He is beating out the likes of Kansas and Mizzou for kids, but top schools like USC, Florida, and Texas won't even consider most of the recruits NU has.
Why should they when they have hundreds of the best players in their back yard? How many top level kids come out of those states period? To any school?
We now have kids on the offensive side of the ball coming to NU that wouldn't have dreamed of coming under the previous staff. Kids like Marlon Lucky, Maurice Purify and Zac Lee. Now, you could argue that it's because the schemes in play now are different than in past years but that's really the point. The most athletic kids these days don't see a run based offense as helping them go to the next level. Back in the day, it seems there were more of these kids or Tom and Co. were just better at finding them than Frank ever was.
Nebraska has never had a bunch of "lesser" kids. For some reason, people want to think that we won national championships with a bunch of kids that grew up on farms or weren't sought after by anyone. It might make a good movie, but really it's just not true. I mean, look at all the guys in the NFL from those teams and tell me they were "lesser". There's no such thing as "lesser" in the NFL. You're either good enough, or you aren't.
That being said, that kind of thing does exist in college I think. Given the size of the roster in Franks later years, its obvious there were kids on the team that really had no chance of ever seeing the field ever and that's just a waste of resources. Now, NU still takes a lot of walk-ons that aren't superstars in high school. Chances are one or two will develop into great players, but they all have to add something to the team of they should really get cut.
With any staff, I think recruiting is a success is getting the players you really want and need. Screw the :star ratings and all that nonsense. I don't think that was happening under the previous staff, especially later. Sure, you miss out on the big guys here and there like everyone but your class doesn't hinge on one or two players. The key is in the breadth of the class. You get breadth by offering A TON of kids, like this staff does.
As far as the 10-3 season, well, I have to say that I think it was probably the most hollow 10-3 I've ever seen at NU. Every time the team stepped out on the field I cringed. I had no confidence in the team that they would soundly beat anyone. After the first few home games I attended (had season tickets last year), I felt some of that confidence returning. I am sure that has something to do with having some continuity finally.