2020 Recruiting

Vaipulu to me is the oline recruit of this year for us. The film on this guy is something he plays aggresive, non-stop motor, and his strength at 303 is explosive he rag doll some people. Him with some more coaching and weight programs will be a force wherever he is on the line.

Think he could start or rotate for sure as FR he moves well and look like has good footwork
 
Don't expect him to be Quenton Nelson as a true freshman. He's a good project for Brent Key, and coming to GT is a very smart move for Mr. Vaipulu.

Played out of position as a left tackle, which is not a shock cuz HS, but did deep snap on special teams so he has some experience at the pivot. He needs to be inside. He has surprisingly good foot speed getting down the field but he is not nimble. Expect him at center, but he needs to be quicker firing off the snap particularly on pass pro, as he does not look natural. I think all he needs on this point is reps, and he will get plenty of reps here.

Does not move his feet enough to be considered a good blocker yet. His go-to move is to shove his opponents and let his arms do all the work. That will not work at the next level. His hand use will eventually become a defining strength, but his legs need to catch up. He lunges way too often, and while you can pancake a slow HS DL by shoving him to the ground, the college linemen (even the DT's) will be past him and in the qb's face. Watch his tape from the Houston regional event. When he keeps his weight back and feet moving, he beats or draws some good DT's. When he lets his hands get too high the DT would push him into the quarterback. When he went for the pancake, the DT was too quick for him and the referee will be reaching for the hankie. Then watch his HS tape again and ask yourself how the blocks would have gone if the opponent was not a scrubby HSer.

Vaipulu does show technique just often enough for you to marvel at what he will become, but don't think he is there yet. Yeah, he has good mental makeup, but he needs to rein it in and focus on moving his feet and keeping his weight back and his hands low. I think there is nothing unfixable about him, but he's going to be a holding call machine and then one day it will all click and he'll be all-conference at center.
 
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You look at these 7 offensive linemen, and you see a lot of nastiness. The other team better show up ready to play, or we will take their lunch money.
Hell our defense better show up every day in practice. I’m getting excited thinking about next year now.
 
I'm looking forward to Vaipulu. I know he's tougher than hell, because he's a grown man named Paula. Johnny Cash put it best...

"Son, this world is rough
And if a man's gonna make it, he's gotta be tough
And I knew I wouldn't be there to help ya along.
So I give ya that name and I said goodbye
I knew you'd have to get tough or die."

416hRCH8NoL._SL500_AA280_.jpg
 
I'm looking forward to Vaipulu. I know he's tougher than hell, because he's a grown man named Paula. Johnny Cash put it best...

"Son, this world is rough
And if a man's gonna make it, he's gotta be tough
And I knew I wouldn't be there to help ya along.
So I give ya that name and I said goodbye
I knew you'd have to get tough or die."

416hRCH8NoL._SL500_AA280_.jpg

I wonder if it's pronounced "Pa-oola" but yes. Polynesian dudes are the nicest in the world but will also murder you in a heartbeat in battle. Paula is of Tongan heritage.
 
may have missed this somewhere else but how are we making room for 23 with very small senior class, a few of which coming back next year after injury?
 
may have missed this somewhere else but how are we making room for 23 with very small senior class, a few of which coming back next year after injury?
coaches don't really share any info about numbers so the best bet is to just let them worry about it. fwiw, we were only at 79 schollies starting this season. 8 seniors + 6 open schollies = 14 schollies to give. 4 early enrollees can count towards last year (we took 21.) so we're up to 18.

then... there will be attrition.
 
coaches don't really share any info about numbers so the best bet is to just let them worry about it. fwiw, we were only at 79 schollies starting this season. 8 seniors + 6 open schollies = 14 schollies to give. 4 early enrollees can count towards last year (we took 21.) so we're up to 18.

then... there will be attrition.
Early enrollees can change the annual numbers not the overall 85.

So 14 to give plus attrition, which can go up to 29 if 4 early enrollees.
 
Generally a team will have scholarship players on their roster from 5 recruiting classes (FR-SO-JR-SR-RS SR). All of the Football Factories are signing 25 players per season on average (and it used to be higher when there wasn't a 25 player cap on annual signees discounting early enrollees). Assume half of every Freshman class Redshirts, so the RS SR class would be expected to be 12.5 guys on average. So in theory a team should have 25+25+25+25+12.5=112.5 players against a cap of 85.

