If Nathan Tilford had made a commitment video, it probably would have looked something like this:
Blank screen.
Arizona.
End credits.
Donât bother searching Tilfordâs Twitter for public declarations of scholarship offers or lists of the Top-10 schools heâs considering, either. The only college-related photos Tilford has posted since creating his Twitter page in November 2015 were of two visits to Arizonaâs campus and one to Arizona Stateâs campus in Tempe.
Tilford doesnât subscribe to the âlook at meâ way of thinking that has taken over football recruiting, especially at the highest levels.
Make no mistake: Tilford, a running back from Ontario, California, is a member of that club.
Tilford is rated a four-star recruit by all the online recruiting services, and is considered Arizonaâs highest-rated commit for 2017. He will move on campus Sunday as an early enrollee. This week, Tilford will take his first college class.
âThereâs a difference between telling people and putting it out there on the internet or making a video and all that,â Tilford told the Star in a rare interview. âI donât like doing all that stuff. I just think Iâd rather stay a little more humble than do all that.â
Tilford hasnât always been this way.
As an eighth-grader, he was a local celebrity with an offer from USC in hand. Tilford, then a lanky wide receiver, had impressed the Trojansâ coaches at a skills camp.
The newfound notoriety went straight to his head.
âI thought it was really cool,â Tilford said. âI kinda started thinking a little too highly about myself, Iâm not gonna lie about it. Being in eighth grade, I thought I was the best, then freshman year came and I hit reality. First time stepping on that field was not the best.â
Tilford learned his lesson: Hype is just that. Tilford is a different person now. The once-skinny receiver is now a 6-foot-2-inch, 215-pounder who managed to graduate high school in 3ÂŊ years.
âI donât mind saying I got an offer from Arizona or Arizona State, or whoever,â Tilford said. âI donât mind telling people. But I just feel like not everybody needs to know. You donât have to go out of your way to do something like that.
âThereâs no need for all that hype, because what are you going to do when you have all that hype? It comes down to you playing, and then youâre not the player everyone thought you were.â
Still, plenty of the countryâs best high schoolers do.
Five-star cornerback Darnay Holmes posted a Bleacher Report video of himself Saturday. He stood on a red carpet as photos flashed and girls asked for autographs.
As the cameras rolled, Holmes bent down and put his hand on the concrete, as if he was being immortalized outside of Graumanâs Chinese Theater.
The camera panned to the concrete to an outline of his hand, signature and the UCLA logo.
Four-star offensive lineman Adrian Ealy told the Star on Tuesday âhe fell in loveâ with Arizona when he visited campus. Two days later, he posted his own Bleacher Report commitment video, this one a parody of âReservoir Dogs.â
Ealy picked Oklahoma. Arizona wasnât even listed as one of his five finalists.
Thatâs not the case with Tilford. He verbally committed to the UA in April, then posted an incredible senior season.
In his first game at Colony High School â he played at nearby Upland for his first three years before transferring â Tilford rushed for 308 yards and four touchdowns on just 16 carries.
Colony coach Steve Randall realized just how special Tilford was a few weeks later. Tilford still managed 197 all-purpose yards and scored two touchdowns against powerhouse La Habra.
âThey usually have a really strong defense and they had some difficulty tackling him and catching up to him,â Randall said. âHe had a great game and I thought, âMan, this guy is the real deal.ââ
Arizona suddenly had company.
âAll these other schools started popping up and getting in my head,â Tilford said. âTennessee popped up and I was like, âNo way! Thatâs crazy!â I never thought that would happen. Then Nebraska came along and I was like âoh geezâ. Thatâs when I started feeling weird, like I donât know if I can stay like this with Arizona, if I can stay committed.â
Tilford admits he couldâve kept in better contact with Arizona.
Recently, USC came back into the mix, and pushed for Tilford to flip at the last minute. It was too little, too late. Nebraska and Tennessee eventually floated away.
Tilford decided he made the right call from the get-go. He remembered what he felt watching Arizona practice, how running backs coach Calvin Magee operated and the beauty of Arizonaâs vast campus.
âJust seeing him coach and I was just like, âWow, I could learn a lot of new things from this guy,ââ Tilford said. âNot even just from football, just from being a coach. Thatâs my next thing I want to do, is be a coach after my playing career is done.â
On Wednesday, the 18-year old Tilford will start college. Heâs already thinking about his life beyond playing football.
Make a video about that.
âWith his attitude,â Randall said, âyou wouldnât know he was a top recruit.â



