hungan1
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2011
- Messages
- 14,185
- Reaction score
- 4,254
- Points
- 113
LINK:
How the Gophers kept Darius Taylor from Michigan and other top programs
Star Tribune, Randy Johnson, September 15, 2023.
Darius Taylor has to be one of PJ Fleck's top recruiting coups. He offered early, built a relationship, and showed a lot of love.
Excerpts from the Star Tribune link:
Early work pays off for Gophers
Taylor is in only his third season as a running back after playing slot receiver as a high school sophomore. His early scholarship offers included Division II Ferris State and FCS-level Youngstown State, but a strong junior season prompted the Mid-American Conference and some Power Five schools to take notice. The Gophers made their offer in January 2022 and quickly built a solid relationship with Taylor. He verbally committed that April.
The waiting, though, was the hardest part for Fleck. As Taylor tore through prep defenses during his senior season, Michigan and Michigan State showed increased interest in a player rated the nation's 23rd-best high school running back in the 2023 class by the 247Sports composite rankings.
"It was a long process, and we got on him really early,'' Fleck said. "On paper, schools that the outside world probably would say, "You're crazy to turn down and come [to Minnesota],' he got that every day in school. And he was unwavering. That's the type of young man he is.''
Not that there weren't tense moments for Fleck.
"Every time you'd see the phone [caller I.D.] say 'Darius Taylor,' you'd panic,'' Fleck said. "Or the text messages. The worst ones were, 'Coach, can we talk?' ''
Turns out, Taylor's 'Can we talk?' text was just to change the time of a scheduled phone call.
"Darius is a very loyal kid,'' Cioroch said. "The early attention and early relationships he built with Minnesota and their coaches, kids and staff were the final pieces of the decision. Michigan and Michigan State came late and didn't show enough confidence in him early, and he didn't like that. He wanted to go somewhere where he was loved.''
Also important to Taylor was the chance to play quickly.
"Go somewhere to be the guy, not just a guy,'' said Cioroch, whose high school team played Thursday, giving him the chance to travel to North Carolina to watch Taylor do exactly that.
How the Gophers kept Darius Taylor from Michigan and other top programs
Star Tribune, Randy Johnson, September 15, 2023.
Darius Taylor has to be one of PJ Fleck's top recruiting coups. He offered early, built a relationship, and showed a lot of love.
Excerpts from the Star Tribune link:
Early work pays off for Gophers
Taylor is in only his third season as a running back after playing slot receiver as a high school sophomore. His early scholarship offers included Division II Ferris State and FCS-level Youngstown State, but a strong junior season prompted the Mid-American Conference and some Power Five schools to take notice. The Gophers made their offer in January 2022 and quickly built a solid relationship with Taylor. He verbally committed that April.
The waiting, though, was the hardest part for Fleck. As Taylor tore through prep defenses during his senior season, Michigan and Michigan State showed increased interest in a player rated the nation's 23rd-best high school running back in the 2023 class by the 247Sports composite rankings.
"It was a long process, and we got on him really early,'' Fleck said. "On paper, schools that the outside world probably would say, "You're crazy to turn down and come [to Minnesota],' he got that every day in school. And he was unwavering. That's the type of young man he is.''
Not that there weren't tense moments for Fleck.
"Every time you'd see the phone [caller I.D.] say 'Darius Taylor,' you'd panic,'' Fleck said. "Or the text messages. The worst ones were, 'Coach, can we talk?' ''
Turns out, Taylor's 'Can we talk?' text was just to change the time of a scheduled phone call.
"Darius is a very loyal kid,'' Cioroch said. "The early attention and early relationships he built with Minnesota and their coaches, kids and staff were the final pieces of the decision. Michigan and Michigan State came late and didn't show enough confidence in him early, and he didn't like that. He wanted to go somewhere where he was loved.''
Also important to Taylor was the chance to play quickly.
"Go somewhere to be the guy, not just a guy,'' said Cioroch, whose high school team played Thursday, giving him the chance to travel to North Carolina to watch Taylor do exactly that.