Thanks for bringing that up... I knew you would.So... You include TO in that group as someone who doesn't understand football. Interesting.
NO person no matter how great is great at everything.
TO... one of the greatest football coaches of all time... has been a disaster at hiring coaches and for our recruiting. The disaster and downfall of our great program and the hubris at the top of our program... started the day his hand picked successor was announced.
Frank Solich's last two recruiting classes were ranked 40th in 2002... and 42nd in 2003.
Here's how the recruiting for Nebraska in the big 12 looked in those two years with Frank Solich as head coach:
2002:
1: Texas
2: Oklahoma
3: Colorado
4: Kansas State
5: Texas A&M
6: Oklahoma State
7: Missouri
8: Iowa State
9: Nebraska
2003:
1: Oklahoma
2: Texas A&M
3: Oklahoma State
4: Texas
5: Colorado
6: Missouri
7: Kansas
8: Nebraska
Solich was a disaster for Nebraska recruiting and started the long spiral downward to where we are at now. Solich's inability to recruit was alarming to many in those days, including me.
Nebraska's willingness to allow Oklahoma and Texas to out recruit us was a disaster for our program. A disaster we have never recovered from.
Texas won the national championship in 2005 based on their great recruiting in the previous 4 years.
And the same great coach... Tom Osborne... also hand picked another coach for Nebraska... you may remember his name... Bo Pelini ring a bell ? You know... the guy who sabotaged our football program. I'll have more on him later.
I don't want to look one-sided so I need to say you have no idea what you're talking about.
You didn't understand the sbnation article ?
Then you are incapable of understanding football.
I may have listened to someone 10-15 years ago who felt that recruiting rankings didn't mean much, but the amount time, effort and research that goes into recruiting services today dwarfs even what was being done five years ago.Couple that misleading statistic with the fact that they are often wildly wrong in conference championships and the top 25, and most of us see that the recruiting services are pretty useless.
The 2014 College Football Playoff featured three of the top four rosters according to the recruiting rankings. Based on the last five classes, Alabama had the No. 1 roster in the nation in ‘14, Florida State was No. 2 and Ohio State was No. 4 nationally. Oregon wasn’t far behind with the 14th-ranked roster in America.
The good folks at SB Nation — Matt Hinton and Bud Elliott — have done marvelous work breaking down the statistics as it relates to recruiting rankings. I suggest reading the articles, but the gist of their research reveals two telling and undeniable truths: 1) Teams with better recruiting classes win more games and 2) players with more stars are more likely to be drafted.
Elliott provides the real data. The ratios indicate that four- and five-star recruits are 995 percent more likely to be drafted in the first round than a three- or two-star prospect. Additionally, based on the 2014 NFL Draft, a five-star recruit has a 60 percent chance of getting drafted (16 of 27) and a four-star has a 20 percent opportunity (77 of 395). Meanwhile, three-star recruits have just a 5.5 percent chance (92 of 1644) and two-stars/unranked players have less than a three-percent likelihood of getting drafted (71 of 2,434).
If we assume the girls don't know each other and these are independent trials with the same probability of wearing a blue dress for each girl, then it has the memoryless property and the previous 10 blue dress wearing girls have no bearing on whether the 11th girl wears a blue dress.You're still not getting it moirane.
The results of the last 11 years have no bearing on what will happen this year. Going back to the girls' dresses analogy, 11 girls walking by in a blue dress doesn't mean the next will definitely, or even probably, walk by in a blue dress.
Coin flipping is stochastic. Girls in blue dresses, not so much. Carry on...<snip>There is no stat that says anything "has" to happen, anywhere. That's why they're stats. You're using a sample to make inferences on a long-run probability or population.
A simple example of the fault in your argument would be the notion that because 9 girls just walked by in a red dress, the next one will be in a red dress. Or more classically, because I just flipped 10 heads in a row, the next flip will be a heads.
Those are skirts.Coin flipping is stochastic. Girls in blue dresses, not so much. Carry on...<snip>There is no stat that says anything "has" to happen, anywhere. That's why they're stats. You're using a sample to make inferences on a long-run probability or population.
A simple example of the fault in your argument would be the notion that because 9 girls just walked by in a red dress, the next one will be in a red dress. Or more classically, because I just flipped 10 heads in a row, the next flip will be a heads.
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I may have listened to someone 10-15 years ago who felt that recruiting rankings didn't mean much, but the amount time, effort and research that goes into recruiting services today dwarfs even what was being done five years ago.Couple that misleading statistic with the fact that they are often wildly wrong in conference championships and the top 25, and most of us see that the recruiting services are pretty useless.
Nobody will say that recruiting rankings are always accurate. But, the only reason any one would deny the value of recruiting rankings is because they simply refuse to believe, comprehend or accept the facts that are put in front of them. It would be ignorance and stubbornness and nothing more.
I suggest reading this article. http://athlonsports.com/college-football/dont-deny-climate-change-recruiting-rankings-matter
Some interesting tidbits.
