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Signing Day schedule

All times CST:

6:00 am: Erik Gibson, Terell Smith, Abi Okonji, Austin Beier, CJ Smith, Alex Reigelsperger, Thomas Rush, and Jornell Manns are all confirmed to be sending in their fax. I would imagine Bateman, Dunlap, Faalele, Edmonds, Oliver, and Ahanotu are all sending in their faxes then too.

7:00 am: Benny Sapp, Elijah Teague, Brevyn Spann-Ford, Jack York, Josh Aune, Grant Norton, and Mariano Sori-Marin are all confirmed to be sending in their fax. I would think that Boe and Richter will be sending their faxes in at this time too.

9:00 am: Jason Dickson and Vic Viramontes are confirmed to be sending in fax.This is also when Austin Beier will have his signing ceremony.

10:00 am: PJ Fleck press conference. Also when Erik Gibson will have his signing ceremony.

11:00 am: Jornell Manns signing ceremony

11:37 am: PJ Fleck interview on KFAN 100.3

Noon: Nolan Edmonds signing ceremony

1:00 pm: Alex Reigelsperger signing ceremony. This is also when the Signing Day Luncheon begins.

2:00 pm: Josh Aune signing ceremony on BTN

2:30 pm: Brevyn Spann-Ford signing ceremony

The rest of the commits I would guess have their signing ceremonies in the late afternoon when school gets out. CJ Smith and perhaps others won't have a ceremony until the February date, even though the fax is being sent on Wednesday. All are sending their fax on Wednesday.

Team Recruiting Rankings

Signing day is just 3 days away. Here is where we stand currently in team recruiting rankings:

Rivals: We are ranked #26 overall (6th in the B1G and 1st in the West)
247: We are ranked #28 overall (6th in the B1G and 1st in the West)
ESPN: We are ranked #23 overall (5th in the B1G and 1st in the West)
Rank by Offers: We are ranked #21 overall (4th in the B1G and 1st in the West - this is without 3 of our commits included)

We are averaging 8 P5 offers per commit and 16.5 total offers per commit. This may not finish as high as Brewster's 2008 class but I would put this class over that 2008 class in quality.

Incredibly Quiet on the Recruiting Front

1 day to the early signing day and there is (so far) zero drama with the Gopher recruits.

Credit to Fleck and Co. for locking the class up and not having to scramble at the bell - even able to fend off some late helmet school offers.

Hope 2019 is another step up with a similar level of commitment from the recruits and another drama-free run up to signing day.

Scouting Report: Benjamin Sapp III

Benjamin Sapp III:


Strengths:

· He seems to have an edge to himself. As unfair as injuries have been to him, he still works hard and has a mental toughness to him.
· Not afraid to be physical: a few of his clips show him not afraid to hit and by physical with opponents.
· Understanding of concepts. The first highlight of his film is him playing Cover 2 corner where the second receiver runs an arrow to the flats, and Sapp flattens him. His dad was a professional corner, so he has been taught concepts.

Weaknesses:

· Injury history. Unfortunately, I have to put this here. We all know about his injury history, and hopefully it is all behind him.
· Playing experience. Piggybacking off the above bulletin, he hasn’t played a ton of football in the past few years. He only played two games this year, and while he looked good, he still will have to adjust to Big Ten football.

Sapp is another relative unknown just because there isn’t a ton of film on him, with only two games worth of film from the past few years. While he showed some promise and had nice highlights, there isn’t a large sample to review from. We all hope that the injuries are behind him, and he can focus on getting his body in the best shape possible to become a contributor for Minnesota down the road.

Keeping Fleck long term.

With all the discussion's about Fleck doing real well wth recruiting,and has just signed an extension.I have been thinking about the past and how the Regents have been unwilling to pay good coaches to even come to Minnesota. With that thought in mind How willing will they be to pay Fleck when he Get's the gophers consistently in the hunt for Big10 Titles and even in line for major bowl games on a fairly regular basis? Yes I realize some of you may think I am drinking to much cool aide, But I would rather be drinking to much, than not enough!!!! Go Gophers!!!

