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'06 OH OL/DT Aaron Brown (Virginia Tech Signee)

When a kids second school keeps changing (first Florida, then Va Tech, with perhaps one or two others in between) it either means he is uncomfortable with the 'home' school and is looking for an alternative, or he is just trying to go through the process with his options open but the home team has had a huge lead all along.

No indicatino he is uncomfortable at all with OSU.
 
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Oh8ch said:
When a kids second school keeps changing (first Florida, then Va Tech, with perhaps one or two others in between) it either means he is uncomfortable with the 'home' school and is looking for an alternative, or he is just trying to go through the process with his options open but the home team has had a huge lead all along.
Or that some of the OOS schools are getting frustrated with the ambiguity and constant changing...

Just a rumbling, but this has been a different recruitment...
 
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Rivals $

8/16/05

From the Auburn site...Aaron's September schedule is rehashed and it is pointed out again that he will announce on October 6th. Brown's father says the decision will come down to the official visits.
 
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Cincy Enquirer

8/18

Thursday, August 18, 2005
Princeton's Brown leads prospect pack

By Tom Groeschen
Enquirer staff writer


Aaron Brown wears scarlet and gray as a Princeton offensive lineman. About 100 miles up the road, there's a university hoping Brown will don similar threads next year.

Ohio State wants Brown, but the Buckeyes have plenty of company. The 6-foot-6, 290-pound senior tackle has more than 60 major college offers and is rated the No. 2 senior prospect in the state by Ohio High magazine, just ahead of No. 4 Connor Smith, an offensive lineman for Colerain.

"I'm just real proud and thankful to be recruited ... If there's one thing I can tell people, it's that your dreams can come true if you work at it," said Brown.

He plans to visit Auburn, Ohio State, Louisville, Virginia Tech and Miami (Fla.) this fall, and possibly Purdue. He probably won't pick a school until October, so his phone will keep ringing - he gets at least 10 calls a day.

"We haven't had Ohio State come to Princeton games since the 1980s," third-year Vikings coach Brian Dodds said. "That tells you something, considering all the talent that's come through here."

In the 1980s, tight end Alex Higdon (Ohio State), quarterback Michael Taylor (Michigan) and defensive lineman Shane Curry (Miami Hurricanes) regularly drew major college scouts to Princeton. In Brown, the school has another blue-chipper.

"He's a prototypical offensive lineman," Dodds said. "He's got good, quick feet for his size, and he's gotten a lot stronger over the past year."

Brown also has a 3.5 grade-point average.

Colerain's Smith is the son of former Colerain and Ohio State offensive lineman Joe Smith. Connor already has committed to Ohio State.

"I've been a Buckeye fan since I was old enough to understand football," Connor Smith said. "I was ready to commit last winter, but my parents wanted me to look around first. I did, but I kept coming back to Ohio State."

Many national recruiting analysts, including Tom Lemming and Max Emfinger, have Brown and Smith rated in their Top 100 players nationally.

"Aaron Brown already looks like an NFL player," said Lemming, an analyst for College- SportsTV.com.

The top locals, according to most analysts, are Brown, Smith, Lakota West wide receiver Josh Chichester (committed to Ohio State), Colerain linebacker Cobrani Mixon (Michigan), Withrow defensive end Kallen Wade (Notre Dame) and Withrow defensive back Robert Williams (uncommitted).

"There's not much difference between Aaron Brown and Connor Smith," Emfinger said. "They're both big, strong and fast with great work ethics."

The Illinois-based Lemming said Cincinnati is making a comeback on the recruiting trail.

"I've been doing this 27 years, and for the first 10 years Cincinnati was great," Lemming said. "Then there was a slump. But overall, this is a very good year in Cincinnati."

The Louisiana-based Emfinger, a 30-year-veteran of the recruiting scene and publisher of National Blue Chips Recruiting, concurred.

"It's back to old times in Cincinnati," Emfinger said. "I know they've had a lot of great players in the past, but there's more depth than there's been in a while."
 
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SGN (premium)

Aaron has accepted to play in the Max Emfinger All American Game January 5th *if* it doesn't get in the way of enrolling early.

I view this as possibly a hint that he feels it won't affect his choice as of now. When would he enroll if he enrolls early to OSU, after Jan. 5th i hope?
 
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osured said:
We really need this kid
He'd be a great pickup for OSU, but we have a very good future at OL, and this recruiting year has enough talent to lose Brown and have OSU still do well. Keep in mind it is often very hard to predict which OL will do well at the next level.

We really needed Chris Wells, b/c we are thin at RB. Brown is a stud and a top target, but OSU will be fine with or without him.
 
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Princeton 'D' stops McNick in 7-0 triumph

Princeton quarterback Darius Edwards threw an early touchdown for the game's only score, but was under no illusions about star-of-the-game honors.

