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Arkansas Sports & Other Stuff

5-Star Runningback Alex Collins Tells NBC 6 in Miami

Posted by Adam Butler on February 6, 2013

that despite today’s surreal (yes the word is appropriate, here) drama, he will sign with Arkansas, tomorrow.

Until then, Razorback Nation will wait….and worry……

 

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Do The College Football Recruiting Stars Ever Really Align?

Posted by Adam Butler on February 5, 2013

When you wish upon a star
Makes no difference who you are
Anything your heart desires
Will come to you…. “When You Wish Upon a Star” by Cliff Edwards

 

By Kris M. Boyd

Five-star running back Alex Collins of Plantation, Fla., surprised the college football world last night when he committed to play for the Arkansas Razorbacks over the homestanding Miami Hurricanes and several of the sport’s  bluebloods.

The decision sparked a flurry of internet activity nationally, (again) further evidencing  the fact that College football recruiting has become a big business and a year-long “sport”.

It’s an odd, but predictable phenomenon. The internet has combined with college football’s immense popularity and spawned the need for blow-by-blow updates of the sometimes whimsical decisions of 18-year-old gridiron superstars. A growing number of national recruiting outfits have sprung up in the last decade to service the need for information.

Each national service has some sort of “star” ranking system.  The majority of the services rate the players from NR (not ranked) or one star to five stars.

Usually only the top 100 recruits at each position receive rankings.  Those players are then ranked overall/ nationally, regardless of position.

From time to time, however, players are included in the rating system that stand out in their state and may not have been high enough to place in the top 100 at their respective position.

In addition to the stars, each player has his own unique numerical ranking on some sites.  For example, a four star player can either be a “low” four star player or a “high” four star player.

The services will add up the numerical ratings and take an average of the stars to come up with team rankings.  There are other scores that get thrown in that can boost a team’s ranking such as bonus points for five-star recruits and players at the top of their position rankings.

On the eve of National Signing Day, aka Utopia for College Football dorks like us, now is a good time to examine whether these rankings have any value.

Some pundits swear by them while others think they’re worth about as much as the paper on which they aren’t written.

The truth is the recruiting rankings have value, but calling them an exact science is like calling a chiropractor a doctor.

I came to this conclusion by using some inexact science, myself. I analyzed the Final AP Top 25 Polls over the past 10 years as well as the Top 25 Recruiting Class rankings during the same span.  I used Scout.com but suspect I would have had similar results using its competitors.

(For those who are unsatisfied with this approach, feel free to go Star Wars Geek  vs. Star Trek Geek and crunch the other numbers.)

I used the 2001-2011 time frame because I wanted to account for cyclical ups and downs through programs as well as recruiting dips and spikes following down years and National Championship years. It also hurt Notre Dame’s numbers, which was a welcomed, but unintended benefit.

I simply took the AP Top 25 for each year and assigned points for each ranked team.  The #1 team received 25 points; the #2 team got 24 points and so on.  Teams received zero points for not being in the top 25, but their overall points were still divided by 10 (years).  The teams were then ranked overall for that 10 year time span according to their scores.

Here are the results from 2001-2011

Final AP Poll Rankings

1. USC

2. Ohio State

3. Oklahoma

4. Texas

5. LSU

6. Boise State

7. Georgia

8. Alabama

9. Virginia Tech

10. Florida

11. Auburn

12. TCU

13. Oregon

14. Michigan

15. Wisconsin

16. Iowa

17. Miami, FL

t19. Penn State

t19. West Virginia

20. Utah

21. Florida State

t23. Arkansas

t23. Louisville

24. Oklahoma State

25. Kansas State

26. Stanford

27. Tennessee

t31. Texas Tech

t31. BYU

t31. Missouri

t31. Cincinatti

t32. Boston College

t32. Notre Dame

33. Washington State

34. Ole Miss

35. California

36. Michigan State

37. Nebraska

38. Maryland

39. South Carolina

t42. Clemson

t42. Pittsburgh

t42. Kansas

t44. Arizona State

t44. Georgia Tech

45. Miami, OH

 

