Reyes will make his final choice after visiting Mississippi State.

Differences between Auburn's first half and second half offense against  Mississippi State - The Auburn PlainsmanKaty, Texas safety Cyrus Reyes believed his college destination was finalized when he committed to the University of Memphis. A lot has changed since the talented safety offered his pledge to the Tigers. His position coach, Matt Barnes, left Memphis for Mississippi State. After his own official visit to Starkville, Reyes has decommitted from the Tiger program. Later today, the ultraproductive defensive back will announce his final decision.

“I am going to announce on Twitter at 2 PM,” Reyes said earlier this morning. “I had a great visit to Mississippi State over the weekend. It’s a reall nice campus. It’s quiet, but it’s winter break. I had a great time out there with my family.”

As one of several official visitors, Reyes went through the guided tours and had the chance to get some insight from one of the current Mississippi State players.

Ty Cooper was my guy,” Reyes explained. “He’s a great guy. He answered all of my questions. He even texted me later when we were in some places where we couldn’t really talk. He kept up with me and made sure that I had a good time and that I understood everything.”

The visit to Starkville was filled with activities and chances to learn more about the Bulldog football experience. Reyes and his family arrived in Mississippi after making the trip from the Lone Star State.

“We got there on Friday and it was sort of chill,” Reyes said. “We had the chance to get settled and go to dinner. Saturday was the big day. A lot of that was about academics, which was really important to me and my family. We got to tour housing and see all of the facilities. We also got to eat some great food, a lot of great food.”

Part of the Bulldog drawing card is Coach Barnes. Reyes has a longstanding relationship with the new Bulldog safeties coach. With Barnes on the move to Mississippi State, it appears Reyes may be following in his footsteps.

“I love Coach Barnes,” Reyes said. “He discovered me when he was at Memphis and gave me the chance to play there. He is the coach that I would want to play for no matter what. I have a great relationship with him and if I go there, I know he would be a great coach to work with.”

With the news of his decommitment making the rounds, Reyes does not plan to keep fans guessing for long. His afternoon announcement will set the stage for his signing day ceremony on Wednesday.

“My parents and I enjoyed everything about the visit to Mississippi State,” Reyes said. “I know me and my parents are on the same page, so I am going to announce my decision and then sign. I am excited for the next chapter.”

Column: The evolution of Mississippi State’s offense continues with a healthy KeShawn Murphy

KeShawn Murphy’s career day led Mississippi State to its win over North Texas on Sunday in Tupelo

TUPELO — It’s easy for Mississippi State men’s basketball coach Chris Jans to talk about what redshirt sophomore forward KeShawn Murphy does well.

He can stretch the court offensively with a skillset nobody else in Mississippi State’s forward rotation has. He has a motor, when fully healthy is pretty unmatched. Both of which he showed in a career-day Sunday afternoon in Mississippi State’s 72-54 win over North Texas at Cadence Bank Arena.

But the first thing Jans mentioned postgame Sunday evening was where Murphy can improve going forward.

“I love him and he knows where his deficiencies are,” Jans said.  “He has got to get better and tougher on the defensive end. He has got to rebound harder and be assignment-correct all the time.”

It’s that “tough love” that Murphy said has pushed him through an injury riddled three seasons in Starkville, the latest caused him to miss the first five games of this season.

Sunday afternoon was the healthiest Murphy has looked since returning against Nicholls on Nov. 24, scoring a career-high 18 points off the bench,  12 of which came in the first half when the Bulldogs needed a spark after falling down double-digits early to the Mean Green.

“We struggled offensively (early) and I have a skillset to be able to help this team,” Murphy said of his performance. “Any open looks I had, I took the shot and we had that advantage.”

Murphy was an instant energizer to a Mississippi State team that had the early looks of getting run out of the gym. A layup and two free-throws brought Mississippi State within six points after trailing 12-2. He them stepped out for a midrange jumper to get the Bulldogs within four at 16-12, which kickstarted a late-half run to push Mississippi State in front before the half, and then dominate the second half to cruise to its win.

“The offensive part is easy for him,” Jans said of Murphy. He is very skilled and talented. When he is motored up and can get to that point where he can defend like we want him to, he provides a whole different look for us.”

Murphy’s skill-set allows Mississippi State to do things it can’t when West Virginia transfer Jimmy Bell Jr. is on the court. Even when Tolu Smith eventually makes his return, which could happen within the next few weeks.

Those guys are more bruisers in the paint. Back to the basket post guys. Murphy has more touch and range, which allows Jans to play for small. He has the ability to stretch the court and shoot three-pointers, though he missed both of his attempts on Sunday. Or he can go to his natural forward position at the ‘4’ with Bell Jr., or Smith, at the five.

The smaller look gave North Texas problems. With Murphy able to step out beyond the arc, the spacing allowed for better looks for Mississippi State’s guards and driving lines for its cutters, and as a result, the Bulldogs scored 36 points in the paint, while shooting 41% from the field.

“It was nice to see him (do that),” Jans said. “He should have had more but he missed a couple of bunnies he usually doesn’t. But he had a nice offensive game tonight.”

Following the game, Murphy said he knew it was his hade when he saw his first bucket go through. That sounds like a player running with confidence and sounds like a guy who is fully healthy. For a team that hasn’t been at full strength since last year’s First Four NCAA Tournament game in Dayton, Murphy taking the next step in his growth is a nice development.

Moreso, for Jans, it was nice to see a player who has had a snakebit career finally look like the player Jans expected when recruiting Murphy from Ramsay High School in Birmingham, Alabama.

“Work, really,” Murphy said of his road back. “The help from my teammates and staff getting back. Just working and coming in with the same attitude and everything will figure itself out.

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National Signing Day 2023: Decommitment tracker on the class of 2024’s biggest flips

Here’s a closer look at some of the noteworthy players who have reopened their recruitments.

The 2024 recruiting cycle is winding down as the early signing period has arrived. Many of the top high school football players around the country have already announced their respective commitments, but nothing is official until they put pen to paper.

With that in mind, there have been some notable decommitments in recent weeks as players are reopening their recruitments before making a final decision.

There will be plenty more decommitments leading up to and into the early signing period, so we will be tracking those here.

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Here’s a closer look at the recent notable decommitments

Dec. 20: KJ Bolden, 5-star S

(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Florida State (flipped to Georgia)

247Sports rank: 5-star | 98 rating | No. 15 Overall | No. 1 S

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-1, 185-pound safety out of Buford (Ga.) High School, Bolden flipped his commitment from Florida State to Georgia, giving Kirby Smart and company another five-star and solidifying the No. 1 class for the Bulldogs. The Peach State product initially committed to the Seminoles on Aug. 5 over his other finalists in Alabama, Auburn, Georgia and Ohio State, but the Bulldogs pulled off the last-minute flip on the first day of the early signing period. In 13 games as a senior, Bolden recorded 33 tackles, one tackle for loss, three pass breakups and four interceptions with one pick-six on the defensive side of the ball, per MaxPreps. He also hauled in 30 receptions for 663 yards and 14 touchdowns and rushing five times for 85 yards and one score on offense while adding a pair of kick return touchdowns on special teams.

Abbreviated scouting report: “A three-phase playmaker for one of Georgia’s top high school football programs who is viewed by many as a defensive back at the next level because of his range and ability to create takeaways. Projects best as a deep safety that can erase mistakes and prevent touchdowns, but has shown over the years that he’s also quick enough and fluid enough to hang as a slot defender or an outside corner.” — 247Sports director of scouting Andrew Ivins

Player comparison: Eddie Jackson | S | Chicago Bears

Dec. 20: Jeremiah McClellan, 4-star WR

Jeremiah McClellan
(Photo: Brandon Huffman, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Ohio State (flipped to Oregon)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 94 rating | No. 72 Overall | No. 16 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-0, 190-pound wide receiver out of St. Louis (Mo.) Christian Brothers College, McClellan flipped his commitment from Ohio State to Oregon on the first day of the Early Signing Period. He initially committed to Ryan Day and the Buckeyes on Aug. 13 over three other finalists in LSU, Missouri and Oregon. McClellan amassed 1,262 yards from scrimmage with 24 total touchdowns over 14 games as a senior.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Has a solidly built, stronger frame. Stocky and is a tough receiver for defensive backs to re-route. … Has excellent ball skills. Hand-eye coordination and ability to make contested catches is one of his standout qualities. Shows burst as a route runner can accelerate and get on top of defenders.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Allen Trieu

NFL Draft projection: Power Five starter

Player comparison: David Bell | WR | Cleveland Browns

Dec. 18: Dylan Raiola, 5-star QB

Andrew Ivins
(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Georgia (flipped to Nebraska)

