Across The Field
Oaky Afterbirth
Over the past 5 years:Well USC has won a Rose bowl and Pac 12 Championship Game in the last 4 years and Utah has not. Texas has won a Sugar Bowl and at least played for a big 12 Championship, Oklahoma State has not. And there hasn't been much difference the last 4 years in terms of performance on the field and recruiting between Miss St and Tennessee. Wisconsin is the one team I'll agree with, but they aren't ever going to sniff winning a title in CFB because they don't recruit well enough. They can beat a team at home with more talent, but they aren't beating a team on the road/neutral that has more talent. We've seen that play out the last couple seasons.
USC: 42-24
Utah: 46-21
USC is 3-2 against them, but the recruiting disparity is unreal. Utah's highest class over those 5 years was 33rd while USC's lowest rated class was 20th, with the other four classes being top 10, and three of those top 5. Now that is an actual talent disparity.
Oklahoma State: 45-20
Texas: 35-29
Oklahoma State is also 4-1 against Texas over the last five years. Obviously Texas had much higher classes all five years, but what difference did it make?
Mississippi State has a slightly better record, but look at recruiting - average class for Tennessee: 13th, Miss St: 24th. The biggest thing is, Mississippi State has played in the SECW, which has been the best division in college football over that time period, while Tennessee has floundered in a weak SECE.
Can't say I agree on Wisconsin. They've had all of the success they've had over the past 5 years with mediocre QB play. That says a lot for a program that is pumped up because, with the new 247 rankings, they have a 5* player in back-to-back years for the first time ever. Think about it: michigan has as many 5* commitments in their last 3 classes as Wisconsin has ever had in their entire history, and that doesn't include Shea Patterson, who was a top 5 overall prospect that transferred in.
There's a cap on teams that don't elite at high levels, yes. However, teams that have high-end coaches tend not to flounder very often, even if they don't recruit at high levels, while we've seen plenty of recent examples of name-brand schools imploding even though the recruiting rankings suggest otherwise.