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James Franklin: The Stickup Man

Penn State and James Franklin Are Making Recruiting Waves in Michigan

Recruiting is a tricky game. Some universities pride themselves on building their rosters with hometown talent. There are advantages and disadvantages to taking that approach. The better teams in the country can recruit their home state as well as invading others.

Oddly enough, Penn State has a long way to establish dominance in Pennsylvania as they only have 2 commitments from the top 25 prospects, but they are taking ownership in the state of Michigan.

PSU Head Football Coach James Franklin in the state up north is becoming what Omar Devon Little was on the hit television show The Wire.

When Omar would walk through the streets of Baltimore, he wreaked fear into everyone on the streets. Chaos would ensue because of his arrival. Omar was a man of few words, but when he showed his face, he made a commanding presence.

The same can be said for Franklin in a sense. As his plane arrives in Michigan, whether if its Detroit, Muskegon, Flint, Grand Rapids, or Lansing, the notion of “Omar is coming” is real.

In the past six months, Franklin has secured commitments from Jaylen Reed, Kalen, and Kobe King, and most recently Jamar Buddin who all hail from Detroit, Michigan. To no surprise, the Nittany Lions Staff are recruiting several other top-ranked kids in the area as well.

What do Bryce Mostella, Enzo Jennings, Lance Dixon, Donovan Johnson, and K.J. Hamler have in common? They are also Michigan natives that were pried away from their home state to play for Penn State. Although he is not from Michigan, Penn State freshman tight end Theo Johnson, who is from Ontario, Canada, is a twenty-minute ride from Detroit also chose Penn State.

How can Franklin and Penn State invade Michigan at the rate that they are?

This is a tricky question, but a lot of it has to do with relationships and taking players that may not fit the mold of other programs.

In an interview on the Notorious B1G Recruiting Podcast hosted by 24/7 Sports Allen Trieu. K.J. Hamler’s Mother stated that ” I think the biggest reason why he chose not to go to Michigan was just thinking that he wasn’t going to fit in with their whole program. She further stated that they were into bigger receivers.”

She also went on to say that then WR coach at Penn State Josh Gattis and James Franklin were heavily invested in Hamler at IMG, even after tearing his ACL. That is a testament to the relationships that Franklin and his staff build with their recruits no matter the circumstances.

It also helps that Franklin has an excellent staff, which includes Co-Defensive Coordinator Tim Banks as the area recruiter in Michigan. Banks, a Detroit, Michigan native played at Detroit Martin Luther King High School and he played his college ball at Central Michigan. Banks also has great relationships with such as Sound Mind Sound Body and Rising Stars, two programs where the top players in the state train and play 7-on-7 football travel ball for.

Numbers can be skewed, but to no surprise, they still favor Michigan and Michigan State when it comes to recruiting the top players in the state. While that is the case, there is no ignoring what the Nittany Lions are doing on the recruiting trail. Just ask former UM All-American and former Cass Tech Alum Jourdan Lewis. Who tweeted after Penn State received commitments from three Detroit kids (Reed, King, and King).

Lewis’ tweet is an indication of how things have felt in the recruiting world for the Wolverines for quite some time.

While it may be true that those kids were not high on Michigan’s radar, but Mel Tucker and Jim Harbaugh must do a better job of protecting the state. Tucker gets a pass because he is fresh on the job, but all eyes will be on him and his staff as they try to sway highly touted 2021 wide receiver Andrel Anthony to stay home in East Lansing.

Many would believe that Ohio State owns Michigan in recruiting, but Ryan Day & Co. recruits on a national level against schools like Georgia, Clemson, and Alabama. While Day and area recruiter Coach Studwra will pluck a few good players from Michigan, it is rare for them to solely try to battle with MSU and Michigan in recruiting just as John Cooper and Jim Tressel did decades ago.

While Penn State does not have ownership of the state of Michigan in a football realm like Ohio State does, they are gaining grown on them in recruiting. It will only be a matter of time where they will take that dominance to the gridiron as well.

For MSU and Michigan, two slogans are commonly stated are: “The best in the state goes to State” and “Those who stay will become champions.”

Although those two statements are popular, it’s a stretch to call them true. Michigan State has been ranked near or at the bottom of recruiting in the conference since having one of their best classes in school history in 2015.

For the Wolverines, they have not been a true Big Ten Power since Carson Daly was hosting TRL on MTV. While they did have some success in the early 2000s winning the Big Ten titles in 2000, 2003, and 2004, but since then they have not had much success under previous head man Brady Hoke and now Jim Harbaugh.

Gretchen ‘Big Gretch’ Whitmer is the Governor in Michigan, but James Franklin would like to have a word with her if continues his recruiting dominance in the mitten.

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BMFOF: Baddest Mother F***** on the Field

These dudes don’t need Samuel L. Jackson’s wallet proclaiming themselves a bad mother f*****. They prove it on the field. These are GAMs – grown ass men – and you want them in your crew when things go sideways at the club.

