The final countdown is on:
Signing Day is next Wednesday, giving college football coaches one final week of on-the-road recruiting before the effective end of the recruiting cycle* arrives.
* - If you don’t count February signings or transfers who wait to make their decisions until later in December.
Here’s the latest on what we’re hearing to start the week.
- The official visit weekend was a small one but a good one. Pitt hosted three recruits for official visits, and the first one we’ll discuss is TJ Harvison. The Bowdon (Ga.) running back won a state championship last Thursday night and flew to Pittsburgh on Friday after receiving an offer from the Panthers in mid-November.
Pitt might have been relatively late to the party in Harvison’s recruitment, but the Panthers have jumped to the top of the list for him. He told me that Pitt is his top school after the visit, and as of Sunday evening, he did not have any plans to take an official visit next weekend. He said he was considering a visit, but he sounded uncertain to me.
Unless Pitt makes a final-week decision to not take a second running back in the class, I would expect Harvison to sign with the Panthers next Wednesday. He also plans to enroll in January, which is also a nice added bonus. Pat Narduzzi and Archie Collins will have an in-home visit with him on Wednesday.
- The second visitors was Inglewood (Calif.) tight end Jamari Johnson. The four-star prospect is committed to Louisville, but he has been looking around due in no small part to the Cardinals’ coaching change.
I have less of a feel for Johnson’s current situation. In a brief text message exchange, he told me he enjoyed the Pitt visit, and I’ve heard varying amounts of optimism regarding Pitt’s chances here. When he scheduled the official visit, the impression I got from different sources was that the Panthers’ were in a surprisingly strong position; given that the staff has tried to emphasize using official visits on recruits with genuine interest - rather than kids who just want to take a visit for the sake of taking one - I tend to believe that Johnson wanted to give Pitt a serious look.
Still, Johnson’s got some schools in heavy pursuit. He has an official visit to Oregon booked for this coming weekend. Louisville is still a factor, of course, after the the hiring of Jeff Brohm as the Cardinals’ next head coach. And Cincinnati is a factor, too, after that school hired Scott Satterfield - the head coach he was committed to at Louisville.
Given the transition at Louisville and Cincinnati, as well as Johnson’s interest in each school, it seems like there’s a good chance his recruitment will carry into January. From my view, I’m not sure that’s a great scenario for Pitt; I kind of think the staff needed to get Johnson in the class over the weekend, and if that didn’t happen - which seems to be the case - then I think their chances decrease quite a bit.
We’ll see, though. Like I said, the interest is sincere and I expect Pitt coaches to make a visit to Inglewood this week to see what they can do with Johnson.
- The third visitor was Agoura (Calif.) quarterback Ty Dieffenbach, who is already committed to Pitt. That was Dieffenbach’s first visit to Pitt, and while he spent the weekend learning about his new home, he also spent a lot of time working on Harvison and Johnson. That’s what any quarterback commitment worth his salt would be expected to do, and Dieffenbach dove right in.
Actually, it wasn’t just Dieffenbach; it was Dieffenbach and his family. Harvison said that Dieffenbach’s parents were very much involved in telling him how impressed they were with his film and how they hope he can play with Ty at Pitt.
Like I said, I think that will happen.
- I also think Pitt is set to land Steel Valley defensive back Cruce Brookins. I know I’ve said this a bunch of times, but with how things have changed quickly in so many recruiting situations this offseason - literally day-to-day, in some cases - I feel like repeating it.
Brookins was previously committed to Kent State, but he decommitted on Dec. 5 - less than a week after getting an offer from Pitt, which came in the wake of Brice Pollock’s decommitment. I think the Pitt staff was high on Brookins all along, but they kind of filled up the defensive back spots in the class, so they held off on offering. But I think they liked him a lot, and several sources have said the coaches think Brookins’ potential is really high.
