George Farmer
WR | 6'2", 205
Serra (Calif.) High School
TR Ranking:
6.1 |
State: #1 in California
Position: #1 WR
Scouting Report:
Scale 10: Special
9: Elite
8: Very good
6-7: Above average
5: Average
1-4: Needs work
Size: 9
Speed: 9
Leaping Ability: 8
Hands: 6
Strength: 8
Run After the Catch: 10
Route Running: 6
Change of Direction: 9
Motor: 8
Concentration: 5
Blocking: 6
Durability: 9
Intangibles: 7
Physically the top wide receiver prospect in the nation.
Makes spectacular plays on a consistent basis, but also
has concentration lapses that make you scratch your
head. Great speed, excellent size, and overall great
athleticism make George the number one wide receiving
prospect in the nation. Can take it to the house at any
time. Electric with the ball in his hands -- almost
looks like a running back with the ball in his hands
(much like Miles Austin in the NFL). Excellent change of
direction, good footwork along the out-of-bounds lines,
physical presence when he wants to be, vertical threat.
Has good all-around strength -- breaks arm tackles
consistently and is a very good blocker when he wants to
be. Also has the capability to make a splash in the
return game.
Translation to College:
If he ends up at USC, like many feel he will, I see a
redshirt as a strong possibility. Should contribute in a
major way for two years of college ball and then move on
to the NFL after his junior season. Has the talent to
win awards in college if he can be more consistent.
For
Kiehl Frazier, the awards, and scholarship offers, keep
on coming. The 6’3” 210 pound star signal-caller from
Arkansas’ Shiloh Christian was just recently named the
2009 4A Arkansas Player of the Year. The next morning,
TCU offered him a scholarship. It was the 14th offer for
Frazier already.
November 23rd, 2004 was
an exciting day in Columbia, South Carolina. A
day filled with hope and anticipation of what
was to come. The Gamecocks had just inked a SEC
coaching legend to coach their football team.
The "Fun 'n' Gun" was coming to save the day or
at least make it better. Surely a coach that led
Duke University to an ACC title could fix the
little problems at South Carolina.
With the 2010 recruiting cycle inching towards
the finish line, here at ThaRinger we feel it’s
a better time to more clearly evaluate the
off-season’s coaching changes with the recently
gained recruiting hindsight. There were 22 head
coaching changes and not all of those changes
were created equally.