I don't think so. If it was, Georgia would be super top level, as well as Florida. And Alabama would only be mediocre. It may correlate better with population on the lower end (Mississippi, Arkansas, Kentucky).
You hit the nail on the head right there.
I will add this:
I am advocate of taking all sports away from the school system. The Cities and counties could fund it separately and employ the coaches full time to do nothing but coach and be custodians. Most of them don't teach shit anyway other than a study hall and then not even show up for that. Most pride themselves on how little they have to do in a real classroom. They just want to coach, then let them coach and get them away from the school.
And please don't tell me how they bring in $$$ at the gate, there is no way they can pay all those coaches not to teach all day long and come out ahead.
We would finally get educators in charge of schools. We would no longer get coaches moving into principals and principals into superintendents while having never actually taught real classrooms.
We might even get better more dedicated coaches that don't have to be at a school at 7 am and not get home until after midnight on game days. A full time designated coach would do a better job and be less taxing on the schools.
Think about it. Would you like going into work a 7 in the morning and then not starting your job until 9 hrs later. The rest of the day you spend trying to get out of work. That life has to suck.
Georgia has more talent than Alabama...according to NCAA Research from 2013-2016 here are the % of high school players recruited by P5 programs....%8.6 of Players from Georgia High Schools , %5.0 from Alabama, %3.0 from Mississippi, %10 come from Florida, %8.1 from LA..... Texas is the biggest surprise at %2.8 ..
The coaching in MS is light years behind AL and LA. The fundamentals are taught here but the refinement of skills is being taught at a much higher level in our neighboring states. If you watch high school football just watch a how QB throws the ball and pay attention to the footwork. Lots of chunking it in MS not much passing.
Well AL doesn't have any large cities either, per se, although the Birmingham metro is 1+ million and growing. AL does have four metropolitan areas of 300k+ or more, and that's a huge difference . MS has Jackson metro, 550k, Gulf Coast, 275k, and then there's DeSoto County at about 170k.
When you beat your first 2 conference opponents, who aren't even the very worst conference teams, 59-0 and 66-3 its very bad for the league and also college football. Over the past 4 years, for every 1 four or five star player we sign, Bama signs 5! Saban is not doing that by just recruiting in and around Alabama. There is nothing good about the fact that 11 of the 13 other SEC teams can't even stay on the field with Bama at this point. Auburn and Georgia are probably the only 2 teams right now that can stay within 3 scores of Bama. Its getting beyond ridiculous.
There is a point of diminishing returns. Bottom line Alabama has 'enough' talent, plus they have the best coach. I personally think you need about 2.5 million in population per school, and have the right black/white percentage (sorry, in 2017 black guys are more likely play football - facts).
Resources enable you find good coaching, not the other way around, unless you are plumb lucky.....and even then, if you don't have resources, that good coach you found because you were lucky won't be around long
I don't know why this is that hard, or even up for debate
I think it's also the depth of talent. Look at how many guys we sign that played multiple positions in the state of MS. A ton of our guys and others that are recruited in state played multiple positions in high school. RB/LB, OL/DL, QB/WR/S. I mean that kind of stuff happens all over in MS.
That doesn't happen in Alabama. The guys getting looked at by colleges don't play multiple positions after 9th grade, at least not in 5A through 7A. They play one position. I teach at a 7A school and we don't have a single player that plays both ways and we will have a good amount of guys play D1 over the next 3 years. They play one position. These skill guys in MS that will eventually play WR or CB at college play QB in high school. Or they play QB/WR/CB in high school.
I'll also add that if you look at the QB play in Alabama, it's so much further ahead than MS. There's 2 guys from 2017 listed as pro style QBs, one of which committed to Arkansas and the other committed to Vandy. Then for 2018 you've got one already committed to Stanford, and one committed to Missouri. Then for 2019 you have 3 guys currently rated 87 or higher on 24/7, and eventually all 3 will be rated at 90 or above and go to either an SEC school or a top program. Also if you look at the Top 4 guys currently in Alabama for 2019, 3 of them are OL and they will all 3 stay in state and go to either Bama or Auburn.
MS doesn't have this, especially at the QB position. MS is not producing talent at the really important positions (QB, OL, WR) necessary for MSU to be competitive nationally or in the SEC. They just aren't. We've already seen us have to go out of state for our QBs, but right now we are not doing a good job of that at OL and WR. And what are our weakest positions? OL and WR. There are a couple every year that might be SEC caliber, but they don't always stay.
If you want to be enlightened in recruiting and the difference between AL and MS, go to 24/7 and go look at state rankings and position rankings and see how guys over the last 5-7 years have panned out in AL and in MS. It's very interesting.
Alabama players are much more physically ready for college ball than Miss players. Just look at the MS/AL high school all star game. Alabama always wins....and it is not all on coaching. I had rather sign a 3* player from Ala than a 4* player from Miss.
I can not comment about the situation of high school coaching in Mississippi but I can tell you something about California. I have three years of JC coaching and 16 years high school. First thing I want to bring up to fellow elite doggers is faculties are becoming more female because teachers are not well paid. Many of the male faculty have had enough of school kids after eight hours, thus a shortage of faculty for football coaches.
Coaches in California are certified thru the California Interscholastic Federation and not the schools Almost 60% of high school football coaches are walk ons. Many great coaches simply can not afford to teach thus they work and commute to various high schools in State. My last years of coaching at Southwestern JC were brutal because I am also teamed up with the US Navy F/A-18 program. At one point I was working for two teams and burned out. I will retire early next year and am ready to full time coach without a second distraction.
Because I have other employment, I simply work for a seasonal stipend. Other great coaching prospect simply can not coach because of their 9 to 5 jobs. If a high school football program can access coaches there can be successes but it can get difficult without good fortune of good money be it one State or another
I posted this same sentiment several years back and was told I was stupid. It's real. One of two things will happen: 1) The blue-blood super-power schools will split into their own division of about 16 schools or 2) college football will quickly head the way of the NFL with declining numbers and interest until it becomes a truly amateur sport once again.
I am not sure I agree with this. You are a coach and have hands-on experience, and probably know better than me. However I have never thought specialization, in any way, was good for development, until you have topped out in ability. For example, the best high school players (that are good enough to go to college) usually can do many more things and can be versatile, while the guys where high school is their peak, are better off specializing.
I do agree about the MS production part. MS produces tons of defensive talent and not nearly enough offensive line and skill and when they do, they are incredibly raw. Not always a bad thing, just have to know it going in.
Don't forget Texas, California, Maryland, awbarn (I know this isn't a state but we get who we want out of their backyard), etc. It's amazing how much less in state talent we take under Saban in comparison to the likes of Stallings. We basically take the cream off the top in state and leave the rest to *u, UGA, UT, etc and it matters not. Pretty remarkable.
Again, go back and look at early classes. Saban slowly transitioned that. The entire early run was done with Alabama players, then once he had that national title he could scale that down and go get whoever he wanted. I thought it was a mistake at the time but he's been able to maintain it. He's one of the few that really can IMO.
2007: 14
2008: 18
2009: 10
2010: 9
2011: 7
2012: 7
2013: 7
2014: 6
2015: 7
2016: 6
2017: 8