Hello: Nick Eubanks (Updated) Comment Count

Ace

Plantation (FL) American Heritage TE Nick Eubanks wasn't a name on many best-guess lists, but after a late push by Michigan that culminated in an official visit this week, Eubanks pulled the trigger on a commitment yesterday. This is not a case of the Wolverines plucking an under-the-radar prospect away from lower-level programs; Eubanks chose Michigan over Alabama and Florida after the coaches convinced him they have the best program for a tight end:

"I chose Michigan because it's a better fit for me," Eubanks said. "I can play right away as a true freshman. It's best for my future and for my work ethic. Plus coach Harbaugh coached Vernon Davis so I know he knows how to use the tight end. Michigan showed me stuff I've never seen before. Not at Florida or at Alabama. How they throw the ball to their tight end. How they flex the tight end out and use the position as a hybrid. No other school I was considering does that. That shocked me and shook my mind."

Eubanks is the 26th commit in the 2016 class and the second at tight end, joining early enrollee Sean McKeon.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
3*, #29 TE 4*, #9 TE 4*, 81, #2 TE-H,
#258 Ovr
4*, 91, #11 TE,
#269 Ovr
3*, #15 TE,
#367 Ovr

Eubanks' rankings are tightly bunched—if Rivals extended overall rankings farther, he'd be within the top 300—with the exception of Scout, whose middling three-star ranking is enough to drag his composite ranking onto the 3/4-star fringe.

Eubanks is listed at anywhere between 6'5", 215 pounds (Scout, ESPN) to 6'6", 230 (247). At this stage he's more of an H-back and giant receiver than a true hand-in-the-dirt TE, but he's got the frame to develop into the latter down the road.

SCOUTING

While Scout is the outlier in ranking Eubanks, their free evaluation falls in line with other reports, and it depicts a prospect with quite a bit of upside:

Evaluation

A tight end with a great frame and the ability to play on the line or to be flexed out. Has great length, he knows how to extend for the football, and he can use that to his advantage. He will fill out, add weight, and get stronger. Solid blocker, but can get better at the point of attack. More comfortable now flexed as a big wide receiver going out for passes. Has good athleticism. Solid hands, but he can be more consistent there.

Strengths

  • Red Zone Weapon
  • Running Ability
  • Size

Areas to Improve

  • Blocking Ability
  • Hands and Concentration

Eubanks has been firmly on the radar of the top southern schools for a while. Miami's 247 outlet talked up his potential after seeing him at the South Florida Opening Regional last February:

Eubanks is a top athlete at tight end. He moves very well as he goes through drills. When the footballs are flying Eubanks needs to improve his catching ability and concentration. The potential is there for Eubanks to be a special tight end.

In March, Alabama's 247 site listed him as one of three top early TE targets alongside four-stars Kaden Smith and Naseir Upshur, and of the trio they cited Eubanks as having the highest ceiling:

If you are looking for an upside prospect at the tight end position for 2016, there may not be one with a higher ceiling than Eubanks who is freakishly athletic with a frame to put on a lot of good weight. Eubanks names Alabama as his favorite school shortly after being offered in late February and the big target has an eye on the SEC in the early going.

By June, Eubanks got a bump into the Top247, with his prodigious upside noted once again:

Another new addition to the Top247 is Plantation (Fla.) American Heritage tight end Nick Eubanks. The big, athletic Eubanks is raw but he continues to develop rapidly. He's a basketball player that is still finding his way on the football field but his upside is as high as any tight end in the class.

In a big-time matchup last August, Eubanks outperformed a prospect with whom you're quite familiar in Heritage's 19-7 upset over IMG Academy:

American Heritage tight end Nick Eubanks was one of the stars of the game. He accounted for two of American Heritage's touchdowns with the second coming on a 100-yard interception return for a touchdown on the game's final play. The big basketball body out-played five-star tight end Isaac Nauta on the night and made himself very accessible all night long for his quarterback. Alabama is currently the Crystal Ball leader.

Florida-based Scout analyst Corey Bender posted a scouting report on The Victors Board in the wake of Eubanks' commitment; encouragingly, he notes that drops have become less of an issue over time:

Eubanks is everything that colleges are looking for in a modern-day tight end. He's a big, smooth athlete who can really run and rack up yardage after the catch. Eubanks is a legit 6-foot-5, and should really fill out nicely once diving into a college strength and conditioning program. He's a long strider that gets to his spot and sets a target for the quarterback. He does a good job of swinging his head around and making himself available.

