There are only 41 unsigned ESPN 300 prospects remaining for the Feb. 6 signing day, and coaches are going to be wooing them down to the last minute.
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“I make fun with all the commits all the time, sorry for bringing down the class average,” Reichard said. “It’s understandable, kickers aren’t as valuable as a receiver or quarterback, but it’s all good.”
The All-America Game is a real-life visual of that self-awareness, that kickers aren’t valued as regular members of the football community. In their corner of the practice field, they’re the green bean casserole on your Thanksgiving dinner plate, pushed to the side as to not interfere with the main dish.
“He’s a kicker,” five-star OT Amari Kight laughed in response to his future teammate’s three-star rating. “We’ll let it slide.”
He’s a kicker. Just a kicker.
Justin Eboigbe, an ESPN 300 signee in Alabama’s class, noted that the group of commits have a running group text message where they all communicate. Reichard is often included, but the others in the group chat can tell Reichard wants to be a bigger part of the team and feel valued. “The kicker is usually the life of the party,” Eboigbe said. “They usually do the most to try to blend into the group, so they’re usually the life of the party to fit in.”
Just because Reichard isn’t a five-star or ranked in the ESPN 300, it doesn’t mean he isn’t a valued member of this class. The Crimson Tide ranked 53rd among all FBS teams in field goal percentage in 2019, making 15 of 20 FG attempts this past season with eight missed extra point attempts.
The team ranked 128 in yards per punt, averaging 35.66 yards per punt.
Reichard specializes in kickoffs, but he can kick field goals and punt if needed, and Alabama might.
“I think the job will be open, it’s going to be whoever performs better in the spring and camp,” Reichard said. “It’ll be like any other position, whoever beats a guy out will win the job.”
Just like any other position. Reichard will have his chance to make his mark, like a contributing member of the team, and earn the respect of his teammates.
His fellow commitments, as highly ranked as they are, understand that the kicker could very well be an early contributor and someone who might decide the team’s fate at the end of a game. While they have poked fun at him in group texts and joked that he’s holding down the class average, Eboigbe and the others know Reichard has his place.
“We all know they don’t rank kickers appropriately,” Eboigbe said. “He is the No. 1 kicker, so that counts for something. We value him like he’s a five-star; he’s an honorary five-star to us.”
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