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Dreams Go From Reel to Real

"Everywhere you turn," Lanham said, "you hear about 10 college prospects."

A designated snack room provided a slight respite -- and the fuel necessary for such a search. The Maryland Football Coaches Association, the organizer of the event, brought chips, pizza, pretzels and trail mix. And five 30-packs of Miller Lite.

Josh Kline
Josh Kline, defensive line coach for Shepherd University, West Virginia, spends time looking at tape from Hereford High School in Parkton, Md. (Preston Keres - The Washington Post)

Each high school coach had arrived with a presentation designed to make his players stand out, but the coaches' methods varied greatly. Glenelg Coach John Davis brought a state-of-the-art Landro Play Organizer that showed digitized clips of Gladiators' games dating from 2003. The Landro clips played on a 10-foot projection screen, making three of the prospects Davis tried to pitch -- Trey Crayton, Stephen Bullard and Evan Key -- loom larger than life.

Across the hall, Gaithersburg Coach Kreg Kephart showed VHS tapes of his players on a small television. Sitting next to him, Monmouth University assistant coach Christopher Damian strained to watch -- and evaluate -- Robert Dugan, a 6-foot-5, 310-pound lineman who, at this moment, was too small to find on the screen.

After Kephart showed game footage of Dugan blocking, the coach fast forwarded to footage of Dugan running agility drills on the track.

"Now I see what you're talking about," Damian said, nodding his head. "This kid can move. I think he might be worth a second look."

Kephart smiled. He had achieved the ultimate success at a recruiting convention: a chance for his player to be evaluated more thoroughly. Almost never, coaches said, do film festival interactions cement a player's college future. Instead, they lead to second encounters, usually in-the-flesh visits that allow for better evaluation.

Cornell assistant Zac Roper planned for his Maryland Film Festival trip to last three days. On Monday at the festival, he hoped to identify as many as 10 potential players. Yesterday and today, he planned to go from one school to the next and visit those players, collecting scouting videos and transcripts to bring back with him to Ithaca, N.Y.

"Nobody really finishes the deal here, but this is where it starts," Roper said. "Instead of trying to go like crazy and talk to 10 different schools in a day, you can come here, see 50 schools, and then narrow it down. This makes our lives a lot easier."

What started about 15 years ago as a small meet-and-greet in a local Days Inn swelled, on Monday, to a mass that overflowed rooms and spilled into hallways. Four years ago, the Maryland Film Festival used five rooms in College Park. This year, the University of Maryland gave it nine, and that sometimes seemed like too little. At 4 p.m. Monday, the Prince George's County room hosted only three high schools -- Potomac, Gwynn Park, and DeMatha -- but more than 10 college coaches sometimes crowded near the door.

The event's magnitude caught at least one high school coach off guard. DeMatha's Bill McGregor, who prides himself on recruiting preparedness, arrived at College Park with four assistants and a large box filled with transcripts and DVDs. He initially thought, he said later, that he might have brought too much.

But before McGregor could even enter the Prince George's room Monday, five college coaches had surrounded him and his basket. Within an hour, all of the transcripts for two players disappeared.

"I guess I'm going to have to go back to school to get more," McGregor said. "Everybody here is scrambling for players. It's all a little hectic."


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