Injury brought ECU, Herrin together
By
Sammy Batten
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Showing loyalty when others shied
away helped the East Carolina football coaching staff land its latest
prospect for the recruiting class of 2016.
The Pirates received their third
verbal commitment from a rising high school senior late last week from
Saluda, SC, offensive lineman Cortez Herrin. Herrin, a 6-foot-4,
320-pounder, chose ECU over scholarship offers from Football
Championship Subdivision programs N.C. Central and South Carolina State.
Those schools were joined in pursuit
of Herrin last winter by Clemson and South Carolina. But the interest
from the Tigers and Gamecocks lessened somewhat when Herrin suffered an
ACL tear in his knee five games into Saluda's basketball season. The
injury, and the fact that Herrin had only one season of varsity football
under his belt at Saluda caused the in-state schools to take a
“wait-and-see'' attitude in regards to his recruitment.
East Carolina, however, took a
different approach. After having Herrin on campus in April and
discussing his injury thoroughly with Saluda head coach Stewart Young,
the Pirates extended a scholarship offer on May 7.
It came as no surprise to Young that
Herrin accepted the ECU offer.
“Why did he choose East Carolina?
It's a real simple answer to be honest,'' Young said. “Before he tore
his ACL he was getting recruited heavily by in-state schools, and I'm
talking Clemson and South Carolina. But after the injury everybody
slowed down on him because of the knee and because we didn't have a lot
of film on him since he'd only played his junior year. They all wanted
to wait and see him at their (summer) camps.
“East Carolina jumped on him and gave
him their word they'd give him a scholarship and would honor it. They
knew he'd get healthy. We had some long talks about it and he kept
saying he wanted to go to ECU because 'they believe in me.' I said, 'OK,
let's make the commitment.' ''
Herrin is already well ahead on his
road to recovery, according to Young. He had surgery in January and
wasn't to be cleared to work out with no restrictions until August 1.
But that date has now been shifted back to July 1.
“He's ahead of schedule,'' Young
said. “He's running, cutting, jumping over small hurdles and everything.
He's getting back to his form.''
It was that form and size that caught
Young's eye when Herrin and older brother Cedric showed up for the start
of Saluda's preseason practice in August 2012. The pair had transferred
in from another school and made an immediate impact on the Saluda
program as defensive linemen.
But after an impressive freshman
season, Cortez stepped away from the gridiron as a sophomore in 2013.
“We knew he was something special
after his ninth-grade year,'' Young said. “But issues – nothing serious
– kept him away from football. It actually ended up being a good thing
for him. He came back last year with renewed energy and spirit. He
became a team leader for us.''
Young used Herrin exclusively on the
defensive line for the first three games of the 2014 season. He played
both nose tackle and end alongside his brother, who would later earn a
spot in South Carolina's annual North-South All-Star game.
But after determining the Tigers had
plenty of depth on the defensive line and were in need of help on the
offensive line, Young inserted Herrin into the starting lineup at guard
as well.
“We played a small school in South
Carolina, McCormick, in our fourth game,'' Young said. “We plugged him
in there at guard and he came out of that game with 14 pancake blocks. I
said, 'Wow! We're going to keep him on offense.'
“He played on both sides of the ball
from then on out. He was in shape to do it. But we used him so much on
defense I don't know if he really was at his best. He'll be a whole lot
better when he plays one way.''
Young said Herrin doesn't rely on
size alone to get the job done.
“He's very athletic,'' he said.
“Before the knee injury he could dunk a basketball. He's a big kid who
moves like a cat.''
The Pirates are expected to use the
“Big Cat'' as an offensive guard, although Young believes he's versatile
enough to play multiple positions.
“He's focused squarely on offense in
college, but the intriguing thing about it is some of the other schools
recruited him to play defense,'' Young said. “But right now East
Carolina is looking at him strictly on the offensive line. He has a
guard body, but he can move so in our league we use him as a tackle,
too.
“With the offense East Carolina runs,
I'm not sure where they'll put him. He could be a center with his
frame.''
Young said he expects more schools to
start engaging Herrin in recruiting talk next fall after getting a look
at him during the 2015 season. But he's just as sure Herrin will remain
committed to the school that was loyal to him from the start.
“I think his recruiting will blow up
after a few games next year,'' Young said. “But I'm convinced he's a man
of his word and he'll stick with East Carolina.''
Herrin joins
quarterback
Reid Herring from Raleigh, NC, and
wide receiver Tajh Deans from
Bailey, NC, as prep players in ECU's recruiting class. The Pirates also
have a commitment from
junior college wide receiver Dre Massey,
who first signed with ECU out of Mauldin (SC) High School in February
2014. Massey is currently on the team at Holmes (MS) Community College.
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05/28/2015 04:03 AM |