I have compared the current rosters for Ohio State and Michigan to see which is more talented, and by how much. I used the 247 Composite rating for each player. Of course, I could not factor player development into the equation, so lets just assume that it is equal for both teams (although I suspect that Ohio State does a better job of player development despite [spoiler alert!] having much better talent to begin with).
A quick glance at the charts should tell you all you need to know: There is lots of scarlet at the top and lots of blue at the bottom.
Here are the top 50 players broken down into groups of ten:
01-10: Ohio State 7, Michigan 3
11-20: Ohio State 9, Michigan 1
21-30: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
31-40: Ohio State 8, Michigan 2
41-50: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
So Ohio State has 35 of the top 50 players (70%), while Michigan has only 15 (30%). It is very difficult to beat a team when your opponent has more than twice as many top end players as you do, and that is exactly the position in which Michigan finds itself. In football terms, Ohio State can field an entire team of 22 players, plus 13 reserves, from top-50 recruits, while Michigan can barely field a single unit (offense or defense) from top-50 recruits.
Things get a little bit better for Michigan in the second 50 players:
51--60: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
61--70: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
71--80: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
81--90: Michigan 6, Ohio State 4
91-100: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
In the second group of 50 players, Ohio State still holds a slight edge, 26 to 24, or 52% to 48%. Among the top-100 players, Ohio State has 61 while Michigan has only 39. Note that Ohio State has almost as many top-50 players (35) as Michigan has top-100 players (39).
Michigan owns the rest of the chart, which is not a good thing. Of the bottom 58 players, 39 (67%) belong to Michigan, while only 19 (33%) are with Ohio State. (Note that place kickers, punters, long snappers are not rated).
Ohio State has 80 players on the chart, while Michigan has 78 players. Here's how the two teams compare by percentage of players in the top-50, second-50, and bottom-58:
Here's another way to look at this: Each team has roughly the same number of players on its current roster (80 for Ohio State, 78 for Michigan). The midpoint player for Ohio State is #40, for Michigan #39. Ohio State's #40 player is Jordan Fuller (0.9403 rating), who places at #59 overall (37th percentile). Michigan's #39 player is Erick All (0.8937 rating), who places at #98 overall (62nd percentile).
Finally, the average rating for Ohio State's players is .9308, and the average rating for Michigan's players is .9020. To people who don't know recruiting, three points might not seem like a huge talent gap. However, take your favorite football simulator game; give every player on one team a score of 93; give every player on the other team a score of 90; play fifteen games, and see which team wins fourteen of them.
A quick glance at the charts should tell you all you need to know: There is lots of scarlet at the top and lots of blue at the bottom.
No. | Player.............................. | Position | 247 Composite |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Justin Fields | QB | 1.0000 |
2 | Shea Patterson | QB | 0.9982 |
3 | Nicholas Petit-Frere | OL | 0.9963 |
4 | Chase Young | DL | 0.9957 |
5 | Jeffrey Okudah | DB | 0.9955 |
6 | Baron Browning | LB | 0.9940 |
7 | Zach Harrison | DL | 0.9933 |
8 | Daxton Hill | DB | 0.9927 |
9 | Donovan Peoples-Jones | WR | 0.9925 |
10 | Shaun Wade | DB | 0.9904 |
11 | Garrett Wilson | WR | 0.9903 |
12 | Taron Vincent | DL | 0.9884 |
