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Verbal Commitment vs. National Letter of Intent: All Athletes Should Know the Difference

This post was written by Chelsea L. Dixon, M.S., M.A.T. It was originally post on Noodle.com and is republished here with permission.

High school sports are exciting, but the stakes are even higher when college recruiters enter the equation.

How can you tell whether you’re seriously in the running for a spot on a college team? Two terms that can cause confusion for high schoolers looking to participate in college athletics are verbal commitment and National Letter of Intent. Here’s an overview of what you need to know:

Verbal Commitment

The verbal commitment has become a trend in recent years. It refers to a non-binding agreement that can be made at any time by a college-bound student-athlete before signing a National Letter of Intent. In theory, this oral agreement seems pretty simple: A prospective student-athlete verbally agrees to attend an institution and play on a given sports team, and a coach orally agrees to give the student-athlete a scholarship and save a spot on the sports team’s roster.

In reality, however, the verbal commitment is not as cut-and-dry as it may seem.

Advantages
A verbal commitment can be made at any time and without any restrictions. This means that an eighth-grader can make a verbal commitment.

Making a verbal commitment can eliminate some of the anxiety associated with choosing a college or university to attend.

Disadvantages
A high school freshman may feel increased pressure to perform given a college coach’s expectations.

Also, a student-athlete’s interests may change after having made a verbal commitment. As students get older, their interests may change. It’s not uncommon for students to change their minds about colleges. What may have interested a student in tenth grade could very well be different by twelfth grade.

Non-Binding Agreement
One key characteristic of a verbal commitment – and it can be both an advantage and a disadvantage – is that it is non-binding. Both parties (the prospective student-athlete as well as the college coach) may have a change of heart at any time. There have been times when a student-athlete has given a verbal commitment to University A, but when it came down to signing a National Letter of Intent and making the promise official, the student-athlete committed to and signed with University B. Conversely, there have been times when a coach has made a verbal commitment to a student-athlete, but then offered a National Letter of Intent to someone else.

Both are unfortunate instances, but they do happen. Although a college-bound student-athlete may announce a verbal commitment, it isn’t binding until a National Letter of Intent has been signed accompanied by an offer of an athletic scholarship. Up to that point, neither the student-athlete nor the college or university is bound by the verbal commitment.

National Letter of Intent

The National Letter of Intent is administered by the NCAA for Division I and II institutions. It is a voluntary program. By signing an NLI, a college-bound student-athlete must attend the participating college or university for at least one academic year, and that college or university must provide athletic financial aid for that same year. Note that community colleges in the National Junior College Athletic Association, or NJCAA, administer their own Letters of Intent separate from those issued by the NCAA.

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Advantages
A prospective student-athlete is not required to sign an NLI in order to join an athletics program at a given college or university. When offered an NLI, however, many choose to sign–they want to ensure that they’ll have a spot on the roster and receive an athletic scholarship. Even if a college-bound student-athlete makes a verbal commitment to an institution, that promise isn’t binding until an NLI is signed.

Student-athletes can only sign a NLI during specific periods; otherwise, the NLI will be invalid.

Once you sign an NLI, you are officially off the market and can no longer be recruited by any other college or university.

Signing an NLI does not guarantee that you will be a starter on a given team, nor that you will even play. The only thing that is certain–provided you have met the requirements set forth by the NCAA Eligibility Center and have been admitted to the institution with which you’re signing–is that you will receive an athletic scholarship.

If you are not granted admission to the institution you signed your NLI with, the NLI becomes invalid. You will then be permitted to attend a new institution without incurring any of the penalties associated with reneging on an NLI.

Disadvantages
If you are admitted to the institution for which you signed a National Letter of Intent and you either don’t fulfill the NLI requirements or decide to attend a different institution, you will be penalized. Generally, you lose a year of eligibility, and if you go to a college or university that is an NLI member institution, you will need to attend that institution for a full year before you are eligible to compete in any sports.

If, however, you ask for and receive a release from your original NLI institution, your penalty may be reduced or eliminated. An institution is not obligated to give you a release. If an institution does not grant you a release, however, you may appeal to the NLI appeals committee.

Binding Agreement
A student-athlete signs a National Letter of Intent with a college or university and not with a specific coach. This is important to know–even if the coach who recruited you ends up leaving the school before you arrive on campus, you are still bound by the NLI to attend that school.

While some institutions will release student-athletes from their NLI under certain circumstances, this is not the norm.

Even if you make a verbal commitment or sign an NLI with a college or university, there is no guarantee that you will be attending that specific institution or that you will be playing a sport there. A school’s admissions department has the final say about whether or not you’ll be admitted.

Chelsea L. Dixon, M.S., M.A.T., is founder and CEO of GamePhox Unlimited L.L.C.  A motivational speaker who has lectured at various high schools, colleges, professional youth sports foundations, and youth groups, Dixon is the author of Bridging the Gap: A Simple Guide to College. She earned a B.A. in sociology from Boston College, an M.A.T. in secondary education from Trenton State College (now the College of New Jersey), and an M.S. in sports management from the University of Massachusetts — Amherst. Learn more about her at www.gamephox.com or www.bridgingthecollegegap.com.

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