All recruits being told to wait as "Silent Commits" until Signing Day

Submitted by Indonacious on

Per Steve Lorenz, it seems as though any future commits will be silent until NSD, when Harbaugh wants to make splash and have all of them reveal their commitment on that day! If true, another unique idea from harbaugh...maybe has something to do with the signing with the stars event?

BornSinner

January 23rd, 2016 at 4:58 PM ^

Makes sense. Michigan is mostly quiet on NSD except for some last minute flips. 

 

Schools like Bama, OSU and LSU cleanup on NSD. Having everyone announce on that day along with those schools puts Michigan's name right up there on CBS, ESPN etc. 

 

Great idea by the staff! 

Blue Mike

January 23rd, 2016 at 5:18 PM ^

Actually, I'd guess it's as much about preventing the last minute frenzy of coaches attempting to flip guys without our coaches having a chance to reel them back in before they sign the LOI.  Smart move either way, and makes for an interesting Tuesday!

stephenrjking

January 23rd, 2016 at 8:22 PM ^

"Silent" to us does not necessarily mean "silent" to the schools recruiting him. Some guys genuinely don't know or play it close to the vest, but it's obvious that some guys whose commitment isn't known (or whose pending decommitment is not yet known) have communicated enough with staffs that word is out. Remember, OSU found a replacement for Kareem Walker before he actually decommitted, and Washington was looking for someone to replace Long before he verballed this week.

So other teams that are bound to lose on recruits can still read tea leaves or get "gut feelings" just like always. This strikes me as mostly a fun publicity move rather than an effort to mess with other teams.

LSAClassOf2000

January 23rd, 2016 at 6:58 PM ^

I've begun to get 522 errors (connection timed out) as well on occasion, and unless my screen is deceiving me, the site now employs CloudFlare. In any case, on NSD, I fully expect the connection to time out rather a lot - as depicted above, a fiber connection to something that is actually on fire at the moment you're trying to access it is typically hard to maintain.