Hello From The Future: Shaun Crawford Comment Count

Ace

As expected, Lakewood (OH) St. Edward cornerback Shaun Crawford announced his commitment to Michigan via a live stream on ESPN's Recruiting Nation, choosing the Wolverines over fellow finalists Florida State, Miami (FL), and Tennessee. Crawford is the first defensive back and fifth prospect overall to commit to Brady Hoke's 2015 class.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
4*, #10 CB,
#98 Ovr
NR CB 4*, 83, #5 ATH,
#49 Ovr
4*, 91, #17 CB,
#156 Ovr
4*, #9 CB,
#89 Ovr

Of the three services that have released 2015 rankings, ESPN is the most bullish on Crawford, and all are in agreement that he's a solid four-star who easily makes their top-n lists. Rivals is the lone site that hasn't unveiled 2015 rankings; their Ohio state recruiting analyst, Marc Givler, gives us an idea of where Crawford might be end up there:

ESPN also has Crawford as the third-ranked junior in Ohio; if Givler's opinion holds, Crawford should end up ranked in the #50-overall range on Rivals.

Crawford's size has been and will be a topic of much discussion, especially given Michigan's recent proclivity for recruiting big cornerbacks; all four sites list him at a diminutive 5'9" and 165-175 pounds. Most corners that size have issues playing man-up on larger receivers and holding up in run support. With Crawford, the latter part, at least, is not an issue...

SCOUTING

...because his highlight tape is essentially eight minutes of this:

Crawford can bring the wood and he's got the play recognition ability to make a big impact in the run game and defending the flats. But don't take it from me. Take it from everyone else. Here's Givler again after taking in a St. Edward scrimmage last week:

Rivals analyst Josh Helmholdt after watching St. Edward in a game last fall ($):

Shaun Crawford, ATH, Lakewood (Ohio) St. Edward (2015): The 5-foot-9, 165-pound Crawford plays both wide receiver and nickel cornerback, but I listed him with the defense because that is where he was most effective. Crawford had a few drops on offense, but he is an outstanding open-field tackler on defense.

Crawford on Crawford ($):

Playing as a sophomore at St. Ed's is not exactly a common thing and making an impact on both sides of the ball as a sophomore is even more uncommon. So where does Crawford like playing the most?

"I like playing corner the best," he said. "I just like hitting people."

You get the point.

Of course, tackling is but one small part of playing cornerback — the whole covering receivers part is a pretty big deal. Bucknuts's Duane Long ranked Crawford as his #8 rising junior in Ohio, and the writeup makes it sound like he probably should've been higher on the list ($):

8. Shaun Crawford, Athlete, Lakewood St. Edward: As much as it pains me to rank a Michigan lean in my top 10, Crawford is too good to ignore. He has all the tools. He is the best cover corner in Ohio regardless of class but I have a hard time placing a player with this much game-breaking ability on defense. Crawford is just as impressive on offense. Crawford has the hips and feet to be an elite cover corner but he is such a fine tackler he could be a safety. His speed is something special.

Someone is going to get a great player whether he plays offense or defense. Right now it looks like Michigan. An offer might help the situation. He was supposed to be a huge Michigan lean and has an offer. What is he waiting on? Maybe we have it wrong. Maybe we are looking at an Ohio kid being brought up to speed on life after football for someone who intends to return to Ohio. We will see. Love to see this one in Scarlet and Gray.

Yes, that second paragraph is particularly delicious.

Crawford's cover skills are bolstered by his top-notch speed; he was regarded as a big-time track prospect before he even got to high school and has since posted electronic times of 10.80 seconds in the 100-meter dash and 21.80 in the 200. Between his speed and willingness to throw his body around, Crawford's dispelled many of the concerns about his height, as evidenced by this quote from Scout's Bill Greene:

Said Greene, “That’s the only drawback (to his game) -- his height. But it doesn’t bother me because I’ve seen him play live and he is a great football player.

His speed is amazing, but he’s got hips so he can turn and run. If he does false-step or get beat, he’s got lighting speed to catch up. And he will come up and hit people. There is no worry about if he can tackle coming up from the corner spot because he comes up and hits people. So he is a great athlete and a great kid. He comes from a great family, he is unbelievable in the classroom (and) he is a leader. There is nothing not to like about Shaun Crawford.

