College Football, Florida Gators, Recruiting

Taking stock of where Florida stands with the 2020 recruiting class

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2019 commit, defensive back Kaiir Elam at the Under Armour All American game

Well, we’re back on the recruiting roller coaster again after 4-star DT Warren Brinson committed to Georgia over Florida on Saturday.

For some on Twitter, this is the final straw. Proof that Mullen will never be able to compete with Kirby Smart for the best players in the state.

For others, this is an overreaction to something relatively insignificant. After all, Mullen was just able to take Jim McElwain’s players plus his transition recruiting class (average national recruiting ranking of 14.5), go 10-3, and finish 7th in the AP Poll to finish the 2018 season.

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I don’t expect this topic to become any less polarizing, but perhaps we can look at some markers to understand whether the sky is falling, everything is fine or if the truth lies somewhere in between.

Where Florida Stands Currently

Last season at this time, Florida was ranked 27th nationally. This year, the Gators are in significant better shape with a national ranking of 7th, 4th in the SEC. This is obviously a welcome change.

But the problem with using the point totals in June to rate classes is that different programs have different numbers of commitments. For example, Alabama has 17 commits while Georgia has 11, so the quantity of players puts Alabama at 2nd with Georgia at 5th, even though Georgia has a higher average player rating.

This is where the picture of where Florida stands gets a little murky. If you sort the data based on the 247Sports composite individual player point rating, the Gators fall to 14th nationally (rating of 90.90). This also drops Florida to 6th in the SEC as Texas A&M (92.08) and South Carolina (92.78) jump in front.

Again, this is an imperfect measure because the Aggies only have 6 commits and the Gamecocks only have 8. If you average Florida’s top-6 and top-8 commits, that gives an average individual point rating of 93.59 and 92.53 so the top-end talent in the class is superior to A&M and South Carolina.

Last season at this time, Florida’s commits had an average individual point rating of 88.90. That translated to an average national player ranking of 498. Compare that to Florida’s average national player ranking of 311 up to this point and it is clear that the recruiting picture this year is much more encouraging than last.

Where Florida Stands Versus Rivals

Recruiting isn’t conducted in a vacuum. I’ve written previously about how conference rankings are important because those are the teams you have to play. Florida has to play Florida State, Georgia, LSU and Alabama (hopefully) every year, so those are the teams to which we should compare the Gators.

That picture isn’t all good or bad either. The following chart shows those teams’ recruiting at this time last year and where they stand right now.

Florida recruiting in June versus its rivals for the 2019 and 2020 cycles. (Will Miles/Read and Reaction)

The good news is that Florida is ahead of Florida State. While it is a narrow margin, this is important because last season at this time, Willie Taggart had an 83 percent top-300 ratio and two top-100 commits. That dropped to 38 percent by the end of the season, so clearly the on-the-field product had an effect.

Last season at this time, Florida had zero top-100 commits and a top-300 percentage of 30 percent. So again, we see that Florida’s recruiting up to this point in the 2020 cycle is better than in 2019.

But when compared to the other three rivals, Florida is again behind. Alabama, LSU and Georgia have classes ranked 2nd, 3rd and 5th nationally based on points and 2nd, 3rd and 7th nationally based on average individual player point rating.

Georgia has a lower top-300 percentage, but that’s because the Bulldog’s bottom two recruits have national rankings of 313 and 339. Alabama has actually seen a bit of a drop-off this year as Clemson and Georgia have begun making inroads, but the Tide is still in an elite category.

LSU has really picked up the pace with a top-300 percentage of 80 percent and 5 top-100 players compared to 40 percent and 2 top-100 players at this time last year. The Tigers finished at 48 percent top-300 in 2019 compared to 52 percent for Florida.

And LSU is an area where I think there should be some concern. With LSU as a permanent opponent from the West, Florida is going to play three recruiting behemoths every season if Orgeron can keep up this pace.

Predicting Florida’s Finish

Last season, this was my prediction in June based on Mullen’s top-300 rate and the way the recruiting board looked at the time.

