Drama in Waco. No surprise there, but the message boards have been blowing up the last several days about a possible de-commit -- Waco Midway safety Ahmad Dixon is seriously considering a switch to Baylor. As of Wednesday afternoon, no switch had been made yet, but Dixon was not willing to go on record with any of the services confirming his continued commitment to Texas. In fact, when Duane Akina was in Waco yesterday visiting with Dixon, the safety declined to mention to Akina that was recruitment was still open and that he was considering a switch.
Several factors are weighing heavily with Dixon: 1) opposing coaches are waving the depth chart at Dixon and claiming that he has no shot at early playing time, 2) one of Dixon's best friends, Levi, is the committed to Baylor in basketball and the son of the Bears' defensive coordinator and 3) there are rumors that Dixon's parents are so pro-UT that they pressured their son to make a quick decision. About the first point, the strange thing about that negative recruiting tactic is that the opposing coaches are essentially saying that they don't think Dixon is good enough to play early at Texas, yet they still love him as a player. Seems kind of contradictory. On the second point, it may be one of the most significant factors in his indecision. As to the third, only time will tell.

Midway coach Kent Bachtel dislikes his players not keeping their word and says that he can't remember any of his players de-committing. He sat down with Dixon for a heart-to-heart conversation on Wednesday afternoon, with the result being that Dixon was still committed to Texas at that point, with Bachtel telling his star player that he needs to keep the coaches at each school apprised of the current situation. In other words, when a Texas coach visits and you are thinking about reneging on your commitment to his school, you need to tell him about it.
The defensive backfield may be the deepest position on the roster, with a lot of youth at the safety position, particularly with both starters and Christian Scott still possessing three years of eligibility. If the Longhorns can afford to lose a player in the 2010 class, it would be a safety. However, Dixon would not be an easy player to lose, as he is often considered one of the best safety prospects (on par with Craig Loston and Kevin Brent in 2009) to come out of the state in the last 10 years.
As for the appeal of Baylor, it's hard to say without more knowledge of how Dixon felt about the program growing up in Waco. Certainly, a large part of the appeal is Art Briles and the prospect of early playing time, coupled with the ability to change the face of the program. What Dixon must factor into consideration is that Briles may well not be at Baylor in five years when he would be a senior. The most significant factor with Briles possibly leaving for a better job is how much he wants to stay in Texas given his ties to the high school coaching community in the state. It may be that Briles wouldn't leave for a job outside the state, but would rather wait for, say, the Texas A&M job to open up before bolting Waco. I'll just say this: if Briles has given Dixon a guarantee that he will be at Baylor when Dixon matriculates, it isn't worth the breath expended to utter it.
If Dixon does indeed switch his commitment to Baylor, Art Briles is well on his way to sowing a similar amount of animosity among Longhorn fans as his colleague Scott Drew after voting the Longhorns fifth in his final coaches poll last year. Stealing Dixon using negative recruiting tactics could make Briles a bona fide Enemy of the Nation.
Late Wednesday afternoon, things did not look nearly as bad as they did earlier in the day in terms of losing Dixon, but this is still a developing situation and one that does not yet have a definitive ending. Stay tuned, folks.
On the radar: Chuka Ndulue. Dallas Jesuit defensive end Chuka Ndulue might be the early version of Tevin Mims this year. After ankle injuries sidelined him for virtually his entire junior year and left him without film, Ndulue began to generate attention ($) during spring practice as college coaches made their rounds. Just a few weeks ago, only Kansas, Richmond, and Utah were actively recruiting Ndulue, hoping they could gain a commitment before the larger programs took notice. Take notice they did, as Oklahoma offered the Nigerian native who spent most of his sophomore year in the weight room while he put on 30 pounds and grew several inches to his current 6-3, 245-pound frame.
The Longhorns are hoping to get in on the recruitment this week and may offer Ndulue. The only problem? Ndulue is planning on announcing his decision this week, leaving little time for the Texas staff to get him to Austin. It sounds like OU for Ndulue unless something changes drastically.
Just listen to Jim. Reiterating the stance ($) he made public several weeks ago, Jim Jeffcoat once again made it abudantly clear that the only reliable information about the recruitment of his son will come from he or his wife. And they aren't talking much.
