per 2hd, per usatoday
the part you will care about
Most deny the websites and analysts have any sway with them. Dan Mullen, the new Mississippi State coach, who just won his second national championship as Florida's offensive coordinator, says the sites are "a neat deal" because they spur more interest in college athletics. <p class="inside-copy">But the rankings have little to do with the process schools go through to identify top prospects.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"We're digging," Mullen said. "They might have a kid pop up on their screen, especially a secondary or tertiary player that we might not have been looking at. But I can tell you in the state of Mississippi, our top 25 rankings are very different than Scout's or Rivals' top 25 rankings, and those are the ones we go by."</p> <p class="inside-copy">Schools must perform at a higher standard than the services to thrive. Mullen worked under Urban Meyer at Bowling Green, Utah and Florida. He said coaches not only looked forward, but back to figure out how successful they were in identifying talent. Mullen has carried that practice over to Starkville.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"We have a whole research system set up on recruiting for us to really track our success, the success of players, where successful players have come from around the country, to see if we should recruit those areas," Mullen said. "When you're at 85 scholarships now, you can't be 50-50. You better hit at least 80% or you're going to be unsuccessful."</p> <p class="inside-copy">Unearthing and developing players others overlook is a particular coup. Two players Meyer's staff at Utah landed are perfect examples.</p> <p class="inside-copy">Alex Smith was a 6-foot-3, 189-pound high school teammate of Reggie Bush who clocked in at 4.9 seconds in the 40-yard dash. He only had offers at Utah and Louisville and chose the Utes because of the chance to play early. Three years later, he was the first overall pick in the NFL draft.</p> <p class="inside-copy">Fast forward to the 2009 Sugar Bowl and Brian Johnson sliced up Alabama's defense as the Utes completed a 13-0 season that put them in the middle of the national championship debate. Before signing, Johnson was a smallish, 6-1 two-star prospect from Texas who ran the 40 in 4.8 seconds.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"He's won two BCS bowls, he's been an all-conference player for multiple years, conference player of the year," Mullen said. "So that shows the inexactness of how the whole process can work."</p>
the part you will care about
Most deny the websites and analysts have any sway with them. Dan Mullen, the new Mississippi State coach, who just won his second national championship as Florida's offensive coordinator, says the sites are "a neat deal" because they spur more interest in college athletics. <p class="inside-copy">But the rankings have little to do with the process schools go through to identify top prospects.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"We're digging," Mullen said. "They might have a kid pop up on their screen, especially a secondary or tertiary player that we might not have been looking at. But I can tell you in the state of Mississippi, our top 25 rankings are very different than Scout's or Rivals' top 25 rankings, and those are the ones we go by."</p> <p class="inside-copy">Schools must perform at a higher standard than the services to thrive. Mullen worked under Urban Meyer at Bowling Green, Utah and Florida. He said coaches not only looked forward, but back to figure out how successful they were in identifying talent. Mullen has carried that practice over to Starkville.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"We have a whole research system set up on recruiting for us to really track our success, the success of players, where successful players have come from around the country, to see if we should recruit those areas," Mullen said. "When you're at 85 scholarships now, you can't be 50-50. You better hit at least 80% or you're going to be unsuccessful."</p> <p class="inside-copy">Unearthing and developing players others overlook is a particular coup. Two players Meyer's staff at Utah landed are perfect examples.</p> <p class="inside-copy">Alex Smith was a 6-foot-3, 189-pound high school teammate of Reggie Bush who clocked in at 4.9 seconds in the 40-yard dash. He only had offers at Utah and Louisville and chose the Utes because of the chance to play early. Three years later, he was the first overall pick in the NFL draft.</p> <p class="inside-copy">Fast forward to the 2009 Sugar Bowl and Brian Johnson sliced up Alabama's defense as the Utes completed a 13-0 season that put them in the middle of the national championship debate. Before signing, Johnson was a smallish, 6-1 two-star prospect from Texas who ran the 40 in 4.8 seconds.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"He's won two BCS bowls, he's been an all-conference player for multiple years, conference player of the year," Mullen said. "So that shows the inexactness of how the whole process can work."</p>