But let’s say Mullen keeps up his 30 percent hit rate on elite recruits and so only gets his top five targets and is forced to fill out the class with players ranked from 350-370. That results in a point total of 271.6, which would put the Gators at ninth overall, which is the absolute ceiling at that top-300 ratio.

The Gators finished with the ninth rated class and a point total of 276.85.

I was actually a little bit more optimistic in that assessment than the numbers suggested based on who was available and suggesting interest towards the Gators.

I had set an (admittedly arbitrary) deadline of August 1 to look at top-300 commit percentage to predict where a class might finish based on a linear regression of previous classes. As of August 1, Florida had a 30 percent top-300 percentage, and I would have predicted a finish around 16th nationally.

But on August 2, Diwun Black committed to Florida, which (if you give me the one day), would have put Florida at 4 out of 11 commits in the top-300. The equation I came up with in that article would have predicted a finish of 14.2 nationally. It turns out if you remove Chris Steele from last year’s class, the Gators end up with a point total of 269.44, which would have put them at 13th.

So minus a near 5-star player who is currently off the radar committing (or flipping), where does that put the Gators?

Top-300 percentage needed by August and projected recruiting finish. (Will Miles/Read and Reaction)

With 6 of 12 recruits in the top-300, were it early August we would expect a finish of around 9th. That can improve to 4.5 if Mullen can get four more commits from top-300 players.

This is a completely different story from 2019. Last year, Mullen needed 6 more top-300 players by August to get to 7th based on this analysis. Basically, a top-10 class was a high-end result. Indeed, Mullen finished strong and was only able to climb to 9th.

This year there’s a much clearer path to a top-5 class, and 9th would, quite frankly, be a disappointment.

Takeaway

Two things can be true at the same time.

First, Florida’s 2020 class is in better shape than 2019, and by a significant margin. However, that 2020 class is also not on-par with three teams that Florida will have to go through on a regular basis to win the SEC.

In my view, the reaction on Twitter on Saturday in response to Brinson’s commitment to Georgia really isn’t all that warranted. Not only is Florida doing better on the trail this year, but the Gators also have two defensive tackles rated significantly higher than Brinson already coming into the program in 2019.

If Florida is going to recruit against Georgia consistently, they’re going to lose some battles. The reality is that the way Georgia is recruiting right now means Florida is likely going to lose more of those battles than it wins.

Additionally, the strange transfer of Steele along with the departure of Jalon Jones and the decommitments of a significant portion of the 2021 class have Gators fans understandably on edge. Had Brinson committed to the Gators, it likely wouldn’t have been seen as a huge deal. The fact that he chose Georgia was a kick to the groin to start June after repeated kicks in May.

If we’re honest with ourselves, progress is the only fair way to grade a head coach. Is the program headed in the right direction? That was what was so disappointing about the offenses under Jim McElwain and Will Muschamp before him, the lack of progress.

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Mullen clearly fixed that problem on the field in year one. He appears to be addressing the recruiting issues at a much slower pace. That pace is going to make winning consistently more difficult, particularly with the way the Gators rivals are bringing players in.

But take heart, Gators fans. Mullen may not have recruiting where you want it just yet, but he is showing progress. It’s up to you to decide individually whether that progress is good enough for how you want the program built.

I know that I believe that he’s going to have to get top-3 classes in the SEC to compete consistently. Unfortunately, just because of the conference he’s in, that means top-4 national classes.

It’s going to take a huge finish – and likely a 5-star commitment – to get there this cycle. But at this time last season there wasn’t any conceivable chance to get there.

That’s progress.

Used via Creative Commons license courtesy oscar99ta

14 Comments

  1. Tom

    For once I really have nothing to add to your article, I believe it pretty much gives a on the spot account and assessment of Gator recruiting thus far! Thanks,,,,,

  2. Alisa

    Great job Will. I live in Atlanta and am married to a Bulldog. From where I sit Florida is far from competing with Georgia from a roster perspective and that grows weekly. We have almost a decade of inept coaching to overcome. I actually mock my husband when Georgia only gets a 4 star commitment. The game in Jax will show how much better Georgia is than Florida. I have faith in Mullen that we will slowly build up to being competitive with them but right now it’s not even close.

