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New: Eastern Illinois Panthers Early Class of 2025

Eastern Illinois Class of 2025 Early Signing Class

My Take: In State Review from the Eastern Illinois Early Class of 2025

Eastern Illinois and head coach Chris Wilkerson had a bit of a step back season in 2024 as the Panthers finished the season with a 3-9 record. EIU had a surprising 2023 season and posted an 8-3 record.....so hopefully things will balance out for 2025 and get the Panthers back on it's winning ways? Eastern Illinois announced 10 early signings and I fully expect at least another 10 plus names to be added here in February and in most cases these will be portal additions. From an in state recruiting standpoint...this is a good class for EIU and in state nkids from a overall numbers and also a quality standpoint.

Eastern Illinois Class of 2025 In State Early Signing Class

Kennyan Chandler (Linebacker, 5-10, 230, Kankakee, Ill. / Kankakee HS)
Tyler Fortis (Defensive Line, 6-2, 265, Park Ridge, Ill. / Maine South HS)

Davian Humphrey (Linebacker, 6-1, 200, Chicago, Ill. / Phillips HS)
Le'Javier Payne (Defensive Back, 5-8, 170, Chicago, Ill. / Chicago Mt. Carmel HS)
Jett Reese (Linebacker, 6-2, 220, Chicago, Ill. / DePaul College Prep)
Barron Sholl (Defensive Line, 6-4, 240, Rockford, Ill. / Boylan Central Catholic HS)

Which In State name has the best chance of becoming an impact player?

Chicago Mount Carmel DB Havy Payne is a bit of an undersized cornerback who no question fell under the radar but who's game I feel is big time. Payne has very good instincts, is a plus defender in both pass coverage and in run support and Pyne brings energy and speed to the table every single day. Payne will have qa chnce to earn early playing time in Charleston and could end up developing into a longer term starter for the Panthers in my opinion.

Chicago DePaul Prep LB Jett Reese no question already looks physically ready for the FCS level and remains a potential steal for EIU in this class. Reese could end up playing wither ILB or could even develop into a DL down the line if needed. Reese was an impact defender for the Class 4A state champion Rams and no question has a ton to offer EIU starting next season. I really like Jett's physical tools and instincts and again he can develop into a top player sooner rather than later for the EIU Panthers in my opinion.

Sleeper In-State Name in the Class of 2024?

Kankakee LB Kennyan Chandler was a multi-year starter for the Kays and also an impact defender who is a heavy hitting mauler who runs well, has very good strength and I felt was a few inches in height away from being an FCS bane versus a potential Power 4 name. Chandler was again jsut all over the field fgor the Kays over the past few seasons and his approach and work ethic should serve him well in Charleston.

Maine South DL Tyler Fortis is the football version of a gym rat.....a kid who just outworked everyone with a non stop motor who plays with a bit of a chip and has the desire and hunger to make it. Fortis has great hands and quickness and is always working on technique and his craft. Fortis is a bit undersized but hisn overall game and tools will serve him well here.

The One Who Got Away?

Plainfield South S/OLB David Obadein had offers from EIU along with SIU and several other FCS schools. Obadein wound up signing with SIU last Wednesday and the Panthers also lost a few other names to rival FCS schools as well.

Overall Grade on the Eastern Illinois In State Class of 2024: C+

Again this story won't be fully told until February...but from an early signing period standpoint I like a lot of what EIU has done here. EIU was able to focs in pretty early on some key names and was also ble to bring this class home. The overall talent level here is good and I like also the potential on some of these new EIU players. The Panthers focus on in state names and recruiting in state names is also duly noted here and HC Chris Wilkerson has been active here in recruiting now for many years previous to his EIU tenure.



Next: Western Illinois

Public School Advantages

A great point, and a great opportunity to remind ourselves: The broader state of Illinois cares far less than this board about the performance of any football team. There are plenty of parents and educators who could care less if they win the state football championship. And that is absolutely fine. For many schools having the HC teach 5 classes might be a no-brainer.
As they probably shouldn't. For any school, public or private football or any sport performance should be way down the list of priorities.

Public School Advantages

Any school that cares about the performance of their football team does not have their HC in a classroom all day. If they are in a class, it is often one that contributes to his football team ie PE lifting class, assistant AD, Dean.

