A lot has been said about interior DL recruiting lately both as it applies to OSU and as a possible explanation for the B10?s demise/SEC emergence. I thought I?d take a snapshot of some actual numbers and see what came of it. I don't know what forum this should be in exactly so I just went with this one, feel free to move it.
Methodology: All data is from NFL.com. I did a search for 2008 individual stats by position and sorted by defensive line. I then further narrowed that to only players listed as DT or NT (excluded DE?s). This returned 142 players who I then sorted by name, NFL experience, college and high school state. In cases of a prep school I went by ?natural? high school listed. In the few cases of a player with no HS listed I went by state of birth.
So 142 NFL players listed as DT or NT in 2008 yielded the following:
By High School State
FL...19
TX...14
CA...13
TN...8
AL...7
GA...7
MI...7
OH...6
SC...6
LA...6
Outside US...6
MS...5
UT...3
MO...3
NJ...3
NY...3
anyone not listed had 2 or less
High School State by region
My geographic pooling may be a bit subjective but I don't think its outrageous. If a state in a region isn't listed it didn't have an NFL player.
Southern (AL,AR,FL,GA,LA,MS,SC,TN) = 60
Western US (anything west of the Mississippi River including Hawaii) = 40
Mid West (IL,IN,MI,MN,OH,PA,WI) = 21
Mid Atlantic Region(DC,DE,NC,NJ,NY,VA,Mass, MD) = 15
American Samoa = 4
Canada = 2
NFL by College
Tennessee...6
Miami...6
Miss State...5
UGA...5
Michigan State...5
Penn State...5
Texas...5
Texas A&M...5
Florida State...5
Oklahoma...4
USC...4
Bama...3
Auburn...3
LSU...3
Nebraska...3
Rutgers...3
Utah...3
Iowa...2
Michigan...2
Minnesota...2
Ohio State...2
Purdue...2
Wisconsin...2
Colorado...2
Mizzou...2
OkState...2
Cal...2
Oregon...2
BC...2
NCSU...2
Louisville...2
WVU...2
ND...2
Fresno State...2
I won't take the space to list all the schools with just 1
NFL by Conference
SEC...33
B12...25
Non BCS and ND...25
B10...23
ACC...18
Pac 10...11
Big east 7
So what does this tell us so far? At its most elemental level the data clearly shows the southern region produces more NFL caliber interior DL talent than any other region...about 1/3 more than the whole western US, about 3 times as much as the midwest and 4 times as much as the mid atlantic/east coast region. You could add the entire B10 region to every state west of the Mississippi ad just equal what comes out of the 8 Southern states. That is a staggering disparity.
At first blush this would seem to explain the SEC's spot at the top of the NFL by conference list but you'll easily notice the disparity isn't as large as the raw population numbers.
I'll add the second part tomorrow and break down who does what as far as keeping the home talent at home and raiding other territory.
As always feedback is welcome, if you catch any errors or omissions let me know. Its late, I'm sure there is at least one or two.
Methodology: All data is from NFL.com. I did a search for 2008 individual stats by position and sorted by defensive line. I then further narrowed that to only players listed as DT or NT (excluded DE?s). This returned 142 players who I then sorted by name, NFL experience, college and high school state. In cases of a prep school I went by ?natural? high school listed. In the few cases of a player with no HS listed I went by state of birth.
So 142 NFL players listed as DT or NT in 2008 yielded the following:
By High School State
FL...19
TX...14
CA...13
TN...8
AL...7
GA...7
MI...7
OH...6
SC...6
LA...6
Outside US...6
MS...5
UT...3
MO...3
NJ...3
NY...3
anyone not listed had 2 or less
High School State by region
My geographic pooling may be a bit subjective but I don't think its outrageous. If a state in a region isn't listed it didn't have an NFL player.
Southern (AL,AR,FL,GA,LA,MS,SC,TN) = 60
Western US (anything west of the Mississippi River including Hawaii) = 40
Mid West (IL,IN,MI,MN,OH,PA,WI) = 21
Mid Atlantic Region(DC,DE,NC,NJ,NY,VA,Mass, MD) = 15
American Samoa = 4
Canada = 2
NFL by College
Tennessee...6
Miami...6
Miss State...5
UGA...5
Michigan State...5
Penn State...5
Texas...5
Texas A&M...5
Florida State...5
Oklahoma...4
USC...4
Bama...3
Auburn...3
LSU...3
Nebraska...3
Rutgers...3
Utah...3
Iowa...2
Michigan...2
Minnesota...2
Ohio State...2
Purdue...2
Wisconsin...2
Colorado...2
Mizzou...2
OkState...2
Cal...2
Oregon...2
BC...2
NCSU...2
Louisville...2
WVU...2
ND...2
Fresno State...2
I won't take the space to list all the schools with just 1
NFL by Conference
SEC...33
B12...25
Non BCS and ND...25
B10...23
ACC...18
Pac 10...11
Big east 7
So what does this tell us so far? At its most elemental level the data clearly shows the southern region produces more NFL caliber interior DL talent than any other region...about 1/3 more than the whole western US, about 3 times as much as the midwest and 4 times as much as the mid atlantic/east coast region. You could add the entire B10 region to every state west of the Mississippi ad just equal what comes out of the 8 Southern states. That is a staggering disparity.
At first blush this would seem to explain the SEC's spot at the top of the NFL by conference list but you'll easily notice the disparity isn't as large as the raw population numbers.
I'll add the second part tomorrow and break down who does what as far as keeping the home talent at home and raiding other territory.
As always feedback is welcome, if you catch any errors or omissions let me know. Its late, I'm sure there is at least one or two.
