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Not that I know of, but he can fly.is that tape sped up or something?
Not that I know of, but he can fly.is that tape sped up or something?
Are those the same people that told us Boeing Brown was a top QB prospect? The people that do this for a living, get it wrong more often then they get it right. And unless your paying for their services, they aren't going to pay much attention. Like I said, Matos doesn't have the body of work to truly judge him against his peers. If you watch him on film, he's pretty impressive.
You don't like him and you don't like Ansonia....we get it. Thanks for posting.No kidding professionals get it wrong sometimes. I'm referring to coaches as professionals not the losers who write for recruiting sites. If you think the professionals get it wrong more often than right... Well I can't wait for the FCS teams to start blowing out the FBS teams this year, that will fit well when the MAC and Sun Belt pile up the Big 10 and SEC wins.
But let's not start dreaming up SAT excuses when every FBS school passes and a player ends up at the worst football program in the CAA.
FBS schools don't think he's worthy of a scholarship - they may be proven wrong but it's that simple.
You don't like him and you don't like Ansonia....we get it. Thanks for posting.
The kid reminds me a little of Marcus Easley. We all know how the experts saw that coming.I have to agree with whaler here. It looks like the kid is a player, and sometimes pplayers get missed, but when a kid is only recruited by FCS and D2 programs, most of the time he is an FCS/D2 level player. Often they are missing something. Do coaches sometimes get it wrong? Sure they do. But they rely on getting it right more times than wrong to keep their jobs. Roughly 120 D1A schools passed on the kid. I'm guessing that he isn't a D1A prospect. It isn't a knock. With luck he'll end up in a good place, have a great college career and get a degree and get to the NFL if that's his dream. Seems the Giants had some success with a kid from the Colonial. So did the Ravens. So it can be done.
If someone ends up at The University of Rhode Island either they really want to go there or nobody else wanted them.
Hundreds of coaches may be wrong. I can't stand PP but let's not pretend if he's wrong on this player that he's the only one.
You are firmly on the side of the "experts" now, but we really don't need to be so locked in on position. He is 6'1", 200#, runs a 4.5, and he plays BOTH ways in HS. He could be a prospect at safety too.Let's think about this. UConn had 1 WR spot open and got a commit from lemelle who had offers from Iowa, WVU, Penn St., BC, Rutgers, purdue, Syracuse, and others. Then there is Matos with no offers. Logic prevails. Which WR do you want to push aside to make a spot for Matos? You have to look at the WRs in the class as part of this discussion.
I understand where all of you are coming from. However, I think many of you missed the point of my posts. I never said we should offer Matos over anyone else. I would have liked to see us take a chance on a kid like Matos. I, personally, think he has a huge upside and if you have a chance to get a versatile athlete with his size, and speed. He may not be better then the kids we've recruit, RIGHT KNOW, but he has the potential to be in two or three years. It's worth the risk, IF we have the scholarship available. Honestly, would you rather have a 5'11, 175, 4.5 WR or a 6'1, 200, 4.5 WR?I watched the Ansonia championship game online and thought that Matos looked like a D1 athlete. Very fast.
Did any MAC schools offer him?