Bad programs more often than not will have their HC teach 4-5+ classes.
A great point, and a great opportunity to remind ourselves: The broader state of Illinois cares far less than this board about the performance of any football team. There are plenty of parents and educators who could care less if they win the state football championship. And that is absolutely fine. For many schools having the HC teach 5 classes might be a no-brainer.

Public School Advantages

Another point:
Many Private school Head Football Coaches do not teach during the day. They are able to work the recruiting office, break film down, make visits, prep for practice, etc.
Nearly all public school head coaches work in the building as a teacher. So, they don't get the opportunity to market their program all day to recruits. They don't get to intently watch film throughout the whole day. I don't know exactly what J. Lynch does during the school day, but I can almost guarantee that R. Zovnar has to take care of other responsibilities besides the football program.
On one side you have the HFC as the full-time job, and the other it has to be the part-time job. IMO, I think that's what makes RZ's accomplishments (and other consistent high performing public school coaches) at a public school so astounding
Any school that cares about the performance of their football team does not have their HC in a classroom all day. If they are in a class, it is often one that contributes to his football team ie PE lifting class, assistant AD, Dean.

Bad programs more often than not will have their HC teach 4-5+ classes.

Public School Advantages

That is the conversation I think we might need to start having. I personally think that the good private schools do have an advantage in terms of acquiring talent, and that the current environment of high school sports is morphing the playing field into a place where those schools are outclassing everyone by such a large margin that it's not even fun for a fandom anymore.
While it's obviously the slant of this board, I personally don't think the IHSA should be doing anything based on how "fun it is for the fandom" - their duty is to all high school athletes. Remember that the kids getting blown out by Mt. Carmel in the state quarterfinals represent a tiny percentage of the players in this state - it's a very "niche" problem.
And the few public schools that are usually pointed to as examples of why private school success is clearly just the result of "good coaching and hard work" - Maine South and Lincoln Way East - weren't honestly as close as the scores for the games they played against Loyola.

Ehhh... I don't think those questions don't get asked enough. I don't think there's any "tricking" going on either. As someone who is a fan of all high school sports, I want to think about basketball for a moment. Coaching matters there too. But there is far greater admission from basketball fans that 1-2 "dudes" raise your ceiling by A LOT. Yes, good coaches get the most out of their guys, but unless you have some dudes you're not going to get too far come playoff time. I think the same is true in football more often than we let on. Talent is the number one factor that gets teams to win deep in the playoffs (where the coaching becomes pretty comparable and every team has a strong baseline of coaching). And winning begets winning. Which means winning draws more talent. And I think one difference between basketball and football is that depth of talent matters a lot more on football teams (due to bigger rosters). Having size and strength and speed far down your roster makes your team unquestionably better.

Yes, football coaches that run great programs develop entire teams. But a football coach that doesn't have some dudes and doesn't have depth of size and talent can only do so much.
I feel like I'm beating a dead horse here... why are these DUDES going to private schools??? If you say "It's not coaching, it's not culture, it's DUDES", but then we can't point to any other reason why the DUDES are going there... It's probably coaching and culture. It doesn't mean that those coaches are wizards that can mold any bunch of random kids into a state champion, but it means that kids are attracted to the programs that choose to run themselves in the most professional and competitive of manners.
So back to the phone calls - yes, both sides make them. But, again, having seen the reaction myself, the kid being courted by a team that is routinely making the semis and championship games has his eyes light up because he knows he can go to a place where being surrounded by depth of talent is more or less guaranteed.
You have a fair point here, a winning tradition is a huge advantage. I would just posit that it's built on the back of what I mentioned above. But it's also not accurate to base an entire thesis on private schools around the two best teams in the state.
The facilities and academics and all of that other stuff don't matter in that moment (and those factors feel exaggerated by some - Loyola and Mt. Carmel, for example, have facilities and programming that are close enough to any public school that it's a negligible "con" in the decision-making process).
Loyola's facilities are meaningfully behind NT, GBS, GBN. You're right that Mt Carmel looks pretty good in comparison to the surrounding CPS schools.
If the kid chooses to go to the private school, he can play for state trophies. He doesn't have to hope to have a few other stud football players in his class in his neighborhood.
Lol... you should tell this to DeLasalle, Pats, ND, Leo, Viator, Marian, Marmion, other Marian, ACC, St. Eds... should I keep going? They are missing out, some one should tell them they can play for state trophies!!
I know the counter argument is that the trophies are proof of the "better coaching" - but come on, let's sometimes call a spade a spade. Or at least acknowledge there's more to it than just "good coaching and good culture." Private schools don't win at a proportionally much higher clip relative to how many there are in the state because of coaching alone. There's more talent. It's the "Jimmy's and the Joe's" as someone stated above. And if there's not explicitly more talent, the different rules of acquiring it make it so that it's easier to avoid a down year. Many of the public schools are dealing with pretty drastically changing demographics. Check the school report cards - there are growing Hispanic populations in almost all large suburban high schools. This is not a sleight, but that demographic often leads to less football playing population in the school. And this demographic change has led even more of the more stereotypical football-playing population to consider private schools where all of the boys still play football (and where you're more guaranteed to always have a "good class"). I think the combination of some of these factors set up some of these private schools for a sustained period of time where they dominate nearly everyone but each other.
It isn't a counter argument! It is the ANSWER to the never-answered question of why these schools "get talent"! I sound like a broken record, but "it's not coaching, culture, tradition, etc., they just get talent" doesn't make sense if you can't explain WHY they get talent! Even your point I bolded above, that is a cultural element of the school. It's also a cultural element of say, Maine South, which contributed to their many dominant years. (a relatively outdated example but one I am familiar with).

