Commitment Report: Eli Solberg (2018)
“You’ll know you will want to play for a program when you get that feeling in your gut.” Those were the words of Elk River head football coach Steve Hamilton to Rogers wide receiver Eli Solberg during the Minnesota Football…
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Continue Reading“You’ll know you will want to play for a program when you get that feeling in your gut.”
Those were the words of Elk River head football coach Steve Hamilton to Rogers wide receiver Eli Solberg during the Minnesota Football Showcase where Hamilton was coaching and Solberg was playing, both for the North All-Stars.
For Solberg, that gut feeling came at the University of Minnesota-Crookston.
“It was a hard decision,” Solberg said. “Each school had its own benefits that made it a great place to consider going. Crookston sold me on the athletics and the education.”
The 1000-yard receiver for the Royals in his senior season looked at Bemidji and Minot State but landed on Crookston where he hopes to major in exercise science and hopefully go on to be a chiropractor.
“I’ll be getting a University of Minnesota degree which helps me in the profession I want to have when I graduate,” Solberg said. “Athletically, there has been a good amount of success at the receiver position in the past and I think the coaches there will put me in a good position to have some success of my own.”
Besides Hamilton, Solberg discussed the coaches at Rogers as people who really helped him along the way as he made went back and forth between a handful of schools.
“Coach Sluze (Dustin Sluzewicz) helped me a lot during the whole thing,” Solberg said. “He told me about his college experience and why he played for the program that he did.”
The University of Minnesota-Crookston is about four hours away from Rogers High School where Solberg caught 50 passes and ten touchdowns in the 2017 regular season for Coach Marc Franz and the Royals program.
“I think I’m most looking forward to the intensity of playing college ball that will come because of the overall increase in the skill of all the players,” Solberg said. “In high school, you might play one of two players on a team that are going somewhere to play football. Now all the kids that I will be playing with and against will be those types of guys. I’m excited to get started.”