247Sports rank: 5-star | 98 rating | No. 2 Overall | No. 1 QB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-3, 230-pound quarterback out of Buford (Ga.) High School, Raiola flipped his commitment from Georgia to Nebraska, making him the first five-star to commit to the Cornhuskers in the 247Sports era dating back to 2000. The longtime Georgia commit initially pledged to the Bulldogs on May 15, but Matt Rhule and company got him on campus for an official visit over the weekend and did enough to flip the Nebraska legacy, whose father, Dominic Raiola, was a two-time All-Big 12 offensive lineman and Rimington Award winner in 2000 for the Cornhuskers. His uncle, Donovan Raiola, is also the current offensive line coach at Nebraska. The younger Raiola is coming off an impressive senior season at Buford in which he completed 160 of 253 passes (63.2%) for 2,666 yards with 34 touchdowns against one interception over 13 games, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “A big-armed passer that has what it takes to be the centerpiece of an offense given how he can sling it around the yard from the pocket or on the move. … Ability to drop the elbow and use baseball-like angles to work around traffic is certainly tantalizing, but regular release is just as impressive as he mirrors his upper and lower halves with a fluid, repeatable motion. Has no issues generating velocity, but has also shown that he can change speeds and layer the football with accuracy.” — 247Sports director of scouting Andrew Ivins

Dec. 18: Jordan Lyle, 4-star RB

Jordan Lyle
(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Ohio State

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 25 RB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-0, 180-pound running back out of Fort Lauderdale (Fla.) St. Thomas Aquinas, Lyle flipped his commitment from Ohio State to Miami following an official visit to Coral Gables, which marked his fourth visit of the fall. He had been pledged to the Buckeyes since May 29 when he chose Ryan Day’s program over a group of finalists that included Alabama, Florida State, Georgia and Miami. But now he is staying home to play for Mario Cristobal and the Hurricanes. In 15 games as a senior, Lyle rushed for 1,376 yards and 21 touchdowns on 130 carries and caught 13 passes for 177 yards and one score, per MaxPreps.

Dec. 18: Xavier Filsaime, 5-star S

(Photo: Jordan Scruggs, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Florida (flipped to Texas)

247Sports rank: 5-star | 98 rating | No. 32 Overall | No. 2 S

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-1, 180-pound safety out of McKinney (Texas) High School, Filsaime flipped his commitment from Florida to Texas on the heels of an official visit to Austin. He had been pledged to the Gators since April 13, but Steve Sarkisian and company extended an offer in October and hosted him on campus twice over the past month to pull off the flip. In 10 games as a senior, Filsaime recorded 64 tackles, two quarterback hurries, two interceptions, six pass breakups and two forced fumbles on defense while rushing for 104 yards and two touchdowns on four carries on offense, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Athletic back-end defender with experience in all three phases and verified athleticism in multiple environments. … Track and combine athleticism translate to the field. Triggers quickly and closes fast downhill. Extremely broad pursuit range. Has shown gradual improvement in tackling consistency to the point of being a striking threat early in his senior season.” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Dec. 18: Rahshawn Clark, 4-star ATH

Rahshawn Clark
(Photo: Brandon Huffman, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: California (flipped to Arizona)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 20 ATH

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-0, 180-pound athlete out of Seattle (Wash.) Garfield, Clark flipped his commitment from Cal to Arizona following an official visit to Tucson. The two-way standout originally committed to the Golden Bears as a wide receiver on July 5 over a group of finalists that included Louisville, Michigan State, Oregon, Oregon State and Washington, but the Wildcats recruited him as a cornerback.

Abbreviated scouting report: “As a receiver, he’s a natural pass catcher and probably projects best inside as a slot but could split out wide too depending on the offense. Defensively, he has some of the best ball skills of any defender in the class and plays with a nice, physical edge to him, not afraid to initiate contact at all.” — 247Sports national recruiting editor Brandon Huffman

Projection: Power Five starter

Dec. 17: Tyler Cherry, 4-star QB

(Photo: Steve Wiltfong, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Duke

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 22 QB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-5, 205-pound quarterback out of Greenwood (Ind.) Center Grove, Cherry decommitted from Duke nearly seven months after initially pledging to the Blue Devils. The decision comes in the wake of a pair of visits to Indiana and Michigan State, and those are the two programs in the mix going forward, per 247Sports director of recruiting Steve Wiltfong. In 13 games as a senior, Cherry completed 218 of 305 passes (71.5%) for 3,156 yards with 34 touchdowns against six interceptions while rushing for four more scores, per MaxPreps.

Dec. 8: Coen Echols, 4-star IOL

(Photo: Brian Perroni, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Texas A&M

247Sports rank: 4-star | 91 rating | No. 197 Overall | No. 9 IOL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-3.5, 290-pound offensive lineman out of Katy (Texas) High School, Echols became the third player to decommit from the Aggies in the wake of Jimbo Fisher’s firing. The move comes nearly two weeks after Auburn hosted him on an unofficial visit for the Iron Bowl. He initially committed to the Aggies on June 23 after taking official visits to Texas A&M, Auburn and Texas Tech earlier that month.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Versatile high school offensive lineman with experience at tackle and center. Could be capable of playing just about anywhere along the offensive front in college. Not the tallest O-lineman, but in the 6-3.5 range with impressive length (about +6) relative to height. Plays with leverage and power. Explodes off the ball and flashes heavy-handed engagement. … Displays above average body control and ease of movement.” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Dec. 8: Jonathan Echols, 4-star TE

(Photo: Jordan Scruggs, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Tennessee

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 18 TE

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-5, 230-pound tight end out of Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy, Echols flipped his commitment from Tennessee to South Florida after being committed to the Vols for more than 17 months. He was the first member of the Vols’ 2024 class, committing on July 4, 2022. The flip reunites him with first-year USF coach Alex Golesh, who recruited Echols during his time as Tennessee’s offensive coordinator and tight ends coach. Echols hauled in 14 receptions for 232 yards and four touchdowns over nine games as a senior, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Has the testing numbers and athletic profile that scouts covet. Initially was graded out as an EDGE, but has made it very clear that he views himself as a tight end on Saturdays and not a pass rusher. Quickly made a name for himself during his first semester at IMG Academy, posting a laser-timed 4.8 in the 40-yard dash to go along with a 4.5 short shuttle and a 120-inch broad jump at the national powerhouse’s annual Pro Day.” — 247Sports director of scouting Andrew Ivins

Player comparison: Noah Fant | TE | Seattle Seahawks

Dec. 8: Jordan Anderson, 4-star WR

Jordan Anderson
(Photo: Brandon Huffman, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Oregon

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 37 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-0, 165-pound wide receiver out of Newport Beach (Calif.) Newport Harbor, Anderson decommitted from the Ducks nearly one year after becoming one of the first players to join the class. He had been committed to Dan Lanning and his staff since Dec. 22, 2022. In 11 games as a senior, Anderson hauled in 77 receptions for 995 yards and nine touchdowns on offense while recording 15 tackles and two pass breakups on defense, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Anderson is one of the better pure route runners in the region and does a great job setting up an opposing corner. He changes speeds well and shows an extra burst when the ball is in the air. He has also really improved as a pass catcher and has a nice all around game with the versatility to play in the slot or out wide.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Greg Biggins

Projection: Power Five starter

Dec. 6: Rustin Young, 4-star IOL

(Photo: Blair Angulo, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Oregon State

247Sports rank: 4-star | 91 rating | No. 210 Overall | No. 22 IOL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-5, 275-pound offensive lineman out of Honolulu (Hawaii) St. Louis, Young became the sixth player to decommit from Oregon State since head coach Jonathan Smith left the Beavers to take the Michigan State job. His decommitment comes on the heels of an official visit to Arizona State, and he is slated to visit Michigan State for the weekend of Dec. 15. Auburn is also in the mix for the Top247 offensive lineman, per 247Sports mountain region recruiting analyst Blair Angulo. Young has committed to play in the 2024 Under Armour All-America Game.

Dec. 5: Elijah Groves, 4-star LB

Elijah Groves
(Photo: © Dave Cardaciotto | For Tennessean.com, USA TODAY Sports)

Decommitted from: Kentucky (flipped to NC State)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 92 rating | No. 130 Overall | No. 12 LB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-4, 215-pound linebacker out of Cross Plains (Tenn.) East Robertson, Groves decommitted from Kentucky and committed to NC State the following day. He initially pledged to Mark Stoops and the Wildcats on July 1 over his other two finalists in NC State and Purdue. In 14 games as a senior, Groves recorded 76 tackles, 15 tackles for loss, one sack, one quarterback hurry, four forced fumbles, four pass breakups and four interceptions with two pick-sixes on defense, per MaxPreps. He also caught 30 passes for 506 yards and six touchdowns and carried the ball 16 times for 117 yards and one score on offense while adding a kick return touchdown on special teams.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Dynamic three-phase playmaker with height, length, and stout build. Ball-winning outside receiver who doubles as a rangy linebacker, edge, and safety on defense. … Spatially aware on both sides of the ball and plays with anticipation. Shows flashes of downhill pursuit juice that manifest in some arriving pop. Self-reported 6-9 wingspan is evident as a tackler” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Dec. 5: Keonde Henry, 4-star WR

Keonde Henry
(Photo: Mike Roach, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Purdue

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 47 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-2, 185-pound wide receiver out of Lake Dallas (Texas) High School, Henry announced his decommitment from Purdue in a social media post, noting that the Boilermakers are still a top choice for him. He initially committed to Purdue on June 26 following an official visit, which came just one day after he decommitted from Boston College. He was pledged to the Eagles for just nine days. In 11 games as a senior, Henry hauled in 56 receptions for 970 yards and 12 touchdowns, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Physically gifted wideout who presents a height-speed matchup problem for many defensive backs. Still honing the technical aspects of the position, but provides big-play juice thanks to functional athleticism that translates to offense and special teams. Projects as a high-major prospect who could become an impact player and shares traits with recent NFL Draft archetypes.” — Brooks

Dec. 1: Gatlin Bair, 4-star WR

(Photo: Courtesy of Burley High School)

Decommitted from: Boise State

247Sports rank: 4-star | 96 rating | No. 35 Overall | No. 9 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-2, 195-pound wide receiver out of Burley (Idaho) High School, Bair decommitted from the Broncos and announced he was focusing his recruitment on Michigan and Oregon. He took official visits to both schools in June before ultimately committing to Boise State on Aug. 5. In eight games as a senior, Bair hauled in 45 receptions for 700 yards and six touchdowns and rushed for another 136 yards and six touchdowns on 12 carries on offense, per MaxPreps. He also recorded eight tackles, four tackles for loss and three sacks on defense to go along with a punt return touchdown on special teams.