Brookins didn’t take an official visit to Pitt this weekend, but he was in the South Side on Saturday to watch the team start bowl practices. On Sunday, he announced a top three of Pitt, Cincinnati and Syracuse, with the intention of making his formal commitment on Signing Day.
Unless the spot somehow fills up - and there don’t appear to be many candidates for that - I think Pitt gets Brookins.
- Elsewhere on the defensive backs landscape, it’s looking more and more like Shadarian Harrison won’t be signing with Pitt. The June commit is one of the top prospects in the class, and Florida State and Oregon were pushing hard for him - a hot pursuit that got only hotter last week when Miami offered.
I don’t know which one of those schools is the biggest threat; I just see the combined efforts as one big threat to Pitt holding onto the underrated three-star prospect. Harrison is really good; that’s why Oregon, FSU and Miami have made him a late-cycle priority, and it’s why Pitt is going to work very hard over the next nine days to hold onto him.
That process of keeping him has been ongoing for quite some time, but today is a big day, as head coach Pat Narduzzi and safeties coach Cory Sanders will have an in-home visit with Harrison. This is the big visit, the moment where Narduzzi and Sanders can convince Harrison to stick with his commitment and stick with the Panthers.
It’s not going to be an easy sell, but I don’t think it’s 100% a done deal that Pitt is losing Harrison. Things seem to be pointing in that direction, but there are strong relationships here, mostly between Sanders and Harrison and his family and the people around him. That bond has kept Harrison in the fold so far; now Narduzzi needs to close the circle.
I don’t know what’s going to happen here. Gun to my head, I’m guessing Harrison doesn’t sign at all next week, delays his signing until February and takes official visits to those three schools in January. Which would obviously be the worst-case scenario for Pitt.
I’ll just add this: it’s really something that, at one point, Pitt had Harrison, Pollock and Shelton Lewis all committed in this class. I know, I know, all that matters is who you sign. But those are three legitimate studs who were all convinced, at some point in time, to commit to Pitt.
- Harrison may be leaning away, but I’m hearing more and more that Hampton (Va.) Phoebus linebacker Jordan Bass is pretty much locked in with Pitt. I use “pretty much” because nothing is ever 100%, but it sounds like any concerns about him slipping away late in the cycle have faded.
- There are two prominent former WPIAL stars in the transfer portal - both considering Pitt and both high-priority targets for the staff. There’s receiver Dante Cephas, the former Penn Hills standout who went to Kent State amid academic issues out of high school but has blossomed into a legitimate Power Five player. Pitt was quick to jump into his recruitment as a transfer candidate, but the Panthers were far from the last school to do so. We’ve run down the list of offers before, but it’s an impressive one, with Notre Dame, Georgia, Oklahoma, Penn State, West Virginia, Miami, Virginia Tech, Kansas, Colorado and Maryland all following Pitt on the parade of Power Five offers.
Cephas was at Penn State for an official visit over the weekend. That follows at least three unofficial visits to Pitt last week. Cephas plans to enroll in January, which obviously puts him on a short timeline, although it does leave next weekend open for another visit.
I’m really not sure which way Cephas is leaning right now. I have a couple sources in different areas on the periphery of his recruitment. One tells me that he is as good as gone, with Penn State or SEC schools as the likely destination; the other tells me Pitt has a really good shot and is more alive than we’ve been previously led to believe.
I can’t call this one yet.
- I’m a little more confident about the other former WPIAL star in the portal, Florida transfer safety Donovan McMillon. There’s a bit of conflicting information from sources on this one, but I’m leaning toward what I’m hearing regarding his intention to come to Pitt after spending two years with the Gators.
That’s not selective sourcing; it just tends to fall in line with some other things I’ve heard about McMillon’s transfer recruitment. My guess is he’ll commit to Pitt at some point this week.
In the meantime, we’re going to keep working on some of the other transfers we’ve talked about, like quarterback Christian Veilleux, tight end AJ Barner and a host of receivers. We haven’t heard anything new on those guys in the last 48 hours, but if we do, we’ll post it.