2013 Recruiting: Dymonte Thomas Comment Count

Brian

Previously: CB Reon Dawson, CB Channing Stribling, S Delano Hill

   
Alliance, OH – 6'1", 180
     

Dymonte_Thomas.vs_.Alliance1[1]

Scout 5*, #4 S, #39 overall, #2 OH
Rivals 4*, #12 S, #109 overall, #4 OH
ESPN 4*, #10 ATH, #93 overall, #4 OH
24/7 4*, #11 S, #80 overall, #4 OH
Other Suitors Ohio State, Notre Dame
YMRMFSPA Stevie Brown
Previously On MGoBlog Hello post from Ace.
Notes Urban Meyer is still on him hard. Army AA. Early enrollee.

Film

Senior highlights can be found on hudl. They're mostly offense. Also they are impressive.

If there's one thing extensive googling of Dymonte Thomas assures you of, it's that at this very moment there is an Ohio State fan posting speculation about Dymonte Thomas opting out of his LOI to a twenty-page thread. Someone else will respond to him by pointing out Thomas is already on campus and never actually signed a LOI, and the original poster will respond "yeah, but…" and spin out his reasons for optimism in re: Dymonte Thomas. This is less speculation than dead statistical certainty.

This is kind of strange for a guy that liked Michigan so much he pulled the trigger right after the Denard After Dentist ND game, ie going on two years ago, and never gave any indication of wavering. Or at least it would for any other fanbase.

In any case, Michigan fans have been patiently waiting for and OSU fans derangedly pining for Thomas because he is an Electric Athlete. I do recommend those hudl highlights linked above, which consist mostly of Thomas putting the jets on at running back and leaving chasers yards in the dust. Despite missing most of three games he put up 1,270 yards at 7.3 a pop, largely by doing this:

What He Does Has the capability to score a touchdown anytime he touches the football. Five of Thomas’ touchdown runs went for 50 or more yards. His one TD catch was for 57 yards.

There's one where he decides to split the safeties and the safeties find out their angles have been calibrated so badly that neither gets within five yards of the kid. I expected at least one of 'em to take their helmet off, quit football forever, and fade away as he walks out of the stadium, but the clip doesn't extend long enough for me to test that hypothesis.

That's the kind of thing that gets this kind of quote deployed:

“He has given the program so much and carries himself the right way at all times on and off the field. I’ve heard so many other coaches and even college coaches say he’s one of the most electrifying athletes they’ve ever seen on a football field.” — Ed Miley

Did we mention that Thomas started as a freshman, was also a wrestler and picked up MLB draft interest? Guys like Thomas are the reason recruiting sites had to invent the "athlete" position. Merely seeing him on the other team causes fever dreams about maybe coaching that kid:

1, Dymonte Thomas, Marlington RB-LB-S
Strengths: Just about everything. He’s a great football player. He’s very explosive on both sides of the ball. He’s very aggressive. He has a nose for the football and he’s a great kid, too…  When you play Marlington, you worry about taking Dymonte away on the perimeter and you take your chances inside, which wasn't a good option last year.
Weaknesses: I don’t know of any. If we had him, I often thought where would he play, and it’d be any number of positions. He does it all well and he’s such a great tackler.
— Opposing coach

More capital-A Athlete takes:

  • Allen Trieu: "college-ready build already … one of his best assets is his speed … simply an excellent athlete."
  • Bill Greene: "combines speed, quickness, and great athletic ability with the love of contact … should end his high school career as one of the greatest all-around athletes in Stark County's storied history."
  • Coach Ed Miley: “I’ve seen big guys, physical players. I’ve seen kids that can run. He is a combination of size and speed. I know he’s 6-1, 190, 200, but he plays much bigger than that. He is very explosive.”
  • Josh Helmholdt: "The first thing to know about Thomas is that he is fast… extremely fast."

