College Football Recruiting
for High School Players
and Parents
NEWS AND COMMENTARY
Showing posts with label recruiting class ranking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recruiting class ranking. Show all posts
Thursday, January 26, 2012
The Class of '07 Fabulous 55 ... what happened?
A couple of items in today's Austin American-Statesman take a look back at how well the paper's Class of 2007 Fabulous 55 high school football players panned out when they went to college. Not so well, indicating how difficult it is to accurately evaluate prospective football recruits and how misleading such lists can be. Check out the story and the list.
Labels:
football recruiting,
National Letter of Intent,
National Signing Day,
recruiting class ranking
Monday, January 23, 2012
Three reasons why rankings of college football recruiting classes are full of it ...
College football fans love
the annual rankings of college football teams' recruiting classes. Interest peaks around National Signing Day, which is February 1 this year. But
as a measure of predicting success on the football field, these rankings of
recruiting classes are pretty much meaningless, looking at team performance
four years later. By that time, most of those players would be seniors or
redshirt juniors. We’d expect them to have moved into starting positions, or at
least be making strong contributions to their teams’ success. So likewise, we’d
think that we’d have college football teams performing in line with the
perceived strength of those recruiting classes. Here’s why we need to think
again:
1) Most of the recruiting classes ranked in the top
10 fail to produce teams that perform at that level. In 2008, the recruiting classes of six
college football teams were ranked among the top 10 by all of three national
recruiting sites (Rivals, Scout, and ESPN). Those teams were Alabama, Notre
Dame, Ohio State, Miami, Georgia, and USC. But of those, only two – Alabama and
USC – ranked among the top 10 in the final Associated Press rankings for the
football season four years later, in fall 2011.
And another three of those consensus top-ranked recruiting classes – at Miami, Notre Dame and Ohio State – produced teams
that didn’t even make it into the A.P.’s top
25 at the end of the 2011 season.
2) Many of the recruiting classes ranked low – even
very low – produce teams that perform at very high levels. For example,
Stanford’s 2008 recruiting class was ranked No. 50 by Rivals and No. 43 by
Scout, and didn’t appear in the ESPN’s top-25-only rankings. But Stanford ended
up the fall 2011 season as the No. 7 team in the nation, according to the final
A.P. poll. Arkansas is another example. At the end of the 2011 season, it was
ranked by A.P. as the No. 5 team in the nation. But its 2008 recruiting class
was ranked No. 36 by Rivals, No. 24 by Scout, and No. 18 by ESPN.
3) Rankings of recruiting classes don’t – and can’t
– take into account all of the intangibles that affect player and team
performance in the future. There’s no
way to know which recruits will be able to adapt to the physical and emotional
demands and faster pace of the college game. It’s a tough transition for many.
Other factors include the nearly 50 percent turnover rate among NCAA Division I
head coaches every three years. New coaches often bring different offensive and
defensive schemes that might not fit the skills and talents of players recruited
by previous coaches. These and other issues are explored in Beyond Friday Nights: College Football Recruiting for Players and Parents, a great read for
anyone interested in college football recruiting.
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