Sumrall gave an opening statement and then addressed questions in a session that lasted 30 minutes this morning. Tulane added OL Reese Baker from Madison Academy in Alabama and former Colorado WR commitment Zycarl Lewis from Venice High in Florida, helping the class rocket to No. 67 nationally from 88. Jayden Lewis, the CB from Anniston High in Alabama, already had enrolled in January and will participate in spring drills.
The three transfers who had been listed on the official roster are in the fold, too--Terez Traynor, Micah Robinson and Kionte Curry.
I am skipping Sumrall's preamble when he thanked recruiting coordinator Cole Heard, Courtney Luquet, who handled recruiting operations during the transition from the last staff to his, including giving him notes to make sure he knew who the recruits on visits were he was face-timing with when he was still at Troy after accepting the job, offensive recruiting specialist Kyle Schexnayder from Holy Cross, defensive recruiting specialist Hunter Sims, grad assistant for recruiting Justin Herrup, social media director Parker Peletier and equipment guy Cody Heidbreder for being instrumental in helping the class together.
SUMRALL
I'm grateful for the young men and the families that are joining us. We have a lot to promote here. I've said this on many occasions, but there are so many great things about this place to attract prospective student-athletes. Playing football at the highest level, FBS Division I, the academic excellence that this university is known for and then being uptown in the city of New Orleans. If you can't recruit here, you probably can't recruit. It's not that hard. I like to think I'm a decent recruiter. If I can't recruit here, I'm probably not very good at my job, so this is a very easy place to attract quality student-athletes and their families to see why this could be a good fit. In total, 32 new players we can announce--16 high school, 13 transfer portal, three junior college, eight from Louisiana, so 25 percent of the class is Louisiana ties, which is a quality group there.
"I am really excited about the group we've added. There are some marquee names transfer wise, high school wise that I think are going to bring great value. There were two new additions to day--CJ Lewis from Florida had been committed to another institution for a while (Colorado since June). It opened back up in the last couple of months and got down to us and two or three other schools there at the end. He chose us. He was on a visit last weekend, and the other is Reese Baker. Reese is from Madison Academy in North Alabama, which is my hometown essentially. He had been committed previously with the coaching change, did not sign in December, an offensive tackle who could be an inside player as well, but he's been playing offensive tackle at his high school. Reese and coach Roushar have a great relationship. That was probably the thing that helped us hold Reese through the process, but those are the two that signed today that have not been released or known about previously."
On 4-star recruits Jayden Lewis and Dominic Steward (247Sports but not Rivals):
"Both high level players. Have known both of them for a while. Jayden was previously committed to Auburn. When you see things getting added transfer portal wise, sometimes it makes guys reconsider where they're going and being the right fit. Jayden's recruiting was interesting. He's enrolled. He's on campus right now. Going through workouts he looks like a really talented young man. I just ran into him in the locker room on my way over here. He has great speed, athleticism, change of direction. I think he can be an elite cover guy. Learning the football I.Q. piece at this level is going to (determine) how fast he develops. And then Dominic Steward is someone I've recruited for a really long time. He went to Westlake High, famously Cam Newton's school, but Dom really came on my radar even bigger last summer. He was an SEC school camp and I was getting videos from that staff while I was at their camp going hey, I don't know if we're going to take him here, but you should look at him. We got him committed at the previous place I was. He sort of reopened his recruiting because SEC schools started offering him once he put weight on, and then when I took this job, his grandmother, Miss Helen, probably recruited us as much as we recruited her because she said, coach, we love you, we would love for the opportunity to go to a place like Tulane that's got great academics in a great city, so it was a great fit. He's also already on campus. Both of those guys have been here, enrollees. Dom's extremely athletic. We may be able to use him some as a jumbo tight end and some other stuff and put him in an eligible number with the way he moves, but I'm excited about both those guys."
On Deshaun Baptiste, the John F. Kennedy New Orleans DE product who played for him at Troy last year:
"Yeah, I felt like I stole him last year when I got him out of here. When he came to Troy, I thought, wow, how did we get this kid out of New Orleans. Fantastic kid. Fits Tulane really well. Once again, the family is really excited he's returning home. He played in four games and still redshirted last year. He played his fifth game in the bowl game. Really a heavy-handed striker at the line of scrimmage. He'll start at the field end spot, which we have a huge need there right now to build frontline players and also depth, but a high-character, high-academic kid, local, which is another nice piece. He's excited to be back home, and I"m excited to bring him home. I think very highly of what he's going to become."
On if 8 out of 32 players from Louisiana should be higher in the future:
"I think it's going to be year by year. We better recruit home very well. The local area for us, it's not one guy that recruits it. We have Orleans Parish, Jefferson Parish, St Tammany, Tangapahoah, the River Parishes, those areas we don't have a person's name on them on a recruiting map. We have a Tulane logo. Everybody has a piece. Every coach on our staff has somewhere between four and eight schools in the local area because any time we're allowed to be there, we're going to be there to check in with the high school coaches, build relationships. We're going to always do our due diligence to turn over every rock and stone locally before we get on an airplane and go recruit somewhere else. The model here does start at home. Now it doesn't end at home. We've got to go other places and find how to put a whole class together, but also now with the transfer portal, even if we don't land a young man, say he goes to a different school, you never know where it might be the right fit on a return trip home like Lawrence Keys, like Shazz Preston, some of these guys that have gone away and may end up finding the right fit back here."
On Ty Thompson recruiting process:
'Obviously it started with Michael Pratt leaving. We all knew Pratt was moving on, and his absence garnered a lot of attention probably in a lot of areas, but in the recruiting area it helped us. I fielded phone calls from a lot of people. I was getting people to call me that I usually couldn't get to pick up our calls, and they were calling us. Had a lot of options of people that were interested. You work through the list of available players that fit. It's not just talent. That's a big component, but it's who's going to fit the culture, who's going to fit the university. As we worked through that process, Ty was the best fit that was available to us. Was Bo Nix's backup at Oregon. On his official visit, I facetimed Tez, who's Bo's adopted brother, and put Ty on the phone with Tez and Bo. We all talked. That helped me see how he engaged with his peers, so it made me feel good about how he is with teammates, but great arm. The Oregon staff spoke very highly of his ability but also of his character, which is a huge component when you're talking about any player but even more importantly quarterback. He's been a joy to watch in winter workouts. We run in three groups--bigs, which is the O-line, D-line; Mids, which is quarterbacks, tight ends, running backs and linebackers; and skill, which is wide receiver/DBs. Ty has won his fair share of the sprint group stuff with the mids so far. He runs really well. Haven't fully gotten into the ball yet. We're transitioning that way as we'll start spring ball March 12. We'll trend that way after Mardi Gras. It's when we start to go into that phase a little bit more, but very pleased with him being here and excited about the competition. I'll say this. I'm excited about Ty, but I'm excited about Kai Horton, too. I'm excited about Darian Mensah. We can win games with Kai Horton. I've watched him play. I watched him practice for a month. He can help us win games, so I'm excited about that competition that's going to take place. The other signee we had, Kellen Tasbee, high school kid, I think really untapped young player but has a huge ceiling as well, so excited about him being a part of what we're doing."
On why people not answering calls are answering them now:
"The on-field success helps. The recognition of Michael Pratt doesn't hurt. You look at the lineage of quarterbacks at Tulane, there have been some good ones, plenty of good ones, but the recent success that Pratt's had, the team has had, attracts guys more naturally and had drawn attention to what can be done here. The best indicator of future success is past success. He's seen the team do well and his position do well very recently, so that helped elevate that interest."
(TO BE CONTINUED)