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'06 MN DT Walker Ashley (Minny...no, maybe USC......no, PSU...no, Minnesota commit)

there was a town in Minn that registered -54 this week.. not wind chill.. straight temp reading... Columbus has to feel like the equator...

I loved the quote from some guy in Minn the other day... "normally it gets about -15 to -20 around this time of year... but it's really cold today"
 
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Laurinaitis named Mr. Football - Rosemount Sun Current

Laurinaitis named Mr. Football
By John Sherman
Sun Newspapers
(Created 12/23/2004 10:04:08 AM)

Even though Wayzata High linebacker James Laurinaitis did not come out a winner in the Prep Bowl this season, he has won the Mr. Football of Minnesota Award for 2004.

This is the second year for the Mr. Football Award, which last year was shared by Lakeville running back Brylee Callender and Breck School quarterback Liam OíHagan. The award is open to seniors only.

Laurinaitis, the first defensive player to win the award, performed brilliantly throughout the season with a total of 197 tackles in 14 games.

His two-year total of 316 tackles may be a state record.

The Mr. Football Award caps an impressive list of honors for Laurinaitis. The 6-foot-3, 235-pound linebacker and tight end was named to the All-State first team by minnesotapreps.com and was also voted state Defensive Player of the Year by that organization. He made the All-Classic Lake team and the Associated Press All-State team.

Laurinaitis comes from an athletic background. His father Joe played college football and was a sensation in pro wrestling as Animal of the famous ìRoad Warriors Legion of Doomî tag team.

In evaluating talent, college scouts look at four things more than anything else ñ academics, football IQ, speed and strength.

Laurinaitis has a 3.6 grade point average and scored a 25 on the ACT test. Scouts like the way he sees the entire field and reacts to situations. They also like the way he runs the 40-yard dash in 4.6 seconds and bench presses 305 pounds.

Laurinaitis is not just a top football player, he is a star in hockey as well. He scored his first goal of the season Saturday as Wayzata defeated Roseville 6-1 in a non-conference game.

Earlier this year, Letís Play Hockey magazine voted him ìMost likely to go proî among Minnesotaís prep players. Ironically, he was playing in a hockey game for Wayzata High when he was announced as the winner of the Mr. Football Award on Saturday, Dec. 4.

Laurinaitis said he is pleased to be Mr. Football of 2004. ìBeing named the best player in the state is a great honor,î he said, ìespecially this year, because there are so many great athletes.î

Laurinaitis said playing in the Prep Bowl against Minnetonka was a special experience ñ because of the rivalry and because the teams always seem to play right down to the wire.

ìI am still disappointed that we lost,î he said. ìBut if youíd told me at the start of the season that weíd be in the Prep Bowl, I would have taken it.î

Good genetics

James Laurinaitis said the two people who have supported him most in his athletic career are his dad and mom, Joe and Julie.

ìMy dad was a linebacker and my mom was an All-State hurdler,î said Laurinaitis. ìThatís probably the best combination of genetics a person could have.î

Joe was a junior college All-American at Golden Valley Lutheran College after an outstanding career as a high school athlete at Irondale.

Instead of pursuing a career in football, the elder Laurinaitis became one of the worldís most prominent professional wrestlers.

ìMy mom and dad have been huge inspirations to me,î said James Laurinaitis. ìMy mom taught me about nutrition and my dad taught me about training and mental toughness.î

Laurinaitis became a linebacker while he was playing freshman football at Wayzata High.

ìI was a defensive end at first, and I wasnít very big ñ only 5-11 and 180 pounds,î he said. ìWe were playing Edina and one of our linebackers got hurt. In my first game at linebacker, I made a game-saving tackle against Edina and I realized thatís where I wanted to be.î

More awards

The Mr. Football of Minnesota committee has three more awards, in addition to the Mr. Football Award.

Walker Ashley of Eden Prairie High School has been named Minnesota Defensive Player of the Year. The 6-foot-4, 280-pound senior played defensive end and tackle for Mike Grantís Eagles and specialized in stopping the run. He was also a top blocker and pass catcher on offense.

Nick Mertens of East Grand Forks has been named Minnesota Offensive Player of the Year. He showed his stuff in the Prep Bowl, leading the Green Wave to the state Class 3A title. In the championship game against Becker, Mertens passed for 224 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 59 yards and another touchdown. He also kicked a field goal and ran for a two-point conversion.

Laurinaitis, Ashley and Mertens were Mr. Football finalists along with South St. Paul quarterback James Leary, St. Louis Park running back Arsenio Richardson, Bloomington Jefferson quarterback Mike Spillman, Sibley East quarterback Jordan Berg, Delano fullback-linebacker Nate Triplett, Mahtomedi lineman Andy Franta, Eastview lineman Ryan Ruckdashel, Tartan running back Jay Thomas, Northfield linebacker Zach Larsen and Maple Grove wide receiver-defensive back Greg Martin.


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Lions need to lock up a few more recruits - York Daily Record

Lions need to lock up a few more recruits
Frank Bodani
Monday, January 24, 2005
The next 10 days will provide an important insight into the supposed rebuilding Penn State football program.

The final 10 days of the recruiting season.

The final chances to turn a really good recruiting class into a great one.

The Lions already have locked up the talent they need at the spots most lacking. The class has overwhelming speed. It has two diamonds in program-changing recruits Justin King and Derrick Williams.

And yet, you must always take advantage of the situation.

There are still four or five scholarships left to lock up by Feb. 2, the first day recruits can make their verbal commitments binding.

So the Lions must strike on their recent good fortune — nearly their entire impressive defense returning in the fall; winning their final two games of the season; luring nationally-treasured talent in King and Williams.

