July 13, 2008
Pete Sampson
IrishIllustrated.com
Charlie Weis probably didn't mind this vacation time out.
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Watt ranks as the second highest rated prospect in this class. |
On the beach with his son Sunday afternoon, the Notre Dame head coach received a call from elite offensive guard
Chris Watt
with news the Irish program had been working to hear for nearly six
months. The four-star prospect from Glen Ellyn, Ill., wanted to take
himself off the market with a commitment to Notre Dame.
"He had heard that I wanted to talk to him," Watt said. "He was very excited about the commitment. He was thrilled."
Watt's decision to select Notre Dame over Ohio State became official
today, but the 6-foot-3, 280-pound prospect began the process of
committing to the Irish two days ago when he tracked down recruiting
coordinator Rob Ianello. Watt let Ianello know he wanted to be a part
of the Notre Dame program, meaning the only move left was to phone Weis.
Watt is Notre Dame's 12th commitment and the second on the offensive
line alongside guard Alex Bullard. Those two figure to be practicing
together often in coming seasons.
"That's what the plan is for right now, definitely offensive guard,"
Watt said. "I'm going to try to come in and compete there. I'm open to
them having me play any position."
Watt also ranks as the second highest rated prospect in this
developing class behind five-star running back Cierre Wood. Yet in
terms of heated recruitments, nobody beats the Chicagoland prospect.
The latest Irish pledge was almost a fixture in South Bend during
the past six months, hitting junior days, spring practices and summer
workouts. He was doing much of the same at Ohio State too, leaving Watt
conflicted about where he wanted to spend his college career.
Watt eventually made a list of pros and cons for his favorites, then
handed it to his parents. Watt said at times he was leaning to Ohio
State while his father liked Notre Dame.
"They were happy with whatever decision I made," Watt said. "They
were kind of surprised when I told them and I handed them the phone to
talk to coach Ianello. They weren't expecting a commitment. They were
happy.
"It just hit me that Notre Dame was where I wanted to be."
The Irish roster helped that cause, specifically freshman Sean
Cwynar. Watt also credited Dayne Crist, Trevor Robinson and Brandon
Walker for making him feel welcome on the Irish roster during multiple
stops in South Bend.
"The people surrounding Notre Dame really got to me," Watt said.
"Obviously all the kids there I just really liked hanging out with.
Sean showed me around and really let me know what the program is really
about and that there's no B.S. there."
The recruiting process probably held some of that for Watt, who said
he enjoyed the college courtship for the most part but that it also
became tiresome.
"It was an interesting process and kind of a learning process going
through it," Watt said. "I really didn't know what I was going to do.
Every coach you met you liked better than the last one. Each school you
saw you liked better than the last one."
Selecting between Weis and Jim Tressel gave Watt two renowned options.
"You can't beat Coach Tressel. He's a phenomenal person and a good
coach, but it's about the overall school and everything," Watt said.
"Coach Weis is an NFL coach and to play for him is a very big step.
Just the overall package of everything, being close to home and being
in a big-time football program with really good academics, that was all
big.
"It's always been a dream school."