When it comes to BCS recruiting, you have to know your place at the start, and take note of what everyone else around you is doing. What I mean by that is, find all of your close geographic rivals and pay attention to where they are spending money/how much money they have left approximately. Read FSS updates. Take notice of any changes.
When I talk about knowing your place, that means respecting the higher prestige schools and their needs first. If you're a B-, and you're right next to A- Iowa State and he needs three bigs, probably don't go for the best big in the area right away. You're just wasting your money. However, if he DOES go for the best big in the area, and spends a lot of money elsewhere, like in the international market, that is a potential poach target for late in recruiting if you are paying attention.
I recommend finding two to three targets that you think fit your system and are of good enough caliber, and get on them right away. Make sure you have FSS locked up, as in very tight or high priority( in pipeline, 6-10k for no stars, 10-15k for stars), as a message to any other school that sees it that you have spent a decent amount of money into the player and that it would take a significant chunk to knock you off of the player. Failure to do this leaves you open to competition on your recruits.
The biggest disadvantage you can give yourself is to spread yourself too thin with your huge bankroll. Treat your money in chunks rather than as a whole, if that makes sense. If you're going to do something, make a strong play to put pressure on other coaches. Do math. If you're 170 miles out with 4 scholarships and a B-, and the player you really want is 350 miles away from an A- school with 2 ships, see how much his CV's/HV's cost and how many CV's/HV's you both can get off realistically.
Sorry, a lot of random thoughts in this post. Hope it helps. I also realize that I have no titles, so take it with a grain of salt if you please.
5/30/2012 2:28 PM (edited)