Clinch County has won six football state championships this century, all in Class A, the Georgia High School Association’s classification for the smallest schools.

Now, this little South Georgia county is No. 1 in an all-classification category — the most major college prospects this century per capita.

Clinch County has produced 10 3-star prospects or higher since 2001, one for every 681 residents, according to Atlanta Journal-Constitution research. Second-place Oconee County, with four winning GHSA schools, has one in 731.

Jim Dickerson, the retired coach who won five of those Clinch County titles, paused a phone call last week to relay the news to nearby players and coaches at the school. The message drew loud cheers.

“In Homerville especially, and in many small schools throughout South Georgia, football is so important,” Dickerson said. “We don’t have a movie theater or a bowling alley or a skating rink or a Walmart. The kids grow up from a young age wanting to be Clinch County Panthers.”

Other counties that show up highly in per-capita prospects are Lee (one in 737); Colquitt (855); Schley (888); Troup (917); Peach (980); and Wilcox (1,108).

The first county with more than 100,000 residents is Gwinnett (one in 1,137), which ranks ninth overall. Tenth is Heard County (1,142).

To compile the rankings, the AJC researched 247Sports’ annual lists of consensus 3-, 4- and 5-star recruits dating to 2001. There are 8,365 of those from Georgia, or about 300 per year.

For population, the AJC used each county’s average from 2000, 2010 and 2020 census data.

The AJC included only players who have competed in Georgia associations, including the Georgia Independent Athletic Association. Rabun Gap, a boarding school with 31 recent major Division I prospects competing in a North Carolina association, is excluded in Rabun County’s totals.

The prospects include current seniors and juniors. From that list, Clinch County gets credit for senior wide receiver Kamarion Johnson, the consensus No. 302 player nationally who is committed to Florida. Without Johnson, Clinch would fall to third.

Johnson is a brother of current Georgia wide receiver Jeremy Bell Jr., who was a 3-star Clinch County prospect and preferred walk-on in 2024 and now on scholarship.

Clinch County’s best known player recently is Trezmen Marshall, a 4-star linebacker who played four seasons at Georgia and finished as a starter on Alabama’s 2023 SEC championship team.

The others are Chauncey Manac (signed with Georgia); Octavis Johnson (South Carolina); Tyler Morehead (Georgia Tech); John Mincey (Tennessee); Jeremiah Johnson (Missouri Southern); Fred Tiller (Kentucky); and Charles McClelland (Cincinnati).

Clinch County’s 10 does not include the school’s lone former NFL player, former Georgia Tech wide receiver Jonathan Smith. He was in the recruiting class of 2000, predating full 247Sports Composite rankings.

Clinch County’s list could grow soon, as the team expects three Division I signees this academy year. That would be the most ever.

After Johnson, they are Travis Miller, a 6-foot-4, 220-pound senior wide receiver and multiposition defensive player who is committed to Cincinnati; and junior free safety/wide receiver Jakyri Posley, who is committed to Georgia Southern.

Miller and Posley are not currently rated as 3-star prospects, but they have time to earn their stars because 247’s composite is not final until the end of an academic year.

Second place was no surprise. All four of Oconee County’s GHSA programs — public schools North Oconee and Oconee County, and private schools Athens Academy and Prince Avenue Christian — are consistently good, each winning playoff games last season.

Colquitt and Lee are large, one-school South Georgia counties with dozens of major college prospects and two state titles apiece this century.

Schley County, with a population of only 4,441, has produced five top prospects. They include current Georgia linebacker Zayden Walker.

Gwinnett, home to more than 20 football-playing schools and the most state champions of any county, has the most prospects overall, at 689. Gwinnett’s census population average was 783,610.

Twenty-six of Georgia’s 159 have produced no 3-star prospects in the 247Spors Composite. The largest is Gilmer, with 27,700 residents.

