Hello: Rashan Gary Comment Count

Ace

It happened.

The number one overall recruit in the 2016 class, Paramus (NJ) Catholic DT Rashan Gary, announced his commitment to Michigan on ESPN this afternoon. Gary had long favored the Wolverines, who held off the likes of Clemson, Ole Miss, and USC to secure his signature.

The impact here is two-fold. Jim Harbaugh landed a Signing Day commit of the highest caliber and visibility, which can only help the program in future recruitments of elite players, especially those in New Jersey. Then, of course, there's Gary's on-field impact, which should be considerable from the moment he steps on campus.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
5*, #1 DT,

#1 Ovr
5*, #1 DT,

#1 Ovr
5*, 94, #1 DT,

#1 Ovr
5*, 100, #1 DT,

#1 Ovr
5*, #1 DT,

#1 Ovr

HE'S PRETTY GOOD, YOU GUYS.

In addition to being the unanimous choice for top overall recruit, Gary is college-sized already; he's listed at 6'4", 286 pounds on the low end (Scout) and 6'5", 293 on the high end (247). I believe the latter figure has been updated more recently.

[Hit THE JUMP for WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO]

SCOUTING

Let's start, as usual, with Scout's free evaluation:

Evaluation

Gary is a mix of power, speed, athleticism and explosion. He has great speed and his ability to chase a play down are exceptional. He ran a 4.74 in the 40-yard dash at The Opening in July, and he plays fast. He can use his strength to overpower an offensive lineman, he has a tremendous change of direction and his explosion is off the charts. -- Brian Dohn

Strengths

  • Athleticism
  • Explosion
  • Speed

Areas to Improve

  • Disengaging Skills
  • Techniques and Moves

Gary was already a big-time recruit by the time he went to The Opening last summer. After a dominant performance there, 247 moved him up to the #1 overall spot and compared him favorably to a former five-star and NFL Rookie of the Year:

Paramus (N.J.) Catholic defensive lineman Rashan Gary is everything you want out of an elite defender. He's coachable, plays with effort and intensity, he's one of the best athletes in this class and he's versatile. Gary is now the No. 1 player in the country on 247Sports and he's been given a franchise rating of 101. That puts him on par with the ratings of Robert Nkemdiche in 2013, Myles Garrett in 2014 and Trent Thompson in 2015. To me, Gary is a Sheldon Richardson clone but he's further along in the same stage of development.

247 since moved Gary back to a 100 grade; if he's stuck at 101, a grade they don't hand out every year, he'd have been in very good company. Still, what he did to five-star OT Greg Little in that event is difficult to forget:

Yes, he one-arm bull-rushed a 305-pound five-star. Successfully. Very successfully.

Former Cal OL Todd Huber, the OL/DL player personnel director for The Opening, told Fox Sports' Bruce Feldman that Gary's performance was the best he's seen in the five-year history of the camp:

"I think he lost only three reps out of the 23 or 24 he had the entire week," said Huber. "With Rashan, he was so dominant and I know a lot of people look at his size and just see him as a D-tackle, but I think he can be as effective as a D-end or inside. There are no holes in his game. He doesn't take plays off. He has a great first two steps. He has incredible bend coming off the edge. He moves like (former five-star defensive end prospect) Byron Cowart only he's 40 pounds heavier. He's incredibly intelligent. He's a sponge.”

Gary's week at the Under Armour All-American Game produced similarly rapturous responses. Scout's Bill Greene liked him more than any DT from last year's crop after taking in the Tuesday practice:

Could make the case that this was the best overall football player on the field today, and I doubt anyone who was there would argue. Gary is a monster. He has everything he needs to be a star at the college level. Last year at Under Armour featured three tremendous defensive tackles in Christian Wilkins, Terry Beckner and Daylon Mack. All three played well this year as true freshman. What I saw out of Gary today puts him way above those three. There are very few true difference-makers coming out of high school every year. Rashan Gary is exactly that. Wherever he goes next year will see him playing as a freshman. He's THAT good. 

Scout's Greg Powers could only invoke the name... Rashan Gary:

Rashan Gary did Rashan Gary type things. He is the No. 1 prospect for a reason. There are not too many more superlatives you can throw on him. He is very special.

Rivals named him the top overall performer of the week:

Gary dominated from the time he arrived until he got on the plane back home. He entered with a target on his back and each and every day he proved he was up to the challenge. He played defensive end and defensive tackle throughout the week and used a combination of power, speed, and technique to get the best of his competition. He showed time and time again the hype was real. He took home MVP honors for Team Highlight after recording six tackles, three sacks and 3.5 TFLs.

