I guess it was a false alarm..............sorry.
I think we do ourselves and the recruits a disservice by thinking they can come in and contribute right away. Its more the norm that it takes someone some time to be able to adjust and contribute.
Welcome home Zaire. I think we go after at least one more LB. Who do we have left?
so when a coach goes after a kid and the kid ends up in a JUCO normally that coach will forget about him?
Sometimes a kid does not qualify and goes the Prep School route. Schools and kids generally stay committed to each other more in this case. When a kid goes the JUCO route you see him go to a different school more times than not from my experience.
2008 CB recruit David Whitmore was a concensus **** who went the JUCO route. Nebraska made no attempt to make him apart of their 2011 class (no new schollie offer) and eventually he signed with Baylor, who Whitmore had zero interest with or from in '08.
I have read a few tongue-n-cheek comments about how Akron was Zaire Anderson's only other schollie offer. I wanted to share my take on that.
Generally a JUCO kid is not heavily recruited (by a BCS power) until around October. Sure there are exceptions. Schools spend the majority of their recruiting efforts up to this point full-court pressing blue-chip high school players (and have been for over a year), and for good reasons. Usually about this time schools will turn their attentions to JUCO players after they have missed out on a H.S. recruit(s) that they have been targeting. Another reason is usually a coach will see by now where he needs immediate help at a specific position or a where he may not be getting the overall player development he thought he would at a position group. JUCO kids are recruited with immediate help for the following season in mind as where a H.S. kid has more leeway time to develope (obviously).
I know Akron is well, Akron, but their 1st year coach is Rob Ianello who had the reputation as being perhaps the best recruiting coach in the country when he was an assitant at places like Notre Dame, Wisconsin and Arizona. I personally agree. The point being he knows talent and with Ianello having his foot in the door early, I would take that as a good sign.
Schools in conferences like the MAC, Conference USA etc. look at JUCO kids much earlier in the process because they know they have no shot at the elite H.S. talent around the country.
Overall as a rule of thumb, you should pay no attention to where a JUCO kid has other offers from. With high school kids on the other hand, I would pay more attention to who they have offers from more than how many stars a recruiting service may give them.
I have read a few tongue-n-cheek comments about how Akron was Zaire Anderson's only other schollie offer. I wanted to share my take on that.
Generally a JUCO kid is not heavily recruited (by a BCS power) until around October. Sure there are exceptions. Schools spend the majority of their recruiting efforts up to this point full-court pressing blue-chip high school players (and have been for over a year), and for good reasons. Usually about this time schools will turn their attentions to JUCO players after they have missed out on a H.S. recruit(s) that they have been targeting. Another reason is usually a coach will see by now where he needs immediate help at a specific position or a where he may not be getting the overall player development he thought he would at a position group. JUCO kids are recruited with immediate help for the following season in mind as where a H.S. kid has more leeway time to develope (obviously).
I know Akron is well, Akron, but their 1st year coach is Rob Ianello who had the reputation as being perhaps the best recruiting coach in the country when he was an assitant at places like Notre Dame, Wisconsin and Arizona. I personally agree. The point being he knows talent and with Ianello having his foot in the door early, I would take that as a good sign.
Schools in conferences like the MAC, Conference USA etc. look at JUCO kids much earlier in the process because they know they have no shot at the elite H.S. talent around the country.
Overall as a rule of thumb, you should pay no attention to where a JUCO kid has other offers from. With high school kids on the other hand, I would pay more attention to who they have offers from more than how many stars a recruiting service may give them.
That was my perception as well but I don't follow it very closely. I wonder why that is; that they don't reoffer the kid. I could see it if the coach leaves.
You know I always wondered why that is also. If we are attempting to get a kid and he goes JUCO, is it more of the coach not staying in touch with the kid or is it more that the recruit lost interest in his favorite school (being that he commited and didn't qualify).
I think about this because of the Heard situation and now Charles Jackson. If Heard would have went JUCO would he have eventually made it back to NU or would he of gain more interest in Ohio St or Miami of Ohio or Ohio etc.... And why?
I have read a few tongue-n-cheek comments about how Akron was Zaire Anderson's only other schollie offer. I wanted to share my take on that.
Generally a JUCO kid is not heavily recruited (by a BCS power) until around October. Sure there are exceptions. Schools spend the majority of their recruiting efforts up to this point full-court pressing blue-chip high school players (and have been for over a year), and for good reasons. Usually about this time schools will turn their attentions to JUCO players after they have missed out on a H.S. recruit(s) that they have been targeting. Another reason is usually a coach will see by now where he needs immediate help at a specific position or a where he may not be getting the overall player development he thought he would at a position group. JUCO kids are recruited with immediate help for the following season in mind as where a H.S. kid has more leeway time to develope (obviously).
I know Akron is well, Akron, but their 1st year coach is Rob Ianello who had the reputation as being perhaps the best recruiting coach in the country when he was an assitant at places like Notre Dame, Wisconsin and Arizona. I personally agree. The point being he knows talent and with Ianello having his foot in the door early, I would take that as a good sign.
Schools in conferences like the MAC, Conference USA etc. look at JUCO kids much earlier in the process because they know they have no shot at the elite H.S. talent around the country.
Overall as a rule of thumb, you should pay no attention to where a JUCO kid has other offers from. With high school kids on the other hand, I would pay more attention to who they have offers from more than how many stars a recruiting service may give them.
You know I always wondered why that is also. If we are attempting to get a kid and he goes JUCO, is it more of the coach not staying in touch with the kid or is it more that the recruit lost interest in his favorite school (being that he commited and didn't qualify).