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Looking at NCAA 2016-2017 College-Bound Student Athlete Guide and see that in a player's Junior year, electronic correspondence (text messaging, instant messenger, e-mail) is allowed after Sept 1 of Junior year, but that "correspondence must be private until you provide a written commitment to the NCAA school."

Two questions:

1. What do they mean by "communications must be private?"

2. By "written commitment to the NCAA school," are they talking NLI? I thought NLI's weren't in play until Senior year?

Anyone smart on this here? Thanks

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Ryno is right....a coach can't say anything publicly about a kid until the NLI is signed.  They will often say things like "just got a big committment from a kid that will help make us better"....but can't give specifics until he's actually signed.  Kid can say whatever he wants.  He is free to tweet "Happy to say I've committed to play baseball at Big State U"....no rules against the kid going public....just the coach/school

They could have worded that better, but they're mainly trying to say that under the category of Electronic Correspondence, the coach's correspondence to you must be private. I think they added that last year in an effort to get a handle on Twitter, Instagram, Stapchat, etc. An example of a violation would be a D1 coach tweeting "@prospect We saw you at WWBA and would love to talk to you." Another example would be a public Facebook post to the student by the coach (I know, kids don't use Facebook).

Once you sign the NLI, the school can send you public electronic correspondence.

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