Quote: Originally Posted By oldresorter on 10/20/2009
Sorry, I see absolutely no logical reason why the competition for recruits will be any different, unless recruiting is changed, it is the same coaches, and good vs bad players are pretty obvious in today's game, resulting in a level of competition, that I believe will still be present 90 days from now when the change is in place?
I also see no reason why the game will sim any different than d2 currently does, because in the long run, that really is the proposal. I think one of the beauties of the d1 game, is how hard it is to coach the minute differences among d1 players, d2 / d3 is far easier and obvious?
I know I am playing a devil's advocate role here - I understand the frustrations that have caused the request for more differentiation - I just am not sure there is any tangible result the fix is going to give us.
As a coach on an extended bye week, this is an enjoyable thread. I agree with dalter (did I say that?). Bobby Knight was intereviewed last season about recruiting and basically came out and said everyone knows who is going to leave early. Mayo, Oden etc. Having a two star leave early is absurd. That issue is probably the result of "potential" if his ratings all go from 50 to 90, and now is equal to a lot of 4-5 star players.
Good thoughts on the midmajors too. And I agree for the most part there too. The only exeception is that we need to redefine midmajor in HD compared to RL since in theory it's possible for certain midmajors in HD to excel past their RL counterparts due to certain circumstances.
Last, and the reason I copied ORs comment is that I agree that "recruiting won't change unless recruiting changes." In other words, FSS has become a huge part of recruiting and it's mostly a local activity with costs of the service based on state, not number of recruits. And it's no secret that recruiting costs also favor local schools. The combination of those two things will still be the biggest threat to unseat lack of competition unless the overall structure of recruiting changes from the top down.
I don't know who it was that I was debating that distance plays a large role irl. I was arguing that it doesn't. That talent level, not geography is the biggest role. His argument was primarily that any good local Florida basketball player will want to stay in Florida because of the "great weather and hot women." I showed him numbers that suggested most Florida DI players in fact the state and his argument quickly changed to "most players will want to stay in the same general region." I presume even if people in other states are fatter and uglier. {He could have zoomed out a few levels and claimed that most would want to stay in the U.S. and been 100% correct.}
The point is that teams will recruit just as players have preference. Teams have a say too, probably the biggest say. Yes, teams will want to stay as local as possible
if there are players that can help them compete (Judd Heathcoate said as much in his coach interview that he did with WIS). If you are a Big 6 school you need to compete with UNC, Duke, UCLA, Florida, Kansas, etc., not just the teams in your conference. I'll also say that in HD since economics are the same, it's probably not that fun at Montana to beat other midmajors as much as it is to compete with the Pac 10.
And if UCLA, Duke and Florida have more local players they can recruit than Kansas, then Kansas needs to go out as far as necessary to get them. A quick check of Rivals and you'll see that Kansas is or was considering 18 players in 2010. Five are 5-star players and hail from Oregon, Virginia, Maryland Washington and Iowa. Kansas in 2009 landed three 4/5 star recruits. The five stars were from Nevada and Oklahoma and the 4 star was from New Hampshire. New Hampshire?
My point is this. We live in a global society where the distance between states is not as prohibitive as it once was. I remember when I thought the fax machine was a big deal--couldn't believe you could send a piece of paper and have another person 600 miles away get a copy of it immediately. Email, internet and video conferencing have made this world tiny. The NBA is routinely scouting in Europe as are many colleges. It's a tiny world, folks.
In this game it's easier to recruit internationally regardless of the cost because your "cost" is the same as your competition. IRL, if Kansas wanted to recruit a kid in New Hampshire they would do so and wouldn't be scared off because another one of their Big 6 competitors was within 240 miles of the kid. They'd probably think it'd be better to recruit that kid in NH than a kid in the Congo. The risk in HD is not only the cost, but also FSS.
Should recruiting internationally be easier than recruiting a kid 250 miles away. Easier for Minnesota to recruit a kid in Siberia than one in Iowa? It doesn't make sense. The risk in doing so, once again, is FSS and cost.