Speaking of which, you know who almost came here?
I saw this article earlier and thought about posting it. The thing I thought was interesting is that Tech has recruited the state of Georgia to a degree that seems pretty comparable to the way UGA has. The thing we've heard for as long as I can remember is that Tech doesn't recruit Georgia; Tech recruits the nation. Not so fast, my friends. Tech is recruiting the state. The question always comes up whenever there are discussions about why Georgia and Georgia Tech do not go head-to-head that often in recruiting. The answer from the party-line is that it's because Georgia recruits the state and Tech recruits the nation outside the state, where people have a good impression of Tech and are not as influenced by Georgia high school coaches who are biased toward the SEC and having been lifelong Bulldog fans. Not to mention that Georgia public schools aren't that great, and Tech needs smart athletes who can handle the academics. I maintain that the reason they don't go head-to-head is that Tech is recruiting a lower caliber of athlete (within Georgia) that Georgia is not interested in. This is not a popular opinion because it forces Tech fans to acknowledge that we don't go for the best. We shoot for something lower. Incidentally, this helps explain Georgia's success against Tech in the series.
Our coaches do target the best of the best early, it's just that they make it known quite early that GT is out of the equation. If you look at some of the top kids in GA, more often than not if they have the academic credentials GT has made an offer.
Just look at the #1 Overall recruit in GA (DE Lorenzo Carter) and #1 Dual Threat QB in the Nation (Deshaun Watson). In Carter's case, we were the first that offered him (at our camp no less), yet we were pretty much out of the race during his JR year even though it's known he's interested (wink wink) in engineering. Watson we offered during his sophomore year, he just flat out said he's not interested in our triple option offense.
I think you're mostly right with that statement though. I think a large part of it is that our coaches understand it's a numbers game and they'd rather move on than spend time fighting off bigger "name" schools. The thinking is probably they'd rather put more time in kids they have a better shot at than spread themselves thin over guys who they'll have to spend an inordinate amount of time on who will probably be high maintenance. Let's face it, UGA is in the running for the best of the best in the NATION, we have to recruit the Nation because the top tier and even some second tiers guys in our own state do not find GT attractive. Hard to accept, but the proof is in the pudding as they say.