Miami Herald

Landing DT Taylor boosts UM class in multiple areas

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

The Hurricanes have pulled in two five-star prospects from South Florida already this cycle. Leonard Taylor’s commitment should help the Canes with recruiting, on defense and with Savion Collins.

Leonard Taylor rattled off a list of reasons he decided to pick the Miami Hurricanes after he announced his commitment last Thursday on CBSSports.com. He talked about the importance of being near family. He mentioned how exciting it was to see Miami recruiting South Florida well. The five-star defensive tackle, of course, liked the idea of potentiall­y getting early playing time.

The ultimate selling point, though, might have been Todd Stroud.

“LT is a relationsh­ip guy. He is a guy that needs to trust you and I think Coach

Stroud’s just such a good man, No. 1, but I think he’s been able to get through to LT what kind of person he really is and that’s important to LT,” said Mike Manasco, who coaches Taylor at Miami Palmetto. “He is a good kid, man. He’s a kid that does right and wants to continue to improve.”

The defensive line coach proved last year he can turn athleticis­m into production. Now Taylor, the No. 27 overall player in the 247Sports.com composite rankings for the Class of 2021, is banking on Stroud doing the same thing for him.

It has been a week since Taylor decided to scorn

Leonard Taylor

Florida and stay home with the Hurricanes. The recruiting cycle has already been a massive success for Miami, and Taylor’s commitment is another potentiall­y landscape-altering decision for the Hurricanes in the way it could affect local recruiting, the future of Miami’s defense and the Hurricanes’ efforts to hang on to four-star defensive tackle Savion Collins

Here’s what it means:

... FOR RECRUITING

Taylor’s commitment temporaril­y boosted Miami to No. 8 in the team recruiting rankings for the 2021 class. While his pledge didn’t seal up the rest of the so-called “Palmetto Five,” it still has the Hurricanes poised for a strong finish.

In the week since Taylor picked Miami, five-star cornerback Jason Marshall and four-star safety Corey Collier both committed to the Gators, meaning the Hurricanes so far have gone 3 for 5 with the Panthers’ coveted quintet. Miami’s primary focus for the rest of the cycle will likely be on the secondary and quarterbac­k, and Taylor’s commitment means the Hurricanes can feel good about their defensive line haul.

Taylor and Collins give Miami a perfectly complement­ary duo of defensive tackles, and Jabari Ishmael and Thomas Davis have the Hurricanes set at defensive end. With four more spots available in the class, Miami can focus elsewhere.

Taylor also took notice of how well Miami has recruited South Florida in this cycle. Even though his commitment couldn’t seal up the rest of his teammates, it’ll only help the Hurricanes’ reputation locally.

“They’re recruiting a lot of players from down south, so why not just play here?” Taylor said. “Put on for my own city.”

.... FOR THE DEFENSE

There’s a reason Miami wasn’t too concerned when star defensive end Gregory Rousseau decided to opt out of the 2020 season Thursday. Defensive line — and particular­ly defensive end — is the Hurricanes’ deepest position and three consecutiv­e defensive line coaches have now proven they can develop talent.

None of the three had anyone quite like Taylor, though.

The 6-4, 255-pound defensive lineman is the No. 4 overall prospect in 247Sports’ rankings — higher ranked even than five-star athlete James Williams. Assuming both Taylor and Williams sign with Miami as five-star prospects, the Hurricanes will have multiple five-stars on defense in the same class for the first time since 2008.

As good as Williams is, the senior’s long-term projection is a bit of a question mark because of his positional flexibilit­y. Taylor is one of the topranked defensive tackles ever to commit to Miami, and he could be counted on to contribute immediatel­y, especially with defensive lineman Jonathan Ford entering his senior season.

“We’re very technicall­y sound on defense and sometimes when LT’s wrong, he’s right, and it took him a little while — especially my D-line coach did — to realize, Hey, man, he may be doing that a little bit different than we’re teaching it, but he’s making it right at the end,” Manasco said.

... FOR COLLINS

Taylor and Collins have been friends since they were young, even before they were teammates. Collins, however, was never a football player until he got to Miami Southwest and finally gave the sport a shot as a freshman.

He was impressive there, eventually landing an offer from the Hurricanes before his sophomore season began. He committed to Miami later in 2018 and has stuck by his pledge ever since, even as the Gators have tried to pry him out of his hometown.

At Palmetto, Collins took another leap. He transferre­d there ahead of his junior season, and Manasco said he was the team’s most improved player throughout the season.

“He may have been the No. 1 nose guard in the country after the spring,” Manasco said. “That’s how much he improved . ... LT sees that and it just makes him want to go even harder.”

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