2012 Recruiting: Ondre Pipkins
Previously: S Jeremy Clark, S Allen Gant, S Jarrod Wilson, CB Terry Richardson, LB James Ross, LB Royce Jenkins-Stone, LB Kaleb Ringer, LB Joe Bolden, DE Chris Wormley, DE Tom Strobel, DE Mario Ojemudia, DT Matt Godin, and DT Willie Henry.
Kansas City, MO – 6'3", 336 | |||
Scout | 4*, #7 DT, #65 overall | ||
Rivals | 5*, #3 DT, #2 MO, #14 overall | ||
ESPN | 4*, #16 DT, #5 MO | ||
24/7 | 4*, #6 DT, #2 MO, #51 overall | ||
Other Suitors | Alabama, Florida, Ohio State, Oklahoma, USC, MSU | ||
YMRMFSPA | Gabe Watson, but fast! | ||
Previously On MGoBlog | Hello post from Tim. I talk about how Pipkins might see Michigan move to a hybrid defense where he two-gaps while others one-gap. | ||
Notes | Originally from Saginaw. | ||
Film | |||
Army Bowl stuffs: And the already-legendary Hoke impression: Also there is an hour of stuff on hudl. |
The only thing larger than Ondre Pipkins himself may be his personality. I mean, the Hoke impression. It's right above these words. Click it. Again, if necessary. There's that, and then there's Pipkins running his mouth about OSU commit Tommy Schutt…
"Tommy Schutt ate turf," Pipkins said. "He ate turf the whole time."
…OSU commit Kyle Dodson…
"I gave a little bit to what's his name, Dodson," Pipkins said. "He ran away from me. That's what they do. They run their mouth, and then when they meet up with the belly of the beast -- I call myself that because I am -- then they run away. When it comes to reality, they want to run away."
…and OSU itself:
"Are you talking about those people down south? I don't want to give them the time of day."
He also opened up an interview with Mike Farrell by eating an ice cream cone symbolizing Ohio State or something. Hopefully you've got your fill of Pipkins wackiness, because now that he's on campus he'll be kept as far away from microphones as Brady Hoke can manage.
The reason Pipkins gets to demonstrate that personality at place like the Army All-American game is that a person his size should not be able to move in the way that he does. One of many scouting reports emphasizing this, this one from Allen Trieu:
"Pipkins is a big-bodied space-eater that can command double teams, but he's quick enough and light enough on his feet to penetrate and disrupt," said Trieu. "Once he learns to really use his hands and consistently play under people, he's going to be an even tougher guy to move and block. Right now he's rated the No. 16 defensive tackle nationally, but he does have a chance to move up higher. Big kids like him that are 320 pounds and move the way he does are very rare."
A little later in that Sam Webb article, Pipkins says Michigan State was recruiting him for three tech. Yeah.
Appropriately, then, Pipkins's main highlights in the Army game were a pair of sideline-to-sideline track-and-tackles, one of them on five star jitterbug WR Stephon Diggs. While those were aided by a goofy defensive scheme that saw Pipkins looping outside the tackle on almost every play, his ability to trundle at speed made him probably the breakout star in San Antonio. Everyone raved.
Incoming maize boxes. A practice report from Rivals($):
…continually drew praise from the coaching staff and was able to split double teams in line drills. He has a great combination of strength and speed and proved very tough to block.
Guy was compared to a couple of guys who went top ten in the NFL Draft after the first day:
1. ONDRE PIPKINS, DT, KANSAS CITY (MO.) PARK HILL
Pipkins is a monster physically - he already looks like B.J. Raji or Vince Wilfork. He is one of the most physically imposing defensive tackles we have seen in awhile. At the point of attack, he is impossible to get on his heels and he penetrates quickly and athletically for a big man. Pipkins is going to be a load for the East offensive line to handle; he was simply dominating a good group of West lineman in the early session of practice.
Further Rivals reports note that he "moves much, much better than a player his size should," noted his "nonstop motor," and named him the #1 riser from the game. They followed that up by putting him in the top 20.
Pipkins also stood out to a couple of 247 analysts…
…Pipkins had the best case for top performer honors. He is a wide-bodied, stout defensive lineman that is much more than a bull-rusher or space eater. When engaged with offensive linemen, Pipkins usually dictates the movement. He also beats interior linemen with his quickness on plenty of occasions.
… Pipkins was as disruptive as anybody in his ability to get in the backfield and blowup blockers and diagnose plays. Physically he's a very stout defender and he uses that frame to take up a lot of space while still showing quickness that is really rare in interior guys. He is a tough kid to block.