Scouting Report: Terell Smith

Terell Smith:


Strengths:

· Phenomenal speed who plays fast on the field.
· Hips and feet. Smith’s hips and feet allow him to change direction and break extremely quickly. Terell wastes no steps inbetween breaks and closes gaps in a hurry with receivers.
· Ball skills. Plays the ball like a receiver, wants to catch it on defense. Also, he’s very competitive in battling for balls with the receiver. He doesn’t not want the receiver to come down with the ball.

Weaknesses:

· Tackling. Only a few clips shown of him tackling, and it looked like he wanted to part of it.
· Nuances of the position. To this point of his career, Smith has been able to lean on his athleticism to play corner and it hasn’t been an issue. He’s a bit high in his backpedal and is going to have to learn the nuances of the position.

Overall, Smith is a very talented athlete. He reminds me a bit of Kiante Hardin, except Terell’s probably a bit taller. He's an exceptional athlete with smooth hips and a quick break. He plays the ball well in the air and is not afraid to battle with receivers. His man-press clips were very impressive. Tackling will be something he’ll have to learn as he gains strength and learn the position a bit, but I like what I see out of him

SIAP - mean looking mascots need safe places too.

i often recall the MN daze when it was decided that Goldy was too mean looking. he needed to be cuddly. many of you have heard my tailgate rant on said topic, and my less than PC views of what things have become. @umfb27 says he will never be able to look at Goldy the same again.

ironically apparently the U nut jobs are not alone - there are also nutjobs down at Iowa City as well.

i often wonder what was missing in the childhood of university professors.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...t-is-too-mean-looking/?utm_term=.8d3eb3bbee82
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STrib: In Benny Sapp III, Mike Grant got a glimpse of the 'full deal' talent coming P.J. Fleck's way

In Benny Sapp III, Mike Grant got a glimpse of the 'full deal' talent coming P.J. Fleck's way

What exactly the Gophers are getting in the thrice-injured defensive back from Eden Prairie is a bit of a mystery.

By Randy Johnson Star Tribune

DECEMBER 19, 2017 — 4:07PM


The last time Benny Sapp III played more than two games in a football season was 2014, when he was a high school freshman in Florida.
(Star Tribune photo by BRIAN PETERSON, brian.peterson@startribune.com)

In August 2016, Mike Grant received word from an assistant coach that there was a player moving to town who wanted to join Eden Prairie’s football team.

“Who is it?” asked Grant, the Eagles’ longtime coach. “Benny Sapp,” came the reply. “I’ve heard of that name,” Grant thought, remembering the former Vikings defensive back.

The prospective Eagle was Benny Sapp III, son of the nine-year NFL veteran Benny Sapp and a transfer from high school powerhouse St. Thomas Aquinas in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

There was a catch, however. Sapp wouldn’t be able to play that coming season, the second in a row he would miss following two tears to the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.

“People kept asking me, ‘Is he a good player?’ I don’t know.” Grant said. “I’d never seen him play.”

Turns out, Grant didn’t get to see Sapp play much as a senior this past fall, either, because the speedy defensive back tore meniscus in that same left knee before the third game.

Perhaps this is the best way to frame Sapp’s potential: three knee injuries, three surgeries and three mostly lost seasons have not scared away college programs, making him the most intriguing member of the Star Tribune’s 20th Super Preps class, an annual look at the state’s top college football prospects. Sapp is expected to sign his national letter of intent with the Gophers on Wednesday during the beginning of the new three-day early signing period.

Sapp, the state’s No. 3-rated senior in the composite rankings of recruiting-focused website 247Sports.com, received recent offers from Nebraska and Michigan State but said he’s sticking with coach P.J. Fleck.

“They took a big chance on me,” Sapp said. “After I injured my knee again, Coach Fleck said I could tear my knee up three times and I still would be a Gopher. I can’t owe them enough for giving me an opportunity.”

Sapp’s first scholarship offers came as he shined as a freshman in 2014, and the schools interested read like a top 10 poll. Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Oklahoma, Ohio State, Florida State, Miami and Michigan all wanted the 6-foot, 183-pounder.

Though his experience is limited, his potential isn’t.

“He’s got really good hands — excellent hands — and he practices very hard. And plays hard,” Grant said. “He would have been a great wide receiver for us this year. Very good punt returner. Great hands to catch punts, kickoffs. He’s the full deal.”