Recruiting Class Rankings

1. USC

2. Texas

3. LSU

4. Florida State

5. Georgia

6. Oklahoma

7. Ohio State

8. Florida

9. Michigan

10. Miami, FL

11. Tennessee

12. Alabama

13. Auburn

14. Notre Dame

15. UCLA

16. Texas A & M

17. South Carolina

18. Penn State

19. Oregon

20. North Carolina

21. Clemson

22. Washington

23. California

24. Texas Tech

25. Pittsburgh

26. Virginia

27. Stanford

28. Arkansas

29. Nebraska

t31. Oklahoma State

t31. Mississippi State

32. Ole Miss

33. North Carolina State

34. Virginia Tech

35. Iowa

36. Arizona

37. Maryland

t40. West Virginia

t40. Michigan State

t40. Illinois

41. Arizona State

42. Georgia Tech

43. Colorado

t45. Washington State

t45. Baylor

t47. Boston College

A few things stand out immediately.  You’ll first notice that the last 10 National Championship winners are all ranked in the top 13 of the recruiting rankings.  You’ll also notice that the top 13 are all pretty much the same except for a few teams.

From there, though, the Recruiting Rankings are not supported by the teams’ performances in the Final AP Polls.  Consider:

  • Florida State has the 4th highest-rated recruiting classes over that period, but its AP ranking is 21.
  • Boise State and Wisconsin are both ranked in the top 15 of the Final AP Polls but did not have one recruiting class in the top 25.
  • Texas A & M has the 16th-ranked recruiting class, but is ranked 57 in the AP Polls.
  • Virginia Tech is ranked 9th in the Final AP polls but its classes have never impressed the services and are ranked 34th.
  • The Notre Dame bias leaked into recruiting services, also, as ND’s classes ranked 14th but the Irish only managed to tie Boston College at 32 in the Final AP Polls.
  • Iowa finished 16th in the Final AP Polls but its classes are way down at 35.
  • Washington’s classes are somehow ranked 22nd even though the Huskies never finished in any of the top 25 Final AP Polls over the 10 years.
  • South Carolina and Clemson’s classes are ranked 17th and 21st respectively, but could only muster Final AP rankings of 39th and 42nd.

The rankings seem to be on the money with regard to the top recruits and top 12-13 classes, but after that, it seems to be a crapshoot.

Obviously, the five-star players are going to be easier to spot and rank.

It’s easy to spot a 6’2” 220 lb. running back from Texas who has 3,000 yards and 32 touchdowns in his senior year and label him a “five star”.

However, the tricky part comes into play with the three and four-star players.  How is one linebacker from a certain area a three-star and a linebacker from another area a four-star?  Why are there so many consistent discrepancies between the rankings and on-field outcomes?

Some of the problem probably lies in institutional and geographic bias. There are three states in which high school football is widely considered the biggest and best and therefore receive by far the most media attention– California, Texas and Florida.

It’s probably not a coincidence that the schools whose highly ranked classes  that are not supported by their Final AP Poll rankings (Texas A & M, Florida State, CAL, UCLA and Miami, FL) are in these states as well as similarly ranked schools that (Washington, South Carolina, Clemson and Notre Dame) heavily recruit these states.

Would a linebacker from small eastern Arkansas town who is a physical beast and dominates his competition be a low three star if he was in Dallas?

Would a high four-star running back from Dallas be ranked that same way if he was from western Kentucky?

“No” is the answer to both.

To be fair, these services simply lack the resources or impetus to accurately rank players throughout the country.

They must spend their resources in the states where there are the most Division I recruits allowing them  to see and evaluate the players from California, Florida and Texas more accurately and aggressively.

Schools are going to have higher-ranked recruiting classes if their classes are stacked with players from the Big 3 states.

In sum, the “stars” matter, but there are more than are being accurately counted.

I  don’t fault the services too much.  I wouldn’t want to go to Jug Fork, Mississippi, either.

 

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

Bielema, Hogs Staff Land A Big Fish in Florida

Posted by Adam Butler on February 4, 2013

In what can only be considered a College Football recruiting coup, Arkansas landed the pledge of 5-star running back Alex Collins of Plantation, Florida, tonight. Collins announced his decision live on FOX Sports South’s The NEW College Football Show: Next Class 2013.

Collins is thought by many to be the best runningback in the Sunshine State and chose Arkansas over Miami, Florida St., Florida and Wisconsin.

His commitment immediately validated the decision of Arkansas Head Coach Bret Bielema to use his connections (as well as those of key assistants Charlie Partridge and former Miami Hurricane player and head coach Randy Shannon) to recruit a Florida heavily.

Arkansas has made recruiting forays into Florida in the past but was typically no match for the Big 3 in the state–Florida, Florida State and Miami.