And perhaps most remarkably, ESPN's evaluation of him does not state "he is more quick than fast" or "lacks a top gear," which damn near every evaluation of a non-lineman will throw in there at some point even if you are pretty damn fast. Instead($):

Thomas is a physically impressive looking athlete and overall football player. …  Plays a hybrid type role … He is quick to read and react and flashes very good closing burst when he locates the football. Gets through the trash with good lateral agility. He plays the position fast and pursues with a high motor and little wasted motion to the ball. Has the range to make plays in all three levels of the defense and is a true ball-hawk. He closes hard and with impressive pop. Runs through and is a hitter who will force turnovers and bring an intimidating presence to the position. … has the size, athleticism and ball skills to develop as a coverage guy along with very good make-up speed.

When ESPN does not note you are not as fast as an NFL player, you are fast. QED.

The catch, such that it is, is that Thomas has not shown an ability to play safety yet. Marlington used him as a weakside linebacker. Thus many of the scouting reports on him mention an uncertainty about whether he has the coverage technique to get the stars his athleticism suggests he should. No one pounded on this more frequently than Josh Helmholdt, who declared three different times that he didn't want to "get too bullish on his ranking until we were able to more thoroughly assess his coverage skills" despite also joining the "extraordinary athlete" chorus. The big reveal($) after Thomas played safety at the Army All-American game:

…Dymonte Thomas was the prospect I felt had the most to prove at the all-star games because we had not seen him in coverage yet. Thomas started out with a rough first day of practices at the U.S. Army All-American Bowl, and his lack of experience in coverage was evident. But as the week progressed Thomas adjusted well, and by the Army Bowl he was in on a lot of plays and was able to show off his speed. At the end of the day, where we had Thomas ranked going into the Army Bowl was pretty accurate.

In one week he went from incapable to in on a lot of plays, so they ranked him correctly. Seems a little stubborn there.

Similar notes of concern come from Scout's Scott Kennedy, who lists "coverage awareness" as a weakness and says "coverage awareness and technique will come with experience on defense," which is the nice way to put it. Scout is the most bullish of the four sites, FWIW, probably because this is the good bit of their eval:

STRENGTHS

Change of Direction

Closing Speed

Toughness

…plays both sides of the ball with aggression. He attacks the defenders when he's running the ball, and he punishes ball carriers on defense. A strong safety type, Thomas has good acceleration and balance. He's good enough on offense to stay at running back similar to Matt Elam (UF) at the same stage.

ESPN notes that "he is not asked to defend a lot in space and man-to-man coverage skills are an area that will need some refinement" and says that he's not much for flipping the proverbial hips at this juncture.

Of course, Thomas has already been on campus for a semester. In that time he seems to have locked down the starting nickel spot. Michigan has been making do with small cover-oriented guys like Courtney Avery there ever since Thomas Gordon was needed deeper. As a result the nickel package has very rarely featured anything except coverage from the nickelback and has been limited to passing downs only. In modern football that is a bit of a problem. See Jake Ryan lining up over triple WR formations to murder screens. It works, but it would be nice to murder screens and have Jake Ryan rushing the passer.

Thomas brings a different skill package and can be deployed on nominal running downs. especially against the spread. Steve Wiltfong:

“He has a chance to be special at Michigan. …physically ready to go. He has the size and speed you’re looking for at the safety position. He can come down and play near the line of scrimmage and he can also cover and deliver the smack to ball carriers. He can force turnovers with his physical size of play. He is a fantastic get for Michigan there.”

His coach is talking about Thomas as a safety here but is even more so laying out the blueprint for a hybrid nickel defender:

"His advantage will be the time he has played linebacker in the box for us, because unlike a lot of high school defensive backs, Dymonte is used to the physical contact and loves it. He is used to coming up and thumping people, and he can close on the ball."

