Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/1169916
P
enn State football fans who are also
followers of Pennsylvania high school
football had good reason to question the
quality and depth of talent that existed
in the Keystone State a>er only one
player in the Class of 2020 – Julian
Fleming of Southern Columbia High in
Catawissa – ended up being ranked
among the nation's top 250 prospects by
Rivals.com.
The striking absence of Pennsylvania
players on the Rivals250 raised anew a
question that Penn State fans have been
dwelling on for the past few years: Is the
state's talent base dwindling to the point
where Penn State will have to perma-
nently change its approach to recruiting,
de-emphasizing Pennsylvania and fo-
cusing on other, more-distant high
school football hotbeds? The Nittany
Lions want to be able to compete for the
Big Ten championship on an annual
basis, so if they can't ;nd the players
they need within a 350-mile radius of
campus, what choice do they have but to
look elsewhere?
The perception that Pennsylvania isn't
producing elite players they way it did in
the 1970s, '80s and '90s is rooted in de-
mographic changes that have taken
place over the past 25 years. Those
changes have manifested themselves in
very obvious ways. The Big 33 Game, for
example, used to be one of the great high
school all-star games in the country,
pitting the top players in Pennsylvania
against their counterparts from states
like Ohio and Texas. Now, however, it's
di=cult for the game's administrators
and coaches to ;ll a roster with blue-
chip players.
Something else to consider is the com-
position of Penn State's recent recruit-
ing classes. It's become apparent to
those who follow recruiting with a pas-
sion that the Nittany Lions might end up
signing no more than four or ;ve Penn-
sylvania players in any given year. In
2017, they signed only ;ve in-state re-
cruits: running back Journey Brown, de-
fensive lineman Damion Barber, safety
Lamont Wade and o