National Signing Day is Wednesday, and Arkansas is still awaiting the decision of a few big targets including offensive lineman Denver Kirkland (6’5 305) of Miami, Fla.

Alex Collins Highlights

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , | 3 Comments »

I Will Be Be Back Soon

Posted by Adam Butler on December 31, 2012

In the last few weeks, I have had a tragic death in the family and another beloved family member in ICU (she’s doing much better, now), all during the typically hectic time around Christmas, my wedding anniversary and my wife’s birthday (the last 3 of which all occur in a 6-day span).

When it is appropriate, I will jump on soon to  further break down the salty staff Head Hog Bret Bielema is assembling.

Posted in Sports | 1 Comment »

Dodd: Jeff Long Made The Most Efficient Hire of The College Football Coaching Search Season

Posted by Adam Butler on December 21, 2012

If you believe Dennis Dodd of cbssports.com, Arkansas is the Coaching Search Efficiency Capital of the College Football World.

Usually, I think Dodd’s columns are worth about as much as the paper they aren’t printed on.

But, this one is interesting because it is Arkansascentric. Take a look at his ranking of the 2012 College Football Coaching Searches in terms of efficiency.

Hint: Each of the top 8 searches involved coaches who had or now have Arkansas ties.

 

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Arkansas Hires Jim Chaney as Offensive Coordinator

Posted by Adam Butler on December 12, 2012

If the staff makes the Coach, Bret Bielema looks to be off to a good start in Fayetteville as Head Hog.

Yesterday, Bielema hired former Wisconsin (co) Defensive Coordinator Chris Ash as his defensive coordinator. Tonight, Arkansas announced Jim Chaney has been hired as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.

Chaney notables:

  • He has spent the last 4 years as the Tennessee Vols Offensive Coordinator (SEC experience and recruiting ties);

 

  • Prior to his time in Knoxville, Chaney spent 3 seasons as an assistant coach for the St. Louis Rams (NFL Experience that should help in recruiting);

 

  • Before his stint in the NFL, Chaney was Purdue’s offensive coordinator for 9 seasons, and tutored a guy named Drew Brees (Superstar name to toss around on the recruiting trail);

 

  • At Purdue, Chaney ran the spread (basketball on grass) but at UT, after his NFL stint, he ran more of a pro-style offense. Neither college stop featured a run-first, run-second offense like those implemented at Wisconsin under the Barry Alvarez and Bielema regimes.

 

  • Chaney (like the new Hogs’ defensive coordinator, Ash) has also served as a recruiting coordinator (at Purdue during the Brees era).

 

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Arkansas Runningback Knile Davis Declares For The NFL

Posted by Adam Butler on December 12, 2012

Knile Davis–the dominant, when healthy, but unfortunately oft-injured Arkansas runningback has declared for the NFL draft.

According to collegefootballnews.com, he will be represented by former Hog Track & Field Olympian turned agent, Mike Conley, Sr.

Davis was a 1st-team All-SEC selection in 2010, when he rushed for 1,322 yards and 13 touchdowns and led all SEC running backs in those categories.

We wish Knile good health and a return to form. He has been through a lot and is the type of player that deserves some good fortune.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , | 5 Comments »

Kick Ash & Take Names? Hogs Hire Chris Ash as Defensive Coordinator

Posted by Adam Butler on December 11, 2012

New Arkansas head coach Bret Bielema announced the hiring of Wisconsin Defensive Coordinator Chris Ash to the same position late this afternoon.

From the release:

Ash spent the last three seasons at Wisconsin and helped the Badgers win three straight Big Ten championships and become the first Big Ten team to play in three straight Rose Bowls since Michigan following the 1976-78 seasons. Ash brings experience as a defensive coordinator at two other schools and has also been a recruiting coordinator three times in his career.

At 39 years old, with 2 Rose Bowl defenses on his resume as a (co) coordinator, established success as a secondary coach and a reputation as a good recruiter, Ash (at least on paper) appears to be just what the doctor ordered for a Razorback defense that has struggled in recent years.

Only time will tell whether he produces Mike Haynes-like players or Paul Haynes-like defenses.

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

Blog Hawgs Heisman 5+1 Final Results

Posted by Adam Butler on December 7, 2012

Special to BlogHawgs by Kris Boyd

It’s Heisman Trophy Award Eve, so that means it’s time for our final Blog Hawgs Heisman 5+1 of the season.

