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Thursday, February 11, 2010

Statistical Analysis of 2010 Recruiting: Part III


As I was keeping track of Michigan's recruiting efforts throughout the 2010 cycle, I began to wonder where Michigan has the most success in recruiting. The obvious answers would be "in state" and "near home" and those answers held true, to no one's surprise.

You can see in the above chart (click to enlarge) that Michigan got the best bang for its buck in contiguous states like Wisconsin and Ohio. Pennsylvania is #5 on the list.

Sitting there at #4, though, is Louisiana. Michigan got two of the six prospects who were offered, slot receiver Drew Dileo and safety Carvin Johnson. The other four were WR Trovon Reed (Auburn), QB Munchie Legaux (Cincinnati), DE Jordan Allen (LSU), and CB Ronnie Vinson (LSU). Of those four, only Legaux didn't have an LSU offer. As I said in yesterday's post, kids in the deep south tend to stay in the deep south if a decent local program offers. Reed spurned LSU for a school in neighboring Alabama, but Allen and Vinson jumped at the opportunity to play in the Bayou.

Moving on to Florida, that percentage might be a bit alarming. The Wolverines extended more offers to Florida than any other individual state by far - 46 offers in all, beating Ohio by 16 - but Michigan's success rate in the Sunshine State was just below 7%. With all three commitments from Florida being 4-stars (Demar Dorsey, Marvin Robinson, Richard Ash), the kids Michigan has stolen have been elite talents. But this is something to watch in the coming years. If Rich Rodriguez continues to offer a high volume of kids from Florida, hopefully the commitments he gets remain elite players. I would hate to see the coaching staff spend such significant time and effort on Florida only to get middling recruits from the state. That being said, the coaches have done a good job there over the past couple years. They've established a pipeline from Pahokee (Martavious Odoms, Brandin Hawthorne, Vincent Smith, Richard Ash) and could be in the process of building a pipeline from Dr. Phillips High School in Orlando (Ricardo Miller transferred from Dr. Phillips to Ann Arbor Pioneer after committing, and 2011 prospects Demetrius Hart and Hasean Clinton-Dix have both been offered).

Rodriguez knows what side his bread is buttered on. He'll continue to get a high volume of recruits from Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and he'll try to pluck a few elite talents out of Florida. Those efforts will be complemented by an occasional commitment from various other states.


2 comments:

  1. Competing in Florida is difficult for everybody because they have three high prestige in-state schools and a number of smaller additional in-state schools. Getting any D1 recruit out of Florida is often a dogfight. In fact, because getting any recruit out of Florida is often a dogfight, we seem to be much more willing to chuck early offers into the state, hence Travis Williams type situations where we offer someone that we don't necessarily want.

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  2. Thanks for collecting the data and posting. In the future, you may want to consider controlling for kids at the same school (and maybe even neighboring schools). M (RR more than LC, it seems) has done a good job at recruiting multiple players from a school (for the current year and the following years), so while additional offers go out, it would seem to be modest amount of additional "work" for players in the same year. Thus, a lower percentage of accepted offers in that state might be less alarming. Another factor you may consider is the pipeline effect (which you mention) as this likely produces a higher percentage of accepted offers than the overall state where the pipeline originated. But, to keep the pipeline alive M has to return to that school annually. Hopefully, that's clear enough - if not let me know and I can to improve.
    -kriegers

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