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2010 Recruiting Wrapup
Written by atlantasooner   
Thursday, 04 February 2010 12:57

Recruiting Wrap for 2010

I'm just going to link to the stats, rankings, and accomplishments from the OU official site instead of rehashing them in the wrapup.

http://www.soonersports.com/sports/m-footbl/archive/2010_signing_day.html

There are highlights reels on this site and Rivals also has footage on the signees. But, I'm going to include links to as much other free video highlights as I can find.

QB:

Blake Bell 6-6, 230, 4.6

Heupel has continued with his one offer at a time recruiting style at QB save for this year when he offered Bell and Connor Wood. Now, it's generally thought that OU offered Wood first which is true. However, I have it on good authority that really Heupel preferred Bell .  I know that sounds like such  massive case of sour grapes. But again, trust me it's true. All Bell did this year as a senior was show vast improvement over his junior and first year of playing QB (previously Blake had been a WR). Blake showed a great arm, great ability to throw on the run, and finally an ability to move the chains and make plays with his legs.  Now Bell's rankings by some of the recruiting guys are just plain weird and contradictory. At one moment, they are saying he has the highest ceiling/most pro potential of any QB in the class, and then the next moment they are downgrading his ranking due to him needing to redshirt a year and get more experience at QB. So he's behind shorter QBs who don't have his arm strength or his athletic ability who have been playing QB longer. Other gurus see Blake for what he is (the best QB in the recruiting class). A prototype NFL frame and arm with the mobility to move the pocket and make plays on the run. His play in the Kansas HS Playoff Semis against Hutchinson gave a glimpse into his overall playmaking ability. Against a much more talented Hutchinson squad (with OU verbal Geneo Grissom), Bell singled handedly kept Bishop Carroll in the game.  The only real downside on Bell is that he's not graduating early to speed up his development. I've been asked who to compare to Blake Bell in terms of college QBs, and I'm having a hard time coming up with a comparison, 6-6 QBs are not supposed to be this mobile. Fortunately, Josh Heupel provided the ideal comparison, a young more mobile Ben Roethlisberger.

Quality Grade: A+ (Five Star Ranking by Scout)

Quantity Grade: A (I just don't see OU signing two QBs in one year. One QB always ends up transferring)

Blake Bell Highlight reel

RB:

Brennan Clay 6-0, 190, 4.45

Roy Finch 5-8, 175. 4.45

OU got two fantastic RBs in this class very early. Starting with the first verbal, Clay is a fantastic RB who also excels at WR. As a junior, Clay had over 1000 yards rushing and 1000 yards receiving and was the first San Diego area HS RB to achieve that mark. Clay looks like a combination of Demarco Murray running the ball (freshman year) with a hint of Reggie Bush in terms of downfield receiving skills. He's that good. As I mentioned in the Offense Defense Game review, Clay was just dominating at the RB position and easily had over a 100 yards rushing. Clay verbaled to OU sight unseen, and really was the catalyst for OU getting other California blue chips Kenny Stills/Tony Jefferson. Roy Finch used to live in Edmond but moved to Florida his junior year of HS, so although OU got a big time RB from Florida there's clearly an OU connection. I give Finch a lot of credit once Brennan Clay verbaled to OU, Finch knew he wanted to go to OU and verbaled before any other RBs could decide. At the time, OU was still recruiting Gio Bernard from Tampa as well as Delans Griffin in state. Finch is a lot like Clay in his tremendous ability to catch out of the backfield. He's an excellent WR. Comparison seems to me to be in the direction of Darren Sproles rather than Quentin Griffin. Finch like Sproles is deadly in the return game. I can really see at least one of these RBs playing next year, perhaps both depending upon their impact in the return games. They provide an excellent compliment to the bigger I-formation RBs that OU already has in Jermie Calhoun and Jonathan Miller. Only Demarco Murray's return will keep them off the field. You can tell listening to Bob's interviews that he is beyond excited about the RB class throwing out names like Joe Washington and Reggie Bush to describe the playmaking skills of Clay and Finch.

