GuySmiley
Don't Drink the Kool-Aid
Tony Boselli.
Scott Lockwood was a good P65 college back at USC.
Tony Boselli.
Ron Bradford, Greg Biekert, but yes "D" is thinNo, we're actually talking about "What programs could compete with only in-State talent," so it is a what if Colorado HS's stayed home and that was CU's team. Correct, Colorado has a poor track record with local QB talent...
The best guys on Defense are pretty thin: JJ Billingsly (you mentioned him) Evan Worthington, and Marques Harris??
It’s as if you’re unwilling to read my posts.No, we're actually talking about "What programs could compete with only in-State talent," so it is a what if Colorado HS's stayed home and that was CU's team. Correct, Colorado has a poor track record with local QB talent...
The best guys on Defense are pretty thin: JJ Billingsely, Evan Worthington, and Marques Harris??
AZ would be halved, though, with 2 programs.We would be last in the Pac12 South.
Quite a bit more P5 talent coming out of Utah and Arizona right now.
Who are the best CU players from Colorado, regardless of position? Daniel Graham, Joel Klatt, Ryan Miller, Nate Solder, JJ Billingsley, Phil Lindsay, Dave Logan, Sean Tufts. Any others of note I'm missing? Point is, most outstanding Colorado preps don't go to CU
If we’re taking institutional popularity into account, I think USC has a shot at the NC every year. CA has so much talent that leaves the state, and USC is head and shoulders above their in-state brethren in the eyes of most recruits.Assuming that all in-state talent would sign with an in-state P5 program, what programs would have a chance?
In CA, talent would be divided by 4 (USC, Cal, UCLA, Stanford). TX divided by 5 (UT, A&M, Baylor, TCU, TTU). FL by 3, GA and PA by 2, and states like OH and LA by 1. Etc.
What P5 programs would have a shot at a national title every year? Which would be in the mix every so often? Which would struggle to have winning seasons? Which may never have much of an opportunity for a winning season?
California would be tiered, though, with USC and Stanford leading the way.Buffnik’s rules were all in state players would have to sign with a power five team. So, no BYU, no Houston, no Central Florida.
Using that, the Florida, Texas, and California P5 teams would still be good, but probably slightly behind LSU and Georgia because there would be fewer teams to divide the pie.
Like Rutgers, the University of Maryland, as the lone P5 school in the state, would have a complete reversal of fortune, until the AD would find some way to screw it all up.
Ohio St as the lone P5 in a top 10 recruiting state would be in excellent shape.Cali, Texas, and Florida for sure. Ohio would be up there, Louisiana, Georgia. My dark horse would be probably Arizona.
If we’re taking institutional popularity into account, I think USC has a shot at the NC every year. CA has so much talent that leaves the state, and USC is head and shoulders above their in-state brethren in the eyes of most recruits.
I think University of Hawaii would be crazy good. I also think schools like U of VA would get sneaky good. Most of the flyover states would be completely ****ed.
Possibly with a coaching change -- Fuente is currently being out-recruited by UVA and ODU.I could actually see VA Tech being pretty good. They would split with UVA, but a ton of talent comes out of the Newport News area, and they would reap in that... @hokiehead ; do you agree?
Navy isn’t power 5.Per Rivals rankings the University of Maryland would have 13 4 star incoming recruits this year. Unless, you think they have to split with Navy, but they'd still crush the like of the Arizona schools.
The biggest sea change in terms of divisional power shifts would be in the Big10 East. Maryland and Rutgers would become serious powers - I'm having trouble coming up with any other schools whose fortunes would improve as much as theirs would. They would go from doormats to consistent playoff contenders.Per Rivals rankings the University of Maryland would have 13 4 star incoming recruits this year. Unless, you think they have to split with Navy, but they'd still crush the like of the Arizona schools.