Below are the results from the 2012 final voting for the Blog Hawgs Heisman 5+1.  The +1 voters feature media members, bloggers, former Division 1 football players and no-talent hacks like myself. The voters are from 12 different states and it is goal of the +1 to eventually feature voters from all 50 states.

Johnny Manziel dominated the first place votes, which are in parentheses.  Collin Klein kept it close.  The real race was for 3rd place between USCw’s Marqise Lee and Notre Dame’s  Manti Te’o.  Lee edged Te’o even though Manti received some first place votes.

There was a clear top 5.  A few voters noted they felt Te’o wasn’t as impressive as Jadeveon Clowney of South Carolina or Jarvis Jones of Georgia.  There was a note from a voter who felt Alabama offensive lineman Barrett Jones was more valuable to his team than Te’o, as Barrett won the Outland Trophy last year, moved to Center this year and was the heart and soul of the best OL for the best team in college football.

The results:

Johnny Manziel: 71 (11)

Collin Klein: 61 (2)

Marqise Lee: 31

Manti Te’o: 30 (2)

Braxton Miller: 11

Tavon Austin: 5

Kenjon Barner: 5

Stepfan Taylor: 3

Montee Ball: 2

Jarvis Jones: 2

Barrett Jones: 2

Colby Cameron: 1

Jeremy Hill: 1

Jordan Lynch: 1

Nick Florence: 1

Jadeveon Clowney: 1

A few other notes:

-Tajh Boyd received no votes even though he led Clemson to a 10-2 record and put up great stats.

-Tavon Austin was shunned despite having over 2,500 yards of total offense.

-Nick Florence received one vote even though his stats were almost identical to Robert Griffin, III’s 2011 Heisman-winning stats while only having two less wins than RG3.

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , , | 3 Comments »

Select 17, Pre-Bowl Edition

Posted by Brett Kincaid on December 6, 2012

The regular season ended last weekend, and once again Alabama sits atop the Select 17 heading into the BCS Championship Game. Is it 2011 or 2012?

(Searching)

Yep, it’s 2012; the Razorbacks do not appear on the bowl schedule. Sad to say, for the first time since 2008 the Hogs are home for the holidays. The upside, of course, is that some smokin’ hot wife has a husband that wants to coach here. Enthusiasm is already surging throughout Razorback Nation, but we need to put a cap on this season before looking ahead to spring practice and kickoff against UL-Lafayette on August 31, 2013 – which is 267 days from now.

So back to the teams still playing…

If you ever wondered whether or not ESPN controls the world, go ahead and look at the BCS Championship Game. Alabama versus Notre Dame for all the marbles. Can you imagine two teams that mean more to the history of college football squaring off for the title? This game will KILL any previous record for ratings of a college football championship game. The Vatican may very well provide free ESPN for all American Catholics. The Alabama National Guard will likely run coax from border-to-border, stealing cable from their neighbors in Tennessee, Florida, and Georgia. (They won’t even try to get it from Mississippi for obvious reasons.)

Perhaps the price we pay for such a great matchup in the title game is a slate of crap for the rest of the bowl season. In total there may be 5 other games I care to watch. I will, of course, probably watch all or part of 90% of the games (aided by the fact that I’m on vacation during Bowl Week), but I will bitch about it all the while.

As for the final Select 17 rankings, you’ll find a theme that repeated itself all season show up once more. The SEC dominates the list, placing six teams in the rankings including three of the top four. We began the year with 5 SEC teams in the rankings with Alabama and LSU occupying the top 2 spots. The more things change, the more they remain the same.

To the numbers…

Rank Team Votes LW
1 Alabama (3) 147 2
2 Notre Dame (6) 145 1
3 Florida 122 5
4 Georgia 117 3
5 Oregon 116 4
6 Kansas St. 110 6
7 LSU 91 7
8 Texas A&M 85 8
9 Ohio St. 77 10
10 Stanford 76 9
11 South Carolina 67 11
12 Oklahoma 58 12
13 Florida St. 46 t13
14 Clemson 34 t13
15 Oregon St. 26 16
16 Northern Illinois 17 NR
17 Boise St. 9 NR

Others Receiving Votes: UCLA 7, Jeff Long 6, Nebraska 6, Wisconsin 6, Utah St. 5, San Jose St. 2, Kent St. 1, Louisville 1

 

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