Hello: Stephen Spanellis Comment Count

Ace


Photo via Scout.

Three-star Baltimore (MD) Gilman OT Stephen Spanellis had made a habit of catching people off guard. First, he picked up a Michigan offer, and the news flew so far under the radar that I can't find a story reporting it on any of the four recruiting sites. Then his official visit last weekend went down in similar fashion. Last night, he flipped his commitment from Virginia to Michigan, and as you can tell from the timing of this post, he wasn't expected to announce so soon. For that, we can thank the snowpocalypse:

"I felt like I was leaning towards Michigan," he said.  "I was going to take the official visit [to Virginia] this weekend if it wasn't for the snow, but then I felt like I didn't want to wait until next weekend to take the visit because I was ready to be done with the recruiting process. I was sure that Michigan was the place for me. 

"It's a great academic school and the tradition there speaks for itself," he added. "[Head] Coach [Jim] Harbaugh I would consider him one of the five best football coaches in the world period. Any time you can be part of something that is excellent, it is something you need to think about doing."

Spanellis is the 22nd commit in the 2016 class and the fourth on the offensive line, joining Ben Bredeson, Michael Onwenu, and Gilman teammate Devery Hamilton. 

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
3*, #100 OT 3*, #36 OT 3*, 75, #60 OG 3*, 86, #92 OG,
#985 Ovr
3*, #61 OG,
#739 Ovr

The recruiting sites are split on whether Spanellis is a guard or a tackle; all have him as various levels of three-star, with Rivals easily the most bullish—in their position rankings he's ten spots away from four-star status, while he's well off that mark everywhere else.

Spanellis has plenty of size. Scout and Rivals both list him at 6'6", 290 pounds; ESPN at 6'5", 313; and 247 at 6'5", 330. He's got the look of a right tackle or guard, depending on his ability to protect the edge.

[Hit THE JUMP for the informative portion.]

SCOUTING

Scout's free evaluation paints the picture of a strong RT/OG type who's got plenty of developing to do from a technical standpoint:

Evaluation

Spanellis' strength shows in his initial punch, which can be jarring and speaks to his balance. He is aggressive and finishes blocks, but he needs to improve his footwork so he can stay on a block better. He comes out of his stance quickly, but he needs to lighten his feet and drive his legs more in run blocking. He uses his strength and initial punch in pass blocking but needs to improve [lateral] quickness. -- Brian Dohn

Strengths

  • Aggressiveness
  • Power And Strength
  • Size
  • Tenacity

Areas to Improve

  • Explosion
  • Feet
  • Pass Protection

ESPN sees him as a guard and has similar concerns about his pass protection; here's their take on his run blocking:

Flashes ability to come off with adequate pad level and when he gets hand placement displays lower body strength to generate some push, but pads can quickly rise and can get stalemated. Can use body and size to engulf and wall off defenders at times. Could struggle to adjust to moving targets, but displays good ability to locate and use angles to get a hit on second level targets.

They mention he can get top-heavy; his profile reminds me quite a bit of Ben Braden.

Everything else we have on Spanellis comes from Michigan media in the wake of his commitment. 247's Clint Brewster evaluated his senior film:

Spanellis is a big-bodied offensive lineman that excels in the straight-ahead run game as a mauler type of offensive lineman that Michigan looks for. He's physical upon contact and uses his body to overpower defensive lineman and drive them into the ground. Spanellis has some fluid movements to be able to turn his body on down blocks and cut off defenders. He's got a physical punch and is able to extend his arms to get separation from defenders and move them where he wants in the running game. Spanellis is well coached coming from national power Gilman high school. He understands pad level and leverage. Spanellis looks like a nice fit at Michigan with his physicality and if he continues to improve his body and foot-speed, he could be a really solid player.

The Wolverine's Tim Sullivan also says his primary strength is as a mauling run-blocker:

He's not the most athletic or flexible tackle prospect, and is probably more of a right (or frontside) tackle in the long-term. He has the ability to hold off edge rushers, but elite defensive ends can get around him. Better to have that in the quarterback's line of sight.

What Spanellis is best at is plowing ahead in the run game on the edge, and working to the next level (something Hamilton is exceptional at for a high school player, as well). That should serve him in the Jim Harbaugh offense. 

