WinterBorn
Verified User
Joe Klatt has Alabama at #1. Given the recruiting Saban has done and the play from the freshman QB, it could be back-to-back championships.
Never too early to talk football...Who had the best recruiting class?
Never too early to talk football...Who had the best recruiting class?
So far, according to a source I just checked, Ohio State has the #1 class. But they have no room for error if someone flips. Georgia is #2, with a shot at passing OSU if they get a few 5 star players.
Alabama is currently #5, but has the potential for moving up. Nick Saban can land some big fish and end up #1 again. He does have a recruiting pitch that no one else can match. Every recruiting class he has had, if the player stayed, has at least one National Championship ring.
I know...when I posted that, it could have flipped in the last couple of hours...
Urban has it all over Nick imho...of course, I haven't met Saban
We shall see....Hopefully, another exciting year for all...Spring games not far away
Lots...we'll see...#1 is just a number sometimes...Urban has a good class lined up. And he recruits very well. Saban has a few spots to fill, but has had the #1 class for like 9 years running. Lots of talent on both teams.
I think The Ohio State University is about 7 out of 10 football players...much higher rate for overall athletes (9 out of 10)
Do any of those schools, especially Alabama, ever graduate football players?
Always found it interesting how a State as Alabama, one of the poorest in the country and one that relys on the Federal dollars, has football coaches as the highest paid employees in the State
I'd imagine not the norm at Alabama, or the majority of SEC schools, and, yes, I know Vanderbilt and Florida are in the SEC, the exceptions
The University of Alabama football graduation rate is better than the national average for all students, not just athletes. The Crimson Tide has a graduation rate of 84%. The national average for all college students is 59%.
As for the coaches pay, it has been a profitable venture. Coach Saban was hired in 2007 for $4 million (not all of that comes from the school). Alabama is one of the top 10 most profitable college football programs in the nation. The last figure I was was for the 2015 or 2016 season. The University made $46 million in profit from the football program. Since Saban has been at Alabama, out-of-state enrollment has grown by leaps and bounds.
"At the University of Alabama, Nick Saban gets $11.132 million a year, plus bonuses, the highest salary for any college coach. His assistants’ pay, according to USA Today, totals $5.995 million, most in the nation."
https://www.forbes.com/sites/filipb...and-south-carolina-for-football/#45f4a0b81b97
So you got sixteen million in salaries, and last I knew, Alabama wasn't the only big time football school in the State of Alabama. The salaries are paid by the State, it may come via the school, but it is a State institution funded by the State
And as for the graduation rate, that includes the entire football team, including all those kids who are added as walk ons for home games, and you can book that the actual graduation rates, especially for black football players, who make up the majority of contributing players, isn't in the 80% percent range, and that includes those with home ec majors
Chris Olave, 4 star WR.... commits to The Ohio State UniversityLets Go Bucks!!!!!
Failing to graduate from a college in AL or MS would be a lifelong shame.![]()