Andrew Morgan didn't even know if he would get to play AAU basketball this summer when he received a scholarship offer from the University of Iowa in late June.
It was the Waseca senior's first Power Five offer. But when the summer was over, the 6-9 bruiser still only had that one high-major conference opportunity.
In any other recruiting season, he would have been playing in front of college coaches, getting noticed and trying to prove he belongs at a higher level. But since basketball resumed in July, Morgan and hundreds of other prospects played in front of empty stands instead.
"Lot of kids lost out on getting life-changing offers," he said.
While the pandemic didn't affect offers for top-end recruits such as Minnehaha Academy's Chet Holmgren, Morgan represents most high school basketball prospects who are now heading into the November signing period frustrated after missing out on a normal recruiting experience.
"There was a lot of downsides for college recruiting this summer, but you still had to make it work with what you had," said Morgan, who committed to North Dakota State last week over Iowa and St. Thomas.
NCAA recruiting rules changed quickly and dramatically to protect prospects and college coaches in all sports from COVID-19. The Division I Council voted March 18 to ban all in-person recruiting, and it's been extended every month and now the ban goes at least until Jan. 1.