A very "amateurly" written blog that covers all things Auburn, and other issues and events going on with College Football. And the occasional rant...
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Auburn '13 QB Target, Ryan Buchanan
Ryan Buchanan
Jackson Prep HS (Jackson, MS)
6'3, 205 lbs.
4.82 forty
1,600 yds passing for 16 TDs. (very run heavy offense)
YouTube Highlights video 1
YouTube Highlights video 2
Amateur Analysis
Really, really good feet with an absolutely ideal build. Has a great knack for fitting balls into tight windows. Particularly like how you can tell he knows that offense like the back of his hand. Every throw he makes tends to be in rhythm with his drops and this is directly attributed to his full knowledge of the playbook. Little bit of a 3/4 release but if he's 6'3 that won't be too big of an issue. Seems to be fairly accurate on the deep ball, but is very very accurate on the intermediate throws. With his 3/4 delivery it does tend to make the ball not necessarily sizzle out of his hand and it tends to come out wobbly when he has to rush the throws, and he doesn't step into his throws as much under duress. This should get better working with a good, college QB coach that can refine his mechanics.
Overall, I feel comfortable at this point in saying that Buchanan is the most underrated QB in the '13 class when looking at his rankings on the more popular recruiting sites out there. In, what I feel is, one of the best years for QBs I've seen in the 5 or so years I've really been following recruiting, I'd have no qualms about seeing Buchanan in the top 5-7 range for QBs. The level of competition Ryan faces is pretty sub-par, so this might be a kid who has to do some camping to truly prove to some that he's worthy or being called one of the top passers in the country.
Recruiting
Buchanan, relative to the fast paced recruitment we've all become used to, has remained under the radar for quite some time. Most of the top 10 or so QBs in this class have been well known players for the past year or 2 in recruiting circles. But, now that coaches have gotten a hold of his film, most of them seem to like what they see and what to get him on campus ASAP to evaluate in person. Recently colleges such as Auburn, Florida and Arkansas have all picked up interest, with Auburn offering on his visit this past weekend. I feel that if Auburn wants him, at this point, Auburn could get him. But, I don't feel Auburn is ready to settle on it's number one target for QB just yet, but it should happen soon. He plans a decision before his Sr. season and AU would like to have it's QB by then as well. Ole Miss will be tough to beat, as they always are in that area of Mississippi, and he has a sister that goes to Ole Miss. I've heard Loeffler is his favorite coach he's talked to, after his recent visit, but have also heard that Bobby Petrino was his favorite. Either way Loeffler wouldn't be too far behind if Auburn really wants him.
Prediction:
Ole Miss
Auburn QB Targets in my top 10....
I'll do the first one today starting with Ryan Buchanan (a personal favorite of mine).....
Monday, April 2, 2012
'13 Top 10 QBs:
Top 10
1. Ryan Burns
2. Kevin Olsen
3. Max Browne
4. Ryan Buchanan
5. Cooper Bateman
6. Hayden Rettig
7. Christian Hackenberg
8. Eddie Printz
9. Shane Morris
10. Brice Ramsey
Highest Ceiling
1. Ryan Burns
2. Max Browne
3. Tyrone Swoopes
Highest Floor
1. Ryan Burns
2. Kevin Olsen
3. Eddie Printz
Sleepers
1. Cord Sandberg
2. Jeremy Johnson
3. Austin Allen
Future #1 pick
1. Ryan Burns
2. Max Browne
3. Kevin Olsen
Friday, March 16, 2012
Way too Early '13 Mock Class
2013 AU Mock Class.....
Let's try our first one here in March:
QB- Hayden Rettig
QB- Jeremy Johnson
RB- Tyshon Dye
FB- Josh Anderson
WR- Earnest Robinson
WR- Isaiah Jones
TE- OJ Howard (I think we flip him, going out on a limb mostly here)
TE- Standish Dobard
OL- Austin Golson (another potential flip...visited several times, quietly, already)
OG- Tyrone Crowder
DL- Dee Liner
DE- Carl Lawson
DT- Jay Ellison or Rod Crayton (if we offer)
DE- Jordan Sherit
DL- one more "best available" guy....hopefully Montravius Adams or Kenny Bigelow
LB- Trey Johnson
LB- Cameron Toney
CB- Kamryn Melton
CB- Noel Ellis
S- Vonn Bell
K- Harrison Butker
LS- Trevor Morgan
P- Jimmy Hutchinson
This would be a class of 23. I'm sure we'll have some EEs to count towards the '12 class. I can't see us bringing in more than 20 in the spring/summer though with the small graduating class that we have coming in.
Friday, February 3, 2012
Post-NSD Grades for Auburn's '12 class
The OL was probably our biggest need coming in, and we've filled that and then some with as of now about the 5th ranked OL class, or so. Adding Jordan Diamond, hopefully, later tonight would certainly put us right there behind Stanford as the #2 OL class, or close to it.