The 2014 College Football Playoff featured three of the top four rosters according to the recruiting rankings. Based on the last five classes, Alabama had the No. 1 roster in the nation in ‘14, Florida State was No. 2 and Ohio State was No. 4 nationally. Oregon wasn’t far behind with the 14th-ranked roster in America.The good folks at SB Nation — Matt Hinton and Bud Elliott — have done marvelous work breaking down the statistics as it relates to recruiting rankings. I suggest reading the articles, but the gist of their research reveals two telling and undeniable truths: 1) Teams with better recruiting classes win more games and 2) players with more stars are more likely to be drafted.Elliott provides the real data. The ratios indicate that four- and five-star recruits are 995 percent more likely to be drafted in the first round than a three- or two-star prospect. Additionally, based on the 2014 NFL Draft, a five-star recruit has a 60 percent chance of getting drafted (16 of 27) and a four-star has a 20 percent opportunity (77 of 395). Meanwhile, three-star recruits have just a 5.5 percent chance (92 of 1644) and two-stars/unranked players have less than a three-percent likelihood of getting drafted (71 of 2,434).
Enhance,I may have listened to someone 10-15 years ago who felt that recruiting rankings didn't mean much, but the amount time, effort and research that goes into recruiting services today dwarfs even what was being done five years ago.Couple that misleading statistic with the fact that they are often wildly wrong in conference championships and the top 25, and most of us see that the recruiting services are pretty useless.
Nobody will say that recruiting rankings are always accurate. But, the only reason any one would deny the value of recruiting rankings is because they simply refuse to believe, comprehend or accept the facts that are put in front of them. It would be ignorance and stubbornness and nothing more.
I suggest reading this article. http://athlonsports.com/college-football/dont-deny-climate-change-recruiting-rankings-matter
Some interesting tidbits.
The 2014 College Football Playoff featured three of the top four rosters according to the recruiting rankings. Based on the last five classes, Alabama had the No. 1 roster in the nation in ‘14, Florida State was No. 2 and Ohio State was No. 4 nationally. Oregon wasn’t far behind with the 14th-ranked roster in America.The good folks at SB Nation — Matt Hinton and Bud Elliott — have done marvelous work breaking down the statistics as it relates to recruiting rankings. I suggest reading the articles, but the gist of their research reveals two telling and undeniable truths: 1) Teams with better recruiting classes win more games and 2) players with more stars are more likely to be drafted.Elliott provides the real data. The ratios indicate that four- and five-star recruits are 995 percent more likely to be drafted in the first round than a three- or two-star prospect. Additionally, based on the 2014 NFL Draft, a five-star recruit has a 60 percent chance of getting drafted (16 of 27) and a four-star has a 20 percent opportunity (77 of 395). Meanwhile, three-star recruits have just a 5.5 percent chance (92 of 1644) and two-stars/unranked players have less than a three-percent likelihood of getting drafted (71 of 2,434).
Your wiki search aside, you're trying to apply a statistics principle that is not applicable in the world of college football recruiting rankings. You've misapplied the probability in this discussion by conflating the "P" of winning a NC with the P that the next NC winner will be comprised of X% of "elite recruits" or have X number of classes in the top 10 or 15. Your analysis would be correct if we were talking about whether Alabama will finish with another top 10 class, The probability of that is technically unknowable (unlike a coin flip), so we could look at the last 5 years and infer that Alabama will finish in the top 10 during 2017. However, that is much different than inferring that because the last X teams who won a NC had rankings of X, then the next team must have X rankings. It's an even further leap, and I think we are in agreement here, to claim that a ranking of X is a necessary condition to winning a NC.If we assume the girls don't know each other and these are independent trials with the same probability of wearing a blue dress for each girl, then it has the memoryless property and the previous 10 blue dress wearing girls have no bearing on whether the 11th girl wears a blue dress.You're still not getting it moirane.
The results of the last 11 years have no bearing on what will happen this year. Going back to the girls' dresses analogy, 11 girls walking by in a blue dress doesn't mean the next will definitely, or even probably, walk by in a blue dress.
That does not however apply to the topic at hand. We're not dealing with independently and identically distributed Bernoulli trials here.
"Given that the probability p is known, past outcomes provide no information about future outcomes. (If p is unknown, however, the past informs about the future indirectly, through inferences about p.)"
It's you (and Psycho) who are "Still not getting it."
You're arguing with the millions and millions of $ being spent by thousands of companies, whose decisions affect you every single day. But apparently they have no idea what they're doing and it's all going to waste because you can't use the past to get information on what might happen in the future. You should be one of their consultants.
I guess I'll post a little football example.
http://www.sloansportsconference.com/?p=10200
Let's assume the premise is true because it is.let's assume the premise is true: To win a national championship, you really need to be finishing in the top 15 of recruiting rankings.
What does that leave the other teams to do? Fire coaches until they find ones who can recruit that type of class (according to the recruiting rankings) consistently? Cheat to recruit those types of classes? Give up on championships if they can't?