Alabama, Nick Saban open as No. 1 recruiting class of 2023

Alabama, Nick Saban open as No. 1 recruiting class of 2023

College football’s summer on the recruiting trail featured another drove of official visit windows in June and even more verbal commitments in the month of July. It’s fitting the initial Sports Illustrated class recruiting ranking would debut after the summer dust settles and as the calendar flips to August—always an unofficial signal that America’s favorite sport is set to return at every level. This year, it appears there was an acceleration in the volume department for many programs. Most programs sit with at least one dozen commitments, while eight are sitting at 20 or more before the season kicks off. In the last cycle’s August ranking, only half as many teams hit the 20-pledge threshold before the end of July. As for how the higher volume affects the debut ranking, it doesn’t as much as one would suspect. SI’s rankings focus on premium position prospects (quarterback, offensive tackle, pass rusher, cornerback), general quality at the top of the class and also positional units being constructed together while addressing team needs.  The upcoming SI99 prospect rankings are subjective, so the team recruiting rankings continue to follow suit on the road to National Signing Day 2023 in February. 1. AlabamaVerbal commitments: 17Premium position pledges: 8The Crimson Tide waited their turn to flip the recruiting switch this cycle, and the program has been emphatic every since. Not only is Alabama keeping considerable talent home, like elite secondary recruits Jahlil Hurley and Tony Mitchell, but it has invaded Georgia for three of its top overall prospects in the class with safety Caleb Downs, quarterback Dylan Lonergan and running back Justice Haynes all joining the class in July. UA holds the top national QB class with Eli Holstein and Lonergan, and the top running back group with Haynes and now Richard Young on board over the weekend. The secondary and offensive line units will eventually compete near the top as well. 2. Ohio StateVerbal commitments: 19Premium position pledges: 7The Buckeyes just landed their glaring missing piece, at least positionally, in Elite 11 quarterback Brock Glenn. Beyond that, Ohio State boasts the top wide receiver haul nationally with Brandon Inniss, Carnell Tate, Bryson Rodgers and Noah Rogers all in the fold. Its secondary class is also likely among the country’s best, though Florida native Dijon Johnson will no longer be a part of it after a weekend decommitment. The offensive line and tight end units are also noteworthy to date. 3. Notre DameVerbal commitments: 20Premium position pledges: 7Despite missing a quarterback at the top of the class, the Irish haul has stars at just about every other spot already on board. The trenches are as balanced as one may expect, with class headliner and pass rusher Keon Keeley leading the way among big bodies. Strong positional units in the secondary and at wide receiver should perhaps excite Notre Dame fans most in that difference-makers are joining the program from the state of Texas in safety Peyton Bowen, cornerback Micah Bell and wide receivers Jaden Greathouse and Braylon James.Watch college football live with fuboTV: Start a free trial today!4. TexasVerbal commitments: 20Scroll to ContinuePremium position pledges: 7Arch Manning’s late June commitment has elevated Texas all the way into the top five nationally with two big and talented position groups at wide receiver and along the offensive line, including the commitment of a blue-chipper who picked Texas without it being a public finalist in Payton Kirkland. The sneaky strong position group Steve Sarkisian’s staff is building, though, is in the defensive backfield, where safety Derek Williams and cornerback Malik Muhammad will profile among the very best at their respective positions. 5. GeorgiaVerbal commitments: 18Premium position pledges: 5Even in bypassing on the quarterback position after Manning opted for Texas, this Georgia class already contains the type of elite defensive recruits one would expect after the dominant unit on the field led Kirby Smart’s program to the national title in January. The four-man secondary group could profile as the best nationally, led by high-floor cover corner A.J. Harris and do-it-all safety Joenel Aguero, each summer pledges to the program. The linebacker group may be even better with balance, speed and instant-impact prospects Troy Bowles, Raylen Wilson and CJ Allen set to be the next wave of off-ball stars in Athens. 6. ClemsonVerbal commitments: 18 Premium position pledges: 7 The defensive line haul coming to Clemson won’t draw the headlines the class of 2020 did, but the group could bring a similar combination of immediate impact players, pass rushers and size. Headliner Peter Woods, who can rush the passer outside or on the interior, also projects as one of the best individual recruiting wins for any program in the cycle as Dabo Swinney’s staff went into Nick Saban’s backyard for one of the best in the state of Alabama. Elite 11 QB Chris Vizzina and a strong secondary class also stand out with CU’s group. 