Feeling Minnesota

As Sapp grew up in Florida — Southeastern Conference country — the Gophers were nowhere near his radar. “That’s all we do in Florida is talk about the SEC; we never talk about the Big Ten,” Sapp said.

That focus changed when Fleck took over as Gophers coach in January. Fleck visited Eden Prairie, and Grant gave Sapp a heads-up.

“Coach Grant said, ‘Hey, Benny. You might want to stay after school today. Coach Fleck might want to talk to you,’ ” Sapp recalled. “I didn’t know what ‘Row the Boat’ meant. When he came to school, I was like, ‘OK, I remember his face from Western Michigan. They went 13-0 and went to the Cotton Bowl and lost to Wisconsin.’ ”

Fleck made quite the first impression.

“He’s like, ‘You’re not leaving the state. I can promise you that.’ I was going to introduce myself, and he said, I already know who you are,” Sapp said. “… When he said that, I didn’t believe him. ‘Does he really know where I’m going to go?’ ”

This was no slam dunk, however. Ten Gophers under former coach Tracy Claeys had been suspended in December related to an alleged sexual assault, giving pause to Sapp’s mother, Erica. “My mom at first was, ‘Oh, no. We’re not doing this,’ ” he said.

Four of the players were cleared by a disciplinary panel in early February, including standout safety Antoine Winfield Jr., whose father, Antoine, played with Benny Sapp with the Vikings. “We’re really good friends with Antoine, and we were praying he would get out of that situation,” Sapp said.

Making the decision

On Feb. 6, Sapp received a scholarship offer from Gophers wide receivers coach Matt Simon, whose recruiting responsibility includes Minnesota. “I hadn’t gotten an offer in a while,” Sapp said. “… They were saying I would be the foundation of this 2018 class and they would build around me.”

Sapp and his father visited the U the following week and were whisked away to a nearby restaurant for lunch. When he stepped into an event room, Sapp received a standing ovation from the entire Gophers staff. “I felt like the president,” he said.

Later that day, Sapp and his father conferred with Fleck in his office.

“When I first when to his room, I was scared. I never felt uncomfortable like that — tense,” Sapp said. “He sat down and said, ‘Benny, I just want to ask you this before we get into details: When was the last time Alabama talked to you?’ It was a good month. ‘Michigan?’ Three weeks. … Coach Fleck said, ‘I want you because of you. I know your story, I know what you’ve been through. I admire you so much because a lot of kids don’t come back from two ACL surgeries.’ ”

After talking it over with his father, Sapp gave Fleck his verbal commitment. Neither side has wavered.

From negative to positive

Sapp’s meniscus tear this past fall came after solid games against Eastview and Lakeville North to start the season. The family opted to have surgery to repair rather than remove the torn piece, which required a longer rehab but saved the meniscus.

“It was pretty tragic right before the Prior Lake game to have him walk over and say, ‘Ah, something’s screwed up in my knee.’ ” Grant said. “You could tell by the doctors that it wasn’t going to be good.”

“Why me?” was Sapp’s initial reaction, but he rebounded and focused on improving his college entrance test scores and took on an off-field leadership role with his team. “This wasn’t my first rodeo in being injured,” he said. “I was sad and depressed for a while, but I had to do something for this team.”

In turn, his teammates kept his spirits up, and Grant even had him symbolically suit up for Eden Prairie’s Class 6A state championship victory over Minnetonka. “He had the hardest season, the toughest season,” Grant said. “We always think the starters, the guys who are playing well, that’s hard to do. That’s easy to do. It’s the guys who aren’t playing, who have to come to practice. You feel like you’re left out.”

Sapp already has resumed running and is expected to be fully recovered in January, Grant said. Despite having played just two games in the past three seasons, Sapp takes a philosophical approach, believing there’s much more to come.

