USA TODAY US Edition

For early enrollees, getting acclimated key

- Jim Halley @jimhalley USA TODAY Sports

Enrolling early in college is no longer a trend for top college football players, it’s a growing tsunami.

Tim Tebow went early to Florida in 2006 and played on the Gators’ national championsh­ip team that season, starting a wave of early-enrollee quarterbac­ks. At the Under Armour All-America Game, however, players at every position are making the jump.

Stanford Samuels III, a defensive back from Flanagan (Pembroke Pines, Fla.), will play in the Under Armour game Jan. 1. Two days later, he’ll be lifting weights and taking classes at Florida State. He already knows who his roommate will be — fellow early enrollee Cyrus Fagan, a safety from Mainland (Daytona Beach, Fla.).

“Right after this, I’ll be heading to Tallahasse­e,” Samuels said. “My deciding to go early was based on things I need to work on. I need time to put on weight and learn the playbook and put myself in position to start my freshman year. Just getting familiar with everything. When you come in at the regular time, you have to get accustomed to a lot of things, because the season is about to start.

“When you come in the winter, the first couple of weeks, it’s pretty much workouts and class, so it gives you a chance to get used to everything and get in the flow instead of having everything pushed at you at once.”

Many of the players who transfer to IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.), which was the No. 2 team in the USA TODAY Sports’ Super 25 football rankings this season, see themselves as being on the fast path to college. IMG spokesman Johnny Esfeller said the Ascenders have at least 23 players who are enrolling early in college.

That includes Marcus Williamson, a defensive back who transferre­d from Westervill­e (Ohio) South to IMG last January. He’s already back home, and after playing in the Under Armour game, he’ll head to Columbus, Ohio, to take classes at Ohio State.

“After I left IMG, I went home and hit the weights hard,” Williamson said. “I was at IMG for two semesters. You want to get into that college weight program and play spring ball and learn to compete at that level. It’s a tradeoff. If you go early, you’re missing on your senior prom and that last bit of high school.”

Trey Smith, a first-team American Family Insurance All-USA offensive lineman from University School of Jackson (Jack- son, Tenn.), says he’s a little beat up heading into the Under Armour game. That won’t stop him from enrolling early at Tennessee on Jan. 7.

“There are so many advantages from an educationa­l standpoint,” he said. “In three years, I’ll graduate and then my master’s will be paid for. Going early was more of a business decision. I know what goals I want to accomplish, and if I go early, I’ll get it done.”

Brock Wright, a tight end from Cy-Fair (Cypress, Texas), is one of five early enrollees at Notre Dame, which matches the school’s highest total, set last season. He said he’s not concerned about going to South Bend, Ind., on Jan. 15, even if the temperatur­e there likely will be 65 to 70 degrees colder than Orlando.

“College is a good time to get some new experience,” he said. “I might as well get used to cold weather for a few years since I’ll probably come back to Texas after I graduate. The last time I saw snow was when I took my official visit up there and it was 20 degrees and snowing.”

“I need time to put on weight and learn the playbook and put myself in position to start my freshman year.” Defensive back Stanford Samuels III, on enrolling early at Florida State

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