Run support: check. Cover skills: check. Track-star speed: check. Fits The Pattern™: check.

Greene added in the same article that "[i]f he was 6-1 he would probably the top cornerback in America," and noted that Crawford plays against some of the best high school competition in the country at St. Edward. Crawford's height may hold him back a little against taller college receivers, though it seems that it'll be more of an issue for NFL scouts; he's an elite talent with a skill-set that covers for his lone apparent shortcoming.

OFFERS

Crawford held offers from Arkansas, Cincinnati, Florida State, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Miami (YTM), Michigan State, Northwestern, Penn State, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Ohio State and Notre Dame both showed interest but didn't offer prior to his commitment, much to the dismay of Duane Long in the former case.

HIGH SCHOOL

Lakewood St. Edward is one of the top programs in Ohio's Division I, producing a number of top recruits in recent years and winning the state title in 2010. Notable former prospects include five-star Michigan guard Kyle Kalis (2012), five-star Ohio State tackle Alex Boone (2005), four-star Ohio State safety Nate Oliver (2007), four-star Northwestern defensive tackle Nate Kuhar (2012), four-star Iowa safety Diauntae Morrow (2007), and a long list of three-stars that contains former Michigan target and 2012 Oklahoma signee TE Sam Grant.

STATS

According to 247, Crawford recorded 66 tackles (three for loss), a sack, two interceptions, two forced fumbles, and a fumble recovery in his sophomore season. He also netted 438 yards and five touchdowns on 24 catches as a receiver.

FAKE 40 TIME

Crawford ran a laser-timed 4.51 40 at February's Nike Combine in Massillon, a very impressive figure that gets zero FAKEs out of five. He posted a 37.4-inch vertial leap at the same combine; that leaping ability should help him in defending taller pass-catchers.

VIDEO

Sophomore highlights courtesy of ScoutingOhio:

Here's video of last weekend's scrimmage courtesy of OhioPreps — Crawford appears with big hits on the two plays beginning at the :55 mark, a short touchdown catch at the 2:30 mark, consecutive TFLs at the 3:13 mark, and another huge hit at the 4:00 mark. Not bad for a day's work:

More clips, including individual game highlights, are available at Crawford's Hudl page.

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Despite his size, Crawford is an ideal candidate to play boundary corner. He's got the speed and cover skills to match up with outside receivers and more than enough tackling ability to hold up on the edge. Much like Michigan is doing with Dymonte Thomas this year — and may do again next year with Jabrill Peppers — the coaches could also give Crawford a first-year internship at nickel if he's ready to see the field that early before moving him to the outside.

When Crawford arrives on campus, Michigan will have a senior Blake Countess, a junior Terry Richardson, this year's freshman crop of Reon Dawson, Ross Douglas, Jourdan Lewis, and Channing Stribling, and of course 2014 commits Jabrill Peppers and Brandon Watson. That's a lot of older players to pass on the depth chart, though if Crawford continues to develop it could be tough to keep him off the field regardless. I really like his game and expect him to be a multi-year starter.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan has one defensive back in the fold for 2015 and could very well add another tomorrow in Tyree Kinnel, a 3.5-star safety prospect who could also project as a bigger cornerback. With a very small projected class and plenty of depth in place, the Wolverines would likely take just one more defensive back — NJ CB Minkah Fitzpatrick is a top national target who's shown some interest in Michigan, and five-star CA CB Iman Marshall has an offer in hand, though he's a longshot.

Crawford is Michigan's fifth commit in the '15 class (sixth if you count grayshirt DT Brady Pallante); that group may only expand to 15-17 signees, so Michigan will be very selective about whom they offer. Top priorities include quarterback, at least one more offensive lineman, defensive end, and outside linebacker.

Comments

NoMoPincherBug

August 23rd, 2013 at 7:47 PM ^

The backpedal is a DB's most important skill.  It is something that is constantly drilled over and over by the best DB coaches.  Some players (corners and safeties) have naturally great backpedals.  Crawford appears to be one of those.  Note how he stays low in his backpedal and then explodes out of it with great force to make tackles.  He also uses it well in coverage as backpedal, then turn and run with receiver is the single most important coverage technique that separates good DBs from Great DBs.  This is why no one should be concerned about him being 5-8.  His backpedal is the Equalizer.