The Lions must take advantage.

They have received only one commitment since landing Williams, arguably the nation's top recruit, and William Penn speedster Knowledge Timmons a month ago.

And that pickup is a mediocre offensive tackle.

There are still 10 days to convince the best talent left to come to Penn State.

Like linebacker Brian Cushing from New Jersey. He seems to have the same kind of potential as Lions' young stars Dan Connor and Paul Posluszny.

Lure talent like gigantic offensive tackle Jared Gaither, who is at Hargrave Military Academy in Virginia.

Or Jerome Hayes, another New Jersey linebacker. He's not quite as highly rated as Cushing but would be a major pickup at a position where the Lions could always use more bodies.

Like defensive lineman Walker Ashley, whose father played for the Lions.

Or Washington state running back J.R. Hasty.

And, finally, receivers David Harvey (Pittsburgh) and Todd Nolen (Virginia). PSU desperately needs at least one more receiver, its most needy position.

They won't get all of them, but they need to get at least a few.

To add depth. To keep building momentum. To stockpile the kind of talent needed to turn around four losing seasons in five years.

And to send a message: That Penn State is dead-set on matching the recovery projects of USC and Oklahoma.

"You never want your momentum to stagnate," said Phil Grosz of the State College-based Blue-White Illustrated. "If Penn State gets three or four of these kids, it will be one of the biggest stories of recruiting."

"They've made a comeback, you've got to give them credit. Now they just have to finish strong," said Tom Lemming, an ESPN recruiting expert.

It will come down to the end with so many of these kids, most not expected to announce until Feb. 2 or just before.

No matter how hard Joe Paterno and his assistants press, some are longshots, like Cushing and Ashley, who seem enamored with USC.

But the Lions have wonderful chances to get the rest. Gaither is a former high school teammate of Derrick Williams. Harvey is a former teammate of PSU quarterback Anthony Morelli. Hasty has been recommended to Penn State by former Lions Curt Warner and Bobby Engram, friends of the family.

Nolen, whose mother is from Pennsylvania, will likely decide between PSU and Virginia Tech. The highly-regarded Hayes has loved Penn State since he was a kid.

It's a nice mix of linemen, receivers and linebackers with a running back thrown in. Lemming calls Hasty "one of the most underrated players in the country."

It's the kind of talent that will mean the difference between Penn State bringing in a top-20 class and a top-10 class.

Maybe the difference between the Alamo Bowl and the Orange Bowl in a couple of years.

A 4-7 team with a top 10 recruiting class?

So the hope is there.
 
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LightningRod said:
A friend of mine who is a Penn State fan sent me an email a bit ago and told me that JoePa has an inhome with Ashley today. Does anybody with premium know anything about this?
I believe that JoePa has already had his in home but I wont swear to that. I thought I read/heard that he had to make an in-home early on in order to get Ashley just to visit.

I htink PSU is out, I understand Ashley wasnt high on them after his official visit.
 
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USCemper is posting on BN (come on out of the woodwork if you are around Scemper) that USC has 6 schollies left. He also says they are seriously in on 11 players right now. Ashley is rated 19th at his position. Almost all of the other 10 are rated in the top 10 at their positions.

I would love to land Ashley, but it doesn't sit well with me that we are hoping for kids that USC doesn't have room for.
 
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I asked questions of another poster that are being reported on another site! I cannot stop patting myself on the back!

If you have BN premium read the Buckeye Grove column for this week. Look at some of those players that we all fussed over so long ago. Forget about the rankings and just take whoever the staff brings in. For every Fred Davis there is a Terry Glenn.
 
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I would love to land Ashley, but it doesn't sit well with me that we are hoping for kids that USC doesn't have room for.<!-- / message -->
It bugs me a little too, Oh8ch. But remember, they had plenty of room for Maurice Wells.

On any specific kid, I don't think the national ratings really matter much. What's the real difference between the 8th ranked player at a position and the 14th? Recruiting is far from science, so I'll trust that tOSU staff has a better grasp of who they like/want/need than some guy who calls teenaged boys after school and writes a column for a living.

But there's no question that Petey's on a helluva roll these days. He's got USCum in the enviable postion of almost being able to pick and choose from among the cream of the HS crops. It's exactly what you'd expect for a team that has 1) two back-to-back NCs, 2) two of the last three Heisman winners and 3) a glamorous, warm weather location. And Petey himself is a 'made-for-TV' glamor-boy salesman. That's a real powerful combination and it's hard for 18 year old kids to turn their backs on it.

I believe that 1) we're headed back toward an NC, 2) that Teddy Ginn will get plenty of Heisman attention from the media and 3) that we'll eventually ride out this wave of crappy publicity and start improving our own image. Then, in a year or two, we'll likely get a shot at the Rubbers on the field. That's our chance to prove the recruiting gurus and broadcast morons wrong -- just like we did against Miami. I can't wait!
 
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But there's no question that Petey's on a helluva roll these days. He's got USCum in the enviable postion of almost being able to pick and choose from among the cream of the HS crops. It's exactly what you'd expect for a team that has 1) two back-to-back NCs, 2) two of the last three Heisman winners and 3) a glamorous, warm weather location. And Petey himself is a 'made-for-TV' glamor-boy salesman. That's a real powerful combination and it's hard for 18 year old kids to turn their backs on it.
All of the above is absolutely correct, but I look at the situation differently, we are in one alot of the same guys USC wants and for a few of the recruits its a toss up and the fact we are still in on these guys with all the stuff USC has going for them and all the negative things surrounding our program is a tribute to our coaching staff. I would love to land Ashley and I believe we have a legitimate shot to do that on Tuesday.
 
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