Recap PITT Commitment ahead of official visit season

Recap PITT Commitment ahead of official visit season

Renda is the first promise in the class.

6-foot, 180-pound three-star quarterback from Southlake Carroll, Texas

"It's great to catch up with Coach Bale," said Renda. "We talked a lot about the ball, listen to his words and deeds, and his offense was priceless."

Renda is one of the most underrated quarterback recruits in the class, during Southlake's outstanding junior season. He completed 257 passes for 3,901 yards for 3,901 yards, and had 40 touchdowns and 11 interceptions, adding 667 yards (7.0 yards per carry) and 14 touchdowns on the ground.

Renda is not the biggest quarterback, nor the strongest arm in the class, but he is the legal organizer. Even on the move, his passes have a lot of zippers and have the ability to make off-game games, he is perfect for what quarterback Bell wants.

Renda plans to return from an official visit from June 5-7, and he will return to become one of the top recruiters.

A 5-foot-10-foot, 160-pound three-star receiver from Booker, Sarasota, Florida.

"As far as he's going to use my way, and I'm going to use my way in the offense," West told Pete Sports News. "Like the action and things like that.

Narduzzi mentioned the idea of ​​playing the broad receiver and cornerback, but is still uncertain. West himself wants to go to campus and see what happens when he does, but he certainly wants to try playing on both sides of the ball.

West felt he could play wide receivers or cornerbacks, but he didn't have a favorite. He is most important to a football player, and that's how Pat Narduzzi describes the players he admires.

"I feel my IQ will help me because whenever I'm on the receiver, I know what the DB thinks, and whenever I'm in DB, I know what the receiver is trying to do."

“I describe myself as a route runner, a runner who can move.”

"Body cornerback, I'm not afraid to stand up and press you."

On Monday, the 6-foot, 184-pound three-star square at First Academy in Orlando, Florida, guaranteed itself to assurance the Panthers. He picked the Panthers’ offer from Boston College, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisville, Marshall, North Carolina, Ole Miss, Purdue, UCF, UCF, UCF, USF, UNV, Wake Forest, Wake Forest, West Forest, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

McCray is perfect for Pitt, with the speed and versatility that offensive coordinator Kade Bell loves.

Last season, he produced for the First Academy's main academy, with 894 yards (24.8 yards per game) and nine touchdowns in 36 passes. He also added defensive interceptions.

CASS Technology from Detroit, Michigan is 6-foot-3 inches tall and weighs 190 pounds.

"I chose Pittsburgh because they showed me their favorites and it felt right," Jennings told Pittsports News. "And I didn't wait for anything.

“I just want to relieve stress from my family and me and focus on my team and I might as well lock it in the school I’m going to.”

Jennings devoted the Panthers to Akron, Bowling Green, CMU, Charlotte, the coastal areas of Carolina, Eastern Kentucky, Illinois, Marshall, Miami (Ohio), UMASS, West Virginia and West Carolina.

Jennings can play in several different positions at the college level, but Pitt sees him as a defender. To be precise, Star Linebacker.

Manalac loves how Jennings is physically fast, physically, and is happy (and perhaps most importantly), and Jennings has seen first-hand how he will adapt to the defensive system.

"I think I'm healthy," Jennings said. "I think I'm directly reflecting the linebacker they're now, Kyle Louis, I think I'm a little taller, I think I'll be bigger, but I think that's the way I'm suitable for defense."

In his junior season at Powerhouse Cass Tech, he was the same playmaker as Kyle Louis, who scored 120 tackles, five sacks, two forced turnovers, two recovery rates, two interceptions and two defensive touchdowns. With Jennings’ help, the technician won the state championship with Jennings.

6-foot, 185 pounds safety south of Westville, Ohio

24 receptions for 460 yards (19.2 yards per game) and four touchdowns; 52 tackles, three tackle losses, one interception and seven pass breakups;