San Antonio Express-News

SEC schools are fighting for recruiting supremacy

- By Steve Megaree

Alabama and Georgia are competing for the honor of having the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class at the same time they are preparing for their respective College Football Playoff semifinals.

But there’s a third Southeaste­rn Conference program that is assembling an equally impressive recruiting class without ever having earned a playoff berth.

Texas A&M has joined its SEC rivals atop the team recruiting rankings heading into Wednesday, the first day that high school senior prospects can finalize their college plans. The race is close enough that the unofficial team recruiting champion might not be determined until the later signing date on Feb. 2.

“Alabama’s finished No. 1 nine of the last 11 years,” said Steve Wiltfong, the national recruiting director for 247Sports. “Texas A&M has really come on here. Georgia’s got a great class. Those three are kind of duking it out.”

Alabama is currently first, Georgia second and Texas A&M third according to composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports.

The 28 head coaching changes in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n rankings have impacted plenty of recruiting classes over the last couple of weeks.

Oklahoma and Oregon were hit particular­ly hard.

Since Lincoln Riley left Oklahoma for Southern California, the Sooners’ 2022 class has lost three top-150 prospects in Brownlowdi­ndy, defensive lineman Derrick Moore (79th) and running back Raleek Brown (33rd).

Oklahoma did get some good news early this week by landing a verbal commitment from quarterbac­k Nick Evers (156th) and getting back linebacker Kobie Mckinzie (144th). Mckinzie had flipped his verbal commitment from Oklahoma to Texas after Riley’s departure, but he flipped back to

Oklahoma this week.

Oregon lost several commitment­s after Miami hired away Mario Cristobal. The list includes offensive tackle Kelvin Banks, who is ranked 15th overall and is now committed to Texas.

Adam Gorney, national recruiting director for Rivals, believes the uncertaint­y stemming from so many coaching changes could cause more verbally committed players than usual to change their minds and sign elsewhere. He noted the difference between this recruiting cycle and the last one, when pandemic-related restrictio­ns prevented prospects from

traveling to prospectiv­e schools for an extended period.

“It felt like last recruiting cycle, kids just wanted a spot and wanted it locked in,” Gorney said.

Not this year. Now that prospects are taking more visits and teams are making more coaching changes, recruits might not be as likely to stick to their verbal commitment­s.

It’s not just the head coaching changes that can impact prospects’ decisions.

Clemson’s staff has been a model of consistenc­y for much of Dabo Swinney’s head coaching tenure, but offensive coordinato­r

Tony Elliott left to take over Virginia’s program and defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables became Oklahoma’s head coach over the last several days.

Swinney now faces the challenge of keeping as much of Clemson’s class together as possible this week. Three top-100 defensive recruits from IMG Academy (cornerback Daylen Everette, edge rusher Jihaad Campbell and safety Keon Sabb) all withdrew verbal commitment­s to Clemson and re-opened their recruitmen­ts after Venables’ departure.

But when the smoke clears, SEC teams once again will be

dominating.

While the 247Sports Composite team recruiting rankings should fluctuate quite a bit over the course of the week, SEC schools had eight of the top 18 classes as of Tuesday morning.

Four of the nation’s top eight recruits are committed to SEC schools: Nolen, wide receiver Luther Burden (Missouri), Stewart and edge rusher Jeremiah Alexander (Alabama).

The only other verbally committed recruits in the top eight are cornerback Travis Hunter (Florida State) and defensive lineman Travis Shaw (North Carolina).

 ?? Vasha Hunt / Associated Press ?? With Alabama’s recruiting machine continuing to operate at a high level, there’s little for Nick Saban to complain about.
Vasha Hunt / Associated Press With Alabama’s recruiting machine continuing to operate at a high level, there’s little for Nick Saban to complain about.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States