I'm not saying this is "fair" per se - you may believe that public schools, based on their mission, are unable to build the winning ecosystem to encourage the best athletes in their district to play football at a youth level and desire to attend their school. The best ones have, for a time. It also doesn't mean that every public school has the inherent potential to win state championships if they did something a different way - they don't. Other factors are at play (some of which you referenced) that effect both publics and privates and will probably similarly prevent Westmont, Payton, and Christ the King from ever winning state, to use three very different examples.

Public School Advantages

Another point:
Many Private school Head Football Coaches do not teach during the day. They are able to work the recruiting office, break film down, make visits, prep for practice, etc.
Nearly all public school head coaches work in the building as a teacher. So, they don't get the opportunity to market their program all day to recruits. They don't get to intently watch film throughout the whole day. I don't know exactly what J. Lynch does during the school day, but I can almost guarantee that R. Zovnar has to take care of other responsibilities besides the football program.
On one side you have the HFC as the full-time job, and the other it has to be the part-time job. IMO, I think that's what makes RZ's accomplishments (and other consistent high performing public school coaches) at a public school so astounding.

NIU to the Mountain West

You are correct in noting that the Mountain West Conference is losing Boise State among other fb programs.
Since conference moves are ONLY made for money, and considering that in the Mountain West, NIU would play 4 road conference games each fall in Nevada, California, Hawaii, etc, … with related travel costs.
Thus, I assume that the Mountsin West football move will be way more lucrative than staying in the Mid-American conference.
So perhaps ESPN is planning to end its money deal with the MAC to play on Tuesday/Wednesday in November.
Those games obviously make the MAC teams TV money but also make the league the worst home-attendance conference in the nation.
Maybe NIU wants to play on Saturday and have more fans at games.
Maybe the Mountain West has a new TV deal coming for 2026 and beyond that is way better than the MAC deal.
We can’t make sense of the deal without the TV dollars.
My thought on this possible football move is that I wish Illinois high schools Would form more football-only conferences, as the. Catholic league/east suburban Catholic Conf. Has done, and also how the Chicago Public League has done.
I get that the ihsa 5-win playoff standard works against building football-only conferences in which elite-team leagues csn be built and bottom feeder-leagues can be built.
It would make the 9-week regular season intense at the top end snd more enjoyable at the other end.
But of course the concept does not work for the current playoff system so it has zero chance of happening.
The weekday TV deal is actually terrible for the team.

