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Wednesday, January 27, 2021

George Rooks, Wolverine

 

Jersey City (NJ) St. Peter's Prep DT George Rooks (image via NJ.com)

Jersey City (NJ) St. Peter's Prep defensive tackle George Rooks III committed to Michigan for the class of 2021 on Wednesday. He picked the Wolverines over offers from Alabama, Georgia, Notre Dame, Ohio State, and Penn State, among others.

Rooks is listed at 6'4" and 260 pounds and is the son of former Syracuse defensive lineman George Rooks, who played for the Orangemen from 1988-1991. During the former's junior year in 2019, he made 71 tackles, 15 tackles for loss, and 9.5 sacks.

RANKINGS
ESPN: 4-star, 83 grade, #22 DE, #208 overall
Rivals: 4-star, 5.8 grade, #14 SDE, #227 overall
247 Sports: 3-star, 88 grade, #30 DT

Hit the jump for more.


Rooks has long been a Michigan lean . . . I mean a Syracuse lean . . . I mean a Boston College lean . . . I mean a Penn State lean . . . I mean . . . Okay, feelings about his leanings have changed direction like the wind. Rooks's older sister, Taylor, played basketball at Michigan, which helped provide some familiarity and comfort with the Wolverines. I long thought the biggest threat to Michigan was Penn State, but defensive line coach Shaun Nua pulled off a big recruiting win.

Rooks plays defensive end for his high school team, and he looks the part. He has a thick lower body and a somewhat undeveloped upper body, so there is a lot of room to grow. He will probably grow into a defensive tackle or at least a 3-4 defensive end, depending on what kind of system new defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald runs.

Rooks has plus athleticism for his size. He can sink his hips to change direction and is swift enough to take advantage of inside pass rush lanes when offensive tackles overset. He sells out his body to make tackles rather than waiting for the cavalry, which is the opposite of 2022 defensive line commit Davonte Miles. Rooks also has a nice, compact swim move, which is probably his best pass rush move at this point in his career.

On the negative side, Rooks does not display heavy hands. He does use his hands - sometimes to good effect - but he needs to strike and lock out better rather than playing patty cake. I also believe he needs to improve his aggression when taking on and defeating pullers. He has a tendency to open up his chest, stop his feet, and catch blockers rather than trying to be the aggressor.

Overall, Rooks has a nice set of athletic skills but is held back by a little bit of a tendency toward finesse when taking on blockers. I believe he will make a move to the interior of the defensive line, and it will take some time to bulk up. I see him as an eventual 290- to 295-pounder playing 3-tech (outside shoulder of the guard) or 4i (inside shoulder of tackle). With proper development, he could become a quietly solid player in the mold of Matt Godin.

Michigan now has 21 commitments in the class of 2021, and Rooks is the only one who has not yet signed his National Letter of Intent. (The Wolverines have also signed offensive tackle transfer Willie Allen.) Rooks is the only defensive tackle in the class aside from Dominick Giudice.

Rooks would be the first player from St. Peter's Prep since linebacker Anthony Jordan (not to be confused with Jordan Anthony), who played for the Wolverines from 1997-2001.

TTB Rating: 80

7 comments:

  1. Good pickup. I've seen comparisons of Wormley, but Goding would be fine so long as we keep bringing in DL

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  2. Speaking of D Line, is DT in the portal from Central Michigan headed to Michigan?

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  3. I'm old enough to remember the institutional disaster that was not having a coaching staff fully in place over Christmas and New Years. It seems the program weathered the storm. What a relief.

    Glad to have a DT recruit in the mix. Keep em coming.

    -Lank

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    1. No one predicted disaster. This is just another Lank lie. Many did say we were falling behind, which does not help. Just off the top of my head:

      - we missed on the PennSt DT and one from Duke
      - we missed on the WMU LB
      - a 5star CB we were hot on, committed to SC

      Three positions of need, 4 lost opportunities (though none a guarantee)

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    2. Oh look JE wants to talk to Lank again. My biggest fan seems upset. Let me see if I can help him out.

      It's college football buddy. Guys choose to go where they want to go. That's true if you have a full coaching staff for a couple weeks in early January or not. We didn't miss on a transfer or recruit anymore than Notre Dame or Wisconsin or whatever other peer school did keeping their whole staff together.

      There's no correlation let alone causality evident. Michigan will continue to see these sort of "missed opportunities" everyday. Just because some guy who didn't graduate high school on a message board thinks Michigan should go after someone doesn't mean that guy is a miss for Michigan. It certainly doesn't mean they would have got him otherwise.

      Meanwhile, Michigan is bolstering it's 2021 defense with more players. A direct refutation that the timing was problematic.

      To assert that a 5star CB from southern California choosing to go to the University of Southern California because Michigan doesn't have coaches in place over Christmas and New Years is just as dumb as it sounds written out.

      When facts get in the way of emotions some people get real upset and call them lies. Oh well.

      -Lank

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    3. None of your blabber changes the fact that you're caught in another lie. No one claimed disaster

      Glad I'm in your head. Quite entertaining

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  4. If the D Line coaches at both Ohio St and Alabama wanted him, he is good.

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