Scouting report: “The 6-foot-2, 180-pound Bair possesses excellent on-field context along with a layered athletic profile, which includes scorching 100-meter and 200-meter times with excellent jumping numbers. Bair also gained reps in the return game. His athleticism and experience certainly fit at receiver, but he also possesses immense upside as a defensive projection as well.” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Projection: Power Five starter

Dec. 1: Cam Coleman, 5-star WR

Cameron Coleman
(Photo: Jason Caldwell, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Texas A&M (flipped to Auburn)

247Sports rank: 5-star | 98 rating | No. 8 Overall | No. 3 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-3, 180-pound wide receiver out of Phenix City (Ala.) Central, Coleman flipped his commitment from Texas A&M to Auburn, giving Hugh Freeze’s program its second five-star commit of the 2024 cycle. He initially committed to Jimbo Fisher and the Aggies on July 4, but he had taken recent visits to Auburn, Florida and Florida State, and Fisher’s firing opened the door for the Tigers to pull off the flip. Through 12 games as a senior, Coleman has averaged an impressive 21.9 yards per catch with 56 receptions for 1,229 yards and 17 touchdowns, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Shows the ability to create consistent separation with size, speed, quickness, and leaping ability. Flashes some natural pass catching ability but will need to continue to develop in this area of his game at the next level.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Cooper Petagna

NFL Draft projection: First round

Player comparison: George Pickens | WR | Pittsburgh Steelers

Nov. 29: Justin Scott, 5-star DL

Justin Scott
(Photo: Allen Trieu, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Ohio State (flipped to Miami)

247Sports rank: 5-star | 98 rating | No. 7 Overall | No. 3 DL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-4, 310-pound defensive lineman out of Chicago (Ill.) St. Ignatius, Scott flipped his commitment from Ohio State to Miami. He initially committed to the Buckeyes on July 3 after taking official visits to both schools as well as Georgia and Michigan in June. Scott now becomes the highest-rated commit for Mario Cristobal and company in the 2024 cycle, headlining a Miami recruiting class that is ranked inside the top-five nationally.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Has prototypical size and athletic ability for the position. Bends well, gets off the ball quickly and can beat blockers with initial quickness. Closes to the ball with speed as well. For a taller interior defensive lineman, he generally does a good job with pad level and his flexibility helps with that.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Allen Trieu

NFL Draft projection: Rounds 2-3 (Day 2)

Player comparison: Christian Barmore | DL | New England Patriots

Nov. 25: Trajen Greco, 4-star CB

Trajen Greco
(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Georgia Tech

247Sports rank: 4-star | 91 rating | No. 215 Overall | No. 17 CB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-1, 180-pound cornerback out of Hoschton (Ga.) Mill Creek, Greco decommitted from Georgia Tech in the wake of an unofficial visit to Missouri. The Top247 defensive back initially pledged to the Yellow Jackets on June 26 following an official visit to the campus. Through 12 games as a senior, Greco had recorded 17 tackles, two interceptions (one pick-six), six pass breakups and one forced fumble on defense while catching 39 passes for 513 yards and 10 touchdowns and rushing for 89 yards and one touchdown on nine carries on offense, per MaxPreps.

RB Derrick McFall
(Photo: Brian Perroni, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: UCLA

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 18 ATH

Recruiting background: A 5-foot-10, 175-pound athlete out of Tyler (Texas) High School, McFall decommitted from the Bruins just over three months after his initial commitment on Aug. 4. He originally chose UCLA over two other finalists in Colorado and Washington, but 247Sports’ Brandon Huffman reports that SMU and Missouri are some of the schools he is now considering. In 10 games as a senior, McFall hauled in 48 receptions for 818 yards and nine touchdowns, carried the ball 16 times for 128 yards and two scores, and threw for 82 yards and one touchdown on offense, per MaxPreps. He also recorded three interceptions on defense and a kick return touchdown on special teams.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Savvy speed-changer. Displays impressive linear acceleration and enough top-end speed to hit the long ball. Good burst out of stops and redirection. Shows an above average feel for pressing blocks considering less-than-full-time running back snaps. … Fairly stout, compact build that could lend to running back in the long run, despite relatively smaller listed size (unverified).” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Nov. 15: Nasir Johnson, 4-star DL

(Photo: Benjamin Wolk, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Florida (flipped to Georgia)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 94 rating | No. 75 Overall | No. 14 DL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-4.5, 300-pound defensive lineman out of Dublin (Ga.) High School, Johnson flipped his commitment from Florida to Georgia in the wake of an official visit to Athens. He initially committed to the Gators on June 17 during his official visit to Gainesville. He was a big riser in the latest Top247 update, climbing more than 100 spots to No. 75 overall. Through the first 10 games of his senior season, Johnson recorded 32 tackles, 12 tackles for loss, two sacks, two pass breakups and one forced fumble, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “An athletic big man that has made an impact on both sides of the ball in a Peach State region that has churned out plenty of FBS talent. … Explosive through the hips and has the athletic markers to back that up: 30-inch vertical jump to go along with strong track and field throwing numbers. … At his best on defense when he’s playing assignment football and asked to plug the A or B gap as he uses a wide base to hold his ground and then fights off blockers with a powerful upper half.” — 247Sports director of scouting Andrew Ivins

Nov. 13: Cai Bates, 4-star CB

(Photo: 247Sports)

Decommitted from: LSU

247Sports rank: 4-star | 93 rating | No. 104 Overall | No. 9 CB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-1.5, 180-pound cornerback out of Orlando (Fla.) Edgewater, Bates decommitted from the Tigers on the heels of an unofficial visit to Florida State. He initially pledged to LSU on July 26 over his other three finalists in Alabama, FSU and Tennessee. He is still being recruited by each of those schools and several others, according to Noles247’s Zach Blostein. Through the first 10 games of his senior season, Bates recorded 22 tackles, one tackle for loss, three interceptions and eight pass breakups, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “A pass catcher turned pass defender with plenty of developmental upside given length and tentacle-like arms. Started prep career off playing wide receiver before being thrust into action at cornerback midway through junior season. Found success right away in coverage, totaling four interceptions and seven pass break ups in just a handful of games. Still figuring things out from a technical standpoint, but has no issues tracking the football and putting himself in position to make a play at the catch point.” — Ivins

Nov. 12: Wardell Mack, 4-star CB

(Photo: Brian Perroni, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Florida (flipped to Texas)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 90 rating | No. 237 Overall | No. 20 ATH

Recruiting background: A 5-foot-11, 170-pound cornerback out of Marrero (La.) John Ehret, Mack flipped his commitment from Florida to Texas, becoming commit No. 20 for Steve Sarkisian and company in the 2024 cycle. The flip comes nearly three months after his initial commitment as he first pledged to the Gators on Aug. 14 over three other finalists in Florida State, LSU and Texas.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Flat-out football player with extensive experience in all three phases, including snaps at quarterback, receiver, multiple DB spots, and return man. … Possesses the look and build of a corner, but could also provide versatility in the secondary given instinctive play style and ball skills. Quick to trigger on short-to-intermediate throws. Plays sticky throughout the route. Regularly crowds the catch window with his body and length.” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Nov. 11: Jamonta Waller, 4-star EDGE

Jamonta Waller
(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Florida (flipped to Auburn)

247Sports rank: 4-star | 96 rating | No. 48 Overall | No. 5 EDGE

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-2, 225-pound edge defender out of Picayune (Miss.) Memorial, Waller flipped his commitment from Florida to Auburn, giving the Tigers their eighth Top247 commit of the cycle. He initially committed to the Gators on June 19 over his other two finalists in Auburn and Penn State after taking official visits to all three schools, but Hugh Freeze and his staff never stopped recruiting the four-star edge rusher and they were ultimately able to pull off the flip. Through the first 10 games of his senior season, Waller amassed 56 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, nine sacks, 21 quarterback hurries, one pass breakup, two forced fumbles and one safety on defense while catching four passes for 59 yards and one touchdown on offense, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Lacks the ideal height for a prototypical 3-4 standup OLB role but displays excellent athleticism and arm length for his size to overcompensate. Exhibits outstanding knee bend and hip flexibility off the edge. Demonstrates an explosive first step off the line of scrimmage in addition to excellent play speed and tempo in his pass rush. Shows the ability to win with short area quickness, suddenness, and power. Pro-active mover that plays with very little wasted motion. Every step has a purpose.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Cooper Petagna

Player comparison: Brandon Graham | EDGE | Philadelphia Eagles

Nov. 6: Braylon Burnside, 4-star ATH

Braylon Burnside

(Photo: Chris Brooks, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Mississippi State

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 21 ATH

Recruiting background: A 6-foot 1/2, 185-pound athlete out of Starkville (Miss.) High, Burnside decommitted from Mississippi State in a social media post, citing “unforeseen circumstances.” He was 1 of 3 four-star prospects in the Bulldogs’ 2024 recruiting class, which now ranks 46th nationally.

