I don't know that it would be "resigning ourselves" to not getting better players -- and I assume you mean by that 4-5 stars the factories routinely stack up -- as much as accepting the reality of it. We haven't, and we won't. Has nothing to do with Tech's academic reputation or standing, things nobody would challenge. But it is math and science and technology and calculus and physics and ... most elite HS players even when good students not only don't like that stuff, they hate that stuff. Worse, that stuff scares 'em. There is nothing wrong with that at all. A whole bunch of very successful people, I would venture the majority of our community, business and political leaders, don't understand it, and never bothered with it. There are a lot of roads to success in life.
But yes, blame rests with the fans who demand NC caliber teams anyway. Occasionally, as in '14, Tech can get awfully close to the brass ring. But if it is to be an elite technical, science and engineering school while offering a very limited "other" curriculum for players, (Clemson is a good engineering school with a vast liberal arts curriculum, and is stacking up 4 and 5-stars as a result), well then, we are what we have. And that's pretty good. Some years the good will become great. Changing schemes, coaches, strategies, etc., will note wash out a line of it, as Omar might have said. (Wonder if he was a football fan when he penned that? I just went back and read it and doggone if it does not describe GT football.)