Why is nobody talking about the silent decommitment watch that's fixin' to explode across the entire 2027 recruiting board? We're sitting here in late April, the NFL Draft is pulling focus, but the real chess match is happening with these high school juniors. Every single one of them is watching where these drafted players came from, and they're recalculatinng their own paths. The second that last pick is announced, the phones are going to light up from every bagman in the country, and commitments that felt solid are going to get shaky. I'm hearing the noise already, not about us specifically, but across the SEC landscape. When a program like ours gets multiple guys drafted high, it's a double-edged sword. You sell the development, but the croots also see immediate playing time open up, and the vultures from other schools start circling your commits, whispering that you're just reloading through the portal anyway. That ESPN article listing us among the teams with big post-spring questions is fuel for the negative recruiters. They'll take that snippet and run with it to every kid we're on, saying there's uncertainty in Oxford. That's when you have to hold onto your silent commits for dear life. The dead period is a myth now, this is a 24/7 pressure cooker. I'm looking at our current 2027 list, and you know as well as I do that a couple of those "solid" verbals are softer than they appear. All it takes is one OV to a place like Georgia or Texas A&M after they flash a shiny new NIL package, and the flip is on. The bump from a successful draft class is immediate, but so is the target on your back. Every other staff is now dissecting our roster, seeing which draft departures create holes, and they're going straight to the recruits they think we're leaning on to fill them. This isn't just about keeping our class together, it's about going on the offensive and using this draft momentum to poach a couple of guys who are currently pledged elsewhere. The decommitment watch works both ways. If we're not actively trying to flip someone right now, we're falling behind. This is the business-as-usual part that nobody sees, the steady drumbeat of calls and texts that either fo...