Hello: Ronnie Bell Comment Count

Ace


[Darryl Woods/810 Varsity]

Ronnie Bell's football recruitment lasted all of a week. Michigan first contacted the Kansas City (MO) Park Hill wide receiver last Thursday. At the time, Bell intended to play college basketball at Missouri State, and held no offers for football despite a productive senior year. Michigan changed that, Bell changed his Twitter bio to read "University of Michigan Commit," and suddenly he's ticketed for the gridiron:

"They were shocked that I didn’t have any football offers," Bell said of the U-M staff. "I’m sure they were shocked that I was committed somewhere to play basketball and not football. I’m not really sure how my name got on their desk or how they found me. God works in amazing ways and he found a way to put my name on their desk.

"I never though this would happen. There were nights I would pray and I would just hope that a football school would give me an opportunity but for Michigan to be the school that did it I could’ve never imagined that. You can’t make something like that up."

Kansas State sniffed around before Bell make his commitment, but it doesn't look like anyone else will get a chance to change his mind; Bell plans to sign his LOI tomorrow, the first day of the new early signing period.

He is the 18th commit in the 2018 class and currently the only wide receiver.

GURU RATINGS

Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
2* WR NR WR 3*, 85, #160 WR,
#1078 Ovr
3*, #226 WR,
#1517 Ovr

Bell got a cursory two-star grade from Rivals after they created his profile yesterday; ESPN hasn't ranked him yet after doing the same. 247 is the only site to attempt to give Bell a real evaluation, but as Allen Trieu explained on The Victors Board, his ceiling is capped by the current lack of information beyond his senior film:

Bell is a tough eval because we have never seen him in person. We looked at his film, but hard to gauge competition and what he's built like on just a highlight tape. We have him a conversative mid-ish three-star to start. I think that's fair for a guy without a huge offer list, without testing numbers we can see, without having been evaluated at camps on in-game.

Michigan has done an in-person evaluation of Bell.

Bell is listed at 6'1", 170 by Rivals and 247; ESPN docks him an inch.

[Hit THE JUMP for scouting, video, and more.]

SCOUTING

The internets are still bereft of scouting reports, so let's go right to the senior film:

I'm impressed. The main thing that stands out about Bell is his remarkable body control. He certainly has a basketball-worthy vertical and he uses every inch of it to high-point the ball (2:05, 3:00, 5:55); he can also contort his body to make circus catches (3:34, 8:39). He has great balance, which he combines with surprising power, plus agility, and decent long speed to get good YAC (3:10) and some spectacular sideline tightrope action (1:22). He's capable of running sharp routes (1:38) and has a good sense for setting up routes off the line (4:25, 7:13). He tracks the ball well in the air (5:05). He's even got some blocking chops; his senior reel features a few pancakes on the edge (3:56, 4:15, 7:58).

There are some potential drawbacks. We don't have testing numbers, but Bell doesn't look like he quite has that top gear to really blow the lid off a defense. At 6'1", he's also not a prototype jump-ball receiver. He'll have to rely on that leaping and ball-tracking ability for big plays, a la Junior Hemingway, who was quite a bit burlier. Other complaints are more technical; his first step off the line is inconsistent at least in part because he lines up with his feet too far apart. That's as much good news as bad; he'll be more explosive with some coaching up.

According to Steve Lorenz, here's what stood out to Pep Hamilton and Co. when Michigan did their evaluation:

I'm told Michigan was really impressed with Bell's explosiveness, ball skills and especially his body control.

Also his vertical leap, which...

...yeah, that'll do.

We're going to get to see how Drake Harris's career would've played out with functional hamstrings. (Fingers crossed.)

OFFERS

Just Michigan, though Lorenz says that's a product of Bell's focus on hoops:

It was reiterated to me that Bell would likely have "multiple" high-level offers if he had focused on football throughout the entirety of his recruitment rather than basketball.

The tape, plus the lack of football offers from the likes of Kansas, who should be offering any functional-looking football player in the region, back that up.

