Looks like Qae'shon Sapp will be first up.
Says the transition to college has happened really well so far.
"Everything is going great."
On missing out on spring: "It's kind of hard being around Coach Atkins and be able to jump in that fire sometimes ... "I wanted to be there in so bad ... being around those guys ... made me want to go out there and participate with them. Because those are my brothers. It was really hard."
On Atkins: Says Atkins doesn't have kids, so he treats his players like his kids. Said growing up without a father it made it click more. He's somebody he can talk to about things going on his life, not just football. "He's very understanding and he wants to see you succeed."
Says most conversations he's had with Atkins have been personal. Says his cousin passed away five years ago on Monday and he's having a hard time with it, but Atkins has helped him through it. "I have somebody I can count on, as a father figure and as a coach."
Says Storms wants him to be down to 320. Right now he's 339. He got to campus at 350. Says he dislocated his shoulder three times last year. ... He can bench 335 again after those shoulder issues. "It's been a really good transition."
Says big OL class was exciting to him: Because it gives him a chance to learn from different players, different talents. "I recruited a lot of offensive linemen in my class, that's why we had a lot of guys."
Says Woody, Early and Armella were the main priority guys he was recruiting. "I knew once we got here we were all going to click."
Says he's good coming off the ball right now, but says he needs to work on his hips, and learn the playbook easy. That's what Atkins has told him.
"I kept my word. And I just showed them once I get here I'm going to do the best I can whenever I can."
He says Coach Atkins told him he was the realest coach he was going to have through the recruiting process. Says their conversations during recruitment were never about football. It was always about how he was doing as a person, how he was doing mentally.
That's a wrap on Sapp.
Now Jerrale Powers is up.
On coming from a strong HS program: He says it prepares them well mentally and physically. He said he's used to the extreme workouts because of Duncanville High.
Says he's working on getting stronger and faster and learning more how to be a tight end in general, blocking-wise. Says he's learning the playbook as well.
On the adjustment to Tallahassee: Says he's adjusted pretty well. Says schedule is pretty stressful, and weather is about the same, except for it's "way more humid."
He says workouts are either at 1130 or 1. Says he doesn't like to sleep in too much, so he tries to wake up around 8. Says sometimes he works out two times a day and then they also have position meetings. Says he gets to chill for about an hour, and when workouts end around 6 or 630 and then he gets food, goes home, lays down, goes to sleep and then does the same thing the next day.
On him and Early committing near the same time from the same school: He says they had conversations. "I'm pretty sure he was FSU way before. ... he got his offer before me. But yeah, it was most definitely a conversation."
Says Coach Thomsen was different than other recruiters because he wasn't always bugging him and blowing up his phone, as opposed to other coaches. Said they talked a lot, but it wasn't too much. Said Thomsen was truthful with him. And he also said he likes Norvell and the energy he coaches with as a head coach.
On the older TEs in the group being helpful to him: "They've all been a very big help."
"I feel like I bring someone who doesn't just block, but doesn't just run routes. I think I can learn to do both very, very good. Just more faster and more physical. ... I feel like with me playing receiver in high school and now playing tight end, I think I can combine the two. It really helps a lot."
Says there was some anxiety about going to Tallahassee because he would be so far away from home. "But I got through it. I started doing way better just learning how to be far away from them."
Says he's a fan of Travis Kelce and Kyle Pitts.
And that's a wrap on Powers.
Jaylen Early is now up.
Says he weighs about 320 pounds and that's about where they want him to stay.
On Atkins as a recruiter: Says they go back to around April of his sophomore year. "He's been the same with me ever since I met him. He's the same here. He's the most honest coach I've ever met ... He's the same dude. ... He told me what I wanted to hear, and that's what drew me to him more." ... Says he watched film with him and Atkins told him what he needed to work on. "I really respect him."
He says any workouts you can think of, Storms has them doing. "There's nothing we're not doing. I'll just put it like that."
Says it's a brotherhood of Olinemen in the recruiting class. "We all talk, we all pick each other up, we help each other out, coach each other ... It's always cool to have that many dudes that are in the same grade, that are going through the same thing you're going through."
Says transition has been kinda tough, but he's getting through it. It helps having a former HS teammate with him. As well as all the other freshmen O-linemen.
"We were going crazy in the group chat" when Armella committed. "I feel like this is the class that's going to do it, this is the offensive line class that's going to bring them back to where we used to be."
