Logically, the best programs have an excess of top 300 talent on their rosters, so the likelihood of a talented player getting buried in the depth chart, and then transferring to earn more playing time elsewhere, is also higher for these teams.
This comment makes no sense. There isn’t a likelihood that more guys get buried at Alabama than at Miami. They both have the same number of roster spots and playing opportunities. The only probability is that the average talent of a kid at Alabama who is buried will be a lot higher than the average talent at Miami of a buried kid. But the actual way it works is often completely opposite to your assumption. At a good program, there’s depth amd maturity and red-shirting and experienced kids stick around, so kids don’t quit and go early, they generally work hard and try to be ready when their number is called. McGahee didn’t transfer when he was behind Gore in ‘01. The thing that causes transfers is loss of fiath in the opportunity (or the coach tells you to gtfo). Winning cures a lot of that. What kid wants to quit on a potential title team?
How can the top programs be the preferred destination for BOTH top recruits, & top transfers, when there are 25 ICs, 85 scholarships, etc? The entire phenomenon behind transfers is being fueled because top programs are hoarding talent.
It’s easily possible that top programs have the most talent, and still have spots that are attractive to a top transfer, because there are lots of spots on a FB team at lots of positions. Just look at Fields at OSU or the OC at Alabama.
The entire phenomenon behind transfers is being fueled because top programs are hoarding talent.
This just isn’t true at all. It‘s mathematically wrong. Top programs hoarded talent more in the past, because rosters were bigger and IC rules were looser. What’s going on here is you’re inventing an idea about transfers that isn’t right. People here are skewed by Miami’s experience the past 2 years. The real ‘liquidity’ added to the transfer market was relaxation of the rule that you had to sit out a year. That de-risks it for kids.
We're trying to discuss the best course of action for MIA to take when trying to fill out it's roster in any given cycle. There is no hard rule to follow, because the variables surrounding each option change on a yr by yr, case by case, basis. No one is arguing whether Alabama CAN acquire the best talent from a recruiting cycle or transfer portal. Obviously they can. The question is how MIA should respond?
I agree it’s situation specific. I was commenting on the mistaken belief that the transfer dynamic is some sort of fundamental change in the logic of cfb. It’s not.
I meant overall share of top 300 recruits on their roster would go down. I'm aware that the overall % of top 300 recruits on their roster would increase. The benefit to MIA would be it's overall % of 300 recruits would also go up.
This is a flawed assessment. Let’s say the IC number was lowered from 25 to 22. Alabama would take 3 fewer top kids a year. Other schools would, too. There would be a pachinko effect all the way down. A bit higher
average talent at all programs in an absolute sense (average per roster spot), but less
overall talent on each roster because fewer kids
and a greater (relative) disparity between top programs and everyone else, because the talent reduction isn’t from across the bell curve. If anything, fewer roster spots at Alabama makes Alabama even
more attractive to top kids because as you point out, they’ll be less at risk of being buried than they otherwise would have been. And what matters competitively isn’t that you got a higher % of some arbitrarily defined pool of kids - it’s whether you’re more or less competitive with the top programs. Also, bad evaluations would be even more harmful in a smaller roster universe, and Alabama will take a lot less risk from that than others, because they pick from a higher quality pool and have more and better evaluation resources than other programs.