One of his Gilman coaches told 247's Steve Wiltfong that Spanellis is an ideal fit for a Harbaugh squad:

“He’s a huge kid, 6-5, 330 right now,” Gilman assistant coach Henry Russell said. “He’s in excellent shape for that size and he’s extremely strong. Strongest player on our team. He has an unbelievable work ethic. First one in the weight room, last one to leave. He’s a quiet kid that leads by example.

“I think he’s a perfect fit for Michigan and the type of kids they’re trying to bring in.”

I'm sticking with my Braden comparison. Braden was similarly enormous coming out of high school, started out as a right tackle at Michigan, and slid inside to guard in part because of his difficulty staying with quick edge-rushers and his habit of leaning into blocks. Unlike Braden, Spanellis has the benefit of being coached by Harbaugh and Tim Drevno from the outset, which makes me more optimistic that he'll be able to stick at right tackle, where he's most needed on the roster.

OFFERS

Spanellis holds offers from Arkansas, Charlotte, Georgia Tech, Illinois, Maryland, Miami (YTM), Michigan State, South Carolina, Syracuse, Tennessee, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, and West Virginia. While that list is missing top-flight programs, it's a very solid sheet for a player with his rankings.

HIGH SCHOOL

You're probably familiar with Baltimore Gilman, a longtime powerhouse that's already given Michigan current H-back Henry Poggi (son of Gilman coach Biff Poggi) and fellow 2016 commit Devery Hamilton.

STATS

Is OL, no stats.

FAKE 40 TIME

ESPN lists a 5.83, which gets zero FAKEs out of five.

VIDEO

Senior highlights:

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

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

With the entire line save Graham Glasgow returning, plus three higher-ranked linemen in the 2016 class, Spanellis is a dead lock to redshirt during his first year on campus. After that, things get interesting, especially if Mason Cole moves to the interior as we anticipate. Grant Newsome should hold down the left tackle spot in 2017, but the departure of Erik Magnuson will leave an opening at right tackle; Spanellis could compete for that job with Juwann Bushell-Beatty, Nolan Ulizio, Devery Hamilton, and perhaps Ben Bredeson.

Kyle Kalis and Ben Braden also move on after next season, so if Spanellis ends up at guard, he has a chance to see the field relatively early there, too. That will all depend on his development once he gets on campus.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan should be set on the offensive line barring the unlikely event they get serious interest from EJ Price, who's too good a prospect not to take if he's interested. They will continue to pursue Texas grad transfer Jake Raulerson, who could immediately step in at center for the next two seasons. The rest of the upshot I'll slightly modify from yesterday's Hello post for David Long:

As for the class as a whole, Michigan is up to 22 commits, and we still expect one or two players from the current group not to end up in a class that could reach as many as 30. That leaves anywhere from eight to ten spots to fill before Signing Day. Top remaining targets include DT Rashan Gary, TE/DE Devin Asiasi, DT Boss Tagaloa, WDE Connor Murphy, ATH Khaleke Hudson, WR Eddie McDoom, TE Chase Allen, WR Donald Stewart, WR Pie Young, WDE Joshua Uche, ILB Elysee Mbem-Bosse, and K Quinn Nordin.

Here's the class as it currently stands:

Comments

alum96

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:32 PM ^

There is no wrong here w/ regard to Davis for Durkin.  It's Maryland not FSU or OSU.  You don't say no to any top 250 prospect who wants in, esp one from your own state.   Maryland actually has a pretty decent crew of commits at OL as far as recruiting rankings.

There were times late in the process Lorenz said it was either Davis or Delance, and others he said they'd take both.  So I don't think its Harbaugh not liking him - sometimes you make a calculation and it doesn't work out.  Sounds like they really wanted Delance for position reasons and that delay may have cost them with Davis.  Davis came up for OSU and also felt like he didn get the attention he expected - that may be on him or maybe expectations were not outlined for an official during a game week.  Who knows the reality behind the scenes.

As for Spanellis I am always torn about it when I hear they get good coaching in HS.  Sometimes you want a prospect who stands out despite mediocre coaching because it means he will only have that much more ceiling once he gets serious coaching.  Meanwhile a guy who comes from great coaching may be nearer to his ceiling esp as a more technical position like OL (vs say a speedy WR where athleticism is more the differentiating factor). OL is such a shot in the dark so who ever knows - no one thought Cole would walk in and be a first day starter....meanwhile Kalis "the most college ready" guard we've ever known struggled for years and Kugler "the most college ready" center can't find the field.

 

Rabbit21

January 22nd, 2016 at 3:28 PM ^

I think the thing that helps me in this regard is that he is extremely aggressive in his film and tends to attack the block rather than just try to overwhelm with his size(his pass protection doesn't look great, but I see punch rather than just receiving the rush), which to me means he is likely receptive to coaching and therefore has a path to further improvement and hitting his ceiling.  It may mean a bit of a high floor low ceiling thing, but it's good to make sure you have an aggressive, reliable, and coachable guy on the O-Line.

Wolverine In Iowa 68

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:07 PM ^

"He has an unbelievable work ethic. First one in the weight room, last one to leave. He’s a quiet kid that leads by example."

 

that DEFINITELY sounds like the type of player Harbaugh values!

 

HAIL!

Reader71

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:22 PM ^

His first step is like nonexistent. That will get fixed with coaching, and if you pair that with his upper body strength (really good punch for a high school kid) I think we have a player here. Congrats Stephen!

M-Dog

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:34 PM ^

 
 
Fun facts about our class so far:
 
More of our recruits are from the Southeast than any other region (32%).
 
The next biggest region for us is the Mid-Atlantic (27%).
 
The talent-rich areas of the country - Southeast, Southwest, West, and Mid-Atlantic - make up a whopping 77% of our class.
 
The Midwest only accounts for 18% of the class.
 
Our biggest recruiting state is a tie between Florida and New Jersey.
 
We heve more kids from Alabama than we do from Michigan.
 
We have no kids from Ohio.  None.  New Jersey is the new Ohio.
 
Welcome to National recruiting in the Harbaugh era!

M-Dog

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:58 PM ^

We will as Harbaugh establishes more relationships in the state and he IDs more players from there that he really wants.  

Also, as we win more, there will be a natural attraction for top Ohio kids to take a good look at what is going on right next door.  They don't all want to be nothing but Buckeyes, especially in northern Ohio and the Cincy area.

In the meantime, New Jersey has become the new Ohio for us . . . the go-to state for recruits outside of our home state of Michigan.  This is a fantastic development for us.  Ney Jersey is talent-rich, and the big local schools - Rutgers and Penn State - are floundering right now.  We absolutely want to own New Jersey.

 

alum96

January 22nd, 2016 at 3:24 PM ^

I thought the lack of OH interest might be a 1 year thing due to OSU NC, MSU success, Jim just returning to CFB, ND pulling 2 of the top 5 kids etc in the 2016 class but I looked at the 2017 top OH kids the other day and UM really only has any crystal ballz for 1, a TE.

Still very early in the process and I would not be surprised to pull 2-3 but its not like the old days where UM generally seemed to get 4-6.  And this is esp interesting since Urban is going more national himself vs Tressel so more kids should be available but certainly MSU success and tons of OH coaches in their program has helped them there of late.

M-Dog

January 22nd, 2016 at 6:18 PM ^

Yeah, it's strange.  Clearly Harbaugh knows the significance of Ohio to UM football and he played with a lot of Ohio guys.

But he just seems to be going after who he likes and he's not worried about region.  Because he can, I guess.

Ohio produces good talent, so he won't ignore it, but he's not emphasizing it as an area.  If anything, it seems to be New Jersey where he is establishing the pipelines.  Given that NJ is now firmly in the Big Ten footprint, it looks like a profitable and sustainable approach for him.

We may no longer see the days where Michigan has more recruits from Ohio than it does anywhere outside of Michigan.  This may be a permanent thing now, at least while Harbaugh is here. 

 

schreibee

January 22nd, 2016 at 3:12 PM ^

Well for the next couple cycles, as the man said, NJ is our new Ohio. That won't last forever, unless something has seriously changed in NJ to make Peppers grow on trees (and Garys, et al).

But JH will find his inroads into OH HS - takes one kid to start a pipeline (Peppers again), a couple to start a flow... with Urbs down there that's about all we can hope for.

M-Dog

January 23rd, 2016 at 1:25 AM ^

I don't know, New Jersey consistently has talent on a level with Ohio.  And NJ talent is not fiercely loyal to the home school the way Ohio talent is.

When you look at the talent that is realistically available to Michigan, New Jersey may have more consistently available talent to Michigan year in and year out than Ohio does.  