Worthing

August 23rd, 2013 at 10:07 PM ^

This isn't a knock at all as I never even played football. However, I thought I had read somewhere that Nick Saban doesn't teach backpedaling at all. Is that just super rare? I'm pretty sure it was a knock Dee Milliner going into the draft though, so it still wouldn't counter your point. More just wondering what the take is on not backpedaling at all if that truly is how Saban teaches it. 

craig_james

August 23rd, 2013 at 7:49 PM ^

This guy cold be a spread killer much like Dymonte and Peppers have been talked up to be when they potentially play nickel corner their first year. Speed and quickness with run stopping ability like that will be great for stopping Urbz spread offense.

uminks

August 24th, 2013 at 12:11 AM ^

Shaun, hope you have a great experience at Michigan.  I think Shaun could grow 2 to 3 inches.  I know I had my growth spurt between the 11th and 12th grade where I went from 5'9 to 6'1. I wish I was athletic and could run a 40 in 4.3 seconds and play for Michigan as well!

BuckeyeInTN

August 24th, 2013 at 1:09 AM ^

Wish the kid well uo in tsun. But it really irks me how people will say his size doesnt matter. If he commiyed to tOSU or msu most eould say , whatever hes freaking tiny and will never make it. The kid looks like a beast hitting.

TheGhostofChappuis

August 24th, 2013 at 2:06 AM ^

Jeremy Birmingham, 11W:

"Buckeyes didn't offer, weren't going to offer. Really great player, but smaller than Ohio State wants at DB."

Right.  OSU loves the 5'10 guys like Damon Webb, but if you're 5'9, forget about it.  That guy is such a douchebag homer.

BuckeyeInTN

August 24th, 2013 at 5:24 AM ^

 dude, i completely disagree with you; jeremy has been said to be nothing but respectful and doesn't say things unless they have evidence. i don't understand your disdain other than he's an osu fan. Jeremy also said he is a good corner. just not what they were looking for. they're happy with webb, whom happens to be from Mi. what more do you want man?

and  most recruiting sites say webb is 5'11 or 6'0"

whereas most sites say crawford is 5'8" to fo 5'9"

like i said crawford seems to have very good instincts and can knock you on your ass. and i wish the guy luck. from what ive seen, there was never much talk on either side btw him and osu. i'm sure he's honored to be able to commit to a prestigious program like UM.

whew..i might've just thrown up a little bit saying that.

but once again good luck to you all and go bucks ;)

BILG

August 24th, 2013 at 9:13 AM ^

Not buying it. Elite kid who would have received an OSU offer if he wasn't a heavy Michigan lean. He received a bunch of offers from elite programs. Urbz doesn't want to lose any more head to head recruiting battles with Hoke, especially in Ohio. Hence he will avoid battles that seem tough and walk away...just like he left Florida when Saban was kicking his ass. Urbz is a front runner, always looking for the easy path, and his inability to develop young men for life, not just football, probably has a lot to do with this easy way out approach to life. Webb is 5'11 tops. Crawford could very well be taller by the time he hits campus, but frankly it won't matter as he will be a top 100 national recruit. Just like you guys never wanted D'shawn Hand because he didn't fit in ( he wants to play school), OSU fans just can't accept that a bunch of kids don't want to play for Urbz the sleazy used car salesman football coach. Real recognize real.

Magnus

August 24th, 2013 at 11:18 AM ^

Huh? When has an Ohio kid being "a Michigan lean" stopped Ohio State from offering? Speaking of homerism...

Every heard of Gareon Conley? De'Veon Smith? Mike McCray? All of them got OSU offers after already being committed to Michigan, let alone being Michigan leans.

Jonesy

August 26th, 2013 at 2:18 AM ^

I was 6'0 at 16, and 6'5 at 19, but I was a late bloomer, I don't think a late bloomer has any shot at being physically able to compete at a high enough level to be a big time recruit as a sophmore.  Don't see many Caris Leverts in football afaik.