Gary didn't just get by on natural talent; Rivals' Mike Farrell also gave him the "anger management" award for the scrappiest player of the week, saying he has a "non-stop motor." That performance cemented his spot atop the Rivals rankings:

“We found our guy,” said Rivals.com National Recruiting Director Mike Farrell. “Gary was No. 1 in our last ranking and he held onto it through all-star season despite some fierce competition. In fact, our top four remained exactly the same, something that is a rarity not only from one ranking to the next but for the final two rankings. Dexter Lawrence was impressive, Shea Patterson had an amazing week as well at the U.S. Army All American Bowl and Gregory Little was awesome at Under Armour All America week.

"But Gary’s performance was as dominant as I’ve ever seen from a defensive tackle who played mostly outside and was still too fast and athletic for everyone. Gary becomes our first defensive tackle to finish No. 1 and it is well deserved.”

Bruce Feldman surveyed 36 college coaches to see which 2016 prospect has the chance to make the biggest impact as a true freshman; Gary was the most popular choice:

"This is a really good defensive line class and he is head and shoulders above every other D-lineman in this class," one longtime college coach said. "He's 300 pounds and he moves well enough, he can play end. He's great with his hands. He's strong. He's been very well-coached and has had a great high school D-line coach. Rashan Gary is the Leonard Fournette of this class."

Said one in-house recruiting coordinator who has worked at two Power 5 conference schools: "He's a 300-pounder who moves like he's 240. He is special."

Scout went one step further and named Gary the most NFL-ready player in the class.

The Wolverine's Tim Sullivan gave his evaluation in the wake of Gary's commitment:

Gary is a naturally strong player, but still has the ability to get even stronger at the next level. In a college weight training program, his already-impressive physique will be taken to the next level. He can dominate offensive linemen who line up across from him, and escort them back to the quarterback or simply discard them off to the side.

He's also extremely quick, able to split double-teams by beating offensive linemen off the ball. He can provide pass-rush from the interior because he's quicker than guards. He can use his quickness and speed to get around the edge.

Gary is also a technically sound player, more so than most young defensive linemen. His footwork and hand technique are exceptional, and will only get better in a college program.

As did 247's Clint Brewster, who echoed the sentiment that Gary can play inside or outside:

Gary easily has the frame to be a 310-pound defensive tackle, but he packs it on tight. He’s 293 pounds now, but looks much lighter because of his compact muscle and long frame. The way that Gary can explode with his body and create distance between him and his opponent is special. The term “converts speed to power ” really applies to Gary. He’s got rare abilities as player because of his versatility and all he can do. It’s rare when a player has the quickness, speed, and size that he has but also the toughness and physicality to finish. He's an instant impact player that will see the field as a true freshman and Gary is so valuable because of the attention he will get from opposing defenses. He will get double and triple teamed and allow other players to get free.

This could go on and on, but it would be more of the same: Gary is an elite prospect who should have an All-American career before making his way to the NFL.

OFFERS

Gary held offers from Alabama, Auburn, Boston College, Cincinnati, Clemson, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, LSU, Maryland, Miami (YTM), Michigan State, Ole Miss, Mizzou, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State, Pitt, Rutgers, South Carolina, Stanford, Syracuse, Temple, Tennessee, UCLA, USC, Virginia, Virginia Tech, and Wisconsin, among others. He could've gone anywhere he wanted.

HIGH SCHOOL

Paramus Catholic probably needs no introduction. Gary was coached for his first three years of high school by current Michigan linebackers coach Chris Partridge. PC gave Michigan another five-star in Jabrill Peppers, a four-star OT in Juwann Bushell-Beatty, and there could be more on the way—four-star 2017 LB Drew Singleton is highly interested and four-star DT Corey Bolds also holds an offer.

STATS

From USA Today:

Gary is 6-5 and 293 pounds and was the American Family Insurance ALL-USA Defensive Player of the Year. He had 13 1/2 sacks and 55 tackles in nine games and forced four fumbles and returned a blocked punt for a touchdown.

According to MaxPreps, he had 14 sacks, ten additional TFLs, a blocked punt, and a fumble return for a TD as a junior.

FAKE 40 TIME

Gary's 4.74 SPARQ-verified 40 time is gloriously not FAKE at all. He's an unbelievable athlete for a player that size.

VIDEO

Senior highlights:

MaxPreps put together a video of his top five plays as a senior:

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

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Even though Michigan returns everyone but Willie Henry from one of the best D-line rotations in the country—and adds Bryan Mone to the mix—there's no question Gary is going to make an instant impact, especially given his versatility. While Mone and Ryan Glasgow are set at nose tackle, Gary could rotate in anywhere else on the line, and perhaps even start at WDE if the Wolverines want to put an enormous front four out there.

