📡 Louisiana HS coach explains why #Alabama isn't welcomed on campus. (UPDATE: Coach Fired!)

If Alabama wants to add 5-star wide receiver Terrace Marshall and offer 4-star dual-threat quarterback Justin Rogers in the Class of 2018, the Crimson Tide won’t get any assistance from their high school coach.

Parkway (La.) High School coach David Feaster appeared on ESPN 104.5 in Baton Rouge Wednesday morning to explain why Alabama isn’t welcomed on campus.

It all stems from former LSU QB Brandon Harris, who attended Parkway before beginning his college career.

At the time, Doug Nussmeier was Alabama’s offensive coordinator and Billy Napier was the Tide’s wide receivers coach. The pair traveled to Parkway to scout Harris back in 2013. According to Feaster, Nussmeier and Napier watched Harris’ film and called the quarterback “phenomenal.” The assistants wanted to offer Harris, but no offer is truly legit unless Nick Saban himself wants that recruit.

It’s well known that if you receive an early offer from Alabama — and the majority of big-time college football programs — the team wants you to attend one of its summer camps to see how the players perform in the drills they should excel at.

Brandon Harris was one of the top quarterbacks in the Class of 2014. At one point, he was rated the nation’s No. 1 dual-threat QB, and he received one of these “camp offers” from Alabama. That didn’t sit well with his high school coach.

“I understand you offer these kids to go meet Nick Saban,” Feaster said. “That’s a big deal and he may feel a different way. What I’m telling Brandon is you only have so much money and time to spend. Go to the schools that you have you at the top of their board. Ohio State, Ole Miss and Texas A&M had him at No. 1
. LSU hadn’t come in yet. (Former LSU offensive coordinator) Cam (Cameron) didn’t come by. All of these other schools said we want you right now and we want you to lead our recruiting class and bring these great athletes out of Louisiana to come with you.”

Before Harris attended the summer camp in Tuscaloosa, he had a phone call with Saban where, according to the coach, Alabama did offer him. But, again, Saban didn’t get a chance to see Harris compete in camp.

In this past year’s recruiting cycle, both 5-star quarterback Tua Tagovailoa and 4-star quarterback Mac Jones traveled to Tuscaloosa before committing. Harris, back in 2014, didn’t do that yet. Parkway’s coach said it wasn’t clear that attending camp was a necessity.

“(Napier) calls me the next day (after coming by the school) and says, ‘Coach, I have some good news for you. Tell Brandon to call me on this phone during this period and I’ll put Nick Saban on the phone,”’ Feaster recalls. “We do that and Saban says, ‘You have a scholarship at the University of Alabama.’ So, they gave him a scholarship offer. It was a committable offer.

By the time he gets to campus in June — and I’m not saying Brandon was going to commit to Alabama — it wasn’t an option. Basically what they told him is that we got other guys that are going to come through here, and I promised them a shot. So we have to wait and see then.”

A few weeks after Harris visited Tuscaloosa, Alabama decided to accept a commitment from David Cornwell on June 14, 2013.

Fast forward four years later, and Feaster is still holding that camp offer against Alabama.

Parkway is home to 5-star wide receiver Terrace Marshall and 4-star dual-threat quarterback Justin Rogers. Marshall has visited Tuscaloosa several times on his own, while Rogers hasn’t received an offer from Alabama.

“All I’m saying is this, if you offer Justin Rogers today and he doesn’t commit — I understand that the offer may not be good a year from now — but if you offer him, you’re making a committable offer,” Feaster said. “If you make a committable offer, there needs to be a window where my guys can say I’ll take that offer and we’ll be done.

“That never happened with Brandon. All it was was them angling him to come to camp and competing against other guys.”

The issue here is not that Alabama isn’t allowed on campus, but that a coach is getting in the way from a university potentially finding other players on his roster who may be worthy of a scholarship offer.

In hindsight, both Cornwell and Harris didn’t have the most successful careers at Alabama and LSU, respectively, but Feaster, who admits he’s an LSU fan, won’t forget how Harris never received a committable offer.

“Maybe I’m playing too hard four years later, but I don’t want them (Alabama) on campus,” Feaster said. “I don’t want them making those offers to the rest of my guys. My guys know they can go to Alabama. Marshall has been there a couple of times. If he wants to go to Alabama, he can and I’m going to pull for him — no doubt. I’m just not going to help Alabama recruit my guys.”

https://www.seccountry.com/alabama/alabama-recruiting-lsu-louisiana-high-school-football
 
Sounds about as weak as it can get from a coach. He basically wants Alabama to offer 20-30 guys, however many they can take, and that's it. I mean, is this guy serious?