Greg Mattison declared him "definitely physically ready" and talked up his coachability:

“He’s very fast and he’s a young man that it’s not too big for him. He comes in everyday and you correct him, he doesn’t go in the tank. He immediately says, ‘ok what do I have to do?’ Very seldom does he do it wrong again.”

…“Based on the spring you’re going to see a guy that’s headed in the right direction to be there quite a bit this fall,” said Mattison.

“He’s a guy that, this summer, again, if he continues to do what he’s doing -- but we’ve been very happy with him.”

Thomas's attitude, cited just above, is another asset. I always perk up when I hear a kid's dad was in the military; Dymonte's dad is a former Marine who put his kids through "boot camp"($) if they slacked off. Thomas was also more than fine with splitting carries with eventual Tennessee recruit Alden Hill:

"Look, Dymonte is a one in a million type of player," Miley stated Friday. "We've had Division-I recruits here the past few years in Zach Higgins (Michigan State) and Alden Hill (Tennessee), but there's nobody like Dymonte. He has started for four years now for me, and I love the kid. Dymonte has never met a stranger, and he's the most personable kid on the team, yet he's a team player first."

"Everybody was worried about his stats last year but him," Miley added. "How many five-star recruits play scout-team tailback, to give the first defense a better look? Dymonte does. He will do whatever it takes to make himself and the team better. He will finish his career with over 5,000 yards rushing and 400 tackles. The 5,000 yards rushing will be amazing because he has split carries with Hill, who ended up with 4,973 yards. Imagine if Dymonte had the carries that Alden had the past few years? What would that yardage total look like? He will end up over 5,000 yards rushing as the second option most of his career. And he's the best defensive player in Stark County history, in my opinion."

It may take some time for Thomas to become a refined engine of death. It looks like it'll take less than the skeptics above predicted what with the instant starting job.

Etc.: Can do the worm, so will probably get the safety role on the victory formation. Wrestling highlights! 3.5 GPA. Could see some special teams duty:

" Michigan will probably use him as a kickoff returner too, and Mattison said he could help out on offense."

I guess there are worse things to hear about a commit:

…came up in run support very well Tuesday and even when he struggled with guys like [Derrick] Green, he came back as physical as ever.

Hey, we got that kid too! /self high five

Why Stevie Brown? I know that probably made you break out in hives, but think about good late Stevie Brown: the kind of athlete who can pop a lead blocker and get out to the edge, who blitzes with speed and brings a load, who can cover underneath and down the seam. Who plays a hybrid LB/DB role. That's what Thomas is now, both as a high school linebacker and possibly—probably—Michigan's starting nickelback this fall.

Meanwhile, Brown finally figured out that whole safety thing en route to eight interceptions and a New York Giants interception return yardage record; Thomas has the same NFL-level athleticism and questions about his ability to translate that into reliable deep safety play. As a recruit, Brown was in the same range as Thomas; Dymonte's probably an inch or two taller. This comparison is a tight one.

Guru Reliability: Moderate-plus. Heavily scouted, Army guy, but positional questions and this review comes after we got a lot more information about the kid at Michigan's spring practice.

Variance: Moderate. Obviously brings all the athleticism you could want to the position and should be an okay starter at the very least.

Ceiling: Vast. Ripped a starting job away from a senior in no time flat, would be competitive in a race with Denard.

General Excitement Level: Just under vast. Smart kid with great personality and military dad should mean he scrapes his high ceiling; still, whenever you're projecting…

Projection: Um, seems to have already taken over the starting nickel position?

Down the road, Thomas may get a shot at replacing Thomas Gordon next year. In an ideal world I think he sticks at nickel for his career, operating as a frequently-deployed spread antidote and triple threat (rush the passer, defend the run, cover) in a system where he is as much of a starter as anyone else on the team. Michigan will of course cross-train the guy at deep safety to give them added flexibility and injury insurance. Like Gordon he may get dragged deeper because Michigan needs him, but that'll depend on Delano Hill, Jeremy Clark, and Jarrod Wilson… unless Thomas is just too good to ever take off the field, which you can't discount.

