This will not be a recruiting season I look back upon and brag about. It might, however, be a recruiting season that I use as an example of what NOT to do.
Pre-recruiting, it looked fairly straight-forward. I had a quality PG and a solid blue PF, both within 70 miles of campus. I figured I'd snare both and be well on my way to meeting needs. As fate would have it, I missed the mini-cycle at the start of recruiting, so I got home that night to discover the PG was already being considered by two human players and the PF had a Sim on it. No problem, the prestiges of the guys on the PG were C+/C- and neither were within 200 miles. I fired off a salvo of home visits, scouting trips and a scholarship. Same strategy on the Sim that was on the PF.
Next cycle, I log in and realize that one of the humans on the PG was, in fact, a D2 school with 7 open 'ships. This battle just became dangerous if he's serious about the player. The PF, meanwhile, rejected my home visits...had I waited for the first Word on the Street, as I commonly advise others to do, I would have seen that the player must have been Simmy's top target. For those keeping score at home, this is about $1,600 spent on two players that I have little shot of landing, despite their proximity. Yes, I are idiot.
This necessitated Plan B, which worked out nicely when I got drop down notice for a player from South Caroina. A quick FSS of the state revealed that, oh my, SC was rich in high-potential low-D2/D3 recruits. I grabbed the 2 that were already showing D3, fired off a call to two D2 ones that I liked, and waited. Both dropped within a day. Four players with the potential to hit 600+ (one might fall just shy...) all from one mid-population state -- definitely not something I encounter every recruiting season.
So, rest assured, Wooster is not in South Carolina. It'll just feel that way for the next four years. Here's your recruiting class:
-- Francis Davis is high-potential in defense, low post, perimeter, passing, stamina and free throws. He'll redshirt this season to bring up his defense number and work on his Off/Def IQs as he was the only player I recruited that did not have experience in the press defense or the triangle offense. The key to his career will be how many points his average speed potential holds. If it's a high average, he could be a PG/SG 'tweener for his career. If not, he's a pure SG.
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Carl Wilson is the man responsible for the South Carolina pipeline coming to my attention. High potentials in speed, rebounding, defense, shot blocking, low post, passing, stamina and durability. He'll easily soar past 600 points, although his freshman year might be a bit of a learning curve as he catches up the points that he starts behind the other recruits.
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Donald Ryder is high potential in athleticis, speed, low post, perimeter and passing. He, too, will easily get beyond 600 points in his playing career for a rating. He'll be one of those players that, by his junior year, will be able to fill multiple roles on the floor.
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Lucas Smart will be the shortest PF in the NCAC. Listed as a SF and standing only 6-foot, his 80 LP rating and high potential in athleticism will produce a player that sports all the numbers you want for a low block scorer. Other highs are defense, perimeter, stamina and free throws. He might not reach 600 for a rating, but I see bright things in his career on the offensive end.
As for the season, Wooster begins the year ranked No. 20 in athleticism and defense in D3 ball. For a press team, that's a good combination. That said, there are some issues ahead. The non-conference schedule contains three encounters with preseason top 20 clubs, none of whom I look to match up well against at this point in time. We'll be vulnerable early in the season against pressing teams -- the high potentials we have returning in ball handling and passing need to spike quickly as the year goes on. The nice thing is that this is a team without a senior and could easily be pushing 540 for a rating by year's end as the younger players improve via playing time. The NCAC is in rebuilding mode across the board and the conference race could go to the team that improves its young players the most over the course of the season. I figure we'll be in the mix, but I won't say we'll be holding a championship banner at season's end. After lowballing my prediction the last two seasons, I'll say Wooster is aiming for 18 wins this regular season and a return to the postseason in some fashion.
1/24/2012 11:13 PM (edited)