Rank / per capita / county / prospects / population

  1. 681 / Clinch / 10 / 6,808
  2. 731 / Oconee / 46 / 33,611
  3. 737 / Lee / 39 / 28,739
  4. 855 / Colquitt / 52 / 44,483
  5. 888 / Schley / 5 / 4,441
  6. 917 / Troup / 71 / 65,083
  7. 980 / Peach / 27 / 26,448
  8. 1,108 / Wilcox / 8 / 8,866
  9. 1,137 / Gwinnett / 689 / 783,610
  10. 1,142 / Heard / 10 / 11,419
  11. 1,166 / Charlton / 10 / 11,657
  12. 1,215 / Fayette / 87 / 105,675
  13. 1,253 / Lowndes / 85 / 106,533
  14. 1,307 / Camden / 38 / 49,648
  15. 1,433 / Thomas / 31 / 44,418
  16. 1,457 / Crisp / 15 / 21,854
  17. 1,524 / Fulton / 613 / 934,432
  18. 1,554 / Carroll / 68 / 105,648
  19. 1,580 / Henry / 119 / 187,992
  20. 1,602 / Lincoln / 5 / 8,011
  21. 1,705 / Houston / 81 / 138,099
  22. 1,723 / Emanuel / 13 / 22,401
  23. 1,747 / Pulaski / 6 / 10,484
  24. 1,781 / Morgan / 10 / 17,807
  25. 1,920 / Jones / 14 / 26,885
  26. 1,925 / Cobb / 357 / 687,326
  27. 1,942 / Irwin / 5 / 9,712
  28. 1,980 / Bartow / 48 / 95,026
  29. 1,989 / Newton / 46 / 91,481
  30. 2,017 / Macon / 6 / 12,104
  31. 2,071 / Laurens / 23 / 47,626
  32. 2,084 / Douglas / 59 / 122,938
  33. 2,091 / Gordon / 25 / 52,278
  34. 2,092 / Dooly / 6 / 12,550
  35. 2,128 / Taylor / 4 / 8,512
  36. 2,131 / DeKalb / 332 / 707,380
  37. 2,226 / Wayne / 13 / 28,936
  38. 2,231 / Toombs / 12 / 26,773
  39. 2,287 / Butts / 10 / 22,870
  40. 2,303 / Twiggs / 4 / 9,212
  41. 2,376 / Jefferson / 7 / 16,635
  42. 2,379 / Floyd / 40 / 95,155
  43. 2,430 / Muscogee / 80 / 194,366
  44. 2,486 / Baldwin / 18 / 44,740
  45. 2,491 / Ben Hill / 7 / 17,437
  46. 2,491 / Glynn / 31 / 77,231
  47. 2,559 / Hall / 68 / 174,032
  48. 2,589 / Decatur / 11 / 28,483
  49. 2,628 / McDuffie / 7 / 18,396
  50. 2,636 / Spalding / 24 / 63,265
  51. 2,722 / Brooks / 6 / 16,331
  52. 2,729 / Long / 5 / 13,645
  53. 2,739 / Harris / 11 / 30,129
  54. 2,748 / Coweta / 44 / 120,897
  55. 2,755 / Clayton / 96 / 264,512
  56. 2,774 / Grady / 9 / 24,969
  57. 2,843 / Jenkins / 3 / 8,530
  58. 2,883 / Mitchell / 8 / 23,062
  59. 2,929 / Lamar / 6 / 17,576
  60. 2,969 / Washington / 7 / 20,784
  61. 2,975 / Paulding / 44 / 130,888
  62. 3,001 / Ware / 12 / 36,015
  63. 3,022 / Lanier / 3 / 9,065
  64. 3,027 / Seminole / 3 / 9,082
  65. 3,049 / Turner / 3 / 9,147
  66. 3,085 / Miller / 2 / 6,169
  67. 3,102 / Meriwether / 7 / 21,713
  68. 3,109 / Bleckley / 4 / 12,437
  69. 3,141 / Bulloch / 22 / 69,100
  70. 3,402 / Polk / 12 / 40,818
  71. 3,457 / Rockdale / 24 / 82,965
  72. 3,526 / Hart / 7 / 24,679
  73. 3,670 / Screven / 4 / 14,678
  74. 3,708 / Jackson / 16 / 59,327
  75. 3,721 / Chatham / 71 / 264,156
  76. 3,723 / Coffee / 11 / 40,954
  77. 3,733 / Stephens / 7 / 26,131
  78. 3,802 / Early / 3 / 11,405
  79. 3,926 / Upson / 7 / 27,483
  80. 3,996 / Tift / 10 / 39,956
  81. 4,017 / Rabun / 4 / 16,070
  82. 4,168 / Forsyth / 42 / 175,067
  83. 4,230 / Monroe / 6 / 25,379
  84. 4,295 / Worth / 5 / 21,477
  85. 4,465 / Walton / 18 / 80,376
  86. 4,473 / Berrien / 4 / 17,894
  87. 4,530 / Telfair / 3 / 13,590
  88. 4,622 / Johnson / 2 / 9,243
  89. 4,688 / Haralson / 6 / 28,130
  90. 4,816 / Whitfield / 20 / 96,329
  91. 4,862 / Bibb / 32 / 155,593
  92. 4,880 / Liberty / 13 / 63,440
  93. 5,026 / Elbert / 4 / 20,105
  94. 5,064 / Cherokee / 41 / 207,623
  95. 5,141 / Wilkes / 2 / 10,282
  96. 5,313 / Sumter / 6 / 31,878
  97. 5,420 / Dougherty / 17 / 92,140
  98. 5,427 / Dawson / 4 / 21,709
  99. 5,479 / Greene / 3 / 16,438
  100. 5,579 / Cook / 3 / 16,737
  101. 5,781 / Clarke / 20 / 115,625
  102. 5,846 / Burke / 4 / 23,385
  103. 5,984 / Walker / 11 / 65,821
  104. 6,011 / Appling / 3 / 18,033
  105. 6,012 / Pierce / 3 / 18,037
  106. 6,371 / Chattooga / 4 / 25,483
  107. 6,897 / Putnam / 3 / 20,692
  108. 6,943 / Habersham / 6 / 41,658
  109. 7,089 / Jeff Davis / 2 / 14,177
  110. 7,242 / Columbia / 17 / 123,117
  111. 7,312 / Randolph / 1 / 7,312
  112. 7,360 / Effingham / 7 / 51,518
  113. 7,371 / Barrow / 9 / 66,339
  114. 8,199 / Bryan / 4 / 32,796
  115. 8,408 / Pike / 2 / 16,815
  116. 8,668 / Montgomery / 1 / 8,668
  117. 9,553 / Wilkinson / 1 / 9,553
  118. 9,634 / Richmond / 21 / 202,310
  119. 9,676 / Murray / 4 / 38,702
  120. 9,823 / Terrell / 1 / 9,823
  121. 10,149 / Dodge / 2 / 20,297
  122. 10,519 / Candler / 1 / 10,519
  123. 10,756 / Evans / 1 / 10,756
  124. 10,966 / Franklin / 2 / 21,931
  125. 11,905 / Chattahoochee / 1 / 11,905
  126. 12,340 / Catoosa / 5 / 61,699
  127. 13,305 / Jasper / 1 / 13,305
  128. 18,433 / McIntosh / 1 / 18,433
  129. 21,092 / Union / 1 / 21,092
  130. 22,933 / Fannin / 1 / 22,933
  131. 25,030 / White / 1 / 25,030
  132. 28,157 / Lumpkin / 1 / 28,157
  133. 28,543 / Pickens / 1 / 28,543
  134. Atkinson / 0 / 8,090
  135. Bacon / 0 / 10,780
  136. Baker / 0 / 3,467
  137. Banks / 0 / 16,951
  138. Brantley / 0 / 17,020
  139. Calhoun / 0 / 6,196
  140. Clay / 0 / 3,129
  141. Crawford / 0 / 12,418
  142. Dade / 0 / 16,013
  143. Echols / 0 / 3,828
  144. Gilmer / 0 / 27,700
  145. Glascock / 0 / 2,841
  146. Hancock / 0 / 9,413
  147. Madison / 0 / 25,161
  148. Marion / 0 / 8,954
  149. Oglethorpe / 0 / 14,120
  150. Quitman / 0 / 2,449
  151. Stewart / 0 / 5,541
  152. Talbot / 0 / 6,365
  153. Taliaferro / 0 / 1,784
  154. Tattnall / 0 / 23,556
  155. Towns / 0 / 10,761
  156. Treutlen / 0 / 6,715
  157. Warren / 0 / 5,795
  158. Webster / 0 / 2,512
  159. Wheeler / 0 / 7,024

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