The timing of the article is one thing that caught my attention this afternoon.

So, a little searching brings up this ...

“I’m not telling them where they want to go,” said Feaster. “It’s about wherever they and their families want to go... You can’t seriously consider a school unless you’ve been on campus and met the head coach. If they’re seriously considering the school where we got a guy already, they’re going to ask the guy.”

Additionally, Alabama is courting Marshall, who has been to Tuscaloosa, Ala., on several occasions over the past year.

The 5-star wide receiver is among the top prospects in the 2018 recruiting class, and while Feaster won’t influence his decision to commit to the Tide or not, he did explain why Alabama’s coaches are not welcome on the Parkway High campus.

“That spring, everyone was coming to see Brandon Harris,” he recalled. “They said: ‘We want to offer Brandon.’ I asked how many quarterbacks they had offered so far, and it was 6 or 7, but they said: ‘An offer for us at quarterback is really an offer to come to camp.’ I understand, go meet Nick Saban, but what I told Brandon was he only has so much money and time to spend, so go to a school that has you atop their board. Ohio State, Ole Miss and Texas A&M 
 LSU wasn’t in yet, and all these other schools said you’re No. 1.

“They told Brandon to call Nick Saban. He says: ‘Brandon, you have a scholarship at Alabama.’ It was a scholarship offer, a committable offer, then we skyped Nick Saban a while later and he said he wanted us to go to camp. When he got there in June — and I’m not saying Brandon was going to commit to Alabama — but it wasn’t an option. When he came back home, they took a commitment from someone else. If you offer Justin Rogers, it has to be a committable offer. That never happened with Brandon. My guys can go to Alabama, but I’m not going to help Alabama recruit my guys.”
That's part of an interview where Feaster is talking about being upset with the way Miles handled Harris and the way Cam handled him.

During the conversation, Feaster oft referred to himself as an LSU fan.
 
Here's the thing that truly entertains me.

By the time he gets to campus in June — and I’m not saying Brandon was going to commit to Alabama — it wasn’t an option. Basically what they told him is that we got other guys that are going to come through here, and I promised them a shot. So we have to wait and see then.”

A few weeks after Harris visited Tuscaloosa, Alabama decided to accept a commitment from David Cornwell on June 14, 2013.

He came to camp. He had a bad camp. He was, and still is, a running back playing the quarterback position. He was not a fit for a pro-style offensive quarterback.
 
Those high school coaches have got to know that that was pretty much standard operating procedure for elite football programs. Sounds petty at best, but so does some of the butt-hurt with one of LSU's assistant coaches who was recently let go after signing day. In fact, the timing is such that it makes one wonder if that is to get the recruiting spotlight off the Cajun coaching staff somewhat? Bama sure picked their pocket clean this time.
 
“All I’m saying is this, if you offer Justin Rogers today and he doesn’t commit — I understand that the offer may not be good a year from now — but if you offer him, you’re making a committable offer,” Feaster said. “If you make a committable offer, there needs to be a window where my guys can say I’ll take that offer and we’ll be done.


So if his guys make a commitment to an offer, that's it, it's over, so he's saying he's going to make those players stop taking visits anywhere else......sounds like he's an agent and not a high school coach. :naughtydevil:
 
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I know that La. has a lot of strange laws on the books...( a lot of old Napolianic stuff for sure) but can someone tell me exactly where it is written that the football coach decides who is and who isn't trespassing on school property?
 
I know that La. has a lot of strange laws on the books...( a lot of old Napolianic stuff for sure) but can someone tell me exactly where it is written that the football coach decides who is and who isn't trespassing on school property?

if it's like anything around here, they have NO control over that. only the board of education can make that call.
 
if it's like anything around here, they have NO control over that. only the board of education can make that call.

And...Trespass is such a mixed law. By (Alabama) state law all landed is posted. But, if you have a business, you must trespass someone to their face, while PD is standing present. I had to do it several times when I managed a bar, and have done it as part of Church Security. ( Yeah it wa bad, we are a church who welcomes every one...well... except that ONE person, LOL).
 
And now Barnett is taking some time out of his surfing schedule to tell the world that against USC he wasn't scared and was unfairly labeled by a certain coach. What a loser/quitter.

http://www.espn.com/blog/pac12/post/...earview-mirror
That's got "motivational speech" to a QB from a OC who has been passed over a few times.
That's also got a guy talking that's been spun so many ways in the last few years he's ..., well, Barnett.
 
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