Four-star safety Cameron Roseman-Sinclair gave North Carolina and new coach Mack Brown their second verbal commitment of the 2020 class on Tuesday evening.

"I am not lookin' for clout, I knew I would figure it out, I took the millionaire route," Roseman-Sinclair wrote via his personal Twitter account. "I am committed to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill."

Roseman-Sinclair, a 5-foot-11, 188-pounder from Charlotte (N.C.) Myers Park, selected UNC over scholarship offers from Kentucky, Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia Tech, and West Virginia. For much of his recruitment, though, it was an ACC Coastal Division battle between UNC and VT.

Ostensibly, Roseman-Sinclair's Dec. 15 visit to UNC for the basketball game against Gonzaga broke the tie. In addition to the nationally televised game against two ranked teams, the visit provided him with a chance to meet the Heels' new coaching staff, which now included his former high school coach Dre Bly.

"It raises the bar with Dre there and I have a great relationship with Coach [Tommy] Thigpen," Roseman-Sinclair said. "And then me meeting the defensive coordinator when I was there, too. I like the whole entire vibe there now. It's a lot different."

A starter at safety for Myers Park High, Roseman-Sinclair finished his junior season with 69 tackles, six pass breakups, and two interceptions.

"I think he's the prototypical safety," Myers Park head coach Scott Chadwick said. "He covers ground. He's physical; he's a very good tackler. He has really good ball skills. He has really good speed. Everything that is a safety he does very, very well.

"And he's also very mature beyond his years, as well. He's also very smart and knows the game very well. He's the total package."

In addition to his four-star rating, Roseman-Sinclair is the nation's No. 9 safety, according to the 247Sports Composite.

Roseman-Sinclair joins fellow in-state prospect Elijah Burris as the first two members of UNC's 2020 verbal commitment list. The state of North Carolina is the biggest recruiting priority for Brown and his staff.

"I'd love the large majority of our team to be from in state," Brown said after being hired. "We used to go to Virginia, and we used to go to Florida, and we used to go to Atlanta. You go to different places out of state to get some players, but to me, you've got to win at home first. You've got to win in this stadium before we can go somewhere else and win. You've got to win at home in recruiting before you can go out of state, because if the locals won't come, why would an out-of-state guy that's really good want to come? We will go back to the same process that we've used everywhere, and that's find the best players that are as close to your campus as you can be, and build your program with them. Then add superstars from outside."