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Re-Ranking the 2004 Recruiting Classes
Recruiting classes are not unlike most pursuits in life: It?s not where you start, but where you finish. While banner classes might look good on paper and sound great in message boards, the real litmus test doesn?t reveal winners and losers until four years later. Signing mega-recruits is a grueling process, but keeping them on campus and molding them into players worthy of their high school ratings can be far bigger challenges. Just ask Miami and Florida State, which had two of the five most heralded classes of 2004, yet produced far more busts than booms, a big reason why both schools have been so uncharacteristically mediocre the last few years. And then there?s Kansas, which turned enough of its 2-star types into All-Americans to win 12 games and the Orange Bowl over Virginia Tech last month.
Finish strong. It?s what coaches preach, and what differentiates the truly good recruiting classes from those that couldn?t deliver when it matters.
*Player and program rankings from 2004 come courtesy of Scout.com
6. Ohio State ? The Buckeyes went for quality over quantity in 2004, getting a lot of mileage out of their handful of regular contributors. Ginn was every bit as good as expected, catching 125 passes and 15 touchdowns, while terrorizing opposing special teams units. Gholston established a new Ohio State record a year ago with 14 sacks, an impressive prelude to a career in the NFL. Pittman is already playing in the pros, leaving Columbus a year early after rushing for 2,945 yards and 22 touchdowns in three seasons. Freeman was a two-year starter on a deep defense, turning 109 tackles and 9.5 tackles for loss into a spot on the 2007 All-Big Ten team. Rehring is a mountain of a man with two years of starting experience and another year of eligibility remaining. On the flip side, Dukes, Hoobler, Welch, and Mitchum were 4-star flame-outs. Dukes and Mitchum haven?t played meaningful minutes in their Buckeye careers, and Hoobler and Welch transferred before making any kind of an impression in Columbus.
Hits: WR Ted Ginn, DE Vernon Gholston, RB Antonio Pittman, LB Marcus Freeman, G Steve Rehring, P A.J. Trapasso, TE Rory Nicol, and G Ben Person
Misses: WR Albert Dukes, TE Chad Hoobler, S Sirjo Welch, and OL Kyle Mitchum
Final 2004 Ranking: No. 11
Cont'd ...