Also, I will not be surprised if Thomas ends up being the primary kick returner at some point. He has the raw Stonum-like speed to be a vertical threat there.

Comments

marmot

May 16th, 2013 at 12:38 PM ^

I watched this kid play high school ball a couple times.  I'm more excited to have him playing for Michigan than any other recruit in the last 5+ years.  Gamer.

dragonchild

May 16th, 2013 at 1:00 PM ^

"There's one where he decides to split the safeties and the safeties find out their angles have been calibrated so badly that neither gets within five yards of the kid."

So, he's this guy.

And by "this guy" I mean the video game version.

wlvrine

May 16th, 2013 at 5:46 PM ^

the fact that if you were quick, you could pile on after the whistle.  I can't count the number of times I dogpiled Bo Jackson after he was down only to see the stretcher come right out after that. 

Wolverine 73

May 16th, 2013 at 1:14 PM ^

I tip my hat to Stevie for what he has become as a pro.  But I will be really surprised if Dymonte isn't twice the college player Stevie ever was.

Hardware Sushi

May 16th, 2013 at 1:16 PM ^

"In an ideal world I think he sticks at nickel for his career, operating as a frequently-deployed spread antidote and triple threat (rush the passer, defend the run, cover) in a system where he is as much of a starter as anyone else on the team."

So then where do you want to put Jabrill Peppers?

Blue in Yarmouth

May 16th, 2013 at 3:01 PM ^

but there are two corner positions as well. Taylor will be a Junior this year and Countess will be a RS Sophmore I believe, so when Peppers sets foot on campus we will have a Senior and RS Junior at the corner spots. If Peppers is as good as advertised I could see him pulling off what Dymonte is doing this year in overtaking a senior with years of experience in R.Taylor.

This is just a guess, but that is what I was thinking would be Peppers track to the field, not at nickle or safety. Then again, there are far more football saavy people here than me that might differ with my opinion.

WolvinLA2

May 16th, 2013 at 3:13 PM ^

Although it would not be crazy to see Peppers take Taylor's spot, the nickel spot would actually be open if Dymonte moves to the open safety spot. So I would guess Peppers would start there, unless he's clearly better right off the bat, in which case Taylor could play the nickel I suppose.

denardogasm

May 16th, 2013 at 5:27 PM ^

The problem is that Taylor is probably closer to Avery than Peppers or Thomas in terms of size/strength/versatility. For that reason, considering the description above of the ideal nickel role, Peppers seems like a better fit for this defense. You can't just look at who is a better corner between Taylor and Peppers. You have to look at which lineup gets all the best players on the field and makes the secondary best as a whole. I think the combo that would achieve that would probably be upperclassmen Taylor and Countess at the cb spots and Peppers and Thomas roaming the middle takin out the trash. Wilson at FS.

No matter what the combo winds up being, our defense is going to be legendary.

WolvinLA2

May 16th, 2013 at 7:00 PM ^

Yeah, I understand that, but Taylor is both faster and more physical than Avery, so he'll be a better fit there than he was.  Despite being a year younger, Taylor is listed 12 pounds heavier than Avery on the roster (and only one pound less than Dymonte).  I think when he is a senior, he'll be a big enough player that he could handle all aspects of the nickel position.

Ron Utah

May 16th, 2013 at 1:17 PM ^

It's hard to call a consensus top-100 guy a sleeper, but I really believe Scout is the closest to being right putting him at #39.  And while that number doesn't mean much of anything, I see Thomas as a can't miss star (assuming he stays healthy) with the potential to be one of the best DBs in Michigan history.

I would predict he ends-up somewhere between Marlin Jackson and Charles Woodson in terms of his greatness, and I do believe he will play some offense and/or special teams where he'll be...special.

Probably my favorite recruit from the class.  I really think he and Green will both live-up to their hype.

