Football Recruiting Report
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
By
Sammy Batten |
|
Big play RB Lee
aims for quick impact
Palmetto
State star's breakaway speed well-suited for ECU's spread offense
By
Sammy Batten
©2012 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
Robbie Brown was telling
anyone who would listen back in the fall of 2009 that Jabo Lee was
special.
Brown is the offensive
coordinator at Dillon (SC) High School where Lee was a freshman running back
at the time. The Wildcats had made it all the way to the state AA, Division
I state championship game against Pageland with Lee joining the starting
lineup early in the season.
"We had seen him at the junior
high level and had seen flashes that he had the tools to be something
special,'' Brown said. "But with him new to our system and just learning the
dynamics of it, we brought him off the bench the first couple of games. But
after about two games we saw he was better than our junior running back.''
Lee rewarded the Dillon
coaching staff for their confidence by producing a 61-yard touchdown run to
break open the championship game and lead the Wildcats to a 21-20 triumph.
It would be the first of two straight state titles for Dillon and Lee.
During those championship
runs, Lee caught the eye of East Carolina's staff while Skip Holtz was head
coach. When Holtz left for the job at South Florida, incoming ECU coach
Ruffin McNeill and his new staff picked up Lee's recruitment.
Their hard work paid off when
Lee decided to make a verbal commitment to the Pirates in late March. He did
so over an offer list that included Bowling Green, Miami (OH), Minnesota,
Tennessee and Virginia Tech.
Longtime Dillon head coach
Jackie Hayes also serves in the South Carolina House of Representatives and
wasn't available for comment on Lee last week. But Brown, who hails from the
same Robeson County in North Carolina that also produced ECU's McNeill, has
been the main person charged with finding ways to utilize Lee since his
freshman season.
The Pirates have held the
upper hand with Lee since he made an unofficial visit to Greenville last
season to watch ECU play in-state rival North Carolina, according to Brown.
"He had a lot of interest,
from Georgia and Virginia Tech in particular,'' Brown said. "But I think
what sold him on East Carolina was the fact that he can go in and have an
immediate impact. He went to the ECU-UNC game this past season and was
really impressed with the staff at East Carolina. In the back of his mind, I
think he kind of made up his mind, but he didn't want to say. He went up for
a repeat visit about a week ago and that sold him.''
ECU currently has five
scholarship running backs on its roster, but will lose senior Reggie Bullock
to graduation after the 2012 season. Three other backs — Michael Dobson,
Hunter Furry and Torrance Hunt — are on track to depart at the end of the
2013 campaign.
Brown believes Lee, a
5-foot-9, 175-pounder with 4.4-second speed in the 40-yard dash, will fit
perfectly in ECU's spread offensive attack.
"We run exactly, or very close
to what ECU does,'' Brown said. "We have always had a lot of skill players
here, so we went to the spread about six or seven years ago. It was the best
move we ever made. We've won two state titles and have been in the hunt for
several others since we made that move.
"Last year I spent some time
talking with (ECU offensive coordinator) Coach (Lincoln) Riley. He told me
Jabo is a perfect fit offensively for what they want to do because of his
explosiveness and agility.''
Lee almost led Dillon to a
third straight state championship as a junior. The Wildcats reached the
state finals only to fall 18-15 when Timberland converted a 41-yard field
goal with 10 seconds to play.
The game ended another stellar
season for Lee, who rushed for 85 yards on 18 carries in the finals. Lee
finished the year with 1,642 yards rushing and 27 touchdowns.
Big plays are Lee's specialty,
according to Brown, who cited examples made during the 2010 run to the state
championship.
"In the state championship
game that year, he made two plays, one off a screen pass and another off a
flare pass,'' Brown said. "He actually got the first-down yardage because of
the design of the plays, but he broke two or three tackles and scored two
touchdowns that put the team we were playing in a big hole.
"He makes things happen all
the time, even when he does something wrong. I've seen him drop a kickoff
and have it go behind him. He picks it up and is all of a sudden surrounded
by a pack of defenders. But somehow he comes out of the pack and there he
goes. Once he breaks containment, it's over. He's got that kind of speed.''
Lee has become well known
throughout South Carolina because of his exploits on the football field and
his friendly personality off of it.
"He's a leader,'' Brown said.
"The kids in school look up to him. I can go anywhere around the state and
have a Dillon shirt on and it never fails, someone will come up to me and
ask, 'Hey, you're from Dillon? You know Jabo Lee?'
"He's made a real big name for
himself around the state.''
The Pirates are hoping that in
the coming years Jabo Lee becomes a household name in North Carolina, too.
E-mail Sammy Batten
PAGE UPDATED
05/08/12 03:09 AM.
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