I always start with scouting. Are you getting enough information on a big enough pool? At UMass, which should be comparable to Dayton and GW, I will get ~275 guys to level 4 on a year when I have 3 scholarships open. Sometimes a little more. Now yeah, a lot of those I will throw out, but having that big pool gives me a lot of options. And I see all the potential gems in the given area, and those guys who will grow into stars are what you want to build your program around when you’re moving into a mid-major.
You don’t have to fill your roster, of course, unless you run FB/P, so don’t be afraid to take a walkon and use the resources next year if no one out there makes your team better. Jucos can be good value, turning over resources fast, and *also* making your team better, bonus if they come in with your set knowledge.
Recruiting is a numbers game, to a large extent. Players just a little better than replacement level are cheap and pretty easy to get, if you scout efficiently. Those are emergency, or “Plan C” types. You can lock up players a notch above that (“Plan B”) with just a few visits, usually. And if those guys have good WE and potential, even if they start low, they turn out to be the types of guys I talk about in the first paragraph. So the rest can be spent taking *intelligent* risks battling for the star players that make sense. Legit 1-3 star player who are a good preference match should be within your reach once you are at B- (A+ teams can sometimes lock you out if they want to, but often would rather invest more in better looking players). If you can get in on a few of those battles every season, while filling up the rest of your roster locking up those Plan B players, you will be on your way. Sometimes you’ll get shut out, and that’s ok. Keep punching up. You’ll get there.
4/2/2022 10:11 PM (edited)