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February 8, 2010
Sills: USC is 'dream school'
By Arash Markazi
The whirlwind journey of David Sills from a
13-year-old middle school quarterback to the
most talked about college recruit in the nation
continued late Friday night as he boarded a
train with his mother, Denise, father, David
Sills IV and his two older sisters, Emma, 17,
and Abby, 14, from their home in Wilmington,
Del. for an appearance on ABC's Good Morning
America.
Less than 24 hours ago Sills, who is a
seventh-grader at Red Lion Christian Academy in
Bear, Del., verbally committed to play at USC
despite not being able to officially sign his
letter of intent until 2015.
It was a decision that set off a firestorm of
opinion around the country and caused YouTube
clips of the teenage signal caller to air on
ESPN. It all came as a surprise to Sills when he
awoke Friday morning and turned on the
television.
"I felt like I was in a dream today," Sills
said. "It was so amazing to see my highlights on
TV. It was on in the restaurants and sports bars
and everywhere. I saw myself a lot on TV today."
News of Sills' commitment spread quickly
after his father informed Red Lion Christian
Academy coach Eric Day, who called The News
Journal in Delaware. Soon after Sills' father
was forced to turn off his phone, which was
being inundated with calls when the story was
picked up nationally.
"I was very surprised at how big this got,"
Sills said. "My dad told me it was going to be
big but I didn't think it was going to be this
big."
Sills actually didn't think his commitment
was that big of a deal.
"USC has always been my dream school," Sills
said. "If it was any other college I probably
wouldn't have said yes but all it is really is a
verbal commitment so I can get out of it if I
wanted to."
The backlash following Sills' commitment has
been severe. Most of the criticism has been
directed at USC coach Lane Kiffin for offering a
scholarship to a 13-year-old, Sills' father for
pushing his son into the limelight and personal
quarterback coach Steve Clarkson, who has
pipelined many of his star pupils from Matt
Leinart to Matt Barkley to USC over the years.
"I really don't care what people say about
me," Sills said. "When people say something
negative about me I just take it and work harder
because it makes me want to push harder and
train harder and work harder and prove them
wrong. I just take whatever they say negative
and turn it into a positive."
Sills' father wasn't surprised by the
reaction, admitting the whole situation seemed
odd to him at first glance.
"Even when I sit back and reflect on it, it's
shocking, weird, bizarre, you name it," said
Sills' father. "Quite frankly I think everyone
is entitled to their own opinion. The rules are
the rules and as long as you abide by the rules
then you abide by the rules. If people don't
like this they don't need to get mad about it
and bash the dad and bash the coach and bash the
kid, they should call up the NCAA and tell them
that they don't like the rules. I'm a guy that
follows the rules. Whatever the rules are, let's
play by the rules. It's very difficult as a
father to say my son shouldn't be getting
recruited at 13 so I'm not going to let him have
this opportunity."
Sills' recruitment had little to do with his
father and everything to do with Clarkson and
his relationship with Kiffin. Clarkson was the
one who called Kiffin and told him about Sills.
"Steve called me and I didn't even take the
call because I was at a job site," said Sills'
father, who is a commercial developer and
contractor. "So I called him back and he said,
'You're never going to believe it.' He was
talking to Lane about some junior quarterbacks
and potential recruits who were juniors and he
said, 'Look, I gave you Matt Leinart, I gave you
Matt Barkley, you trust me and we've known each
other for a long time and if you really want to
look at a kid you need to look at this kid from
Delaware.' So Lane looked at the video, called
Steve back and said, 'I'll offer that kid a
scholarship right now.' Steve told us that he
couldn't call us so we had to call him and gave
us his number."
Sills sat down with his parents and discussed
the offer before calling Kiffin. But it didn't
long for them to decide that USC was the right
school. It wasn't a surprise considering
Clarkson, who has USC memorabilia throughout his
office, had taken Sills to USC games, introduced
him to Pete Carroll after watching spring
practices and brought in Leinart and Barkley to
work with him.
"He has more of a relationship with USC for
all these weird reasons than any other school.
If any other school had asked him to do this I
would have told him to say no," Sills' father
said. "He decided if he was a senior he'd pick
USC, if he was a junior he'd pick USC, if he was
a sophomore he'd pick USC, if he was a freshman
he'd pick USC. So why not just pick USC now? You
think about a recruiting process taking two
years and this recruiting process took three
hours."
While Sills' father said he wasn't surprised
by the backlash, he believes people would have a
different point of view if they were the father
of a child being recruited by one of the most
storied college football programs in the
country.
"For the people that don't like kids getting
recruited early, if it was their kid, what would
they do? Would they hold them back?" Sills'
father asked. "I understand people's opinions
and I respect that everybody is allowed to have
an opinion but I don't really have a problem
with people young, old or in between getting
recruited. I don't think it's a big deal. People
talk about pressure and expectations but that's
not who David is. He doesn't feel a lot of
pressure. He loves football and he likes to have
fun. I told him if it ever gets to a point where
he's not having fun to stop and we'll play
golf."
Sills' father believes the reaction would
have been different if Sills were a prodigy
pianist offered a spot in the Philharmonic
Orchestra.
"The way I look at it is if David was a
phenomenal mathematician and I held him back,
wouldn't that be wrong? If he was a great piano
player or a gifted child actor and I held him
back, wouldn't that be wrong?" Sills' father
asked. "There are a lot of things that people
don't put a negative stigmatism to because
they're considered prodigies and all I'm doing
is saying David has been recognized as a decent
athlete and I'm allowing him to fulfill whatever
opportunities that he can. It's as simple as
that. There's no pressure, there's gentle
encouragement. He's the one that always says dad
let's go to the gym and let's throw. It's what
he enjoys doing. If he ever got to a point where
he doesn't love what he does I told him to
stop."
As Sills sat next to his dad on the train to
New York for the first of what could be a series
of interviews (Clarkson's publicist is working
on getting him on a variety of national shows),
he said he was as nervous as he was last night
when he talked to Kiffin, shaking as he talked
to him on the phone. Sills' father was also
nervous for a different reason. He was still
hoping their decision and the publicity that has
come with it would be worth it for his son and
his family.
"I'm just trying to give him every
opportunity that I can," Sills' father said.
"There are people who support the decision and
people who don't support the decision and I'm
just hoping that I'm making the best decision
for my child and I hope he's making the right
decision for himself." |