Green Mountains
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I tried to look at the class rankings a different way. I ranked each player at their position, using 247 Comp. Then I re-ranked the classes in the top 10 using the average position rank. Here is what that looks like:
.........................................Aver at........# of.........247 Comp
Rank........... School...........Position.......Recruits......Ranking
1.................USC...............5.7................15.............2
2.................Texas...........12.1................13...........10
3.................LSU..............12.4................25.............8
4.................Bama............14.8...............21.............1
5.................ND................16.7...............23.............3
6.................OSU..............20.1...............20.............4
7.................U of M...........21.5..............24..............5
8.................U of F............22.6..............23..............6
9.................U of GA..........22.8..............30.............9
10...............Tx A&M..........28.5..............34.............7
Obviously, this methodology favors small classes (lots of high end talent but no depth, and that should be factored in). Additionally, when a class included a few kids who are not as highly regarded by the services, it hurts the class using this methodology (ND is an example).
Clearly this methodology has some glitches, but it helps put the classes is perspective (at least to me).
I don't understand why LSU's class isn't regarded higher.
McGlinchey at 20, Kinlaw at 21, Deeb at 28, Butler at 28, Onwuala at 40, Fuller at 45, and Robinson at 58 are what are driving ND's average position ranking down. Without those 7, ND's average position rank is 9 (with a class size of 16). I think this just points to a problem with the methodology.....and to the fact that many think Onwuala, Fuller and Robinson are under appreciated by the services.
Thoughts?
(Can anyone help me format a table?)
.........................................Aver at........# of.........247 Comp
Rank........... School...........Position.......Recruits......Ranking
1.................USC...............5.7................15.............2
2.................Texas...........12.1................13...........10
3.................LSU..............12.4................25.............8
4.................Bama............14.8...............21.............1
5.................ND................16.7...............23.............3
6.................OSU..............20.1...............20.............4
7.................U of M...........21.5..............24..............5
8.................U of F............22.6..............23..............6
9.................U of GA..........22.8..............30.............9
10...............Tx A&M..........28.5..............34.............7
Obviously, this methodology favors small classes (lots of high end talent but no depth, and that should be factored in). Additionally, when a class included a few kids who are not as highly regarded by the services, it hurts the class using this methodology (ND is an example).
Clearly this methodology has some glitches, but it helps put the classes is perspective (at least to me).
I don't understand why LSU's class isn't regarded higher.
McGlinchey at 20, Kinlaw at 21, Deeb at 28, Butler at 28, Onwuala at 40, Fuller at 45, and Robinson at 58 are what are driving ND's average position ranking down. Without those 7, ND's average position rank is 9 (with a class size of 16). I think this just points to a problem with the methodology.....and to the fact that many think Onwuala, Fuller and Robinson are under appreciated by the services.
Thoughts?
(Can anyone help me format a table?)
Last edited:
prospects in each class. I believe that neither ESPN nor Rivals has a set number, but Scout does at 50 prospects. The blurb of explanation from JC: