Upstate New York's Democrat and Chronicle spoke with Jared Gerbino, the 6-foot-4, 230-pound quarterback from Rush-Henrietta High School outside of Rochester, and he had this to say about his recruitment:
“It feels great knowing I’m leaving such a great program here at R-H with such great coaches and entering another great program. This was the best decision for me and my future. I am going to get a great education and play in a very competitive league with a bunch of great guys.”Recruiting News Guru has a Q&A with 6-3, 255 Calabasas, Calif., linebacker/defensive end Arthur Kaslow that includes this in the intro:
Kaslow started his high school career playing basketball but added football to his list of hobbies entering his junior year. After four games he was named a starter for Calabasas High School and went on to lead his team with 86 tackles and 14 tackles for a loss in 11 games. With a little bit of technique polish to his athleticism, along with 25 pounds of muscle, the now 6’3”, 255 pound, talent proved his worth as a senior coming up with 118 total tackles, 10 sacks, one interception, two forced fumbles, one fumble recovery, and a mind numbing 30 tackles for a loss.
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Something called Stadium Journey has compiled its 2015 FCS College Football Stadium Experience Rankings (as if that's actually possible ;-).Dartmouth comes in 29th in a field of 125. Here's how the Ivy League ranks:
23. Franklin Field, Penn
29. Memorial Field, Dartmouth
30. Yale Bowl
33. Harvard Stadium
67. Princeton Stadium
70. Schoellkopf Field, Cornell
72. Brown Stadium
114. Wien Stadium, Columbia
All you need to know to completely discount those rankings is that Georgetown's embarrassing Multi-Sport Field came in 21st, ahead of every Ivy League school. Oh, and that New Hampshire's Cowell Stadium – referred to by its own players as The Dungeon because of its sorry state – came in 42nd, ahead of four Ivy League schools including Princeton. (Cowell will be a totally different stadium when it reopens next fall.)
Granted, the ranking is about more than the stadium itself, but really?