hoyahooligan wrote:I think the issue is confusing the terms national in terms of recognition and national in terms of where they recruit.
Syracuse is a national program because they're a top 20 program and have fans all over the country and draw well and are recognizable.
A school like Fordham for example is a regional school because they're only kind relevant in the area around the school and no where else.
I don't think anyone actually uses the term for a school being a national recruiting power. I don't think that's really a thing anyone thinks about. When you say a team is a national team you mean in terms of presence. And Cuse is a national Presence. Georgetown is a national presence. Seton Hall is a regional Presence.
nathanhm wrote:TheHall you have to account for the number of players an area produces. You say all in the same breath that Duke and UNC owns recruiting yet they also land kids all over the country. Has it occurred to you the northeast has 50M people making it the most densely populated part of the country. The same can't be said for the surrounding area of Duke and Kentucky. If they want to find 13 too players thaey have to mine more area.
That being said lets look at some of the rosters of teams you highlighted:
Duke. - 0 NC players. 8 guys from non ACC areas
Kentucky. - 3 Kentucky players 7 guys from outside the SEC
Arizona - 2 AZ players 4 kids from outside the Pac12
Florida - 8 Florida guys 3 kids outside of SEC
Georgetown 3 DMV kids. 6 guys from out of the old Big East areas
Syracuse - 3 NY kids - 3 guys outside of old big east areas
I did this entirely based on hometown not high school so the numbers are probably even more slanted towards each school having kids within their conference footprint. Simply almost everyone primarily recruits within their conference, some conferences have a larger population of residents, but across the board it's a similar story at top 20 programs.
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