Okay, earlier, I linked to some individual player stories, now for the class as a “whole.”
Here’s the AP Wire article.
Pitt Coach Dave Wannstedt signed 25 players Wednesday, including several highly rated players like West Allegheny running back/receiver Dorin Dickerson and Franklin tight end Nate Byham.
The Panthers, coming off a disappointing 5-6 record in Wannstedt’s first season, still managed to sign a full 25-player recruiting class that was rated 16th by ESPN and 21st by Rivals.com. The Panthers’ recruiting class was considered the best in the Big East by most scouting services.
Now that’s some silly hedging. What scouting service didn’t have Pitt with the best recruiting class in the Big East? Really. I want to know.
“Our goal here is to build a top-10 football program at the University of Pittsburgh,” Wannstedt said. “For us to reach that level, it’s important that our first full recruiting class provides a strong foundation for future success, both on and off the field. So, that’s what we tried to do.”
Expect to see that quote many more times in all articles about Pitt’s recruiting class in the coming week or two.
There was, apparently something of a press conference by Coach Wannstedt yesterday.
When Pitt’s football coach held a news conference to discuss his recruiting class in past years, it usually brought out many members of the media. But when Dave Wannstedt spoke about Pitt’s 2006 recruiting class yesterday at the team’s South Side offices, the throng of reporters and TV personalities was much smaller than usual.
Apparently, some event in Detroit this week has attracted many members of the local sports media.
How ironic, because this Pitt recruiting class commands more attention than possibly any Panthers’ group in the past 20 years.
Not for the right reasons, but I’d say what happened with the recruiting class in 2003 got a lot of attention.
The thing that stands out both for the job that Pitt’s coaches did and the players they recruited, is that there were no reports on wavering based on the season Pitt had. The talent Pitt had gotten to commit, and do it early, were not exactly being left alone. They continued to get calls and contacted. They remained firm almost to a man.
“They didn’t lose anybody to Michigan. They didn’t lose anybody to Penn State,” said Bob Lichtenfels of Scout.com. “I would challenge anyone to tell me when that’s ever happened before. I don’t think it ever has. To me, that’s the most surprising thing.”
The jewel of the class is West Allegheny’s Dorin Dickerson, the state player of the year in Class AAA. Dickerson led the WPIAL with 38 touchdowns last season and played receiver, running back, quarterback, defensive back and kick returner.
Even before Greg Lee declared for the NFL Draft, Dickerson was slotted for a significant role in Pitt’s receiving corps this fall. But with the recent departure of tailback Rashad Jennings, Wannstedt hinted that Dickerson will get some time at running back.
“We’ve got to find a way to get the ball in his hands eight or 10 times a game,” Wannstedt said.
Dickerson committed to Pitt last year and never wavered, even as the team struggled through a 5-6 season that included humiliating losses against Ohio and West Virginia. Other local players also did not seem to be disturbed by the Panthers’ down year.
“It’s encouraging that everybody hung strong,” Wannstedt said.
As for Dickerson seeing lots of touches, I want to hear OC Cavanaugh talk about it as well. Conservatism on offense is also a trait of his as well as Coach Wannstedt.
So with the Steelers getting all the ink in Pittsburgh, Coach Wannstedt is only seeing positives from it.
Former Bears coach and current University of Pittsburgh boss Dave Wannstedt says his recruiting benefited from the success of the Super Bowl-bound Steelers.
“We share the same stadium–Heinz Field. What’s a better recruiting tool than that?” Wannstedt said Wednesday on the first day recruits could sign a national letter of intent. “This is a football town. The Steelers’ success is the best thing that has happened to us.”
The Panthers finished 5-6 in his initial year of coaching his alma mater.
Wannstedt and Steelers coach Bill Cowher have offices across the hall from each other in the infrastructure at Heinz Field.
“He’s a hero in Pittsburgh. We talk quite a bit,” said Wannstedt, who signed 13 All-Staters from Ohio (2), Florida (2), New York (2) and Pennsylvania (7).
“It’s kind of like the NFL draft,” he said. “I have been in 16 different draft rooms over my career and each time you feel like you picked up some great talent.”
So how’d the rest of the Big East feel about the day?
Well, Louisville got a little bounce from being in the Big East (though probably smaller than hoped for).
Petrino found his own “Peanut” in Deantwan “Peanut” Whitehead, the nation’s No. 4-rated defensive end according to Rivals.com. The Cardinals snatched him out of Birmingham, Ala., in the middle of a battle between Auburn and Alabama.
That signing signaled a bit of a breakthrough for U of L. This 24-member recruiting class is the highest-ranked in school history according to both Rivals.com (No. 34) and Scout.com (No. 26). Last season’s class was rated No. 35 by Rivals.
“Most of the time in February, everybody thinks they have the best class they’ve ever had,” Petrino said. “But we won’t know until we get them here in August and see them. Certainly the way they rank them and the way we feel about them, it’s our best class top to bottom. But that’s always yet to be seen.”
After their first season in the Big East Conference, the Cards engaged more top-tier programs than ever on the recruiting trail — and won more than they ever have.
Naturally, one columnist complains that recruiting rankings are useless. After all, they don’t get it right often enough.
Recruiting chatter, especially football recruiting chatter, is the cotton candy of sports journalism. It’s the ultimate junk food. You can eat handful after handful without a single gram of nutritional value.
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The gurus got it right with U of L defensive end Elvis Dumervil — sort of. He was ranked the 25th-best defensive end prospect. Of course, they also touted tight end Chad Jorgensen and defensive back Phil Minafield. I won’t bore you with the details about Indiana.