“I didn’t get to experience high school football and the Friday night lights,” he said, “but I feel like I’m meant for Saturday and Sunday nights.’’

http://www.startribune.com/in-benny...deal-talent-coming-p-j-fleck-s-way/465266633/

Scouting Report: Mayan Ahanotu

Mayan Ahanotu:

Strengths:

· Size: Listed at 6’4” and 250 lbs.
· Great use of his hands once engaged. Ahanotu possesses a number of moves against tackles to shed blocks
· Motor. Constant effort, pursues down the backside. Makes plays he has no business making

Weaknesses:

· Quickness. Not extremely light footed. Not as quick as Reigelsperger for example to turn the corner.
· Tweener

Ahanotu is an interesting prospect for me. He is quite talented and plays extremely hard, which I love. He also seems to be a bit of a tweener. He could put on some weight and become a very good defensive tackle, or try to get his body in good shape and stay at DE. He played inside at DT a bit in high school, so he does have the ability to do both. Either way, his skill set and effort are most intriguing for me, both of which will translate.

48 Hours

In less than 48 hours we'll be signing the best recruiting class the Gophers have signed in years, thanks to the hard work this coaching staff has put in. In that class there will be 7 OL, and 5 DL. Something the last coaching staff had a hard time recruiting. And even said the DL were very hard to recruit. So PJ just pulled in 5 of them. Great job.
Does half this class play next year? I'm thinking they do. After this it's time to reload again with another great class next year.
Suck it Hawks!

Take Two: Can Fleck turn Minnesota into a contender?

From: @Adam Gorney

Take Two returns with a daily offering tackling a handful of issues in the college football landscape. Rivals.com National Recruiting Analyst Adam Gorney lays out the situation and then receives takes from Rivals.com National Recruiting Director Mike Farrell and a local expert from the Rivals.com network of team sites.

THE STORYLINE
Minnesota narrowly missed a bowl appearance in coach P.J. Fleck’s first season, but he did not necessarily finish all that well with a 39-0 loss to Northwestern followed by a 31-0 defeat to Wisconsin to wrap up the regular season.

But there were signs of hope. The Golden Gophers started 3-0, battled Michigan Stateclose, only lost by 7 to Iowa and beat Nebraska by 33 points.

Recruiting has also seen a dramatic uptick in the last week, as Minnesota added more than 1,000 pounds of beef to its offensive line with commitments from JUCO Jason Dickson a former UCLA commit, and Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy standouts Curtis Dunlap, formerly a Florida pledge, and Daniel Faalele. The Golden Gophers have also recently landed JUCO QB Vic Viramontes, who started his career at Cal.

Minnesota currently holds the sixth-best recruiting class in the Big Ten, tops in the West Division.

Can Fleck, who turned around a moribund Western Michigan program into a 13-1 juggernaut, make Minnesota a meaningful contender in the Big Ten West? Or are the Golden Gophers destined to always be an also-ran in a conference loaded with superior teams?

From: @Matt Jessen-Howard

FIRST TAKE: MATT JESSEN-HOWARD, THEGOPHERREPORT.COM
“This was very much a Year One - or Year Zero as he likes to call it - for P.J. Fleck.

"The Gophers narrowly missed a bowl game, but Fleck feels confident about the progress he’s made building his culture, and recruiting is the best it’s been in a decade. So for a program that’s historically recruited poorly and coming off a year with an off-field incident that hit national headlines, that’s absolutely progress. Contending for a Big Ten West title is likely still a couple years away, but most in the fan base are of the opinion that if he could lead Western Michigan to a 13-1 record, he’ll lead Minnesota to national relevancy, as well.

“Minnesota faces similar challenges to Iowa and Wisconsin in that they’re able to recruit very well from their own states, but the states generally produce less than half the Power Five talent needed to assemble a recruiting class. So it’s crucial to have recruiting success out of state. In that sense, I don’t think these three programs are very different from many other Power Five programs in small- or mid-sized states. The stability and competence at Wisconsin, led by Barry Alvarez, and Iowa, led by Kirk Ferentz, have bred success. The recipe for success at Minnesota is similar, even if the styles are different: Fleck is hoping to instill a stable, winning culture that’s both unique to him and nationally known.”

