Pryor's not talking but still gets warm welcome from hoops fans
Mar 19, 2008 It's Ohio State.
Terrelle Pryor announced today at noon that he's signing with the Buckeyes, spurning Penn State and Michigan.
The nation's top-ranked football recruit placed an Ohio State cap upon his head in the auditorium of his Jeannette (Pa.) High School.
At 6-foot-6, 220 pounds, Pryor is the only Pennsylvania quarterback to throw and rush for over 4,000 yards in his scholastic career.
The Jeannette quarterback said he made his decision this morning.
"I shouldn't feel bad, but I feel bad," Pryor said of picking Ohio State over Michigan. "I just had too much of a bond with [Wolverines] coach [Rich] Rodriquez and Gibby [Michigan assistant Tony Gibson]. I mean, they just had hopes on me, and I let him down. But I'm going with coach Tress [Jim Tressel]."
Pryor made news last month when he delayed his college decision on national signing day. He was scheduled to sign with Ohio State, but chose to extend the process because he wanted to visit Penn State and Oregon.
At the time, Pryor's father, Craig, convinced him to take a more serious look at Penn State.
But he never went on official visits to Penn State or Oregon.
Pryor was asked about Penn State after leading Jeannette to Saturday's Class AA boys' state championship win over Strawberry Mansion in Penn State's Bryce Jordan Center.
He said the school was "too country" for him.
Pryor was asked why he didn't select Penn State during yesterday's press conference.
"Penn State was not the place for me," he said.
Why?
"Because it's not," he added.
Everything Pryor has done during the past month suggested that Ohio State was the frontrunner.
He said in the past that he wasn't focusing on football until after the basketball season. As a result, he has put off an official visit to Penn State.
But Pryor managed to attend the Ohio State-Wisconsin basketball game in Columbus on Feb. 24, a day after leading Jeannette to the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League Class AA championship.
Blessed with great size, quickness and speed, he is regarded as the nation's No. 1 football prospect by both Scout.com and Rivals.com.
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