Hello: Cesar Ruiz Comment Count

Ace


[Andrew Ivins/247Sports]

The nation's consensus top center, IMG Academy's Cesar Ruiz, committed to Michigan this afternoon over Auburn and Florida, who I found out were the other finalists only when Ruiz made his announcement. This may have been a foregone conclusion. You should watch his announcement video if you're into such things:

Michigan beat out a significant portion of the country's best programs to land Ruiz. He's the 23rd commit in the class and the fifth on the offensive line.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
4*, #2 OC,
#100 Ovr
4*, #1 OC,
#77 Ovr
4*, 84, #1 OC,
#69 Ovr
4*, 95, #1 OC,
#66 Ovr
4*, #1 OC,
#58 Ovr

Ruiz is the nation's #1 center to every site save Scout, which lists him one spot below Texas Tech commit Jack Anderson. Scout is a minor outlier in Ruiz's rankings and still has him in the top 100, and his rankings are in such a tight range that his composite ranking is higher than any individual ranking. There's a strong consensus on Ruiz's talent.

There's also a strong consensus on his size: he's listed at 6'3" and 313-321 pounds. He's got the ideal build for a center and enough bulk to play guard.

SCOUTING

Ruiz has been a well-regarded prospect since his time at Camden (NJ), where he was teammates with freshman DE Ron Johnson and incoming WR Brad Hawkins. He picked up his first offers, from South Carolina and Temple, in March of 2015, and was one of the underclassman standouts at the RCS New Jersey a month later. By the beginning of May, he held offers from Alabama, Auburn, and LSU, and Bama's 247 site listed him as the starting center on their fantasy two-deep for 2018.

Ruiz was part of the group that won the Big Man Challenge at that summer's Rivals Five-Star Challenge, and he showed that he's a natural center at the Under Armour Future 50 camp to end the year, per 247's Luke Stampini:

Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy center Cesar Ruiz was the smallest offensive lineman on hand on Friday, but the four-star prospect looked natural snapping the ball and handling bigger defensive tackles. He was able to sit back with a wide base and stay in front of pass rushers using his feet.

After transferring to IMG for his junior season, Ruiz was back on the camp trail this past summer. Rivals considered him one of the best players at February's RCS Orlando and liked his potential to get even better with added strength:

Ruiz was his usual steady self. The four-star prospect is a well-rounded lineman that can play center or guard. He moves well for a player of his size and has been well-coached throughout his career. He will continue to improve rapidly as he gets stronger.

He earned an invite to the Opening finals at the Orlando regional with a performance Scout considered the best of any offensive lineman in attendance:

Ruiz worked at guard in the Final Five, but he is a center, and that is where he did most of his damage Sunday.  He is very strong at the point of attack, he set a great base, and at times he wasn't moved.  If Scout had to name a Top OL, it would have been him.

He soundly won two of three reps in that Final Five while working at guard:

Ruiz didn't draw much mention from the Rivals Five-Star Challenge save for in Mike Farrell's awards column, when the recruiting analyst praised Ruiz for missing only one rep after taking a nasty poke to the eye.

That was not the case at the Opening finals, where Ruiz excelled on his way to earning recognition as one of the Final Five O-linemen. Scout named him to their Super Team:

Ruiz was stoning defensive lineman after defensive lineman last week. He has great lower body strength, he showed great punch, and he was rarely pushed backwards. It is hard to find a better center out there in 2017. Ruiz is considered to be a strong Alabama lean at this time, but there are others involved here. One to watch is Michigan, but like the Wolverines, all others are chasing the Crimson Tide right now.

247's Barton Simmons was blown away by his Saturday performance:

I didn't realize Ruiz was this good. He just couldn't be moved. It's not that he's a massive guy on the inside, it's just that he plays with such good leverage, such good hand placement and such tenacity that he won almost every rep. Even massive bodies like Marvin Wilson and Tyler Shelvin weren't able to overpower Ruiz but the more active defenders like Jay Tufele couldn't out-quick him either.

247, unsurprisingly, named him to their Dream Team, saying he "looked like a total star" during the week. Follow the Opening finals, Scout moved Ruiz into their top 100, and 247 jumped him all the way from outside the Top247 to #67 overall.