From: @MFarrell

SECOND TAKE: MIKE FARRELL, RIVALS.COM
“I don’t see the Golden Gophers as an emerging power. They don’t have the recruiting base or the tradition. At least with Nebraska, you have the tradition to sell. From all accounts, my assumption is that Dunlap was dropped by Florida. Faalele didn’t have a ton of options, as far as major options down South. They did a good job of getting two high-profile offensive linemen, both of whom are very, very big - but I don’t think it’s a symbol they’re going to start recruiting IMG consistently or that they’re going to start recruiting the state of Florida and landing four-stars every year.

“With the disadvantage they have geographically and the lack of a winning tradition, it’s going to be tough for them to push through and win the West. I don’t know how long Fleck’s going to stay. He might be there forever. I don’t know if anyone really knows. He was a hot coach that was looking for a Power Five job, and he got that. There’s nothing to say anybody is going to go out there and try to steal him away. He has to prove he can be a winner at this level now before we can think about him taking another job.”

https://n.rivals.com/news/take-two-can-fleck-turn-minnesota-into-a-contender-

Thanks @MFarrell for the vote of confidence!
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Frost

Will Frost pull a Fleck his first year at Nebraska or are they too loaded? Does he have a quarterback he can bring with him? I'm not saying I want him to win; I just want to know what we're up against. Central Florida is a little different than Western Michigan, especially recruiting wise. I don't want us to start losing to Nebraska on a regular basis again.
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Fleck needs to out recruit NDSU.....

let me explain. Once we become a national power, NDSU will become less sexy to area athletes that are borderline. PWO or scholarship. Fleck is NDSU biggest threat in a long time. He could make a dent in their success, indirectly. Until then their dominance will hurt us, indirectly. Fight back Fleck. They are like a pebble in our shoe. Wisconsin or Iowa don’t have a similar scenario close to them.

What say you?

Inside Gopher Athletics With Mark Coyle: "Scholarship Seating and Tax Changes"

INSIDE GOPHER ATHLETICS: SCHOLARSHIP SEATING AND TAX CHANGES

Coyle-Blog-Header-17.jpg


Dec. 18, 2017

By Mark Coyle

In light of recent news that the federal tax reform bill has been passed through both houses of the legislature on its way to potentially becoming law, today we reached out to every fan who has invested in our student-athletes by supporting Scholarship Seating with their Gopher season ticket purchases to outline how one change in the tax code may impact their ability to write-off that contribution.

One of the many changes this bill will put into effect – should it become law – will remove what was commonly called the “80/20 rule,” which allows taxpayers to write-off 80 percent of charitable contributions attached to event tickets. In our case specifically, this deduction has been available to fans who owned season tickets in Scholarship Seating areas for football, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s hockey and volleyball.

This change to tax law would mean Scholarship Seating contributions will no longer be 80 percent tax-deductible. Should this become law, you will not be able to write-off any of your Scholarship Seating donations next year.

While tax law may change, what has not and will not change is the impact your investment makes in the lives of Gopher student-athletes. You were part of investing more than $11 million in our department last year. Those Scholarship Seating donations made up approximately 10 percent of our total operating budget, critical to providing more than $12 million in scholarship support for Gopher student-athletes.

Something else that has not changed is the people supported by your investment, some of the brightest student-athletes in the country. We have been the No. 1 public school in the nation for student-athlete academic performance each of the past four years according to the NCAA’s Public Recognition Awards for academics. We finished last year with a department-record GPA across our student-athlete population (3.24), we announced a department-record Graduation Success Rate this year (92 percent), and all of this with 700-plus students pursuing more than 80 different majors.

The new federal tax code may change how you account for your Scholarship Seating investment, but it will not change the significance of your investment to current and future Gophers.

As we shared in our email to fans who may be impacted by this change, our Golden Gopher Fund staff is happy to discuss questions you may have. The best way to contact them is to call (612) 624-4653 or email ggf@umn.edu. Of course, as recommended in that same email, we encourage anyone with specific questions about their personal taxes to reach out to a professional tax adviser.