Princeton beat McNicholas 7-0 in the season opener at Princeton on Thursday night, thanks largely to a defense that stopped McNick on four different possessions inside the Vikings' 25-yard line. The game's final play, from Princeton's 21-yard line, was an incomplete McNick pass into a crowd in the end zone.

"I've got to give it up for our defense," Edwards said. "They won the game for us."

Edwards, a senior transfer from Middletown, threw a 25-yard touchdown to sophomore running back Dorian West with 1:12 left in the first quarter.

Senior Ted Rivers rushed 21 times for 112 yards for Princeton, and also played the whole game at defensive back because another Princeton starter was serving a suspension.

"For him to rush for all those yards and play defense all night, that was a great effort," Princeton coach Brian Dodds said.

The game was a stark contrast to the opener of two Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown games at Princeton, in which Winton Woods pounded Western Hills 48-0.

"I was afraid of one big play," Dodds said. "We were fortunate to pull it out, but I think our team speed may have made a difference on stopping some of their offensive plays."

Princeton's defense stopped McNick three times inside the Vikings' 20-yard line: on an interception, an incomplete pass, and a missed 32-yard field-goal attempt.

Princeton, coming off a 3-7 season, just missed the top 10 in the Enquirer Division I preseason coaches' poll.

McNick, coming off a 5-5 season, is No. 6 in the Enquirer Divisions II-VI poll. The Rockets have dropped from Division II to Division III this year after enrollment realignments.

It was McNicholas coach Steve Klonne's first game as a head coach since he left Moeller after the 2000 season. Despite the loss, Klonne was upbeat because his smaller school held its own with the big-school Vikings.

"It was great," Klonne said. "You want to win, but it couldn't have been much better. We'll take a lot away from this game. You make a play here or there, and you never know."

McNick had more total yards, 246-218, but also ran more plays from scrimmage (60, to Princeton's 45).

For McNick, senior quarterback David Klonne - son of the coach - completed 15 of 29 passes for 147 yards and had one interception. Young Klonne runs the spread offense and is one of the area's top returning QBs, having thrown for more than 1,844 yards and 18 TDs last year.

McNick was held to 99 yards rushing on 31 attempts and passed for 147 yards. Princeton rushed 40 times for 136 yards and passed for 82.

For Princeton, Edwards was an efficient 4-for-5 passing for 82 yards and one TD. The Vikings have dropped their spread offense of recent years, going with the I-formation and mostly running plays now.
 
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SCOUT.COM$

8/27/05
<TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 width="98%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=3>OL Brown, RB Simpson Highlight Cincy Opener

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Aaron Brown

</TD><TD noWrap width=3></TD><TD vAlign=top>By Steve Helwagen Bucknuts.com Managing Editor
Date: Aug 26, 2005

The Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown features some of the best talent in the Cincinnati area year in and year out, and this year's version kicked off Thursday night with blue-chip lineman Aaron Brown and Cincinnati Princeton taking on McNicholas. Also in action was a fine junior running back prospect, Hosea Simpson of Cincinnati Winton Woods. The Crosstown Showdown continues with action today and tomorrow.
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The high school football season got under way in a big way Thursday night at Cincinnati Princeton for the first two of eight games in three days as part of the Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown.

In the opener, Cincinnati Winton Woods flattened Cincinnati Western Hills 48-0. Then, in the nightcap, host Princeton had two huge defensive stands in the red zone at the end of each half and blanked Cincinnati McNicholas 7-0 in a dramatic win.

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Hosea Simpson had a big day for Winton Woods
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Winton Woods' junior running back Hosea Simpson had 147 yards and two touchdowns on 13 carries. With the game starting at 6 p.m. Thursday night, Simpson likely scored the first touchdown of the Ohio high school football season when he burst through the line for a 46-yard score on his team's third play - at 6:05 p.m.

"Coach called a trap and it was open," Simpson said. "I just saw the hole and I hit it. My line did a great job and it was wide open."

He also had a 3-yard touchdown later in the game.

"It felt good to get back out there," said Simpson, who was a 1,000-yard rusher last year as a sophomore. "My offensive line did a great job. I think I could have done better. Our defense played a great game."

Winton Woods' Marlon Woods blocked a Western Hills punt and recovered it for a touchdown to put his team up 14-0. The lead went to 21-0 when Winton Woods recovered a fumbled Western Hills snap for a score and 28-0 when WW quarterback Julian Johnson scored on a 1-yard run.

"We came to make a statement this year," Simpson said of the Mustangs, who were 6-4 last year. "Everybody didn't expect us to do so well. But I think we made a statement that we're coming out to play. We want to make some noise this year. We want to get to the playoffs this year."

The 5-9, 194-pound Simpson boasts 4.52-second speed in the 40-yard dash.

"I'd say I'm like a pounding running back," he said. "I don't like too much fanciness."

When asked what he did to prepare for the season, Simpson said, "I was just working out hard with our team. I was working out with my family here, my brothers, and just coming out to play."

Simpson, considered one of Ohio's top junior prospects, said colleges are sending him mail on a regular basis.

"I get a lot of letters and questionnaires," he said.

Winton Woods coach Troy Everhart, now 37-24 in his seventh year with the Mustangs, talked about what makes his run-oriented offense a success.

"The offensive line is pretty good," Everhart said. "We have five seniors on that line. We have a junior that rolls in there. That's a dominating offensive line. Each one of those guys power cleans 250 pounds and can squat over 400. They are a tough group and they get holes. Then, Hosea is just so explosive. He gets up in there and makes things happen.

"This was a good opening week. It is so hard to get ready in high school football with the days that they allot. I thought we were better this week than we were in our scrimmage."

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Hosea Simpson
Princeton Holds On

In the nightcap, there were more than a few anxious moments for the home crowd. Princeton ended up slamming the door on McNicholas four times inside the Vikings' 30-yard line.

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The game's only touchdown came on Darius Edwards' 25-yard touchdown pass to Dorian West with 1:12 left in the first quarter. The game ended with McNick at the Vikings 21-yard line and quarterback David Klonne throwing an incomplete pass in the end zone on the final play.

"That made me nervous," said Princeton coach Brian Dodds, whose Vikings registered their first shutout in his two-plus years at the school. "A tipped ball, a bad pass or somebody falls down, and it's a different game. But we held in there and it was a great defensive effort.

"We're extremely excited. We started two sophomores on defense and we're very young there. We had one kid get hurt and put a sophomore in. For us to shut them out - a spread team, a high octane team - we're very happy. Coach (Steve) Klonne is a tremendous coach. You can see that. Their kids are tremendously well disciplined. We just made plays."

"Last year, we struggled big time. It was a rough year. We were 3-7. Colerain beat us up and Brookhaven beat us. We lost a lot of seniors. For us to come in here and win like this with a young team, it's huge."

For Princeton senior offensive tackle and co-captain Aaron Brown, it was a relief to get that first win of the new year.

"It feels so good to get that first win, coming out in your senior year and the new season," said the 6-6, 290-pound Brown, ranked as the state's No. 2 senior by Ohio High. "It's great coming off a bad year. We've worked up to this game and I think we accomplished what we set out to do.

"We did a good job of coming off the ball and firing out. That's what we needed to."

Regarding being a team leader, Brown said, "It means a lot. I know I have to be a leader on this team."

Dodds talked about what makes Brown special.

"I can see him two years from now being 6-7, 320 and having really good feet," the coach said. "He's that kind of kid. He has grown so much in the last year. He has great feet for a big man. He also has that leadership ability. He's not a vocal guy. He just gets the job done. He's an intense kid on the football field and gets his job done. I could see him being that prototypical lineman down the road."

Brown has recruiting visits coming up to Auburn Sept. 3, Ohio State Sept. 10, Louisville Sept. 17, Virginia Tech Sept. 24 and Miami (Fla.) Oct. 1.

"Ohio State, I've known Ohio State my whole life," Brown said. "It's a great school with great coaches. I could see myself there. Basically, all of the schools I could see myself going there. The big thing will be how I feel with the coaches."

Showdown Continues

The Kickoff Showdown continues Friday night at Miami's Yager Stadium in Oxford as Liberty Twp. Lakota East tackles Lebanon at 6 p.m. and West Chester Lakota West - with Ohio State commitment Josh Chichester - meets Mason at 8:15 p.m.

Saturday's schedule at Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium features: Sycamore against Cincinnati LaSalle at 11 a.m., Cincinnati Moeller against Cincinnati Withrow at 1:45 p.m., Cincinnati Colerain against Cincinnati St. Xavier at 4:30 p.m. and Huber Heights Wayne against Cincinnati Elder at 7:15 p.m.

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It really will come down to the visits. If a coach tells Aaron it may be 2-3 years before he will have an opportunity to contribute significantly, you can count them out... and that includes tOSU. It's a LOT closer than many may think between tOSU and V Tech.
 
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Here is a blurb from the Dayton newspaper....

MORE FOOTBALL: Lakota West WR Josh Chichester, Colerain LB Cobrani Mixon and OL Connor Smith, Withrow DE Kallen Wade and Princeton OL Aaron Brown have been nominated to play in the annual Army All-American Bowl on Jan. 7, 2006, in San Antonio.

They are among 400 players nominated nationally, with the list pared to 78 by December.
 
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