 

Quality Grade: A+ (Clay's a five star RB by Scout, both RBs are in Rivals Top 100)

Quantity Grade: A+ (To get two RBs with such versatile skills running and receiving the ball is one thing, to get two additional play makers in the return game is something else)

Brennan Clay Video (Footage is from just one game. One kickoff return for a TD, another one for 70 yards as well as rushing and receiving highlights)

Roy Finch Video (his highlights begin at the 45 second mark)

 

WR:

Kenny Stills  6-1,180, 4.35

Justin McCay  6-3, 200, 4.5

Joe Powell 5-11, 185, 4.5

Sheldon McClain 6-2, 180, 4.5

Trey Franks  5-9, 180, 4.3

So first off the speeds on Franks and Stills are legit. Tracks times or laser timed. So OU's adding some serious speed to the WR position. The Blue Chips here are Stills and Justin McCay. McCay started the year as a five star Ath/LB/SS, until all year long as a senior he proved that he was dominating play making WR. McCay is just so physical at 6-3, 200 that you don't expect him to that quick or fast (Bob broke out the Malcolm Kelly example today, but I think McCay might have more overall speed). The only real question might be is if McCay can be a great WR because he would be a great SS/OLB. I think his senior year answered that question. Also, McCay is a weapon on kickoff returns as well as a demon on kickoff coverage. If McCay is power, then Stills is speed. Stills had back to back 1000 yard receiving seasons showing great downfield speed as well as great overall receiving skills. Stills is already on campus and once an NCAA issue with one of his classes is resolved should get a long look at WR during spring ball. OU beat Florida for Stills, if you want some idea of the level of competition for this elite San Diego talent. Now OU did miss out on several big time WRs that were in play early for OU, Kyle Prater from Illinois to USC and Darius White to UT. To be clear though, after losing out on Darius White OU had several chances to recruit big time WRs (Kadron Boone, JUCO WR Thompkins) and had a chance to re recruit Mike Davis who left LSU for UT (OU passed when Davis called) and did not feel like their WR class needed another player. The last 3 WRs are less heralded mainly for two big reasons. One, Sheldon McClain got hurt early in his senior year so he never really got a chance to improve his ranking. Trey Franks got suspended for a semester from sports due to some texting shenanigans involving him and two female students. Joe Powell however did have a very good senior year, and some observers think that Powell is better than teammate UT recruit Mike Davis, just like last year OU felt that Jaz Reynolds was better than UT WR Timmons (early signs would prove that to be correct, but Timmons has time to make OU regret that decision). McClain is on campus rehabbing his knee and should be able to go through spring practice. Before his injury, ESPN was tracking McClain as a top 150 national type kid. Franks is the wildcard here with potential game breaking speed at slot WR and in special teams. Powell like Ryan Broyles played a bunch of positions his senior year and could easily be a CB as well (during a summer 7 on 7 tourney, Powell was a lock down corner). You have to wonder when he has a chance to dedicate himself to WR what is his potential ceiling. Overall, the biggest boost for OU is the infusion of talent and competition these guys will bring to the WR position.

Quality Grade B+  (Great class with stars in Stills/McCay. Powell was a 4 star WR by Scout, and before getting hurt McClain was a 4 star WR.)

Quantity Grade: A (OU badly need to replenish the WR ranks and this class succeeds in doing that)

Kenny Stills (2009 highlights. Video quality is mediocre in parts but his speeds leaps off the screen)

Justin McCay (2009 highlights at both LB and WR)

Sheldon McClain (2008 Highlights due to his injury, but they look good)

 

OL:

Tyrus Thompson 6-6, 300, 5.1

Bronson Irwin 6-5,310, 5.1

Adam Shead 6-4, 310, 5.2

Austin Woods 6-5, 290, 5.0

Daryl Wiliams 6-5, 275, 5.0

Josh Aladenoye 6-5, 330, 5.2

This was exactly the OL class that OU needed. It's has depth, talent, and versatility. The best news on the OU offensive line recruits were their performance at two events. One, all of the OU verbals starred at OU's summer camps. Two, four of the verbals (Shead, Woods, Thompson, Irwin) formed the basis of a great OL at the Offense-Defense All Star game to the point that they dominated the entire game leading to their team rushing for over 250 yards. The OL  class more than just being 5 signees is a complete OL  a center, two guards, and two tackles. OU lucked out with Irwin and Woods have already enrolled to provide key depth at OC and OG for Spring. There's a good chance both kids may end up in the OL 2 deep. The other Guard Shead could also find himself not redshirting and providing depth this fall. Shead is as ready an OG prospect that OU has signed in the last couple of years. The two tackles Thompson and Williams both have elite potential, but need a redshirt year for different reasons. Thompson needs the year to develop further at OL. Thompson prior to this year played primarily DT (best comparison that I like using for Thompson is Jammal Brown). Williams has great technique and blocking skills, but needs to add 20 to 25 pounds to be that elite LT.  Currently Williams looks more like an NBA power forward than an OT. Some will focus on the absence of a JUCO OT, but OU only really liked two kids (John Cullen and Roszell Gayden). And instead of reaching again for a player like Vinson like last year I'd prefer they save the ship.