He can continue to work on his consistency catching the football, but is much improved in that department from the last time I laid eyes on him. Eubanks put forth the effort and really spent time on his blocking over the offseason, but is more of a threat in the pass game at this stage in his career. He must continue to strengthen up his frame and packing on weight at 215 pounds,.

Overall, this is a tight end prospect with oozes with upside. Eubanks is a field-stretching tight end that fits perfectly in Jim Harbaugh's program in Ann Arbor. He gets up the field like a gazelle, and is equipped with good frame/measurables.

ESPN's evaluation goes into detail on Eubanks' ability to stretch the field:

Target with a clean release, possesses the top-end speed to threaten the intermediate to deep part of the field and present a vertical threat. Flashes ability to locate and settles into pockets working against zone and can use size to help create some separation but needs to continue to develop as route runner. Enough speed to rip off some yards after catch if gets a seam and adequate ability to make first defender miss.

Good hands with ability to extend for the ball. Displays very good body control to adjust to passes thrown off target. With height and leaping ability can be threat downfield in jump-ball situations.

Like everyone else, they say he needs to develop physically to be a plus blocker at the college level, and they believe he can be a productive mismatch-causer in the passing game.

Finally, The Wolverine's Tim Sullivan sees him as a great fit in Michigan's offense:

It should come as no surprise with his lean build right now that he is most accomplished as a pass-catcher. He has outstanding hands, and is a good athlete. Those two combine to allow him to make plays downfield. He fields the ball cleanly, and turns upfield right away.

He is a size mismatch for safeties and a speed mismatch for linebackers - all the while possessing the frame to fill out and be a devastating blocker at the point of attack. He's a well-rounded tight end and it's no surprise to see a player with that skillset opt to play in a Jim Harbaugh offense.

Eubanks is an impressive athlete at the position; as long as his hands don't betray him and he maintains that athleticism while adding bulk, he should be very productive as an H-back and eventually tight end in Harbaugh's offense.

OFFERS

Eubanks holds offers from Alabama, Auburn, Florida, FAU, FIU, Georgia, Louisville, LSU, Maryland, Miami (YTM), Mississippi State, Mizzou, Nebraska, Ole Miss, Oregon, Rutgers, South Carolina, Texas, USC, and Wake Forest.

HIGH SCHOOL

American Heritage is one of the top program in the state of Florida, with their most notable recent recruit being five-star Georgia running back Sony Michel. Michigan has already offered four 2017 prospects from the school: RB Kyshaun Bryan, CB Marco Wilson, and OTs Kai-Leon Herbert and Tedarrell Slaton.

STATS

According to 247, Eubanks had 23 receptions for 344 yards and three touchdowns as a senior.

FAKE 40 TIME

Eubanks has a SPARQ-verified, zero-FAKE 4.69 40 time, which is quite impressive for a tight end.

VIDEO

Senior highlights:

Junior highlights and single-game reels can be found on his Hudl page.

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Even with AJ Williams gone, Michigan is pretty crowded at tight end, so Eubanks should be afforded a redshirt year before he's asked to hit the field. There will be ample opportunity for playing time in 2017, when Jake Butt will be gone; Eubanks will compete with Khalid Hill, Ian Bunting, Tyrone Wheatley Jr., and Sean McKeon for a spot on the two-deep. His best bet to see the field early in his career will be as an H-back until he fills out and proves he can be a solid in-line blocker. If he lives up to his ample potential, he should be a versatile threat lining up all over the field.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan now stands at 26 commits with one grayshirt and one expected departure still among that number. While WR Nate Johnson is apparently no longer an option for Notre Dame, his place in the class isn't a guarantee, either. That leaves Michigan with seven or so more spots to fill in the class.

The commitment of Eubanks explains why Iowa State suddenly looks like the destination for TE target Chase Allen, who announces his decision today. Michigan is still expected to push for four-star CA TE Devin Asiasi, who's both too good not to take and a potential package deal with four-star DT Boss Tagaloa.

Other top targets include DT Rashan Gary, ATH Jordan Fuller, CB Lavert Hill, WDE Connor Murphy, S Isaiah Simmons, WR Donald Stewart, WR/DB Pie Young, and K Quinn Nordin.

