Mags FTW wrote:coolhandluke121 wrote:In the past, I think the helmet schools got more than their fair share of the best recruits and it was hard for them to transfer if they didn't get playing time. All the top recruits probably have a ton of confidence and think they'll rise to the top, but when they don't win a spot in the rotation, now they can easily transfer. That wasn't the case in the past. I think there is slightly more parity.
However, when the richest schools have gaps, they can just poach players to fill those gaps, so it does work both ways. I just think the overall trend of distributing talent *slightly* more evenly (in the name of getting playing time) is having a larger effect. It's harder to hoard talent if you can't find playing time for all of them, and you're only going to spend so much NIL money on players who aren't in your regular rotation.
The problem is that NIL has ended recruit and develop for the non-helmet schools. If you recruit a diamond in the rough, or develop a 3-star into a 4/5, they are bolting for a bag.
They ended it for different reasons, IMO. I don't think your example happens
that often. I think it's this:
Wisconsin was
the recruit-and-develop team.
What happened? If you spend 2-3 years developing a very solid D-lineman and also try to keep depth behind him with other great development, you have 2 problems:
1. Indiana, Minnesota, and Illinois just walk over to New Mexico State's roster or Texas A&M's bench and pick up a transfer that takes 0 years to develop and is every bit as solid as the guy you developed over several years.
2. The depth you are trying to create - the guy on the bench waiting behind your developmental starter -
that is the guy that gets impatient and bolts for a starting job elsewhere (for only a little bit of $, if anything).