Next was adding some playmakers at WR, and keeping JaQuay Williams and Ricardo Louis is more than enough for me. I have felt that Louis is vastly underrated as a playmaker, he's just raw. Really like how we met this need. Adding Diggs would be some REALLY good icing on the cake, but not counting on it.
Next was TE. After Lutz is gone we only have Brandon Fulse at TE, so getting some immediate help there was crucial just in case one of those guys goes down. Ricky Parks is a physical specimen and should be able to contribute right away. Darrion Hutcherson is a 6'7, 250 lb athlete that could stay at TE or move to the DL/OL, but either way he needs to develop a little more of a meanstreak. However the biggest pickup we got for our TEs was getting fullback Jay Prosch as a Transfer from Illinois. This will allow the TE to play TE exclusively. Lutz has been underutilized because he was probably our best blocker last year but is such a great receiving TE too. Prosch will help big time.
Lastly, our last need would be considered getting a few quality LBs. I feel that getting a MLB was more important than OLB, and Cassanova McKinzy is, physically, ready to help out right away if need be. He is another kid that needs to learn to play with more effort consistently and get a little meaner on the field but he certainly has the size and talent to help. Mitchell is a project, plain and simple, but has tons of athleticism at 6'2, 200 lbs and runs in the 4.4s. I think he could move to safety if VanGorder chooses to go back to having bigger LBs.
Grades:
QB- B (Pike has huge boom or bust potential, but with Loeffler's QB coaching ability I think Pike should be thrilled)
RB- B+
TE- A+ (I think Parks and the TE from USC are the 2 best in the class)
WR- A
OL- A+
DL- C (wasn't a need, but missing on Goldman, Ward, Jenkins and Williams hurt....still like Nero and President's upside though)
LB- B
CB- B+
S- n/a
Overall I'd say Auburn had a B+ class. The meat of the class is on par with what we've had the past two classes, we just didn't have the two or three 5* guys that we've gotten recently to really anchor the top.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Statistical Analysis of Auburn's '12 Class by Max Mitchell
The rating of individual players is subjective, so they obviously differ from site to site. Then, those player ratings are stuffed into a point calculation system that is unique to each site. Starting with different player ratings and then feeding those numbers into different calculation systems obviously produces different results on the different sites...sometimes drastically different.
Personally, I trust the guys at 247 to give the best recruit analysis. I'm not sure how their point system works, but since I trust the evaluations, I trust the outcome of the team rankings...even if it doesn't work out the best for Auburn this year.
However, there is something to how each site does it, so I thought I'd average them all out.
Since everyone uses different ranking/point systems, I took the number 1 team from each site and gave them a 1.00 point total. The #2 team was then a percentage of the #1 team. In other words, if the #1 team had 1000 points and the #5 team had 876 points, then the #1 team gets 1.00 and the #5 team gets .876. At 247, Alabama was #1 with a point total of 781. FSU was #2 with a point total of 773. 773 points is .989% of 781. So Alabama gets a 1.00 and FSU gets a .989.
I did that for all four sites, giving the top 25 teams on each site a % of the point total of the #1 team. The exception was ESPN, who doesn't show points. So I just subtracted .025 from each team counting down from #1. In other words, #1 was 1.00, #2 was .975, #3 was .950, #4 was .925, #5 was .900, and so on.
And here is the way they stacked up....
1. .985 - Alabama
2. .969 - Texas
3. .913 - Ohio State
4. .905 - Florida
5. .872 - Michigan
6. .854 - Florida State
7. .824 - Stanford
8. .815 - Miami
9. .796 - Georgia
10 .789 - Oklahoma
11 .772 - USC
12 .739 - Clemson
12 .739 - LSU
14 .715 - Auburn
15 .710 - UCLA
16 .703 - South Carolina
16 .703 - Texas A&M
18 .696 - Oregon
19 .636 - Tennessee
20 .615 - Washington
NOTES:
It was interesting to see certain teams all over the place in the rankings on each site. Here are some that had a wide range:
LSU -
#7 high on Scout
#17 low on Rivals
Georgia -
#5 high on ESPN
#13 low on Scout
Clemson -
#9 high on ESPN
#22 low on 247 Sports
South Carolina -
#12 high in Scout
#19 low on Rivals
USC -
#7 high in Rivals
#20 low on Scout
FSU -
#2 high on 247 Sports and ESPN
#10 low on Scout
Notre Dame -
#10 high on ESPN
#22 low on Rivals
Auburn's high and low was #12 on Rivals and #17 on 247 Sports and ESPN. And before anyone says "of course ESPN has us low", remember that they had us #3 and #4 the last two years...the highest two year average of any of the sites.
The truth is, recruiting rankings matter. They are an indication of the overall talent and depth you acquire each year. But the subjective nature of evaluating the players that make up the classes that make up the rankings means that the rankings should, as the very least, be viewed in groups. Is #7 really that much better than #12 on any given site? Especially since those two teams might be ranked #10 and #14 on another site?