7. OklahomaVerbal commitments: 19Premium position pledges: 7The Sooners surged into the top 10 of the initial 2023 ranking with nine July commitments, including trench additions Adepoju Adebawore and Derrick LeBlanc on defense along with top tackle prospect Cayden Green on offense. Jackson Arnold looks like the future of the quarterback position with a combination of size, raw arm talent and production to his name, too. OU kicked off August with a strong optical win at a premium spot in landing Austin (Texas) Westlake pass rusher Colton Vasek over rival Texas.8. MiamiVerbal commitments: 16Premium position pledges: 7Where the Hurricane class lacks defensive line and secondary talent, it makes up for with one of America’s top offensive line, quarterback and tight end classes. The pass-rusher group could eventually challenge among the nation’s best, too, based on two July commitments in Malik Bryant and Jayden Wayne. Winning the Francis Mauigoa battle on July 4 profiles as one of Mario Cristobal’s signature wins along the offensive line, of course, his specialty position having played and coached it himself. Even better for Canes fans is the fact that Mauigoa is pushing for more UM prospects at IMG Academy, arguably the most talented high school program in the country. 9. TennesseeVerbal commitments: 19Premium position pledges: 7Electric quarterback prospect Nico Iamaleava headlines the Vols class, but he’s far from alone. In fact, the UT group looks strongest on defense to date, led by pass rushers Caleb Herring and Chandavian Bradley. Tight end pledge Ethan Davis will debut in the SI99 rankings among the top tight end recruits nationally, and the rest of the pass-catcher class is coming along nicely. Needs remain along the offensive line and defensive interior. 10. Penn State Verbal commitments: 18Premium position pledges: 6As the program searches for a passer, the Nittany Lions have secured one of the most talented secondary classes in the country, led by a quartet of Southern safety recruits in former Alabama pledge Elliot Washington, Conrad Hussey, DaKaari Nelson and King Mack. The trenches are also a clear strength, with a strong foundation on the offensive line and a few dynamic pass rushers already in the fold.11. ArkansasVerbal commitments: 23Premium position pledges: 7SI will probably remain higher on Arkansas quarterback pledge Malachi Singleton than most, especially with such a high floor as a winning dual-threat talent (who also finished the Elite 11 as the sixth-best QB by our count). Beyond him, Sam Pittman’s program has high volume in the trenches, a great tight end class and a massive secondary haul already committed. If you’re into sleeper recruits, TJ Metcalf could one day project as the captain of the Razorbacks’ defense from his safety post. 12. USCVerbal commitments: 13Premium position pledges: 3By the end of the Trojan haul, should it retain commitments, of course, quarterback Malachi Nelson and receiver Zach Branch could wind up No. 1 at their respective positions nationally. Branch pairs with Makai Lemon for an ideal one-two punch for Lincoln Riley on the outside, while spot recruiting wins like linebacker Tackett Curtis and mauling offensive lineman Micah Banuelos could become foundational pieces at positions of need.  13. FloridaVerbal commitments: 16Premium position pledges: 7The Gators capped July on a tear on the trail, particularly within state lines, snagging four skill position commitments over the weekend including speedy wide receiver Aidan Mizell and former Miami commitment Andy Jean. Almost quietly, UF has built a very strong secondary and wide receiver class that could grow in strength sometime soon. Throw in a flip of high upside quarterback Marcus Stokes from Penn State, and July went about as well as any Billy Napier follower could have hoped. 14. LSUVerbal commitments: 17 Premium position pledges: 7Another program still hunting for a future QB1, the Tigers still wound up as one of the summer’s biggest winners in pulling in a dozen new commitments since June began. None felt bigger on offense than wide receiver Jalen Brown, one of the nation’s fastest players at any position. Defensively, the pass-rushing unit has seen recent upgrades in Dashawn Womack and Jaxon Howard, two out-of-region wins for Brian Kelly at his new post. Better production closer to Baton Rouge, and the Tigers could be looking at an eventual top-10 group. 15. Cincinnati Verbal commitments: 21 Premium position pledges: 6The class after that historic playoff run is coming together as many would have expected. Luke Fickell’s program has a massive defensive back haul already on board, littered with wins over Power 5 suitors like Daeh McCullough and Amare Snowden, among others. The offensive line haul is strong, and Elite 11 finalist Brady Drogosh could be one of the more interesting long-term developments in a loaded quarterback class nationally. 