Gary should eventually settle into the interior, though with his quickness it's likely Michigan will move him all over the line to provide as many matchup issues as possible. He's got all the tools to be an All-American and eventual top draft pick.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

It's really dang good.

Comments

BuckNekked

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:17 PM ^

Yea the last week has been tough to work through. I bought a month of TMI last night so Sam could allay my fears with his even handed analysis but even he was scrambling this morning.

I think next year I will ignore recruiting until its over. Fifty-one year old men shouldnt invest this much into the whims of 17 year old kids.

Yea thats going to happen.

BlueMan80

February 3rd, 2016 at 5:54 PM ^

like a first class disruptor on the D line.  Michigan hasn't had one of these in a while.  But, when we did, we rode some awesome D to a National Championship as I recall.  Oh boy!  I can hardly wait.  Don Brown has to be the happiest DC in all of college football.  He's got some great new toys to destroy the opposition.

Kevin13

February 3rd, 2016 at 5:54 PM ^

A big splash rounding out the class with Gary and then Asiasi. Great first full class by Harabuagh. It I was nitpicking I would say it would've been great to have one more top OL in there. Loosing Hamilton late was a blow, but a top 5 class is hard to complain about.

SAMgO

February 3rd, 2016 at 5:57 PM ^

I can't believe we're going to have Gary and Jabrill and Lewis and Mone and Glasgow and Wormley and Clark all on the field at the same time.

FanNamedOzzy

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:00 PM ^

Hard to miss with this guy.

4.74 and the dude is just under 300 pounds. That's just a scary human being. Dynamic as hell.

While of course I'm excited about what he'll do for our defense, I think it'll be huge for our OL development as well. Week in week out, Gary will be the guy lining up as that opponent's best DL player to give our guy a look. Priceless.

funkifyfl

February 4th, 2016 at 2:27 PM ^

Have forgotten more football than I have ever known, but against pro style QBs, I would put him in the interior because even the best pro style QBs (i.e. Brady) suffer immensely when they can't step up in the pocket and have hands in their face. Against a dual threat QB, I would be more inclined to put him on the outside to really limit his side of the field.

 

Nevertheless, it probably makes sense to move him around against any type of QB to create the best matchups. GIDDYUP!

 

Edit: SB Nation agrees (mods: as always, feel free to delete if I poach too much info) (link - http://www.sbnation.com/college-football-recruiting/2016/2/4/10833200/rashan-gary-recruit-michigan):

"A multiple-front defense like Michigan's would be easy to move Gary around in. The Wolverines have done so with 6'5, 300-pounder Chris Wormley, who had 14.5 tackles for loss and 6.5 sacks in 2015. Against a pro-style team like the hated Michigan State, perhaps Gary would be best as an under-front three-technique.

On any runs to the tight end side, Gary would have the opportunity to be an interior disruptor, penetrating from the backside and utilizing his ability to shuck blockers and dart through gaps.

But against a spread squad like Ohio State, perhaps Gary could also contribute as a DE who has the agility to rush the passer, play the option on the edge, and handle the techniques teams have for getting playmakers loose on the perimeter.

Here, Gary would be at the crucial point in any schemes that try to attack with a pulling H-back, guard, or option read. Since he has the agility to play the option honestly, it's hard to attack him in that way. His great use of hands and sheer size would make him a difficult target to block."

kzoomgr

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:11 PM ^

What's just as encouraging is that we now have a coaching staff that can do something with this talent we're picking up.  There are a lot of consistently excellent teams that pretty much make their living on lots of 3 stars and a few 4 stars.  That Georgia is top 5 in recruiting year after year and have been kind of meh or a little better in that stretch speaks to the issue. High confidence that the Harbaugh regime will get the most upside of the guys they bring in, which is fun to be a part of as a lifelong fan.

Goggles Paisano

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:21 PM ^

I got to see him play when they played at IMG. He is so freakin explosive for his size.  I sat there mouth agape as I swear he was going to kill Shea Patterson.  He came around the edge with so much speed and power - Patterson did a Tom Brady type side step to elude the hit or he would have been posterized by for sure.  Freak athlete for sure. 

Also a big thanks to MGoBlog and Brian for providing all day twitter coverage here on the front page.  I had no problems today getting tons of info.   It's been a great day!!! 

Rabbit21

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:29 PM ^

What a crazy awesome piece of good news.  

This defense next year is going to be firghtening, get the offense just a little bit more progress and this could be a very, very good team.

bsand2053

February 3rd, 2016 at 6:39 PM ^

When I read most of these Hello posts I just glance at the bolded passages of the quotes.

Ace didn't bold anything in these qutoes and I can see why.  Every word is glowing.

I'm excited.