Dobbs 4 Heisman
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So rather than waiting for 247 to put out their rankings of talent level in college football, I decided to do my own research and see if I could put together a list that is more accurate. It always confused my why people weigh recruiting classes equally. Just think about this logically. Why should the freshmen class be treated the same as the junior class? If you had only one top 5 class on campus, wouldn't you rather it be your junior class that is loaded rather than your freshmen class since the juniors have more experience and more likely to make a huge impact? For most of the elite teams like Alabama, Ohio State, and Florida State, this distinction doesn't matter cause they recruit top 5 classes every year. However, this distinction will prove significant for a team like Michigan vs a team like Tennessee. How come? Because Tennessee's talent is concentrated in their senior and junior class while Michigan's talent is concentrated in their freshmen and sophomore classes. If you just averaged their last 4 classes, they would be ranked similarly, however, which situation would you rather be in? Would you want your loaded classes be experienced seniors and juniors or inexperienced freshmen and sophomores? It should stand to reason that Tennessee should be ranked higher since the senior and junior class ranking should get more weight.
So here is my methodology: I counted the number of 4-star and 5-star recruits signed over the last 4 years. Then I weighted each of those classes based on the percentage of seniors, juniors, sophomores, and freshmen teams typically have in their 2-deep. For example, Tennessee's projected 2-deep will have 11 seniors, 17 juniors, 11 sophomores, and 6 freshmen. So my formula came out to this: [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2014 x (1)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2015 x (1.75)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2016 x (1)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2017 x (0.25)] = total talent score.
And without further ado here is how the rankings came out:
***NOTE*** The number you see next to the team name is the total score I got based on my formula above and the numbers in the parenthesis are the number of 4-star and 5-star recruits according to the 247composite rankings that the school signed in the past 4 years. The order goes (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017).
TIER ONE (70+ points)
1. Alabama - 80.00 (22, 20, 17, 24)
TIER TWO (60-70 points)
2. Ohio State - 65.00 (16, 15, 18, 19)
3. Auburn - 63.75 (13, 20, 13, 11)
4. Florida State - 62.00 (16, 14, 18, 14)
5. LSU - 61.50 (17, 13, 18, 15)
TIER THREE (50-60 points)
6. USC - 59.00 (10, 18, 14, 14)
7. Georgia - 56.75 (13, 14, 14, 21)
8. Tennessee - 55.25 (16, 16, 10, 5)
9. Notre Dame - 53.00 (16, 14, 10, 10)
10. Texas - 50.25 (8, 14, 16, 7)
TIER FOUR (35-50 points)
11. Texas A&M - 47.00 (14, 13, 8, 9)
12. Clemson - 45.50 (10, 12, 12, 10)
13. UCLA - 43.50 (9, 13, 10, 7)
14. Oklahoma - 41.00 (9, 10, 10, 18)
15. Michigan - 38.75 (9, 6, 14, 21)
16. Penn State - 38.50 (5, 13, 8, 11)
TIER FIVE (25-35 points)
17. Ole Miss - 34.00 (6, 7, 15, 3)
18. Miami - 28.25 (8, 5, 9, 10)
19. Stanford - 28.25 (8, 5, 9, 10)
20. Florida - 27.75 (9, 4, 9, 11)
Interesting Results:
So here is my methodology: I counted the number of 4-star and 5-star recruits signed over the last 4 years. Then I weighted each of those classes based on the percentage of seniors, juniors, sophomores, and freshmen teams typically have in their 2-deep. For example, Tennessee's projected 2-deep will have 11 seniors, 17 juniors, 11 sophomores, and 6 freshmen. So my formula came out to this: [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2014 x (1)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2015 x (1.75)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2016 x (1)] + [# of 4 and 5-star players from 2017 x (0.25)] = total talent score.
And without further ado here is how the rankings came out:
***NOTE*** The number you see next to the team name is the total score I got based on my formula above and the numbers in the parenthesis are the number of 4-star and 5-star recruits according to the 247composite rankings that the school signed in the past 4 years. The order goes (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017).
TIER ONE (70+ points)
1. Alabama - 80.00 (22, 20, 17, 24)
TIER TWO (60-70 points)
2. Ohio State - 65.00 (16, 15, 18, 19)
3. Auburn - 63.75 (13, 20, 13, 11)
4. Florida State - 62.00 (16, 14, 18, 14)
5. LSU - 61.50 (17, 13, 18, 15)
TIER THREE (50-60 points)
6. USC - 59.00 (10, 18, 14, 14)
7. Georgia - 56.75 (13, 14, 14, 21)
8. Tennessee - 55.25 (16, 16, 10, 5)
9. Notre Dame - 53.00 (16, 14, 10, 10)
10. Texas - 50.25 (8, 14, 16, 7)
TIER FOUR (35-50 points)
11. Texas A&M - 47.00 (14, 13, 8, 9)
12. Clemson - 45.50 (10, 12, 12, 10)
13. UCLA - 43.50 (9, 13, 10, 7)
14. Oklahoma - 41.00 (9, 10, 10, 18)
15. Michigan - 38.75 (9, 6, 14, 21)
16. Penn State - 38.50 (5, 13, 8, 11)
TIER FIVE (25-35 points)
17. Ole Miss - 34.00 (6, 7, 15, 3)
18. Miami - 28.25 (8, 5, 9, 10)
19. Stanford - 28.25 (8, 5, 9, 10)
20. Florida - 27.75 (9, 4, 9, 11)
Interesting Results:
- ITS ALABAMA AND THEN EVERYONE ELSE. Honestly, I was shocked by how much more talented Alabama's roster is than everybody else. As you can see, nobody else even breaks into the 70s in terms of their final score. But there is Alabama by themselves in the 80s over 15 points clear of everyone else. To put it in perspective, at least according to my rankings, there is a bigger gap in talent between Alabama and Ohio State who rank #1 and #2 than there is between #2 Ohio State and #10 Texas. THAT'S CRAZY. No wonder Nick Saban and Alabama are always in the national title game.
- Auburn and Notre Dame ended up a little higher on this list than I would have expected. Auburn was helped mainly by the fact that they signed 20 4 and 5-star recruits in 2015. While Notre Dame has just signed solid classes each and every year the last 4 years. I wouldn't be surprised if Notre Dame has a huge bounce back year this season. They have too much talent not to be very good.
- Tennessee plays 3 teams that according to these rankings are more talented. However, the talent level between Tennessee and Georgia is nearly identical. Given that Tennessee will have home-field advantage, I think we can say that we should be the favorite in that match-up. LSU is also a little bit more talented than Tennessee but that game is also at home. Tennessee should have every chance in the world to win that game because the gap in talent between LSU and Tennessee isn't wide enough to overcome home field advantage. The only game on Tennessee's 2017 schedule that looks unwinnable is the road game against Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Other than for that game, Tennessee should have a good chance to win every other game. 10-2 should be the expectation with 11-1 being a distinct possibility.
- And finally, my goodness is Florida in trouble. They are less talented than 6 of the teams they play this year (Florida State, LSU, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas A&M, and Michigan). I don't think home-field will be enough to close the gap against Florida State, LSU, and Tennessee because the gap in talent between those teams and Florida is just huge according to my rankings. The games against Georgia and Michigan also look unwinnable because they are at neutral sites rather than being home games that Florida could benefit from. The only game where Florida is less talented than their opponent that they have a decent chance of winning is against Texas A&M. The gap in talent in that game could be close enough that home-field becomes an advantage. All in all, the recruiting rankings say Florida could be in for a very rough year. And its the fact they only signed 4 recruits in the 2015 class that were either 4-stars or 5-stars that will hurt them this year.