Public School Advantages

I don't think arguments are oversimplified that often here, honestly. They're just often taken wrong. Of course there are a multitude of factors, but there's enough examples of public school success story that the origin of the complaints often seem pretty hollow. If you wanna get into why Loyola and Mt Carmel can 3 peat in 7/8A and LWE can be very good but not quite that (or Naz/Sycamore in 5A) I think that's a legit conversation you can have. But peeling back the record of the source of complaints often shows a history that isn't being thwarted by private school success, but even their inability to find success among public schools like them.
That is the conversation I think we might need to start having. I personally think that the good private schools do have an advantage in terms of acquiring talent, and that the current environment of high school sports is morphing the playing field into a place where those schools are outclassing everyone by such a large margin that it's not even fun for a fandom anymore. Even those that disagree with the first part of my statement (that privates have a talent-acquiring advantage) can at least acknowledge that there are very few schools that can even be on the same field as some of the current private juggernauts (which Snetsrak61 does seem to allude to agreeing with on some level in the statement above).

I saw it every week in the prediction threads - anyone who might predict that someone might beat a Mt. Carmel or Loyola was usually dismissed by multiple posters as "no, this game won't be close. Three scores at least." And... that was pretty much always true. And the few public schools that are usually pointed to as examples of why private school success is clearly just the result of "good coaching and hard work" - Maine South and Lincoln Way East - weren't honestly as close as the scores for the games they played against Loyola. Call me an overreactor to a short time frame (that might be a fair statement... for now) but I am genuinely concerned the gap exists and is getting larger.

The two questions that don't get asked enough are:
  • WHY is the experience going to be better at the private school? Why should the kid believe him?
  • WHY aren't the coaches from the kid's districted school making the same call? Why shouldn't the kid believe him?
Of course they can and do make those calls, but unless you think they are just "tricking" these kids into coming, there's something

Again, this is the flawed chicken and egg logic tossed around on here. Why are these "studs" just picking up and paying $12k a year to drive to some private school?? Could maybe, just maybe, coaching and culture be the essential ingredient to attract talent, especially when you are disadvantaged from a facilities, cost, and potentially academic standpoint?

Ehhh... I don't think those questions don't get asked enough. I don't think there's any "tricking" going on either. As someone who is a fan of all high school sports, I want to think about basketball for a moment. Coaching matters there too. But there is far greater admission from basketball fans that 1-2 "dudes" raise your ceiling by A LOT. Yes, good coaches get the most out of their guys, but unless you have some dudes you're not going to get too far come playoff time. I think the same is true in football more often than we let on. Talent is the number one factor that gets teams to win deep in the playoffs (where the coaching becomes pretty comparable and every team has a strong baseline of coaching). And winning begets winning. Which means winning draws more talent. And I think one difference between basketball and football is that depth of talent matters a lot more on football teams (due to bigger rosters). Having size and strength and speed far down your roster makes your team unquestionably better.

Yes, football coaches that run great programs develop entire teams. But a football coach that doesn't have some dudes and doesn't have depth of size and talent can only do so much. I read a lot on the board this year about how talented LWE was relative to everyone else. So I was excited to go to the Loyola-LWE game. The QB on LWE seems like the real deal and is clearly a great player. But I was stunned to see Loyola look so much bigger at every other position on the field. I thought they made LWE look like a JV team (I also thought the Loyola guys standing on LWE's sideline who weren't even getting playing time made LWE look like a JV team). Where was all this talent advantage of LWE I had read about? I think we had some misinformed posters, personally. And, as anyone looking at these teams stand near each other would have probably guessed, Loyola out-physicaled LWE and didn't get stopped from scoring one time the entire game on offense. LWE had the best dude, but Loyola had a few studs of their own and way more depth of talent and size.

So back to the phone calls - yes, both sides make them. But, again, having seen the reaction myself, the kid being courted by a team that is routinely making the semis and championship games has his eyes light up because he knows he can go to a place where being surrounded by depth of talent is more or less guaranteed. The facilities and academics and all of that other stuff don't matter in that moment (and those factors feel exaggerated by some - Loyola and Mt. Carmel, for example, have facilities and programming that are close enough to any public school that it's a negligible "con" in the decision-making process). If the kid chooses to go to the private school, he can play for state trophies. He doesn't have to hope to have a few other stud football players in his class in his neighborhood. (Again, to compare to basketball, coaches hope to get 1-2 good players in each class... a class without 1-2 good players means you're going to have a rough year or two while you hope the next class has some good players - this is even more imperative in football where you need multiple good players, linemen in particular, in each class to compete at the highest level).

