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"It's complicated. But let's look at things from a more general perspective. There are multiple factors that contribute to this number, which is ever-changing; the most relevant being the 85 player scholarship limit, the 25 scholarship per academic year restriction, transfers, players who fail to qualify after signing their letter NLI (National Letter of Intent), early enrollees and grayshirts.It was me, and yes they do, according to the officer at LSU.
My *understanding was the only way to avoid having him on this year's class is not to sign him for football until after June. Which would be fine if he had to redshirt anyway. But for now, he would have to enroll on his own dime, which I'm sure isn't very attractive if you have several schools after you.
FBS (Division 1A football) allows up to 85 scholarships, or total counters, per program at any given time, making it a constant factor in the number of prospects a school can add to it's roster, annually. At the same time, schools are only allotted up to 25 new scholarships per academic year, called initial counters.
Players who transfer from institutions positively impact the overall (85) player scholarship limitation by opening up a spot. While players who transfer in take up a spot within the overall 85, but only count as initial counters if they transfer in at the beginning of the academic year (as opposed to mid-year). However, an even more direct component of the number of players a school can attain any given year are early enrollees; which, when combined with grayshirting, yield an over-signing work-around."