Re: Bohl News
Originally Posted by
td577
Part of the rivals system is it requires the athletes to sign up. Usually a college coach encourages them to sign up so they can go back to the boosters later and say they got x amount of 3 star signees. The problem comes in when these guys commit, they automatically rise up in the ranking system. So someone like Harry commits to UND, UND encourages him to sign up to Rivals so they can show to other recruits and boosters they are signing ranked athletes because as soon as they got him to commit to a D1 program, he went up a star. He already was in the top 20 in the state, from someplace I read, so that puts him somewhere in the top 1000 in the country, so he was no less than 2 stars before he committed. He committed to a D1 one program and if he wasn't already in the top 750 to get the three stars, he is now. So when Wyoming goes after him and gets him to change his verbal, he is already a 3 star recruit. He might have already been a low three star before the UN_ commitment, but he was a solid 3 star afterwards. Just signing up to rivals makes a athlete a 1 star.
I am guessing when NDSU starts talking to these kids, one of the first things they tell them is the college scouts know who they are and signing up for rivals does nothing but put unneeded expectations on their collegiate career by people that it doesn't really matter to. If a school wants them, they will find them regardless of how many stars are after their name. The stars are all about selling programs to boosters and dreamers. NDSU doesn't need the stars to sell the program. The athletes don't need the stars to excel in the program. All it does is distract a student/athlete from making a decision based on their needs, wants, and what is best for them and their family. While the top programs in the nation get their fill of 4 and 5 star ranked football players, I would be willing to bet when they get their sights on someone who hasn't signed up with a scouting service they tell them the same thing. The stars rally only come into play when you are talking about a fringe athlete who is a high two star that needs the three star to get a D1 offer or a high 3 star who needs a 4 star to get a P5 offer. I am guessing a lot of the kids that committed to NDSU would have been 3 star signees if they had signed up with a scouting service like Rivals. At a minimum, most of them would have been high 2 stars. Of course, we all know it doesn't matter how they get here, it matter what they do when they get here. That is simply my opinion based on how I understand how Rivals works as far as being on their radar requiring a high school athlete to actually sign up.
Not sure on the accuracy of the entire post, but I do know that Momoh was ranked as a three star prior to UND even recruiting him, so your theory that UND encouraged him to sign up for rivals is bunk. Maybe I'm not sure what you mean by signing up - a lot of NDSUs recruits are on rivals just the same as Momoh.
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