Not All Blue-Chip Prospects Choosing Blue Blood Programs in New Age of College Football

The changing landscape of college football means the nation’s premier recruits are no longer signing with the same handful of programs.

That became particularly apparent this week when the nation’s top-ranked prospect landed in Vanderbilt of all places.

Vanderbilt parlayed the first 10-win season in school history into a recruiting coup when Nashville (Tennessee) Christian quarterback Jared Curtis decided to stay home and sign with the Commodores. Curtis is the No. 1 overall player in his class according to composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports.

“Being here in Nashville and seeing what Vandy has been doing this season has been amazing, and over the past few weeks, I felt more and more that I wanna be a part of that, to be close to home, to play in front of my family and friends and to be what I love to be, an underdog,” Curtis said Tuesday in an X post announcing his decision.

Curtis had been committed to Georgia up until this week. He instead is taking a chance that he can help Vanderbilt continue to thrive after star quarterback Diego Pavia’s departure.

“If you’re interested in inheriting success, if you’re interested in walking into a trophy case that’s already full and a hallway full of NFL players on the walls, there are other programs where you can do that,” Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea said Wednesday. “If you can walk these hallways and see your picture on the wall and if you can look at an empty case and (see) the trophies that will go in there, if you want to put your signature on the success, then this is the perfect place.”

Curtis’ decision wasn’t an aberration. Three of the 247Sports Composite’s top five prospects signed with home-state schools generally unaccustomed to acquiring five-star recruits.

Houston got the nation’s No. 3 recruit by signing Keisean Henderson of Legacy the School of Sport Sciences in Spring, Texas. Edge rusher Zion Elee, rated fifth overall, is going from Baltimore’s St. Frances Academy to Maryland.

That represents a sea change from just five years ago, when seven of the 247Sports Composite’s top 10 recruits signed with either Ohio State or Alabama.

Categories: Sports – Local Sports News