13 | Wyatt Davis | OL | 0.9876 |
13 | Tyreke Johnson | DB | 0.9876 |
15 | Harry Miller | OL | 0.9868 |
16 | Chris Hinton | DL | 0.9867 |
17 | Justin Hilliard | LB | 0.9851 |
18 | Jaelen Gill | RB | 0.9831 |
19 | Tyreke Smith | DL | 0.9816 |
20 | Jonathon Cooper | DL | 0.9811 |
21 | Jeremy Ruckert | TE | 0.9810 |
22 | Ben Bredeson | OL | 0.9799 |
23 | J.K. Dobbins | RB | 0.9791 |
24 | Cesar Ruiz | OL | 0.9786 |
25 | Teradja Mitchell | LB | 0.9771 |
26 | Demario McCall | RB | 0.9767 |
27 | Zach Charbonnet | RB | 0.9760 |
28 | Josh Myers | OL | 0.9757 |
29 | Luiji Vilain | DL | 0.9734 |
30 | Tommy Togiai | DL | 0.9721 |
31 | Isaiah Pryor | DB | 0.9712 |
32 | Haskell Garrett | DL | 0.9678 |
33 | Matthew Jones | OL | 0.9652 |
34 | Austin Mack | WR | 0.9649 |
35 | Josh Proctor | DB | 0.9640 |
36 | Kamryn Babb | WR | 0.9629 |
37 | Jameson Williams | WR | 0.9621 |
38 | Ambry Thomas | DB | 0.9583 |
39 | Michael Onwenu | OL | 0.9571 |
40 | Jashon Cornell | DL | 0.9563 |
41 | Tyler Friday | DL | 0.9560 |
42 | Binjimen Victor | WR | 0.9546 |
43 | Mazi Smith | DL | 0.9536 |
44 | Trente Jones | OL | 0.9512 |
45 | Jordan Anthony | LB | 0.9510 |
46 | Cade Stover | LB | 0.9507 |
47 | Jonah Jackson | OL | 0.9500 |
48 | Aidan Hutchinson | DL | 0.9498 |
49 | Ronnie Hickman | DB | 0.9485 |
50 | Cameron McGrone | LB | 0.9481 |
No. | Player.............................. | Position | 247 Composite |
---|---|---|---|
51 | Chuck Filiaga | OL | 0.9475 |
52 | Max Wray | OL | 0.9473 |
53 | Tarik Black | WR | 0.9454 |
54 | Enokk Vimahi | OL | 0.9445 |
55 | Jake Hausmann | TE | 0.9439 |
56 | Dylan McCaffrey | QB | 0.9435 |
57 | Brendon White | DB | 0.9421 |
58 | Lavert Hill | DB | 0.9409 |
59 | Jordan Fuller | DB | 0.9403 |
60 | Nico Collins | WR | 0.9378 |
61 | K.J. Hill | WR | 0.9330 |
62 | Dallas Gant | LB | 0.9322 |
63 | Mustapha Muhammad | TE | 0.9318 |
64 | Nolan Rumler | OL | 0.9295 |
65 | Cornelius Johnson | WR | 0.9294 |
66 | Trevor Keegan | OL | 0.9288 |
67 | Antwuan Jackson | DL | 0.9260 |
68 | Jaylen Harris | WR | 0.9254 |
69 | Marcus Williamson | DB | 0.9250 |
70 | Amir Riep | DB | 0.9243 |
71 | Luke Farrell | TE | 0.9233 |
72 | Joe Milton | QB | 0.9202 |
73 | Jalen Perry | DB | 0.9186 |
74 | Josh Ross | LB | 0.9184 |
75 | K'Vaughan Pope | LB | 0.9170 |
76 | Javontae Jean-Baptiste | DL | 0.9168 |
77 | Sevyn Banks | DB | 0.9166 |
78 | Anthony Solomon | LB | 0.9137 |
79 | Master Teague III | RB | 0.9132 |
80 | Steele Chambers | ATH | 0.9126 |
81 | Jerron Cage | DL | 0.9105 |
82 | Jaylen Kelly-Powell | DB | 0.9071 |
83 | Jalen Mayfield | OL | 0.9062 |
84 | Karsen Barnhart | OL | 0.9057 |
85 | Cade McNamara | QB | 0.9052 |
86 | Ryan Jacoby | OL | 0.9031 |
87 | Giles Jackson | WR | 0.9004 |
88 | Pete Werner | LB | 0.8994 |
89 | David Ojabo | DL | 0.8986 |
90 | Thayer Munford | OL | 0.8985 |
91 | Quinten Johnson | DB | 0.8982 |
92 | Cameron Brown | ATH | 0.8971 |
92 | Donovan Jeter | DL | 0.8971 |
94 | Tommy Eichenberg | LB | 0.8966 |
95 | Noah Potter | DL | 0.8958 |
95 | Ryan Hayes | OL | 0.8958 |
97 | Carlo Kemp | DL | 0.8954 |
98 | Erick All | TE | 0.8937 |
99 | Tuf Borland | LB | 0.8933 |
100 | Marcus Crowley | RB | 0.8917 |
No. | Player.............................. | Position | 247 Composite |
---|---|---|---|
101 | Nick Eubanks | TE | 0.8893 |
102 | Gemon Green | DB | 0.8891 |
102 | Mike Morris | DL | 0.8891 |
104 | D.J. Turner | DB | 0.8888 |
105 | Chris Olave | WR | 0.8875 |
106 | Andrew Steuber | OL | 0.8860 |
107 | J'Marick Woods | DB | 0.8838 |
108 | Khaleke Hudson | LB | 0.8819 |
109 | Charles Thomas | LB | 0.8810 |
110 | Mike Danna | DL | 0.8800 |
111 | Gavin Cupp | OL | 0.8791 |
112 | Christian Turner | RB | 0.8784 |
113 | Brad Hawkins | DB | 0.8783 |
114 | Zach Carpenter | OL | 0.8776 |
115 | Joel Honigford | OL | 0.8761 |
116 | Jack Stewart | OL | 0.8756 |