He says he sees the work ethic of the O-linemen class. "I see how bad they want it." Says he feels like if they keep doing what they're doing they're going to build something real special. And he mentioned the word "brotherhood" again.
Says he wants to be versatile, so he doesn't want to learn just one position. He says Rob Scott and Maurice Smith have been the most helpful veterans with him. "I look up to those guys."
On Duncanville High being so good: Says they had a really good head coach and he prepared them for college. Says the coaches helped get him to the next level, and that they really push them over the edge.
Says the reaction he got from friends and classmates after committing to FSU was people asking him if he really could leave his mom and family and go three states away. He said he made the decision FOR his family. And he and his mom are good, they still talk a lot. And he doesn't really care about other outsiders' opinions.
And that's a wrap on Early.
Now, Jazston Turnetine is up.
On the transfer process: Says it was pretty hectic.
Says he saw Atkins had a very good repertoire to give him, a lot more tools to pick from. He had his eyes on the weaknesses and the strengths.
Says it was mainly Atkins and Norvell during the recruiting process. Says it wasn't really a pitch. In his final year of college football, says you're not really looking for the "butt-kissers." He wanted guys that would tell him what his problems were and how they were going to get fixed.
Says his perspective on college football has completely changed. It's not about glitz and glamour, it's about the coach, and what that coach can do to make him better. "You really pay attention to detail. It's true detail when you're older." Says you're looking for lifelong friends, too, not just football friends. Says it's about who you know in this world, not just what you know.
Says he's happy he was welcomed into the O-line room. Says you have to earn your way, earn your respect, and says it's humbling. "I'm just trying to gain respect amongst the room, show them I know things as much as they do."
He says he knows what his problems are. Says he can be dominant in the run game. But he knows his weakness is pass pro. Says Atkins has offered different techniques, different tools. That's what he needs, he said, and he loves the attention to detail.
Says he feels "very confident" about playing a role on this team. He says he's seen so many different offenses, coaching staffs, and he says at the end of the day it's truly can you translate terminology? Says he hopes to convince the coaches he's worth it. "I'm here to help regardless."
Says he's never going to shy away from new methods, new techniques. "If anything, you can always get stronger."
Says at the end of the day he's trying to prove to himself. At the end of day, its 1 v 1. With yourself. Says he wants to prove he can be better.
Says of Jammie Robinson: He's a ball of energy. Says that when he got to Tallahassee, Robinson helped show him the ropes. "It made me happy to see his growth and performance and how much love he received here even though he was from a different institution." Said Robinson has taken him under his wing.
Says his workout with Atkins was "great." He wanted to stay in shape during that time period, and it showed him it was really detailed. Says it was more practicing details and techniques as opposed to "hey, just go block the guy."
Says he's changed his major. Used to be arts and design and now he's in social sciences. He says he loves people. And he loves art.
Says it takes loss to grow. You need to learn from your mistakes. And said coming into the SEC everything was speed and power. It makes you adjust and learn faster. Says he really appreciates the time he had in the SEC to make him adapt to the speed of the edge.
And that's a wrap on Turnentine.
Now we have Ayobami Tifase up next.
Says it's been an amazing process. Says he's made some very strong connections to the football team already.
Says it doesn't matter if we call him Ayo or his full name.
Says the people at FSU were the difference in the recruitment. And he said the tradition is unlike any other. That was a really big part of the process.
On Odell: Says he's more than thrilled. The things he's learned and heard about Odell made him seem like an amazing guy. And says within a week his work ethic and skills have gotten so much better. Says you don't walk around here and people don't know who you are. People greet you and say hello. And it makes you feel important and good about yourself.
Says he played football for one year as a kid. 10th grade he started wrestling and was pretty good, then got too big for wrestling. And then moved to another school, and his junior COVID year was cut short. And says as a senior they won their league championship, got a ring, beat the no. 1 seed, "And that achievement carried me so far." Says to be one of the youngest on the FSU team, it gives him something to live for. "I believe I will be something specific. ... I think that will be something that pushes me and drives me."
Says he loved wrestling. "I just liked to slam people, to be honest with you." Says he stopped because the private school he transferred to didn't have a team.
He says he took ground power away from wrestling. Explosion out of his stance. That's what he thinks has carried over. "I did that so much it was just right for me." Says if you watch his film you can see he has pretty good speed off the ball."
