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Tennessee Recruiting: Bynum Rounds Out the 2012 Class

With Dalton Santos and Otha Peters bailing on their long-time Tennessee commitments and heading to Texas and Arkansas respectively within a week of National Signing Day, the Volunteers were left in a quandary.

Derek Dooley had just hired Alabama linebackers coach Sal Sunseri, who was going to switch UT from a 4-3 base defense to a 3-4. And, now, all of a sudden the Vols were short on linebacker depth.

Needing at least another player at that position with little time to recruit, the Vols went looking for one they could possibly poach. That search began -- and ended -- with Jacksonville, Fla. linebacker Kenneth Bynum, a long-time Cincinnati Bearcats commitment. Sunseri convinced Bynum to hold off signing with Cincy until he visited Knoxville after National Signing Day. After a little more than a week of deliberation, Bynum notified the Vols he'd be the team's newest member Wednesday afternoon.

Star-divide

Bynum, who stands at 6-feet-2 and weighs around 220 pounds, is an inside linebacker prospect, filling a major position of need as UT transitions to the 3-4. Counting grayshirt Tino Thomas, Bynum is the Vols' 22nd and final commitment for this year's class.

His strengths are obviously his frame, tackling ability, ability to shed blockers and football acumen. Though he isn't the fastest player in the class by any means, speed is an asset -- not a necessity -- for playing inside in a 3-4. The Raines HS senior will be a candidate to redshirt, have a year in the strength and conditioning program and be ready to compete in 2013. If he comes in, adds the right kind of weight and learns the new defense, however, there is certainly playing time to be earned on the inside.

Bynum is currently at around 217 pounds because he is a high school wrestler who must control his weight, but Bynum played last year at over 225 and, honestly, needs to be more than 235 to play the position in Sunseri's defense. Alabama's middle linebackers -- Dont'a Hightower and Nico Johnson -- weighed 260 and 245 respectively. CJ Mosley was 235 and Trey DePriest was 242, and they also played there.

He was universally rated a three-star prospect by everybody but Scout, who rated him a two-star. ESPN rated Bynum as the 56th-best outside linebacker, 247 had him as the 31st-best inside linebacker, Rivals didn't rate him other than giving him three stars, and Scout had him as the No. 116 outside linebacker.

Bynum had interest from schools such as LSU, Georgia, Florida and Florida State, though none of them offered. He was offered by Ole Miss late after deciding to wait until after NSD. He had offers from UT, Cincinnati, Georgia Tech, Illinois, North Carolina, N.C. State, Ole Miss, Rutgers, Southern Miss, Stanford and West Virginia.

Though it was a bummer to lose a couple of potential stars like Santos and Peters, you hate to pluck a player from another school this late, putting them in the same predicament the Vols were that late in the game. But recruiting is a cutthroat business, and UT needed another linebacker. I'm more than happy to get Bynum in to school and get him working toward getting on that football field. Hopefully, he is an SEC-caliber talent, and he'll have every opportunity to prove that.

Welcome to Big Orange Country, Mr. Bynum.

0 recs  |  11 comments

Comments

That gigantic T in the Dooley picture is freaking me out.

It’s watching me sleep.

I thought Upshaw was an outside backer?

In NFL draft circles he seems to be considered as a “Jack” in a 3-4 or perhaps a pass rush DE in a 4-3.

You're right. It was Hightower, Nico Johnson, CJ Mosley, Trey DePriest

But Hightower was 260. Mosley was 235. And DePriest was 242.

Will change that. Sorry. I was thinking Hightower was the Jack for some reason, which he was when Rolo was there, but he moved inside.

Ah, okay.

I don’t actually follow Bama’s particular personnel that closely, but there are some Bama fans over at Music City Miracles who have talked about drafting Upshaw as a DE.

Either way, you’re absolutely correct. Bynum will need to add some bulk to truly stand out in this system. Now that he’s not worried about wrestling, let’s hope he can do that.

NOT THE NEXT POST ANYMORE, BRAD

/40-reply-buffer-zone

That's just cold, main.

Cold.

He can, from what I understand.

A recruiting guy I know believes he’ll be able to surge to 235 quickly and easily. It wouldn’t surprise me on that frame for him to be at least that in August. You’ve got to believe if he played at 225 throughout the season, that’s natural for him, and he’s just really working it to get to 217.

As a former wrestler...

I’ll tell you that keeping that weight down is usually a pain in the butt, his natural weight is probably closer to 235-240. Almost everyone wrestles down a weight class.

Welp, Brad's forgotten nested replying again.

;-)

Nah. I remember how, but I just guess I didn't see the need in it when I knew I was going to be the next post

I mean, I see the need in it, but I just elected not to do it.

#rebel

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