Story Poster
Photo by Twitter / Jermaine Terry
Cal Football

Bears Add a Future Hometown Hero in 4 Star Richmond TE Jermaine Terry

February 24, 2020
33,060

Cal's strong 2021 recruiting start got another big boost with today's commitment from 6-4/235 Kennedy-Richmond TE Jermaine Terry‍ today.

Earlier Terry indicated that the Bears were high on his radar and have been for quite a while.

“I want to get a great education and go somewhere that uses and produces NFL-caliber tight ends, and it has to feel like home,” said Terry.

“Cal is great place to play football and get an education. Coach Wilcox is bringing that program back up and I would love to be a part of that one day.”

Terry announced his decision today on Twitter, saying:

“First I want to start out by thanking God for how much he has blessed me and always set me on the right path. I want to thank my mom for all that she does. I can never repay her. I want to thank my family for always supporting my decisions and pushing me to be the best I can be every day. I want to thank my friends for always keeping me grounded and level headed.

“The recruitment process has been great for me but they say, “Home is where the heart is” and Cal is that.

“With that being said, I would like to say that I am now committed to THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY. 

With offers from top programs throughout the country, including Alabama, Auburn, Ohio State, Penn State and more, keeping the talented tight end home was a strong move for a Cal program seen as being on the rise after finishing their 2019 season strong with a Red Box Bowl win and 8-5 record for the season.

Other stories:

Cal Hoops: A 2020 Recruiting Update

5 Star 2021 WR Troy Franklin Talks Cal Offer and Recruiting

Discussion from...

Bears Add a Future Hometown Hero in 4 Star Richmond TE Jermaine Terry

29,609 Views | 64 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by Hail2Calif
Beardog26
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This is essentially what I was thinking but was too busy/lazy to do the total/average stars research.

I love JT and what he did for our program. To get us to 7-5 in 2002, the first season after 1-10, was fantastic coaching. It also included great development of many players. That said, I don't think the high level recruiting really started on "Day One."
71Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).
NVBear78
How long do you want to ignore this user?
71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).



Great to define recruiting success not by stars but by performance on the field. Wilcox will do well by this just like JT. Ironic that JT's downfall came by defining recruiting success by Stars rather than by what they do on the field and by staying in school.
irvinebear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This started like a good congratulatory commitment thread, but devolved... again. We really suck at commitment threads.

Can we get back to congratulating Jermaine on a great achievement?
71Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
NVBear78 said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).



Great to define recruiting success not by stars but by performance on the field. Wilcox will do well by this just like JT. Ironic that JT's downfall came by defining recruiting success by Stars rather than by what they do on the field and by staying in school.
Recruiting is a two part play

Part 1 - from a fan's perspective, until a recruit takes the field at the college level, stars are the primary evaluation tool.
Part II - once a recruit takes the field, all that matters is performance.

At the end of a recruit's college career, does really anyone care about stars? Of course not, at that point, it's all about accolades earned in college.

JT was very successful early. Later, he lost his way by chasing recruits who had no business attending Cal - they were either (or both) overrated and not academically-oriented. Thus far, Wilcox is hewing to the early JT formula - sign guys who belong at Cal AND can play at a championship level. I anticipate that JW will stick to that path.
MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
Going by top 4 in a first class, I think most would take Dykes' first class of Goff, Muhammad, Borrayo and Mekari or Walker over Makonnen, McCleskey, Robertson and Mixon. Many would take Garbers, Saffell, Hicks and Funches, too. At worst, It's a draw.

IMO it takes a special coach to win tough recruiting battles out of the gate unless the program recruits itself. The great equalizer is superior talent eval.

Gotta give Wilcox and staff credit for the fast start this year. Anderson was blowing up but shut things down early after finding the right fit at Cal. Ditto with Swinney, with lots of good midwestern offers, including the new hot local program Minnesota. Even moreso with Terry. Bama? Ohio State? Nope. Cal. I'm February.

Uncharted territory for Cal 6 months before a season.
Hail2Calif
How long do you want to ignore this user?
irvinebear said:

This started like a good congratulatory commitment thread, but devolved... again. We really suck at commitment threads.

Can we get back to congratulating Jermaine on a great achievement?
So true. So true.

Congrats, Jermaine, on a great decision for life!

Go Bears!
heartofthebear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I think in both the case of Tedford and Wilcox, success in recruiting and performance had to do with the coaching staff he had. Tedford immediately assembled a really good coaching staff and his OC was top notch. Once Cortez left, his offense was never as good, despite better recruiting and talent.

Wilcox has taken a bit longer to assemble a great coaching staff, particularly at OC. I think we would not have the kind of recruiting we are getting on offense right now had Baldwin stayed at Cal. And I think we are going to start to see an offense similar to what Tedford had from 02-06 at Cal under Musgrave et. al.
Cal89
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Congratulations to Jermaine Terry, AND Cal!

