Ohio State pulled off one of the best recruiting days in recent memory Monday, adding three four-star recruits, including two it flipped from division foe Maryland.

First, Ohio State landed four-star receiver Binjimen Victor, of Ft. Lauderdale (Fla.) Coconut Creek, beating out West Virginia, Tennessee and Florida, among others. Urban Meyer's name still carries weight in the Sunshine State from his time running the Gators.

What happened next came with more drama. Potomac (MD) Bullis School QB Dwayne Haskins, who had been committed to Maryland since May, flipped to the Buckeyes along with linebacker Keandre Jones, of Olney (MD) Good Counsel. The move gave Ohio State the No. 1 recruiting class, for the moment.

Haskins had been the leader of "The Movement," an effort aimed at getting Maryland locals to stay home. A few months ago, Maryland fired head coach Randy Edsall after a disastrous tenure, and along with him, offensive coordinator Mike Locksley, its ace recruiter. Haskins cited Maryland's coaching change as a primary factor for him looking around.

There are so many angles here. Maryland's once promising recruiting class is now blown up. The administration is going to have to be extremely patient with new coach D.J. Durkin if he is to succeed. I asked Maryland fans on Twitter whether firing Edsall was worth it if it also means losing Haskins and Jones, and the response was overwhelmingly in the affirmative.

On the Ohio State side, I am interested to see how Meyer's offense works with the best pro-style passing QB it's signing since John Brantley at Florida, which didn't go so well. Meyer's offense is based around the QB run threat, and while Haskins is mobile, he is not a dynamic runner.

Meyer is a great coach, and great coaches evolve. Bear Bryant went to the wishbone. Nick Saban's defense got smaller and less specialized, and he even went away from his pocket-passing preference in 2014 with Blake Sims. Will sacrificing some run threat from the QB in order to gain better passing be a trend with Ohio State's recruiting, or is this a case of an elite prospect being on the market and the Buckeyes having a need? Time will tell.

Land-Grant Holy Land has a great look at what's next for Ohio State's class, which seems to be mostly wrapped up. Testudo Times surveys the wreckage and figures out where Maryland goes from here on the QB recruiting trail.

Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State and Penn State have 49 combined four- and five-star recruits. The rest of the Big Ten has eight. Whatever Maryland figures out, it had better involve a lot of patience and realistic expectations, because the East Division is nails.

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