Michigan is becoming one of the "home schools" to NJ recruits along with Rutgers and PSU.  This is because of the confluence of several events:  NJ now being a Big Ten state, the pipeline effect of successful recruits like Peppers and coaches like Partridge, and the relationships the coaches have now established in NJ.  

That's a great place to be and I think we can keep it up.

 

alum96

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:41 PM ^

With the issues at tackle in this class I wonder if Cole moves inside for a year w/ Swenson out to LT and then in his last year he shoots back out to right tackle.  While he struggled with elite pash rushers this year (MSU, MD games) he won't as often face those type of cats on the other side of the line and with the bevy of guards we have you hope someone like a Dawson is ready to figure it out inside in 2017. 

Definitely need to find a few top end tackles in next year's class to replenish.

schreibee

January 22nd, 2016 at 3:51 PM ^

I've been operating under the assumption - likely planted by this here blog - that Newsome will be LT next year with Cole moving to C, or if Raulerson comes, possibly unseating one of the guards.

If we assume Newsome > either Braden/Kalis - or Raulerson ends up elsewhere and then no one gets unseated, Cole just slides to C - that's an upgrade for '16.

Or as much as can be with a guy that's kicking ass at Senior Bowl practices leaving us...how many more Glasgow brothers are coming up?

Reader71

January 22nd, 2016 at 3:54 PM ^

I don't like the idea of moving Cole. I'm sure he could handle the switch, but I don't see how that would help our line as a group. Keep Cole at LT, move Newsome to RT for a few years to cut his teeth on the edge, and move Magnuson inside. I think it is conceivable that Newsome improves our RT play and the three others at least tread water on the interior. I don't think it is likely that Newsome is an improvement at LT, so even if Cole is a good C, we will have robbed Peter to pay Paul.

AC1997

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:46 PM ^

If this recruiting class exceeds 28 players I am going to eat an apple on the internet!  (I've learned from this blog that eating lemons or hats is a bad idea).  

 

I just don't see how this class is going to find 2 grayshirts in it.  The type of player who would agree to a grayshirt is the same type of player Michigan is currently encouraging to take other visits.  I have a hard time seeing Harbaugh take a kid that isn't good enough to make the 28 players but is good enough to hold a roster spot the following 4 years.  

 

The most common suggestion is that Quinn Nordin fits into this category.  I can see why a kicker would be a good candidate since Kenny Allen and Andrew David are already on the roster and kickers are at the bottom of the recruting food chain.  But Nordin is the #1 kicker, he has multiple power-five offers, and he seems to really enjoy the recruiting process and think highly of himself.  I don't see how they will tell him to pay his own way and not practice wit the team in the fall rather than go to PSU, USC, etc.  

 

The class is going to max out at 28 players.  

AC1997

January 22nd, 2016 at 2:41 PM ^

Once again, let's clear this up for everyone.  The NCAA rule for maximum signees is irrelevant because the B10 rule trumps it.  Thus you won't see any B10 schools pulling an Ole Miss and signing 32 players in one year.  

 

The B10 rule states that 25 is the maximum and you can add up to 3 if they enroll early and your previous class had <25 players.  There were rumors of this being a gentlemen's agreement with the schools that they could go higher than 28 if they could show where those scholarships would come from.  I don't actually think that's ever happened and even if it is an option, Michigan is currently way over their 85 limit pending Spring Practice injuries or 5th year players not coming back.  

 

I think we end up at 27-28 players.  

mjb

January 22nd, 2016 at 2:06 PM ^

22 Current commits

Exit 3:  Dytarious Johnson, Rashad Weaver, and Nate Johnson :-(

Add 8: Rashan Gary, Eddie McDoom, Chase Allen, Connor Murphy, Khaleke Hudson,  Donald Stewart or Pie Young, Quinn Nordin, and Joshua Uche or Elysee Mbem-Bosse.

27 commits for 2016.

 

trueblueintexas

January 22nd, 2016 at 1:54 PM ^

As I was watching Spanellis' highlight video, I thought this would be a good way to see how Hamilton plays on a regular basis (not just highlights). He looked consistently impressive also. 

Bones032

January 22nd, 2016 at 2:21 PM ^

How come Ace keeps leaving Lavert Hill off his list of top remaining targets? He lists 12 players there, hard to believe all 12 of those are bigger targets than Hill. Im guessing he forgot to add him to the last 2 commit posts.

 

edit: Damn Jibbroni beat me to it, I swore I refreshed before I posted and did not see your comment.