HIGH SCHOOL

Kansas City Park Hill plays in the largest classification in Missouri, though the area competition isn't of the quality you'd get in, for example, Detroit. Bell with be the fourth Power Five signee to hail from the program, according to the Rivals database. He's the second to head to Michigan, joining 2012 five-star DT Ondre Pipkins.

STATS

After recording stat lines of 17-232-4 and 53-639-6 as a sophomore and junior, Bell's numbers shot up to 89 receptions for 1605 yards (18.0 YPC) and 21 touchdowns (fourth-most in state history) as a senior. He added 163 yards and three scores on 15 rushes and a punt return touchdown. He won the Simone Award as the best high school football player in Kansas City; notable previous winners include Ladell Betts, Darren Sproles, Josh Freeman, Nathan Scheelhaase, and Evan Boehm.

FAKE 40 TIME

None listed; no surprise, as Bell didn't participate in any football camps.

VIDEO

Senior highlights reeeeeeeeeemix:

Some hoops highlights:

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

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Bell should get plenty of time to get used to his new #1 sport. Michigan brings back all off their wide receivers from this season other than Moe Ways, which means getting Tarik Black back from injury and Oliver Martin free of his redshirt. Also, as we were reminded this year, freshman receivers undergo a major transition period. Bell should get a redshirt.

After that, he'll start clawing for snaps behind, for the most part, the epic receiver haul of 2017. Given the competition, it'll probably take a few years before Bell gets significant playing time, giving him a chance to hone his technique before being pressured to produce. I certainly like his chances of outproducing his current ratings; to me, he looks like a four-star prospect. He has the film, the statistical production, and the local accolades, he just had to choose the sport.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan stands at 18 commits in a class that'll reach the low 20s. Top targets going forward include DE Eyabi Anoma, DTs Tyler Friday and Rick Sandidge, and OTs Nicholas Petit-Frere and Jarrett Patterson. Sam Webb posted that Bell's commitment won't stop Michigan from continuing their pursuit of four-star WRs JaMarr Chase and Chris Olave, either.

Here's the class as it currently stands:

Comments

MGoCali

December 19th, 2017 at 4:12 PM ^

At 6'1, to have that kind of dunking ability speaks to his explosive athleticism. With some coaching, he will have a good chance to make use of that on the field. I'm not worried about his speed, if he can leap like that, he can get off the line and get separation. 

Welcome! 

Our Man in Havana

December 19th, 2017 at 4:40 PM ^

I get it...teams purportedly didn't recruit him for football because he committed to play basketball somewhere. But, that somewhere was Missouri State?  I mean, #80 in KenPom? They've had exactly two dudes play as many as 20 games in the NBA in their history, and one of those was drafted in 1970 (Curtis Perry). And it's hardly an academic powerhouse (with apologies to any of its esteemed graduates reading this), sporting just a 53% six year graduation rate, and accepting 86% of applicants. It's just weird that there wouldn't be more schools trying to sway him to football if he really had that much potential. It feels like a desperate grab to make news by having some players sign on December 20th, so we don't get left out of the first early signing day.

Our Man in Havana

December 19th, 2017 at 6:52 PM ^

...and he already had 1000 yards receiving and had been named his conference's Offensive Player of the Year, so he was doing noticeable stuff as a football player before he signed that letter. It's just weird that no college football teams recruited him before he signed that LOI on the 8th.

Our Man in Havana

December 19th, 2017 at 6:59 PM ^

An article in the Kansas City Star (http://www.kansascity.com/sports/high-school/article190451359.html) confirms his preference to play football, his disappointment at getting no offers from anywhere, and settling for a basketball scholarship at Missouri State:

"Two weeks ago, Park Hill senior Ronnie Bell paraded around a gymnasium with a three-foot tall trophy, one reserved for the top high school football player in Kansas City. But the college football offers had oddly remained silent, so Bell had instead secured a Division I basketball scholarship."

"“I just kinda hoped and prayed that somebody would take a chance on me,” Bell said. “I knew if anybody reached out, I was going to let them know that football is what I wanted to do.”

