Tuesday, February 08, 2011

not seeing the trees for the forest


it's trendy in the national sports media post-national signing day to bemoan the celebration/exploitation of high school football players. surely, these 17 year-olds don't deserve this type of attention, do they?

well, of course they do.

ivan maisel wrote this column last thursday. i won't waste your time and link to all of the like-minded articles that i've read in the past week because most of them share the same sentiment. that being, for all the stars and the hype and the faux-celebrity that is created for many of the high-profile football recruits, a very small percentage of them pan out to be something truly great. in his column, maisel cross-references espn's top 150 of 2006 prospects with the 2010 nfl draft and finds only 20 of that group had their name called by roger goodell or one of his underlings. you can't argue with the facts i suppose, but the thing is...

he totally misses the point.

do you know what a number one recruiting class looks like?

here, let me show you.

 how many of those names do you recognize? be honest. my guess is one, maybe two at the most. in this state, cyrus kouandjio became a household name over the course of three days, so he's a gimme. he's the guy that went on espnu and announced his intentions to play for auburn university with the most pained look i've ever seen on the face of somebody that was laying down his path for the next four years, the "best days of his life". about an hour after the announcement, a young lady from scout.com broke the story that auburn had yet to receive the lineman's letter of intent. by that time, facebook was aflutter, mainly because all of the recruiting "experts" had penned in cyrus to join his brother at alabama for weeks. so, the same auburn fans that on my facebook nation didn't announce/celebrate any other signings that day (not one!!!) made a point to welcome cyrus to auburn's "au"ll in family. a funny thing happened on cyrus' way to auburn, though, and he quietly faxed his scholarship papers to tuscaloosa saturday afternoon. those same facebook people never posted retractions. then again, most of them likely didn't even know who the big fella was until a friend of theirs told them he was "supposed" to go to alabama, but they still used his momentary brain-freeze to flip the proverbial bird in the faces of their alabama "friends". most of those folks probably will still assume that cyrus will be on the loveliest village come the fall. he won't. i digress. back to the names. if i give you cyrus, how many others do you recognize? maybe one? two at the most? and that's fine. completely normal even for you to not take off work for signing day the same way you would for, say, columbus day or something of much greater importance.

again, maisel and his ilk are nothing but right in the numbers they use to extrapolate what they see as a day that is full of sound and fury most often signifying nothing.

except, it does signify something.

what the national pundits miss when they try and mock the importance of the celebration of signing day is the idea that these names will be the ones that i (and fans across the nation) will emotionally invest in for the next four to five years of my (our) life. it makes zero difference if they go on to be drafted in 2015 or if they become all-americans or if they make all-sec. the important part is that they are now a part of my favorite football team. their journey will make up a part of my journey. i will celebrate their highs with them and poo-poo their lows at them.

four years ago, alabama signed another number one class. take a look at these names. if you are an alabama fan or even an sec fan, how many names do you recognize from this group? a helluva lot, right? to maisel's point, a lot of those starry-starred athletes didn't work out the way recruiting sites predicted. even for me, i remember being infatuated with burton (b.j.) scott when he signed. i was obviously already in love with julio, but i was happy to have burton be my mistress. he caught a pass in the first quarter of the clemson game his  true freshman year and then fell off the map or into nick saban's doghouse, rarely to be heard from again. after this year ended, he opted out of tuscaloosa and went to play at south alabama where he could play on the field his final year. how about tyler love? five stars just like cyrus and he has yet to see significant playing time.

to my point, though, 18 of those 32 names have played roles, if not key roles, to alabama's success and even the ones that didn't i have worried and wondered about.

why?

because they play for alabama, stupid.

when the national columnists call out those that spend time with and invest in recruiting, all it tells me is that they don't have a local rooting interest.

they would probably argue that they are trying to identify and represent the "bigger picture" of college athletics, and i get that. in many facets of my life, i make pained and concerted efforts to be a big picture guy. not with college football, though. i pay attention because these guys, these young men are going to be my boys for however long they roll with the tide.

that alone, is worth my attention.

6 comments:

Kiker said...

Get ready to have some serious wood over Dee Hart, Trey DePriest (who has been compared to AJ Hawk), and Ha'Sean Clinton-Dix, a 6' 2" ball hawking missile of a safety. I find it awesome that we will have a Kouandjio and Luatua on the offensive line, while Jessie Williams from Australia is rushing passers.

katie said...

it is fun to look at all of that potential there for the next couple of years. i totally let signing day get me and spent a good portion of it disappointed because of initially missing on cyrus. but, we are totally loaded it feels now. and i agree, these guys will be our football world for the near future, why not let the obsessing begin as soon as possible. ;)

kevin said...

@Kiker...

I don't know if you meant to or not, but you just identified the singular difference between the Saban program and several eras of Alabama football before he arrived. Not one of the guys you mentioned is from Alabama. Shula and others could every so often pull a big time recruit (Andre Smith)from inside the state lines, but the national wingspan is totally different with Saban. And it is awesome.

Amy said...

looking at those two classes side by side is pretty fun. trying to guess the breakout players based on the number of stars next to their name and how they did in high school/junior college may not be fool proof but i love that we have so many to choose from. i agree, post nick saban recruiting is a whole other world. i will pick demetrius hart as my early favorite...if nothing else he can continue the hair trend :)

Jacobs said...

Why has highschool recruiting become a spectator event? it's fun to think about how good a player might turn out to be, but considering said player will maybe just play a little bit or be red shirted the following season, it's hard for me to really get hyped up for recruiting. maybe i'm just a bad football fan. heck, i don't even care about the a-day game.

Julie said...

My experience as a cheerleader in highschool was great, and it improved in college. I was sent to Argentina to take part in a tournament. It was a cheerleading competition held there. They put us all in Buenos Aires apartments and practised there because we had a gym in the building. We won and I got an even greater scholarship. I think it should continue being this way!
Julie