knapplc
Active member
He probably sold it the next day just to spite you.
Which gives me carte blanche to rag on his every decision from here until the end of time. Bonus!
He probably sold it the next day just to spite you.
National Champions average recruiting ranking according to 247 the 5 years leading into the championship year:But, I dont think it takes that to win a national championship.
It may take that to win a national championship and also be considered the most dominating and best team in the history of college football.
Nebraska has ALWAYS gotten the talent back then. What teams were you watching?Exactly Huskers. When NU finally got that talent it created the best team ever. That was never the M.O. because that was not the normal level of talent. It was about hard work and coaching.
Had talent, but not the level you remember.Nebraska has ALWAYS gotten the talent back then. What teams were you watching?
Not sure how easy it was for you to put that together. But can you do the same thing for the team that lost the national championship game that year? I only say that because yes they lost- but they were obviously right there and had what it took to win the natty- they just lost to a better coach. I think oregon played in 2 from memory and I think they had a chance to win both. Now they came up short- but a different bounce of a ball here or there and they may have won. So curious what it takes to get to the game.National Champions average recruiting ranking according to 247 the 5 years leading into the championship year:
2004: USC 8.8
2005: Texas 8.4
2006: Florida 6
2007: LSU 6.8
2008: Florida 5
2009: Alabama 9.4
2010: Auburn 14
2011: Alabama 4.6
2012: Alabama 2.4
2013: Florida St 7.2
2014: Ohio St 6.8
2015: Alabama 1
2016: Clemson 14.2
2017: Alabama 1
It has taken no lower than an average 14 recruiting class since 2000 to win a national championship. And, again, if Frost can win one without doing the same, put up a statue for him immediately after.
Sure. I'll do it. Give me a few minutesNot sure how easy it was for you to put that together. But can you do the same thing for the team that lost the national championship game that year? I only say that because yes they lost- but they were obviously right there and had what it took to win the natty- they just lost to a better coach. I think oregon played in 2 from memory and I think they had a chance to win both. Now they came up short- but a different bounce of a ball here or there and they may have won. So curious what it takes to get to the game.
Oregons classes during they dominating run is very important to note, because it directly impacts how we should view things. Because it shows what this system can over come in talent or star ratings.
Sure. I'll do it. Give me a few minutes
Had talent, but not the level you remember.
Agree to disagree. :cheers
National Champions average recruiting ranking according to 247 the 5 years leading into the championship year:
2004: USC 8.8
2005: Texas 8.4
2006: Florida 6
2007: LSU 6.8
2008: Florida 5
2009: Alabama 9.4
2010: Auburn 14
2011: Alabama 4.6
2012: Alabama 2.4
2013: Florida St 7.2
2014: Ohio St 6.8
2015: Alabama 1
2016: Clemson 14.2
2017: Alabama 1
It has taken no lower than an average 14 recruiting class since 2000 to win a national championship. And, again, if Frost can win one without doing the same, put up a statue for him immediately after.
National Champions average recruiting ranking according to 247 the 5 years leading into the championship year:
2004: USC 8.8
2005: Texas 8.4
2006: Florida 6
2007: LSU 6.8
2008: Florida 5
2009: Alabama 9.4
2010: Auburn 14
2011: Alabama 4.6
2012: Alabama 2.4
2013: Florida St 7.2
2014: Ohio St 6.8
2015: Alabama 1
2016: Clemson 14.2
2017: Alabama 1
It has taken no lower than an average 14 recruiting class since 2000 to win a national championship. And, again, if Frost can win one without doing the same, put up a statue for him immediately after.
This.He's going to have to do it to get a NC, because we aren't going to have those averages.
Runner ups average recruiting rankings:National Champions average recruiting ranking according to 247 the 5 years leading into the championship year:
2004: USC 8.8
2005: Texas 8.4
2006: Florida 6
2007: LSU 6.8
2008: Florida 5
2009: Alabama 9.4
2010: Auburn 14
2011: Alabama 4.6
2012: Alabama 2.4
2013: Florida St 7.2
2014: Ohio St 6.8
2015: Alabama 1
2016: Clemson 14.2
2017: Alabama 1
It has taken no lower than an average 14 recruiting class since 2000 to win a national championship. And, again, if Frost can win one without doing the same, put up a statue for him immediately after.
I was thinking about looking up the class rankings of a new HC leading up to their first NC appearance. Maybe another day.Nebraska's 1992, 1995 and 1996 classes were in the top 10 by Tom Lemming. Max Emfinger has Nebraska in his top 10 in '92, '94, '95 and '96
Good stats, but by that token, HCSF should have 5 years to recruit.
I actually started looking at that. From just browsing, only the Michigan St appearance had a team with an average below 15-16Should probably do all 4 playoff teams from the past few years... if you got the time :thumbs
Show me one coach that says they are just trying to recruit the best players regardless of fit.
No one said that being high rated is a guarantee but when you have a 4-5 star player that doesn't pan out and you have other 4-5 star players to fill in, it works out. See: Clemson, Alabama, Ohio St.
Recruiting is only one part. Coaching and development are the other 2. See Alabama, Ohio St, Penn St, Clemson
If he can do it game after game in the B1G with his system, then God bless him. I see Urban Meyer and James Franklin taking the other approach and being very successful.
Nebraska's 95 NC team starters consisted of 2 5 star RB's, 6 High School All American's and 10 High School All State players from like 4-5 different states. Let's be real here.