youwouldno wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 10:02 pm
The Jackal wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 8:39 pm
FCS coaches, like virtually all non-P5 programs, are looking for market inefficiencies. They are trying to find guys that are overlooked for whatever reason.
We could discuss dozens of excellent FCS players that were overlooked by major universities for whatever reason. Some guys were too short, too slow, played the wrong position, an untimely injury, or lived in a difficult to reach part of the country.
I also do not believe we can cursorily dismiss our recruiting efforts. I went into detail about this on some other thread, but our current staff inherited a bad QB situation from their predecessors and have had some bad luck with transfers (Grainger will add to that problem should he opt to leave).
According to you, anything negative that occurs is "bad luck." If I write a crap memo at work, I can't turn around and blame it on "bad luck." CCH and his staff are certainly very capable football coaches, but the reality is that they haven't handled the QB position well. Anything beyond that is just excuses - the same kind of excuses I remember hearing about Fowler (of course those had to be more numerous and even less plausible).
How so? I went into this in detail on some other post, but you have to look at context.
Fowler recruited two QBs in the 2014 class (Blazejowski and Roberts). Furman took no QB in 2015, having just taken two in 2016 (and redshirting Roberts). In 2016, Fowler's staff brought in Avery Armstrong, who was almost immediately moved to WR.
So, now Furman has gone two years (2015 and 2016) with no scholarship QB. Hendrix had nothing to do with that (besides keeping Armstrong at WR).
Hendrix is hired in December 2016. He immediately tries to add a QB in the 2017 class. The original target, Jalen Greene, flips his commitment to Elon late in the game. Furman fills that spot with JeMar Lincoln.
Seeing the gap left by missing out on two seasons without a QB, Furman recruits two QBs - Sisson and Grainger - in 2018.
Going into the 2018 season, Hendrix cites four QBs (Roberts, Lincoln, Grainger, and Sisson) as potential starters at the position. To that point, Roberts had never started and none of the other three had even played in a college game. Again, that is a problem Hendrix inherited, not created.
Lincoln, of course, leaves the program before the season. So, now back to three scholarship QBs - a redshirt senior that had never started and two true freshmen.
Having just taken two QBs in 2018, Furman did not take a QB in the 2019 class. As best I could tell from following reported offers, Furman was not even in the market for a QB in that class given that most of the snaps were going to go to two freshmen.
So, Furman heads into 2020 with two redshirt sophomore QBs. They have a commitment from Wilson for the 2021 class.
Now we find out Grainger is transferring. In his public comments, Grainger indicated that his decision to transfer wasn't anything Furman did. Maybe he stays, maybe he goes. Maybe he lost out to Sisson. I don't know, but it doesn't seem like the situation was "mishandled" by Furman. At least not according to Grainger.
So, what could have been done different?
I mean, potentially Furman could have brought in a transfer QB to fill in the gap after Roberts graduated. Even then, that still would have been trying to accelerate Furman's competition window ahead of schedule. The coaching staff, presumptively, considered that it would be better long term for Sisson/Grainger to cut their teeth as freshmen and try to really push for a national title in 2021.
Even then, transfers aren't a panacea (usually, there's a reason they are trying to transfer). Even if Furman wanted to take an older transfer (and there's no indication they did), there's no guarantee anyone would be any better than Grainger or Sisson for the 2019/2020 seasons.
Other than that, what would you have them do? Magically convince two kids not to leave? Wish Fowler had recruited a kid in 2016 that could stick at QB?