hard to believe that they werent impressed with him after being named MVP of the Columbia Nike Combine. but i was not there and i only have what is posted to believe so you never know.From what I hear, the Husker coaches werent impressed enough to give Biere an offer, but Leverson did impress the coaches at the camp and he will most likely get an offer very soon. If and when Leverson gets that offer he will commit soon there after.
I hope the skull ain't smiling. :lol:Oh, yeah! Welcome aboard Sean! I recommend we need to get the skull and bones Blackshirts logo as a clickable smilie! But for now, these guys will do...
:bonez :bonez :bonez :bonez :bonez
Millard standout picks NUBY BRIAN ROSENTHAL / Lincoln Journal Star
Thursday, Jun 14, 2007 - 04:59:27 pm CDT
Sean Fisher said he’s been leaning toward Nebraska for some time now. A visit earlier this week to the Big Red Football School sold the Millard North star.
Fisher on Thursday delivered, in person, his oral commitment to Nebraska football coaches. He’s the ninth member to orally commit to the Huskers’ 2008 recruiting class, choosing Nebraska over rival Oklahoma.
“I’ve been thinking about it really hard lately and have been really close with the whole deal,” said Fisher, a 6-foot-5, 210-pound high school senior.
“I was pretty sure (of my decision), and then going to camp and working with Coach (Kevin) Cosgrove ... I loved the way he coached.”
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Fisher plays safety for Millard North and coach Fred Petito but will come to Nebraska as a linebacker. Fisher said he’ll focus initially on the SAM, or strongside, position.
In addition to Nebraska and Oklahoma, Fisher had offers from Arkansas, Iowa State, Colorado, Iowa, Arizona State and Wisconsin. He’s the fourth in-state player to join Nebraska’s 2008 class.
Ironically, his commitment comes only days after former Millard North teammate Corey Young asked for, and was granted, his scholarship release from Nebraska. Young, a cornerback, would have been a Husker sophomore this fall.
“It didn’t really affect me,” Fisher said of Young’s departure. “I talked to him a little bit. He talked about Coach Cosgrove and (strength) Coach (Dave) Kennedy. All I heard was positive things. Nothing negative. He just left more for personal reasons, that’s all.”
Fisher’s father played for Nebraska from 1980-83, something Sean labeled as only a minor factor in his decision.
“He just wanted me to find what was best for me,” Fisher said. “Just when it came down to sitting down and looking what was best, I thought Nebraska was better for me.”
Fisher said he was disappointed in his 40-yard dash time of 4.65 and shuttle time of 4.35 he ran in Nebraska’s high school camp earlier this week.
Fisher will play safety and running back this fall at Millard North — he said he prefers defense — and has already talked to Nebraska coaches about the Huskers’ depth chart at linebacker in 2008. Nebraska will lose seniors Corey McKeon, Lance Brandenburgh, Bo Ruud and Steve Octavien.
“It’s pretty wide open,” Fisher said, referring to the possibility of early playing time. “(Coach) thinks it kind of depends on me physically and how I grasp things.”
Reach Brian Rosenthal at 473-7436 or brosenthal@journalstar.com.
Fisher turns down OU for NUBY RICH KAIPUST
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU
• 2008 NU football commitments
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• 2008 NU football commitments
LINCOLN - In recruiting Sean Fisher, Oklahoma was able to detour his thoughts but ultimately couldn't derail his intentions.
Fisher listened when the Sooners called and offered a football scholarship last month. The Millard North safety even visited OU on his own two weeks ago.
But he found himself dialing Brent Venables on Thursday and telling the Oklahoma defensive coordinator and associate head coach that he was going to Nebraska - the first school to offer him and the front-runner for most of the process.
"Prior to the Oklahoma deal, Nebraska by far was the top favorite," Fisher said. "When they came, I was willing to give that a good look. After evaluating everything, Nebraska was still where I wanted to go."
NU rarely has to deal with OU coming into its backyard, so keeping Fisher should be considered a huge victory over the team that beat the Huskers for last season's Big 12 championship.
Millard North coach Fred Petito said NU assistant Dennis Wagner told him this week that he heard Fisher was leaning toward the Sooners. Petito told Wagner he wasn't sure that was the case.
"He just wanted to see what that place was all about, and he wasn't taking just a casual look," Petito said. "He's a real intelligent kid, and he was only going to make a decision he felt sure of."
Two things might have pushed Nebraska over the hump: proximity to home and the fact that the Huskers lose four senior linebackers after next season.
"That'll really open the positions for younger kids," said Fisher, who would arrive in 2008. "Nebraska had an opportunity in that sense."
Fisher is projected to transition from safety to linebacker in college. At 6-foot-5 and 210 pounds, he's about 30 or 35 pounds from having the ideal frame for the strongside slot.
Fisher spent Monday at Nebraska's camp and watched film Thursday with defensive coordinator Kevin Cosgrove in the Husker football offices. Cosgrove will be Fisher's position coach at NU.
"I told Coach Cosgrove that if you like him now, wait until you're around him every day and you're going to love him," Petito said.
Fisher said it "definitely was kind of a rush" to have Oklahoma so interested. Out of 15 total offers, OU and NU emerged from a final list that also included Arkansas and Iowa State.
Fisher said Venables just asked that he take a good look at the Sooners.
"I think they kind of knew it would be tough with a kid from Nebraska," Fisher said.
The commitment from Fisher was the ninth for Nebraska but only the second from a defensive player. Fisher has ridden back and forth to Lincoln before with I-back recruit Collins Okafor of Omaha Westside, and has talked some with offensive linemen Baker Steinkuhler of Lincoln Southwest and Trevor Robinson of Elkhorn.
Fisher was a World-Herald All-Nebraska player last season with 92 tackles and three interceptions as a junior.