There's surprisingly little out there on Ruiz from his senior season even though he played at the most heavily scouted high school program in the country. This recap of IMG's win over Georgia powerhouse Grayson from 247's Steve Wiltfong is the closest thing to a single-game scouting report from the 2016 season:

I thought the left side of IMG’s offensive line played well in the second half in Notre Dame commit Robert Hainsey, Top247 2018 offensive guard Curtis Dunlap and the nation’s No. 1 ranked center in 2017 Cesar Ruiz. Mond did some damage running behind those three.

Rivals's latest rankings update, from two weeks ago, bumped Ruiz up 41 spots into their top 100:

“Ruiz boasts an incredibly strong upper body with massive legs and a great base. Still, his true worth is in his versatility. He can easily play guard at the next level but is also capable of remaining at center, where he has a heap of experience. Ruiz will likely go north for college. Michigan is the heavy favorite to land his pledge, but North Carolina and Penn State are also options.” – Cassidy

ESPN's evaluation concludes that Ruiz could be an early contributor and should be a multi-year starter at center:

Ruiz is a very good center prospect with good experience at the position. Looks to be progressing well and continuing to get better and has experience working against good competition on a daily basis. With continued growth as a player has potential to come in and compete for time as freshman, but if not in the big picture can be a guy who anchors a line for several seasons for a Power-5 program.

Scout's free evaluation praises his pad level(!) and doesn't have too much to critique:

Evaluation

Ruiz plays with a low pad level and explodes well. He is quick to the second level and his agility allows him to manipulate his body and make square blocks on smaller targets. He has a strong initial punch and once engaged, he drives his legs and turns the defensive play to open a hole. He retreats well in pass protection and he reads blitzes well. Adding more knee bend and getting his hands inside more are key to his development. -- Brian Dohn

Strengths

  • Body Control and Balance
  • Explosion
  • Quickness Off Ball

Areas to Improve

  • Flexibility
  • Technique

Ruiz is the rare true center prospect who's considered such not because he's undersized, but because he's a great fit for the position. He's much more experienced at the position than most high-level high school prospects—who often play tackle no matter what in high school—and he's proven he can hold up on the interior against the best competition in his class.

OFFERS

Alabama, Auburn, Baylor, Clemson, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Louisville, LSU, Miami (YTM), Michigan State, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Penn State, Tennessee, Texas A&M, and Virginia Tech, among others.

HIGH SCHOOL

IMG is a sports academy in Florida with a crap-ton of top-flight talent. Michigan held their spring practice there last year for reasons that should be obvious by now.

STATS

Is OL, no stats.

FAKE 40 TIME

ESPN lists a combine time of 5.26 seconds, which gets zero FAKEs out of five. That was less than a tenth of a second off the top SPARQ-recorded time for a center in this cycle. He had one of the better shuttle times among centers at 4.66, posted a solid 28.7" vertical, and missed the best powerball throw by half a foot at 42'0". His 97.92 SPARQ score is best among centers in the class, per ESPN. His Hudl profile also lists a 375-pound bench press and 610-pound squat. That is a lot more than I can do.

VIDEO

Junior highlights:

Single-game reels from his senior year can be found on his Hudl page.

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Ruiz probably won't get a chance to play right away unless Mason Cole goes pro and Patrick Kugler is needed at guard—let's not do that, please—but once Cole graduates there's a good chance he takes over the center spot as early as 2018.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Ruiz is the only center commit Michigan needs, and he's the fifth total commit along the offense line; M could take up to three more OL to round out a class that should reach 32. Their next commitment could (probably should) come at 4 pm today, when in-state DL Deron Irving-Bey makes his announcement. More could come later this week. Ruiz's IMG teammate, four-star LB Jordan Anthony, is scheduled to announce on Thursday, and there are rumors that more decisions could be bumped up to this week.

Other top targets include five-star CA RB Najee Harris, five-star GA DT Aubrey Solomon, top-100 UT DT Jay Tufele, top-100 NJ OLB Drew Singleton, top-100 TX OT Chuck Filiaga, and four-star MS OLB Willie Gay.

