Dayton Daily News

Big investment in recruiting

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Two pictures COLUMBUS — hang above Mark Pantoni’s desk: The greatest recruiting photograph ever taken, and a shot of AT&T Stadium the night Ohio State won the 2014 national championsh­ip.

One photo turned into the other.

If there were a nameplate on Pantoni’s desk, it would read “Ohio State Football General Manager.” He’s the general manager who made those two photos above his desk possible; the general manager who signed the best recruiting class in team history in 2017; and the general manager who is responsibl­e for the 2018 recruiting class that currently ranks No. 1 in the country.

OSU coach Urban Meyer has said recruiting is the “lifeblood of this program” a million times. He’ll say it again the next time there’s a microphone in his face. But now Ohio State is putting money where Meyer’s mouth is by investing what will be millions of dollars the next few years.

The recruiting photo above Pantoni’s desk is of him standing with Ezekiel Elliott, Joey Bosa, Eli Apple and Darron Lee during a recruiting visit. They all went on to be first-round NFL draft picks after being integral parts of the title run, the other picture.

Pantoni sits under those two framed photos every day but rarely feels nostalgic. It’s nice they’re there — “testimony,” he says — but he never forgets that those pictures need to be created again with new faces. This program needs to get to the point where those pictures become routine, not framed.

Otherwise, Pantoni is not doing his job.

“That’s the standard now,” he said. “Be the best. Nothing else.”

Meyer has the reputation as one of most demanding coaches in college football, but even Meyer understand­s there are limits to what one person can do. So Ohio State invested in its recruiting department.

What was once a two-man recruiting staff of Pantoni and Greg Gillum in 2012 is now a 10-person staff. This has turned into an NFL-like operation.

Great recruiting leads to winning, and Pantoni is pulling the strings. This GM can’t draft players or sign free agents, but Pantoni can recruit. Now he has help.

The most recent addition came last week when Andre Robinson was hired as an assistant director of new and creative media.

The nine others, including Pantoni, earn salaries that add up to a combined $617,213.98, according to state records.

That number doesn’t include Robinson’s salary because he was just hired, but Ohio State has made a tremendous investment in recruiting support staff. That number also doesn’t include the hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on recruiting travel, whether on coaches’ trips or official visits made by prospects.

“We’re having tremendous recruiting success,” Meyer said, “but we aren’t doing it without that staff.”

Seven years ago when Jim Tressel was the coach and Meyer was at Florida, the recruiting coordinato­r position was just assigned to one of the nine assistants. For Tressel, it used to be tight ends coach John Peterson.

Now you have GM Pantoni — who has his fingers in everything from prospect communicat­ion to coaches’ travel to visit itinerarie­s to film breakdown — and an entire team dedicated to film breakdown, videos, graphics, marketing and social media.

Ohio State never had a meeting to discuss this expansion, but Meyer basically reassigned every available staff position he could to recruiting, and redefined staff roles. The recruiting department quadrupled in people and payouts.

Athletic Director Gene Smith didn’t even hesitate to pay up.

“You can have the greatest head coach and the greatest coordinato­r, but you know the old saying: ‘Great players make great coaches,’” Smith said.

“Understand­ing what was happening nationally, understand­ing just the way it’s changing and the way young people pay attention, it was critical for us to have those people . ... I think it’s important for us to look at where we are, see the future and put in place the infrastruc­ture to support it.”

Nothing OMAHA, NEB. — LSU encounters in the College World Series championsh­ip series will be any more daunting than the task the Tigers completed to get there.

The Tigers twice beat an Oregon State team that owned the most formidable record of any team in four decades, and they did it in dominating fashion.

Caleb Gilbert held the No. 1 national seed Beavers to two hits in 7⅓ innings, Michael Papierski homered from both sides of the plate and LSU won 6-1 Saturday a day after beating them 3-1.

The Tigers will play Florida in the best-of-three final after the Gators beat TCU 3-0 later Saturday. Alex Faedo (9-2) allowed three hits and struck out 11 in 7 ⅓ innings, and Michael Byrne finished the shutout with his 18th save, allowing one hit.

The Tigers (52-18) won their third straight eliminatio­n game since they lost their series opener 13-1 to Oregon State (56-6).

“To lose four games the entire season, and we beat them two days in a row, it’s hard to predict those things to happen, but that’s why you have to play the games,” Tigers coach Paul Mainieri said. “Our kids embraced the challenge.”

The Beavers had a pair of 23-game winning streaks and finished the season with a .903 winning percentage — the best since Texas’ mark of .908 in 1982.

“It’s a tough day when you’ve had such a great year,” Beavers coach Pat Casey said. “Now is not the time to really think about that or talk about it, but I know there will be

SATURDAY’S GAMES

LSU 6, Oregon St. 1 (Oregon St. eliminated)

Florida 3, TCU 0 (TCU eliminated)

CHAMPIONSH­IP SERIES

Monday 7 p.m. Tuesday, 8 p.m. x-Wednesday, 8 p.m. x-if necessary a time when they get to sit back and reflect and realize what they accomplish­ed.”

Gilbert allowed an infield single and walk until Michael Gretler homered in the seventh. He struck out a careerhigh seven in his longest outing in his two seasons at LSU. Zack Hess allowed one hit the rest of the way.

“It’s a surreal feeling to be able to pitch your team, when the back’s against the wall in an eliminatio­n game, into the College World Series final,” Gilbert said.

Papierski became the first player to homer twice in a CWS game since TCU’s Bryan Holaday in 2010. He went deep from the left side off Bryce Fehmel in the second and the right side off Brandon Eisert in the fourth.

“I put some good swings on fastballs,” Papierski said, “and after that, the wind helped a little bit. But that wasn’t the highlight of the game. It was Caleb Gilbert.”

The Beavers had a season-low two hits Friday and three against Gilbert and Hess on Saturday.

“A lot of the game we were taking a lot of defensive swings,” Gretler said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY OHIO STATE ?? Buckeyes director of player personnel Mark Pantoni (from left) with 2013 recruits and future NFL first-round draft picks Darron Lee, Joey Bosa, Ezekiel Elliott and Eli Apple.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY OHIO STATE Buckeyes director of player personnel Mark Pantoni (from left) with 2013 recruits and future NFL first-round draft picks Darron Lee, Joey Bosa, Ezekiel Elliott and Eli Apple.

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