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re: A&M fans (regarding Texas)

Posted on 2/13/12 at 3:26 pm to
Posted by UT755LN
Houston
Member since Nov 2011
70 posts
Posted on 2/13/12 at 3:26 pm to
The SEC is not a substitute for a quality athletic program. Old Miss, Miss St., Vandy ect... aren't dominating recruiting even though they are in the SEC.

LSU spent a long time being average until they got Saban and followed it up with Miles. Bama had a dry stretch until they got Saban. Florida went from the 60s until Spurrier and Meyer.

If aTm made the right hire with Sumlin and if he can win they will recruit better. If aTm continues to win 5 to 7 games a year then the recruiting will be about the same.
Posted by TeLeFaWx
Dallas, TX
Member since Aug 2011
29179 posts
Posted on 2/13/12 at 3:43 pm to
quote:

The SEC is not a substitute for a quality athletic program. Old Miss, Miss St., Vandy ect... aren't dominating recruiting even though they are in the SEC.


This is where I think the argument is interesting, it is a relatively new phenomenon. When was the last time current high school prospects remember a time when the SEC wasn't dominant? Current high school juniors were in elementary school when Vince Young beat USC. They basically don't remember the half decade before that when the Big XII South was pretty much unanimously considered best division in college football year in and year out. They are all in the Internet Generation. ESPN, video games, Tebow, Cam Newton, Honey Badger, these topics of discussion are permeating nationally at a rate that has never existed prior to right now. It will be interesting to see if the SEC's dominance continues. You would like to believe things are cyclical, but at some point the SEC's dominance could sort of become a self fulfilling prophecy. Vanderbilt might not be better than Baylor or Iowa State, but they might be given the benefit of the doubt because of perceived ability.

It is interesting. The wild card in this is all the Mexicans. In less than a decade, there will be more last names that end in EZ in Texas than anything else. It will be interesting to see how the population shift and wealth shift among people that traditionally have no loyalty or legacies to collegiate athletics affects college football.
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