Penei Sewell, OT, Oregon

Penei Sewell will be a cornerstone left tackle for an NFL team this time next year, likely a top 5 pick. PFF calls him “the best offensive tackle prospect we’ve ever graded,” and the numbers bear that out. Since 2014 when PFF started grading college games, 4,739 offensive linemen have played at least 250 snaps in a season, and Sewell’s 2019 campaign was the highest Wins Above Average rating in those five years – better than Notre Dame’s Quenton Nelson in 2017, and Nelson may be the best OL in the league now. PFF graded Sewell at 95.5 last year, the highest grade ever given to an offensive lineman, and he’s ranked the third best player in the country preseason. He didn’t give up a sack last year and has only given up one in 1,376 snaps for the Ducks. The last time an OL finished in the top five of Heisman voting was 1996 when Ohio State’s Orlando Pace finished fourth. Sewell could change that. Kayvon Thibodeaux, Oregon’s sophomore stud at DE, who PFF says had the most valuable season as a true freshmen since 2014, would be on this list, but we’re limiting it to one player per team.

Marvin Wilson, DT, Florida State

Big Marv (6-foot-5, 311 pounds) is built like an Everglades backwater stump, but, for a nose guard, he moves like a fat kid chasing an ice cream truck. He’s doubled or chipped most plays and still wins: His 90.9 Pro Football Focus pass-rush grade among nose guards was second in 2019 only to Texas A&M’s Justin Madubuike, who was an overgrown pest in his own right. Wilson won on 16.8% of his pass rush reps, tied for the fifth-highest rate in the country, according to PFF. He’s a top 10 pick in 2021 and has shown why he was one of the most sought-after high school prospects in the country.

Wyatt Davis, OG, Ohio State

The Buckeyes have a couple guys who fit this list, but Davis is the most valuable guard in the country coming back, PFF says, and he didn’t allow a sack on 459 pass block snaps last season. Best of all though, he’s the son of Duane Davis, aka Alvin Mack, the linebacker from the greatest college football movie of all time, “The Program.” Wyatt has snot bubbles running in his DNA, and that makes him one bad son of a badass.

Micah Parsons, LB, Penn State

Parsons is almost too mainstream for this list because everybody knows him, but damn … the kid can play. After a breakout sophomore season, Parsons will be on every NFL teams’ 2021 draft wish list as visions of LaVar Arrington’s stone-cold leaping stop at the goalline dance in their heads. Only two players had 75-plus tackles and less than 10 missed tackles in 2019, according to PFF, and Parsons was one. He’s a former five-star prospect that has lived up to the billing and then some. He does it all, even the dirty work – PFF tabs him as the top returning run-stopper in the Big Ten.

Brendan Radley-Hines, S, Oklahoma

This cat has that Troy Polamalu feel, and it’s not just the hair. OK, it might be mostly the hair, but both those guys flew around the field and were vicious. Radley-Hines’ ejection in the CFB playoffs against LSU gained him the “dirty” label, but that’s the kind of hitter you want on your side over an entire season. He’s the enforcer in the Sooners’ secondary, but he also ranked third in the nation per PFF last season in yards allowed per slot coverage snap. Note: Oklahoma center Creed Humphrey is also one bad mofo.

Dylan Moses, LB, Alabama

Alex Leatherwood or Christian Barmore could easily make this list – all big, bad skull crushers – but Moses is primed for a comeback after missing all of 2019 due to injury. If healthy, he would have been a first-rounder in 2020, but instead he returns to anchor an Alabama defense that churns out NFL talent annually. Moses had 84 tackles and just four misses in 2018. At 6-foot-3, 235, few players cover as much ground and bring the hammer like Moses.

Zamir “Zeus” White, RB, Georgia

His nickname is Zeus for God’s sake. He was the No. 1 running back coming out of high school in 2018 before tearing both knees up within a year. White takes over the coveted role of lead back in Athens, and he’s finally at full strength. He runs like a tank and the elusiveness is nearly back. He’s in PFF’s top five running back list for the 2021 NFL Draft and only got 78 carries in 2019. That should tell you something.

Jackson Carman, OT, Clemson

Big boy, at 6-foot-5, 345, held his own as a first-year starter in 2019 and had an impressive showing against Chase Young in the CFB playoffs. He’s a mauler in the run game and continues to improve in pass pro. If Carman get his hands on you, forget it.

Trey Smith, OG, Tennessee

Apologies to Darian Kinnard at Kentucky, who is the top-graded returning OL in the SEC, but Trey Smith at full strength is the first guy you want with you in the trenches. Smith has been berated by chronic injuries during his career in Knoxville, but if he can get one more full season healthy, he’ll show he’s one of the best in the country. He’s got a mean streak, too, and if Cade Mays receives eligibility after transferring from Georgia, the Vols OL may be the Nasty Boys of college football.

Hamilcar Rashed Jr., OLB, Oregon State

Set the Beavs’ record for sacks in a season last year (14) and led the nation in tackles for loss (22.5). Bad dude with even worse intentions off the edge. You’ve got to love this guy, but he won’t get the attention he deserves.

Honorable mention: JaCoby Stevens, S, LSU; Carlos Besham, DL, Wake Forest; Gregory Rousseau, DL, Miami; Jalen Twyman, DL, Pitt; Kair Elam, S, Florida; Darius Stills, DT, WV; Rashawn Slater, OT, Northwestern; Dax Hill, S, Michigan, Sam Cosmi, OT, Texas; Jay Tufele, DT, USC; Levi Onwuzurike, DT, Washington