Says he's the youngest of four sisters. They're Nigerian descent. Said growing up it was strict. Said he knew at a certain time he would have to be out of the house. Said as a 17 year old boy, coming out of Baltimore, he knows how to be by himself. Because he was taught that.
On this first year of college football and redshirting: Says this year will be the most beneficial for him. "In fact, I know." Says has the size and has a chance to get even stronger. "I know Coach Odell will get me to where I need to be. I don't doubt it at all."
Says he has talked with the veteran DTs as much as possible. And they push him a lot in practice. "They keep reminding me constantly and constantly and that's what I need, because it helps me learn. ... I need to devour everything they give to me before they leave."
"The heat? Hoo boy. ... It's something I'm definitely getting used to." Says he's losing weight and drinking a lot of water. And says teammates ask him to pronounce certain words because they like his baltimore accent.
And that's a wrap on Tifase.
Julian Armella is up next.
Says he wants fans, coaches to know he's just not coming to play football. He's coming to be a student-athlete and a "dawg." And that he's going to give 100 percent all the time.
On body transformation: Said he was 301 when he got to FSU. Said he gained five pounds at first and said right now he weighs 315 pounds. "The transition has been very, very smooth." Says he's getting more muscle than fat and he's going to keep his head down and keep working.
Expectations heading to freshman season: Says his mentality is to play like a walk-on. He's going to act like he's trying to gain a spot and work his butt off until he gets one.
Says he already knows there are going to be some chippy moments in practice. But it's not going to be excessive. He's not going to be out there trying to fight everybody. "I'm just going to try to outwork you. And I feel like that just raises the standard." Says he's going to try his best to be the No. 1 runner, the No. 1 lifter, whatever he can do.
Says his favorite part of the campus is people. Says he's got teammates that he's turning into brothers. "That kind of uplifts you every day to try and go out and be great." Says the hardest transition has been maintaining his sleep schedule. It's just been making sure to get out of that high school mentality and into college mentality.
Says he thinks his work ethic is what he thinks is gaining respect from his teammates. He tries to be an uplifting presence on the field and in the room when he can be.
On choosing FSU: Says coaching staff, the players and the environment. Says Norvell and Atkins are his "Two guys." Says it was real people here in Tallahassee. He was told that if he comes in and works his butt off he could set himself up for success.
Says he wasn't trying to be on a bandwagon team. He wanted to go somewhere where he could help change the culture. Says Coach Storms has told him the team is much closer, much stronger, much more together than it has been in the past. "Everybody is on board, everybody wants the same goal."
Says his main goal is to create his own legacy. He wants his guys to forever have a mark at Florida State. Says he's not different than any of the other recruits. Says he feels a little bit of pressure because he is a legacy recruit, but he wants to make his own legacy.
Says he got rid of baby fat. He actually got down to around 275 before starting back up over 300. Says he's stronger than he's ever been.
And that's a wrap on Armella.
Antavioius Woody is the last one (his interview begins at the 8:00 mark)
On getting to Tallahassee: Says once he got here, the coaches and players greeted him with a big welcome.
Says coaching staff and freshmen pushed him and pushed him throughout the process and trying to get eligible.
On getting used to coach storms: Says he's getting the hang of it. They're going to push him as much as they can.
He says he's trying to learn as much as possible. "It's just all about learning at this point."
Says he's going to start preseason practice at guard.
On perhaps playing D-line: Says he's not worried about defense right now. Says anywhere they put him he'll play it.
Says he was into basketball and track and outdoorsy stuff growing up before football.
Says he's always played to the echo of the whistle. That's just how he's always been.
Says he is solely on O-line right now, but if fullback or defense happens, he would do that, too.
And that's a wrap on this marathon interview day!
Thanks for stopping by and reading that novel!
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Florida State football team has welcomed several new faces in recent weeks, and a contingent of those players will answer questions from the media today at noon.
The players scheduled to participate in individual interviews are:
* 4-star OL Julian Armella of Miami
* 3-star OL Jaylen Early of Duncanville, Texas
* 4-star OL Qae'shon Sapp of Leesburg, Ga.
* South Carolina OL transfer Jazston Turnetine
* 4-star OL Antavious Woody of Welch, Ala.
* 3-star DT Ayobami Tifase of Baltimore, Md.
* 3-star TE Jerrale Powers of Duncanville, Texas
Warchant will post live updates from the interviews right here in this thread. Check back around noon for updates.