So glad that we are going-back to more of a TE-focused offense; and we are clearly attracting and getting some of the best in the nation too.

I view stars as assigned by services as a measure of incoming talent level. Most often pretty raw talent, with upside being the lure. There is then development of that talent at the school of choice. Development results are easily measured broadly in wins and via other metrics, down to the individual level of course. We live and breathe such numbers on this forum. The resulting talent affords a select few to play professionally, and that too can and has been a gauge of interest also.

JT was quite impressive in delivering NFL-ready talent. I looked back in the day, over quite a few years, and the amount of talent pumped into the NFL from Cal rosters was not just impressive, but much more so in relation to the average star classes or incoming talent. The development and maximization of talent by him and his staff were noteworthy and clearly the best in D1. No team with Cal's level of recruiting was putting so many players in the NFL, year after year...

The HC is the single most important talent on the football team. It all starts there...
Sig test...
71Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Cal89 said:

Congratulations to Jermaine Terry, AND Cal!

So glad that we are going-back to more of a TE-focused offense; and we are clearly attracting and getting some of the best in the nation too.

I view stars as assigned by services as a measure of incoming talent level. Most often pretty raw talent, with upside being the lure. There is then development of that talent at the school of choice. Development results are easily measured broadly in wins and via other metrics, down to the individual level of course. We live and breathe such numbers on this forum. The resulting talent affords a select few to play professionally, and that too can and has been a gauge of interest also.

JT was quite impressive in delivering NFL-ready talent. I looked back in the day, over quite a few years, and the amount of talent pumped into the NFL from Cal rosters was not just impressive, but much more so in relation to the average star classes or incoming talent. The development and maximization of talent by him and his staff were noteworthy and clearly the best in D1. No team with Cal's level of recruiting was putting so many players in the NFL, year after year...

The HC is the single most important talent on the football team. It all starts there...
Well said, 89....
BearlyCareAnymore
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
1. I'm pretty sure McCleskey flipped from Colorado to Cal after Tedford came in and offered. You can correct me if I'm remembering incorrectly.

2. I think it is ridiculous to analyze either coaches first class that was almost entirely recruited by the prior guy other than to give brownie points for guys the specifically brought in who succeeded.

3. Yes, of course we won't know what Wilcox' first real class grades out as until they are done, but if anything, Tedford's class is more impressive for not having a high rating. Tedford's class, laden with JC talent, did contribute much faster than Wilcox's class has, but that was by design.
Bear19
How long do you want to ignore this user?
71Bear said:

It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff).
Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years.
Disagree that Dykes should get any credit for Goff - JG was 100% committed, set to come on campus early by Tedford. Dykes didn't screw up the commitment, so there's that.

If we don't have many many classes that surpass the best Tedford classes, it will mean we're still in the quagmire of mediocracy. Not saying we're guaranteed to rise above that, but it does appear that Wilcox is on the way to get us to a much higher level than we've been in a long time.
tequila4kapp
How long do you want to ignore this user?
It is so refreshing to have a staff that recruits CA instead of saying there aren't enough kids that meet our academic requirements
MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
They weren't just saying that. There weren't in prior years. This happens to be a much better group.
71Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
tequila4kapp said:

It is so refreshing to have a staff that recruits CA instead of saying there aren't enough kids that meet our academic requirements
There were plenty. The coaches were a bunch of idiots....

MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
71Bear said:

tequila4kapp said:

It is so refreshing to have a staff that recruits CA instead of saying there aren't enough kids that meet our academic requirements
There were plenty. The coaches were a bunch of idiots....
Cal's always recruited SoCal. it's the Bay Area where the last couple staffs have said there aren't enough high level athletes with strong academics to bring in many.

Let's hear who the "idiots," including Wilcox and staff for the past three years, have passed on who were strong students, high level athletes and good fits for the program.

Real easy to call people stupid. Not so easy to back up the assertion.
71Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

tequila4kapp said:

It is so refreshing to have a staff that recruits CA instead of saying there aren't enough kids that meet our academic requirements
There were plenty. The coaches were a bunch of idiots....
Cal's always recruited SoCal. it's the Bay Area where the last couple staffs have said there aren't enough high level athletes with strong academics to bring in many.

Let's hear who the "idiots," including Wilcox and staff for the past three years, have passed on who were strong students, high level athletes and good fits for the program.

Real easy to call people stupid. Not so easy to back up the assertion.
The bunch that Wilcox and his assts. replaced were idiots. They proved their incompetence repeatedly over the years they were at Cal. The proof is in the pudding........
MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
Wilcox and his assistants didn't bring in any more NorCal/Bay Area guys than Dykes did. Dykes and staff averaged 5 per year. Wilcox and staff have brought in an average of 4 per year in their 4 years. And it's because of exactly as noted. There have not been a big group of high level, academically qualified, good fits in the Bay Area and NorCal in quite a while now.

This class is the best one in quite some time.
calumnus
How long do you want to ignore this user?
71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.
MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
Minor correction: Cal had 7 wins in both '02 and '03 but the SC win in '03 definitely helped '04 recruiting.
01Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.

Out of curiosity, how many stars did Marshawn Lynch receive coming out of high school? Was he a 4-star athlete? (IIRC, the 5-star athlete was Desean Jackson; please correct me if I'm wrong on that.)
Rushinbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


. He added good JC players
Are JC's as rich a source of talent as they used to be?
berk18.2
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Rushinbear said:



Are JC's as rich a source of talent as they used to be?
I don't know how it used to be, but for this class I've been compiling recruiting data for the whole conference. 251 recruits signed, and only 16 of them were from JC's. Nine of those were signed by OSU and Colorado, leaving only seven for the remaining ten schools.

It's also striking that Cal could get the #1 JC OLB last year, and we've had highly-rated JC recruits in the past, but we almost never get comparably ranked HS recruits. Similarly this year OSU signed five top-100 JC recruits, but their highest-rated HS recruit was only #598 nationally. It seems like there's simply less demand/competition for JC guys, even if we're talking about someone who's top-10 at their position. A part of that is also that there are way fewer JC recruits in the first place, and so a high ranking is easier to obtain.
BearlyCareAnymore
How long do you want to ignore this user?
01Bear said:

calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.

Out of curiosity, how many stars did Marshawn Lynch receive coming out of high school? Was he a 4-star athlete? (IIRC, the 5-star athlete was Desean Jackson; please correct me if I'm wrong on that.)


Marshawn was a high 4 star. One service had him as the second best running back in the country behind Adrian Peterson
burritos
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MoragaBear said:

Minor correction: Cal had 7 wins in both '02 and '03 but the SC win in '03 definitely helped '04 recruiting.
Do you recall during the Holmoe years that he almost had a socal trifecta commit which included Chris Lewis, Kareem Kelly, and someone else? That didn't materialize but we did end up with Boller. Or am I remembering this narrative incorrectly?
01Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
OaktownBear said:

01Bear said:

calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.

Out of curiosity, how many stars did Marshawn Lynch receive coming out of high school? Was he a 4-star athlete? (IIRC, the 5-star athlete was Desean Jackson; please correct me if I'm wrong on that.)


Marshawn was a high 4 star. One service had him as the second best running back in the country behind Adrian Peterson

Thanks for that OTB. That's kind of what I remembered, but I can't fathom how he wasn't ranked as a 5 star athlete. In any case, if Cal can get more Marshawn-esque student-athletes, that would be fantastic not just for the product on the field, but also because his uniqueness, drive, compassion, and intelligence are all part of what makes Cal the greatest university in the world.
burritos
How long do you want to ignore this user?
01Bear said:

OaktownBear said:

01Bear said:

calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.

Out of curiosity, how many stars did Marshawn Lynch receive coming out of high school? Was he a 4-star athlete? (IIRC, the 5-star athlete was Desean Jackson; please correct me if I'm wrong on that.)


Marshawn was a high 4 star. One service had him as the second best running back in the country behind Adrian Peterson

Thanks for that OTB. That's kind of what I remembered, but I can't fathom how he wasn't ranked as a 5 star athlete. In any case, if Cal can get more Marshawn-esque student-athletes, that would be fantastic not just for the product on the field, but also because his uniqueness, drive, compassion, and intelligence are all part of what makes Cal the greatest university in the world.
I'll be happy with a JJ Arrington like performance with a good line. Just don't fax the LOI too early.
01Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
burritos said:

01Bear said:

OaktownBear said:

01Bear said:

calumnus said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

MoragaBear said:

71Bear said:

calumnus said:

golden sloth said:

On top of that, unless you have some insanely charismatic coach or a coach with bonafided credentials of success (like Urban Meyer), recruiting is a delayed indicator of team success. Trying to recruit HS seniors is hard as you have a lot of ground to make up, but HS sophomores put you on more equal footing.


Which is why the "we need to recruit better" first argument generally fails. You need to get the most production you can from the players you have before the top players sign on. Though in this case the combination of Wilcox and the promise of Musgrave is enough, the big change will come when we combine a good offense with a good defense.
I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
Not really. Looking at it from both recruiting rankings and how they ended up working out by recruiting players who outplayed their rankings, the 2002 class was not good. O'Keith, Gray and Parson were 4 star players (good rankings, underachievers). McCleskey, Makonnen and Bundy were 3 stars (McCleskey outplayed his ranking, Makkonen lived up to it and Bundy didn't play). The other 12 were 2 stars and most played like it except Erik Robertson and Tim Mixon. This was by far Cal's worst class in the internet ratings era (post SuperPrep, etc).

