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Yeah I don’t see the LOI as much of an impediment anymore.
Doesn't the institution have to release you from your LOI for the first year?
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Yeah I don’t see the LOI as much of an impediment anymore.
Not necessarily. And I think the bar is pretty low to be key out of them.Doesn't the institution have to release you from your LOI for the first year?
they have to actually sign a LOI before they can cash in on the NIL
Would the NIL contract be enforceable? I mean sue him for restitution?How is this even enforced. Get the NIL deal, commit to state school of choice, get paid, transfer portal.
You’ve already played the HS games, gotten the money. They can’t force you to STAY at the school.
Would the NIL contract be enforceable? I mean sue him for restitution?
So, he can't transfer out-of-state?The NIL contract is not contingent on him signing with Missouri. According to the law, they do not have capacity to enter into an NIL contract unless they have signed with a Missouri school.
So, he can't transfer out-of-state?
If he does, is there recourse for the providers of the NIL money?He should be able to, although there are restrictions on the transfer portal. So long as the athlete abided with those, they could transfer.
If he does, is there recourse for the providers of the NIL money?
Scenario:Why would there be? He's signing as a high school athlete.
they have to actually sign a LOI before they can cash in on the NIL
Not quite, but close.Based on what others have said, HS athletes in Missouri are only eligible after signing a LOI.
They could of course enter the transfer portal later on.
Doesn't even have to transfer ... you aren't at the school until you enroll. See the post above.How is this even enforced. Get the NIL deal, commit to state school of choice, get paid, transfer portal.
You’ve already played the HS games, gotten the money. They can’t force you to STAY at the school.
The NIL deal is with an outside group not the school. It can’t be.Would the NIL contract be enforceable? I mean sue him for restitution?
Are you saying that the NIL contract cannot, by law, be contingent?The NIL deal is with an outside group not the school. It can’t be.
I suppose the person offering the deal can make it contingent on him going to a state school but I don’t think that’s what’s being discussed here.Are you saying that the NIL contract cannot, by law, be contingent?
In that case, there are a bunch of fools negotiating for the NIL side.
Not quite, but close.
First, he can't sign an LOI until December 20. So that's out.
The Missouri law uses the phrase "other written agreement" not LOI. It is presumed that a financial aid agreement or scholarship agreement can fall under that category.
The state law goes into effect on August 28th. Nwaneri can sign a financial aid agreement and be eligible to begin getting NIL money on September 1st as long as the document he signs is with an in-state institution.
Here's the catch: Financial aid agreements are not binding for the player. So he could sign that, do some things to get NIL money beginning September 1 and would still be able to sign anywhere he wanted to on December 20. And Missouri's not going to be able to get that money back because he would have done whatever act was required to earn that money. And because NIL specifically can't be an inducement to attend a certain school, the contracts are not going to be able to say that payment is dependent upon him actually showing up. It's dependent only on him signing the document (this is true for any player, I'm just using Nwaneri as the example). In other words, there's a risk for Missouri. Do you trust the kid that if he says he's coming he's actually going to come and not just get three months of payments out of you and sign elsewhere?
I stole this from somewhere else and paraphrased some of it.
I totally agree with the inducement part. However, I did not realize it was the state, itself, providing the NIL money.I suppose the person offering the deal can make it contingent on him going to a state school but I don’t think that’s what’s being discussed here.
The state is saying HS seniors can make NIL deals but only if they agree to play in state in college.
That’s a state requirement to be eligible to negotiate an NIL deal. Anything else seems to be flirting with inducement which is an NCAA violation
I’m not suggesting it is. It’s my understanding that to even be eligible to ink a deal you have to agree that you’ll stay in state.I totally agree with the inducement part. However, I did not realize it was the state, itself, providing the NIL money.
That's the contingency. If you don't stay in state, the NIL contract would be null and void and all funds paid out would be recoverable. Or, do I have a wrong interpretation of contract law? Admittedly, I have no training in the subject.I’m not suggesting it is. It’s my understanding that to even be eligible to ink a deal you have to agree that you’ll stay in state.