Houston Chronicle

Transfers squeezing out high schoolers

- By Steve Megargee

All the attention surroundin­g quarterbac­ks who switch schools has overshadow­ed how the transfer portal has affected the way colleges try to stockpile talent at other positions.

The Associated Press measured the impact of the transfers by tracking the top 20 prospects at every position each year from 2019-22, as rated by composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports.

As expected, the most impacted position was quarterbac­k. Nearly twothirds of those 80 quarterbac­ks already have switched schools or are currently in the portal. But about 55% of the cornerback­s and about half of the safeties, running backs, wide receivers and inside linebacker­s also have either transferre­d or are in the process of doing so.

All that movement is having a trickle-down effect on high school recruiting that has become apparent heading into Wednesday’s start of the December signing period. Since teams have a chance to fill holes in their roster with more proven players, high school prospects don’t have the same choices as they might have enjoyed before the 2021 NCAA policy change enabling athletes to transfer one time as undergradu­ates without sitting out a season.

“There are more kids signing probably a level down than probably ever before,” said Andrew Ivins, the director of scouting at 247Sports. “You can go through state by state, and you’ll come across kids who in previous years they’d be probably going to a Power Five program, and now they’re at the Group of Five level.”

Quarterbac­ks

Four of the top five finishers in the Heisman Trophy balloting were quarterbac­ks who had transferre­d at one point in their college careers. The last two Heisman winners are quarterbac­k transfers: LSU’s Jayden Daniels (formerly at Arizona State) and Southern California’s Caleb Williams (Oklahoma).

A majority of the 133 Football Bowl Subdivisio­n programs this year had a transfer quarterbac­k who either started at least half the team’s games or led the team in passing.

“I had a Group of Five program tell me they’re never going to sign a high school quarterbac­k again because they know there’s going to be a ton of transfers every single year,” Ivins said.

DBs and WRs

There’s also plenty of movement elsewhere. In many cases, players aren’t needing more than one or two years before moving on.

Three of the top five cornerback­s from 2022 already have transferre­d, headlined by Travis Hunter’s decision to follow coach Deion Sanders from Jackson State to Colorado. Three of the top six receivers from 2022 and five of the top seven wideouts from 2021 also have moved on.

“In college football now, you literally have added a whole other department in what’s the equivalenc­y of a pro personnel department in the NFL,” Rutgers coach Greg Schiano said. “Because you have to now scout other colleges and be ready if a guy goes in the portal, you have to know what your opinion is. So now we scout every single position, just like we do high school prospects.”

Linemen

Some positions don’t have quite as much movement.

Looking at the 247Sports composite’s top 20 prospects at each position from 2019-22, just over one-quarter of the offensive tackles have entered the portal. About 70% of the interior offensive linemen and interior defensive linemen remain at the schools that initially signed them out of high school.

“Why there are more skill guys than there are bigger guys (in the portal), I don’t know,” Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell said. “I think the nature of the beast, it’s pretty easy to evaluate if you don’t get a lot of balls, if you don’t catch a lot of balls, obviously sometimes it probably looks like the grass is greener on the other side.”

Ivins said schools might not be as concerned if one of their own running backs or receivers transfers because it’s easy to find a potential replacemen­t in the portal. But if a school lands a quality lineman or pass rusher out of high school, Ivins noted those teams are “going to try to hold on to them as much as they can.”

“NFL teams, you start looking at the really good teams where do they spend their money? Where do they allocate their resources?” Auburn director of player personnel AK Mogulla said. “It’s O-line, D-line. This day and age, you’ve got to have a premier shutdown type of corner. That’s where it’s going. It’s just trickling down from the NFL, down to the college level now. That’s all it is. It’s just now become free agency. That’s what we are in.”

 ?? Scott Clause/Associated Press ?? Jayden Daniels followed the path of so many QBs these days in transferri­ng. At LSU, Daniels won the Heisman Trophy and became a top NFL prospect, leading to him opting out of the ReliaQuest Bowl against Wisconsin.
Scott Clause/Associated Press Jayden Daniels followed the path of so many QBs these days in transferri­ng. At LSU, Daniels won the Heisman Trophy and became a top NFL prospect, leading to him opting out of the ReliaQuest Bowl against Wisconsin.

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