The two-way standout initially committed to the hometown program June 20 over a group of finalists that included Arkansas, Auburn, Illinois, Ole Miss and Texas A&M. Burnside had an outstanding junior season in 2022, catching 75 passes for 1,158 yards and 11 touchdowns on offense while recording 12 tackles and one interception on defense over 15 games, according to MaxPreps.

Nov. 4: Courtney Crutchfield, 4-star WR

Courtney Crutchfield

(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Arkansas

247Sports rank: 95 rating | No. 56 overall | No. 11 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-2, 175-pound wide receiver out of Pine Bluff (Ark.) High, Crutchfield decommitted from Arkansas just more than six months after committing to the in-state program April 21. The Razorbacks are still in contention for the four-star wideout, but the 247Sports Crystal Ball is trending in the direction of Missouri.

To read more on his recruitment, click here (VIP).

Crutchfield has made a big jump in the rankings since the spring, moving from outside the Top247 to now being ranked among the top 60 nationally. Through nine games as a senior, he has hauled in 35 receptions for 710 yards and nine touchdowns while rushing for another 30 yards and one touchdown on six carries, according to MaxPreps.

Nov. 2: J’Marion Burnette, 4-star RB

(Photo: Jason Caldwell/Auburn247, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Auburn

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 17 RB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-1, 220-pound running back out of Andalusia (Ala.) High, Burnette backed off his commitment to Auburn Nov. 2, becoming the third player to decommit from the Tigers since the beginning of October. He was pledged to Hugh Freeze’s program for more than seven months before reopening his recruitment. Burnette has rushed for more than 5,000 yards during his high school career, including 573 yards and eight touchdowns as a senior despite being limited to just six games in the regular season due to an ankle injury.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Has the shiftiness and suddenness to make the first defender miss in space. Excels on contact and possesses good play strength at the point of attack. Shows the ability to play through contact consistently and flashes some power as a runner.” — 247Sports national recruiting analyst Cooper Petagna

Oct. 29: Trever Jackson, 3-star QB

Trever Jackson

(Photo: Blair Angulo, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Ole Miss

247Sports rank: 89 rating | No. 29 QB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-2 1/2, 185-pound quarterback out of Orlando (Fla.) Jones, Jackson decommitted from Ole Miss just more than two months after committing to Lane Kiffin’s program. Jackson initially pledged to the Rebels Aug. 26 over three other finalists — Oklahoma, Texas A&M and UCLA.

The Elite 11 finalist transferred to a new school ahead of his senior season, but he has not been the full-time starter. Through nine games, Jackson has completed 32 of 62 passes (51.6%) for 583 yards with six touchdowns against five interceptions while rushing for an additional 378 yards and six touchdowns on 49 carries, according to MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Seems to be his best when he’s attacking the intermediate parts of the field as he can rip a tight spiral and accurately hit his marks. Athletic and elusive enough to extend plays and get out of trouble, but needs to improve as a decision maker and learn how to limit turnovers.” — 247Sports director of scouting Andrew Ivins

Oct. 26: Weston Davis, 4-star OT

Weston Davis

(Photo: Collin Kennedy, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Texas A&M (flipped to LSU)

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 27 OT

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-5, 275-pound offensive tackle out of Beaumont (Texas) United, Davis flipped his commitment from Texas A&M to LSU exactly four months after his initial decision. He announced his original pledge to the Aggies June 26 after taking official visits to Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Alabama and LSU that same month. Davis now becomes the 26th commitment of the 2024 recruiting cycle for Brian Kelly’s program. The primary recruiter was LSU offensive line coach Brad Davis.

Oct. 23: Naki Tuakoi, 4-star EDGE

Naki Tuakoi

(Photo: Brandon Huffman, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Stanford

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 24 EDGE

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-4, 222-pound linebacker out of Oakland (Calif.) Fremont Senior, Tuakoi decommitted from Stanford just more than four months after committing to Troy Taylor’s program on the heels of an official visit to Palo Alto. Tuakoi was one of four four-star commits in the Cardinal’s commit list for the 2024 class. Tuakoi announced the decision to reopen his recruitment in a social media post. He is slated to play in the 2024 Polynesian Bowl in January.

ct. 22: Armondo Blount, 4-star DL

(Photo: 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Miami (flipped to Florida State)

247Sports rank: 96 rating | No. 39 overall | No. 9 DL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-3 1/2, 250-pound defensive lineman out of Miami Central, Blount flipped his commitment from Miami to Florida State at the conclusion of a weekend visit to Tallahassee. The decision came on the same day that he announced he was reclassifying to the class of 2024.

Formerly a five-star recruit in the class of 2025, the defensive lineman initially committed to the Hurricanes Sept. 14 over a group of finalists that also included FSU, Ohio State, Oklahoma and USC. Through seven games as a senior, Blount has amassed 42 tackles (13 for loss), eight sacks and two forced fumbles, per MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Wins from both the inside and the outside. Could likely play a variety of different roles at the next level and already has experience working up and down the line of scrimmage. Active, heavy hands allow him to fight off blockers while a flexible lower half makes it easy for him to find leverage. Tends to bring plenty of energy each snap and isn’t one that’s looking to bail on a rush.” — Ivins

Oct. 18: Ondre Evans, 4-star CB

(Photo: Ryan Callahan, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: LSU (flipped to Georgia)

247Sports rank: 93 rating | No. 107 overall | No. 10 CB

Recruiting background: A 6-foot 1/2, 183-pound cornerback out of Nashville (Tenn.) CPA, Evans flipped his commitment from LSU to Georgia, making him commit No. 27 for Kirby Smart’s program in the 2024 recruiting cycle. Evans initially committed to the Tigers June 15, during an official visit to the campus. Through 10 games as a senior, Evans had 20 receptions for 381 yards and six touchdowns on offense to go along with 18 tackles, one interception and three pass breakups on defense, according to MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Has been asked to play a lot of off-man coverage out on the perimeter, but has shown on multiple occasions that he’s not afraid to try and redirect traffic with his hands and could thrive in a bump-and-run scheme after a developmental year or two. Surprisingly physical given his leaner build and does an admirable job of wrapping up ball carries and getting them to the ground.” — Ivins

Oct. 17: Drelon Miller, 4-star WR

(Photo: Brian Perroni, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Texas A&M

247Sports rank: 94 rating | No. 66 overall | No. 14 WR

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-0, 190-pound wide receiver out of Silsbee (Texas) High School, Miller decommitted from Texas A&M nearly four months after committing to Jimbo Fisher’s program over his other two finalists in LSU and USC. Each of those three schools are still in the mix for the top-100 wideout, along with Colorado, who recently hosted him on an unofficial visit.

Through the first nine games of his senior season, Miller had 43 receptions for 883 yards and 10 touchdowns to go along with nine carries for 116 yards and one score on offense, according to MaxPreps. He also recorded 12 tackles, including one for a loss, with one interception and one pass breakup on defense.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Contested-throw bully. Plays much larger than on-paper size. Very strong hands and a stout-trunked build knock defenders out of his orbit. Not afraid to work the middle of the field and will torture smaller defenders there with physicality and relentlessness. Violent runner with running back’s gait.” — 247Sports national scouting analyst Gabe Brooks

Player comparisonJonathan Mingo | WR | Carolina Panthers

Oct. 17: Jayden Lewis, 4-star CB

(Photo: Jason Caldwell, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Auburn

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 26 CB

Recruiting background: A 5-foot-11, 175-pound cornerback out of Anniston (Ala.) High, Lewis decommitted from Auburn more than eight months after his initial commitment to the in-state program. He was one of the first members of Freeze’s 2024 recruiting class, announcing his pledge Feb. 1 following a junior day visit to the campus. Following his decommitment from Auburn, Louisville hosted the four-star cornerback on an unofficial visit Oct. 28. Lewis is also a state-champion sprinter, having won the Alabama 4A 100- and 200-meter championships as a junior with times of 10.72 and 21.89 seconds, respectively.

Oct. 17: Joseph Stone, 4-star WR

(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: LSU

247Sports rank: 90 rating | No. 45 WR

Recruiting background: A 5-foot-11, 180-pound wide receiver out of Fairburn (Ga.) Langston Hughes, Stone decommitted from LSU after spending well over a year on the Tigers’ commit list. He was pledged to Kelly’s program for more than 15 months before reopening his recruitment. Stone has since committed to Louisville, announcing the decision Nov. 4 during an unofficial visit to the campus for the Cardinals’ game against Virginia Tech. He has missed most of his senior season due to injury, but he has five catches for 53 yards and one touchdown over two games, according to MaxPreps.

