Los Angeles Times

Better late than sorry?

Stanford’s Shaw says there could be complicati­ons with an early signing period.

- By Ben Bolch ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter: @latbbolch

One of the intended benefits of college football’s new early signing period is that it will allow high school players to lock in on a school in December, preventing two additional months of recruiting drama.

That is, if it doesn’t lead to a different kind of fuss.

“Honestly, what’s going to happen, my little crystal ball here, you’re going to recruit and sign an offensive lineman,” Stanford coach David Shaw said in describing a hypothetic­al scenario Thursday at the Hollywood & Highland Center during Pac-12 Conference media days. “Great, he’s committed, his family’s committed. He wants to come. He wants to be there.

“The O-line coach may get a coordinato­r job someplace else, may become a head coach someplace else, now you might talk about changing the offense with a new coordinato­r and new line coach. Well, he may not want to play in that new system, so now we’ve created a problem in December that we wouldn’t have had in February because he wouldn’t have signed to begin with. So for me it’s created more problems than I think many people are seeing that are going to happen.”

Several coaches voiced concerns about teenagers being forced to making binding commitment­s at a time when both players and schools are still feeling each other out.

“Guy’s 18 and making a very important decision, and between him and his family needs more time to make that decision,” Washington State coach Mike Leach said. “In addition, as a school, you try to evaluate character and things like that. The more opportunit­y you have to get to know them and spend time with them and their family, the better your chances of making accurate judgments on that. So from that standpoint, I think the additional time is helpful.”

Shaw said Stanford would continue to allow players who change their minds out of their letters of intent “because we’ve never held anybody to a letter of intent that really wants to get out, whether they have a legitimate reason or not.”

Fundamenta­lly, at least, the mechanics of recruiting remain unchanged.

“At the end of the day,” Oregon coach Willie Taggart said, “you’ve got to recruit, recruit, recruit and get guys to come into your system, the right guys.”

Title is needed

Pac-12 coaches like to trumpet the top-to-bottom strength of the conference, repeatedly saying there are no gimme games.

But UCLA coach Jim Mora acknowledg­ed that a lack of success on college football’s biggest stage has hurt the national perception of the Pac-12. Every Power Five conference besides the Pac-12 has won a national championsh­ip since USC defeated Oklahoma in the 2005 Bowl Championsh­ip Series title game.

“Every team is capable of winning any game,” Mora said, “but for us to legitimize it outside of our conference, someone needs to go win a national championsh­ip here soon, and then when that happens then I think more of the nation will stand up and take notice of just how competitiv­e the Pac-12 is.”

Mr. Personalit­y

Leach likes to get straight to business. He sat down behind a table on a platform inside a ballroom and looked like someone who wished he could get right back up to leave.

“All right, any questions?” Leach said by way of introducti­on, prompting laughter among reporters.

Asked by a Pac-12 official to make some opening remarks, Leach said, “What did you say?” He then pointed to his players preparing to speak with reporters in the back of the room.

“There’s Peyton Pelluer over there,” Leach said. “He’s got the samurai hairdo going, middle linebacker, great player. And then Jamal Morrow, running back. And he continues to walk away, very disinteres­ted.”

Leach went on to address an unusual mix of topics that included millennial­s and whether hot dogs are sandwiches.

Southern comfort

Oregon’s 24-player freshman class includes seven players from Southern California and a handful who were recruited by USC and UCLA. Taggart cited two factors that helped sway those players away from their local colleges.

“I think the ‘O’ and the Nike swoosh helps going in there,” Taggart said, referring to the influx of money and gear from the apparel giant through its affiliatio­n with Phil Knight but perhaps forgetting that USC is also a Nike school. “Then the tradition. Oregon has won a lot of football games. I think I saw a stat where the last 20 years probably the winningest team in the Pac-12.”

Oregon finished last season 4-8 overall and 2-7 in the Pac-12, its struggles the reason that Taggart was addressing the media after replacing Mark Helfrich.

The Ducks also lost wide receiver Darren Carrington, who transferre­d to Utah. Carrington was dismissed from Oregon two weeks ago, after he was arrested on a misdemeano­r DUI charge.

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