Says the transition to college has happened really well so far.
"Everything is going great."
On missing out on spring: "It's kind of hard being around Coach Atkins and be able to jump in that fire sometimes ... "I wanted to be there in so bad ... being around those guys ... made me want to go out there and participate with them. Because those are my brothers. It was really hard."
On Atkins: Says Atkins doesn't have kids, so he treats his players like his kids. Said growing up without a father it made it click more. He's somebody he can talk to about things going on his life, not just football. "He's very understanding and he wants to see you succeed."
Says most conversations he's had with Atkins have been personal. Says his cousin passed away five years ago on Monday and he's having a hard time with it, but Atkins has helped him through it. "I have somebody I can count on, as a father figure and as a coach."
Says Storms wants him to be down to 320. Right now he's 339. He got to campus at 350. Says he dislocated his shoulder three times last year. ... He can bench 335 again after those shoulder issues. "It's been a really good transition."
Says big OL class was exciting to him: Because it gives him a chance to learn from different players, different talents. "I recruited a lot of offensive linemen in my class, that's why we had a lot of guys."
Says Woody, Early and Armella were the main priority guys he was recruiting. "I knew once we got here we were all going to click."
Says he's good coming off the ball right now, but says he needs to work on his hips, and learn the playbook easy. That's what Atkins has told him.
"I kept my word. And I just showed them once I get here I'm going to do the best I can whenever I can."
He says Coach Atkins told him he was the realest coach he was going to have through the recruiting process. Says their conversations during recruitment were never about football. It was always about how he was doing as a person, how he was doing mentally.
That's a wrap on Sapp.
Now Jerrale Powers is up.
On coming from a strong HS program: He says it prepares them well mentally and physically. He said he's used to the extreme workouts because of Duncanville High.
Says he's working on getting stronger and faster and learning more how to be a tight end in general, blocking-wise. Says he's learning the playbook as well.
On the adjustment to Tallahassee: Says he's adjusted pretty well. Says schedule is pretty stressful, and weather is about the same, except for it's "way more humid."
He says workouts are either at 1130 or 1. Says he doesn't like to sleep in too much, so he tries to wake up around 8. Says sometimes he works out two times a day and then they also have position meetings. Says he gets to chill for about an hour, and when workouts end around 6 or 630 and then he gets food, goes home, lays down, goes to sleep and then does the same thing the next day.
On him and Early committing near the same time from the same school: He says they had conversations. "I'm pretty sure he was FSU way before. ... he got his offer before me. But yeah, it was most definitely a conversation."
Says Coach Thomsen was different than other recruiters because he wasn't always bugging him and blowing up his phone, as opposed to other coaches. Said they talked a lot, but it wasn't too much. Said Thomsen was truthful with him. And he also said he likes Norvell and the energy he coaches with as a head coach.
On the older TEs in the group being helpful to him: "They've all been a very big help."
"I feel like I bring someone who doesn't just block, but doesn't just run routes. I think I can learn to do both very, very good. Just more faster and more physical. ... I feel like with me playing receiver in high school and now playing tight end, I think I can combine the two. It really helps a lot."
Says there was some anxiety about going to Tallahassee because he would be so far away from home. "But I got through it. I started doing way better just learning how to be far away from them."
Says he's a fan of Travis Kelce and Kyle Pitts.
And that's a wrap on Powers.
Jaylen Early is now up.
Says he weighs about 320 pounds and that's about where they want him to stay.
On Atkins as a recruiter: Says they go back to around April of his sophomore year. "He's been the same with me ever since I met him. He's the same here. He's the most honest coach I've ever met ... He's the same dude. ... He told me what I wanted to hear, and that's what drew me to him more." ... Says he watched film with him and Atkins told him what he needed to work on. "I really respect him."
He says any workouts you can think of, Storms has them doing. "There's nothing we're not doing. I'll just put it like that."
Says it's a brotherhood of Olinemen in the recruiting class. "We all talk, we all pick each other up, we help each other out, coach each other ... It's always cool to have that many dudes that are in the same grade, that are going through the same thing you're going through."
Says transition has been kinda tough, but he's getting through it. It helps having a former HS teammate with him. As well as all the other freshmen O-linemen.
"We were going crazy in the group chat" when Armella committed. "I feel like this is the class that's going to do it, this is the offensive line class that's going to bring them back to where we used to be."