I know the counter argument is that the trophies are proof of the "better coaching" - but come on, let's sometimes call a spade a spade. Or at least acknowledge there's more to it than just "good coaching and good culture." Private schools don't win at a proportionally much higher clip relative to how many there are in the state because of coaching alone. There's more talent. It's the "Jimmy's and the Joe's" as someone stated above. And if there's not explicitly more talent, the different rules of acquiring it make it so that it's easier to avoid a down year. Many of the public schools are dealing with pretty drastically changing demographics. Check the school report cards - there are growing Hispanic populations in almost all large suburban high schools. This is not a sleight, but that demographic often leads to less football playing population in the school. And this demographic change has led even more of the more stereotypical football-playing population to consider private schools where all of the boys still play football (and where you're more guaranteed to always have a "good class"). I think the combination of some of these factors set up some of these private schools for a sustained period of time where they dominate nearly everyone but each other.

I end my long-winded post by restating that I want a good product. The $5 for a high school game has always been the best deal in town for entertainment. But not if it's an increasing number of blowouts. I've always thought there should be more playing around with some sort of ranking formulas. For perspective, I don't think Rochester winning so many in a row at the lower class made much sense either (but we know they can't play 8A after the thrashing they got from Loyola). Aim for a competitive balance. Which is a hard thing to define... I think it's one of those "you know it when you see it" kind of things. I do think the multiplier makes sense on some level. I think a success factor makes sense on some level (for private and public - let's get East St. Louis in the higher classes!). I'm sure there are some other tweaks that people smarter than me could think of in addition to those two factors.

NIU to the Mountain West

My knee jerk answer would be "they should have just reorganized the SICA differently" but there are some lot closer to peer conferences elsewhere in the suburbs that could potentially collaborate and do this. To a degree you already see this in the CSL-MSL and the DVC-SWSC schedule arrangements.
The Fantastic SICA as we knew it is dead. The end of it was ugly for sure. When Sica was started they wanted the Illini 8 & were going to call it the Sica Southwest but they wouldn’t take Joliet Catholic or Marian Catholic so it was a no go. At one time in addition of Joliet Catholic & Marian Catholic the Sica declined Bishop Mac Riverside Brookfield,Marist,Providence Catholic,Lemont & Joliet East who was going to stay open while Central closed so they would have been Sica too

Public School Advantages

I don’t dislike the catholic schools. I was just trying to make things better. I root for 8A so none of the changes affect them. It’s more for the smaller schools. Like I said the system should be designed to make winning a championship difficult not collecting trophies every year. Private or public.
Well going from 5 to 6 to 8 classes isn't helpful towards keeping trophies rare.

But we also shouldn't immediately react to a string of trophies as something that has to be designed against. It's probably happening too frequently now, but I don't think we should reflexively race against any dynasty run as something in need of correction. Sometimes a program just raises up and is historic for some period of time and that isn't necessarily a "wrong".

Public School Advantages

We have a decent system in place already but it doesn't sound like you like the results since too many Catholic's win. There are a handful of catholic schools that win a lot and handful of publics that have win a lot, like in most sports.


Most of the the other schools private or public are never gonna win anything no matter how much tinkering is done. Success isn't fair, so the next best thing is to be given a chance. A chance that everyone has at the start of a football season.
I don’t dislike the catholic schools. I was just trying to make things better. I root for 8A so none of the changes affect them. It’s more for the smaller schools. Like I said the system should be designed to make winning a championship difficult not collecting trophies every year. Private or public.

Public School Advantages

I get that. No one is entitled to an athlete or prospective student. But let's take this example to the extreme, if all football playing boys in a class from a community chose to go to a private school, the local public school is missing an entire class of players. They cannot replace those players, they just have to coach up the other kids. So therefore, they might have zero lineman for a class, or no QB, or no skill position players. Whereas, that just will never be true for private schools. It is a scenario some private school supporters cannot fathom. What do you mean a 7A football school like Mundelein High School with 2,100 students had zero lineman in the class of 2023?
What do you mean it will never be true for private schools? For private schools, there is no "class of football playing boys from the community" to bank on to begin with! It happens to private schools all the time! What do you think happened to Guerin, or Holy Cross, or Weber, or Driscoll, or St. Joe, or Seton, or Mendel, or St. Mel? Have you seen any of those football teams running around lately?
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