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The saga of which school will get Florida running back Dacorius Law apparently is over.

Ole Miss released a statement Thursday afternoon announcing it has released Law from his National Letter of Intent.

Law signed letters to both Utah and Ole Miss on signing day, adding some unexpected confusion and drama.

Apparently his family wanted Law to go to Ole Miss while he wanted to go to Utah. He also signed with East Mississippi Community College, but athletes are allowed to sign with junior colleges as well as Division I schools if they aren't sure if they will qualify academically.

Utah sent copies of the paperwork it received to both the Pac-12 office and NCAA along with a video in which Law explains why he wanted to go to Utah in an effort to prove Law wanted to attend Utah.

Luckily for the Utes, such steps were unnecessary with Ole Miss releasing the athlete.

Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze said his school's compliance department was cooperating with the NLI office.

Law rushed for 1,275 yards on 109 carries and 13 touchdowns as a senior. He runs a 4.35 in the 40 and also plays basketball for Haines City H.S.

Interestingly, the Law case isn't the first time the Utes have been in a bidding war for a player. In 1999, defensive end Van Brown, from Alhambra, Calif., signed with both Oregon and Utah.

The Collegiate Commissioners Association, which presides over such matters, eventually determined he was Oregon property because Oregon's letter was dated earlier than Utah's.

Brown never played for the Ducks, as he sat out the 1999 season then went to Glendale Community College before landing at USC in 2002. He played primarily as a backup at defensive end.