Early LOI signing

Submitted by white_pony_rocks on
So after reading the forum post about the WVU commits I went to their commit list on rivals and noticed some players had signed letter of intents already. Is the no early signing period up to individual conferences to allow, because I figured something like that would be NCAA wide to create a more level laying field.

white_pony_rocks

January 9th, 2010 at 5:30 PM ^

here is a suggestion to brian. lets put a way to comment to the poster when we up vote or neg bang someone, and make it so only the poster of the original comment can see by looking at his mgpoints on the side since putting them on the comment page would take up to much space. that way i can figure out why i got neg banged. was it because somebody doesn't like me? or maybe they don't like UF. it could possibly be that they don't like my gf (my vote)

Maize and Blue…

January 9th, 2010 at 7:35 PM ^

Early enrollees sign their LOI when they enroll for classes. That is a problem right now for Kyle Prater who was supposed to be on a flight to LA to start classes on Monday. With Pete Carroll leaving the kid is getting the ultimate shaft job. Unless he is already accepted at other schools his EE dream is gone unless he is going to stick his neck out and hope SC gets a coach and staff that he likes.

Irish

January 9th, 2010 at 5:14 PM ^

EEs sign a different "LOI", it has the same implications but is not the same document. Whomever you saw as signed is probably an EE.

amk7

January 9th, 2010 at 5:23 PM ^

on florida's commit list on rivals they have the same thing with the 'signed LOI' thing but the players listed are definitely high school players(like josh shaw), so my guess is its early enrollment

buck1973

January 9th, 2010 at 11:23 PM ^

An early enrollee is not permitted to sign a NLOI. From the National Letter of Intent website: "May a midyear enrollee sign a National Letter of Intent?" "No. Under the terms of the National Letter of Intent program, a written award of athletics aid for the entire academic year must accompany a National Letter of Intent. Accordingly, the National Letter of Intent program does not allow for prospective student-athletes enrolling at midyear to sign a National Letter of Intent. The National Letter of Intent program has created an exception to this general rule for midyear junior college transfer students in the sport of football. A midyear junior college transfer student in the sport of football may sign a National Letter of Intent during the designated signing period." http://www.ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/nli/NLI/Frequently+Asked+Questions/…