Posted by professor17 on 1/8/2012 4:00:00 PM (view original):
Posted by lmschwarz on 1/8/2012 10:33:00 AM (view original):
Although I'm not an A+ program at my Colortado (Phelan), I feel the same way. If the recruit generator gives me quality recruits within 360 miles I'll have a good class, if not, I may get one very good recruit outside the area, but not the two or three needed to compete on a national level. Having Syracuse on Knight, I rarely have that problem as the northeast usually has plenty of recruits. The problem in the northeast, however, is the high number of quality programs competing for said recruits. So each area has its good points and bad points.
Whenever I first break into BCS-level schools in a world, I've always been intrigued about possibly coaching at Colorado, since I believe it is the only mainland BCS school that does not have any other BCS schools within it's 360-mile radius. I always figured that once the prestige got up, the whole state could become an impenetrable fortress, and the Buffs would be virtually assured of every good recruit that came out of there and Wyoming with (hopefully) little recruiting effort, leaving vast resources for expanding outward if needed (or so the plan went, in theory, anyway!). Of course, if no good recruits get generated in Colorado, then that changes things a bit! I applied once, but didn't get the job. Maybe someday...
i coached at colorado once, it was the 2nd d1 school i ever coached. it actually caused quite an uproar at the time. i had a pretty strong MWC nearby, but still, was quickly able to take the reigns of the area. you have enough d1 recruits within 360 miles that you are generally speaking the most powerful school in the country, to recruit solidly. well, the far from home preference was not around then, which does change the game somewhat. but basically when you get to a B+ or so, you generally have a good upper hand even against the best A+ school in the nation, and there are no other BCS schools close. but anyway, there is a large enough base of recruits that with a great recruit generation for you, you can get a pretty awesome class. one year, i had IMO 3 of the top 6 recruits nationally over in Provo, Utah (WIS had them as 3 of the top 25), and i believe 3-4 other top 50 recruits were nearby. that led to the best soph class i've had, by a lot, and hence the uproar.
however, the problem with colorado is, that base of recruits is not so large as to guarantee you a stop on the bottom end, like schools on the east coast have. you can have, like AZ or CA schools often complain about, zero or 1 top caliber recruits, and often just a couple who you could even conceive recruiting to a high BCS caliber program. recruiting nationally is very difficult, but by carefully managing your walkon situation, you can come out in decent shape.
on the whole, i would not expect an a+ colorado to be as consistently good as an a+ school in a fertile area, without a ridiculous level of competition. however, i would expect a b+ colorado to be as consistently good or better than a b+ school in a fertile area. there is just little benefit of going from b+ to a+ there, compared to other schools.
its definitely an interesting place to coach, though. if you have a bad-*** MWC, it would not be a great destination, but with a mediocre or less MWC, its a pretty good spot. not the best, but solid. just expect regular frustration... and a relatively low-level of excitement during recruiting.