In the next year, they had one 4 star (Matt Malele) and three 2 stars (DeCoud, Van Hoesen and Myles). The rest were 3 stars. Ultimately he made good calls on a lot of the 3 star JC guys like Rodgers, Arrington, Cross, Riddle and Giordano plus preps like Mebane and Hughes but the strong recruiting really didn't kick in till 2004 after they'd had two 7-win seasons.
Tedford 2002 (late start)

Makkonen
McCleskey
Robertson
Mixon

I'll that foursome over any "new coach late start foursome" this century.

Tedford 2003 (first full year)

Arrington
Maningo
Giordano
Hughes
Rodgers
Stevens
Riddle
Mebane
Malele
DeCoud

I'll that top ten over any "new coach first full year top ten" this century.

In fact, I'll take those ten guys in the same class over any ten guys in the same class signed by any coach in any year since Tedford became coach.

To suggest Tedford started slow is ridiculous. 2003 was an amazing group of talent.
Well, you're moving the goalposts here. You said:
Quote:

I disagree. Tedford proved you can recruit effectively from a Day One even if you are starting from a deep hole.
No "late start" mulligans involved in a Day One statement.

Secondly, How many of those four you mentioned were Tedford recruits? I think only Makonnen was. You still have to hold on to them so points for that. But beyond that, I'd venture that there were hundreds of top fours from a coach's first recruiting class that were better to far better than that group. And to cherry pick the best four from a class of 18 that averaged a miserable 2.44 stars per player -you can't put lipstick on that pig. No big knock on Tedford. It's just another example of how it's tough to recruit strong classes from Day One.

As for the 2003 class, if you want to define recruiting effectively by looking at what kind of college players they were, fine. Then you have to reserve judgment on the last 2-3 of Wilcox's classes, too, because we're not there yet. But if you want to go by ratings, the 2003 class had a 2.92 to 3.0 star average. That's okay. Not sure it would normally be considered effective.
Tedford signed the guys. He gets credit for them. It is that simple (just like Dykes gets credit for Goff). Having said that, I did fail to clarify the "foursome" comment. It was in reference to only Cal coaches (i.e., Dykes/Wilcox). It is not a cherry pick because anyone is welcome to select the top four from Dykes' first class or Wilcox's first class and compare.

I define ALL by performance not stars. Absolutely, you cannot assess a class until at least three years after signing day. Having said that, Wilcox will be hard-pressed to match the '03 group. Quite frankly, I think that class will not be topped for many years. Of course, only time will tell if that statement holds up (I hope not, I would love to see this year's class better the results posted by the '03's).


I see it this way: Tedford was a known entity as the OC for Oregon. However, in 2002 Tedford won 7 games mostly with the guys he inherited from a 1 win team. That created a lot of buzz. He added good JC players and solid underrated guys and won 8 games in 2003 including handing USC their only loss. That is when the recruiting really took off. The next year in 2004 he won 10 games.

The 2002 class had 3 guys with 4 stars

The 2003 class had 4 guys with 4 stars

The 2004 class had 6 guys with 4 stars

The 2005 class had 1 guy with 5 stars and 9 guys with 4 stars.

Out of curiosity, how many stars did Marshawn Lynch receive coming out of high school? Was he a 4-star athlete? (IIRC, the 5-star athlete was Desean Jackson; please correct me if I'm wrong on that.)


Marshawn was a high 4 star. One service had him as the second best running back in the country behind Adrian Peterson

Thanks for that OTB. That's kind of what I remembered, but I can't fathom how he wasn't ranked as a 5 star athlete. In any case, if Cal can get more Marshawn-esque student-athletes, that would be fantastic not just for the product on the field, but also because his uniqueness, drive, compassion, and intelligence are all part of what makes Cal the greatest university in the world.
I'll be happy with a JJ Arrington like performance with a good line. Just don't fax the LOI too early.

Lol! Yeah, I guess a 2000 yard rusher would be acceptable.

Seriously, though, I'm a huge Marshawn Lynch fan. There are stories that in his time at Cal and with the Seahawks, even though he was the featured back, he would ask to rest during some plays just to get his teammates some touches. Who does that? He could carry the team and knew he was the best player, but he also wanted to see his teammates shine, even if it meant his own stats suffered. That just speaks volumes about him as a person.

Again, that's just his on-field performance. By all accounts, he was as solid and selfless a guy off the field as well. It's why I want to see nothing but the best befall him. He makes me proud to be a Cal alumnus. He is a great representative for our school and our alumni.
Hail2Calif
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I seem to recall stories of how he was campaigning on the sidelines for Justin Forsett to get back late into the Vegas Bowl for another carry as he was sitting on 999 rushing yards. Just a great teammate.
Refresh
Page 2 of 2
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.