Community Film Room, Episode 49
In this article:
Our Winter rankings update pinpointed even more players from the 2025, 2026 and 2027 classes who have stood out in their respective positions. For a variety of reasons, our team decided that each of those new additions were worthy of…
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Continue ReadingOur Winter rankings update pinpointed even more players from the 2025, 2026 and 2027 classes who have stood out in their respective positions. For a variety of reasons, our team decided that each of those new additions were worthy of a coveted spot in our rankings.
But we’d be naive to think we’ve evaluated everyone or didn’t miss a few along the way.
PRZ South Carolina is constantly looking at as many of the 10,000-plus prep football players in the SCHSL and SCISA ranks as possible.
Now, the Community Film Room is back.
In each edition, we’ll break down five unranked players from across the state to let you see what we’re seeing. The series will lead right into the the start of the spring rankings cycle, the ever-growing importance of the summer schedule and then the 2024 season.
In Episode 49, we’ve got another five players in five different positions who have shown flashes of brilliance and are ready to take on more consistent roles with their individual squads.
We’re going to attack the icing on the cake first, if for no other reason that it kicks off Glymph’s junior reel. He caught nine passes (including his insane first highlight) for 154 yards yards and a touchdown and added two carries for 27 yards and another score.
Not a bad appetizer for a player who is so much better on the other side of the ball. Playing as a safety with considerable coverage skills, Glymph tallied 52 total tackles, four tackles for loss, two forced fumbles, three pass break-ups and an interception last year.
He tackles well, can fight through opposing receivers when the ball is in the air and has the speed to get where he should be.
Too often we see tailbacks being over-patient in a way, juking in the backfield before anyone is close to them searching for perfect. White is not that type of tailback.
He get to the hole and bursts through it as fast as he can. Take this game against Rock Hill, for instance. He rushed for a season-high 235 yards on 26 carries, often getting to the linebackers before anyone was close to touching him.
The following week against Spring Valley, he needed just seven carries to get to 100-plus yards. For the year? 1,108 yards and just shy of six yards per carry.
How’s this for effective? Every five passes Clark caught last year for the Rams went for a touchdown. When he can get some distance between him and a defender, he can turn on the jets.
And at 6-foot-2 and 180 pounds, he has the size to create that separation with his physicality. Chesterfield felt so good about it that it found ways to get him 56 carries, too, something he used to put up another 240 yards and three touchdowns.
The fact that he played nine games at safety and put up 23 tackles only makes him that much more valuable to a team trying to turn things around in 2024.
Christopher Glover
Christopher Glover
Glover may very well finish his high school career with 400 total tackles before it’s all said and done. Seriously, we’re not even really stretching there.
Glover had 104 stops as a sophomore, and with teammate Amare Haynes (167 tackles last year) out of eligibility, Glover now becomes “the” guy on this defense. What you can also expect a bump in is his tackles for loss (four), forced fumbles (two) and pass break-ups (two).
No matter what, his top talent is getting to ball carrier and planting him. And there’s going to be a ton of that over the course of the next two seasons.
Devaughn Locust
Devaughn Locust
One of the reasons big things are happening at Lamar is because of their big right guard. Locust can rough up opposing defensive guards and ends alike and never stops moving his feet.
He doesn’t give those guys a lot of wiggle room, and if he gets his hands on someone, it’s all over but the shouting.
Locust seals left or right. He can drive. He can back pedal. And the more he settles in, the more dynamic you’re going to see the offense settle in around him and the rest of the line. Like we said, big things are happening at Lamar.