In my opinion, I would group the top 20 teams by percentages related to the top team. Maybe the .900 teams, the .800 teams, the .700 teams, etc, as teams ranked that closely over the range of four different sites are essentially a subjective toss-up.
So for this year:
Group 1 consists of Alabama, Texas, Ohio State, and .Florida Group 2 consists of Michigan, Florida St, Stanford, and Miami.
Group 3 consists of Georgia, Oklahoma, USC, Clemson, LSU, Auburn, UCLA, South Carolina, and Texas A&M.
Group 4 consists of Oregon, Tennessee, and Washington.
In this case, I would only say there are eight classes that are CLEARLY ahead of Auburn's class. And that Auburn's class is on par, or in the same general ball park, as that of Georgia, Clemson, A&M, LSU, etc. After all, two sites had Auburn at #12 and #13, while two sites also had Georgia at #11 and #13. So even though Georgia averages out on the four sites at #9 and AU averages at #14, who's to say which ranking for each team are actually right. If you look at the two examples I just gave for each team, you'd think they were dead even.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
BREAKING: Ricardo Louis decommits from FSU
He might be announcing his commitment on ESPN on Wednesday, NSD.
Friday, January 20, 2012
Countdown to Signing Day (1/20)
Never, since I've followed recruiting for 5-6 years, have I seen Auburn have this many big fish left on the board AND the space available to take them all! That is a fun, yet dangerous, game to play. We'll get to the list of guys at the end.
The Hurdles
Now, we've had our share of tough breaks on the recruiting trail this year that has hindered Auburn at least a little bit from taking advantage of the proverbial "National Championship bump". It's my personal theory that the enhanced social media cycle actually has advanced so far that the National Championships actually now pay off THAT year (2011 class) as opposed to the next year like it used to. Most kids have completely forgotten that Auburn had won the title because a year ago might as well be 10 years ago to an 18 year old. Anyways, that's my theory on the bump.
In addition to my theory, we also lost both our offensive and defensive coordinators. In my opinion we've done a fantastic job of keeping everyone on board that was actually planning to come to Auburn (Yeldon was always going to Bama), other than the recent decommitment of Ricardo Louis (which I'll address as well). Those relationships that the coordinators formed with the recruits and the uncertainty it causes makes it tough on the long-time commits to Auburn, but we've kept most of them and had a VERY good start to recruiting this year, which was different than usual.
We didn't have an OC for 40 days, but it's better to make the right hire than make the wrong and easy hire to save a recruit or two. Ricardo Louis was just a casualty of Auburn and Chizik being unwilling to settle on a decent hire and swing for the fences, in my opinion. As a result of making a successful hire, it appears that Auburn has a better than average chance of getting Louis BACK on board with the 2012 Auburn signing class. Multiple places have confirmed there's at least a chance.
Finally the NCAA stuff gave other staffs more ammo to negatively recruit against Auburn while it was out there. Thank God that the NCAA decided to publicly exonerate Auburn of any wrongdoing so we could get out from under that shadow!
The Potential positive
Now, Auburn did a phenomenal job with the hiring of Coach Brian VanGorder, former DC of the Atlanta Falcons and former Broyles Award winner as the DC at UGA. He is as brilliant of a defensive mind as you'll find, and yes that includes Saban, and will make the transition to a more balanced pro-spread offense that much easier. This was huge because many of the guys left on our board are defensive guys, and it's pretty obvious we could use a great talent infusion into our defensive roster.
The list of guys that our final 9 could potentially come from is:
5*WR- Stefon Diggs
5*WR- Cordarelle Patterson
4*WR- Ricardo Louis
4/5*OT- Avery Young
4/5*OT- Jordan Diamond
4* OT- Menelik Watson (JUCO)
5*DT- Eddie Goldman
4*DL- Leonard Williams
4*LB- Kwon Alexander
4/5*DB- Ronald Darby
4*DB- Deon Bush
3*DB- Jordan Moore
4/5*ATH- Arik Armstead
In case you didn't know, that's a TON of talent left on the board, but the issue is that we're not the only team(s) that feel good about these guys. Usually AU fans know more than likely who we're gonna get and who is a legitimate longshot. This year is different. We could absolutely close with NINE off of that list and it would propel us right up to the top 5 of every site out there and provide us with a HUGE influx of talent......BUT, we could also lose on all but 1-2 of those guys and be very, very disappointed with how we close. Then we have to be hopeful on our plan B guys......
But ya know what, lost in the potential meltdown of closing worse than we're accustomed to would be a very solid class based on all of the things I listed above. Even if we only get 2 off of that list we'll have 10-12 four star or better prospects in this class and will put us somewhere in the top 15. That's hardly reason to panic, and with better coaching on defense and maybe even offense, the future is bright no matter how we finish!
WDE!