Good article from the OWH. Lots of facts on how changes around college football have also changed college football.
Map: Hometown of Top 10 Draft Picks since 2009
The Big Ten’s struggles are really just a symptom of a larger problem with Northern football. That’s the real story. That’s why the Big Ten lags behind in recruiting. That’s why the Big Ten loses bowl games.
Of the 60 Top-10 picks since ’09, 49 played their high school football south of St. Louis. More than 80 percent.
How many grew up in the Big Ten footprint (population 69 million)?
Two (Eric Fisher and Luke Kuechly).
That’s the same number that came from Rock Hill, S.C., population 68,000 (Jadeveon Clowney and Stephen Gilmore).
* Apparently you’re 1,000 times more likely to be a Top-10 pick growing up in Rock Hill than you are in Big Ten country.
But even if you cut the Northern states some slack, there’s plenty to chew on, specifically the double-whammy of demographics and offensive evolution.
In 1960, Ohio had more people than Florida and Texas. Since then, Florida has grown by 14 million people, Texas by 16 million, both tripling in size. Ohio has added less than 2 million, growing by just 18 percent.
Population in Southern states grew 14 percent from 2000 to 2010, compared with just 4 percent in the Midwest. And per capita, they produce more than twice as many BCS recruits.
When Woody Hayes won his last national title in 1968, football games were three yards and a cloud of dust. Offensive linemen and running backs won games.
Football began changing in the 80s, first in the NFL (Bill Walsh) and college (Miami, Florida State, BYU). Offenses opened up. From 1973-83, all 11 Heisman Trophy winners were running backs. From 2000-2013, 13 of 14 winners were quarterbacks.
Twenty-first century football is a warm-weather sport. A speed game. Kids in the South practice 12 months a year, playing pitch-and-catch in the sun, often without tackling each other. Meanwhile, Big Ten kids are trying to hone the same skills in half the time outdoors.
Map: Hometown of Top 10 Draft Picks since 2009