by Rum_Ham » Tue Aug 30, 2016 10:31 pm
I usually follow recruiting for Big East teams pretty closely in the offseason and have to say 2017 is shaping up to be better than recent years. The quality of this class is fueled mostly by the newcomers. Butler has three solid pledges, including top 100 forward Kyle Young, and is in position to pick up two other top 100 players in Wabissa Bede and Christian David. If Butler pulls in 3 top 100 players it would by far their best class to date, coming off an already impressive class last year.
Xavier also has 3 pledges, one top 60-ish player in Naji Marshall and two borderline top 100 guys in Jared Ridder and Elias Harden. They are heavily involved in fringe 5 star Paul Scruggs and have a legit shot at a top 15 player in Kris Wilkes. Pulling in just one of those players would easily be a top 20 class and adding both would be top 10 and probably the best class ever at Xavier on paper
Creighton already has two top 100 pledges that are great fits in their system with Mitchell Ballock and Ty-shon Alexander. Their new recruiting assistant Preston Murphy has really ramp up their recruiting game, he was the lead on Alexander and former top 50 transfer Kaleb Joseph, and is currently trying to get a commitment from top 15 player Brian Bowen (Michigan St still heavy favorite). It's safe to say none of these schools would be in the position they are in without Big East membership.
The other schools aren't really skipping a beat either. I love the class the Chris Mullin put together at St Johns, Marvin Clark and Justin Simon are two transfers that will be significant pieces going forward and Zach Brown is a legit 7 footer that is a top 25 talent as long as he stays out of trouble (watch out for the class they could put together in 2018 it could be huge). Marquette only has one three star player signed in Ike Eke and he fills a major need but we have official visits from 4 4-star players in Sep and would be surprised if we didn't land two of them (we also are very focused on two 5 star in state kids with Joey Hauser, brother Sam is on the team already, and Tyler Herro). Providence is in the final two for a top 50 guard and final four for their top target in big man Nate Watson, they only have one scholarship available after already getting a commitment from a 7 foot 4 star big man. Seton Hall has a great recruit committed with top 60 player Myles Cale and is in good shape with top 100 New York guard Isiah Washington. Nova is clearly still recruiting at a high level after picking up a top 50 wing last week and Depaul has two huge transfers already signed in Austin Grandstaff and Max Strus (beat Xavier and Butler, very good D II transfer) and already got a commitment from their top target Justin Roberts. Only team that seems down recruiting wise is Georgetown but they just lost two assistants and its still early, they have always put together solid classes. Obviously teams need to land some of these guys still but you cannot deny that the league has set themselves up for a huge influx of talent next year.
Also the ranking assigned to recruiting classes by year are not always a great indicator of how a school is recruiting. First off recruiting is cyclical, a huge class one year will usually mean a smaller class next year and thus a far lower ranking. Plus they are completely subjective and based on a small team of recruiting analysts' opinions, who have no way of seeing every player and usually bump players up if they have great showings in marquee events. I remember JaJuan Johnson was bumped up to nearly a five star a couple years ago based solely on how well he played in one tournament as just an example of how subjective it can be. Lastly they omit incoming transfers which, as stever mentioned, is an area the Big East has been dominant in. Guys like Marcus Foster, Eric Paschell, Rodney Pryor, and Rashid Gaston will all have impacts and stats similar to a mid tier 5 star high school player that benefit from more experience, yet they are not reflected at all in rankings. The Big East have several other transfers (Katin Reinhardt, Andrew Rowsey, Kethan Savage, Avery Woodson, Jevon Thomas) that will be key players next year.
If you made it through this wall of text I'll summarize by saying don't just look at yearly rankings to determine how a league is recruiting but look at all incoming talent (transfers included). Make note of the caliber of players that schools are in the mix for and the final lists that each school makes. Xavier chasing five stars this year shows they are clearly more of a destination for top players then they were in the A-10. In my opinion, the three newcomers have made great strides in recruiting while the rest of the league has continued to recruit at a similar level than they were before realignment, meaning the conference as a whole is beginning to see an overall recruiting bump as the league solidifies its identity.
Marquette 2016