Ronald Darby to ND

Submitted by jerseyblue on

From Scout. Landing Richardson and/or Reeves is a must for us.

jtmc33

April 16th, 2011 at 7:18 PM ^

Generally I agree, but he is RJS's friend/teammate, rumored heavy lean, best in-state DB,  and at a position where we really only need one commit, I think Richardson is a "must get" in as much of a sense that such term can exist in late-April

I think losing out on him would be a huge letdown

mGrowOld

April 16th, 2011 at 7:21 PM ^

Excuse me fella.  Between now knowing that our entire season is doomed based on one glorified internal scrimmage and the unmitigated disaster our recruiting efforts will obviously be with us not getting this one kid I think it's pretty safe to say we will be lucky....LUCKY i say to win more than two games over the next 7 years.

Michigan fans....especially knowledgeable ones like us...never overact now do we?

DGDestroys

April 16th, 2011 at 7:17 PM ^

If it were this time last year, that'd suck. However, this year, we're in the top group for MI CB Terry Richardson, MA CB Armani Reeves, and NJ DB Yuri Wright, all of whom you could make an argument for placing in the top 100 players in the country. 

PurpleStuff

April 16th, 2011 at 8:55 PM ^

"Baby Jordan" was just overrated (he had the sweet dunks but lacked a complete game). 

D'Arby was the truth.  That first album was a monster, but it turned out the guy was batshit crazy and screwed up his whole career.  First he kept telling interviewers how he was like the greatest human being who had ever lived in the history of earth.  Then, as if that wasn't bad enough career suicide, he changed his name after some crazy ass dream where he supposedly saw himself die.  Always a good move.  Turns out people like sweet jams like "Wishing Well", not listening to lunatic celebrities who make that guy named "?" who claims to be an alien sound sane.

clarkiefromcanada

April 16th, 2011 at 11:05 PM ^

Batshit indeed.

The artist adopted his name (but without the middle name), Sananda Maitreya, following a series of dreams in 1995. He legally changed his name 6 years later on October 4, 2001. He proclaimed in an interview that "Terence Trent D'Arby was dead... he watched his suffering as he died a noble death", in what was perceived as an attempt to reinvent himself artistically and free himself from what he believed to be the oppressive nature of the record business.

After a series of dreams.