Saunders
Administrator
The first Wednesday in February -- Signing Day – invariably gets under the skin of certain college football curmudgeons. They can’t stand all the doting over 17-year-olds with overinflated egos. They hate the hat ceremonies. They’re probably furious that LSU this year plans to put up billboards in their honor.
That’s their prerogative.
But what annoys me to no end is the annual lazy narrative that the recruiting rankings at the center of Signing Day are meaningless. A favorite trick is to hold up someone like Houston Texansstar J.J. Watt (former two-star recruit) or 2014 Heisman winner Marcus Mariota (three stars) as an indictment of the entire system. Or a school like Boise State that’s won at a high level or without a host of blue-chippers. Or Texas, which has essentially done the opposite.
But what these critics hold up as “evidence,” anyone with a basic understanding of statistics calls “outliers.”
To the recruiting analysts’ credit, the rankings of both the recruits you’ll see sign Wednesday and the classes that schools assemble are highly accurate predictors of future success. That is, unless you’re holding the evaluators to some impossible standard where they should never miss on a single prospect. If that’s the case, former sixth-round pick Tom Brady is an indictment of the entire NFL draft process, and Vegas oddsmakers should never be taken seriously because sometimes the underdogs beat the favorites.
To truly understand why you should in fact play close attention to Wednesday’s results, you need to look at the bigger picture. Below, I’ve assembled some data that debunks the most common myths about recruiting.
http://www.foxsports.com/college-football/story/signing-day-recruiting-rankings-5-stars-rashan-gary-derrick-brown-demetris-robertson-020116
They expanded on this more in their most recent podcast. Basically, the numbers say you have to recruit at a top ten level, or you won't win a national championship. Recruit at a top 20 level, or you'll be hard pressed to win a conference championship.