NashVol11
Gloomed to Fail
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Georgia also has about 50 blue chip recruits in their state, much easier to land that many recruits when you have several to chose from. Implying that UT is going to be able to recruit at that level in another state is silly. Even if UT had held onto Higgins, you are talking about a single player. UT is at a distinct disadvantage when it comes to recruiting. It is just a fact.
Georgia also has about 50 blue chip recruits in their state, much easier to land that many recruits when you have several to chose from. Implying that UT is going to be able to recruit at that level in another state is silly. Even if UT had held onto Higgins, you are talking about a single player. UT is at a distinct disadvantage when it comes to recruiting. It is just a fact.
Simple question: Who has had the top recruiting class the last 6 years? And how has that team competed during that stretch?
Georgia also has about 50 blue chip recruits in their state, much easier to land that many recruits when you have several to chose from. Implying that UT is going to be able to recruit at that level in another state is silly. Even if UT had held onto Higgins, you are talking about a single player. UT is at a distinct disadvantage when it comes to recruiting. It is just a fact.
I'd guess bammy but that's not the "question" here. I'm just saying 3 stars ain't that bad of a thing. How many stars were Leaf, Young, Manziel, and Pacman to just name a few right off.
Recruiting evaluations have gotten considerably better over the last decade or so and there's a direct correlation between the number of 4-5 stars recruited and on the field performance.
Can't put my fingers on the article, but someone developed a "blue chip ratio" -- maybe not the exact terminology-- but it clearly showed that high ranking teams over the last 10 years had the most highly ranked recruits.
I had a high school teammate that went on to play for NC State during the peak of FSU/Bobby Bowden's days (think Charlie Ward era).
He said unquestionably recruiting was the #1 factor in major college football. Basically, he said pretty much every D1 team had good coaches and at the very least decent facilities. It all boiled down to depth and when he was blocking FSU's 3rd string DE (who was just as good as their 1st stringer) in the 3rd quarter and he hadn't taken a play off the entire game and had played on special teams....Well, you get the picture
Not a knock on Butch, but we look to be receuiting around 5-6th in the conference this year. If that trend continues, we'll be highly likely to be 5-6th in the SEC standings. Coaches rarely outcoach each other these days, at least not for extended periods of time.
Take for example Bill Snyder and the way everyone drools over his coaching ability. Yes he gets a lot out of a little. Personally, I'd rather have an average coach and a great recruiter. Snyder's won 2 conference titles in 25 years and had a losing record as recently as 2015.
When the courtship began, what was the first question Saban asked the AD at Bama? "What's your recruiting budget?"
Just because a player is a 3 star in high school doesn't mean he won't grow into a 4 or 5 star in college. One of the biggest difference between 5 stars and 3 stars is how soon they will play in college.
I'd guess bammy but that's not the "question" here. I'm just saying 3 stars ain't that bad of a thing. How many stars were Leaf, Young, Manziel, and Pacman to just name a few right off.
I don't disagree with this. But, the odds are much greater that a 5* will grow into a strong contributor than they are for a 3*.
Just because a player is a 3 star in high school doesn't mean he won't grow into a 4 or 5 star in college. One of the biggest difference between 5 stars and 3 stars is how soon they will play in college. Imo thinking that any player has reached their full potential in high school is not the way to think about recruits. I think that we sometimes do assume a 3 star will always be one of a 5 star will turn into that great player.
There is a lot of good 3* talent out there. Many of them shine during their college years. Cameron Sutton and someone would say Josh Dobbs. But when there's NO development by the coaching staff, then the team remains a 3* leveled team. Average. Nothing special. Which honestly is what we've been for past three years.
Contribute earlier yes I agree. I have changed my beliefs about rankings long ago. To me the biggest difference is how soon they contribute or how ready they are to play college football.
110-101 = A player ranked in this range is a "franchise player." He is one of the best to come along in years - if not decades (LeBron James, Adrian Peterson). Odds of having a player in this category every year is slim. This prospect has "can't miss" talent.
100-98 = Five-star prospect. One of the top 25 or so prospects in the nation. Player has excellent pro potential, and should emerge as one of the best players in the country before his college career ends.
97-90 = Four-star prospect. Prospect will be an impact-player for his college team. All-America candidate who displays pro potential. Typically one of the top 300 players in the nation.
89-80 = Three-star prospect. These are the players who will develop into reliable starters for the college teams. They are among the best players in their region of the country, and are generally among the top 750 players in the nation.
79-below = Two-star prospect. These players make up the bulk of Division I rosters. They may have little pro potential, are likely to become role players for their respective schools or not enough is known about the prospect to rank them accurately.
5 star doesn't necessarily mean you've reached your full potential already, just that evaluators see the most talent/potential in your future
There is a lot of good 3* talent out there. Many of them shine during their college years. Cameron Sutton and someone would say Josh Dobbs. But when there's NO development by the coaching staff, then the team remains a 3* leveled team. Average. Nothing special. Which honestly is what we've been for past three years.