16. BaylorVerbal commitments: 23Premium position pledges: 7The Bears loaded up relatively early in the class and are holding strong at the end of the summer in numbers and quality talent. Elite 11 passer Austin Novosad continues to be its headliner and despite continued flip attempts by others, he was back in Waco recruiting for BU over the weekend. The Bear class has gems at many spots, like offensive tackle Zay Robinson, but the back-seven defensive class is where the strength of the class lies. Retaining Novosad’s pledge, which he affirmed Monday night, may be Baylor’s biggest individual recruiting win under Dave Aranda. “The coaching staff was a huge reason and the relationships I have with them as well as how I fit into the program and offense,” Novosad said on Monday. “Another reason is the academics and what the Baylor degree can do for me after football is over.”17. WashingtonVerbal commitments: 19Premium position pledges: 8The hottest Pac-12 program of the summer was Kalen DeBoer’s, corralling 15 of its 19 pledges between June and July. Among them, the Dawgs got their quarterback in the ultraproductive Lincoln Kienholz, in addition to a secondary group with some star power at the top in Louisiana native Curley Reed. The secondary haul and offensive line group are all but wrapped up before anyone’s first game kicks off this month, with the D-line unit potentially next up. 18. North CarolinaVerbal commitments: 15Premium position pledges: 7UNC has done very well within state lines in 2023, and it has hit on several pass rushers closer to home, addressing a clear need under Mack Brown moving forward. The offensive skill spots are off to a strong start, too, led by another Carolina native in quarterback Tad Hudson. 19. Texas TechVerbal commitments: 23Premium position pledges: 5Joey McGuire surged early in the recruiting cycle and still holds the bulk of his first full class intact, filled with Texans, to date. The trenches are filled to the brim while offensive skill players are also coming in droves, including five pass catchers already committed. Chris Palfreeman is the only receiver being brought in under 6′, but he also happens to be one of the fastest football players in the state. 20. OregonVerbal commitments: 12Premium position pledges: 6The Ducks have the smallest class among the top-25 programs on this list, so of course the star power is prevalent within it. It starts with SI’s Elite 11 MVP in Dante Moore and one of the nation’s most gifted wide receivers in Jurrion Dickey, but there is also a big secondary haul already on board. The Ducks have raided Pac-12 territory to put it together, too, with recruiting wins in Washington (Caleb Presley), Arizona (Cole Martin) and Nevada (Kodi Decambra) committed. The Ducks need more trench talent to ascend later in the year. 21. LouisvilleVerbal commitments: 12Premium position pledges: 5The Cardinals have won some of the most surprising far-from-home battles in the class in commitments Pierce Clarkson, Aaron Williams and DeAndre Moore (from Calif.), along with Rueben Owens (Texas) and more. Five future Cardinals are from the Golden State, the same amount of commitments Scott Satterfield has on board from the actual ACC footprint. Owens, arguably the top running back in the U.S., was among the most unexpected commitment wins nationally when he decided in late June. 22. IowaVerbal commitments: 17Premium position pledges: 8The Hawkeyes have built the class one may expect under Kirk Ferentz to date. The skill group is solid, but half of the class is made up of trench talent, led by national in-state recruit Kadyn Proctor at offensive tackle. The Hawkeyes also boast one of the better one-two running back commitment packages to boot in Khalil Tate and Kendrick Raphael.23. NorthwesternVerbal commitments: 20Premium position pledges: 5At one point in the late spring, the Wildcats were the hottest recruiting program in the country. The program didn’t add a July pledge but already built a top-25 class by that point, thanks to great work along the line of scrimmage on both offense and defense. Northwestern won battles in 10 different states to make up their current group, led by Texas defensive lineman Ashton Porter, perhaps a sign that the program will continue to recruit above expectation under Pat Fitzgerald.24. PittVerbal commitments: 17Premium position pledges: 8A top-10 quarterback in Kenny Minchey and near-complete hauls at wide receiver and offensive line should have Pitt fans confident that the ACC title run of 2021 was no fluke on that side of the ball. Beyond Minchey, individually, there are intriguing defensive additions throughout the secondary also in the fold.   25. DukeVerbal commitments: 25Premium position pledges: 7The biggest recruiting class in America for a first-year head coach? Sure, the Blue Devils are taking chances within this class. But there are building blocks for the future sprinkled throughout the haul, including one of Texas’s top running back prospects in recent commitment Marquise Collins, who totaled more than 3,000 yards from scrimmage as a junior. Honorable mentions: Texas A&M, Iowa State, Stanford, TCU, South CarolinaThe class recruiting rankings will be updated each month through National Signing Day in February. More from SIAA Football:!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()
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Notre Dame edge Isaiah Foskey

