Yeah I agree with mully on this one.
I’m going to use an example from the last recruiting cycle in Tark, where I have a very non-A+ Fresno St in the vicinity of piman’s A++++ UCLA. I had 2 open scholarships, he had I don’t know, 3 or 4, with a couple expected EEs as usual. There was a Southern California 4 or 5 star guy that we were the only two on after one cycle (I have lots to say about this, but I’ll leave it alone for now). I had only spent a single AP, knowing UCLA was probably going to also be on him, but the kid wanted to play, and wanted at least one of my sets, and I think I had another possible advantage, so I tried to pull the stow AP and promises on a wants to play kid before I offered a scholarship. The idea being that of course UCLA is going to likely think this guy is locked in, and move on to other targets; perhaps I can sneak in and make some noise.
As it turns out it worked too well, when I unlocked the promises, even before the scholarship, I jumped all the way to very high. Now at that point I knew I had no shot at the kid if UCLA wanted him, but I did want UCLA to spend on him (and I also want UCLA to know I’m around, and all that) so while I had my own real targets locked in, I also threw in some visits and hung around for a while. Not all the way in, only about half way, but enough to make sure UCLA either offered promises themselves, or invested some visits to lock the kid in. It’s in no one’s interest if A++++ teams get 4-5 star recruits unchallenged. The reason I could challenge for this kid was because he had a preference for playing time, and I could offer him promises that did not hurt me at all. It probably doesn’t end up hurting UCLA either (much, this time around) but in these *types* of cases, forcing the A+ teams to give starts to freshmen does hurt them, it does cost them something. You take that recruiting tool away, and you’re closing the window on the range of teams that can challenge for these types of players.
8/26/2021 7:38 PM (edited)