takethepoints
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 6,088
1. Yes. I can understand why this is done; it levels the ranking to a single standard and, after all, the rankings for transfers are for high school, not their play in college. Still, it does affect the "class" rankings. Provided, that is, that you actually think those are anything close to accurate in the first place.Except you haven't. The biggest argument isn't that the class size is small so the ranking isn't accurate, or that fit is more important, or the coaches know better. It's that a quarter of our class is not being accounted for by the ranking services because they are transfers rather than traditional recruits. And while sometimes that distinction matters, for several of our recruits it doesn't because they are coming in immediately eligible with 4 years left.
The arguments in years prior revolved around either reranking recruits or adding fictional recruits we didn't land through either direct addition of "we could have added another player ranked x if we wanted to" or taking our average star rating and extrapolating it out. That isn't the case with this class. We can use the ranking the services themselves have provided with the system the services themselves have provided and can calculate how many point we would have if the transfers were counted using their highschool rankings in the system the services themselves used. And if we do this just for the transfers that transfers who are going to be freshmen next year still, so excluding Cochran and White, the points we would have in the 247 would put us 21st in the country and 4th in conference.
Now you might have some issue with that argument but the argument itself is fundamentally different than the ones that have been used in the past.
2. Well … no, we can't. Like I just said, the "rankings" are for play in high school, not in college. And you need to remember that, with some exceptions, players transfer because they can't see the field at their first choice. In some cases, that's no disgrace: Bammer and Texas have really good programs and they may have been buried in their positions or run afoul of the coaches. But a really good high school rating is no guarantee that you will be a really good college player. The only way to find out is to re-rank classes four years in based on how well their teams are doing. We'll have to see about that.
3. Some arguments are (you just made one); most of them aren't. The Stinger is right. But none of them matter. What matters is what the players do on the field. And, again, we'll have to see about that.