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claymore
02-05-2010, 07:43 AM
Middle-schooler David Sills verbally commits to USC

David Sills, a highly-touted youth quarterback, made a verbal commitment tonight to accept a college football scholarship from USC.


Sills is not even in high school yet. He is a seventh-grader at Red Lion Christian Academy in Bear.

Red Lion high school varsity coach Eric Day confirmed the decision by Sills tonight, also confirming that USC coach Lane Kiffin offered the scholarship tonight to the 13-year-old Sills.


"I'm very excited but I was very, very nervous," Sills said tonight about talking to Kiffin over the phone. "It was very cool [to talk to Kiffin] but my heart was beating so fast, and I was scared. But after it was over, I was so excited and pumped."


"It has been a very interesting last few hours," his father, David Sills IV, said tonight shortly after 9 p.m.


Since 2006, Sills has been trained in California about six or seven times a year by Steve Clarkson, a former trainer of Matt Leinart, Ben Roethlisberger and current USC quarterback Matt Barkley.


Sills IV related a conversation between Clarkson and Kiffin tonight, saying that Clarkson told Kiffin that the younger Sills is "the best I've ever coached," and that Kiffin, as he was watching online video of Sills, told Clarkson "I'd sign that kid today."


Sills is 5-foot-11 and 136 pounds, with doctors having told him he will grow to be 6-foot-5.


"I've always imagined in my dreams going to USC," he said. "But I never really detailed it to the phone call. All I imagined was playing in the Coliseum. But this is so crazy and out of nowhere."


Sills IV said he talked many times with his son about college, specifically USC, cautioning his son about "if that opportunity is there when the time comes.


"We assumed that would be when he was a junior [in high school]," Sills IV said.


Day, previously an assistant coach at two colleges, including Delaware State, said Sills makes believers out of people once they see him play.


"Besides his talent the maturity for his age and just how he handles himself," Day said, "people are drawn to him. All the intangibles you look for in a quarterback, he has."


Sills will be able to sign a letter of intent in February 2015, unless of course NCAA regulations have changed by then.


In the hours after delawareonline.com broke the story, "David Sills" became a trending topic on Twitter.
Read more in Friday's editions of The News Journal. Contact Buddy Hurlock at bhurlock@delawareonline.com.

NUb8F8Ltru0

claymore
02-05-2010, 07:43 AM
He wears a number 7 too. :salute:

CoachChaz
02-05-2010, 12:33 PM
We'll see where he is once he's in college. Looks like he has a nice arm and good accuracy, but come on...he's 13.

underrated29
02-05-2010, 01:07 PM
He needs to grow into his body otherwise someone is going to snap those chop stick legs he has.

Ravage!!!
02-05-2010, 01:10 PM
are you kidding? that kid is going to spend the next 5 years being a HUGE USC fan. If he has a chance, he's going to USC.

I wish we had that kind of offense when I played QB in Jr High. We ran that damned wish-bone. I STILL have dreams about reading the tackle, TE, DB.. and PITCH *grumbles*

silkamilkamonico
02-05-2010, 02:03 PM
What's more likely, Kiffin will be gone at USC or USC will be on some kind of major violation?

Skinny
02-05-2010, 08:47 PM
Getting early teen commitments like this are happening in college baseball as well..
Nick Ciuffo commits to USC (http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2009/dec/08/nick-ciuffo-commits-usc/)
Dec 8, 2009

Wando High School freshman Nick Ciuffo has never played in a varsity baseball game. Yet, this past weekend, the 14-year-old catcher committed to play for the South Carolina Gamecocks.

Baseball insiders believe Ciuffo is the first baseball player in South Carolina, and perhaps the Southeast, to be offered a college baseball scholarship before playing a varsity game in high school.

Thediamondprospects.com, a Web site dedicated to high school baseball in South Carolina, called the commitment unprecedented and said Ciuffo is the first player in the Southeast to commit to a college prior to playing in a varsity game.


That's just crazy.