Kolton Houston given opportunity to follow father’s footsteps to UGA

Kolton Houston

Buford OL Kolton Houston has UGA and Georgia Tech offers (Photo by Brandi King)

Shane Houston tried his best to hide the excitement over his son, Buford’s Kolton Houston, being offered a football scholarship by Georgia. Shane played at UGA, and there’s just something special when your son is offered by your former team. It’s one of those father-son things. Shane tried to put on his best “game face” but it wasn’t really working.

“It definitely means a lot for Georgia to offer,” Shane said on Monday evening. “Any father would think that. It was honor. It felt special. Now it’s in Kolton’s hands on what to do with the recruiting process.”

The son is not sure what to do just yet. For Kolton, Georgia is offer No. 13, including Georgia Tech, Tennessee, Clemson, Auburn and Michigan State. The 6-foot-5, 270-pound offensive lineman said the lack of a Georgia offer, especially with the family connections, created an uneasy situation.

“It started getting a little discouraging,” Houston said. “Then I sat down with my high school coach and talked about it. I realized that Georgia doesn’t offer people early. I’m just not the type of person to be cocky and write Georgia off my list just because they haven’t offered. And look, it all worked itself out. Like [Mark Richt] said, ‘It’s only March 30.’”

According to Kolton, the UGA coach also said something else very interesting before handing him the magic envelope. “When I got into Coach Richt’s office, he talked about how messed up recruiting has gotten, how fast it has gotten with [prospects] getting offered earlier and earlier. Then he said, ‘I have something for you to read.’ He showed me a piece of paper and it was a scholarship offer.’”

What was Houston’s reaction? “I wasn’t necessarily expecting the offer. I wouldn’t have been surprised if Georgia didn’t offer me [on Monday], and I wasn’t going to be surprised if they did offer me. They did, and it was good news. I thanked him and he said for us to keep in touch.”

Was he tempted to commit to UGA on the spot? “The offer meant a lot, but I’m not planning on making a commitment anytime soon. I’m probably going to decide on a school in June. Just because my dad played at Georgia doesn’t mean I’ll go to Georgia. They are up there on the list, but there are other schools just as high as them on the list.”

Football is a family time for the Houstons

Football is family time for the Houstons. Kolton has 13 early scholarship offers, with the last two being UGA and Tennessee. He is thinking about making his college decision in June. Houston starts for Buford High School, the two-time Class AA state champions

Now back to the father-son thing. Shane grew up in the Atlanta area, signed with Western Illinois, and later transferred to Georgia. The hard-nosed linebacker had worked hard enough to compete for playing time during his final season for the Bulldogs in 1988. Yet on the second day of preseason practice, he broke his ankle and his career ended. However, it wasn’t a total loss. He did some successful recruiting on his own, marrying Tiffany Houston, who also attended UGA.

However, Shane says he won’t be recruiting his son with the same intensity. “It’s an honor with all the schools that have offered Kolton. We want it to be Kolton’s decision. It’s important for him to figure out on his own the college that fits him the best academically and on the football field.”

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  • 41 comments Add your comment

    thought you might find this interesting

    March 31st, 2009
    10:30 am

    Enter your comments here

    GeoffDawg

    March 31st, 2009
    10:18 am

    If you go back and re-read MinnesotaJacket, you’ll see that tech was mentioned under the tag of “others receiving consideration”. I’m surprised you missed it given that’s usually where you find tech in the AP top 25.

    JT

    March 31st, 2009
    10:14 am

    Shane you do not tell kids that they are not good enough, or that they are too slow or that they need to play another sport. I know of 3 kids that you told them that including my own. 2 of them loved the game but never played again. I have coached all my life and never said that to a kid. You cared more about winning your 10 year old championship trophy than teaching these kids the fundamentals of football. It does not matter if the kid is the worst player on the team, you never knock them down. Instead as a coach you need to encourage them to love the game. At that age all those kids want to do is play and have fun, you never know if they ever will become a top player. Oh by the way, my son the one you specifically told him he was too slow, fat and not big enough is now 6′2 and 225 and runs a 4.4 forty linebacker that has 10 scholarship offers from Soputhern Cal to Miami. Looking at a 10 year old you can never tell what he might develop into. You might remember, I was the one who confronted you have you told my kid that he was not good enough and when I did you were a coward who had to call other coaches to protect you. Real tough with the kids. Hard hitting linebacker my ass.

    Bank Walker, Texas Ranger

    March 31st, 2009
    9:58 am

    I hope Kolton dosen’t follow in his dad’s footsteps. I would like to see him not have to go to Tenn Military and then when he gets to UGA is only kickoff coverage.

    Bank Walker, Texas Ranger

    March 31st, 2009
    9:55 am

    Facts are checked. Check again Big Bee, a portion of Buford is in Hall County and any SPLOST money that Hall gets, then a portion goes to Buford City Schools, just like Gainesville City School. Apparently they don’t have any courses on map reading or common sense at Tech. If you ever see Bufords weight room, you will understand. This is not booster money. Now take that round house kick to the head big bug.

    Chris Medeiros

    March 31st, 2009
    9:42 am

    Poor MN Jacket… Do you not realize that UGA owns this state? We have more fans, and more money! The AJC wants people to visit this site. Tech is not interesting. Tech is in a city with 4.5 million and has an attendance of 50k… UGA is located in a town with 100k and triples that on GameDay! 92k in the stands and countless fans just there to tailgate!

    Plus the major recruits that readers would like to hear about are not considering TECH. And while you have a coach that runs an archaic offense, blue chippers will choose an offense that will help them live their dream of playing in the NFL.

    Tenn Dawg

    March 31st, 2009
    8:55 am

    Okay all you bb heads. Wow what an awesome legacy of being 1-7 against the Dawgs. I suspect Kolton will become a Dawg and then you can cry red and black.

    Big Bee

    March 31st, 2009
    8:35 am

    Bank Walker, Texas Ranger, I am a long time GT Fan and I also know that Buford is not located in Hall County Ga. Get your facts straight before you make snide comments.

    dap01

    March 31st, 2009
    8:31 am

    Congratulations Kolton. You will be very successful where ever you go.
    You have great options.

    If you go to UGA, you can follow in your father’s footsteps, you will win 10+ games each year and possibly play pro ball. The 92,000+ fans will adore you. You will have a great future with a degree from UGA.

    If you go to Tech, you can get tickets for family and friends very easily. You can get to finish in the top 30 every 5 years or so. And you will get to play on TV on Thursday nights (sometimes, is Boise State is not the game picked by ESPN). Tech even averages 45,000+ each game. You will have a great future with a degree from Tech.

    Bank Walker, Texas Ranger

    March 31st, 2009
    8:18 am

    The recruiting process is no big deal for Kolton. He has plenty of experience in being recruited and Buford won the recruiting battle. It was pretty simple. The weight room provided by Hall County SPLOST money won him over.