Notre Dame edge Isaiah Foskey

It’s never too early to turn attention towards the 2023 NFL Draft, especially as it is now less than two months away from a trio of intriguing matchups. Things get rowdy early as Georgia takes on Oregon, Ohio St. faces Notre Dame, and Florida St. travels down to Baton Rouge to square off with LSU. The seeds of prospects who will be all the rave during the pre-draft process in January are being planted now.
The 2023 edge rusher group has a real chance to evolve into one of if not the deepest position group in next year’s class. With players like B.J Ojulari (LSU), Isiah Foskey (Notre Dame), Nolan Smith (Georgia), Clemson’s Myles Murphy, Zion Tupola Fetui (Washington), and Ohio States Zach Harrison there should be plenty of options to choose from. Maybe the most intriguing of the aforementioned players is Foskey, who has a unique blend of size, length, athleticism and alignment versatility.
We take a look at Foskey and why his arrow is trending up and if he could be a fit for the Dallas Cowboys come next April’s draft.

Measurables

Michael Caterina/South Bend Tribune-USA TODAY Sports
Height: 6-foot-5(unofficial)
Weight: 260(unofficial)
Position: Edge/OLB
Hometown: Antioch, CA
High School: De La Salle
At the time of his signing was the No. 211 player nationally and the No. 13 weak side defensive end. He was the 28th best player in the state of California according to 247 sports composite. 
Career Statistics:
2019: Only played in four games. Five tackles, One pressure and a blocked punt.
2020: 20 tackles, five tackles for loss, four and half sacks, one pass defended.
2021: 52 tackles, 12.5 tackles for loss, 11 sacks, six forced fumbles. Started all 13 games.
Honors and Awards:
2021 Phil Steele All-American Third Team Selection.
 

Summer Scouting Report

It’s easy to see why Foskey has started to generate a ton of buzz amongst the scouting community. A lot of it has to do with the tools: the size, length, athleticism and how he is utilized but in 2021 the production started to match the potential. He led the Fighting Irish in sacks (11), which ranked third-most in a Notre Dame single season. He is only nine sacks away from becoming the Irish’s all-time leader in sacks.
He started all 13 games and recorded a sack in nine of those starts.
Foskey decided to return for his senior season, stating, “The main thing was I believe in Coach Freeman and I just believe in the whole team that we can actually win a national championship. I believe that we can actually do that. The best of both worlds, I can come back, develop as a defensive and not just as a pass rusher, but as an all-around defensive player, but I feel like this team can really win a national championship, that’s the main reason I came back.”
Foskey knows what another year of improving his skill set could not only do for his team but his development as well and being able to self-scout is huge when it comes to understanding what areas you need to improve in.
“Everyone sees that I can get to the quarterback but I want to really emphasize that I can stop the run, hold the edge, make plays, make a lot more TFLs (tackles for loss) and of course make more sacks …. Another good reason why I came back too is I was close to the sack record.”
Foskey’s leadership both on and off the field will be the key if Notre Dame is to get back to the college football playoffs in back-to-back seasons.
 