The elder Jeffcoat's stance isn't really news, nor are the planned visits to the West Coast to visit USC, UCLA, Cal, and Stanford and the East Coast to visit Florida, Georgia, and Rutgers. Jeffcoat's extensive connections to USC aren't wholly revelatory, either, though it is surprising how deep those roots run. Aiding USC's cause are Jeffcoat's friendship with linebackers coach Ken Norton, Jr. from their championship days as Cowboys. During that time, Jeffcoat also played with Devon Kennard's father, Derek. Defensive line coach Jethro Franklin is another acquaintance from Jeffcoat's NFL days.
Jim Jeffcoat says that his son's decision will entirely be his own, but the deep connections to the USC program are a much stronger connection than anything Jackson has to Texas. Despite those connections, his father says the most important factors will be playing time, academics, and quality coaching. Given the talent of the younger Jeffcoat, playing time shouldn't be a factor at any school. Given the connections to USC, getting Jeffcoat to commit to be a Longhorn might be an uphill battle.
More on the linebackers. The amount of information one some of the linebackers I talked about on Tuesday has increased greatly in the last several days -- guess I should have waited on the linebacker edition for a couple days.
0 recs | 25 comments
Highway 6 is going to be a battlefield
I could see Briles staying for the very same reasons you mentioned. If little maroon headed step-brother doesn’t get it’s crap together, Baylor is going to take swipe after swipe.
As for Briles voting us 5th, he should already be firmly entrenched on the Longhorn $h!tlist.
run Bevo run - May 21, 2009
Oh please.
I still recall Mack Brown leaving TCU off of his final 2006 ballot, when TCU finished #21. It can be argued that someone was trying to deny them their Top-25 status. Who did we play in 2007………yes, the same TCU team. Glass houses and all………
HornChamps - May 21, 2009
How does that make sense? Why would Brown want to decrease the ranking of a team he is playing the next year? That would only hurt his SOS.
It’s not unreasonable at all for him to leave them off. I disagree all the time with who is supposedly the 21st through 25th best. If you look at the numbers, a LOT of people disagree. There are usually 5+ other teams that are unranked that have almost as many points as those in the 21 through 25 spot.
UT_BKC - May 21, 2009
Not true.
Final 2006 ESPN Coaches’ Poll:
21. TCU 11-2 339
22. Oregon State 10-4 206
23. Tennessee 9-4 202
24. Hawaii 11-3 152
25. Penn State 9-4 142
Others Receiving Votes
Georgia 133, Nebraska 43, Texas A&M 29, Georgia Tech 19, South Carolina 17, Houston 8, Maryland 7, Texas Tech 2, Kentucky 1.
Mack doesn’t want recruits to see some mid-major, in-state team finishing the season in the Top-25.
HornChamps - May 21, 2009
Honestly
You think Mack cares what TCU does recruiting and how it affects our recruiting?
run Bevo run - May 22, 2009
If he's not.....
…..then he’s not paying attention. Maybe you aren’t either.
Here are some responses from Rivals’ recruiting analysts in a recent article:
Jeremy Crabtree’s answer: I also fully expect TCU to remain up there with Utah because of the amazing natural recruiting base the Horned Frogs have in Texas. I also marvel at the job that Boise State does with their evaluations. Broncos coaches find prospects who just end up being great players three years later; that staff projects as well as any in the nation.
Barry Every’s answer: TCU has been recruiting well for more than five years; it is not uncommon for the Horned Frogs to outrecruit Texas Tech or Texas A&M. They really put a lot of effort into identifying, then working kids in the state of Texas. Utah surprises people even though the state actually produces more top-level athletes than the general fan would think. Boise State is the school that has to really hit the recruiting trail hard because Idaho is basically void of D-I talent. I think Boise does a great job of identifying kids who may be a tad short or slow for “Big Six” schools to go after, but these same kids are legit, hard-nosed football players. A good football player with the desire to succeed will beat out a star athlete every time if the star athlete does not find the motivation to get better.
How is Mack feeling about Baylor’s recruiting today??
