Popular Post BIG ERN Posted December 19, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 19, 2019 2018 Class 2019 Class 2020 Class QB Adrian Martinez .9423 Luke McCaffrey .9070 Logan Smothers .8972 RB Maurice Washington .9190 Sevion Morrison .8939 Rahmir Johnson .8858 Greg Bell .8846 Dedrick Mills .8817 Ronald Thompkins .8817 Marvin Scott .8647 OL Turner Corcoran .9800 Bryce Benhart .9349 Cameron Jurgens .9227 Alex Conn .8647 Michael Lynn .8614 Brant Banks .8613 Matthew Anderson .8572 Willie Canty .8526 Will Farniok .8581 Ethan Piper .8410 Jimmy Fritzsche .8301 TE Chris Hickman .8851 Katerian Legrone .8492 WR Wandale Robinson .9597 Zavier Betts .9500 Marcus Fleming .9093 Omar Manning .9053 Alante Brown .8939 Darian Chase .8889 Damariyon Houston .8884 Dominick Watt .8871 Jamie Nance .8862 Jaron Woodyard .8859 Andre Hunt .8742 Miles Jones .8741 William Nixon .8647 Justin McGriff .8498 Mike Williams .8474 DL Ty Robinson .9284 Tate Wildeman .8971 Jahkeem Green .8900 Nash Hutmacher .8722 Mosai Newsom .8681 Marquis Black .8614 Jordon Riley .8567 Casey Rogers .8526 LB Nick Henrich .9383 Keyshawn Green .9329 Caleb Tannor .8958 Jackson Hannah .8850 Will Honas .8818 Blaise Gunnerson .8801 David Alston .8721 Eteva Mauga-Clements .8688 Jamin Graham .8668 Garrett Nelson .8659 Garrett Snodgrass .8626 Jimari Butler .8621 Niko Cooper .8594 DB Noa Pola-Gates .9379 Henry Gray .9122 Jaiden Francois .9040 Cam Jones .9023 CJ Smith .8897 Deontai Williams .8784 Myles Farmer .8688 Quinton Newsome .8863 Cam Taylor .8636 Javin Wright .8634 Braxton Clark .8490 Ronald Delancy .8451 Tamon Lynum .8375 Transfers Darrion Daniels .9032 Kanawai Noa .8528 Nouredin Nouili .8053 Travis Vokolek .8027 12 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 Dang, this is nice work! 3 Quote Link to comment
HS_Coach_C Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 1 hour ago, BIG ERN said: 2018 Class 2019 Class 2020 Class QB Adrian Martinez .9423 Luke McCaffrey .9070 Logan Smothers .8972 RB Maurice Washington .9190 Sevion Morrison .8939 Rahmir Johnson .8858 Greg Bell .8846 Dedrick Mills .8817 Ronald Thompkins .8817 Marvin Scott .8647 OL Turner Corcoran .9800 Bryce Benhart .9349 Cameron Jurgens .9227 Alex Conn .8647 Michael Lynn .8614 Brant Banks .8613 Matthew Anderson .8572 Willie Canty .8526 Will Farniok .8581 Ethan Piper .8410 Jimmy Fritzsche .8301 TE Chris Hickman .8851 Katerian Legrone .8492 WR Wandale Robinson .9597 Zavier Betts .9500 Marcus Fleming .9093 Omar Manning .9053 Alante Brown .8939 Darian Chase .8889 Damariyon Houston .8884 Dominick Watt .8871 Jamie Nance .8862 Jaron Woodyard .8859 Andre Hunt .8742 Miles Jones .8741 William Nixon .8647 Justin McGriff .8498 Mike Williams .8474 DL Ty Robinson .9284 Tate Wildeman .8971 Jahkeem Green .8900 Nash Hutmacher .8722 Mosai Newsom .8681 Marquis Black .8614 Jordon Riley .8567 Casey Rogers .8526 LB Nick Henrich .9383 Keyshawn Green .9329 Caleb Tannor .8958 Jackson Hannah .8850 Will Honas .8818 Blaise Gunnerson .8801 David Alston .8721 Eteva Mauga-Clements .8688 Jamin Graham .8668 Garrett Nelson .8659 Garrett Snodgrass .8626 Jimari Butler .8621 Niko Cooper .8594 DB Noa Pola-Gates .9379 Henry Gray .9122 Jaiden Francois .9040 Cam Jones .9023 CJ Smith .8897 Deontai Williams .8784 Myles Farmer .8688 Quinton Newsome .8863 Cam Taylor .8636 Javin Wright .8634 Braxton Clark .8490 Ronald Delancy .8451 Tamon Lynum .8375 Transfers Darrion Daniels .9032 Kanawai Noa .8528 Nouredin Nouili .8053 Travis Vokolek .8027 It's crazy that every receiver from 2018 is now gone. 1 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 It really is amazing how many players never really make it. What do you lose from 9th grade to 12th grade? @HS_Coach_C Quote Link to comment
HS_Coach_C Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 19 minutes ago, teachercd said: It really is amazing how many players never really make it. What do you lose from 9th grade to 12th grade? @HS_Coach_C The baby fat and the squeaky voices? 1 3 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 1 minute ago, HS_Coach_C said: The baby fat and the squeaky voices? I hate you! Ha You know what I mean. But that was incredibly funny! Quote Link to comment
VizionNE Posted December 19, 2019 Share Posted December 19, 2019 When you look at WR, look at how 2018 panned out when frost was just trying to get a class together to hit numbers. Not saying they are not good players, but most of them are on the low end for a reason. I’ll be curious how much attrition happens on the 2019 class. Encouraging to see the rise in rankings. Need to win some games to make the next jump. Excited by the influx at the LB position. Teams have been taking advantage of our LBs eyes and/or lack of speed for awhile it seems. Overhaul was long overdue. Quote Link to comment