Oct. 16: Andrew Dennis, 4-star IOL

(Photo: Allen Trieu, 247Sports)

Decommitted from: Michigan State

247Sports rank: 92 rating | No. 159 overall | No. 5 IOL

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-5, 275-pound offensive lineman out of Mount Pleasant (Mich.) High, Dennis was one of a handful of players to decommit from Michigan State in the weeks after the firing of head coach Mel Tucker. Dennis was pledged to the program for more than six months before reopening his recruitment. He is still considering the Spartans along with the likes of Illinois, Penn State, Purdue and more. Dennis is slated to announce his decision at the All-American Bowl Jan. 6.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Motor runs hot and manifests in drive-blocking ability. Valuable two-way snaps with high-volume reps on the defensive front. Impressive pursuit range as a defensive lineman. In fact, possesses size and functional athleticism that could likely allow him to live full-time on defense.” — Brooks

Player comparison: Logan Bruss | OG | Los Angeles Rams

Oct. 8: Elijah Rushing, 5-star EDGE

Elijah Rushing

(Photo: Diannie Chavez, USA TODAY Sports)

Decommitted from: Arizona

247Sports rank: 98 rating | No. 14 overall | No. 2 EDGE

Recruiting background: A 6-foot-6, 251-pound edge defender out of Tucson (Ariz.) Salpointe Catholic, Rushing decommitted from Arizona just more than three months after committing to the hometown program. He initially chose the Wildcats over three other finalists in Notre Dame, Oregon and Tennessee.

He has since committed to Oregon, giving Dan Lanning’s program its second five-star commitment of the 2024 cycle. Through the first nine games of his senior season, Rushing has racked up 39 tackles (13 for loss), 10 sacks, 45 quarterback hurries, four pass breakups and two forced fumbles, according t MaxPreps.

Abbreviated scouting report: “Scheme-versatile front-line defender with size/frame potential of a more traditional hand-on-the-ground defensive lineman, but the functional athleticism and pursuit range of a modern edge rusher. High-level physical tools and immense upside. Senior season shows encouraging speed-to-power ability as a pass rusher.

“Wields a heavy inside hand that can rock tackles onto their heels. Flashes some arc-running juice and dangerous back-side pursuit ability. Plays with strong hands and increasing violence in his upper body. Capable of disengage-and-chase ability. … Given physical tools, consistently good production across multiple years, and live evaluations, Rushing looks like one of the top defensive prospects in the 2024 cycle.” — Brooks

NFL Draft projection: First round

KeShawn Murphy sparks Mississippi State comeback win against North Texas

Here is what happened in Mississippi State’s basketball game against North Texas in Tupelo

TUPELO —  Mississippi State men’s basketball’s offense was as cold as it had been in weeks to open Sunday’s “Magnolia Madness” game against North Texas at Cadence Bank Arena. The Bulldogs quickly fell behind double digits early against the Mean Green, and needing a spark turned to KeShawn Murphy.

Murphy’s minutes in the first half changed the direction of Sunday’s game, leading to a 72-54 victory.

Murphy scored a career-high 18 points on 8-for-14 shooting, adding three rebounds and two assists, with 12 of those coming in the first half, including a buzzer-beating dunk to give the Bulldogs a 36-32 lead. Murphy was joined in double figures by D.J. Jeffries, who added 13 points, and  Josh Hubbard who chipped in 11 points.

North Texas was led by Rubin Jones, who finished with 20 points, while Jason Edwards added 11.

Losers of their last two games heading into Sunday, the Mean Green made their first five shots from the field to open the game and led by as many as 11 points in the first half. After falling behind 14-4, Mississippi State, winners of now three straight games, cut its deficit to 16-12 on a Murphy jumper, and then used an 8-0 run later in the first half to tie the game at 30. The Bulldogs ended the half on a 4-0 spirt to take the lead for the first time and didn’t trail the rest of the way.

Mississippi State pushed its lead out to 11 on a transition layup by Jeffries, which was part of a 12-0 lethal second half run to put Mississippi State up, 54-36. The Bulldogs outscored North Texas, 36-22 in the second half.

The Bulldogs shot…42% from the field (25-for-60), 24% from three-point range (5-for-21) and finished with just three turnovers in the game.

North Texas finished the game shooting 38% from the field and 20% from behind the arc.

Mississippi State (9-2) returns to the court on Dec. 23 when they travel to Newark for a non-conference neutral site game against Rutgers at the Prudential Center (11 a.m./ Big Ten Network).

Mississippi State rolls over Memphis on the road, 81-63

The Bulldogs played some stifling defense and got 20 points from Jerkaila Jordan and a third-straight double-double from Jessika Carter to take home a relatively comfortable 81-63 win over the Tigers.

For the third time this year, Mississippi State went to play a true road game as the Bulldogs traveled on Memphis on Sunday.

The Bulldogs played some stifling defense and got 20 points from Jerkaila Jordan and a third-straight double-double from Jessika Carter to take home a relatively comfortable 81-63 win over the Tigers.

State’s two star players in Jordan and Carter carried the team during the game. Jordan followed up eclipsing 1,000 points for her MSU career against Jackson State by putting together a huge outing with 21 points on 6-of-12 shooting and seven rebounds while making 8-of-10 from the free throw line.

Carter has had a monster week with 31 points and 13 rebounds against Kennesaw State, 17 points and 18 rebounds against JSU and had 17 points and 12 rebounds with 6 blocks on Sunday on 7-of-14 shooting.

“It was only a matter of time where it was going to be consistent behavior,” Purcell said of Carter. “Our fans knew what was up. I think we’re watching it unfold right before our eyes.”

Debreasha Powe added 14 points on the day with another efficient showing with 5-of-7 makes from the field.

The Bulldogs shot the ball well in the game hitting 50% of their shots at 29-of-58 and they made 23-of-30 free throws on the day. The team also held Memphis to 22-of-74 (30%) on the day and 8-of-23 from the 3-point line with Memphis’ Madison Griggs pulling the weight there with 24 points on 6-of-13 from long range.

There were some things that the Bulldogs didn’t do well. State turned the ball over 18 times in the game and also gave up 21 offensive rebounds to the Tigers. State did win the boards overall 47-36, however, and had 12 blocks to go along with a dominant afternoon in the paint at 50-24.

State had trouble getting some distance in the game after jumping out to a 22-13 lead in the first quarter. The game was even for the next two quarters as State dealt with foul trouble from Carter and Lauren Park-Lane and it got as close as five points in the second quarter.

In the fourth, though, MSU came to life. State scored 27 points that frame and took a nine point lead out to 18 by the end of the game.

“I’m so proud I’m almost speechless,” Purcell said. “I didn’t think I played enough people and use my bench (vs. JSU) but for us to play our bench in the first half it allowed us to have that fourth quarter that we had because we were fresh bodies. We were able to get max effort. For us to put up 27 speaks volumes of how good this team can be.”

The win improved the Bulldogs to 11-2 on the season but there’s another tough game on the horizon. State will be playing its fourth true road game of the non-conference slate when the Bulldogs travel to Colorado State (9-1).

MSU plays the Rams on Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m.

“This last road trip before Christmas is more than basketball,” Purcell said. “I have a lot of new players and we’re trying to bond. What’s scary is, what if our chemistry only gets better? What if our team play only gets better? There’s another ceiling this team can reach.”

National Signing Day: Oregon inks 3-star QB Luke Moga

Luke Moga (Photo: Gaby Urrutia, 247Sports)

The Oregon Ducks have received the signed National Letter of Intent from quarterback Luke Moga of Phoenix (Ariz.).

Here is everything you need to know about this 2024 signing.

Height/Weight: 6-foot-2, 190-pounds
Projected Position: Quarterback
247Sports Position Ranking: No. 58 quarterback
247Sports Composite National Ranking: No. 497 overall
247Sports Composite Position Ranking: No. 33 quarterback
Primary Recruiter: Offensive coordinator Will Stein
Notable Offers: California, BYU, Miami, Michigan State and TCU.

Moga is the program’s lone quarterback signee in the 2024 class.

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How he got to Oregon

Offered a scholarship in late January, Moga locked in on the Ducks from there.

After taking spring unofficial trips to Miami (Jan. 26), California (March 13) Michigan State (21) and Oregon (April 22), the Arizona native wasted little time making his decision. One week after making the trip to Eugene, Moga announced his commitment to Oregon on April 28.

“Relationships with coaches and culture,” Moga said of his decision in his commitment story. “Schematic fit, but I want to win championships.”

Moga did not waiver later in the cycle when the Ducks added a second prep QB verbal in Michael Van Buren. Van Buren joined Moga on Oregon’s commitment list on May 20, but ultimately backed off his decision on Dec. 2 and will now sign with Mississippi State.

Hudl Film

Outlook at Oregon

Early playing time is unlikely to be available to Moga. The Ducks have brought in Oklahoma transfer Dillon Gabriel to run the show in 2024. Gabriel will be a one-and-done at Oregon, however, paving the way for an open quarterback competition the following offseason.