…and his coach at the Army game:
“The Ondre Pipkins kid in the middle has really been impressive but all of those kids have really done a good job of reading blocks and picking up what we’re trying to do. He’s the one guy that I think has been the most impressive of the group.”
That's unprompted, and suggests that Pipkins is The Ondre Pipkins. As in, there are no more Ondre Pipkinses around here. There is The Ondre. There are no other Ondres.
After all that, 247 and the rest of the services slid him up significantly. ESPN didn't bother because ESPN is a fire-and-forget service unless you go to the UA game; in situations where a kid surges on all the other sites I tend to ignore the static evaluation provided by the WWL. ESPN did bump him a bit; when he committed he was a generic three star to them.
There's a ton of additional stuff out there from the various camps Pipkins hit up before his senior year, all of it in the same vein as the stuff above:
- "power and quickness creates nearly unstoppable upfield momentum"
- "when he decided it was time to get upfield, no offensive lineman showed the ability to stop him."
- "…wide and powerful and he will demand multiple blockers and free up his linebackers behind him. On Saturday, Pipkins used that powerful frame and added good explosiveness, agility and power."
- "Ondre is strong and quick off the ball, and when he can latch onto an opponent and stay low, he can take care of some gaps for sure." Ondre heard it himself:
Pipkins on what college coaches are telling him: "At 320 (pounds) you move. What I've been told is, 'I've never seen a kid who is 320 pounds move like you do.' I run a 5.1 (seconds) 40 (yard dash) and I bench 360 pounds. That's rare for a defensive tackle in his junior year. I'm very strong, very explosive and I have a lot of quickness and speed. It all ties into me being an athlete in the offseason and me working hard."
- You get the idea, and hope it will fling opposing guards backwards for four years.
---------------------------------
So what's the catch? There must be a catch. Even the bluest of blue chips flame out regularly. I think you might find it between the lines of this high praise from an opposing coach:"That kid has great explosion and punch off the ball. When he's tuned into the flow of the game, it's impressive the plays he makes. He'll chase players from gap to gap. He had a nice play on Evan - here's this 300-pounder chasing down a 160-pound running back, diving for him, getting him by the back of his jersey and throwing him to the ground.
"There are times where he chooses to go, go go and he's pretty destructive in the middle of the field. Almost unblockable, even with two or three kids. I can understand why everybody in the country is so enamored with him."
- I closed out one of my many many Ondre Pipkins tabs in a fit of "argh so much" that I wish I could locate again in which Pipkins's coach talks about how he had some frustrating times with the kid trying to get him to show effort.
- That's the best I've got, and it goes hand in hand with the fact he's a massive defensive tackle. It is, however, something that I think all Michigan fans were frustrated with during the above-mentioned Watson's career. He was really good, but when he decided to be great, he was great. And that wasn't often enough to be GREAT.
If Pipkins ends up in the same fan memory bin as Watson, the ability to give effort on every play will be the main reason… and he'll probably still be a multiple-time All Conference performer.
Etc.: Has a meme generator all prepped and ready. Had a sad diet:
Tremendous interview:
Tremendous (sort of interrupting): Michigan State is pretty close to home too though, right?
Ondre: I grew up a Michigan fan. They are not Michigan over there.
Pipkins features in the closest thing to Catlab that is not Catlab. Preps KC documents his nomadic high school life. Signing Day article from the KC Star. Long freebie sample of GBW magazine features Pipkins. AnnArbor.com profile notes the weirdest thing he heard during his recruitment:
"I like big, angry black guys on my D-line."
Two out of three, I guess?
Why Gabe Watson? Michigan nose tackles have not often been the run-clobbering battleship sorts who hover around 330 pounds and can play effectively at that weight. Gabe Watson is the only guy in program history who has. Terrance Taylor was a shorter fireplug sort, Alan Branch a 6'5" penetrator, Mike Martin a slab of quick-twitch muscle. Guys before Watson were never that big, either. He stands alone as a Michigan comparable.
People remember Watson as a disappointment but if he was one it wasn't much of one after being named first-team All Big Ten twice and getting drafted in the fourth round. His specialty was taking one on one blocks and depositing them on their ass many yards upfield, and that's what Pipkins will do if successful.
If you want to add a dash of Alan Branch, okay, since it seems Pipkins is a little smaller and more athletic than Watson.
Guru Reliability: High. All Star appearance.
Variance: Low-plus. With guys the size of Pipkins there's always a chance weight becomes a persistent issue. If that isn't a problem it's hard to see him not being a very good starter.
Ceiling: As massive as Pipkins himself. Potential NFL first rounder.
General Excitement Level: Very high. Obvs.
