David Gabriel Georges’ recruitment has turned into one of the hottest battles in the 2027 cycle, and the final stretch is coming fast.
The elite running back has already taken official visits to Ohio State, Tennessee and Ole Miss, but the real tug-of-war appears to be between the Buckeyes and the Vols. CBS Sports has reported that Georges will announce his commitment on July 22, and right now there’s no obvious lean.
That uncertainty has only fueled the noise around the recruitment. National analysts have bounced back and forth between Ohio State and Tennessee, and both fanbases have been all over the matchup. When Georges visited Columbus and Knoxville in consecutive weeks, the online back-and-forth between supporters on both sides got loud in a hurry.
On Sunday night’s episode of The RTI Low-Down, RTI’s Bob Baskerville and On3’s Chris Low dug into where things stand. Low made it clear he wasn’t ready to call it.
“I’m not going to predict,” Low said. “I know everybody has predicted.
You’ve seen national recruiting analysts, some have picked Ohio State, some have picked Tennessee. Talking to people at both those schools, they both feel pretty well-positioned.”
For Tennessee, this has become more than just another recruiting chase. Many in the fanbase see Georges as a must-land prospect for Josh Heupel and his staff, especially with the in-state angle and the Vols’ offense. Low, though, said he has “mixed feelings” about how aggressively Tennessee should pursue the deal.
“I think Tennessee is prepared to pay him somewhere approaching $2 million,” Low said. “And there’s incentives in there that he could hit on that would, again, make him far and away the highest paid high school running back since we went down the NIL road.
And some people look at that - I’m sort of, I have mixed feelings. Because I give Josh a lot of credit.
He’s been able to get thousand-yard rushers out of just everybody. I mean, pretty much anybody he’s brought in here: Dylan Sampson, DeSean Bishop, who was a walk-on from Karns and had a terrific year last year, Jaylen Wright.
So having guys that have run the football for 1,000 yards hasn’t been an issue for Tennessee. Now, is Georges enough of a difference maker, where he’s going to come in and run for 1,800 or 2,000 yards?
Maybe so. Everybody I’ve talked to from the Ohio State perspective, the Georgia perspective, the Tennessee perspective, says this kid is as good as they’ve seen as a runner at this point in his career.”
Low also raised the question of whether Tennessee should spread that money around instead of pouring so much into one running back.
“If you ask me, and I know optically you’ve got to get a guy like that in your state who’s playing high school football, man, I’m hard pressed not to go spend more money on an EDGE rusher, on a left tackle, maybe on a big play receiver. Split it up a little bit more. But you know what the narrative will be, Bob, if they lose this kid to Ohio State… ‘How can you let Ohio State come in our backyard and get the best high school running back that’s come through here in a long time?'”
That’s the tension hanging over this recruitment: the obvious upside of landing a player like Georges, versus the reality that Tennessee could direct those resources elsewhere if the decision breaks against it. Either way, Low’s take added a different layer to a chase that has already been fiercely contested.
Tennessee and Ohio State both made strong impressions during their official visits, and national recruiting experts have been split on the outcome over the last couple of months. It has become one of the most heated recruiting battles in the class, with Tennessee fighting to keep one of its top in-state prospects home.
Rivals’ Industry Rankings list Georges as the No. 9 player in the class, the No. 2 running back, and the No. 1 player from Tennessee.
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