Even then, it seems a stretch to expect Moga to win the starting job as a redshirt freshman in 2025. The Ducks have gone portal hunting both times the QB position has opened up under Dan Lanning, and it’s possible they go that route again.

Moga will likely have to be patient if he ever hopes to win the starting job in Eugene. That patience doesn’t always pay off. Just ask Ty Thompson.

Frankly, it’s hard to project how a prep quarterback will fare at this level these days. With the ability to add plug-and-play quarterbacks each year, developing a player like Moga, who is a fairly raw prospect, may become less and less prevalent.

Follow Gene’s Page’s live game thread: Mississippi State vs North Texas

Follow along as Mississippi State men’s basketball plays North Texas

TUPELO — Another basketball afternoon has arrived for Mississippi State (8-2) as the Bulldogs play North Texas (5-4) at Cadence Bank Arena in Tupelo in non-conference action. Follow along here for pre and in-game updates:

Bulldog secondary rebuild recruiting brings Cyrus Reyes to Mississippi State

Safety prospect Cyrus Reyes joins Coach Jeff Lebby’s first Mississippi State signing day

There’s no area of the Bulldog lineup which did not need upgrading after 2023. But in priority terms the defensive secondary needs the most available help in both quality and quantity. Signing up Texas high school prospect Cyrus Reyes is part of this process.

Reyes, of Katy, Texas, made himself an official piece of Coach Jeff Lebby’s first Mississippi State signing class today. This week he committed to the Bulldog program immediately after backing out on a call he had made for Memphis back in June, and following a weekend visit to Starkville.

He is the #200 ranked safety prospect in the country by 247’s analysts, and is listed at 6-1 and 190 pounds.

Reyes’ ideas of moving to this part of the Southeastern Conference were cemented when Mississippi State hired two-season Memphis coordinator Matt Barnes to co-run the Bulldog defense as a whole with a focus on the safeties.

“It was a great visit,” Reyes told 247 recruiting reporter Rion Young. “Coach Barnes has never doubted my ability to play football. He is a great defensive coordinator with a great defensive mind. He is the exact coach I need to be a top tier SEC caliber football player.”

Reyes had other offers from Arkansas State, Montana State, Lafayette, Northern Iowa, and more.

As a senior at Katy’s Taylor High School, Reyes was able to intercept three passes this past fall. He collected 91 total tackles during the 2023 season, with two stops behind the line of scrimmage for losses as the Mustangs went 5-3 in their District with a third-place finish.

In his high school career he came away with five total interceptions. Reyes had 91 credited tackles in his 2022 junior season as well with one intercepted pass and four more broken up. For his varsity tenure and in thirty games he got in on 121 solo tackles and 88 assists.

He did not just defend passes, but caught them as well. Playing wide receiver he hauled in ten receptions worth 109 yards in eleven games. Reyes also saw high school action on special teams returning kickoffs and punts for three seasons.

Besides his football feats, Reyes has run for the Taylor High track team specializing in the 110 and 300 meter hurdles.

Reyes, and fellow defensive back prospects, are coming to campus in an effort to transform a 2023 Bulldog secondary which ranked 11th (of 14 teams) in SEC pass efficiency defense and was next-to-last in league interceptions for the regular season.

This December’s early signing period runs through Friday. The spring signing period is February 1-through-April 1. The NCAA’s transfer portal, which opened December 3, is open through January 2 and is two weeks shorter than before. Players entering the portal during these dates can sign after the closing.

This year’s signing class is not capped by the NCAA, as long as teams are at the still-in-force limit of 85 scholarship players for the fall semester.

Mississippi State has yet to announce the spring practice schedule for Lebby’s first roster.

KJ Jefferson in transfer portal: Destinations that make sense for Arkansas QB

KJ Jefferson has options.

Nearly three weeks after reports initially surfaced that Arkansas quarterback KJ Jefferson would enter the transfer portal, the multi-year starter for the Razorbacks announced over the weekend his intentions to do so. After speaking with industry sources, there are a couple of schools that make sense for the decorated signal caller.

Jefferson, who played for three offensive coordinators over his five-year tenure with the Razorbacks, threw for 2,107 yards this season and 19 touchdowns. For his career, Jefferson has 67 touchdown passes to 18 interceptions to go along with 7,911 yards passing. He recently met with Arkansas coach Sam Pittman and new offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino to discuss his future plans prior to the team landing a commitment from Boise State transfer quarterback Taylen Green.

Like all quarterback dominoes beginning to fall into place, Jefferson is looking for a spot to arrive on campus as the likely starter as a graduate transfer with one year of eligibility left.

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Here are a few potential destinations that make sense for Jefferson:

South Carolina Gamecocks

(Photo: USA TODAY Sports)

South Carolina was one of the initial teams to watch for Jefferson, but the Gamecocks also have eyes on other options, too, including Vanderbilt’s AJ Swann after recently hosting him on a visit. Swann is deciding between South Carolina and LSU, but as of Monday afternoon, hasn’t yet announced his intentions for the 2024 season. Joining the Gamecocks would reunite Jefferson with former Arkansas assistants Dowell Loggains, the Gamecocks’ offensive coordinator, and wide receivers coach Justin Stepp

Sources tell 247Sports that the Gamecocks are comfortable moving forward with redshirt freshman LaNorris Sellers handling first-team duties next season given rave reviews he received in limited duty this fall. Sellers and Jefferson are near identical players from a physicality standpoint and South Carolina’s coaching staff wouldn’t have to tailor the gameplan specifically for either option. Right now, South Carolina has a top 10 transfer class this cycle and recently gained a commitment from Jefferson’s Arkansas teammate, Raheim Sanders.

UCF Knights

(Photo: © Mike Watters-USA TODAY Sports, USA TODAY Sports)

Gus Malzahn and UCF hosted Coastal Carolina’s Grayson McCall prior to his commitment to NC State, so clearly, the Knights are in the market for a player with “instant-starter” capabilities and that’s what Jefferson would offer the Big 12 school. UCF’s RPO-heavy offense with John Rhys Plumlee exhausting his eligibility fits Jefferson’s skill set and playing time, per sources close to the former Arkansas quarterback, is a major factor in his upcoming choice.

Miami Hurricanes

(Photo: Getty)

Miami could enter the fray for Jefferson if the Hurricanes fail to land Washington State’s Cameron Ward, one of this cycle’s highest-rated players still on the market. Ward is finished with his official visits after taking in Miami and Florida State. His decision is pending. He finished the 2023 season with 3,735 yards passing and 25 touchdowns against seven interceptions on a 66.6% completion rate. His passing total ranked No. 5 in the nation. Miami has an immediate need after this season’s starter, Tyler Van Dyke, transferred to Wisconsin.

Ward’s father, Calvin Ward, told Noles247 that his son seeks a place with a pass-first offense and plenty of weapons to surround him.

“The big thing Cam was looking for is an offense that he can make sure he fits in,” Calvin Ward said. “An offense that throws the ball. Offensive line with guys that have been there – veteran offensive linemen. Receivers that can go get the ball and a complimentary defense. I think those are the things that he is looking for. He only has one year left, so he’s got to go in and get it.”

Mississippi State Bulldogs

(Photo: Jared Thomas , 247Sports)

This potential destination is far-reaching after first-year Mississippi State coach Jeff Lebby got a commitment from Baylor’s starting quarterback, Blake Shapen, earlier this month, but if the Bulldogs want to kick the tires on immediate competition from a proven commodity in the SEC, Jefferson could be an answer. A source close to Starkville said he wasn’t sure if Jefferson was the “right fit” in Lebby’s scheme. The primary question surrounding Jefferson, a Sardis, Miss., native, is if he can be a pocket passer. In Mississippi State’s scheme, he’d have to throw it — a lot.

If Jefferson was a take for Mississippi State, he’d compete with Shapen, who threw for 5,574 yards and 36 touchdowns over the course of three seasons in Waco, Texas. Shapen told Gene’s Page what he liked about Lebby’s offense after his commitment this month.

“The first thing that really stands out is how fast they move and how much tempo they use,” Shapen explained. “They are getting teams in their base defenses, because they’re moving so fast. Teams are having to line up in their base defenses, which makes it easier to see for the quarterback. The defense has to show their hand early. Being able to see what they’re in takes a lot of pressure off the quarterback. With all the different things they do on the perimeter and getting the ball out, they’re getting it to their best guys and then letting them work. That’s one of the biggest things.”

Jefferson made his transfer public over the weekend with a post on social media.

“It has been a dream to captain and QB1 at the University of Arkansas,” Jefferson wrote. “Accomplishing those records, and being mentioned amongst the great QBs in Razorback history was an honor, but the memories and friendships I’ve made with my coaches and teammates along the way are what I’ll cherish the most. To the fans, I can’t express my gratitude enough for all of the support I’ve received from this great state. I hope you’ve enjoyed watching me grow as a man and a player as much as I’ve enjoyed representing this state and university. You accepted me as one of your own, and for that, I’m forever grateful and in your debt.

“With that being said, after much prayer and thought, I’ll be entering the transfer portal for my final year of eligibility.”

