We don't out recruit Rutgers?
Nebraska since 2020 in Big Ten recruiting rankings: 4, 5, 10, 5, 6
Rutgers since 202 in Big Ten recruiting rankings: 13, 9, 8, 11, 11
Not sure how you can say we don't out recruit them significantly.
Where a team finishes in rankings isn't an accurate reflection of recruiting talent. Because of talent consolidation among top teams, the gap between the team that finishes 25th in national rankings, for example, is closer to the team that finishes 50th than they are the team that finishes 15th.
Instead of looking at raw finishing in the rankings, which doesn't accurately reflect recruiting prowess because it doesn't consider the distance between the teams. Use the blue chip ratio to determine talent acquisition.
Good coaching and adequate talent will beat s#!t coaching and good talent 9/10 times at this level. Miami is a bad example.
Nebraska having equal talent to the Illinois/Purdues/Minnesota's is a stretch. Nebraska has significantly more talent. They have more talent than Wisconsin and Iowa, and right now have as much if not more productive talent than Penn St. Our rosters were never close to maxing out or being developed and finally we have a staff who can do that.
I agree that good coaching and adequate talent can go a long way. I think the Big Ten has good coaching across the board. Brett Bielema at Illinois is a good coach, so is PJ Fleck, so is Kirk Ferentz, and so is Greg Schiano. I think top to bottom, the Big Ten has the best coaching in the country, which is why teams without a lot of talent beat bad teams (like Miami) who have talent.
But this idea that Nebraska is more talented than Wisconsin, Iowa, or some of our other conference peers is... strange. Nebraska has a good advantage over Northwestern, Illinois and perhaps Purdue. The number of Blue Chip players recruited by each school (4 and 5 star players):
2021 2022 2023 2024 4 Year Total
Wisconsin 9 Wisconsin 2 Wisconsin 3 Wisconsin 11 Wisconsin 25
Nebraska 4 Nebraska 2 Nebraska 4 Nebraska 8 Nebraska 18
Iowa 7 Iowa 2 Iowa 2 Iowa 6 Iowa 17
Minnesota 4 Minnesota 2 Minnesota 2 Minnesota 3 Minnesota 11
Rutgers 3 Rutgers 5 Rutgers 0 Rutgers 4 Rutgers 12
Northwestern 3 Northwestern 2 Northwestern 1 Northwestern 0 Northwestern 6
Purdue 1 Purdue 4 Purdue 0 Purdue 5 Purdue 10
Illinois 0 Illinois 0 Illinois 3 Illinois 2 Illinois 5
In the past, I've posted a similar chart that included blue chip transfers - which schools held onto their blue chip talent and kept it in the program. I don't have the time to update the chart or go through my post history. But I do know that Nebraska had the most blue chip transfers. For example, 2 out of the 4 blue chip players Nebraska recruited in 2021 transferred. In 2022, 1 out of the 2 transferred.
I would argue that the idea that Nebraska's roster is significantly more talented than conference rivals like Minnesota, who does a better job of holding onto their blue chip talent is a false one. Nebraska does have a few more blue chip players on its roster, but I don't think that's enough to confidently say that they are much better. It's why we lose to those teams.