Hello: Sammy Faustin Comment Count

Ace

Michigan continued their recruiting roll today by adding three-star Naples (FL) defensive back Sammy Faustin, the fourth BBQ at the Big House visitor to commit since Saturday.

Faustin is a Don Brown target who went from no offers at the end of 2016 to 20+ in the spring. Michigan joined the fray in February and immediately jumped out to a lead; they see Faustin as a safety:

“When they called me, it was like, yeah, doesn't matter to me, it's cool," he said. "They also asked if I'd like to come play at Michigan, like if I'd come play safety, because they're recruiting me as a safety. I was like, yeah, I'll play wherever you need me to play. It doesn't matter to me.”

Faustin is the 13th commit in the 2018 class and the fourth in the defensive backfield, joining fellow lanky CB/S prospects Myles Sims, Gemon Green, and German Green. Brown definitely has a type.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
3*, #75 CB,
#876 Ovr
3* CB NR CB 3*, 86, #74 CB,
#730 Ovr
3*, #78 CB,
#870 Ovr

So, yeah, prepare for some comments. Faustin is well off the four-star pace at this point at every site save Rivals, which gives him a 5.7 rating, their highest for three-star prospects. (Somehow this doesn't merit giving him a position ranking.) Scout and 247 have given him cursory three-star ratings, while ESPN—the only site that has an evaluation on him—hasn't bothered to rank him yet.

Every site save ESPN (6'1", 177) lists Faustin at 6'2", 170 pounds. He's built, well, like all of Michigan's other defensive back commits, and like the others should have the versatility to play cornerback or safety.

[Hit THE JUMP for scouting, video, and the rest.]

SCOUTING

There's surprisingly little out there on Faustin given he's from Florida, so let's start with his junior highlights:

The main attribute that jumps out to me is Faustin's football IQ. He has a great sense of where the ball is going and reacts with remarkable quickness. The play at 1:55 is something I'm not sure I've seen from a high school corner: Faustin plays press man, runs his man's route for him, somehow realizes the quarterback is throwing to the next receiver over, and breaks on the ball in time to make a play on it.

He also looks equally comfortable in press man, off man, and zone coverage, which is rare for a high school prospect. Again, his recognition and ability to break on the ball stand out, whether it's a pass, screen, or run—a great trait for a safety. While he's not a forceful hitter, he takes good angles to the ball in the open field and looks like a sure tackler. He looks quite underrated to me as a safety prospect, and he also displays the potential to be a significant contributor on special teams—in addition to solid open-field tackles, he tears off the edge for a couple blocked kicks in that reel.

ESPN has the only full-blown scouting report from any of the four recruiting services:

Strengths: Versatile defender who can play outside and projects as a FS. Shows ball skills and ability to stick his foot to drive on the ball. ... Areas of Improvement: Strength in his tackling, consistency of footwork and leverage in his pedal. Development of more size will benefit the position. ... Bottom Line: FS prospect with ball skills and versatility. Leverages routes effectively and is consistent to make plays. Will need to develop short area burst, balance and base in his pedal and his strength to realize his upside.

Adding strength and refining technique are the main areas of improvement; these are coachable areas. Meanwhile, his coverage skills will translate well to playing safety in Brown's defense, which often requires safeties to play man-to-man in the slot.

Faustin's high school coach, who's admittedly not the most unbiased source, believes he has a future in the NFL:

Naples High School's Hall of Fame head coach has seen dozens of Division I prospects come through his program over the years. He knows rising senior defensive back Sammy Faustin has a chance to be special.

"I don't say this, you've never heard me say this, but he's the guy that can play on Sundays," Kramer said. ...

"When you see the length and the ability to run, we knew there was something special, plus his attitude. He's the sweetest guy.  He's a true competitor, but he is a gentleman off the field. God gave him a whole bunch of tools in his tool kit, and I'm proud of him for maximizing it."

SBNation's Bud Elliott was asked about Faustin on Twitter, and while Elliott didn't think he was Florida-FSU-Miami caliber, he made him sound like the ideal Don Brown safety:

It appears opponents largely avoided throwing at Faustin last year, as noted when he was named third-team all-state:

DB — Sammy Faustin, Sr., Naples
Teams stayed away from Faustin, creating opportunities for the rest of the team. Had 31 tackles.

Of Michigan's current defensive back haul, Faustin looks most likely to wind up at safety (it's either him or German Green) and I like his potential there quite a bit.

OFFERS

Faustin holds offers from Arizona, Iowa State, Kentucky, Maryland, NC State, Nebraska, Ole Miss, Purdue, UCF, USF, Virginia, Appalachian State, ECU, FIU, Georgia Southern, and Western Kentucky. Florida has shown interest but has yet to offer.

HIGH SCHOOL

Naples competes in Florida's 6A classification, the third-largest in the state. They've produced three four-star signees since 2002, most notably former OSU and current San Francisco 49ers RB Carlos Hyde, according to the Rivals database.

STATS

According to MaxPreps, Faustin recorded 39 tackles (30 solo) with an interception, four passes defensed, a forced fumble, and two fumble recoveries as a junior.

