Florida State’s recruiting frustrations in its own backyard took another hit when 2028 four-star cornerback Kahmaree Crumity released his Top 10 and left the Seminoles out of it.
That omission stings even more because Crumity is a local name. He plays at Lincoln High School, just down the road, and Florida State had hosted him nine times over the past year-plus.
Five of those visits came since the calendar turned to 2026. Still, when the list came out, FSU was nowhere to be found.
Crumity’s Top 10 includes Tennessee, UCLA, Texas A&M, Notre Dame, Ole Miss and Auburn, among others. According to 247Sports, the race is really tightening around a final five of Clemson, Indiana, Miami, Louisville and Auburn.
There’s another layer to this one, too. Crumity transferred to Lincoln from Gadsden County High School, a program with a direct connection to Florida State’s director of recruiting, Devin Rispress. Even with that tie and all those visits, the Seminoles couldn’t get into the mix.
For Mike Norvell, it’s the latest sign that Florida State’s pull has slipped with local elite talent. The Seminoles have been busy adding commitments over the last month, but those moves haven’t changed the bigger picture for a 2027 class that still isn’t gaining much traction.
The larger issue is obvious: Florida State keeps getting squeezed in-state. The Seminoles have to fight Florida and Miami for top local players, while also fending off the national programs that come into the Sunshine State every year. And right now, they’re losing too many of those battles.
This isn’t the only recent blow, either. Just weeks ago, in-state four-star safety Mekhi Williams backed off his commitment to Florida State and chose Miami instead.
Williams wasn’t some ordinary flip. He was a top-100 national prospect, the No. 10 safety in the country, and FSU’s highest-rated recruit. He was also one of the few blue-chip, nationally ranked players in the Seminoles’ 2027 class.
Crumity’s production at Gadsden County also gave him plenty of attention before the transfer. As a sophomore, he finished with 33 tackles, 6 pass deflections and 1 interception, and he earned first-team All-Big Bend honors after the season.
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For 16 years, Woody Hayes has been part of the rhythm of game day at Doak Campbell Stadium, the familiar public address voice that helped set the tone for Florida State football afternoons. His run began after succeeding Nick Menacof, and over time he became one of those steady details fans could count on whenever the Seminoles took the field.
Florida State has now confirmed that his football duties will end after the 2025 season, while also noting his long service and contributions to the program. Hayes will stay on as the announcer for the Seminoles mens and womens basketball games, leaving one of the most recognizable voices in Tallahassee still tied to the school even as a familiar part of Saturdays changes. [Read more 🡒]
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Florida State has multiple players who could be affected, including a group of true seniors whose decisions would shape both the present and the next step of the program. Some are established contributors, others are coming off injuries or looking for a bigger role, and the new rule gives each of them another layer to weigh before the offseason takes hold. The bigger question now is how many of those veterans decide the Seminoles are worth one more year, and which positions could look very different if they do. [Read more 🡒]
Mike Norvell's Job Security Could Hinge On More Than A Bowl
Florida States schedule has a way of turning every week into a referendum, and the next stretch looks especially unforgiving for a program still trying to measure where it stands under Mike Norvell. The backdrop matters here too: the Seminoles are still chasing the kind of standard that defined the 1990s, when winning seasons were the expectation rather than the talking point, and even a solid finish can feel like it comes with an asterisk if the marquee games go sideways.
Miami looms as the kind of matchup that can reshape the conversation fast, because it is not just about one result but about how the rest of the season gets framed afterward. Florida State also keeps adding pieces around the margins, including South Carolina right-hander Alex Philpott, while former Seminole Myron Rolle is back in the news for joining the NFLPA as a special advisor on brain health and preventive care, but the real pressure still sits on the field and on the head coachs future. [Read more 🡒]