Jimothy Lewis stays True Maroon and signs with State

Mississippi State surprised many when Jimothy Lewis committed to the Bulldogs. Despite some rumors to the contrary earlier in the process, Lewis stuck with State.

One of Mississippi State’s biggest commitments literally and figuratively has signed his national letter of intent with the Bulldogs. IMG Academy offensive tackle Jimothy Lewis is officially in for Coach Jeff Lebby and his staff. Lebby inherited the verbal pledge, but the Bulldog staffers held Lewis’ loyalty throughout a recruiting process that involved a coaching change in Starkville.

Lewis took an official visit to Mississippi State the weekend of December 8th and did not rule out the possibility of a visit elsewhere last weekend. In the end, Lewis stayed home and stayed true to the maroon and white.

Mississippi State overcome offers from Alabama, Alcorn State, Arkansas State, Auburn, Baylor, Florida, Florida A&M, Florida State, Georgia, Grambling State, Indiana, LSU, Louisville, Memphis, Miami, Michigan, Michigan State, Missouri, Ole Miss, Southern Carolina, Tennessee, Tennessee State, USF and Vanderbilt among others.

At one point, Lewis was rated as the top offensive line prospect in the country, but saw his rating dip over the course of the last year. On signing day, Lewis remains the highest rated player to cast their lot with Mississippi State this year.

Lewis helped pave the way to a perfect 10-0 season at IMG. The former Madison-Ridgeland Academy product made the move to IMG, but plans to spend his college career in his home state with Mississippi State.

Mississippi State loses several offensive lineman to graduation, so the chance to play early and often is available for Lewis. Left tackle is a premium position, the 6-6- 275 pounder may begin his career as a reserve or a guard, while he gets up to Southeastern Conference speed.

Lewis is considered a future pro football prospect, so he is not a guy who should need much in the way of maturation. State needs him to be good early and there is reason for hope in that regard. Lewis has the size and strength to handle the rigors of trench warfare in America’s toughest college football conference.

The Bulldogs are losing some key pieces on the offensive line, but State has had some success on the recruiting trail this cycle. Lewis is one of six offensive line prospects to announce their intentions of playing for the Bulldogs in the years to come. Lewis is part of a talented trio of prep high school offensive linemen that should mesh well with three transfer prospects who will serve as a stop gap, while the young Dawgs mature.

Mississippi State fans are always pushing for bigger names when it comes to the offensive line. The Bulldogs have delievered with the signing of Lewis as part of a very talented group of Bulldog blockers. Lewis will join the program soon and get to work preparing for his first college football season.

Van Buren signs on as a key piece in Mississippi State quarterback game plans

All-American quarterback prospect Michael Van Buren is a highlight of Jeff Lebby’s first Mississippi State signing day

Coach Jeff Lebby is busy rebuilding his Mississippi State quarterback room for both 2024 and beyond. A significant piece of this game plan is the signing of Michael Van Buren as part of this winter recruiting class.

Van Buren comes to Starkville and the Southeastern Conference from Baltimore, MD., where he attends and plays for St. Frances Academy. Analysts rate Van Buren a top-five national prospect, designated as a pocket passer. He earns four stars from the 247 Composite rankings, and is listed at or around 6-0 and 190 pounds by various outlets.

247 ranks Van Buren the #227 overall prospect in the country, #12 in the state of Maryland.

Van Buren was committed to Oregon with a late spring announcement but continued visiting, including a trip to Starkville twelve days ago after he had decommitted. That change of mind was in no small part influenced by Mississippi State’s own change of course and the hiring of offensive minded Lebby.

In a commitment interview with Steve Robertson, Van Buren made clear what a difference this coaching regime made in his decision. “With the new leadership and Coach Lebby, I felt it was the best place for me. He is one of those guys who develops quarterbacks and he has a proven track record in his offense of putting up big numbers. That all really intrigued me.”

He had other offers from Oklahoma, where Lebby was offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, as well as Alabama, Tennessee, Michigan, Penn State, local program Maryland, and many more.

Van Buren’s signing ends a tumultuous 2023 for the all-star talent beyond his recruiting twists and turns. His senior season was a grind as St. Frances played a brutal schedule including early games against teams from Georgia, Missouri, Florida, and more. That led to four losses, as did a minor injury to the team’s leader.

Van Buren got back into action in time to direct SFA to five wins in their last seven contests and a final 5-6 record. In the highest profile matchups, Van Buren threw one touchdown and ran for another playing IMG Academy’s varsity White team which faces top-250 squads around the country. Against powerhouse St. John Bosco he threw for 150 yards with a touchdown.

Van Buren was named to the Under Armour All-America team despite the senior season setbacks.

He had raised his recruiting profile as a junior by throwing for 205 yards and three touchdowns in an inter-sectional matchup with eventual Texas 6A champions Desoto High. St. Francis finished 9-1 that season as Van Buren threw for over 1,700 yards with 18 touchdown passes. He also rushed for a pair of scores.

Van Buren will be the high school signee addition to Mississippi State’s quarterback roster for 2024, which was down to one scholarship varsity member in true sophomore Chris Parson.

Four-season starter and program records-holder Will Rogers has left Mississippi State and will enroll at Washington via the transfer process.

Mississippi State has not announced a spring practice schedule as Lebby and his coaching staff, which was only completed over the weekend, focus on recruiting for this winter signing period. It runs through December 22.

The spring signing period is February 1-through-April 1. The NCAA’s transfer portal, which opened December 3, is open through January 2 and is two weeks shorter than before. Players entering the portal during these dates can sign after the closing.

2024 college football transfer portal: Ranking best quarterback fits, who’s left

Ten great fits among quarterbacks who announced commitment

Many of college football’s transfer portal dominoes fell at the quarterback position, but four of the top-five signal callers remain undecided entering this week’s early signing period. That includes UCLA’s Dante Moore and Washington State’s Cam Ward.

Five of the last seven Heisman winners have been transfer quarterbacks, including Jayden Daniels. Scheme fit is everything for the high-end players on the market along with NIL contracts and potentially competing for a College Football Playoff berth for a title contender. It’s difficult to check every box for quarterbacks on the move, but every now and then, obvious home runs rise to the surface.

Another name to watch is USC quarterback and former five-star Malachi Nelson, who is expected to enter the portal and immediately ranks among the best available. With the Trojans recently hosting Kansas State’s Will Howard on a visit, it appears Nelson has a decision to make on his future.

Get the latest football and basketball transfer portal news from 247Sports.

Here are 10 best-fits this portal cycle for quarterbacks who have announced their transfer destinations:

10. MJ Morris (NC State to Maryland)

(Photo: Cory Fravel, 247Sports)

Maryland offensive coordinatorJosh Gattis

Why it makes sense: Confident in his abilities as a pocket passerMJ Morris will get that opportunity with the Terrapins as the probable QB1 to succeed Taulia Tagovailoa next fall in a pass-centric scheme. He hasn’t been promised a starting job, but Morris said his comfort level with Maryland’s coaching staff and what he knows about the Terrapins’ offense was part of the reason he chose a future in the Big Ten over signing with LSU. Morris went 3-1 at NC State this fall before deciding to redshirt in November and look elsewhere.

9. Tyler Van Dyke (Miami to Wisconsin)

(Photo: Getty)

Wisconsin offensive coordinatorPhil Longo

Why it makes sense: Longo is hoping he can generate 2022 Drake Maye-like levels of success with the acquisition of Tyler Van Dyke based on previous succeed he had as UNC’s play-caller in his interpretation of the Air Raid. The Badgers struggled at times this season with their new offense in place after transitioning from the run-heavy looks in previous years. Now, Wisconsin gets a veteran quarterback with a big arm with ample experience at the Power Five level in high-pressure situations. And this scheme should be advantageous for Van Dyke since it’s based around quick decisions without having to sift through a ton of reads.

8. Riley Leonard (Duke to Notre Dame)

(Photo: Don Juan Moore, Getty)

Notre Dame offensive coordinator: TBA

Why it makes senseNotre Dame’s hoping to strike fire once again in the portal at quarterback with the addition of Riley Leonard, another experienced option from the ACC. He’ll be the third transfer starter in four seasons for the Fighting Irish who have previously taken the field with Jack Coan (Wisconsin) and Sam Hartman (Wake Forest). Leonard, a potential high-end 2025 NFL Draft pick if he becomes more accurate downfield, had nearly 700 yards rushing this season. And with Notre Dame’s top rusher Audric Estime off to the NFL, more productivity in the quarterback run game might be needed next fall in South Bend. This fit depends on who Marcus Freeman hires as his next OC with Monday’s news of Gerad Parker accepting the head-coaching job at Troy.

7. Grayson McCall (Coastal Carolina to NC State)

(Photo: Timothy T Ludwig, Getty)

NC State offensive coordinatorRobert Anae

Why it makes senseGrayson McCall chose the Wolfpack over fellow finalist UCF as one of college football’s most productive multi-year starters this portal cycle. NC State OC Robert Anae’s career pedigree has focused on spread tendencies, which suits McCall’s strengths. Most importantly, NC State retained star freshman wideout Kevin Concepcion, so there’s a true No. 1 in the passing game for McCall as soon as he arrives on campus. Per Pack Pride, McCall completed 710-of-1,016 passes (70 percent) for 10,005 yards with 88 touchdowns and 14 interception during his time at Coastal Carolina, while also rushing 350 times for 1,113 yards and 18 scores. He was three-time Sun Belt Player of the Year, four-time first-team all-conference selection four times and the Sun Belt’s Freshman of the Year during the 2020 season.

