A lot of what they do will be hard to maintain without saban because he manages it all but i suspect their process and infrastructure are solid enough to continue at a relatively high level for some time. Position coach input is probably minimized down there in recruiting because their coaches change over a lot.
Here’s how I suspect their recruiting evals work.
They have a recruiting (and roster management) function, an analytics function (with experienced coaches contributing as analysts), a player development function (including S&C), position coaches input, and overall goals and priorities from the HC. They are looking at kids together with different areas to watch out for. Development might have things it wants to look out for to avoid in recruits, and other things it wants to focus on finding. Position coaches have their perspective. Analytics and recruiting help do the digging to learn about kids and identify strengths, weaknesses and tendencies. Roster management also looks at what specific roster needs being filled are to make sure the assessments are tied to team needs not just kids in the abstract. The head coach manages this, tasks out process steps and inputs, and arbitrates the decisions.
This should all be obvious but I doubt other schools do it nearly as effectively as Alabama. One of their challenges that makes this type of approach important is they have such a big funnel because they’re a national recruiter. Which kids should they focus on? Recruiting has to build a funnel and screen it, get guidance and input, come back with initial assessments, prioritize where time and analysis is spent, etc.
What this all gets them is better needs assessment so better fit, better kid assessment so fewer mistakes, and better time management / prioritization, so higher success rate. If they’re 10% better than most in fewer mistakes, that’s 2-3 more kids a year who are contributors - 10 kids on a roster. Big difference. If they’re a bit better in assessing kid fit, that’s also 2-3 kids a year who are right vs. belonged elsewhere. Better prioritization means better recruiting success, maybe 2-3 kids per year who other programs wouldn’t reel in (all else aside). There’s some overlap but the point would work for any school - and especially Miami - to upgrade it’s roster - a few kids a year makes a big difference.