However, these articles do not prove that regular top 10 classes are NECESSARY to winning a championship (though they certainly help the cause). As was pointed out, he even acknowledges that MSU and other teams are outliers even this year, just like Nebraska was an outlier in its day.
You don't know what you're talking about.
For the last 11 years in a row... without fail... 100% of the time... the team that has won the national championship has achieved the elite player metric (number of elite players on the team - 4 and 5 star players).
If a team has met that metric then they have a chance to win the national championship. If they don't meet that metric they have 0% chance to win the national title... as in zero.
Reality... fact.
Actually, you don't know what you're talking about. You're confusing past results with future returns. It's certainly an interesting trend, but there is absolutely no guarantee that this "metric" will continue to be true. And the first time a non-top-ten-recruiting team wins the title, the "metric" will shift slightly to whatever includes that champion and the previous ones (e.g. "You need a top 13 recruiting class...").
And for Mandel to call everyone else lazy about statistics is laughable - there's only 11 data points for the conclusion he's drawing!!
None of what I'm saying implies that recruiting isn't important though.
Just that the evidence being used here does NOT imply future results.
More fairy tale thinking.
Yes... something happening 11 out of 11 times in a row does imply future results... especially when the thing that happened 11 out of 11 times in a row... was proven by the results on the field.
You can't "prove" something by looking at a limited set of results. And calling everyone else's posts "fairy tale thinking" is pretty funny since you're the one who has the fairy tale that only top ten recruiting class teams (or whatever the metric is) can win the title.
A sample size of 11 isn't necessarily too small, especially when the proportion = 1.
If we are looking at just the last 11 championships, the number of teams winning those is actually only eight (Alabama, Florida, FSU, Ohio State, Texas, Florida, LSU, Auburn), meaning the sample in a sense is even smaller.
Other "to win a championship, you ..." type conclusions that are similar to "you must have X top 10 classes or X% of 4* and 5* classes" that can be drawn from this data:
You must be a team from south of the Mason Dixon line (with one exception - and that was a coach who was previously coaching south of the Mason Dixon).
You must be a team from east of the Mississippi (with Texas being an exception)
You must not be in the P12
and the list of meaningless and unsubstantiated conclusions could go on...
Again, no one is arguing that recruiting is unimportant. Some of us simply believe that top 10 classes are not a prerequisite for winning championships (though they certainly help). An for those of us who are fans of Nebraska, we should hope that those some of us are correct.