Moving Up (New 7A):
Seckinger 2422
Moving Down (New 6A):
Effingham Co. 2306*
McEachern 2304
Grovetown 2287
Alexander 2277*
Newnan 2248*
New Manchester 2237*
Heritage, Conyers
Tift County
Houston Co. 2150*
Alpharetta 2144
Shiloh 2119*
*won '23 appeal
@OfficialGHSA I thought playing to three schools in one year was illegal? I’ve seen a kid leave us, play spring ball with another school, and play three weeks at another school. What is the expectation? This is ludicrous. Get it under control
A Coach Almost Broke Down Crying Whet Trying To Convince This Player To Stick Wish Football Instead Of Turning To The Streets Because He Knew He Would Be Dead Or In Jail Within The Next 3 Years.💯🤝🏾😢
We’re ready to expand the franchise. We’re officially a member of the CCJBC. Ready to watch the youth in our community compete and improve the way we have with our high school program! We’re here now!!! #PantherPride
Shoutout to the HS baseball guys who shut it down for the next several months to strap on the football gear and get after it. You only get a few years to do it.
HS football builds character, grit, resilience, discipline, toughness and team first.
Scouts love these guys.
✅ What Athletes Should Do
•Keep working—academically and athletically.
•Don’t stop communicating with other schools.
•Ask the coach questions like:
•“Is this a committable offer?”
•“What are the next steps?”
•“Will this turn into a written offer?”
What a Verbal Offer Doesn’t Mean
•Not Legally Binding: It is not a contract. The school doesn’t have to follow through, and the athlete isn’t locked in either.
•Can Be Pulled: Coaches can change their minds due to:
•Injury
•Grades/test scores
•Changes in staff
Doesn’t Guarantee Admission: The athlete still must meet academic requirements and be formally admitted.
A verbal offer is like a coach saying, “We want you.” But until it’s in writing—either in a National Letter of Intent (NLI) or scholarship agreement—it’s just a promise.