Quality Grade: A (Everyone of the OL verbals was ranked 4 stars by one service.)

Quantity Grade A+ (OU added a complete OL. One center, two guards, two tackles)

Bronson Irwin Highlights from a Summer camp in 2009

Tyrus Thompson Highlights from 2009

Austin Woods Highlights from his Junior year 2008

http://www.arkansasonline.com/videos/2009/mar/23/3491/

Adam Snead Highlights from his Senior year 2009

http://www.dallasnews.com/video/dallasnews/sports/index.html?nvid=412631

 

 

TE/FB/H-Back

Austin Haywood 6-5, 245, 4.7

Trey Millard 6-3, 245, 4.7

TE other than OL had the biggest productivity drop last year, but OU certainly wasn't prepared for that going into the recruiting year. OU thought that they had found their next Gresham in Xavier Grimble at OU pipeline Bishop Gorman, but Grimble shocked the OU coaches by choosing USC. It looked like OU might stand pat at TE after securing Juco TE Lane Johnson (qualifier out of HS, Johnson left JUCO after one year and redshirted). Then, TE position fell apart. Gresham got hurt, once and future Gresham James Hanna disappeared and OU was playing James Raterree. OU desperately need a TE but it was an awful TE class depth wise. They tried talking to kids in California, Mississippi, and Georgia. ThenOut of nowhere like a Winning Golden Ticket, Austin Haywood burst on the Oklahoma prep scene. Haywood who had transferred from Anadarko to Southmoore gave some early hints of his potential at a 7 on 7 tourney in the Summer. Once Southmoore started playing though, Haywood exploded on the scene as a TD target for QB Jameel Thompson, a red zone wildcat QB (yep QB at 6-5, 245), and finally a pass rushing DE (with 73 tackles, two interceptions, nine sacks, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries). Haywood's highlight reel is awesome showing great athleticism and speed as well looking like a natural pass receiver (Grimble is a better blocker right now, but Haywood looks far better catching the ball). I honestly think if he had been a known recruit his junior year that Haywood might have been a five star prospect. For two final examples of his athletic ability/potential, recently  Haywood won the MVP award at a recent basketball tourney at Skiatook (all great TEs seem to have that basketball background), and in his radio interviews on signing day Bob dared compare Haywood to the Gold Standard of OU Tight Ends TGKJ (the great Keith Jackson). As if Haywood wasn't enough, OU added a TE/HBack prospect in Trey Millard who looks like a better receiver version of Matt Clapp. Millard was amazingly productive as the primary RB his senior year (over 1400 yards) and showed a great game as a pass receiver. There are players on campus that could force both kids to redshirt. They have spring to grab a lead because athletically both kids appear to be big upgrades over what is on campus.

Quality Grade: A+ (Haywood could easily be the best TE prospect in the country. Millard is probably the best HBack/FB prospect in the country)

Quantity Grade: A+ (OU basically lost the ability to run their Power No Huddle look. These two kids could easily restore it. Millard could even be the feature back while Murray flexes out.)

Austin Haywood 2009 Highlights

Trey Millard Highlights from one game (Millard is number 9 playing primarily RB, but also DT/DE)

 

DT:

Eric Humphrey 6-4, 275. 4.75

Torrea Peterson 6-4, 295, 4.9

Damon Williams 6-4, 310. 5.1

Daniel Noble 6-4, 280, 4.9

It was a weird year in DT recruiting with no Five Star local elite talent like McFarland, Granger, or McCoy on the radar. Now UT will claim that they got a five star kid in Taylor Bible. Personally, I don't think his highlight reel/all star games are in the class of the previous talents listed. But Bible was the highest ranked DT in Texas, and is headed to UT. OU's first verbal for 2010 was actually Daniel Noble. Noble who is blind in one eye, is a very solid run blocking DT. Next OU out of nowhere offered Torrea Peterson ahead of Bible, Ashton Dorsey (UT verbal) or Deaires Cotton (UT Verbal). Now Peterson would soon end up with offers from UT and USC while being ranked pretty low by most services. His rankings didn't match his offers (Ken Norton JR doesn't visit San Antonio for just anyone). Peterson verbaled to OU before his season started, and OU looked done at DT. Peterson remained relatively lowly ranked, then he played in the Offense Defense Bowl. In that game, Peterson was a complete terror with a great burst, pursuit and collapsing the pocket from an inside pass rush. He looked like the best DT in Texas. OU then in December started up defensive tackle recruiting in Texas when it was clear that they were not going to get a one of the West Coast DTs they coveted (Uko, Heimuli, Marsh). Again, like the Haywood recruiting gift, two Dallas area DTs had had massive senior years. First OU got Damon Williams who as a 3-4 NG had 99 tackles for his team. His highlight reel shows him dominating the line of scrimmage while showing good mobility. He's a massive DT who is athletic enough to play center for his HS basketball team. He could easily be an 6-4, 310 run stopper star for the Sooners. While OU was getting their next Granger like NG, even more of nowhere Eric Humphrey showed up on the recruiting radar. Humphrey was a relatively unknown 6-3, 240 DT/DE tweener before his senior year. Then Humphrey transformed into a 6-4, 275 pass rushing DT monster who had 17 sacks as a senior. Humphrey's senior year footage rocketed him up recruiting charts, and he very well may end up being the elite DT from this class in the Big 12. Humphrey at 275 easily looks like he can add another 15 to 20 pounds more without losing any speed. There's a chance one of these DTs could end up being moved to OL. The early guess would be either Noble (although the vision problem might hamper that effort) or Williams (he could be a dominant OG). I can see at least one of these DTs not redshirting to provide some depth at DT.

Quality Grade A- (All 4 DTs are ranked as 4 star talents by at least one service)

Quantity Grade A+ (4 DTs and a variety of skill sets and abilities)

Torrea Peterson (highlights from last year, but still better looking footage than Rivals has had)

http://texasfootball.com/mediamgr/player.php?sid=5258&s=1245256570-851547395

Daniel Noble (highlights from last year)

 

DE:

Chuka Ndulue 6-3, 245, 4.7

Geneo Grissom 6-4, 230, 4.6

OU to be honest really didn't have a great need at DE, but OU still got two excellent prospects. Of course, the miss here that everyone will focus on is Jackson Jeffcoat to UT. However, OU perhaps cognizant of Jackson's leaning grabbed a prospect with almost identical measurables. OU offered Chuka Ndulue very early in recruiting right around the same time that Reggie Wilson verbaled to UT. Ndulue has amazing potential at DE. He's only been playing football for 3 years, and was hurt much of his junior year. OU only really needed to see him in spring football before his senior year and offered before other programs could get involved. Ndulue at 6-3, 245 looks like a potential Jeremy Beal clone, but will need some time to develop pass rushing technique. However, frame wise Ndulue looks like he could easily keep his speed at the 6-3, 260 mark. The other DE was the late addition of former KU verbal Geneo Grissom. Grissom at 6-4, 230 has a massive wingspan and easily looks like he could carry 260+ on his frame. Easy comparisons to current Sooner Frank Alexander are there, but personally I think Grissom seems to be very similar to Jeffcoat (both kids are excellent HS basketball players as well). Jeffcoat is more polished as a pass rusher right now with a better burst, but Grissom looks like he might have a bigger/better frame.

Quality Grade: B+ (Both kids are ranked 4 stars by a service, but will need redshirt years to help their development. Ceilings are very high.)

Quantity Grade: A (OU can afford to redshirt both kids with their current DE depth. You can never had too many pass rushers in your program)

LB:

