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I enjoy your opinions at all times. To your point, some might not like the timing or source of the perspective, but I greatly appreciate it.So...I clearly do not fit your desired demographic with this (as I'm transparently somebody with an infatuation with the offense, and not somebody interested in GT's best interest at heart, with the exception of the fact that i've grown fond of the fanbase over the years), but I'll jump in. If it's not welcome, please feel free to delete this post, as "fans of other teams showing up after years when we're at our lowest to offer their opinions" might not be what you're looking for at the moment.
That said: what does your fanbase think should be your "expected value" as a football program.
If you didn't care about GT at all, but were a fan of East California State, and with no passion looked across the country, and assessed GT, what would you think their fans should reasonably expect?
You're a small school, with a tough academic program, in a great recruiting area, with a crappy fanbase (remember, external eyes. You don't show up to games, you don't have a great giving base, etc), with "meh" facilities, in a good but not great conference, and you're perennially short funds. There are some plusses, there are some minuses.
From this outsider's point of view, it's silly to think you "deserve" any better than middle of the road in the ACC, some years better, some years worse. This is true for recruiting, this is true for results.
I see no reason to believe you'll ever be a recruiting powerhouse. Even with Collins, who has a reputation of a great recruiter, his classses are as follows, nationally:
2021: #48
2020: #27
2019: #50
For 2022, you currently sit at #31
(source: https://247sports.com/Season/2019-Football/CompositeTeamRankings
That's.....meh. Given that there are ~65 P5 teams, it seems that Collins is recruiting "average" to "below average" vis a vis his peers.
If you're going to run vanilla schemes, and recruit at an average level, then unlesss you're just EXCELLENT teachers, you're likely to achieve average results. (As far as I'm concerned, conference record is what you judge by. Those are your peers).
IF YOU ALLOW that the "recruit our way to victory" looks to be not happening (given that you're not currently out recruiting your peers, and given the results on the field, recruiting is likely to get harder, not easier, as vision gets harder and harder to sell), and you want success, then scheme is the other way to do it.
There are relatively few outlier schemes these days, and the one most familiar to your fans is the one you just ran, and....it worked.
Paul Johnson had exactly 1 losing season in conference in his 11 years at the helm.
In my opinion, he consistently outperformed your "fundamentals" as a program.
He was never likely to win a national title, but (and you probably don't want to hear this), you are never likely to win a national title. Those days are over for you guys, as long as you are not playing to win like the powerhouses are.
Honestly, those calling for a CPJ scheme are (in my opinion) being realistic and accepting the cold, hard, Braine truth. Your school/program/donors/fanbase/etc are not willing to do what it takes to really be a powerhouse, so they should stop pretending like they're going to be a powerhouse by following the example of the other powerhouses. It's not going to happen. So either freaking BECOME Georgia, and drastically reduce your academic standards, and spend millions and millions on facilities and TV and marketing, and etc, or stay Georgia Tech, and punch above your weight via scheme.
There's two data points re: your projection of recruiting rankings that I greatly disagree with that are fundamental premises worth agreeing on, otherwise we'll never agree on the takeaways:
1) You attribute the 2019 class to Collins. He was in fact hired less than two months before the 2019 signing day. We can parse that apart, but I think it's fair that he does not own the final ranking of that class.
2) That leaves 3 years of data, two of which agree with my point. The class that does not agree/adhere with the top 30 principle was 2021 which was intentionally augmented by a record number of portal transfers. In other words, the HS ranking was an outlier with a clear and decisive reason. TBD on relative contribution of those transfers.
So, if you can come around to us looking more like a top 30 recruiting ceiling, what 'expected value' should we expect with top 30 classes? I would say top 30 results on average, or thereabouts. Regardless of scheme. To me that leaves open the door to upper-middle ACC and special seasons. Only in the last 10 years or so could a team finish as ACC runner-up and still make an Orange Bowl. You and we observed that first-hand with our respective squads.
Do you agree with my reframing of recruiting? And if so, does that change your opinion of 'expected value'? I still agree that there's a hurdle to overcome to be elite, and by no means am I saying that top 30 gets us near elite. But to win the Coastal does not require 'elite' based on its current formation.