HornChamps - May 23, 2009
Probably not terribly impressed…in other words, pretty much the same way he’s felt about Baylor recruiting for the past decade or so. When has Baylor ever been a persistent threat to UT in football recruiting? Does it really look to you like it will be one anytime soon?
burntorangehorn - May 23, 2009
Huh?
Not following your logic. Wouldn’t you want a team to be ranked as highly as possible if you were going to play them to make it look like a better quaility win?
What would Mack Brown have to gain by ranking them worse than he thought they deserved, when a higher ranking to finish 2006 would have probably meant a higher ranking for TCU to start 2007?
Horncasting - May 21, 2009
Baylor started the 2007 season....
…..as the country’s #22 team. Mack’s refusing to vote for TCU at the end of ‘06 sure didn’t accomplish anything.
TCU finished the ‘08 season as the country’s #7 team. Still think he’s not worried?
HornChamps - May 23, 2009
Conference?
Don’t you remember Baylor is in our conference? TCU, if you do not want to follow the simple logic as the two above posted, isn’t in the Big XII.
run Bevo run - May 21, 2009
Between White and Dixon
It seems like no news really is good news at this point. Maybe BON just needs to rename Morning Coffee to Afternoon Tea or something to get rid of the bad juju.
As for Briles, I rather like the guy and what he’s doing for Baylor football. At this point, I’m putting Baylor as my second favorite Big XII program behind the Fightin Leaches.
jc25 - May 21, 2009
Texas is your third favorite? nt
Misterserious7 - May 21, 2009
good catch
Other than Texas caveat applies.
jc25 - May 21, 2009
film
Blake Terry
A bit of a discrepancy in his measurables though based on his film I would peg him as being closer to the 190 you list than the 220 that this film suggests.
For me this video was almost more so worth watching just to get a glimpse of T. Bible on plays that weren’t his highlights… enjoy
andmyster - May 21, 2009
Tried to search YouTube for those highlights,
but didn’t get anything last night, don’t know what I did wrong.
Wescott Eberts (GoBR) - May 21, 2009
All the stuff that I get
comes via subscribing to the Inside Texas channel that the Terry film is from. It is usually good for one set of highlights per week or so.
andmyster - May 21, 2009
2nd pick in the NFL Draft
I wonder how much producing the 2nd pick in the draft is helping Baylor with Dixon. If this has anything to do with him wavering, he should really look at the draft results of players in the secondary under the man who is recruiting him and would be his position coach at Texas.
Maybe Akina should start the meeting taking a call from Aaron Ross and then Michael Huff. “Sorry I can’t talk now, I have a Thorpe winner in my ear.”
Horncasting - May 21, 2009
“what’s that? 2 thorpe awards? well shit…”
Displaced Longhorn - May 21, 2009
Texas = DB U baby!
Sunkist - May 21, 2009
I think he actually has 3
The other one was from another stop. Arizona or ASU maybe?
Horncasting - May 21, 2009
you’re right, darrell lewis at arizona… i was only talking texas db’s, but yup, akina’s made some good ones.
Displaced Longhorn - May 21, 2009
Orangebloods is reporting
that Ahmad Dixon withdrew his commitment today and has committed to Baylor
NeTexHorn - May 22, 2009
that sucks
he was definitely one of the commitments that I was more excited about. I wonder if we’ll now seek out another DB or stay with the ones that we have.
andmyster - May 22, 2009
This might shed some light
I found this in the free edition of Inside Scoop on the Inside Texas page
I think this might provide some insight into how Dixson could have been swayed into changing his commitment from UT to Baylor. I am sure GoBR will be along at some point with more info, but if I come across anything else I will post it.
You can read the full article here
NeTexHorn - May 22, 2009
P.L. Lindley
Here is a few more tidbits on P.L. Lindley OLB at Stony Point High. The 4.71 forty was timed when he was a freshman at Stony Point High. During the football spring testing period he was timed at 4.54 in the forty. During this year track season he ran a consistent 22.7 in the 200meters. As a sophomore this past season he started every game and was second on the team in tackles. He loves the thought of maybe one day playing for the Longhorns. Here is a link to his Highlights of the past 2008 season.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voxxFGxeyTU
platnmram - May 27, 2009
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