Now you're trying to move the goal post. No one has argued it's an easier job to keep kids eligible or recruit to varied majors at other schools. That is not the discussion.
I think you're missing the point. I've already stated : I've said over and over that GT's academic environment precludes us from recruiting certain kinds of SAs. The fact that GT is a place where we can't hide SAs simply because GT across all majors is difficult isn't something new. No one disagrees with that.
How is that me not "seeing a huge disadvantage"? Clearly I'm stating we are at a disadvantage, BUT there are enough majors at GT to attract 15-20 kids a year to sign with us. How many of those scholarship players GT signs end up in a STEM major? If someone is going to make a point out of STEM majors, lets apply the statistic correctly. Kids for various reasons do not sign here outside of academics. Offense (DeShaun Watson, Joshua Dobbs...even though he's majoring in Aerospace Eng. at UT), inability of staff to close (Stephon Tuitt), not liking a certain coach (Shane Skov), Atlanta is too big of a city (forget the name of the recruit, but it was a DT that ended up signing with Iowa), etc.
If you want to say GT needs more majors, that's fine. That's not the argument I'm making. I'm simply stating that if someone chooses to make STEM majors a qualifier, let's show how many of our SAs are actually majoring in STEM fields. You're trying to argue something else that I'm not disagreeing with you about.
I guess I just don't understand your point. Leaving STEM aside, it sounds like you agree we don't have many majors to offer (including what appears to be about 90% of the most popular majors that football players choose). It also seems you agree the majors we do have are hard and that all of these factors are disadvantages for Tech. For my part, I agree with you that Tech does have things to sell (e.g., the strength of the degrees we do have, the city of Atlanta), and I assume the coaches are in fact trying to maximize that. We definitely are not going to get all the kids we attempt to recruit, and you point out some examples of kids we have missed on. On the other hand, there are some 4* kids that we do get.
I agree that we could be doing a better job recruiting than we are. I think CPJ and his staff are fine at recruiting (on par or a little below Gailey IMHO), but it is clearly not a strength. I also think our system is an impediment to recruiting. That said, I think CPJ and his staff are better than average at maximizing results based on the talent they do have, so it is a bit of a balancing act. In a perfect world, I agree that I would like one of the top recruiters and one of the top football minds in the country coaching here. So would everyone else. And, like in recruiting, most of those schools have more to sell such a coach than Tech does (facilities, fanbase, ease of recruiting).
So, I guess we have no disagreement? (Unless you are suggesting we have enough majors that we should be getting top 25 classes every year, which I would say is belied by Tech's recruiting results across numerous coaches in the modern era. Remember, any kid that is a 4-5* and academically inclined is still going to be recruited just as hard, or harder, by the football factories. And, as much as we don't want to admit it, some of them have some pretty good academic programs too in addition to their joke majors. I am just not sure what Tech has to sell that they don't. Our STEM majors are one thing but, as we discussed, there just isn't a lot of interest there. And, even places like Michigan and Stanford have that too.)
The world of college football is just a tough, competitive business. In general, I am proud of how Tech has done. And, if we can repeat our accomplishments over the last 8 years in the next 8 (2 orange bowls, 3 ACC title games), sign me up.