Breaking Down VT's 2005 Recruiting Class: Wide Receivers and Tight Ends
by Phil Martin, 6/29/05
We continue our breakdown of VT's 2005 recruiting class by examining the wide
receiver and tight end positions. We'll figure out if the Hokies got the player
they wanted at each position and will project where recruits like Ed Wang will
fit into Virginia Tech's plans.
Wide Receivers
With four WR recruits the previous year and emerging receivers in second-year
players Josh Hyman and David Clowney, Tech did not have a glaring need at wide
receiver. However, the Hokies still would like to have a big-play wide-out,
preferably with good size, in this recruiting class. Here are the wide receivers
that Tech offered last year:
Obviously, Tech was looking for size at wide receiver with six of the eight
WR offers being players standing 6-2 or better. The Hokies looked out-of-state
for most of the receiver talent with three offers going to blue-chip players
from South Carolina � C.J. Byrd, J.C. Neal, and Eric Huggins.
VT WR Signees
Todd Nolen from Hampton HS was clearly the top receiver in Virginia
this year. Nolen has excellent size and physical skills, but the attribute
that really stands out is his ability to �go get the ball.� He has
big-play ability and excellent football instincts. Many considered UVA as the
leader for Nolen throughout the recruiting year, but the Hokies broke through
the �walls� that the Cavaliers had built around the strong Hampton HS
program and signed a player from Coach Mike Smith. North Carolina and Penn
State also made a late push for Nolen. Qualification concerns kept the number
of offers down for Nolen, but he is an exceptionally talented wide receiver.
Prediction: Nolen will likely need a year at prep school before enrolling
at Virginia Tech
Non-VT WR Signees
C.J. Byrd, from North Augusta HS, was generally considered the top
player in South Carolina and could be an immediate impact player at WR or at
either safety position. He has all of the physical attributes for receiver or
the secondary and possesses a good, competitive attitude. Byrd wants a shot at
receiver but he could make an earlier impact at safety for Georgia, who gained
his services over offers from Clemson, Florida, Florida State, LSU, Tennessee,
Southern Cal, Virginia, Oklahoma, Auburn, Alabama, Ohio State, Michigan, and
many more.
J.C. Neal, from Lakeland HS, is an incredible athlete who could play
numerous positions in college, including running back, cornerback, or safety
in addition to wide receiver. Neal was a high school quarterback who saw some
time at running back as well. He is exceptionally quick and elusive with great
football instincts. Most schools recruited him for offense, but he showed in
the NC-SC Shrine Bowl Game that he would be an exceptional defensive back as
well (Neal played strong safety in the all-star game). N.C. State signed Neal
after a tough recruiting battle with the Hokies. South Carolina made a late push
and Maryland was in contention throughout the recruiting year. Other national
powers, such as Auburn, Florida State, and Ohio State also offered Neal.
Having Neal sign with the Wolfpack was one of the biggest recruiting losses
for the Hokies.
Eric Huggins, from Conway HS near Myrtle Beach, is a rangy athlete with
excellent potential. He has big-play ability but still needs some �polish�
in his game. He needs to gain some weight (looks lighter than listed) and
become more physical, but he looks to have a bright future if he hits the
weight room. Oklahoma received a fairly early commitment from Huggins, who
chose the Sooners over offers from Michigan, Tennessee, Clemson, Florida,
Virginia, Auburn, Miami, Florida State, Southern Cal, LSU, Georgia, and many
more.
Nyan Boateng, from Brooklyn, NY � Lincoln HS, is a two-sport star
that had numerous offers in both football and basketball. Obviously, he is a
great athlete with excellent potential in both sports. Tech actually learned
of Boateng initially through Seth Greenberg and the basketball program.
Florida signed Boateng for both sports over offers from Nebraska, Michigan,
Michigan State, Southern Cal, Miami, Virginia, Ohio State, Notre Dame,
Georgia, Texas, and many more.