Here's the class as it currently stands:

Comments

Quailman

January 29th, 2016 at 12:29 PM ^

24/7 rating is the rating their guys give a player. 

The 24/7 composite is the composite average of 24/7, Rivals, Scout, and ESPN. 

The composite gives a good look at a sort of  "consensus" rating and where they stack up since often one or more of the sites can be an outlier regarding certain players. 

alum96

January 29th, 2016 at 12:56 PM ^

I presume because they are granular than just the blanket star.

There is a significant difference between a high 4 and a low 4, and a massive difference between a high 3 and a low 3.

To that end the player ranked #42 in the country is a 4* as is the player ranked #273.

The player ranked #378 is a 3*.  So is the player ranked #893.   But there is a massive difference between those 2 guys views by the services.

A player like Eubanks actually falls right where 3/4 merge around 350ish.  So he could be ranked 311 on 1 service and be a low 4* and 359 on another service and be one of the highest 3*s there are.

This is another reason you can't just look at stars per se in absolute terms.  You can look at a class and mock a lot of 3*s of some schools but a good # of those could be ranked #370 to #450 - which essentially is a coin flip away from a low 4* when you are ranking 1000s of kids across the country.  And very different than getting 3* guys in the 800s for example.

m_go_T

January 29th, 2016 at 12:48 PM ^

I actually came in to chime in with Eric Ebron.  Both had about the same type of ratings coming out of High School.  If you look at his recruting profile they are very similar, 6-4 about 220.  Very fast, more receiver than blocker but with the ability to grow into a blocker.  Had similar stats senior year and similar rankings (3/4 star and just outside a top ten TE).  

The more I research the kid, the more I like him.  Good pickup.  

AZBlue

January 29th, 2016 at 12:36 PM ^

I see 2 5th years on the depth chart by class that will almost certainly be gone, and you could project some departures in a few skill positions -- particularly if they were able to get the 3+ year degree -- but I also find it hard to see enough names that won't be in AA next season to accommodate the incoming class AND give scholarships to the deserving walkons.

AZBlue

January 29th, 2016 at 12:32 PM ^

Ace can you please use your relationship with Steve Lorenz and 247 to see if they can change the profile picture they have for McKeon? Freaks me out every time I see it -- looks like one of those vampire kids from the twilight movies.

getsome

January 29th, 2016 at 2:32 PM ^

ha yeah they seem to like finding him in the flat / hook / curl zones but he also ran a few 9s.

though with 2 elite OL prospects (#57 looks really good at first glance by the way) and a RB i just saw they offered, im guessing that squad runs the ball quite a bit (or at least they should)

ama11

January 29th, 2016 at 12:44 PM ^

I think he is a good athlete and can do great things in college, he has great hands, has good speed for the position and has a nastiness deep down that comes out from time to time. BUT, he needs to work on effort(!), blocking and playing to the whistle. I'm surprised some of the clips of him not blocking to the whistle and blocking in the back is on his highlight film. If I were a college coach, he would be a borderline kid. I'd rather have Chase Allen. But, in Harbaugh we trust.

Congrats to Eubanks!

Steves_Wolverines

January 29th, 2016 at 1:04 PM ^

I believe it's because he's still very raw. He only has a couple years of football under his belt, and probably hasn't gotten the correct kind of coaching for his skill set. He also played basketball, so he was splitting his time between the two sports.

It's well reported that he has a high upside, which makes him such a coveted target. He has all the tools to be a dangerous player.

The only risk with taking a player like this is whether or not he can be coached into the player all the coaches see he can become. Harbaugh definitely has a unique way of coaching. So we'll see if Nick Eubanks can commit to Michigan, Harbaugh, and himself to become the player we all see he can be.

I think he could be one of our sleeper of the year picks, due to how raw he is. 

