johnnycando
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How am I just seeing your location?
"You from Midland!?!"
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I had nothing to do with the lawsuit.
I just wanted to provide geographical evidence and proximity reference.
How am I just seeing your location?
"You from Midland!?!"
![]()
Was that the school where Leif was slingin drugs while he coached?

How am I just seeing your location?
"You from Midland!?!"
![]()
If only there was a safety recruit like this.
Or, maybe he actually is a bit slow or doesn't have a very strong arm or plays in a system that pads his stats and he isn't a division 1 qb? I don't think it is as simple as he is from New Mexico. If he has been to all these qb camps, i'd speculate there is a reason he hasn't been offered. -Just playing devil's advocate.
One already has a '15 QB commit and the other took SIX QB's last season.
Easton Bruere’s vision is to play Division I college football someday. He apparently believes he has found the right place to incubate that dream.
The Rams’ senior quarterback has decided to play for Butler Community College in El Dorado, Kan., a program that has proven to be a solid pipeline from the junior college ranks to four-year schools.
The Journal could not reach Bruere for comment Thursday. Rio Rancho coach David Howes confirmed the story.
The 6-foot-3, 200-pound Bruere threw for over 4,600 yards and 49 touchdowns last season for the Class 6A state champion Rams. He threw six interceptions, although his first pick did not occur until the final game of the regular season.
That Bruere went almost completely unrecruited by both Division I and Division II schools was – and is – baffling to Rio Rancho.
Bruere’s tale gained national traction recently when the website Bleacher Report took Bruere’s odd situation and wrote an extensive piece about him, describing him as the best football prospect in the country no one had heard of. The tale became compelling in light of the contrast with Eldorado quarterback Zach Gentry, who earlier this week signed with Michigan.
Butler CC had 20 players sign with D-I programs after the 2014 season. The school said it has had at least 14 players transfer to D-I schools after each season since 1998. Since 1998, the school has won five national championships, according to the school’s football website.
New Butler coach Tim Schaffner is a former Eastern New Mexico and NMMI assistant.
Found this article pretty interesting. You would think that a '6"3 kid that threw for 4,567 yards and 49 touchdowns with only six interceptions this season, carries a 3.75 GPA and became the state's all-time leader in passing yards would have at least one scholarship offer. But here we are, a week before NSD and this kid is still on the board. Pretty crazy.