After Florida won a tight recruiting battle with the Hokies for WR Derrick
McPhearson from DeMatha HS in the previous year, McPhearson failed to
qualify and enrolled at Fork Union prep school for 2004-2005. After Ron Zook
was fired from Florida, McPhearson re-opened his recruitment only to switch
his signing to Zook�s new school, Illinois. Tech recruited McPhearson again,
but without the same effort as the previous year. Ultimately, McPhearson chose
the Illini over his previous school, Florida, and offers from Maryland,
Nebraska, and Clemson. LSU, Michigan, Notre Dame, Miami, and Ohio State had
offered the previous year. McPhearson has excellent speed and big-play ability
and he should see the field early for Illinois.
Lavar Lobdell, from Syracuse, NY � Christian Brothers Academy, is
another big receiver with excellent hands. Lobdell paired with Greg Paulus,
the Duke point guard recruit who was also an excellent quarterback, to provide
an exceptional pass-catch combination in high school. Lobdell decided to stay
local signing with the Orange over offers from Miami, Florida, N.C. State,
West Virginia, Southern Cal, and Penn State. Lobdell is an excellent signing
for Syracuse, who has lacked big-play receivers in recent years.
Geron James, from Wilmington, NC � Eugene Ashley HS, is yet another
tall, rangy receiver with excellent potential. He needs to hit the weight room
and gain some size and become more physical, but he has the ability to go deep
and make big plays. James chose the local school, N.C. State, over the Hokies
and UNC. He should contribute for the Wolfpack after a couple of years of
strength training.
WR Conclusion
Virginia Tech was looking for a big-play receiver with good size and
certainly met that goal with the signing of Todd Nolen. The signing of Nolen
also had the added benefit of re-opening the recruiting door at Hampton HS
which had been shut for many years. Even though Nolen will likely have to prep
for a year, Tech was not looking for an early contribution at WR and sitting
out a year puts an additional year of separation between him and the
outstanding receiver class of 2004. Statistically, Tech�s �won-loss
percentage� at wide receiver was 41.7%, which is slightly below average,
likely due to many schools not offering Nolen because of his qualification
concerns. This score emphasizes that the statistical rating can be misleading
because I�m sure the Tech coaching staff was ecstatic about Nolen�s
signing.
Tight Ends
The tight end position has changed for Virginia Tech in the last couple of
years with the need for two types of players. The prototypical tight end needs
to have the size to block and should also be a receiver, but Tech also uses an
H-Back (hybrid tight end/fullback) now who has to be more athletic and have the
size to block. Ideally you want a player that can fill both roles, such as Jeff
King, but these players are hard to find. Duane Brown returns as a prototypical
tight end and, at the beginning of the recruiting year, Tech had Maurice Reevey
as a future H-Back. As we know now, Reevey is no longer in school and Tech moved
John Kinzer to H-Back in the spring, but for planning the recruiting class, Tech
had to consider Brown and Reevey as the future at tight end. To provide backup
at the position, Tech was probably looking for a prototypical tight end and an
H-Back candidate. Here are the tight ends that Tech offered last year:
Table 2 - Tight Ends
Offered by VT (2005) |
Name
|
St
|
Ht
|
Wt
|
40
|
Signed
|
Offers |
1-4 |
5-9 |
10-19 |
20+ |
Jonathan
Hannah |
NC |
6-4 |
255 |
4.8 |
South Carolina |
|
|
X |
|
James
Dray |
NJ |
6-5 |
225 |
4.6 |
Stanford |
|
|
X |
|
Ed
Wang |
VA |
6-5 |
265 |
4.8 |
Virginia Tech |
X |
|
|
|
John
Phillips |
VA |
6-6 |
250 |
4.8 |
Virginia |
X |
|
|
|
Sam
Wheeler* |
VA |
6-3 |
240 |
4.7 |
Virginia Tech |
X |
|
|
|
*Wheeler would be counted as a 2003-2004 recruit but for our purposes he
will be discussed as an in-coming recruit.
VT TE Signees
Ed Wang, from Ashburn, VA � Stone Bridge HS, committed in September,
2003 stating that he was a life-long Hokie fan and had always wanted to play
for Tech. He attended Tech�s camp that summer and impressed the coaches
enough to give him a written offer at the beginning of his junior year
(written offers cannot be given prior to a player�s junior year). Wang
immediately jumped on the offer and never wavered from his commitment. Given
his size and speed, he would surely have received a number of offers if he had
kept his recruitment open. Wang has exceptional agility for a player his size,
but he failed to dominate at his high school level (class AA) as you would
expect from a player with his size/speed, particularly on defense (playing
defensive end). While possessing all of the physical traits for an ideal tight
end, Wang needs to play with more aggression and become more physical.
