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I'm not sure anything stated above is untrue, doesn't mean that incident isn't particularly egregious. But the state referenced above are made here on a regular basis.You should have heard all the local yocals on the radio defending Harblo. According to them this is big boy football and Harblo wasn't hired to field 9-3 teams with inferior talent....
You should have heard all the local yocals on the radio defending Harblo. According to them this is big boy football and Harblo wasn't hired to field 9-3 teams with inferior talent....
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--- thor06 wrote:
Wouldn't happen if the NCAA would let them go to 90 players. With all the transfers and kids leaving early it's tough to keep the roster stacked and even
When Erik Swenson committed to Michigan football in November 2013, he thought he was set to sign in February 2016. The four-star offensive tackle from Downers Grove, Ill., called U-M his dream school and turned down others — including Alabama, winner of four of the past seven national championships.
But he won’t be signing with the Wolverines, because they pulled his scholarship offer, his high school coach, Mark Molinari, told the Free Press. And now he has to find a place to play at a time when other schools have filled their spots.
“It’s unfortunate for a kid who had committed and was going to do the right thing and never tried to hold four or five offers,” Molinari said Wednesday. “We didn’t ever think we were going to be in this situation, and Erik is. We’re kind of scrambling around. There have been a lot of schools that have called, but as a 17-, 18-year-old kid, when you make that commitment, you expect it’s going to be held up on the other end.
“That obviously did not happen.”
Swenson said U-M coach Jim Harbaugh never reached him on the phone. He said Harbaugh called late Tuesday night after Swenson knew he was out and left a message with Swenson’s father, asking how Swenson was and said he’d call back.
According to Molinari, when Drevno spoke to him later Tuesday he was more direct, saying Swenson could come to U-M but only as a preferred walk-on to compete for a job.
Swenson called Ohio State and Notre Dame, and they said they would be interested in his talent but those positions were already filled.
“They said, ‘We’d love to have you. We’d even get rid of another kid to get you, but we’re not like that,’” Swenson said. “We’re happy with our guys, and we don’t fall in the rankings and everything. Which I respect. I would hate for this to happen to another kid who doesn’t deserve it. A couple schools said they’d love to have me, but they’re full.”
Two weeks from signing day, offer pulled from lineman committed to Michigan since 2013
The past couple of weeks have featured nothing but feel-good stories — some would call one them creepy — of Jim Harbaugh on the recruiting trail. Today, though, the unsightly underbelly of the recruiting game has been exposed yet again.
Erik Swenson was the first commitment to Michigan’s 2016 recruiting class, verballing to Brady Hoke and the Wolverines back in November of 2013. Even with the coaching change from Hoke to Harbaugh in December of 2014, the four-star offensive lineman remained committed. Why? Because he committed to a school, not a coach.
“You have to stick with your commitment, you committed to Michigan, you have to honor that,” Swenson told mlive.com last June. “You made a commitment and you have to show you’re willing to honor it. There will be ups and downs at any place, and any place you go you’ll have to show you can push through them.”
Fast-forward seven months, and how was Swenson’s loyalty rewarded? By having his offer from UM pulled exactly two weeks before National Signing Day. At least, that’s the recruit’s side of the story.
From mlive.com:
In a text message to MLive, the four-star offensive tackle said Michigan recently pulled its scholarship offer and canceled his previously scheduled official visit. He said the program did not provide a reason for doing so. He declined to speak further on the matter at this time.
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Because of NCAA bylaws, UM officials will not be permitted to address, at least on the record, their side of a story that’s certainly to cause its share of controversy.
Swenson is the No. 2 player at any position in the state of Illinois and the No. 227 overall in the country according to Rivals.com. He also holds offers from, among others, Alabama, Illinois, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Ohio State, and Virginia Tech.
Entire article: http://collegefootballtalk.nbcsport...rom-lineman-committed-to-michigan-since-2013/