Baltimore Sun

Recruits choosing to sign early

More high school players now pledging in December

- By Steve Megargee

College football fans used to treat the first Wednesday of February like a virtual national holiday. Now that recruiting ritual and all the madness surroundin­g it has shifted to December.

Most schools are signing nearly all their incoming recruits the week before Christmas.

The arrival of an early signing period last year enticed the vast majority of last year’s top seniors to finalize their college plans in December. Coaches and recruiting analysts expect that pattern to continue for the foreseeabl­e future — and they’ve planned accordingl­y.

“I just think everybody sees [December] as the new signing date, in my opinion,” Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy said.

This year’s early signing period begins today and runs through Friday. Seniors also have the option of waiting until the Feb. 6 signing date. ESPN director of recruiting Tom Luginbill said 72 percent of last year’s recruiting class signed in December rather than February.

That doesn’t surprise longtime Santa Ana (California) Mater Dei coach Bruce Rollinson, whose program has six of the nation’s top 350 senior prospects according to composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports.

Rollinson, the high school coach for current Southern California quarterbac­k J.T. Daniels and receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown, said many seniors want to sign now because they’re tired of the recruiting process. Other seniors might feel pressure to get it over with now because so many of their classmates are already signing early.

“Right now statistica­lly I’m hearing anywhere from 80-85 percent of the top players are going to sign Wednesday,” Rollinson said. “Well, if I’m a parent, I’m looking at that and saying we’d better be careful here, get signed and lock down this scholarshi­p and not take our chances with a pool of 15 percent or 20 percent of the scholarshi­ps that are still available.”

The arrival of a December signing period created uncertaint­y in last year’s recruiting cycle because nobody knew just how many seniors would end their college selection process before the winter holidays.

Now they have a better idea.

“I think all of us coaches would tell you it surprised us that so many kids wanted to get it done and signed in December,” Texas coach Tom Herman said.

The change in the recruiting calendar has forced most programs to adjust. That includes offering prospects earlier and getting more of them on campus for official visits in the spring.

Once this early signing period has ended, most teams will only be pursuing a few more high school seniors while shifting their attention to the sophomore and junior classes.

“The way you go about your business has totally changed,” Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said.

Coaches aren’t the only ones adapting. ESPN has altered its recruiting coverage based on what happened during the first year of the early signing period.

Last year, ESPNU aired two hours of coverage on the first day of the early signing period and two more hours on the final day. Because so much of the action during last year’s early signing period occurred on the opening day, ESPN will have five hours of coverage this Wednesday — two hours on ESPN2 and three on ESPNU.

There could be a little more suspense with this early signing period, as Rivals director of recruiting Mike Farrell said more high-level recruits entered December undecided than at this time a year ago. Seven of Rivals’ top 14 senior prospects remain uncommitte­d.

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