He says he sees the work ethic of the O-linemen class. "I see how bad they want it." Says he feels like if they keep doing what they're doing they're going to build something real special. And he mentioned the word "brotherhood" again.
Says he wants to be versatile, so he doesn't want to learn just one position. He says Rob Scott and Maurice Smith have been the most helpful veterans with him. "I look up to those guys."
On Duncanville High being so good: Says they had a really good head coach and he prepared them for college. Says the coaches helped get him to the next level, and that they really push them over the edge.
Says the reaction he got from friends and classmates after committing to FSU was people asking him if he really could leave his mom and family and go three states away. He said he made the decision FOR his family. And he and his mom are good, they still talk a lot. And he doesn't really care about other outsiders' opinions.
And that's a wrap on Early.
Now, Jazston Turnetine is up.
On the transfer process: Says it was pretty hectic.
Says he saw Atkins had a very good repertoire to give him, a lot more tools to pick from. He had his eyes on the weaknesses and the strengths.
Says it was mainly Atkins and Norvell during the recruiting process. Says it wasn't really a pitch. In his final year of college football, says you're not really looking for the "butt-kissers." He wanted guys that would tell him what his problems were and how they were going to get fixed.
Says his perspective on college football has completely changed. It's not about glitz and glamour, it's about the coach, and what that coach can do to make him better. "You really pay attention to detail. It's true detail when you're older." Says you're looking for lifelong friends, too, not just football friends. Says it's about who you know in this world, not just what you know.
Says he's happy he was welcomed into the O-line room. Says you have to earn your way, earn your respect, and says it's humbling. "I'm just trying to gain respect amongst the room, show them I know things as much as they do."
He says he knows what his problems are. Says he can be dominant in the run game. But he knows his weakness is pass pro. Says Atkins has offered different techniques, different tools. That's what he needs, he said, and he loves the attention to detail.
Says he feels "very confident" about playing a role on this team. He says he's seen so many different offenses, coaching staffs, and he says at the end of the day it's truly can you translate terminology? Says he hopes to convince the coaches he's worth it. "I'm here to help regardless."
Says he's never going to shy away from new methods, new techniques. "If anything, you can always get stronger."
Says at the end of the day he's trying to prove to himself. At the end of day, its 1 v 1. With yourself. Says he wants to prove he can be better.
Says of Jammie Robinson: He's a ball of energy. Says that when he got to Tallahassee, Robinson helped show him the ropes. "It made me happy to see his growth and performance and how much love he received here even though he was from a different institution." Said Robinson has taken him under his wing.
Says his workout with Atkins was "great." He wanted to stay in shape during that time period, and it showed him it was really detailed. Says it was more practicing details and techniques as opposed to "hey, just go block the guy."
Says he's changed his major. Used to be arts and design and now he's in social sciences. He says he loves people. And he loves art.
Says it takes loss to grow. You need to learn from your mistakes. And said coming into the SEC everything was speed and power. It makes you adjust and learn faster. Says he really appreciates the time he had in the SEC to make him adapt to the speed of the edge.
And that's a wrap on Turnentine.
Now we have Ayobami Tifase up next.
Says it's been an amazing process. Says he's made some very strong connections to the football team already.
Says it doesn't matter if we call him Ayo or his full name.
Says the people at FSU were the difference in the recruitment. And he said the tradition is unlike any other. That was a really big part of the process.
On Odell: Says he's more than thrilled. The things he's learned and heard about Odell made him seem like an amazing guy. And says within a week his work ethic and skills have gotten so much better. Says you don't walk around here and people don't know who you are. People greet you and say hello. And it makes you feel important and good about yourself.
Says he played football for one year as a kid. 10th grade he started wrestling and was pretty good, then got too big for wrestling. And then moved to another school, and his junior COVID year was cut short. And says as a senior they won their league championship, got a ring, beat the no. 1 seed, "And that achievement carried me so far." Says to be one of the youngest on the FSU team, it gives him something to live for. "I believe I will be something specific. ... I think that will be something that pushes me and drives me."
Says he loved wrestling. "I just liked to slam people, to be honest with you." Says he stopped because the private school he transferred to didn't have a team.
He says he took ground power away from wrestling. Explosion out of his stance. That's what he thinks has carried over. "I did that so much it was just right for me." Says if you watch his film you can see he has pretty good speed off the ball."
