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Houston Westfield running back Daniel Young is now the second in-state player to pick up a Thursday offer from the Texas Longhorns, joining Wylie East’s Eno Benjamin:
Blessed to have received my 11th offer from The University of Texas #HookEm pic.twitter.com/lclE0mJr4I
— Daniel young (@Kidddvnn) December 8, 2016
New Texas assistant Corby Meekins coached Young at Westfield before joining Tom Herman’s staff at Houston. After that, Meekins’ brother, Matt, took over that role.
Young pledged to the Cougars in late September over finalists Boise State, Minnesota, and Nebraska. In the immediate wake of the offer, Young made tentative plans to take an official visit to Texas, though the timing isn’t yet clear.
When he does, expect him to flip to the Longhorns and join Herman in Austin — there was already a prediction that he would do exactly that in the immediate aftermath of Herman’s hire at Texas.
A consensus three-star prospect, Young is the No. 915 player nationally, the No. 58 running back, and the No. 129 player in the state of Texas, according to the 247Sports Composite rankings.
As a senior, the 6’0, 210-pounder carried the ball 176 times for 1,290 yards and 19 touchdowns. During his sophomore season, he played on defense at linebacker.
When Young attended the Houston The Opening Regional camp this year, he posted a 4.80 40-yard dash, a 4.47 shuttle, and a 34.2-inch vertical leap. His good vertical suggests that with more speed training, he could improve his marks in the 40 and the shuttle.
Watching Young in pads, he plays a little faster than those testing times — he has good initial burst and can run away from high school opponents at the 6A level in a talent-rich city.
More importantly in projecting Young to college, he’s a legitimate 210 pounds and has a good center of gravity, a thickly-built lower body, and the willingness to play behind his pads and punish defenders in the open field.
He can also do some of the little things — there’s a clip of him in pass protection, he keeps the ball high and tight to finish runs, and though he’s not elite in terms of his jump cut or slide cut, he does make nice moves in the hole to crease defenses.