6. Kyle McCord (Ohio State to Syracuse)

(Photo: Gregory Shamus, Getty)

Syracuse offensive coordinator: TBA

Why it makes sense: To no one’s surprise, the addition of Ohio State’s Kyle McCord over the weekend puts Syracuse’s recruiting hype in a different stratosphere this cycle ahead of coach Fran Brown’s first season. The expectation is the Orange’s show offensively belongs to McCord in 2024 and the offensive staff will do all they can to make the former Buckeyes starter to feel as comfortable as possible in his new digs. Syracuse is reportedly targeting New York Giants assistant Jeff Nixon as its OC. Nixon previously assisted with offensive play-calling over a three-year stint at Baylor prior to coaching the past four seasons at the NFL level as an offensive assistant.

5. Taylen Green (Boise State to Arkansas)

(Photo: Jackson Moore, 247Sports)

Arkansas offensive coordinatorBobby Petrino

Why it makes senseConsistency will be key for Taylen Green in the SEC next season, but when he’s on, the dual-threat playmaker looks to be exactly what Bobby Petrino is looking for to run his balanced, quick-strike scheme. Last season at Texas A&M, Petrino’s attack looked a bit different since Jimbo Fisher had his fingerprints throughout the game plan. At Arkansas, Sam Pittman is providing Petrino with full responsibility on that side of the football, which means he’ll direct Green and Jacolby Criswell on what he wants done on the field. We expect the Razorbacks’ attack will closely resemble what Petrino had at Missouri State and Louisville and less of what we saw this season in College Station.

4. Brock Vandagriff (Georgia to Kentucky)

(Photo: Dale Zanine, USA TODAY Sports)

Kentucky offensive coordinatorLiam Coen

Why it makes sense: Coen likes NFL-sized, strong-armed passers and Brock Vandagriff checks a lot of boxes on that wishlist for Kentucky’s play-caller. Vandagriff is closer to Will Levis, Kentucky’s starter during the 2021 and 2022 campaigns than he is Devin Leary, the Wildcats’ transfer portal starter this season. Vandagriff had a shot to be Georgia’s 2024 starter had Carson Beck chosen to leave for the NFL after the bowl game, but decided to go elsewhere with a more definitive handle on the depth chart. He should be able to run Coen’s scheme without hiccups once he learns the terminology in a pro-style set similar to Mike Bobo’s passing ideology this spring.

3. Will Rogers (Mississippi State to Washington)

(Photo: Jared Thomas , 247Sports)

Washington offensive coordinatorRyan Grubb

Why it makes sense: Who wouldn’t want to be a pocket-passer in Washington’s wide-open offense after what Michael Penix Jr. was able to accomplish each of the past two seasons with the Huskies? Will Rogers, the SEC’s second all-time leading passer, struggled to come to grips with altering his Air Raid career to a pro-style look this fall at Mississippi State and gladly trades in that playbook for one that much better suits his skill set at Washington. Rogers should get back to the quick game and back-shoulder long tosses in 2024 with the Huskies as a potential stat-stuffer in the Big Ten.

2. Aidan Chiles (Oregon State to Michigan State)

(Photo: Soobum Im, USA TODAY Sports)

Michigan State offensive coordinatorBrian Lindgren

Aidan Chiles to Michigan State is a natural fit given the fact he’s following the coach that recruited him — Jonathan Smith — to East Lansing and there’s a clear opening at the position with several Spartans leaving the program in that room. Lindgren’s success at Oregon State in the passing game as the teacher for Clemson transfer D.J. Uiagalelei paid off in a big way this fall and he took Chiles under his wing as well.

1. Dillon Gabriel (Oklahoma to Oregon)

(Photo: Getty)

Oregon offensive coordinatorWill Stein

Oregon needed a point guard of sorts to run its offense in 2024 following the departure of all-everything signal caller Bo Nix and Dillon Gabriel fits that role like a glove. The Ducks won’t have alter tempo or any of their passing concepts with Gabriel in the fold. Oregon will have the rare luxury of essentially a sixth-year player at the position, who assumes another coach-on-the-field role in Eugene. Nix was able to bail out Oregon’s offense with his feet at times and Gabriel shares a similar skill set on the move.

Jessika Carter earns SEC Co-Player of the Week honors ahead of another big road game

When Mississippi State hit a rough patch two weeks ago with two-straight losses, All-SEC Jessika Carter’s absence was felt as much as it had been in her previous five years.

When Mississippi State hit a rough patch two weeks ago with two-straight losses, All-SEC Jessika Carter’s absence was felt as much as it had been in her previous five years. The Bulldogs struggled with the size of Miami in a 74-68 defeat and missed the opportunity to dominate inside in a 59-53 loss to UT Chattanooga just a few days later. It was two hits that the Bulldogs didn’t need for their postseason hopes, but the following week showed just how much better this State team can be with her back at full strength. ‌ After missing two weeks and three-straight games, Carter came back with full force in her three contests on the week and helped the Bulldogs to three wins against Kennesaw State, Jackson State and Memphis. Averaging 21.6 points and 14.6 rebounds, Carter earned herself the SEC Co-Player of the Week honors with All-American center Angel Reese of LSU. “I’ve been sitting out for a while and watched a lot of basketball to see what my team needed,” Carter said. “I’m just so happy and grateful to be around the people that bring the most happiness and positivity in my life right now. I just enjoyed the moment tonight and kept doing what I did in practice.” The run began for Carter against Kennesaw State on Monday night when she put together a game unlike any other she’s had before. Carter scored her first 30-point performance in her six years on campus with 31 points in 30 minutes and she pulled down 13 rebounds. ‌ Carter followed that up with 17 points and 18 rebounds in a 40-minute showing against JSU and she had 17 points and another 13 rebounds as State beat Memphis on the road and she added another six blocks. In 10 games this year, Carter has averaged 15.2 points a game with a team-high 9.6 rebounds and 2.2 blocks. She has five double-doubles and has scored in double figures nine times. With Carter back on the court, the Bulldogs (11-2) are building again. The team needs a strong finish in the non-conference portion of the schedule and it continues with the second of a two-game road trip coming on Wednesday night. The Bulldogs are in Fort Collins, Colo., to take on the Colorado State Rams on Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m. game in a contest against a 9-1 team that has been tough the last two years. Purcell said that’s exactly what his team has to do to head into Christmas break perfect on this road trip. “We’ve got to be tough. We’ve got a sour taste because the last time we were on the road we lost,” Purcell said. “Christmas is around the corner so you’ve got to stay dialed in. I want to have fun, I want to work hard. Hopefully we can send these kids home with a 2-0 record on the road.” Wednesday night’s contest can be seen only on the Mountain West Network.

Transfer portal wide receiver Kelly Akharaiyi commits to Mississippi State

Kelly Akharaiyi commits to Mississippi State.

At Mississippi State, the recruitment division is genuinely doing better.Bulldog supporters and Jeff Lebby’s crew are securing what they believe to be some important pieces. A number of the top prospects for high school football, junior college football, and transfer portal football have made the decision to play at Starkville, Mississippi.

Kelly Akharaiyi made the decision to commit to Mississippi State as the next player. Akharaiyi is a player who might one day be selected in the NFL draft. He trusted Chad Bumphis and Coach Lebby to bring him there. The Bulldogs have a strong pick in this. He is a 194-pound, 6-foot-1 man who came from UTEP through the transfer portal. He played for the 2023 All-C-USA team.

“I committed to Mississippi State because I feel like Coach Lebby is a great offensive mind,” Akharaiyi stated. He seems to have me ready to advance to the next level. During my official visit, I had a great time with the coaching staff and the people in my immediate vicinity.”

Next season, Bumphis needs individuals with experience who can step up and make some plays. That’s what guys like Akharaiyi can do. He recorded 48 catches for over 1000 yards and 7 touchdowns in the previous campaign. He also had a reception average of 21.5 yards.

“At this point and going forward, the main goal is to get to the NFL,” Akharaiyi stated. “If that was not the intended outcome, I would not be undertaking this. Based on his past performance, Coach Lebby has some of the best receivers in the league. I believe that he and Coach Bumphis can help me become ready to be an NFL player.”

Receivers choose a school based on playing with a great quarterback, not on other factors. According to Akharaiyi, Blake Shapen made contact with him in an attempt to recruit him to Mississippi State. That is encouraging for this team to see. It’s indicating that the locker room will have amazing synergy. If Lebby hopes to win a few games at Mississippi State early in his coaching career, he will require that.

Akharaiyi responded, “Of course, I paid attention to who the quarterbacks could possibly be,” when asked if the quarterbacks had any influence over his choice. “Shapen contacted me, and ever since then, we have been developing a relationship. I have faith that Coach Lebby will know exactly who he wants as his guy. I have faith in Shapen if he does.”

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