http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pb...508170352/1109
OXFORD — The Ole Miss freshman football class absorbed another blow on Tuesday when linebacker Dustin Forston became the fifth rookie to leave the program.
Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron confirmed after Tuesday's practice that Forston, a highly-touted Miami, Fla., native had left the team. Orgeron said it was Forston's decision to leave.
"We tried to keep him here and keep his spirits high," Orgeron said. "We asked Forston to stay here and he decided he didn't want to do it. He's a good young man and we wish him nothing but the best."
Forston could not be reached for comment Tuesday. He was one of five linebackers in Orgeron's first signing class. Alex Forston said Tuesday his son left the team because he was disappointed with his status on the depth chart. Forston, a first-team All-State pick out of Miami's Northwestern High, was a strongside linebacker running behind sophomores Garry Pack and walk-on Dontae Reed.
"I spoke with (Dustin) and I told him I was disappointed with him leaving," Alex Forston said when reached at his Miami home. "This wasn't about him getting in trouble or anything. The only reason he gave me was that he said he was told one thing and that a guy who had walked on was playing more. I told him that happens sometimes, especially early in the season, and that he should stick with it."
Forston, a 6-foot, 215-pound defender, is the fourth Ole Miss player to part ways with the team since practiced started on Aug. 6. He is the eighth member of Orgeron's February signing class to have either been dismissed for disciplinary reasons, quit or failed to meet NCAA academic requirements to enroll at Ole Miss.
Orgeron said Tuesday that some of the attrition was due to players struggling to adjust to higher demands and expectations at the college level. He also said he was forced to take some recruiting gambles on a few players because he only had about a month to recruit after getting hired on Dec. 15.
"During the evaluation process, we saw a few things we liked on film and it was in the last week (before signing day) that we got some of these guys," Orgeron said. "After you spend about a year with them (recruiting), the evaluation process will be more exact. I think that's pretty obvious."
So sad. He actually had to work his way to the top of the depth chart.