Rivals.com chose Cincinnati Elder's Kyle Rudolph as the No. 1 high school tight end in the country in 2007. Michigan, Tennessee and the home-state Buckeyes were in the mix to sign the lanky 6-6, 220-pounder. But Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis had the recruiting tool that trumped all others.
"He had John Carlson," Rudolph said of his current Vikings teammate. "Every time I visited South Bend, Coach Weis always made sure John was my host."
Weis had done his homework. He knew what Carlson, a senior tight end at the time, meant to Rudolph.
"The whole time I was in high school, I talked to my dad [Dan], who is a football coach, about who I wanted to be like," Rudolph said. "It was always, 'I want to be like John. One day maybe I'll be able to do what John did at Notre Dame.' I always looked up to John."
Carlson, who is quiet, remembers meeting Rudolph, who might have been even quieter.
"He wasn't nearly as thick as he is now," Carlson said. "He was just this very tall, very skinny kid. They kept telling me he was going to be someone special."
On Rudolph's first visit, they went to see the movie "300," a tale about King Leonidas leading 300 Spartans into battle against 300,000 Persians. Rudolph was outnumbered as well.
"It was John, me and Danielle," said Rudolph, referring to Carlson's then-girlfriend, former Notre Dame volleyball captain and current wife. "It was a pretty cool time though."