A week after five-star Stephenville quarterback Jarrett Stidham flipped his commitment from Texas Tech to Baylor, four-star quarterback Chad President has also decommitted.

The Temple quarterback announced Tuesday he is decommitting from Baylor, first making the news known on Twitter.

"I want to thank Baylor University for giving me the opportunity to play football and get my degree from there," President wrote on Twitter. "But I have officially decommited and (am) opening back up my recruitment. Thanks to everyone who has helped me along the way."

After Stidham changed his commitment to Baylor, many speculated that President's future for the Bears would be at wide receiver, which played a role in his decision. President played wide receiver at Temple as a sophomore.

"Once I found out the Stidham kid committed to Baylor and how it all went down, that was a slap in the face," President told the Temple Daily Telegram on Tuesday. "This kid picked Texas Tech but then he visited Baylor twice (in December). That just kind of happened. Baylor always told me I was their guy. (After Stidham committed) they didn't reach out to me or anything. I thought that was sideways.

"I talked to my dad about it (following the state final), and I just had to do what's best for me. It takes a lot for me to change my mind."

President committed to Baylor in April 2013 and had planned to begin classes in Waco in January. Like Stidham had with Texas Tech, President had signed a nonbinding financial aid agreement with the school.

In a radio interview with ESPN Central Texas, President remained adamant that he had no interest in playing wide receiver.

"That is my main position," he said. "Some people have said I am an athlete playing quarterback, but I am a quarterback and I can do some things at that position that most players can't do."

Multiple reports have said President could committ to Tulsa, where former Baylor offensive coordinator, Philip Montgomery, recently became the coach.

"Right now I'd call them the favorite," President told the Telegram. "Tulsa's close enough (to home). Coach Montgomery called me a couple days ago and said, 'If you come to Tulsa, you'll be ahead of everyone else because you already know the offense.' That's an advantage. The only disadvantage would be (adjusting as a freshman to) the speed of the college game."

President also told the Telegram that he had spoken with new Houston coach Tom Herman, who as Ohio State's offensive coordinator this season won the Broyles Award as the nation's top coordinator. However, he said on the radio show that he had not spoken with Texas Tech coach Kliff Kinsbury.

"I'm probably going to look into (Houston) more," President said. "Coach Herman had a high-powered offense like we have and he did a lot with (dual-threat QBs) Braxton Miller and J.T. Barrett."

President said he wants to choose a program in two to four days.

"I have a feeling about where I want to go," President said on the radio show. "Once I make my decision, I am going to stick with it."

President said no other school recruited him after he committed to Baylor. As a senior at Temple, President passed for 2,603 yards and 25 touchdowns and rushed for 934 yards and 12 scores en route to leading the Wildcats to the 5A Division I state championship game, where they fell to Aledo.

"It is frustrating," he said. "You are committed so long and then things like that happen. Baylor was always my first choice and seeing what went down I felt let down and then had to make a decision that was best for me."

President will no longer consider Baylor.

"I have learned words are just words and actions are actions," he said. "Actions speak louder than words, You have to learn from it and all of this will help me later on in life."

Six prospects to commit at UA game

As of now, six prospects are slated to announce their college decision at the Under Armour All-America Game in Orlando, Fla. on Jan 2.

The country's No. 2 receiver in five-star Tyron Johnson will choose between LSU, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech. The Tigers hold 75 percent of the 36 forecasts for the New Orleans (La.) Warren Easton playmaker. Texas Tech was tied with Oklahoma State at 11 percent.

Others planning to commit at the game are Fort Bend Marshall cornerback Kendall Sheffield, Birmingham (Ala.) Shades Valley defensive tackle Daron Payne, McKinney North running back Ronald Jones II, Dallas Skyline linebacker Anthony Wheeler, offensive lineman Josh Wariboko and Manassas (Va.) Stonewall Jackson defensive tackle Tim Settle.