My sleeper of this class candidates (and order I would rank them) are:

Khaleke Hudson

Nick Eubanks

Devin Gil

Three pure athletes, with a ton of potential. Can't wait to see them evolve under Harbaugh and Co. 

getsome

January 29th, 2016 at 2:53 PM ^

no doubt hes a raw prospect and has tons of upside if harbaugh and staff can harness his natural ability and motivate him to become a technically sound football player.  that can be a big "if" with some prospects though, regardless of the staffs talent or dogged nature - i dont know anything about this kid personally so i cant comment but its a safe bet the staff believes they can mold him or they wouldnt sign him.

but i think that comment was more directed towards the fact that hes including somewhat lackadaisical play, questionable body language, mild taunting, etc on his highlight tape - its a highlight tape meant to entice all coaches, not a compilation of questionable clips pieced together by scouts on the fence but a highlight tape.  its just not something you see very often.

from pure talent and potential ceiling perspective, hes an exciting addition.  especially when added to current TEs on roster, mckeon and hopefully asiasi bc hes a different type player

wahooverine

January 29th, 2016 at 1:23 PM ^

No way. Trust Harbaugh's preference on this one. Given that any freshmen TE will redshirt and develop you take the guy with the freak physical upside. I don't think he offered him only based on his measurables and physical ability. Clearly after meeting him he also thinks he has the mentality required for this program.  Eubanks was quoted above, "It's best for my future and my work ethic".  I think this kid knows if he doesn' block with EUTM he won' be playing.

alum96

January 29th, 2016 at 12:49 PM ^

That's an impressive 40 time for a 17 year old of that height and near 220 lbs.  I believe Funchess was about that time at his combine.  Sounds like for now he is a more athletic Khalid Hill. 

Down the road you see what weight he can put on, how his hands develop, and how he blocks (will and ability).  But based on not too many years playing football he sounds like an interesting guy.

Hopefully he puts on a good 12-15 lbs by this time next year, and he does those JBooty drills where he catches stuff with 1 hand on his back 300x a day, and we'll see you at the beginning of the 2017 season ready to compete with Bunting, McKeon and hopefuly Asiasi

SoullessHack

January 29th, 2016 at 1:01 PM ^

Am I crazy or is "That shocked me and shook my mind" just about the greatest quote of this recruiting cycle?  Especially when you combine it with his hair!  How have none of you kids with your straight bill hats and your hope the future not made a meme with that photo of Nick Eubanks and "HE SHOOK MY MIND!" in block letters underneath?

 

I'd like to propose that the term "mind shake" replace "puncher's chance" when describing UM's chances of flipping an otherwise committed (or heavily leaning) recruit on a weekend visit.  As in, "(PROSPECT) is committed to Tennessee, but if he makes it to Ann Arbor for an official visit there's a chance for mind shaking."  (Or "... a chance for the Harbaugh mind shake.")  Recruits could also be on "shake watch," a particularly out-of-nowhere flip could be a "mindquake", etc. 

CaliforniaNobody

January 29th, 2016 at 1:19 PM ^

Dude will have more career yards and TDs than Nauta. Partly due to his upside, largely because he chose the best TE utilizing coach in the nation while Nauta chose a school who never uses them.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

Danwillhor

January 29th, 2016 at 1:20 PM ^

as far as guys we have/had a shot at. Asiasi was/is really the only guy left after Nauta that isn't a project. That said, I was never thay high on Nauta. No sour grapes, btw. Many called Nauta a "once a decade TE" and such but I don't see it. I think he'll be fine but the best TE I've seen in this class is going to osu. I haven't seen them all but I think they landed the best in the country based on what I actually have seen. Eubanks and Allen were basically the same guy to me despite not being all that alike. Intrigued with Asiasi and if we can get him to leave the WC AND if any Freshman would play for us next year. I'm not sure the snaps would be there and that's a good thing in that it let's them learn, trim down and bulk up behind Butt, Bunting and Hill. Still, glad we got one of Eubanks/Allen.

Danwillhor

January 29th, 2016 at 1:25 PM ^

but I think both Michigan and Ohio will return to normal (with elite kids) when winning big returns to Michigan. We'll always look nationally but a winning Michigan is a gimme for top kids in-state. We just happen to be the 2nd best football program in our own state at the moment, like it or not.

Denard P. Woodson

January 29th, 2016 at 1:28 PM ^

Unless I’m just falling for the hype, it looks like UM is really stacking elite athleticism throughout the roster.  You never know which high school athletes will be that special play-maker at the next level, but the more chances you have, the better the odds.  I'm getting very optimistic that UM will soon get to be a  year in, year out national title threat like Bama, USC, LSU, FSU and OSU have been.