Scouting Report: Elijah Teague

Elijah Teague:


Strengths:

· Strength. Already possesses Division-I strength. Hard to move, takes the battle to the offensive lineman
· Active Hands. Extremely excelled for a high schooler on the use of his hands in both run and pass rush situations. A variety of moves are in his toolbox
· For a man of his size, he is quite quick and moves very well
· Keeps his “eyes on the prize”. What I mean by that is, whether he is engaged against the run or in a pass rush scenario, he is able to identify where the running back/quarterback is, not allowing them to get by him. Teague will shed the block, and come flat down the line to make the play

Weaknesses:

· Leverage. Because I feel like I have to put something here, I’ll say his leverage gets to be too high at times. When double teamed, he needs to learn to go through the hips of a double team and not the shoulders

To be rather simple with it all, Teague is a beast. One of the more impressive films from the class that I’ve looked at so far. Tough to find many weaknesses with his game. Elijah is strong, quick, and looks to understand blocking schemes and where he fits. Already uses his hands in an impressive fashion. Should see playing time from Day One

Recruiting: Spoiled rotten (What have you done for me lately)

Man. This fan base has really gotten spoiled rotten. The level of recruiting we're doing this year is really very exciting, but I think our fan base has already come to take it for granted. Just over the last week we've gotten some great recruiting news and in the next week we'll see (for the second time in three weeks) some very impressive athletes on campus from all across the country.

1) Very exciting to hear the news over the last week that four star juco recruits Taikwon Paige (#23 overall juco, only offered by Rutgers and ECU, When was the last time either of those programs had top twenty teams?) and Hayo Carpenter (ho hum, legit 4.45 speed) are seriously looking at the Gophers. Both positions of need. Also four stars Anthony Leon (s/lb?) and wr Jamar Howard have Minnesota on the radar.

2) Very exciting to look at visits already made by four star recruit Hasan Lipscomb (a verbal from one of Texas best backs? seriously?)and visits scheduled by four star recruits Eric Stephens (a verbal from Rivals #6 rated APB? are you kidding me?) and Michael Carter (OMFGx4).

3) Very exciting to hear news over last week or two that four star recruit Maresh is working out and cleared by docs, high three star Spencer Reeves has passed clearinghouse and will be here in January and that four star Marqueis Gray still plans on being a Gopher.

4)Very excited to hear Gophs are in the running for four star (on Scout already and soon to be on Rivals) Taylor Lewan. Pumped to see Gophers get an early commit on high three star (5.7) Fergus Falls Campion, who reportedly is leading his team to great season. Also nice to hear great things about Mahtomedi's Ed Olson this weekend.

5)Very impressed to see Gophers hitting Florida hard (and not just hitting it hard but getting a commit and early visits) for skill/speed players like receivers Keise and Reese and d-backs Crawford, Kellam and the Geffard twins. All of these guys are three star guys with nice competing offers. In past years, we'd be jumping out of our shoes about a last minute afterthought visit from these guys in January.

6) Nice to see us proactive in going after a punter, rather than trying to get some one to walk-on in August.

7) Good to see we haven't abandoned looking for tough kids from west central Minnesota.

8) Pumped to see a visit from a guy in Colorado that we never would have even blipped on radar in past. A Rivals 5.7 3* guy at that. Have we reached the point where a visit from a Rivals 5.7 3* guy with multiple offers from a place we've never had recruiting success in the past is a ho-hum thing?

9)Excited to read we are still in the chase for a guy like Kendrick James, a southern speed athlete that we got in early on and may have a shot at now that Colorado and Oklahoma are sniffing around. Hope we still get a visit from one of best d-linemen in Texas (Nosa).

10) Great to see us lock Alipate down early, pumped to see us still in the hunt for Hageman and Garin, who would be huge, huge gets and difference makers.

Potential for nine four stars yet again (Hayo, Carter, Paige, Howard, Leon, Lips, E-Step, Lewan and RaShede) and 12 three stars ( Alipate, Campion, KGM, Nosa, Keise, Kendrick, Garin, Crawford and Kelllam (or Geffard and Geffard) Reese, Olson and Michel in this class. Plus Maresh, Reeves, Carufel, Royston and maybe Gray. Are you kidding me? Book your 2009 TCF seats now. Ho hum.
This post was edited on 9/29 11:17 AM by foggieguy
This post was edited on 9/29 11:28 AM by foggieguy
This post was edited on 9/29 11:30 AM by foggieguy
This post was edited on 9/29 12:06 PM by foggieguy
This post was edited on 9/29 12:23 PM by foggieguy
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