Sherm Sticky
The Prophet
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To soon
To soon
anyone care to pm details if worth it
just go to the who's likely next thread. commitment coming tomorrow
I was just thinking about recruiting and everything today and I have a question for you all, and didn't feel like making a new thread. I have my own opinion, but would like to hear from greater more experienced minds.
With all the recruiting sites and 5,4,3,2 stars. what positions are hardest/easiest to evaluate, which are hardest/easiest to develop. If you have a class with so many 5 stars so many 4 stars and so many 3 stars, at what positions would you want the 5 stars/4 stars/3 stars or even 2 stars.
I have mainly been thinking about this because the strength of our classes (stars wise) have been our offensive lines. In my opinion, offensive line is probably the easiest to turn a 3 star player into a first round draft pick. If this is the case, does a 4/5star OL not hold as much weight as a 4/5 star rb/wr commit. Is our team ranking inflated because our strong point is our offensive line?
I'd be very interested in any answers or debate on this topic, and feel free to move it if this is the wrong thread, thanks.
vs 4
vs 3
so let's just look at true 5
players for a second.
talent at QB followed by DL. After that it gets nitpicky and depends on the identity of your team.
HS talent is OL, because if you recruit enough big, athletic, project players with the right coaches for player development they can turn out very elite. It's also hardest to project from HS how someone will do when asked to block 280+ athletic freaks versus 250 pound slow fat kids. With that being said, consistent elite OL recruiting leads to dominant OLs that allow you to run the ball on anyone. A dominant OL coupled with a competent QB is the surest way to build a team. So signing highly rated OLs should not be scoffed at by any measure.
players to get the job done can actually lead to issues if any are busts or you have injuries.
isn't the end of the world. It's also obvious that a 100 rating QB is more valuable than a 100 rating WR who is more valuable than a 100 rating TE (in most schemes) because of how much influence each has on any given play.I was just thinking about recruiting and everything today and I have a question for you all, and didn't feel like making a new thread. I have my own opinion, but would like to hear from greater more experienced minds.
With all the recruiting sites and 5,4,3,2 stars. what positions are hardest/easiest to evaluate, which are hardest/easiest to develop. If you have a class with so many 5 stars so many 4 stars and so many 3 stars, at what positions would you want the 5 stars/4 stars/3 stars or even 2 stars.
I have mainly been thinking about this because the strength of our classes (stars wise) have been our offensive lines. In my opinion, offensive line is probably the easiest to turn a 3 star player into a first round draft pick. If this is the case, does a 4/5star OL not hold as much weight as a 4/5 star rb/wr commit. Is our team ranking inflated because our strong point is our offensive line?
I'd be very interested in any answers or debate on this topic, and feel free to move it if this is the wrong thread, thanks.
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Tranquill commitment will elevate Irish class two spots to No. 9 overall on <a href="http://t.co/eChBJgDjAc">http://t.co/eChBJgDjAc</a>, jumping Texas and Clemson.</p>— Irish Illustrated (@NDatRivals) <a href="https://twitter.com/NDatRivals/statuses/402947209563369472">November 19, 2013</a></blockquote>
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I miss Hood![]()
O/U on Tennessee commits by signing day? I'm thinking 34. What a joke.
I'm a bit confused by 247. They have Tranquill as a 4-star, but on their team rankings they count him as a 3-star (reflects his composite score). They also show his composite score on the commit tracker. Do they pay any credence to their own evaluations?
I think they just use their composite rankings in order to rank schools
Just seems weird to me that they would rate a player and then defer to the industry, but I get and appreciate the macro view.
everything is a cycle.
10 years ago, the SEC was not the king of the football field, 10 years from now, they probably wont be again. It's a cycle. The demographics have not/will not change, but coaches do and so do programs.
btw: quality response Buster Bluth, way to bring something to the discussion.