The initial plan was always football, Bell said. He loved the game his father once played collegiately, and there was a certain appeal to following an identical path.

But as his senior season progressed, and as the touchdowns reached record-breaking numbers, the offers never came. So Bell, a wide receiver who won the Thomas A. Simone Award, took the opportunity he had on the basketball court, signing to play at Missouri State."

But then things get a little shady-sounding:

"Last week, he reverted to his initial instinct and reopened his recruitment. Missouri State officially released him from his letter of intent Friday.

Michigan came calling. Even if no one else did.

'It’s such a blessing,” Bell said. “When I signed for basketball, that’s what was best for my family, so I stuck with it. But once my dad said to go do what I want, I knew that was football.'”

No offers, he signs his LOI, but then abruptly changes his mind, gets a release, and reopens his recruiting for football - where there had been no interest, mind you - and suddenly gets an offer? Sounds like he knew that the offer would be forthcoming if he got his release.

TheReal_GR3

December 19th, 2017 at 4:45 PM ^

So I've held on this but I think I see what the coaches see now... A player that was very successful for them before. 

Doug Baldwin. 2007 - 2* at 5-11, 178. Baldwin had two four offers from Stanford, FIU, FAU and Lousiana-Lafayette. National rank was 2020. 

buddha

December 19th, 2017 at 5:06 PM ^

Ugh...As a Niners fan, I have nightmares about what Baldwin has done to my team the past several years. (shudder)

I fall into the category of "trust the coaches" and Coach Harbaugh - of all coaches in my lifetime - has certainly earned the right to be trusted. There's no reason for me to think this kid can't be a stud, and I hope he proves to be on the field, assuming he dedicates himself to the work ahead.

Having said that, the optics of this scenario - agnostic of Ronnie Bell - are strange, at best. I can appreciate Bell committed to Missouri State for basketball, but who cares? Why would that detract a football coach from - at minimum - offering him? Hell, Missouri, Kansas, and Kansas State didn't offer the guy, and he's in their immediate backyard (and none of them exactly fall in the category of a powerhouse program).

If he had committed to Duke or Kansas for basketball, that would be one thing, but he committed to Missouri State. Given the egos of most college football coaches, I'm not sure Missouri State merits the gravitas to dissuade a program from offering the kid. Just seems strange.

Also, slight red flag to me, is he jumped at the UM offer without even visiting campus. This may just be me, but I like to see kids - at minimum - walk the diag, take in the Big House, and get drunk at Rick's before committing to UM.

So - I don't really know how to feel about this. Of course, I hope and trust Robbie maximizes every opportunity he has at UM - football and otherwise - to become a true leader and Michigan Man. I can't help but wonder - however - about the strangeness of this situation...

TheReal_GR3

December 19th, 2017 at 5:35 PM ^

Well If I might he SIGNED with Missouri State. I think that changes how a coach looks at him. He also never camped, visited, or showed any serious interest in playing football. I don't have a feeling on this one way or the other but I was trying to answer your question about why no football coach had offered him. 

Hell to be honest there is nothing to confirm he is even 6'1" 170 because he has never been to a camp. 

Abram

December 20th, 2017 at 11:50 PM ^

Shows one can make a remark without being unpleasant, especially since a.) we don't KNOW how things will turn out, and b.) nobody on this board knows anything that isn't based on hearsay, or a clip, or some "rating service" with all their own biases. One should be especially careful talking about young people. That's basic consideration. 

WestQuad

December 19th, 2017 at 5:17 PM ^

"I strongly suggest you get out the way. "

 

Ondre Pipkins.  Felt bad that kid never got healthy and had to transfer.  His Brady Hoke impersonation alone was worth his weight in gold.

 

 

robpollard

December 19th, 2017 at 5:25 PM ^

Anyone who is 6-foot and can go from a standing start at the free throw line and then rise up and throw down a two-handed slam has some serious hops.

Combine that with what look to be high-quality hands, and you have the makings of a good (potentially really good) receiver.

