New in-state offer: 2026 OT Khalief Canty, Jr.

Submitted by Magnus on January 17th, 2023 at 4:48 PM

Michigan offered 2026 Detroit (MI) Cass Tech offensive lineman Khalief Canty, Jr. Kentucky and Michigan State had previously offered. 

Michigan has already offered Detroit (MI) King WR Jaquan Stennis and Cass Tech WR/DB C.J. Sadler in the 2026 class.

Paps

January 17th, 2023 at 5:13 PM ^

Kentucky is seemingly in on every single Detroit (and honestly MI/OH) area prospect these days. I understand the strategy from an institutional standpoint of not wanting to waste resources on recruiting battles between them and UGA/Auburn/Tennessee etc, but I was wondering, is there a specific assistant(s) that is leading this, or that their hiring has coincided with this push north? 

Magnus

January 17th, 2023 at 7:03 PM ^

Correct.

UPDATE: By the way, I happened to see a tweet earlier today from Marrow where he was talking about being a head coach. He said he wants to be a HC someday. Talk is that he's more of a recruiter/personality than an actual X's and O's or instructional guy, so it kinda makes sense that he wants to be a HC.

True Blue Grit

January 17th, 2023 at 5:22 PM ^

Sign of the times I guess.  I'd imagine extremely early offers are conditional that the player develops as the coaches expect when they make the offer.  I remember that OL from not many years ago who Michigan rescinded their offer to late in the cycle.  Allegedly he hadn't really worked as hard to develop himself so Michigan said no thanks.  I think he went to Oklahoma.

Magnus

January 17th, 2023 at 7:07 PM ^

It seems kinda crazy, except Michigan has been offering 8th graders for a while. Michigan sent out a couple offers (to Stennis and Sadler) before they had even decided where to go to high school, and both Dante Moore (2023 QB) and Isaiah Marshall (2024 QB) were offered before they got to high school.

Marshall is one of those kids who never really hit a growth spurt, so now I don't think Michigan is really a legitimate option anymore. So that's one of the "risks" or drawbacks of being offered early. It kind of sets kids up for disappointment.