FAKE 40 TIME

Faustin has an unverified 4.63 40 time on his Hudl page, which gets three FAKEs out of five.

VIDEO

Single-game reels can be found on his Hudl page.

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Faustin looks like a safety to me, which means he'll likely have the luxury of developing for a couple years behind Josh Metellus, J'Marick Woods, Jaylen Kelly-Powell, and Brad Hawkins before working his way into the rotation. While he could potentially line up at corner, the path the field is tougher at that spot, and Faustin's skill set seems best-suited for safety regardless.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Faustin is the 13th commit in a class that should eventually end up at 20-24 prospects, depending on attrition. Michigan took five defensive backs in the 2017 class, so they can stay put with this group of four unless they can land a top-tier prospect like Josh Jobe or Isaac Taylor-Stuart. They'll continue to recruit targets at RB, WR, TE, OT, DT, and DE.

Here's the class as it currently stands:

Comments

bmdubs

August 2nd, 2017 at 6:48 PM ^

"Faustin's high school coach, who's admittedly not the most unbiased source,"...

 

Fair point. The high school coach, Kramer, may be biased but he's won multiple state championships and has seen what it takes.  I take his word a bit more seriously due to that compared to someone who hasn't won in Florida when he says that this guy has the potential for the NFL.  Is that a guarantee of success? Not so much.

MotownGoBlue

August 2nd, 2017 at 8:32 PM ^

IIRC, Doc Brown likes free safeties that can cover, so the move to safety for some of these lengthy CBs is no surprise. Most will have to add some weight and hopefully not lose any speed.

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

August 2nd, 2017 at 9:09 PM ^

the staff. We're plucking recruits from all corners of the US. The overall class has fewer elite commits than I expected in JH's full 3rd year (especially at TE and OL). It's a strange year sandwiched between 3 top classes. We are not quite in the rarified recruiting air of Bsma or OSU yet with JH, but this class is full of high ceiling guys like Sammy.

Kmart Carcajou

August 2nd, 2017 at 11:32 PM ^

I've been thinking the same thing for a while now. We've gone after top 50 overall TE, QB (and often OL) and RB prospects and keep coming up in 2nd place. This offense seems like a perfect fit for all of the above, especially those looking to go pro. Only a matter of time before we land the top QB, TE and RB in one class. I'm guessing our depth may be the reasons the TE, QB and RB prospects keep their distance. I trust in our offers (regardless of ratings) eventually being ballers though.

MGoShorts

August 2nd, 2017 at 10:07 PM ^

Yes, they found a gem in St. Juste, but he also put up insane testing numbers for a lanky corner. It doens't look like Faustin has that kind of natural explosiveness, so it's a little easier to understand why people would question the offer. 

MGoShorts

August 2nd, 2017 at 10:03 PM ^

How do you justify playing him at safety if he doesn't have the speed to cover ground in a deep half? Will be hard not to play him at CB and see if those instincts lead to turnovers. Looks like a carbon copy of Stribling.

Lil boy blue

August 2nd, 2017 at 10:22 PM ^

Have to also consider laying the foundation to pluck other players from this area in future classes. We opened up Georgia by getting high potential 3*'s. We have already done pretty well in FL but this could be a combination of upside prospect + future pipeline.

Frank Chuck

August 3rd, 2017 at 5:08 AM ^

A friendly reminder on 2 points:

1. We have 13 players commited in the class of 2018. 9 of them are 4 stars.

2. Harbaugh is recruiting at a much higher level at Michigan than he did at Stanford. Have some faith. We're a dominant Michigan OL and an elite QB away from having a soul-crushing offense.

Our 2016 offense was very good (bordering on great) against average-to-good teams. But it wasn't on par with our elite 2015 and 16 defenses. Once we have both (hopefully sooner than later), we'll be better-equipped to beat elite programs like Ohio State, Alabama, and Clemson.

JBombs3224

August 3rd, 2017 at 10:09 AM ^

Recruiting sites typically show a high correlation to team success and NFL draft chances but they revise their rankings all the way up through signing day. A lof of these 3* Michigan has picked up have improved in the minds of the recruiting sites by the time they are done with their high school career. If anyone at Scout/Rivals/etc. become highly successful talent evaluators, a college program would pick them up and find a role.

It's a tough task to find 16-17 year olds and project what they might do but I will err on the side of trusting Harbaugh, Brown, and the rest of the staff who knows what works in their system and may value certain skill sets/attributes more than a generic recruiting site.

Welcome aboard, Sammy!

CookieMonster77

August 3rd, 2017 at 6:55 AM ^

In my humble opinion, it seems that there have been a few recruits that we have either gotten or have been in on that blew up not long after they popped up on our radar. I feel like I'm jumping on top of the dogpile by saying, "Trust the Harbaugh" but... there it is.

brianntb

August 3rd, 2017 at 10:54 AM ^

I hope the very best for this young man, but the teams winning championships are recruiting 5 stars, not 3 stars. 

Don

August 3rd, 2017 at 1:46 PM ^

ignore the fact that a percentage of their elite recruits are kids that Michigan either will not or cannot offer for academic, character, or recruiting ethics reasons. The pool of elite kids available to Michigan is simply smaller because of this.