Danny Kelly
1.9K posts

Danny Kelly
@CoachDanny4
Head football coach Nashoba Tech Vikings| Boston Globe Coach of the year| 2x CAC Coach of the year| LIUNA Instructor| [email protected]






Excited to get to work. Just when I thought the ride was over we’ve only just begun. Go Ponders! @Ponderfootball @doug_hanlon50 @AHS_SpyPonders




Offensive guys! Welcome coach Paillet who will be our newest hire to the staff coming over to us previously after being the Offensive coordinator in Littleton, and coaching at North Broward Prep in Florida! Coach Brick bringing back stability to the running backs room!





Assistant coaches week! Introducing 3 major key parts to our coaching staff! These guys go above and beyond for our program to be successful! It is a TEAM effort ! We thank you for your dedication and commitment to the Vikings football program.




Last home loss was October 22nd 2023. Defend the VALLEY!







The QB offer market is complicated to say the least. We verified the 2026 cycle across all 67 Power 4 schools and found 1,104 school-side QB "Official" offers. From our count, there were only 31 actual high school QB roster spots given. That is roughly 36 offers for every 1 real spot. And 39 of the 67 schools took zero high school quarterbacks. That is the first reality families need to understand. An "official" offer has value. It reflects evaluation and access. But it is not the same thing as roster allocation. The second reality is just as important. Many schools may still be acting in good faith when a QB board changes late. The problem is that quarterback recruiting is now one of the most volatile markets in football. A staff can genuinely like a quarterback in October. Then in December a coordinator leaves. A current QB stays. A transfer becomes available. A decommitment happens somewhere else. NIL priorities shift. The room changes. The board changes. Sometimes the literal night before signing day. That does not always mean the offer was fake. It means quarterback recruiting is a one-spot problem inside a moving market. That is why families cannot confuse interest with certainty. The serious question is not just, “Who offered?” The serious question is, “Who still has both the need and the willingness to give one of their very limited quarterback spots to you when the market tightens?” That is why QB recruiting is not a volume game. It is an alignment game. Offers matter. Timing matters. Roster structure matters. Development matters. Command matters. When the board starts moving, the quarterbacks who survive are usually the ones staffs feel most comfortable protecting. Visibility helps, but alignment is what turns recruiting attention into a real opportunity.