To make the 25 per year numbers work, there must be an average attrition of 5.5 players per season. That comes from injuries, transfers, behavioral issues, graduation, quitting football, players declaring early for the NFL, etc... To make Tech's numbers work in 2019 we are expecting a slightly elevated rate of attrition. IIWII.

I prefer to we stick with "Magic Juice" as the explanation on how this happens.
 
I think you also have to prepare for at least one or two commitments not actually signing. When you are recruiting higher calibre athletes (which we are now), they are going to have more options and you have to be ready for a few to sign with factories. They will likely come back as transfers anyway when they find out those factories sold them a false bill of goods.
 
Generally a team will have scholarship players on their roster from 5 recruiting classes (FR-SO-JR-SR-RS SR). All of the Football Factories are signing 25 players per season on average (and it used to be higher when there wasn't a 25 player cap on annual signees discounting early enrollees). Assume half of every Freshman class Redshirts, so the RS SR class would be expected to be 12.5 guys on average. So in theory a team should have 25+25+25+25+12.5=112.5 players against a cap of 85.

To make the 25 per year numbers work, there must be an average attrition of 5.5 players per season. That comes from injuries, transfers, behavioral issues, graduation, quitting football, players declaring early for the NFL, etc... To make Tech's numbers work in 2019 we are expecting a slightly elevated rate of attrition. IIWII.

I prefer to we stick with "Magic Juice" as the explanation on how this happens.

We'll never have a problem with "5.5"......... this was just the first time we had a starter walk away through the Transfer Portal.... over the years we've had RS Jrs, including some very good starters a million years ago like Joe Vitunic & John Riggle, decide they'd had enough & walk away.

I am the first to admit I've been away from it for a very long time & have no special inside view into CGC's staff's procedures, but the way a lot of places handle 5th year guys is if they aren't gonna be a starter or the first guy off the bench, they get introduced to "Work Study" around the AA, "Meet & Greet" grunt work, work as Grad Assts, etc. They keep their "converted" rides, but are no longer players in the case of this staff "ATL" and are expected to go ahead & graduate.

This has been beaten to death on this and a bunch of other boards, but I fully expect the Chief of Staff & a bunch of other FB staff weenies already have their spreadsheets & Gantt charts working the system CGC devised at NATS & perfected under The Great Satan at UAT (the Bammers HATE that).

Selah.
 
Don't expect him to be Quenton Nelson as a true freshman. He's a good project for Brent Key, and coming to GT is a very smart move for Mr. Vaipulu.

Played out of position as a left tackle, which is not a shock cuz HS, but did deep snap on special teams so he has some experience at the pivot. He needs to be inside. He has surprisingly good foot speed getting down the field but he is not nimble. Expect him at center, but he needs to be quicker firing off the snap particularly on pass pro, as he does not look natural. I think all he needs on this point is reps, and he will get plenty of reps here.

Does not move his feet enough to be considered a good blocker yet. His go-to move is to shove his opponents and let his arms do all the work. That will not work at the next level. His hand use will eventually become a defining strength, but his legs need to catch up. He lunges way too often, and while you can pancake a slow HS DL by shoving him to the ground, the college linemen (even the DT's) will be past him and in the qb's face. Watch his tape from the Houston regional event. When he keeps his weight back and feet moving, he beats or draws some good DT's. When he lets his hands get too high the DT would push him into the quarterback. When he went for the pancake, the DT was too quick for him and the referee will be reaching for the hankie. Then watch his HS tape again and ask yourself how the blocks would have gone if the opponent was not a scrubby HSer.

Vaipulu does show technique just often enough for you to marvel at what he will become, but don't think he is there yet. Yeah, he has good mental makeup, but he needs to rein it in and focus on moving his feet and keeping his weight back and his hands low. I think there is nothing unfixable about him, but he's going to be a holding call machine and then one day it will all click and he'll be all-conference at center.

Wow, excellent analysis.Almost what I was thinking.I don't think I've ever have see a hi school guy use his hands/arms as much as this guy. Perfect for todays game except he holds a LOT. AND as you said--he can't push guys like that in P5 fball. If his competition is good on the tape, he could play early. If not ,he has a ways to go.
 
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