The Morning Call

Lions again rule state

Franklin snags Pennsylvan­ia’s top player for 3rd consecutiv­e year

- By Rich Scarcella

Quinton Martin Jr. followed in the footsteps of Nick Singleton and J’ven Williams on Wednesday and became the third straight top-rated recruit from Pennsylvan­ia to land with Penn State on signing day.

Martin, a running back and receiver from PIAA Class 3A champion Belle Vernon, and Wyomissing lineman Caleb Brewer were two of 25 high school seniors to sign letters of intent with the Nittany Lions, including eight from Pennsylvan­ia.

Penn State coach James Franklin would like to make it four in a row in a year. Singleton, the former Gov. Mifflin star, began the run two years ago, followed last year by Williams, Brewer’s former teammate at Wyomissing.

“All these players have a responsibi­lity to help us sign the No. 1 player in the state next year as well,” Franklin said. “We take a lot of pride in that. I’m a big believer that it’s a win-win for everybody.

“The best players need to stay in Pennsylvan­ia and they need to come to Penn State.”

The 6-foot-1, 185-pound Martin, a four-star prospect, picked Penn State over Ohio State, Pittsburgh and West Virginia. He rushed for 1,181 yards and 16 touchdowns this season and caught 53 passes for 764 yards and 11 TDs. He finished his career with 3,787 rushing yards and 77 TDs.

He led Belle Vernon to back-to-back state titles.

“Quinton really was low maintenanc­e,” Franklin said. “He and his family and his support system have been awesome.

“He committed to us and never wavered. He didn’t flirt with other schools. He totally shut it down.

“He really has done extremely well academical­ly. He’s just been awesome.”

Martin is one of two running backs in Penn State’s recruiting class, which was ranked 15th by 247Sports and 16th by On3. The other back is four-star prospect Corey Smith, of Waukesha, Wis., one of three players from Wisconsin who signed with the Lions.

The 5-10, 175-pound Smith led his team to the state semifinals this season and was rated one of the top five players in Wisconsin.

“Both Quinton and Corey were used heavily as wide receivers,” Franklin said. “In today’s college football or the NFL, the more ways you can use running backs, the better.

“We’ve made a huge investment to use our running backs in different areas, and we want to continue to grow in that area. I actually think Quinton and Corey can play wide receiver for us.”

Ethan Grunkemeye­r might one day be the quarterbac­k throwing to them and others. The 6-2, 200-pound Grunkemeye­r committed to Penn State early and threw for 8,401 yards and 80 touchdowns in his career at Oletangy High School in Ohio.

He’s trained by Brad Manedler, who also trains Lions sophomore quarterbac­k Drew Allar. Grunkemeye­r will be one of four scholarshi­p quarterbac­ks on the roster, along with Allar, Beau Pribula and Jaxon Smolik.

“We recruited Ethan because we’ve seen over time that he has a chance to be a really talented player in the Big Ten and nationally,” Franklin said. “He’s proved that over his entire career and really over the last yearand-a-half. He’s really taken it to a different level.

“His high school and his high school coach did a phenomenal job with him. His quarterbac­k trainer has done a great job with him as well. His family has done a great job. This kid is wired right and he’s been raised right.”

The 6-4, 270-pound Brewer is one of five offensive linemen in Penn State’s class, one of two from Pennsylvan­ia along with Erie McDowell’s Cooper Cousins.

Brewer plans to wrestle for Wyomissing this winter and to enroll at Penn State in the spring. He picked the Lions over Michigan and Notre Dame.

“You’re not gonna have any bigger cheerleade­rs than me and Traut (offensive line coach Phil Trautwein),” Franklin said to Brewer after he signed Wednesday morning. “Don’t wrestle too well because I really don’t wanna compete with (Penn State wrestling coach) Cael (Sanderson).”

Penn State was behind Ohio State and future Big Ten member Oregon in the recruiting rankings and slightly ahead of conference champion Michigan. None of the Lions’ committed players flipped.

“In 2023 there’s a lot to be said about a drama-free signing day,” Franklin said. “It’s very telling about the staff and how thorough and detailed we are. It’s very telling about our process that we don’t pressure guys to commit.

“It’s a pretty well-rounded class. We were able to fill needs at every position as well as signing (players) so we can continue developing across the board.”

Penn State Class of 2024 4-star recruits

Name; Pos.; Ht.; Wt.; Hometown

Luke Reynolds; TE; 6-4; 220; Westford, Mass.

Quinton Martin; Ath; 6-1; 185; Belle Vernon

Ethan Grunkemeye­r; QB; 6-2; 200; Lewis Center, Ohio Cooper Cousins; OL; 6-6; 320; Erie

Liam Andrews; TE; 6-4; 275; Brookline, Mass.

Jon Mitchell; CB; 5-11; 180; Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

Garrett Sexton; OT; 6-6; 260; Hartland, Wis.

Mylachi Williams; DE; 6-3; 220; Philadelph­ia

Dejuan Lane; S; 6-2; 205; Baltimore

Vaboue Toure; S; 6-1; 200; Irvington, N.J.

Corey Smith; RB; 5-10; 175; Milwaukee

Josiah Brown; WR; 5-11; 165; Malverne, N.Y.

Jaylen Harvey; DE; 6-2; 250; Potomac, Md.

Heights and weights from Penn State. Composite star rankings from On3.

 ?? MEDIA NEWS GROUP FILE ?? Bonner-Prendie’s Mylachi Williams takes part in a Friars scrimmage before the start of the 2023 season.
MEDIA NEWS GROUP FILE Bonner-Prendie’s Mylachi Williams takes part in a Friars scrimmage before the start of the 2023 season.

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