Hello: Ryan Hayes Comment Count

Ace

Over the weekend, Michigan picked up a commitment from four-star Traverse City West OT Ryan Hayes. Hayes is the second in-state offensive linemen to pick the Wolverines in the last week, joining Grand Rapids Catholic Central four-star Jalen Mayfield. Like Mayfield, Hayes fits the mold of a Greg Frey tackle—big-framed, lean, and athletic enough to play tight end in high school.

"I just really liked it in Ann Arbor," Hayes said. "I liked all the coaches. It just felt right, and I was ready to commit."

The 6-foot-7, 252-pound junior said the Wolverines plan to use him at tight end to start and see where he goes from there.

"We'll see what happens with my body, if I move to tackle or not," Hayes said.

"I just knew right on that visit, I wanted to go there," Hayes said. "It was everything. As soon as I got there, walking around, talking to a few coaches and people, it felt right from the start."

Hayes had heavy contact with Michigan State throughout his recruitment and Notre Dame emerged as the presumed leader when they joined the fray. After Michigan offered in February and got Hayes on campus, however, the recruitment moved quickly:

Hayes is the tenth commit in the 2018 class. He's the third in-state commit (Mayfield, Aiden Hutchinson) and third offensive lineman (Mayfield, Emil Ekiyor) in the class.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
4*, #21 OT,
#262 Ovr
3*, #49 OT 4*, 80, #30 OT 4*, 93, #10 OT,
#102 Ovr
4*, #17 OT,
#205 Ovr

The rankings for Hayes are all over the map, at least in part because of a lack of exposure. Scout is the only site that has published scouting reports on Hayes, who hasn't hit the camp circuit. 247 is particularly bullish, which was also the case with Mayfield; they seem to like that type of lineman. Rivals is a major outlier on the low end, ranking Hayes as the #17 prospect in the state; that's almost certain to change.

Hayes is listed at 6'7" and 250-255 pounds. When he packs on some weight, he'll look like a prototypical tackle.

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

SCOUTING

Hayes is a natural. His parents were both varsity athletes at Central Michigan. His father played football, while his mother held the school's all-time scoring record in basketball for over two decades. Ryan plays three sports himself; in addition to football, he's a standout center for the basketball team and boasts a fastball in the upper 80s as a starting pitcher on the baseball squad. Even though he's one of the biggest players on the field, he lines up at tight end for Traverse City West, and as you'll see in the highlights he's not just a blocker. His coach ascribes to the Harbaugh belief that playing multiple sports is better than specializing:

“You look at almost every elite athlete and they played two if not three sports,” said Tim Wooer, head football coach at Traverse City West. “It helps on the competitive end. You compete every day for nine or 10 months out of the year. Basketball helps him with his footwork, explosiveness, his lateral agility and burst. Baseball, I don’t know if there’s a real close carryover from baseball to football with him being a pitcher. But you just want kids to enjoy high school and have the opportunity to compete on a daily basis.”

Wooer sees Hayes as very similar to one of his former players and a top Frey target in his first stint at Michigan, Jake Fisher:

“He’s just very athletic,” Wooer said. “He’s got good legs and can bend low. He’s about 255 pounds right now and he’ll be 300 pounds in no time. He has a nastiness and toughness to him as well. He will be very effective. He’s athletic enough to someday be a left tackle.”

As a tight end, Hayes uses his huge frame to his advantage. Wooer told Sam Webb he could see Hayes playing either TE or OT at the next level:

“I think he is talented enough to play tight end.  He is not going to take the top off the defense, but he is an incredible target. He has got good range, good hands, is athletic, and he would be one heck of a run-blocker in the heavy sets, which they use. But by the same token he would be an excellent left tackle down the road.  He is going to be able to do whatever Michigan wants him to do.”

Since Hayes hasn't played tackle in high school or hit the camp circuit, there's not much out there from people who aren't his head coach, but Scout's free eval suggests he has a lot of potential at OT:

Evaluation

Big framed high school tight end who will project to [offensive tackle] at the next level. Very good athlete, a three-sport athlete who is coordinated, has good balance and flexibility. Used as a blocker as a tight end, so he has experience in the run game and does well in that aspect. Must learn to play tackle and continue to add weight and strength to play left tackle in the future, but has a very high ceiling as a tackle.

Strengths

  • Body Control and Balance
  • Flexibility
  • Frame

Areas to Improve

  • Power And Strength
  • Technique

Hayes should begin his career as a ready-made blocking tight end with some upside as a red zone target, making him an ideal fit in Harbaugh's heavy sets. Down the road, however, he should fill out and be a full-time tackle—and, based on his film and profile, he could be a very good one.

OFFERS

Michigan's primary competition for Hayes was Notre Dame and, to a lesser extent, Michigan State. He also holds offers from Cal, Central Michigan, Kentucky, Minnesota, Northwestern, TCU, Vanderbilt, and Virginia.

HIGH SCHOOL

Traverse City West is one of the better programs in the region. While they don't produce a ton of Division I talent, the aforementioned Jake Fisher ended up as a second-round pick after playing his college ball at Oregon, and 2008 three-star lineman Rocko Khoury spent four years at Michigan during the RichRod/Hoke transition.

STATS

None that I could find.

FAKE 40 TIME

Ditto.

VIDEO

Junior highlights:

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

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Hayes' utilization will depend on how he develops physically both before and after he arrives at Michigan. The current plan is to start him as a tight end, where he could see time right away in goal line and heavy sets, though given how much development he'll need at tackle a redshirt could also be in the cards. As Hayes fills out, he'll likely transition to tackle, where he'd probably need two or three years before he's ready to see the field as a full-time starter—in the interim, he's likely to be utilized as the rare extra OL in heavy sets who's an actual threat to leak out and catch a pass.

