The staff just wasn't done evaluating Hubbard.
This is starting to become a "thing" with the staff and I'm not sure whether I like it or not. Fister hates it, which makes me think I should like it by default. But the staff is very methodical with their evaluation of players and seems to really wait to pull the trigger on an offer. Most schools go the opposite route... extending offers early and then turning up the heat as necessary depending on whether or not they want the prospect. This doesn't happen all the time (see: Dawkins, Schutt, etc.) but it happens quite a bit.
We waited on Kyle Bosch, and got in too late. Ended up not being a big deal.
We waited on Marcus Rios, and lost him to UCLA who turned up some pressure. Keiv bailed us out on that misstep.
We waited on Tranquill, and now we're trying to flip him. There's almost no doubt he would be Irish if we offered 10 days earlier.
We waited on Hubbard, while Stanford, Michigan, Ohio State, etc. immediately extended offers after seeing his junior film. We tried to set up a meeting on campus after a couple weeks. He committed to Ohio State on a visit before that, as Meyer pursued vigorously from the onset.
We're waiting on Shaun Crawford, and he's going to commit to Michigan in the meantime.
We waited on Deshone Kizer, and just barely got in the race on time. What if Kyle Allen drags things out another week or two? Scary to think about.
In general, we tend to be slow with the trigger on our offers. I don't know if this is a good plan or not. But so far I can still count recruiting mistakes from this staff on my hands... which is FAR better than previous staffs and the vast majority of schools around the country. So I'll take it.
To Whiskey: that was precisely the problem and why they wanted to get him on campus to evaluate him to see where they thought he could play and if we had a need at that spot. He wasn't a priority, we dragged out feet, and now he is going to OSU. At the end of the day, probably not a big deal unless we start striking out on prospects AND get decommits. So let's cross our fingers that doesn't happen. At least he didn't end up at Stanford where they surely would've used their voodoo magic to ensure he turned into a dominant 6'6" 265 pound freak at some position.