I will tell you this: Not every guru touted Vince Young of Texas as the top high school quarterback four years ago. Several guys, including the always quoted Tom Lemming, liked Ben Olson of California better.
Ben Olson wasn’t even the best Olson at UCLA last season. Drew Olson was. Ben, a transfer from Brigham Young, threw four passes and completed two.
Sooner or later, we’ll learn.
You are talking about projecting what high school kids will do. The system they will be in and of course what kind of teaching they receive from coaches. Of course there will be plenty of misses. There are also plenty of hits.
You know what? That kind of rant/whine is typical of sportswriters who don’t even want to bother with the topic because it is too hard and requires them to sully their hands with recruiting sites and experts. People they look down upon.
Syracuse is feeling mostly good about its first recruiting class under Greg Robinson. If for no other reason, that they too were able to take a good recruit out of Maryland.
The Syracuse University football team introduced 22 players on Wednesday that have signed binding national letters-of-intent to play for the Orange.
For all the offensive linemen and receivers and even Mr. Football in Ohio that are coming to Syracuse, the essence and hope of the class gets down to one player – quarterback Andrew Robinson of Baltimore.
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There are a number of high-profile players in the class including tailback Delone Carter, who was named Mr. Football in Ohio; receiver Andrey Baskin of Camden, N.J., and offensive lineman Jim McKenzie of St. Joe’s Prep outside of Philadelphia.
In addition to Andrew Robinson, Syracuse signed five players out of Maryland including lineman Ryan Bartholomew of DeMatha and defensive back Nico Scott of Greenbelt’s Eleanor Roosevelt High School, one of the most prolific producers of college players in the country.
Okay, what the hell is going on in Maryland that suddenly has all of this talent? The state isn’t that big, and yet all of these top recruits seem to be from there. Seriously, where next? Delaware?
But not all was completely rosy for ‘Cuse.
However, the Orange failed to sign any of the Top 14-ranked New Yorkers according to Scout.com, an online recruiting site. Syracuse also lost the two top prospects in its own backyard to Big East rival Pittsburgh, which signed defensive end McKenzie Mathews of CBA and tailback Kevin Collier of Churchville-Chili. Mathews made his decision Wednesday.
Throw on the signing day decision by defensive tackle Jason Kates of Harrisburg, Pa., to sign with Michigan over the Orange, and the recruiting rush to signing day ended with a bit of a thud.
Rutgers, like Louisville could claim their best recruiting class ever.
It was the one question that always intrigued Rutgers football followers: If Greg Schiano could have recruiting success while saddled with a chronic loser, what would happen if the coach ever had a bowl team to sell?
The best recruiting class in school history — at least on paper — seems to be the answer.
With 25 recruits committing on national letter of intent signing day yesterday, Schiano’s words and body language seemed to indicate that he knew he’d delivered in a big way after his latest talent haul was officially revealed.
The big one was getting a NJ native who had verballed to Virginia to stay.
[Kordell] Young, who capped his career by rushing for 1,898 yards on 152 carries (12.4 yards per carry) last season while scoring 32 touchdowns, was the 15th-ranked prospect in the state, according to Super Prep Magazine.
He committed to Virginia in July, 2005. He had offers from Maryland, Illinois, Pittsburgh and Boston College, among others.
Cinci signed the lowest rated class in the BE, but that didn’t stop the Cinci coach from putting on a happy face.
UC fans will find out during the next few years if any of the 18 players the Bearcats signed can match the highlights that were flashed on the screen at the Kingsgate Marriott Hotel.
Mark Dantonio, the Bearcats’ third-year head coach, believes they will.
“When you look at the quality of players in terms of who we were competing against, I think we got some very good players,” Dantonio said.
Maybe so, but the class is not highly rated by the recruiting analysts. Tom Lemming said earlier this week that UC’s class, though solid given the Bearcats’ needs, would not crack the national Top 50.
Rivals.com on Wednesday rated UC’s class No. 104.
None of that fazes Dantonio, who’s convinced that he has upgraded his team.
“I don’t pay attention to that,” Dantonio said. “Most of those guys have never played football. We make our assessments based on fact, not fiction. We watch them play, get to know them as people and stay the course.”
Do you have a choice?
UConn, like Cinci, is going with the “ratings don’t tell the story” argument. You kind of have no choice when you are building a program. And they, like Cinci and USF are doing that. There was nothing before that tumbled and is being resurrected. These are all programs trying to make something new.
Well how about the Big East champs and Sugar Bowl winner?
A month after what was perhaps the most significant victory in the history of West Virginia’s football program, Rich Rodriguez signed a small group of freshmen on the first day of the NCAA’s official signing period.
Did the Mountaineers’ win over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl influence any of them to come to Morgantown? Well, perhaps. But with the bulk of recruiting already finished before last month’s bowl games, the impact was almost negligible.
“There might have been one or two guys we were fighting for at the end, and the Sugar Bowl put us over the top with them,” Rodriguez said Wednesday. “We’re hoping there is more of an impact next year.”
Wait until next year is always a fun battle cry. Apparently there is just something about the state that makes it difficult to recruit to.
West Virginia is more than coal camps, dueling banjos, country roads and barefoot hillbillies.
Now, if only the rest of the country knew that.
Mountain State misconceptions are some of the toughest challenges facing West Virginia Coach Rich Rodriguez in trying to lure top high school football players, but the Mountaineer head man said all it takes is one visit.
And then you know it’s true.