The list does suggest academics could be an issue
by nathan (2020-12-23 12:35:58)

In reply to: I estimate 82/100 2021 Top 100 prospects match.  posted by rkellyatrecess


Playing some devil's advocate here - the list has 82 with offers from private schools or UVA and exactly 3 of them committed to one of those schools (all ND), it suggests that very few top 100 recruits are interested enough in a private school education for it to be a deciding factor, or that ultimately they don't really qualify. Based on nothing it all I suspect it is some of both.


Wrong conclusion *
by cards86  (2020-12-23 14:17:33)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post


_(ツ)_/¯
by Nathan  (2020-12-23 19:39:40)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

Objectively it’s a list of 100 kids being used to support the premise that academics don’t aren’t a factor in recruiting. Yet, Aside from the 3 going to ND, not a single one is going to a private school or UVA. I made no conclusion, only pointed out that it doesn’t support the premise you are trying to prove. What do you conclude?


That kids want to go to schools that will further
by cards86  (2020-12-23 19:51:57)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

their football aspirations. ND under Holtz was one of those schools. Academics does not preclude that. It’s an excuse for the lazy.

That’s what I conclude.


you are, of course, correct.
by MrE  (2020-12-23 23:13:18)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

ND's peer group is Ohio State, Georgia, Alabama et al. - where the Top 100 elect to play football.

ND's peer group is not Vandy, Stanford, Duke, et al. - where the Top 100 elect not to play football.


Based on this list?
by Nathan  (2020-12-23 20:23:18)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

That kids choose based on their football aspirations is obvious. No one has ever argued that. The list supports that, not much more. To the coldly analytical this list says nothing about how academics factors in, only that it would appear that all 100 are eligible.

My biggest takeaway from this list that the best players are from California, Texas, or the south. My other takeaway is that the top schools kids are picking are west coast, Texas/Oklahoma and the south. Seems like those two things could be related. The list doesn’t prove it.

I don’t think kids exactly dream of playing for BK or in his offense but I also don’t think a lot of those kids in the top 100 care much about academics. I’d go so far as to say that any kids who picks Oklahoma does not.

Among data scientists, physicians, and psychologists, the term for your bias is called “confirmation” bias.