bottlebass
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Nice try throwing ice in my chili, it was so hot the ice started on fire rather than melting!
Are you suggesting that Claeys can't recruit and that he should be let go?
For the record, recruiting rankings correlate with success but at a school like Minnesota you have to build your way up to get to the point where you can compete with the big boys. The staff has said in the past that they model their recruiting after Michigan State, a program that has shown that the strategy works.
I think you need to clarify. Wisc has done a little better according to recruiting class rankings, but not by much. MN and IA seem to consistently be close to each other in the rankings.
Actually out of the 3 since 2010, Iowa has done the best. According to Rivals the average ranking for each school since 2010 is:
IA: 47
WI: 52
MN: 58
This is actually closer than I thought. However, Wisconsin had a significant outlier with the 2010 class ranked 98. If you remove each schools worst class since 2010, the rankings are as follows:
WI: 44
IA: 45
MN: 55
10 spots might not seem like a lot, but it adds up over time, especially when you have a fringe top 30 class.
Iowa's highest ranked class was ranked 31, Wisconsin's was 33, and Minnesota's was 51.
Lord, this again. Every year, we get the same argument about star ratings, and the same weeping and wailing about how the Gophers' recruiting stinks. Then, on signing day, by some miracle, you come on Gopher hole, and people are predicting that every recruit is a future superstar and is going to transform the program.
I have no idea how good any of these recruits may be. I wait to watch them play, and then I make up my own mind about who can play, and who can't play.
It doesn't really beyond maybe #25, certainly not in the 40-60 range...very subjective. Coin flip.
A 33rd ranked class is still in the top 26% of FBS. The 51st ranked class is in the top 40% among the 128 schools in the FBS. That's still a big difference.
Is it really that big a difference though.
Outside the top couple teams, and then a mid range of the top 20.... I swear one player with an extra star makes the difference between 33 and 50 at times....
It doesn't really beyond maybe #25, certainly not in the 40-60 range...very subjective. Coin flip.
Who?
You want Andersen?
Bert?
Bret Bielema at UW:
68-24 (37-19)
3 Big Ten Championships
Gary Andersen at UW:
19-7 (13-3)
1 Big Ten West title, got smoked in Big Ten Championship game.
Not trying to flame, just saying Gopher fans would be thrilled with the results of Bielema and Andersen. There is not a lot separating Wisconsin (or Iowa) from Minnesota as far as level playing fields go. I would say BB and GA should be what Minnesota is striving for.
As far as recruiting goes, I'm for evaluating classes after their time on the field has completed. I think SB Nation did a feature on re-ranking the recruiting classes after their 4 or 5 year periods have completed. I can't find the article now but UW was a lot higher in that regard.
Do you think the results would be the same here?
A 33rd ranked class is still in the top 26% of FBS. The 51st ranked class is in the top 40% among the 128 schools in the FBS. That's still a big difference.
Not in football. In basketball maybe. A four star might move a team in that range up a spot or two. Not 17. It also has to do with the number of recruits.
Last year ranked at 51 the Gophers had 1 four star and 13 3 stars. Wisconsin ranked at 35 had 4 four stars and 19 three stars.
Listen, we can cherry-pick all night to prove our points.
To break it down even further, a team ranked in the mid 40s has on average 4-5 more recruits ranked 3* and above than a team ranked in the mid 50s. Over a 4 year period that's an average of 16-20 recruits, nearly a full recruiting class of higher ranked kids. That's a significant difference.
It's not cherry picking. There is a direct correlation between recruiting rankings and winning programs. It's fact.
It's not cherry picking. There is a direct correlation between recruiting rankings and winning programs. It's fact.
Northwestern.