Posted by gillispie on 7/18/2023 4:54:00 PM (view original):
Posted by shoe3 on 7/18/2023 4:51:00 PM (view original):
Posted by gillispie on 7/18/2023 4:42:00 PM (view original):
Posted by shoe3 on 7/18/2023 4:13:00 PM (view original):
In the past, I've been agnostic to recruit gen arguments. This year's generation in Tark has made me a convert.
From my spot in Fresno, there are:
0 Top 100 recruits in California, Oregon, or Washington
3 Top 100 recruits within 400 miles of Fresno
7 Top 100 recruits within 750 miles
14 Top 100 recruits within 1000 miles (that is essentially the entire US West)
After sending a ticket, the response was a predictable "gosh, we're sorry it's so bad, that's the way it goes" kind of deal. Whatever, those guys are clueless, old news. Here's the interesting thing. The claim is that it's programed to be tied to how many scholarships are open in the region, which I knew; this was why I was sending the ticket asking them to look into it. I knew our conference had plenty of open scholarships - I had 6 graduating seniors myself. So I looked into it, and the Pac10 has more graduating seniors than all but one power conference, with 33. To add to this, the WCC has 37, the Big West has 34. We are not short for open scholarships due to seniors in this region.
The one conference that is above us? The SEC, with 44. That's a TON of graduating seniors for high level D1. Apparently, that anomaly is tricking the system into an absurd amount of high level recruits into that region for everyone else. I know people have complained about some bad crops before, but I've never seen anything close to this bad, and I've spent a lot of time in Pac-10 teams. It doesn't feel like a coincidence to me that it corresponds with that anomalous class.
my guess is, on your last line - that it is a coincidence. i don't think the # of recruits or quality of recruits in the SEC area in any way relates to the number or quality of recruits in the PAC 10 area.
I mean... they very nearly straight up told me it was not a coincidence.
"There is also a factor of what teams' overall needs in for each region that also plays a factor in the generation of the recruits and is intended functionality"
i think you are reading too much into that. first, your count on # of openings for SEC is not in line with how it actually works, i think. and second, i don't think they very nearly straight up told you anything along the lines of, the SEC count impacted your region. i don't think the SEC region has anything to do with the PAC 10 region, and i don't infer a contradiction from what you posted there.
Well first, if anything, more walk-ons just means we have more need in the Pac10 - odds are quite good that the more graduating seniors there are, the fewer the walk-ons, wouldn't you agree? I mean I could click through and count if you really want, but it seems intuitive.
And second, you're mixing my arguments. I'm not sure about the strong correlation either. That's why I said it doesn't feel like a coincidence, instead of, like "it can't possibly be a coincidence" in my OP.
But also, they did straight up tell me that "There is also a factor of what teams' overall needs in for each region that also plays a factor in the generation of the recruits and is intended functionality". That is verbatim.
And look Gil, I don't expect you to see the urgency on this, being at Florida A&M. I'm sure this crop looks fine from where you are. :)