Who is responsible for determining the eligibility of "University Challenge" players and teams? Is it the BBC, Granada, College Bowl, or are the schools and players expected to police themselves?
Based on my experience as a quiz bowl player, it used to be the role of the schools and the governing bodies to determine eligibility. My sophomore year of college, we had an eligibility issue with a player (he was in a dispute with the school over financial aid and bills), and the school blocked him from registering for classes for the spring semester. He had qualified for our CBI team the previous November, but CBI told us that if he was not registered for the spring semester, we had to replace him with the alternate.
After winning Regionals (where the player in question served as an assistant coach) and a few weeks before Nationals, said player finally resolved his dispute with the school and was allowed to register for the spring semester (he had been attending classes in the interim as a "non-credited" guest). Over the next few days, the team had to fax and mail several pages of evidence to CBI to confirm that he was a student again. Three or four weeks before Nationals, CBI gave us the approval to have him on our roster.
Obviously, CBI is not producing U.S. tournaments anymore, and I'm not sure how the other U.S. national organizations handle eligibility issues (when I was biz manager of TRASH, we ran "open" tournaments where eligibility was restricted to players 18 years of age and older, and we warned hosts and teams, in no uncertain terms, that those under 18 are not allowed. One school lost hosting and playing privileges for a year for getting caught violating the rule). I'm curious if UC has schools police themselves, or the show and its partners handle those issues.
JD