Projection: Won't redshirt with very little behind Campbell and Pipkins seemingly the obvious choice to replace him next year. Probably starts off a little slow due to conditioning issues and general freshmanhood, starts coming on midway through the year, and does some stuff towards the end of his freshman season that get everyone revved up about year two.
From there he's likely a three-year starter somewhere between pretty dang good and All-American.
August 11th, 2012 at 2:01 PM ^
Brian is really starting to crank these out
August 11th, 2012 at 2:13 PM ^
Because we've been following the 2012 class for so long, I can't remember who is actually on campus now. I keep thinking a few people from the 2013 class are in camp. Like, isn't Shane Morris a Michigan sophomore / RS freshman by now?
And when will Ferns get into the rotation? Or, since we got 12 of them to commit the other day, is he the rotation?
#michiganrecruitingproblems
#beatbama
#iknowthisisnttwitterbutIdontcare
August 11th, 2012 at 2:15 PM ^
Ondre is like a very large Jedi. He does things no one else can.
August 11th, 2012 at 2:25 PM ^
I am assuming you mean he plays behind Campbell this year, then starts the next three.
Do you really think he will be here four years?
August 11th, 2012 at 2:27 PM ^
August 11th, 2012 at 2:27 PM ^
I think he'll start in Columbus.
August 11th, 2012 at 2:31 PM ^
...we might need to reappropriate Joe Bauserman's passing chart
August 11th, 2012 at 2:32 PM ^
Saturday Post!!!!!
August 11th, 2012 at 2:41 PM ^
And I am very excited to see The Ondre Pipkins get some frosh time.
August 11th, 2012 at 2:49 PM ^
Have there been other freshman DTs that get significant playing time their freshman year and play well? I remember Mike Martin playing some but he was a NT in a 3-3-5 that seemed ill-fated. Did Gabe Watson or Alan Branch play their freshman year and how did they fare?
August 12th, 2012 at 9:11 AM ^
Mike Martin was a freshman in 2008. We played a 4-3 for most of that year, and the starters at DT were Terrance Taylor and Will Johnson.
August 11th, 2012 at 2:55 PM ^
Most lineman really need a year in the weight room to effectively compete at this level. That said, the kids these days are coming in bigger and more fit in many cases so they are closer to being ready to play.
August 11th, 2012 at 3:07 PM ^
A post on the weekend??
August 11th, 2012 at 3:45 PM ^
Of course I enjoyed seeing him do those two sideline jaunts and yes those were very good, but before those came up they were going by him like a mile marker on the highway.
August 11th, 2012 at 3:50 PM ^
He was constantly penetrating the Oline. The backs hardly ran towards him. Try re-watching with a non-hater mentality
August 11th, 2012 at 6:44 PM ^
Played more football than probably anyone on this board, was the 4th gen of my family to go to Michigan (2 nieces are now the 5th gen), so not a hater. Just watched objectively as the right guard in particular was able to turn OP in the hole play after play, letting the back go right by him or within an arm's reach and OP didn't get off the block. It's not like I think the kid is going to be a bust, it's just that the tape, other than those two sideline plays, wasn't all that flattering.
August 11th, 2012 at 10:35 PM ^
August 11th, 2012 at 11:06 PM ^
20,000 folks at the Murph (Jack Murphy Stadium, nee Qualcomm), televised, LA, NY, Phoenix, Miami, Dallas, Houston, etc. Not your little imaginary box, real football, sport.
August 11th, 2012 at 11:25 PM ^
20,000 folks at The Murph? For a second I thought you meant you played for the Chargers. USFL? XFL? Semi-Pro? Division III school?
Are you evaluating him by that one play? Are you comparing him to where a high school player's ability should be, or a Division I senior? I'm sure Mattison and company can mold him into a halfway decent player over the course of a couple years. Roh and Demens seem to think there is some potential.
August 12th, 2012 at 11:58 AM ^
August 12th, 2012 at 1:08 PM ^
After all, I even have trouble remembering my position and playing weight. Oh, wait, no I don't, never mind.
I have to hand it to Brian. I think he went out and hired a few guys to come in here and get both the proletariat and the mods ready for the season!
August 12th, 2012 at 1:35 PM ^
There's always some guy whose still ticked he didn't make the JV team down in Fraser or Wyandotte, or wherever and is of course very brave on the internet. Didn't mean to ruffle your feathers fella by mentioning a relevant frame of reference for the topic/comment you note from last week. Maybe you should try the decaf.
The essence of my observation on this one was that it wasn't a great highlight tape for OP, and I'm not the only one to post that. I do think the kid has talent and if he stays on his conditioning regimen and get's Mattison's coaching, he could turn out to be a stud.
