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Oh man...this puts me in a good mood when he talks about his grandfather!
No doubt.
Oh man...this puts me in a good mood when he talks about his grandfather!
No doubt.
doh...didn't think about that!kinda like Lynch's grandpa....
kinda like Lynch's grandpa....
but he did go to ND...
challenge.
On the flip side of the line, K.C. McDermott of Wellington (Fla.) Palm Beach Central plans to follow in the footsteps of his older brother -- Shane McDermott -- in enrolling early.
McDermott is the No. 50 player in the Rivals100 and said that he plans to make his college pledge next week after he visits Notre Dame. He is between the Fighting Irish and Miami -- where Shane plays center. His other brother, Tyler, played at Colorado State and is now a graduate assistant at Notre Dame.
With a relative on both campuses, it will be the intangibles that tip the scales of the 6-foot-6, 285-pound tackle.
"I am going to try to go in early," McDermott said. "My brother (Shane) did it at Miami and he felt like it was a great thing and helped him. He is going to graduate in May and he's only a redshirt sophomore."
The plan to get on campus early was no shock to Codrington.
"K.C. is a very heady player," Codrington said. "His smarts translate from the class to the field. You can look at him and see that he has the size and frame to be a starting tackle right now and if he is able to get into a school early he could compete for the early time."
McDermott said that his parents put a premium on academics and had he not had his grades in order, he would lose the chance to play.
It is a parental lesson that will carry over to the next level.
"I'm not even allowed to be out here if I have a C," McDermott said. "They definitely push the books and I push myself to work harder every day - not only on the field but in the classroom."
McDermott is an imposing figure with a college-ready body. The quiet confidence that is usually displayed by the No. 50 player in the Rivals100 was quickly transformed once the Rivals Camp Series presented by Under Armour started.
Rivals.com Southeast regional analyst Woody Wommack took notice.
"He had great reps today," Wommack said. "He had a mean streak that I don't think we have seen before and that was a very good thing.
"He treated this like a business trip and performed very well."
His performance left him as the only player from the camp to receive an invitation to the series-ending Rivals Five-Star Challenge to be held in June.
McDermott said that he played to his potential today.
"I did everything they asked of me and more," he said. "I went out and dominated."
McDermott took home the offensive lineman MVP award and in the one-on-one session fared well against Miami (Fla.) Booker T. Washington defensive end Chad Thomas.
Thomas took home the defensive line MVP, but McDermott took home the bragging rights.
The two lined up head to head and McDermott fared better.
"I won," McDermott said.
Wommack said the battles between McDermott and the No. 207-ranked Thomas were intense but the willingness to take on the challenge is what helps separate McDermott and pushed him into the Rivals Five-Star Challenge.
"They probably split the reps, with K.C. winning the last one," Wommack said. "But really it was really great to see the willingness to compete and take on whoever was sent out there against him.
"K.C. looked really good today and played his way into the event."
I am so tired of hearing about these academics. Because it seems like we get left at the altar.
hahahah what
He is talking about prospects who tout academics than go to less than stellar academic schools. It happens.
I get what you're saying LAX. But another thing to consider is not every degree at ND is better than the degree at scool 'x'. Ifmy son wanted to major in business you bet I'd push him to go to Mendoza. But maybe he wants to go into engineering or broadcast journalism or fine arts. Maybe he wants to go pre-med. Is ND number 1 across the board? Sure, ND graduates just about all of their players, but every kid that has a list of schools not including ND isn't disinterested in school. It could mean they just aren't into ND.
You can't really put "better" in a box. Too many factors, and there are certain programs at almost every school where a degree is pretty valuable.
The solution is simple... accept that on a macro scale looking at a gross cross-section of student athletes that Notre Dame is about as good as it can possibly get student athlete academics; at the same time accept that for any specific individual with personal goals that none of us on the outside can really hope to comprehend that there is no one size fits all for "academics" and the concept of "better" is inherently subjective.

Told 247 he is going to ask every question he needs to know when he visits ND particularly if Kelly is going to leave and about NDs engineering program. Feels he already knows every thing about Miami.
I get what you're saying LAX. But another thing to consider is not every degree at ND is better than the degree at scool 'x'. Ifmy son wanted to major in business you bet I'd push him to go to Mendoza. But maybe he wants to go into engineering or broadcast journalism or fine arts. Maybe he wants to go pre-med. Is ND number 1 across the board? Sure, ND graduates just about all of their players, but every kid that has a list of schools not including ND isn't disinterested in school. It could mean they just aren't into ND.
He's Irish. Just a hunch. PM me for vbets on the matter.