Rashad Favors 6-2, 225, 4.5

Aaron Franklin 6-1, 210, 4.5

Corey Nelson 6-0, 210, 4.5

The very definition of signing day surprises revamps this position quite a bit. So OU cuts ties with Jarrett Lake apparently almost a month ago due to concerns over grades and OU not having all of his transcript information. Lake who didn't play at all his senior year due to an eligibility issue, got his offer from a great performance at OU camp at LB, a position he never played (his junior year he was a WR). So Lake signs with the Pigs who figure that they can get anyone enrolled. So this looked like a horrible blow to the LB position, except about 20 minutes later Joe Powell in his interview with KREF talking about signing with OU tells a stunned James Hale/Toby Rowland that Corey Nelson will be signing with OU today. Nelson is the blue chip of this group, five star OLB by Scout/Under Armour All American. Nelson's junior year film on rivals is just sick. He's just dominating all over the place. Now, his senior film isn't quite as star studded so he's dropped in some rankings, but for most services Nelson is the top ranked OU recruit from Texas. Borrowing from our editor, Pong, the Sooner that Nelson reminds me of the most is Rufus Alexander (but faster). He could be an elite SAM LB for OU. In addition, Nelson is absolute terror on special teams. Combined with the Hammer Ronnell Lewis, kick returners might not like OU at all, also Corey has an amazing ability to block punts and field goals. The LB position grade has literally gone up a full letter with Nelson, and he's raised the class grade just by himself. He eliminated the only weakness of this class, no blue chip LB. Aaron Franklin also has fantastic footage before his knee injury. Franklin as a senior was still getting over that injury, so he dropped some in the rankings. Franklin appears to be all the way back physically now at 6-2, 207, running a 4.47. Before his injury, most gurus felt like he was the going to be the best junior LB in Texas. The 3rd LB recruit did not get a chance to play his senior year due to an ankle injury. However, as a junior, Favors showed great range and power playing Strong Safety. OU made an easy projection of him to OLB/MLB with his great athletic ability. It will take Favors some time to adjust to LB, but physical skills are in the Travis Lewis range (watch him accelerate and close on the kickoff returner in the Soonersports highlights that RB is Herschel Sims who has elite 4.4 homerun speed).  These 3 LBs provide a huge boost of speed and OLB coverage ability, especially SAM LB. Combine that with the power and speed of the previous LB class which has more of a Mike/Will flavor , and OU will have a very versatile group of LBs to use no matter what type of offense they face.

Quality Grade: A- (Five Star OLB, Franklin is a 4 star OLB by two services, despite not playing Favors potential kept him at 3 stars.)

Quantity Grade A (Two great OLB prospects possible SAM every down LBs, and one WILL/MIKE guy in Favors. Add it to the great LB core of last year, and OU has reloaded at LB)

 

DB

Aaron Colvin 6-0, 180, 4.5

Julian Wilson 6-3, 180, 4.35

Quentin Hayes 6-1, 180, 4.4

James Haynes 6-1, 185, 4.35

Tony Jefferson 6-0, 200, 4.5

This is great DB class with tremendous speed and versatility. As, Bob Stoops joked the DB signees could almost be a track squad there's so much speed. The versatility is also great with 3 players (Hayes,Haynes, and Wilson) appearing to have the skill set for safety or CB. First, we have to talk about Tony Jefferson. Jefferson is the best safety prospect OU has signed since Tony Cade or Roy Williams. Being from California, the Roy comparisons are a natural to Jefferson who is a tremendous hitter. But Jefferson also seems to have great coverage potential. Jefferon is already on campus and is in the mix for the open safety spot if Jonathan Nelson. Jefferson might be the best player OU signed this year. OU offered Aaron Colvin after an awesome performance at OU's summer camp. Colvin got the OU offer ahead of two other in state CBs Xavier Smith (to Mizzou) and De'vante Porter (Tech). We will see if OU made the right choice. But Colvin had a great senior at Owasso. Hopefully. Colvin continues a recent trend of Tulsa area CBs for the Sooners (Franks to Lynn to Colvin). Now onto the speed, Wilson and Haynes both have the track times to justify the sub 4.4 speeds I'm giving them. They have elite speed. I'll be honest that I was stunned that UT didn't put up a huge fight to stop OU from getting Haynes. He's the time of DB that UT has been recruiting away from OU the last couple of years (Curtis Brown). Haynes could easily be the big CB that OU's system needs, or Haynes could be the elite speed recovery safety that OU needs against all these spread teams. Julian Wilson is the last of the OU summer camp superstars that earned a ship. Wilson was a multi position talent for Southmoore this year. He could easily be OU's tallest CB since Andre Woolfolk (good early comparison) or develop into a bigger center field safety with elite speed. Hayes is the last DB recruit and he also could be either OU's big CB or an excellent coverage safety. Hayes was a teammate of Demontre Hurst and was a playmaker in the secondary for Lancaster this fall.