Comments

boliver46

December 19th, 2016 at 1:46 PM ^

point - hence my inclusion of my uncertainty as to his degree status.  If he has his degree in hand (or shortly thereof) he may get the firm handshake - or decide he'd rather play elsewhere.

If we were actually going to pull in the amount of OL originally suspected (9? I think) it would have made a numbers crunch on the OL - and in the amount of playing time if we had an immediate impact Freshman.

Anyways - I will be quiet now.

alum96

December 19th, 2016 at 2:29 PM ^

The irony of you saying Ruiz is as college ready as they come in a post that mentions Kugler trying to get some snaps in his 5th year is not lost here.

Can we stop with the projection of guys we have never seen play a snap on the OL?  No one said Mason Cole would start as a true freshman nor that he was "as college ready as they come."  Kugler was the #1 center of his class with daddy as a NFL lineman; Kalis was "the most college ready prospect of any in his class on OL."  That didn't work out.   Let's just cool it with the hype a bit on the lines immediate contribution - skill positions a bit different. 

With all that said I would not be surprised to see him play in a backup role as Harbaugh seems to like to get guys who are going to play the next year experience, and with Cole and Kugler both gone the next year it's not your daddy's Wolverines where 80% of the kids redshirt.

Amaizing Blue

December 19th, 2016 at 12:49 PM ^

 "...also lists a 375-pound bench press and 610-pound squat. That is a lot more than I can do."

 

Congrats Ace, you are a normal human!  Unlike Cesar, apparently.  Welcome to Michigan, big man.

funkywolve

December 19th, 2016 at 2:34 PM ^

but I'm kind of done fantasizing about future olines.  In 2012 we thought Kalis and Mags were going to be dominant olinemen by the time they were done, and then in 2013 most people thought we had an oline class for the ages (Kugler, Bosch, Dawson, Fox and LTT).  

Getting highly rated olinemen in your recruiting class is better than whiffing on them, but I'm kind of done getting my hopes to high with oline recruits.

jdemille9

December 19th, 2016 at 3:30 PM ^

I hear ya. But it was pretty clear that Hoke and Co., especially Funk, did not know what they were doing in regards to OL recruitment and development. With a HUGE emphasis on lack of development. 

Harbaugh built a championship caliber OL at Stanford out of mostly 3-star kids, but it took him a couple years. He's way ahead of schedule here and he's passed on a good deal of highly rated kids, at several positions, and has taken low rated kids that no one else really wanted. He has an eye for what he wants, and I trust that completely. 

I look at it this way, regardless of their ranking or number of stars if this is a kid Harbaugh wants then that means a lot to me. Star gazing is fun, and yes we've seen a lot of former high star kids, like you mentioned, not perform to what we expected, but this is not the Hoke/Funk era anymore. Stop acting like it. 

Don

December 19th, 2016 at 1:34 PM ^

From Friday afternoon through this morning the threads were filled with people wringing their hands that Harbaugh and Drevno couldn't recruit top OL talent, but now the MGoBlog Schizophrenic Whiplash Train is pulling into Ann Arbor right on schedule, and JH is a recruiting dynamo/genius steamrolling the opposition. Again.

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

December 19th, 2016 at 2:05 PM ^

especially the #1 in the land. He could give the staff options for 2017 because he is not a project from a physical standpoint and I believe (maybe this has changed) Ruiz is an EE. That would give him 9 months to absorb the O before game 1. Rare for a C as.a frosh to make the calls, but he could get acclimated with some G play. Go Blue!

vulture

December 19th, 2016 at 3:59 PM ^

Attending IMG is expensive and inconvenient.  I thought people did it because it was a way for their kid to get noticed by college recruiters.  But this kid already had a ton of college offers before he transferred.  How did attending IMG benefit this kid?

Magnus

December 19th, 2016 at 5:37 PM ^

He got elite-level coaching and played against elite-level competition for the past two years. Now he's college-ready instead of being a project, which could help him make millions of dollars down the road. That stuff isn't available in Camden, NJ. Meanwhile, a lot of bad stuff happens in Camden. It's not a great place to live.