James Madison had a string of 6-8 win seasons from 2010-2013 and finished in the middle of the CAA. They started to really get rolling in 2014, jumping to 9 wins. They haven't won fewer than 9 since and are a perennial top 5 team.AstroDin wrote: ↑Thu Dec 17, 2020 8:51 amI'll go out on a limb and say when Hero Sports rolls out it's 2021 FCS team recruiting rankings - the Furman class is top five, maybe top three. This will be the second class in a row that is comparable to a JMU and NDSU class.The Jackal wrote: ↑Thu Dec 17, 2020 7:44 amAlso, kudos to the coaching staff for putting together what looks to be an outstanding class under difficult circumstances.
Furman signed 15 kids, many of whom were highly coveted players. Just for comparison:
Samford signed 7 (3 transfers)
UTC signed 8 (4 transfers)
Mercer signed 6
Wofford signed 13
ETSU appears to have signed 2, one of whom appears to be a JuCo transfer that appeared on Last ChanceU last season.
the Citadel signed six
What does that tell us? I have no idea. I was just surprised to see the wide disparity in the size of the signing classes.
JMU and NDSU didn't get to where they are overnight. They both have a brand that makes them a serious contender when they offer a player. What CCH and staff have done with the Furman brand in such a short period of time is frankly amazing.
It's so short-sided to be complaining about a player only getting two offers, it wasn't that long ago that our signing day list had many players with one or two offers. One comes to mind — Devin Wynn. Played single-A ball in Georgia and Furman offered late. Yes, Devin ran all over A ball competition but Furman had no guarantee he would be able to do the same against college competition.
By the way, the Dukes signed 12
https://jmusports.com/news/2020/12/16/d ... g-day.aspx
NDSU, signed a big class 24
https://gobison.com/news/2020/12/16/nor ... g-day.aspx