This is a pretty cohesive board. Let's try to keep it that way. Go blue.
Q
August 12th, 2012 at 2:10 PM ^
Ending comments with "Go Blue" is a cheap ploy to distract someone from whatever bullshit you're typing.
If you're going to go all Al Bundy and "4 touchdowns in a single game" on the internet, you're going to get called out on it. In case you haven't figured it out yet, it makes you look like a gigantic dick bag.
August 12th, 2012 at 6:08 PM ^
loves that potty mouth. But hey, let's turn a negative into a positive. What say we do a sanctioned match where we charge maybe $5 a person to attend and we make it coincide with the U of M/MSU game. You pick the style of fighting (box, kick box, MMA) and we can wear big gloves or even head gear in case you're worried about me being so old you'll hurt me. The winner can give the money to the blog, or better yet, give the money to a charity of their choice. Even if we only get 100 of our buddies there, that'd still be worth the effort for some local charity. And of course, you can talk all the smack you want. Right up until the bell rings.
You in?
August 12th, 2012 at 7:52 PM ^
I googled boxing gyms in ann arbor, and it looks like there are at least two that could handle it, but finding an MMA ring might prove tougher and your choices could be limited to boxing or kick boxing. Let's pick one and contact the manager.
Been years since I've had a real match, and it would give us 2+ months to specifically train for it. All of our MGoblog friends can show up and donate. Wrap it around the MSU game and that sounds like a winner.
Your friend,
Al Bundy
August 13th, 2012 at 1:59 AM ^
HULK ANGRY!! One should never forget the valuable lesson learned by Debo in classic film - Friday.
August 13th, 2012 at 9:11 PM ^
August 14th, 2012 at 12:05 AM ^
M-Wolverine, I love your comment here!! I had literally posted almost the same thing, but edited it by cutting out what you said because I thought I might be going over the top. Glad I'm not alone in my opinion. I guess great minds think alike....and so do ours!!
August 14th, 2012 at 9:41 PM ^
August 12th, 2012 at 11:07 AM ^
August 12th, 2012 at 11:40 AM ^
August 11th, 2012 at 11:38 PM ^
I saw exactly one running play to his side of the formation, and they had him rushing off the edge for reasons passing understanding. I mean, he got burned once on the scramble, which of course he looked out of place trying to tackle a mobile quarterback in the open field.
August 12th, 2012 at 2:32 AM ^
I watched it one more time from your point of view. I seriously don't know what you're watching. There were a total of 2 maybe 3 plays out of 15 or so where he could have done more. On nearly every play he shows great athleticism, quickness, speed, etc. Showed a sick spin move twice, penetrated and caused pressure on the qb multiple times, ate space, took double teams and had the two impressive sideline rundowns. This is a one game highlight against other top players in the country.
August 11th, 2012 at 3:55 PM ^
August 11th, 2012 at 4:03 PM ^
He told Craig Roh he wants Roh to call him "Optimus Prime", meaning SE Michigan would have a total lockdown on Transformers based nicknames in football.
August 12th, 2012 at 8:09 AM ^
:(
August 11th, 2012 at 4:18 PM ^
that this year he'll impress but still at times look like a freshman, after a year under his belt and a year of collegiate weight training.....he'll by stomping the holy hell out of everyone. He is a beast!!!
August 11th, 2012 at 4:32 PM ^
Alan Branch:
August 11th, 2012 at 9:27 PM ^
"I grew up a Michigan fan. They are not Michigan over there.
"Pipkins is catching on fast...very fast indeed. Love this (large) kid.
August 11th, 2012 at 9:32 PM ^
I LOVE this kid. I hope he is one of those 4 year defensive lineman that brings fear into the eyes of his opponents. I can't wait for him to have his own...
August 11th, 2012 at 10:12 PM ^
I know he already has a nickname, but I wish we could call him "Big O."
August 11th, 2012 at 10:27 PM ^
Textbook D-line scheming in that Army game.
- Take a true NT.
- Line him up at the 3-tech.
- Stunt him outside (wait... outside? Are you sure? Okay, if you say so...)
- ???
- PROFIT!!!
August 12th, 2012 at 12:35 AM ^
Would be nice if he was good enough to start at the nose, and bump Campbell back over to the 3-tech where he is probably a better fit given his height and slimmer profile. Would boost the size of our starting D-line quite a bit. Probably asking a bit much of him, though.
August 12th, 2012 at 1:47 AM ^
YMRMFSPA: Warren Sapp
August 12th, 2012 at 3:07 AM ^
August 12th, 2012 at 9:53 AM ^
August 12th, 2012 at 11:06 AM ^
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