Yes, he needs to redshirt and bulk up, along with becoming much more of a technician with route running, but I like the bet on athleticism and his hands -- those are both clearly there.

Bodogblog

December 19th, 2017 at 7:23 PM ^

Yeah that doesn't even look possible, yet there it was. 

This class - if we close with Friday and keep Reese - is going to be filled with a limited number of really high level recruits (Reese, Friday, Sims, McGrone, Muhammed), some really solid contributors who can be very good in several years (Mayfield, Hayes, Hutchison, Milton), a lot of guys the coaches have liked all along despite lower rankings (Greens, Turner, Faustin, Schoonmaker), and a bunch of projects. 

If every class looked like this, I'd be concerned.  If one out of every four years looks like this, and the others are top 5'ish to top 10'ish, I'm OK with that.  And isn't the consensus that Michigan will finish top 10 even this year?  I'm not concerned. 

Brian8603

December 19th, 2017 at 9:33 PM ^

for a nuanced and thoughftul take on this class. 2020 could be a bit of a down year if some of the projects or reaches don't pan out, but there's only 2 players out of 18 that I'm not really sold on. And one of them I basically like but don't view as a good fit for UM .  Like you,  I'd also be worried if this was our usual recruting haul, but if this is what we will pull in an off year with some structural things working against us, then I feel pretty good about the state of the program.

Year of Revenge II

December 20th, 2017 at 8:01 AM ^

I believe another reason why this is a good take is that football is a team game, and you need role players just as badly as you need stars.  

Role player build team cohesion, they are generally more team than self-oriented, and they are willing to learn and do dirty work in a way that starts generally are not.

I would take the #1 class every year if I could get it, but a class like this after the ones we have had is not a bad omen at all.

Dennis

December 19th, 2017 at 6:11 PM ^

To all the clowns dogging this kid... you don't say "I never though this would happen. There were nights I would pray and I would just hope that a football school would give me an opportunity but for Michigan to be the school that did it I could’ve never imagined that" and not belong as a Michigan man.

schreibee

December 20th, 2017 at 12:29 AM ^

Hey man! This is the internet!

Anyone saying anything that has even a remote resemblance to disagreement or debate is a "dogging clown"... How do you not know that?

Oh wait - you have 25 pts. You don't spend much time on the internet, do ya Mr. Reasonable?!

and as much as I hate having to do this:

/s

Coldwater

December 19th, 2017 at 8:46 PM ^

So he just decided he wanted to play college football last week? Does he even have a love for the game? I hope he has an unwavering passion for Michigan football. I hope he wakes up everyday and thinks about what he can do to help beat Ohio State. I hope he doesn't start to miss basketball after not seeing the field for 3 years. Th kid hit the jackpot. Free college, and he gets to play football at The University of Michigan...not a bad week

taut

December 20th, 2017 at 12:06 AM ^

Ace - what does this mean?

"Michigan has done an in-person evaluation of Bell."

Do you mean that someone from the staff watched him play football in person this fall? Or just that someone did a home or school visit recently? Curious as to when he popped up on the radar, and how/why. Seem like an intriguing prospect.

jblaze

December 20th, 2017 at 10:27 AM ^

Not Ace, but I think I read somewhere that a UM coach saw him play in person and was really impressed by Bell and wanted to offer. I don't know if it was ever revealed which coach saw him though.

Maybe the coaches were trying to convince him to play football or maybe they were waiting to see if they could hit on higher profile guys, but a UM coach saw this kid live and was impressed.

philthy66

December 20th, 2017 at 8:55 PM ^

Harbaugh makes everyone work harder. Even recruiting sites. He's kind of screwing up their tendancy to overevaluate the elite talent with elite opportunity and elite exposure. Work harder guys. This Ronnie kid can ball

WFDEric

December 25th, 2017 at 11:32 AM ^

Go back and look at Grant Perrys high school film. Bell looks a little thinner with better leaping ability, pretty close otherwise. Rivals has Perry at 6'/185 Bell is 6'1 175 so that seems right. Perrys route running was advanced but both appeared very willing to block in high school.