Quality Grade A- (Five star talent in Jefferson, high 4 talent in Haynes. Hayes is a ESPN Top 150 member as well. Colvin/Wilson are 3 star kids but have serious potential )

Quantity Grade A+ (One big time safety in Jefferson, one true CB in Colvin, and 3 players in Wilson, Hayes, and Haynes who could play CB or safety. That kind of flexibility is huge for OU's defense in the spread era)

Tony Jefferson (highlights from 2009)

 

Quentin Hayes (highlights from 2008)

 

James Haynes (from 2008)

http://www.takkle.com/videos/18325/-/member/7457769

 

Overall Class

Quite simply the best overall offensive class of the Bob Stoops era. Now OU may have signed higher ranked offensive players in Bomar and AD. But OU has never signed a collective group of so many blue chips on offense.

Elite QB, check

Two elite RBs, check

Elite TE, check

Elite FB, check

Two elite WRs, check

Five blue chip OL, check

There are no weaknesses with this offensive class. There are minor gripes about not closing on one more elite WR in Darius White or Marcus Lucas. Perhaps, a JUCO OT would have been a good addition. But these are all minor issues at this point.  The massive infusion of offensive talent was really needed with all the great players leaving OU and with last year's class being slightly weaker in terms of offensive players. On offensive side, especially OU did a fantastic job recruiting outside of Texas and Oklahoma. Personally, I think Blake Bell is a better prospect than any QB in Texas (including Connor Wood who OU also offered). At RB, I think Finch/Clay are much better than any RB from Texas. At WR, I think OU was able in Stills/McCay to match the UT twosome of White/Davis. And at TE, I think Haywood is better than any TE that is out of Texas. So right there, you have 6 of OU's best players not from Texas. At OL, I think OU signed their best OL class under Stoops, and while the tackles might need longer to develop they have the highest ceiling. You always love to get a true center. Let's hope OU can actually avoid their trend of senior centers being replaced by freshman (from Vince Carter to Jon Cooper to Ben Habern). Early prediction of who will contribute year one. Bronson Irwin at OG, Austin Haywood at TE, Justin McCay at Wr, Kenny Stills at WR, Finch or Clay at RB it's just too close to call.

While Bob was establishing a new high mark on offense, OU wasn't exactly just sitting around in defensive recruiting. The way I'd like to approach the defensive class is by looking at it combined with last year's class.

DT: Jamarkus McFarland and now Torrea Peterson, Damon Williams, Eric Humphrey and Daniel Noble (One five star kid with host of 4 star DTs talents all who bring something slightly different to the mix)

DE: Justin Chaisson, Jarrett Brown, Chuka Ndulue, and Grissom (great athleticism and depth. Potentially stars in Chaisson and Grissom)

LB: Tom Wort, Ronnell Lewis, Jayden Bird and Nelson, Franklin, and Favors (Super athletic MIKE backers with size and power, then add speed and ability to play in space for WILL and SAM)

Safety: Brent and now Jefferson (two elite safeties, best pair Bob has ever recruited back to back?) and depth from Harris and Hayes.

CB: Hurst is already penciled in to start. Gabe Lynn and Marcus Trice to provide depth. Then you add Aaron Colvin, James Haynes, and Julian Wilson for even more size and speed. (OU's drastically improved their CB depth and talent)

Defensive/special teams contributors? Tony Jefferson, one DT - Torrea Peterson for now, Corey Nelson, one CB- James Haynes due to ability to play safety as well.

Per a suggestion by my editor, I'm going to do a classes through the decade comparison for a more historical perspective.  But right now overall I think this might be Bob's best class.

Scout Ranking: 2nd

Rivals Ranking: 7th

ESPN Ranking: 5th

MaxPreps Ranking: 4th

 

Overall Grades

Quality A- (There are just a few too many 3 star question marks in this class, plus 3 players who did not play their Senior years. )

Quantity A+ (There is not a numbers gap in this class at all. And primary positions of greatest need WR, OL, DT, and TE all got a massive infusion of talent and numbers)




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Comments (2)Add Comment
another fine job
written by Jack Durrett II, February 05, 2010
I have enjoyed your observations for years. You're even right most of the time!! HA!
...
written by SoonerSunDevil, February 05, 2010
Stills got his clearance yesterday and officially signed. This class has the potential to be outstanding.

Write comment

busy
 

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