planomateo
Member
When someone talks about head coaching changes in college and how it impacts a recruit, there is always someone say that its not fair to the kid. As the kid committed to the coach and not the school and they are the ones getting hung out to dry (cause a college education is worthless...insert sarcasm).
This is a pretty telling statistic - which I'm referring to the data here (unverified)
here is the meat/potatoes of the article
http://coachesbythenumbers.com/the-article-every-high-school-football-recruit-should-read/
Terry - this could be a twitter feed worth adding
@CoachesBTN
This is a pretty telling statistic - which I'm referring to the data here (unverified)
here is the meat/potatoes of the article
So think about this. If you signed a scholarship to play college football at an FBS program in 2009, there is a 68% chance that you are playing for a new head coach, an 86% chance that you are playing for a new offensive coordinator, and an 88% chance that you are playing for a new defensive coordinator.
Here is one final eye-opening statistic for all the wide-eyed high school recruits getting wooed by their favorite coach or coordinator. In the last 4 years (2009-2012), only eight FBS teams (roughly 7%) have had the same head coach, offensive coordinator, and defensive coordinator for all four years from 2009-2012.
First moral of the story? DONāT CHOOSE A SCHOOL BASED ON WHO THE COACHES ARE BECAUSE THEY PROBABLY WONāT BE YOUR COACHES FOR TOO LONG.
Second moral of the story? IF YOU ARE AN ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, YOU HAD BETTER BE PREPARED TO HIRE A NEW COACH OVER THE NEXT FOUR YEARS AND IF YOU ARE NOT USING DATA AND STATISTICS TO CONTINUALLY UPDATE YOUR SHORT LIST OF REPLACEMENTS, THEN SHAME ON YOU.
Disclaimer: we know that four new teams have joined the FBS for 2012, but we assume 120 FBS teams for āapples-to-applesā comparisons.
http://coachesbythenumbers.com/the-article-every-high-school-football-recruit-should-read/
Terry - this could be a twitter feed worth adding
@CoachesBTN