Bill Belichick and North Carolina kept pressing after Chad Willis had already made his choice, and it paid off.
The three-star wide receiver from Orchard Lake, Michigan had committed to Cincinnati in early May, which looked like the end of his recruitment. Then Auburn and UNC entered the picture two weeks later, and Willis did the smart thing: he slowed everything down, visited all three schools, and weighed his options before deciding where he wanted to play college football.
That decision now points him to Chapel Hill.
Inside Carolina reported that Willis has flipped from Cincinnati to North Carolina after taking the final visit in his three-campus tour over the last few weekends. He becomes the 18th commitment in UNC’s Class of 2027 and joins A mare Patterson and Anthony Williams as wide receivers already in the fold.
Willis brings a frame that stands out right away. He is listed at 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, the kind of big target that can win ugly plays and give an offense a reliable answer when it needs one. Andrew Ivins, the Director of Scouting at 247Sports, described him as a “Big, outside target that fits the bill of a modern possession wide receiver.”
Ivins also noted that Willis “Came in right around 6-foot-3, 215 pounds spring before senior season after adding significant mass,” and pointed to the traits that make him more than just a size profile. He is “Crafty with his releases and can create quick separation,” “Powers his way through contact and gets large at the catch point,” and “Understands how to use the sideline to his advantage on out-breaking routes.”
The evaluation doesn’t stop there. Ivins said Willis “Gives effort as a blocker on the perimeter,” and while he “Might not profile as a true burner,” his ability “to make tough catches in traffic shouldn’t be ignored.” Ivins added that he “Projects as a potential multi-year contributor and likely starter at the Power Four level.”
That kind of skill set should fit a North Carolina offense that likes to run the football. Willis may not be the flashiest receiver in the class, but he brings the sort of physical, useful game that can matter every Saturday. He can help as a pass catcher and as a blocker, which makes him an easy fit for what UNC wants to do.
Belichick and his staff have been chasing playmakers since arriving on campus, and they’ve already put together a solid group of receivers for the 2027 class. With Willis now aboard, the Tar Heels have three committed wideouts who could develop into long-term pieces at the position.
The route to Chapel Hill wasn’t as direct as it was for some of the other commits, but UNC got the result it wanted: another talented football player in the class.
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