Max Brown announcement that he is leaving the florida gators now another significant issue for the Team…
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Something doesn’t add up when you look at Max Brown’s recruiting profile. In his junior and senior seasons at Lincoln Christian School in Tulsa, Oklahoma, he completed a combined 71.6 percent of his passes for 4,416 yards with 68 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. He also added 2,335 yards and 33 more scores on the ground. He produced a sparkling 41-4 touchdown-to-interception ratio as a senior.
He led the Bulldogs to consecutive undefeated regular seasons and appearances in the state championship game.
“Max is just a tremendous athlete,” Lincoln Christian head coach Jerry Ricke said. “He’s definitely your dual-threat type quarterback. He’s got a big arm, a live arm. A kid that understands what it takes to win, just great leadership skills, and he’s a guy that wants the ball in his hands in crucial moments in big games.
Brown was also a standout shortstop and catcher on Lincoln’s baseball team and possibly could’ve played professional baseball if he had chosen to go that route.
His father is former Tulsa and Atlanta Falcons receiver Corey Brown.
So, Brown has gaudy statistics, athleticism, a track record of helping his teams win at a high level and an NFL bloodline. What’s not to like, right?
And yet, the final 247Sports Composite rankings had 95 quarterbacks ranked ahead of him. His only college offers were from Central Michigan, Temple, Washington and Florida.
Of course, it only takes one major school to believe in you in recruiting, and that’s exactly what happened with Brown. Billy Napier targeted him fairly early on after he accepted the Florida job. Brown took an official visit in late January, received an offer and flipped his commitment from Central Michigan shortly thereafter. He signed in February and is only a few weeks away from enrolling at UF.