Football Recruiting Report
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
By
Sammy Batten |
|
ECU's offensive
line of the future taking shape
Laney's Williams joins
front line recruits Ashley, Matau, Smith
By
Sammy Batten
©2012 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
For years when he was
younger, Larry Williams wasn't allowed to play organized football
because of his size. Now, because of that and the agility he's developed
through hard work and dedication, the Wilmington, NC, product is getting
the opportunity to play at the college level as an adult.
The 6-foot-3, 275-pound
offensive lineman from E.A. Laney High School accepted an offer to join the
East Carolina University program next fall earlier this month as the Pirates
continued stockpiling blocking talent in their recruiting Class of 2013.
Williams is the fourth in-state offensive lineman to make a verbal
commitment to ECU, joining Havelock's
Malcolm Ashley,
Christian Matau of New Bern
and
Brandon Smith from
Kernersville.
Williams has been a two-way
starter since his sophomore season at Laney, but head coach Greg Ditz was
aware of him long before he reached the varsity.
“He used to come over here
when he was just in the seventh and eighth grade in the summer,'' Ditz said.
“He played JV as a freshman, then we started him on the varsity as a
sophomore.
“Larry has kind of always had
the size, but as a sophomore he was a little timid. But you could start to
see by the end of his sophomore season he was starting to understand what it
took to be a man on the football field. His junior year, he just took over
and blossomed like a switch went off in his head. He realized he could
dominate anybody.
“He's just a great kid, a hard
worker and a real coach's dream.''
Williams attributes his early
struggles to inexperience. After all, he wasn't allowed to play football
until he reached the seventh grade because of local weight limits in the
recreation leagues.
“I was always too big to play
Pop Warner football,'' Williams said. “I was like 170 pounds in the fourth
grade. I was over the limit by 40 pounds, so there was no way I could ever
play.
“It hurt. I wanted to play so
bad, but I had to wait. When I finally did get to play in the seventh grade,
I fell in love with it.''
Williams quickly learned that
he needed to be in better shape and move faster to be successful on the
football field. Ditz said Williams dedicated himself to the weight room and
the track long before he played in a varsity game.
The result has been a more
agile athlete, who has been timed at 4.9 seconds in the 40-yard dash.
“That's moving pretty well,''
Ditz said. “Because of his speed, we've played him at guard rather than
tackle. We run a lot of counter plays. Every time he was pulling and kicking
out the defensive end on those counters last year there was always a big
collision.''
Despite his impressive size
and athleticism, Williams wasn't able to land a scholarship offer from the
school he actually favored at the start of the recruiting process.
N.C. State had begun
recruiting Williams during his sophomore season. But after he didn't receive
a scholarship while attending the Wolfpack's summer camp June 23, Williams
decided to take his talents to Greenville.
The Pirates had offered a
scholarship to Williams after watching him perform at their summer camp on
June 10.
“(Offensive coordinator)
Lincoln Riley told me my performance at camp was one of the best he'd ever
seen,'' Williams said. “I was wanting to go to N.C. State because they had
been recruiting me since I was a sophomore. I went up there (to camp) and
did a little as an offensive lineman, but the majority of my work was with
the defensive lineman.
“They (State coaches) said I
was good and I was definitely a Division I athlete, but that they didn't
need offensive guards. They are looking for offensive tackles. I guess they
were looking for someone taller. They like their tackles to be 6-6 or 6-7.''
N.C. State's loss is ECU's
gain.
Although he has performed well
on the defensive front in high school, the Pirates plan to use Williams
primarily at offensive guard.
“That's the plan, I think, but
I wouldn't mind playing some defensive tackle or defensive end,'' Williams
said. “But Coach Riley said they wanted me as an inside guy (on offensive
line) along with the other guard from New Bern (Matau). But Coach Riley also
said they like their linemen to be versatile enough to play any spot on the
line.''
E-mail Sammy Batten
PAGE UPDATED
07/17/12 03:16 PM.
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