Prediction: Ed Wang has the frame to eventually grow into an offensive
lineman, but I see his immediate future at tight end. Wang is an excellent
prospect, but he will need a year or two to adjust to the college game.
Sam Wheeler, from hometown Blacksburg HS, signed in 2004 but failed to
qualify and attended Hargrave Prep School last year. He has now qualified and
will enroll this fall. Wheeler is an outstanding athlete who was an excellent
basketball player as well. He has good hands (played some WR in high school)
and can be an effective blocker. Wheeler also played linebacker in high
school, but did not show an aggressive, defensive temperament in the games I
saw, so I feel he is better suited for offense.
Prediction: Sam Wheeler has very good size and could play a number of
positions for the Hokies, but I believe he will start out at H-Back. He played
fullback last year for Hargrave, so the move to H-Back should not be
difficult. Wheeler will need to adjust to the college game as well and, with
some hard work, could develop into a solid player in time.
Non-VT TE Signees
The name Jonathan Hannah is now infamously linked with other former
recruits, such as Mike Mangold, Courtney Denson, Montavis Pitts, and Patrick
Dosh. After committing to Tech at a January press conference, Hannah succumbed
to the evil preaching of Steve Spurrier at South Carolina and signed with the
Gamecocks on February 4, sending shockwaves throughout the Hokie Nation.
Hannah, from Hope Mills, NC � South View HS, is a physical, blocking tight
end with excellent athletic ability, as exemplified by his talent in
basketball. He could play defensive end as well, but his future is likely at
tight end. Hannah�s recruiting took many twists and turns and we really
shouldn�t have been surprised by the ending since a number of schools were
mentioned as leading for him. Ultimately, Hannah chose South Carolina over
offers from Virginia Tech, North Carolina, N.C. State, Clemson, Florida State,
Tennessee, Virginia, LSU, Oklahoma, Penn State, Georgia, and several more.
James Dray, from powerhouse Bergen Catholic High School in New Jersey,
is an outstanding receiving tight end who also plays very physically. He has
exceptional hands and is a very good blocker with the frame to put on
considerable weight. Dray is also an aggressive linebacker, but tight end is
his future position in college. He is an outstanding student and chose the
academics at Stanford over offers from Boston College, Notre Dame, Tennessee,
Florida State, and Iowa. Tech was under consideration, but never seemed to be
in strong contention for Dray. He likely would have been an H-Back at Tech.
John Phillips, from Hot Springs, VA � Bath Co. HS, has been compared
to UVA tight end Heath Miller by some, particularly since he comes from a
small, rural high school in Western Virginia and dominated at that level
(class A). Phillips has ideal size and decent speed, but we will have to see
if he develops the intangibles that Miller possesses. He has excellent hands
and is a physical blocker, so all of the tools are in place to become a good
tight end. He also plays defensive end and he could play on the defensive side
of the ball in college as well. Virginia landed Phillips last spring over the
Hokies (only offers), but many schools were interested. An ACL injury his
junior year may have kept some teams from offering early until they could be
sure he was fully recovered. Phillips, like Wang, will need a couple of years
to adjust to playing in college, but he should have a solid future for the
Wahoos.
TE Conclusion
Tech filled the immediate needs of a prototypical tight end in Ed Wang and
an H-Back in Sam Wheeler. Both of these players will need to become more
aggressive to see the field for Tech, but each one has the physical tools to
succeed. Tech will need solid backups at both positions in 2006, so both
players will need to develop quickly or the Hokies will need to sign an elite
tight end in the next recruiting class (or move another player, such as Greg
Boone, to tight end). Neither Wang nor Wheeler had any other offers, so
statistically the won-loss percentage at tight end would be 0.0%. Wang would
surely have had numerous offers if he hadn�t committed early, thus showing
that this method of quantitative evaluation has its limitations.
In the next article, we'll look at the offensive line.
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