Space Coyote

May 16th, 2013 at 1:38 PM ^

He eventually occupies the nickel role and plays safety when back in a 4-3. I don't think you'll want to take him off the field if he lives up to the hype. I'm hoping Hill redshirts, because I really like him at SS too.

Brown Bear

May 19th, 2013 at 12:06 PM ^

vast (vst)
adj. vast·er, vast·est
1. Very great in size, number, amount, or quantity.
2. Very great in area or extent; immense.
3. Very great in degree or intensity. See Synonyms at enormous.

Makes sense and isn't bad. It is not saying that he has a lot of ceiling, that would make zero sense, it is saying his ceiling is extremely high. This kids ceiling is higher than high, it is immense!

WolvinLA2

May 21st, 2013 at 7:58 PM ^

See, I disagree. The adjective in this context should not be describing the ceiling, it should only describe where the ceiling is located. An immense ceiling does us no good if it's near the ground.

I just think Brian got too fancy with the vocabulary and used a word that doesn't work.

Monocle Smile

May 16th, 2013 at 3:13 PM ^

You could use the Nickel as your base set if your nickelback is a strong run supporter and tackler. (i.e. can take on the block of a tight end AND cover a slot). This also works against spread teams...the only reason we threw Ryan over the slot against NW is because he was the only one who could both obliterate receiver blocks and pursue.

Come On Down

May 16th, 2013 at 3:33 PM ^

correct me if I'm wrong but wouldn't you still be substituting the nickel corner in and out based on the offense? If he's at safety he's always on the field save for maybe a a handful of plays where there's no deep threat at all. Also, sice it's the safety's job  to be the last line of defense it makes sense to put a guy with a ton of speed at the position.

WolvinLA2

May 16th, 2013 at 4:02 PM ^

Actually, safeties don't need to have a ton of speed. Obviously, you want every player on your team to be fast, but safeties don't need as much speed since the have the advantage of positioning and angles. It's more important for a safety to be able to diagnose quickly than to run fast, but obviously both is best.

Remember the Kyle Rudolph play against Cam Gordon? If CG had Denard speed that's still a 60 hard gain, at least. Had he diagnosed the play correctly, he probably doesn't need any speed.

RoZ06

May 16th, 2013 at 3:11 PM ^

According to his junior highlights, he had a 2.7 GPA. If he in fact graduated with a 3.5 (which seems darn near impossible) that's impressive.
Either way, there seems little reason to doubt that this kid will be something special.

Monocle Smile

May 16th, 2013 at 3:16 PM ^

I don't know what his school ran, but trimesters and quarter systems allow students to throw their GPA all over the place if it's calculated at the end of every term. Weighted AP classes can also help here.

I wouldn't think he'd be able to enroll early if his GPA was questionable, so I'm guessing his highlight video was off or he made the decision to enroll early at Michigan and worked his balls off.

Painter Smurf

May 16th, 2013 at 4:10 PM ^

the defensive instincts to boot.  That's pretty rare.  A lot of even the top defensive recruits are deficient in one area or the other.  You could say the same about Woodson - he could have easily been an NFL WR or RB.  Thomas could be a very good college RB too.  But defense is a better bet because he can be used in a lot of different ways.  UM needs him more on defense too.

Elmer

May 16th, 2013 at 5:04 PM ^

I think someone showed that it's not significantly worse for injuries to play kick-returner, but I still hate seeing a key player return kick-offs.  There are some violent hit with two guys running full speed at each other.  Would prefer to see a back-up get the job.

DoubleLegTakedown

May 16th, 2013 at 10:30 PM ^

You can tell by the way he wrestles that he has good matt presence and a true feel for the sport, potential MLB prospect and UofM football player on top of that....this kid is special and imagine a backfield of Thomas, Wilson, Peppers, stribling, and ummm any other DB we may have recruited recently. This has me so excited for the next 4-10 years of Michigan Football!