116 | Bryson Shaw | DB | 0.8756 |
118 | Cormontae Hamilton | TE | 0.8754 |
119 | Mike Sainristil | WR | 0.8743 |
120 | Taylor Upshaw | DL | 0.8742 |
121 | Craig Young | ATH | 0.8735 |
122 | Sammy Faustin | DB | 0.8729 |
123 | Phillip Paea | DL | 0.8721 |
124 | Robert Landers | DL | 0.8719 |
125 | Alex Williams | DL | 0.8713 |
126 | Ben Van Sumeren | OL | 0.8709 |
127 | Marcus Hooker | DB | 0.8701 |
128 | Kwity Paye | DL | 0.8696 |
129 | Julius Welschof | DL | 0.8694 |
130 | Vincent Gray | DB | 0.8667 |
131 | Branden Bowen | OL | 0.8666 |
132 | Jaden McKenzie | DL | 0.8661 |
133 | Josh Alabi | OL | 0.8655 |
133 | Gabe Newburg | DL | 0.8655 |
135 | Michael Barrett | LB | 0.8635 |
136 | Luke Schoonmaker | TE | 0.8614 |
137 | George Johnson III | ATH | 0.8601 |
138 | Damon Arnette | DB | 0.8596 |
139 | Rashod Berry | TE | 0.8568 |
139 | Malik Harrison | LB | 0.8568 |
141 | Quintel Kent | WR | 0.8564 |
142 | Josh Uche | DL | 0.8558 |
143 | Stephen Spanellis | OL | 0.8543 |
144 | Josh Metellus | DB | 0.8540 |
145 | Hassan Haskins | RB | 0.8539 |
146 | Joey Velasquez | DB | 0.8531 |
147 | Dawand Jones | OL | 0.8527 |
148 | Ellijah Gardiner | WR | 0.8518 |
149 | Ben Mason | FB | 0.8510 |
150 | Sean McKeon | TE | 0.8493 |
151 | Gunnar Hoak | QB | 0.8485 |
151 | Jahsen Wint | DB | 0.8485 |
153 | Davon Hamilton | DL | 0.8457 |
154 | Michael Dwumfour | DL | 0.8453 |
155 | German Green | DB | 0.8444 |
156 | Devin Gil | LB | 0.8428 |
157 | John Runyon | OL | 0.8402 |
158 | Ronnie Bell | WR | 0.8349 |
01-10: Ohio State 7, Michigan 3
11-20: Ohio State 9, Michigan 1
21-30: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
31-40: Ohio State 8, Michigan 2
41-50: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
So Ohio State has 35 of the top 50 players (70%), while Michigan has only 15 (30%). It is very difficult to beat a team when your opponent has more than twice as many top end players as you do, and that is exactly the position in which Michigan finds itself. In football terms, Ohio State can field an entire team of 22 players, plus 13 reserves, from top-50 recruits, while Michigan can barely field a single unit (offense or defense) from top-50 recruits.
Things get a little bit better for Michigan in the second 50 players:
51--60: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
61--70: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
71--80: Ohio State 6, Michigan 4
81--90: Michigan 6, Ohio State 4
91-100: Ohio State 5, Michigan 5
In the second group of 50 players, Ohio State still holds a slight edge, 26 to 24, or 52% to 48%. Among the top-100 players, Ohio State has 61 while Michigan has only 39. Note that Ohio State has almost as many top-50 players (35) as Michigan has top-100 players (39).
Michigan owns the rest of the chart, which is not a good thing. Of the bottom 58 players, 39 (67%) belong to Michigan, while only 19 (33%) are with Ohio State. (Note that place kickers, punters, long snappers are not rated).
Ohio State has 80 players on the chart, while Michigan has 78 players. Here's how the two teams compare by percentage of players in the top-50, second-50, and bottom-58:
Program | Top-50 | 2nd-50 | Bottom-76 |
---|---|---|---|
Ohio State Buckeyes | 35/80 (43.75%) | 26/80 (32.50%) | 19/80 (23.75%) |
Michigan Wolverines | 15/78 (19.25%) | 24/78 (30.75%) | 39/78 (50.00%) |
Finally, the average rating for Ohio State's players is .9308, and the average rating for Michigan's players is .9020. To people who don't know recruiting, three points might not seem like a huge talent gap. However, take your favorite football simulator game; give every player on one team a score of 93; give every player on the other team a score of 90; play fifteen games, and see which team wins fourteen of them.
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