Small but solid class joins Cardinal football on National Signing Day
The Cardinal has welcomed its official 2013 recruiting class, as 12 promising high school recruits from eight different states signed their Letters of Intent with Stanford.
The Cardinal has welcomed its official 2013 recruiting class, as 12 promising high school recruits from eight different states signed their Letters of Intent with Stanford.
At 10 a.m. Wednesday morning — with just a fax to Stanford’s football office — new football signee Thomas Oser’s path to Stanford was finally complete.
Recruiting analysis is an inherently hypocritical business. In a good year, we write about all these highly ranked players that will change our team’s future; in a bad year, we just complain that recruiting rankings are worthless anyway.
Twelve high-school seniors signed National Letters of Intent to join the Stanford football on Wednesday morning. Just a year after the Cardinal was a big winner on National Signing Day in 2012, the proceedings were far from dramatic this time around, as Stanford signed all its committed recruits and failed to lure four-star receiver Jordan Cunningham away from Vanderbilt.
It’s not often that the sweetest sound on the Stanford campus is that of a screeching fax machine. But that was the story on Wednesday’s National Signing Day, when the Stanford football team signed its best recruiting class in school history
Quiz time. What’s the best way to remove all questions about the future stability of your program when you’ve got a first-year head coach and your three best players headed to the NFL? Answer: sign the best recruiting class in school history
On Wednesday, the nation’s best high school football recruits will sign on the dotted line and commit themselves to the top programs in the country–and four of the nation’s best recruits could take their talents to the Farm, including the nation’s top quarterback prospect.
The Super Bowl is supposed to be the pinnacle of sporting events. It’s the best of the best–a day for all of us regular folks… Continue Reading »