Says he's the youngest of four sisters. They're Nigerian descent. Said growing up it was strict. Said he knew at a certain time he would have to be out of the house. Said as a 17 year old boy, coming out of Baltimore, he knows how to be by himself. Because he was taught that.
On this first year of college football and redshirting: Says this year will be the most beneficial for him. "In fact, I know." Says has the size and has a chance to get even stronger. "I know Coach Odell will get me to where I need to be. I don't doubt it at all."
Says he has talked with the veteran DTs as much as possible. And they push him a lot in practice. "They keep reminding me constantly and constantly and that's what I need, because it helps me learn. ... I need to devour everything they give to me before they leave."
"The heat? Hoo boy. ... It's something I'm definitely getting used to." Says he's losing weight and drinking a lot of water. And says teammates ask him to pronounce certain words because they like his baltimore accent.
And that's a wrap on Tifase.
Julian Armella is up next.
Says he wants fans, coaches to know he's just not coming to play football. He's coming to be a student-athlete and a "dawg." And that he's going to give 100 percent all the time.
On body transformation: Said he was 301 when he got to FSU. Said he gained five pounds at first and said right now he weighs 315 pounds. "The transition has been very, very smooth." Says he's getting more muscle than fat and he's going to keep his head down and keep working.
Expectations heading to freshman season: Says his mentality is to play like a walk-on. He's going to act like he's trying to gain a spot and work his butt off until he gets one.
Says he already knows there are going to be some chippy moments in practice. But it's not going to be excessive. He's not going to be out there trying to fight everybody. "I'm just going to try to outwork you. And I feel like that just raises the standard." Says he's going to try his best to be the No. 1 runner, the No. 1 lifter, whatever he can do.
Says his favorite part of the campus is people. Says he's got teammates that he's turning into brothers. "That kind of uplifts you every day to try and go out and be great." Says the hardest transition has been maintaining his sleep schedule. It's just been making sure to get out of that high school mentality and into college mentality.
Says he thinks his work ethic is what he thinks is gaining respect from his teammates. He tries to be an uplifting presence on the field and in the room when he can be.
On choosing FSU: Says coaching staff, the players and the environment. Says Norvell and Atkins are his "Two guys." Says it was real people here in Tallahassee. He was told that if he comes in and works his butt off he could set himself up for success.
Says he wasn't trying to be on a bandwagon team. He wanted to go somewhere where he could help change the culture. Says Coach Storms has told him the team is much closer, much stronger, much more together than it has been in the past. "Everybody is on board, everybody wants the same goal."
Says his main goal is to create his own legacy. He wants his guys to forever have a mark at Florida State. Says he's not different than any of the other recruits. Says he feels a little bit of pressure because he is a legacy recruit, but he wants to make his own legacy.
Says he got rid of baby fat. He actually got down to around 275 before starting back up over 300. Says he's stronger than he's ever been.
And that's a wrap on Armella.
Antavioius Woody is the last one (his interview begins at the 8:00 mark)
On getting to Tallahassee: Says once he got here, the coaches and players greeted him with a big welcome.
Says coaching staff and freshmen pushed him and pushed him throughout the process and trying to get eligible.
On getting used to coach storms: Says he's getting the hang of it. They're going to push him as much as they can.
He says he's trying to learn as much as possible. "It's just all about learning at this point."
Says he's going to start preseason practice at guard.
On perhaps playing D-line: Says he's not worried about defense right now. Says anywhere they put him he'll play it.
Says he was into basketball and track and outdoorsy stuff growing up before football.
Says he's always played to the echo of the whistle. That's just how he's always been.
Says he is solely on O-line right now, but if fullback or defense happens, he would do that, too.
And that's a wrap on this marathon interview day!
Thanks for stopping by and reading that novel!
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Florida State football team has welcomed several new faces in recent weeks, and a contingent of those players will answer questions from the media today at noon.
The players scheduled to participate in individual interviews are:
* 4-star OL Julian Armella of Miami
* 3-star OL Jaylen Early of Duncanville, Texas
* 4-star OL Qae'shon Sapp of Leesburg, Ga.
* South Carolina OL transfer Jazston Turnetine
* 4-star OL Antavious Woody of Welch, Ala.
* 3-star DT Ayobami Tifase of Baltimore, Md.
* 3-star TE Jerrale Powers of Duncanville, Texas
Warchant will post live updates from the interviews right here in this thread. Check back around noon for updates.
Last edited by a moderator: