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Michigan Recruiting Story

osugrad21

Capo Regime
Staff member
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Catching fire

Snub by Michigan set Jennings ablaze

By TODD ROSIAK
[email protected]


Posted: June 1, 2006

Green Bay - Greg Jennings has been everything the Green Bay Packers had hoped he'd be when they drafted him in the second round in April.
<!--Begin Sidebar--><!--End Sidebar--> Quick, strong, smart and in the mix as both a punt and kick returner, the 5-foot-11, 197-pounder from Western Michigan has shown no signs in his month with the team that the game in the National Football League is too big for him.
But there was a time when there were those who had their doubts about his ability to perform at even the Division I college level.
A native of Kalamazoo, Mich., Jennings earned second team all-state honors after his junior year at Kalamazoo Central and, as a result, a number of schools were expressing interest in his services.
Michigan State, Purdue and Wisconsin were among those calling but once Michigan entered the picture, his recruitment was over. A lifelong Wolverines fan, Jennings orally committed to Michigan without so much as taking a visit anywhere else.
"I went to every game, they were keeping in contact, calling me, 'Greg, are you coming up? We just wanted to know,' " Jennings recalled Thursday. "I was no longer on recruiting visits (to Ann Arbor)."
That all changed, though, by the end of Jennings' senior year.
For reasons unbeknown to him, coach Lloyd Carr and his staff began distancing themselves from Jennings.
"I never had to call them. They just stopped calling me," he said. "Then I called them and they were kind of standoffish, like, 'Well, you can come up, but . . .' and I was, like, 'But? I've never heard that before. Where is that coming from?' "
Eventually, with less than a month to go before national signing day, Jennings took the hint and started looking elsewhere. Problem was, none of the other Big Ten schools that had pursued him had room for him.
"I burned my bridges," he said. "I called Michigan State and couldn't get in up there. They had already used up all their scholarships. Wisconsin had already used all theirs. Purdue was the only one who kind of had one half-scholarship left but I didn't want a half-scholarship. Then it was, like, 'OK, forget it. Let's go to the (Mid-American Conference).' "
Jennings' first visit was to Eastern Michigan, and that's where he expected to sign. But after reconsidering he visited and signed with Western Michigan, his hometown university.
"I literally did not want to be there on my visit. It was home for me," Jennings said. "Then the next morning I woke up and all of a sudden I wanted to go to Western. It was crazy."
And over the course of four seasons, all Jennings did was rewrite Western Michigan's record books.
After redshirting in 2001 and missing four games in 2002 with a broken left ankle, Jennings went on to set all-time records for the Broncos with 238 catches, 3,539 yards, 39 touchdowns and 5,093 all-purpose yards.
Jennings also became just the 11th player in NCAA Division I history to record three 1,000-yard receiving seasons.
"(Michigan's snub) drove me. And looking back on it I wouldn't do it any differently, knowing how hard I had to work and what it took for me to get to this point," he said. "A lot of times when you go to that bigger school that's more publicized and things like that, you're spoon-fed. Everything is pretty much given to you and it's up to you to just go out there and do a couple of things and you're there.
"That's one of the things I didn't want, to be given an opportunity."
Despite his incredible collegiate productivity, Jennings' 4.53-second time in the 40-yard dash and small-school pedigree likely hurt him on draft day.
As it turned out Jennings was the fourth wide receiver taken, at No. 52 overall, by the Packers, who overlooked his relatively small stature - a general no-no in coach Mike McCarthy's version of the West Coast offense - and instead focused on his productivity and return ability.
"All the talk about the small school, all that's done and over with. It's time to just go out there, play ball," he said. "I'm at the level of play that I wanted to get to; it's the highest level there is. It's all up to me now to go out there and prove everybody wrong."
With likely No. 3 receiver Rod Gardner not present thus far at the Packers' organized team activities, Jennings has received plenty of opportunities at the line of scrimmage and done well, according to offensive coordinator Jeff Jagodzinski.
"He stands out," he said. "He's really smooth. He's what we thought he would be. The game doesn't seem like it's too big for him. He does some things where you go, 'Wow.' He flashes. But he's young."
Added McCarthy: "I think he's been able to pick up the scheme. You don't see him making too many mental errors. He has the ability to separate."
 
Evans Desir.

"This is a kid who has been calling the past couple of years. The first time he “committed,” he tried to get in touch with “Coach Collins,” the recruiting coordinator. When we said there was no Coach Collins, he asked for the tight ends coach. That should tell you our level of interest there."<O:p</O:p
 
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Yeah, that ruins the story.

Seriously though, I wouldn't doubt that. Who was the guy from Florida a few years ago who kept saying he was going to OSU, but never had an offer?
Lots of them, really. As Sears said, Evans Desir was one of them, but each year, there are a one or two kids who "commit" to OSU without the benefit of an offer: Kenyon Buford (2003), Frank Morton (2004), Gartrell Shavers (2004), and Conredge Collins (2005) are some of the names that I remember.
 
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Here's an explanation from ny1995, who is one of the most reputable Michigan posters out there. He runs iBlog for Cookies. The most pertinent section:

This is one of those "there are two sides to every story" things. The article is obviously written for one side of the story, which shows the guy as a victim-turned-superstar. And this particular article happens to show Michigan and Lloyd Carr as the bad guys. But aren't these stories coming out all the time? What's the guy's name who went to Northwestern? Terrell Sutton, or something? I got sick of his story after the manyith time before Ohio State played Northwestern last year. I think all schools and all coaches have many of those "Damn - we could have had that guy" players. They also have many of those "Damn - why'd we give that guy a scholarship" players.
 
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I think Lord Jeff Buck nailed it - Kenyon Buford is the one who professed to have a Buckeye schollie. He put it on the net, and maybe hoped that the Buckeye coaches started believing it.

If you're a 'second-tier' school, then you can 'waste' a couple of schollies on a kid that might develop. Indiana is finally up to 85 on schollie for the first time in what, four years? They didn't get there by taking all 3* plus type of kids.

But a top echelon program (tOSU naturally, Michigan, Miami U, Florida and Fla St, USC, Texas, etc) cannot really afford to 'waste' a schollie and compete. Sure, some kids don't pan out. But hey, nothing is certain. A kid that goes to a Mid-Am school can makes good (does Ben Roethleisberger come to mind - or about 5 other Mid Am QBs) can make it in the pros.

Not that I'm a John Cooper fan, but.....he did say that if you missed on a kid, you only had to face him once a year for four years, but if he's on your team, you had to face him every day. Pretty savvy wisdom for Coop.

PS, I'd put Notre Dame up there (with the not taking the greatest kids in the last three years), but now that Charlie Weis (little Tuna) has come on board, he'll be looking for more 4*'s.

:gobucks3: :osu4: :banger:
 
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