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re: Do any of you know about the Missouri Law that allows instate kids to commit in state
Posted on 8/21/23 at 7:18 am to LSU1215
Posted on 8/21/23 at 7:18 am to LSU1215
Glad to hear this guy [Alabama fan?), who could care less about recruiting, is calling high schools kids every week talking about every subject except recruiting.


Posted on 8/21/23 at 7:56 am to aqross5054
I may be misinterpreting what is transpiring.
But it sounds like Missouri is the highest bidder on these kids.
This law doesn't change who the highest bidder is (unless local businesses would prefer to give their NIL opportunities to high schoolers over college athletes).
If Missouri is saving their NIL money for the biggest in state recruits, then they are going to continue to sign those recruits out of high school.
The NIL that Luther Burden won/earned directly resulted in Dom Lovett entering the transfer portal, though.
I presume he had earned NIL. Just no where near what Burden got. And it resulted in Missouri losing their best wide receiver.
But it sounds like Missouri is the highest bidder on these kids.
This law doesn't change who the highest bidder is (unless local businesses would prefer to give their NIL opportunities to high schoolers over college athletes).
If Missouri is saving their NIL money for the biggest in state recruits, then they are going to continue to sign those recruits out of high school.
The NIL that Luther Burden won/earned directly resulted in Dom Lovett entering the transfer portal, though.
I presume he had earned NIL. Just no where near what Burden got. And it resulted in Missouri losing their best wide receiver.
Posted on 8/21/23 at 12:02 pm to meansonny
I could very well be wrong, but I don’t think that was necessarily the case with Nwaneri. I’m not ignorant to the fact that an offer was also part of the package, but the law specifically is aimed at empowering Missouri athletes that stay in state to reap the benefits of endorsements sooner than how it is traditionally. The logic being first is better than highest.
Posted on 8/21/23 at 12:05 pm to aqross5054
I think we are on the same page.
But no one has referenced how the law limits what Texas or Oklahoma NIL deals can be entered for the high school athlete once eligible for NIL benefits.
No one has referenced how the law limits multiple financial aid requests. No one references how the law punishes a high school athlete who receives Missouri NIL deals but still signs and attends elsewhere.
But no one has referenced how the law limits what Texas or Oklahoma NIL deals can be entered for the high school athlete once eligible for NIL benefits.
No one has referenced how the law limits multiple financial aid requests. No one references how the law punishes a high school athlete who receives Missouri NIL deals but still signs and attends elsewhere.
Posted on 8/21/23 at 3:46 pm to GetmorewithLes
quote:
I thought that was a violation of one of the very few NCAA rules on NIL
That is exactly why Missouri created the law. State law trumps NCAA rules and courts have already ruled on this.
Posted on 8/21/23 at 3:52 pm to meansonny
quote:
But no one has referenced how the law limits what Texas or Oklahoma NIL deals can be entered for the high school athlete once eligible for NIL benefits.
No one has referenced how the law limits multiple financial aid requests. No one references how the law punishes a high school athlete who receives Missouri NIL deals but still signs and attends elsewhere.
LINK
LINK .
Lots of details in that link.
To answer the one question, I dont believe anything stops a company from Texas from paying a MO HS senior money to attend Mizzou or another Missouri school.
This post was edited on 8/21/23 at 3:55 pm
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