  3. Mark

    Great job, Will. I am in 100% agreement with this article. Mullen is likely not doing good enough job recruiting to win a national championship right now – but he is showing progress every year.

    He has won big battles (Emory, Copeland, Elam) and he has had setbacks (Jalon and Steele), but he is slowly returning the Gator standard. I think Mullen is the right man for the job, and I’m happy to see your article end with a note of optimism.

    I always enjoy your articles, keep them coming. Thanks!

  4. Eric Green

    Hard to saying anything after that you broke that down perfectly!

  5. Ken Clarke

    Twitter is stupid.

  6. 8 transfers plus players kicked off the team and highly ranked recruits decommiting is not a good sign ! Yes he is doing better than last year but that’s not tough to do . I hope you are correct with your Rosie outlook but until we start getting top ranked skill players and offensive lineman the gators won’t be able to compete with Bama Georgia or lsu .

    • Comment by post author

      Will Miles

      I’ve said my piece about what’s necessary for championships. Just saying it over and over won’t change things. So the question becomes, are things getting better? They are, much slower than I’d like, but it is what it is.

  7. Mike

    Not a fan at all You talk about numbers and stars and not players and no context.

    This is a much deeper yr in the state of Florida than 19 but that basic line is no where to be found.

    Without getting a qb last year getting a stud in 20 is more important but that hasn’t happened…an, the most important position.

    Your article doesn’t care if a 5 star is a tight end or longsnapper or qb..just that he is 5 stars.

    Bullshit read. Fooling a lot of people and perhaps yourself.

    • Comment by post author

      Will Miles

      Tell me how you really feel, lol. Turns out a lot of what you are complaining about is in previous articles on the site, including recent ones. I don’t rehash the state of everything in every article.

  8. Carey Freeman

    To the ” . . . this is the final straw. Proof that Mullen will never be able to compete with Kirby Smart for the best players in the state.” Crowd: Who are you going to hire (after you fire Mullen) that will solve this? ”
    Chip Kelly? Scott Frost? Willie Taggart? or some other recruiting genie who will pull magic out of a bottle? Come on guys, give us names and a tangible plan to make it happen.

    . . . oops. Nevermind. As usual, that crowd isn’t capable of that kind of thinking. Just the usual pissing and moaning without a real plan in place. So awesome to have you guys as part of the Gator Nation (note sarcasm).

  9. Jimmy Burke

    Great article, Will. Curious about something. My opinion is the thing that will get us over the recruiting will be be beating Georgia. Not sure if we can do it this year, but we will be more competitive against them. When we do beat them, how much of a boost do you thing that will give our recruiting? FSU doesn’t worry me. Until Taggart puts the dumpster fire out (if he can) I don’t think they will keep up with us, or Miami for that matter. Miami scares me more than FSU in recruiting. Ultimately, winning fixes everything, And Coach Mullen has proven he can do that. Will be nice to land that first 5 star, though!

  10. gene Harris

    Good analysis. We are making progress, could wish for more.

  11. Jimmy Burke

    Great article as usual, Will. Curious, how important do you think it is to beat Georgia. I feel like until we beat them, we won’t start really pulling in the 5 stars. We have a shot this year and will definitely be more competitive, but I think next year will be the breakthrough year.

  12. Judd

    Great article Will. I agree with the sentiment that beating Georgia will help with recruiting, but Mac beat the dogs and it didn’t translate to great classes. Continued work on facilities and an upgrade in the recruiting office staff should give us a better chance with the elite players.

    One other point, and I know you have spoken/written on it before, is that Mullen is able to get more “production per star” than Kirby or Ed or Willie. That will ultimately translate to wins even though our roster may be slightly less talented. Anyway keep up the good work!