Mountaineers Building Strong Georgia Pipeline

As Head Coach Dana Holgorsen and staff continue to navigate the tricky recruiting waters of Big 12 football, the Mountaineers are building a strong Georgia pipeline. These efforts are led by cornerbacks coach Doug Belk, who has proven a valuable member of the staff.

As many Mountaineer fans recall, Holgorsen initially pushed his efforts into the traditional territory with which he was familiar: Texas and Oklahoma. But West Virginia soon learned that the conference brand was not enough. So West Virginia focused on more traditional pipelines. The Mountaineers also captured over half of the in-state Power Five talent.

The Georgia Foundation

Over the last few years, however, West Virginia has turned its focus elsewhere: to the Peach State. Georgia has been a talent-rich recruiting area for years. Over the last three, though, Georgia has produced just under 10% of the total blue-chip talent in each of those recruiting cycles. The remaining three-star talent, which is also abundant, shares the field with the best players available. The resulting competition produces rich talent across all recruiting ranks.

Enter Belk. He hails from Valdosta, a town in southern Georgia with a population of around 55,000. Belk started his coaching career at Valdosta State and then took a graduate assistant position with the Alabama Crimson Tide. He worked under Nick Saban between 2014 and 2016. Ultimately, the Tide earned three straight playoff appearances and won one national championship during Belk’s tenure. During that time, he grew and maintained strong relationships throughout Georgia.

Building the Georgia Pipeline

In his first season with the Mountaineers, Belk’s connections produced quick results. He was lead recruiter for Joshua Norwood, Keith Washington, Oyenmwen Uzebu, Jayce Rogers, and Sam James. Norwood went to high school in Valdosta. So did Rogers. Uzebu hailed from Alpharetta, and James graduated from Richmond Hill.

Indeed, the State of Georgia produced four of Belk’s first five Mountaineer recruits. Norwood was a former four-star signee with Ohio State, and Washington was a former Michigan signee. And both have already produced huge snaps for the Mountaineer defense.

For the 2019 class, Belk added six more recruits, five of whom hail from Georgia. That crop includes Dreshun Miller, the speedy blue-chip cornerback who flipped his commitment from LSU to West Virginia within a week of the Early Signing Period.

In total, West Virginia has signed nine recruits from Georgia the last two years. It’s safe to say, then, that they are building a strong pipeline into the State.

The Future

Fans can expect West Virginia to keep going back to that well, too. In an interview during the Early Signing Period, Holgorsen commented, “Doug (Belk) has a good relationship with a lot of people down there.” Holgorsen added, “We’ve had success with guys there in the past (referring to Adam “Pacman” Jones and Bruce Irvin).” He even called it “as well-coached of a football state as I’ve seen.” And he lamented, “I wish I would have stumbled on it and focused on it earlier.”

As we wrote earlier, Holgorsen told the media after the season opener against Tennessee in Charlotte that the game was “great for recruiting” in North Carolina. He opined, however, that he should have sold the matchup several years ago to the players who would have been playing in that game. It is safe to say that Holgorsen learned the lesson, though. Indeed, the staff’s focus in the Peach State has helped the Mountaineers attract several recruits who could easily be on the field when the Mountaineers take on Florida State in the 2020 season opener in Atlanta.

And given Georgia’s rich football history, the Mountaineers can surely benefit from the strong pipeline.

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