Down the road, Hayes has a ton of potential as a tackle. It may take a while to come together, but the physical tools are all there.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan can really zero in on top offensive line targets with Hayes, Mayfield, and Ekiyor in the fold, including four-star GA OG James Ohonba and three-star IMG OT Daniel Faalele. Other positions of need include tight end and defensive tackle, and the staff will push to add a second quarterback (likely Tyler Shough) plus top targets at running back, wide receiver, and in the defensive backfield.

Hayes' commitment moves Michigan up to #7 on the composite team rankings. Here's the class as it currently stands:

Comments

AC1997

May 30th, 2017 at 2:15 PM ^

Thanks to everyone for talking me off the ledge.  It seems that we've addressed enough needs in recent classes that we don't need to grab another 28 person class to fix depth chart issues.  Hurrah for a stable & successful coaching staff!  

My reason for mentioning it was that we look to be headed into 2018 with the following:

  1. Speight (RSr) as a 3-year starter if he's still around
  2. Peters (RSo) as a highly touted recruit with back-up experience
  3. McCaffrey (RFr) coming off a redshirt with pedigree
  4. Milton (Fr) as the incoming project

That's a solid depth chart when you assume another stud in 2019 is coming.  But if we can fit another one, we should.  Speight may leave early, someone may get hurt, someone may transfer due to competition.  Maybe I'm just not used to having so many guys on the depth chart after the last decade of thin QB depth charts.  

IBleedMaizeNBlue

May 30th, 2017 at 5:31 PM ^

Even with your presumed stud coming in in 2019, your QB depth chart in 2019 would look like the following:

Peters (RS Jr)
McCaffrey (RS So)
Milton (R Fr)
2019 Stud QB (Fr)

If your starter gets hurt, (or goes pro after, say, a phenomenal RS So year) your backup options then become either a) Joe Milton, who requires a ton of development and won't be ready to play, or b) a true freshman, who also won't be ready to play and ideally would redshirt with this depth chart. Not good. This is why you take another QB in 2018 who is more polished especially when you aren't desperate to use the scholarship to fill in other gaps on the roster. 

Mongo

May 30th, 2017 at 2:27 PM ^

one versatile athlete that can switch positions and be good (Milton) and one pro style guy who needs a redshirt and development to add depth (Shough). If Milton develops pro-style QB skills, then you might have an elite dual threat guy with 2 very strong pro-style backups in case he gets injured (as that athletic-type QB often does during a B1G season). Seems like a sound strategy now that you have Milton.

Gentleman Squirrels

May 30th, 2017 at 2:46 PM ^

I've read that we are also recruiting OT Tommy Brown hard and that he is planning on visiting Michigan over the summer. I would love to have him along with Mayfield and Hayes as development propsects.

UWSBlue

May 30th, 2017 at 3:20 PM ^

Last season Harbaugh said Speight warranted Heisman consideration which leads me to think WS is going to be a top 5 QB this year. If so, I can see him leaving as a 1st or 2nd round pick.

Mongo

May 30th, 2017 at 4:59 PM ^

if Harbaugh can develop Speight into a NFL prospect next year and he gets drafted in the 2nd round after next season, then mission accomplished ... that means our 2017 season was a huge success and Wilton is ready for the NFL. In steps Peters for 2018-19 after having been groomed to take over from Speight and the process begins again to get Peters ready for the NFL by the end of his RS-junior year. In steps McCaffery or Milton (from a healthy competition and grooming) to take over from Peters in 2020-21 ... etc, etc ... for a decade of elite QB development and numerous championships. Harbaugh goes down in Michigan lore as its greatest coach of all-time ... and Bo smiles down from heaven.

StephenRKass

May 30th, 2017 at 5:51 PM ^

I definitely want a second QB. Think back to 2014 Ohio State. Braxton Miller was the starting QB, but was injured. In came JT Barrett. The Buckeyes were undefeated, but Barrett went out vs. Michigan. Enter Cardale Jones, who led them to the NC. OSU depended on QB depth, and had it. Michigan needs that kind of depth. 

CriticalFan

May 30th, 2017 at 7:46 PM ^

Welcome to the University of Michigan, Mr. Hayes! The team is glad to have you! Sorry we thread jacked the hello. Post to talk about everyone but you.

Kewaga.

May 31st, 2017 at 12:15 AM ^

 

 

3. Better get your guy in this class, because ... 

 

Well, I'll just say it: The quarterback climate in 2019 looks pretty barren. Best strike while the iron is hot in a much better 2018 class. 

College coaches are one gauge of where things stand in the quarterback cycle. As important as it is to have someone locked up early to build momentum within a recruiting class, there are very few '19 passers that colleges have felt confident enough to push on.

Last year at this time saw plenty of 2018 players already off the board... This year, Dwan Mathis (Iowa State) is the only quarterback committed anywhere.

There are still some dudes in this class.... But aside from a few exceptions, the names just haven't bubbled up quite as rapidly as we're used. This isn't the recruiting cycle to save your bullets for. 

 

http://michigan.247sports.com/Article/Barton-Simmons-The-race-for-top-Q…

Chaz_Smash

May 31st, 2017 at 12:19 AM ^

Shough keeps getting more offers, I saw Cal & ASU recently. He's no lock to wind up at Michigan. I would think some guys might look at Peters, McCafrey & Milton and figure they have a better chance to play somewhere else.

BlueinOK

May 31st, 2017 at 2:20 PM ^

I like the in-state tackles in the class. Long, athletic and lean guys who just need to add pounds worked out for many other guys. Both have high upside to be successful.