Evaluation

Games Watched: USC (2021), Purdue (2021)
STRENGTHS:

Foskey has plenty of size, listed at 6-foot-5, 260. He moves really well both coming forward and when he is asked to play in reverse. He is a well put together 260 with a ripped physique.
He offers position and alignment flex with the added ability to give you quality snaps both as an edge rusher or an off-ball backer. He has reps from a multitude of alignments: Sam linebacker, Will linebacker, Mike linebacker. Strong side or weak side defensive end.
Foskey is a nuanced rusher with plus hand usage and a solid repertoire of moves, but his primary rush move is that long arm chop where he basically uses his inside arm as his strike/long arm, and he swipes through the blockers outside arm allowing him to rip through or simply grease the corner.
He has range as a pursuit player with a motor that runs hot allowing him to chase downplays from the backside.
While most of the talk is centered around the tools he has as a disruptive pass rusher, he’s player with the baseline ability to hold the point-of-attack and could stack, shed and play through contact.
He not only sacks the quarterbacks and creates pressure, but he forces turnovers; six forced fumbles in 2021.
Two career blocked punts.

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT:

Foskey will need to continue to add variety to his rush. At times he relies too much on his go-to rush move, allowing blockers to get a read on his rush patterns.
He still has room to grow as a run defender. Both at the point of attack and generating tackles behind the line of scrimmage.
His versatility as a player is a plus but it would do him well at some point this season to settle into what he does best, which is rush the quarterback, and really master that skillset.
More rushes from a three-point stance to see if he can play as a down defensive end.

PROJECTION: Foskey projectsin a wide alignment, with the base characteristics of an outside linebacker in a 3-4 defense.
It’s very early in the process but Foskey with a productive year on tape and an impressive pre-draft process could easily work himself into first round of next year’s draft. He plays a premium position, at a big-time school and he has projectable size and athleticism.

How He Fits with The Cowboys

WHAT THEY HAVE:
The Cowboys have a pretty good nucleus of edge rushers on the current roster. Their best defensive lineman is two-time Pro Bowler Demarcus Lawrence, and their best pure pass rusher is sophomore phenom, Micha Parsons. Provided they remain healthy it should be an interesting race as to who finishes with the most sacks by season end.
After that there is a little more projection involved. Rookie Sam Williams should be in line to play a lot after being selected in the second round. Dorance Armstrong is likely to be the starter opposite of Lawrence and he is expected to improve after starting a career-high five games last season and finishing with a career-high five sacks.
Dan Quinn helped bring in Dante Fowler with the hopes he could rekindle some of the success he had earlier in his career as a situational rusher. Tarell Basham played well at times last year and provides the group with needed depth.
WHAT THE FUTURE LOOKS LIKE:
By seasons end we will know where the Cowboys stand when it comes to their edge rushers and just how big of a need it is entering 2023. Lawrence, Parsons, Armstrong and Williams will all return in 2023. Basham and Fowler are slated to become free agents so there is a good chance the Cowboys are looking to add depth to the group either through free agency or the draft.
If anything has been learned about the type of defenders Quinn covets it’s the ability to play a multitude of positions well. There is no greater example than the way he utilized Parsons, but it is littered across his defense. The Cowboys are a fluid unit that align either out of a three or four down lineman looks.
That is why Foskey would be an intriguing fit with the Cowboys. He already has the experience of playing all three linebacker spots and can get after the quarterback as a standup rusher. On top of that, his measurables are similar to Williams who Quinn was enamored with during the pre-draft process so there is a connection between what he looks for in a player.
Everyone has heard the old adage, “You can never have too many pass rushers” so anytime there is an opportunity to add a talented rusher to your team it’s a no brainer.

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