BIG ERN Posted December 19, 2019 Author Share Posted December 19, 2019 5 hours ago, VizionNE said: When you look at WR, look at how 2018 panned out when frost was just trying to get a class together to hit numbers. Not saying they are not good players, but most of them are on the low end for a reason. I’ll be curious how much attrition happens on the 2019 class. Encouraging to see the rise in rankings. Need to win some games to make the next jump. Excited by the influx at the LB position. Teams have been taking advantage of our LBs eyes and/or lack of speed for awhile it seems. Overhaul was long overdue. I think since he arrived so late he was scrambling to sign kids to fill the 18' class and wasn't able to build relationships. Between that and the 17' class having a ton of kids not make it or leave set us back big. 1 Quote Link to comment
flatwaterfan Posted December 20, 2019 Share Posted December 20, 2019 I took the data given and computed some averages. I did not mess with the transfers. Not sure if this tells us too much but kind of interesting. Ratings per position high to low: 1) QB rating average = .9155 3/3 100% retention 2) ILB rating average = .8944 7/7 100% 3) WR rating average = .8940 10/14 71.4% retention 4) RB rating average = .8848 5/7 71.4% retention (I guessed that m.w is gone) 5) DB rating average = .8799 11/13 84.6 % 6) OL rating average = .8785 10/11 90.9% retention 7) DL rating average = .8783 8/8 100% retention 8) OLB rating average = .8717 7/7 100 % retention 9) TE rating average = .8614 1/3 33% retention (I moved McGriff to TE's) From the ratings we are better with skill positions than the positions on the line. Retention rates by position Ratings per position high to low: 1) DL rating average = .8783 8/8 100% retention 2) ILB rating average = .8944 7/7 100% OLB rating average = .8717 7/7 100 % retention 4) QB rating average = .9155 3/3 100% retention 5) OL rating average = .8785 10/11 90.9% retention 6) DB rating average = .8799 11/13 84.6 % 7) WR rating average = .8940 10/14 71.4% retention 8) RB rating average = .8848 5/7 71.4% retention (I guessed that m.w is gone) 9) TE rating average = .8614 1/3 33% retention (I moved McGriff to TE's) It seems that most attrition happens with skill positions. The more blue collar type positions seem to be more stable. Defense is generally better than offense. 5 Quote Link to comment
Toe Posted December 26, 2019 Share Posted December 26, 2019 Knock on wood, but it's probably just a matter of time until we start to see some QB losses. Hard to keep talented guys around as backups... 1 Quote Link to comment
HUSKER 37 Posted February 3, 2020 Share Posted February 3, 2020 Interesting read..Not new...But new to me. Nebraska's in-state recruiting collapse was worse than you think. Scott Frost won't find a quick fix Quote In the 1990s, 51 Husker lettermen came from towns of fewer than 2,000 people, including 14 on the 1997 team alone. This decade, 12 lettermen fit that category. Look at it from the scope of scholarship players. In the 14 years before Bill Callahan, 15 towns of fewer than 2,000 people produced a scholarship recruit. The 14 years since? None. Here’s the most glaring fact: In the past 10 seasons (2008-17), two Husker lettermen came to NU from eight-man high school football. Lance Thorell and Taylor Dixon, walk-ons from Loomis and Wauneta-Palisade, respectively, finished their careers in 2011 and 2012. Quote The obstacles specific to Frost are more formidable: » Limits to walk-on numbers because of Title IX. Attempts to expand the Husker roster to Osborne standards may require NU to cut a men’s sport — or create another women’s sport. » The rising cost of college. In-state tuition to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln 20 years ago averaged $2,849. The cost — even after accounting for inflation — has more than doubled, not including increases in housing, meals, books and fees. It’s harder for native sons to accept walk-on offers. » The evolution of college football. The sport values speed more than ever. Size and power football, where Nebraska kids traditionally excelled, is at less of a premium. Moreover, the old path to success — redshirting, developing and waiting two or three years to set foot on the field — has become antiquated. Kids want to play now. » A generation of kids that has never seen Nebraska in the top 10. Homegrown kids used to dream of wearing the red N. Now they like Oregon and Ohio State, too. » Demographic changes. The only reason the State of Nebraska is growing is because of its Latino population. Those kids often lack experience and interest in football. » The biggest issue of all: Small-town depopulation. Rural Nebraska is drying up at an alarming rate, and with it the unheralded heroes of Osborne’s program. Quote Link to comment
Mavric Posted February 3, 2020 Share Posted February 3, 2020 40 minutes ago, HUSKER 37 said: Interesting read..Not new...But new to me. Nebraska's in-state recruiting collapse was worse than you think. Scott Frost won't find a quick fix Is that what you meant to link to or is there a different article? 1 Quote Link to comment
NUance Posted February 3, 2020 Share Posted February 3, 2020 49 minutes ago, Mavric said: Is that what you meant to link to or is there a different article? Ha ha! I think he meant to link to this OWH article: LINK Interesting article. 2 Quote Link to comment
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