this is not accurate. JB did not begin playing mostly zone until the probation period in the early 90s, and didn't go totally zone until after the 96 Final Four run. So, it's been working more like 20 years and been excelling really only the last 4 (and counting)I will also state right now that I am a big fan of the zone. It's worked for over 35 years.
So Syracuse is not the single best recruiting school in the country and you blame that on playing zone despite the fact that recruiting is better now that we are playing zone full time than it was when we were playing man to man full time? Seems like your reasoning is seriously flawed. There can only be one best school, Syracuse is not it, but we are in the top 1 or 2% of D1 schools in recruiting.
• It's a matter of personal opinion as to how to characterize the differences in recruiting classes. You may consider us in the top 2% and find comfort and satisfaction in that. I, on the other hand, see that we're in a conference with Duke and NC, and they will regularly pull top 10 players. Each year. And, in multiples, per year. Heck, Duke regularly fields almost an entire squad of McD players. We're not doing that. That does not give me comfort or satisfaction. You may be a 'glass half full' kinda guy, and being better than 98-99% of other programs (i don't agree with your math, but whatever). I'm a 'glass half full — but of poison' kinda guy. And, all i see is the 2% ahead of us. I don't give a rat's about beating Colgate or Cornell, or Virginia or NC State. Winning those games won't compare to the order of magnitude of suck if/when we lose to Duke.
No, I don't know if the blame is being put entirely on the zone or at all on the zone. The question was does playing the 2-3 zone keep the best recruits away. Our recruiting is awesome, but we don't typically get the elite of the elite. Which is fine, there are only so many schools that can get them and we've done pretty well without them. And I don't think the zone is really the reason. But we don't normally land top 5-10 caliber kids; I think that is a pretty fair statement to make.
Duke may field an entire squad of McD players but they weren't in the final four last year. KU had the best class in the country last year and they lost in the first round of the NIT. We went to a final four. It seems like you're watching recruiting as if it's the actual game. JB has a history of finding players before they get big or players that have unrealized potential. I care more about what a guy does after he gets here than what he did in high school. MCW was a three star when he committed, became a lottery pick. Hakim Warrick was a fallback recruit barely in the top 100, became an All-American and a first round draft pick. GMac was not a McD, he drops 18 in the first half of the NC game while going up against a senior that's had a 10 year NBA career and follows that up with an epic performance against BYU in the NCAA tournament the following year and a legendary one in the Big East Tournament as a senior.• It's a matter of personal opinion as to how to characterize the differences in recruiting classes. You may consider us in the top 2% and find comfort and satisfaction in that. I, on the other hand, see that we're in a conference with Duke and NC, and they will regularly pull top 10 players. Each year. And, in multiples, per year. Heck, Duke regularly fields almost an entire squad of McD players. We're not doing that. That does not give me comfort or satisfaction. You may be a 'glass half full' kinda guy, and being better than 98-99% of other programs (i don't agree with your math, but whatever). I'm a 'glass half full — but of poison' kinda guy. And, all i see is the 2% ahead of us. I don't give a rat's about beating Colgate or Cornell, or Virginia or NC State. Winning those games won't compare to the order of magnitude of suck if/when we lose to Duke.
• Having "at least one better recruiting class" also isn't comforting. It's good. But, we have to compete with great. And beating each of those teams once in five years, while fantastic, still means not beating them four out of five years. Again, the OP's question was about "the best."
A few thoughts...let's compare a couple of forwards from the 2010 recruiting class.
North Carolina got Harrison Barnes, the consensus #1 recruit in America. Behind him, North Carolina won 72% of their games and went to back to back Elite 8s . . .then he left
In the same class, Syracuse got forward CJ Fair, the consensus #96 player in America. Behind him, Syracuse has wan 82% of its games and has gone to back to back Elite 8s . . . and counting
now, you can be worried about recruit rankings if you wish, but I trust JB to go out and get the guys who are best suited to his system and then to make it work.
I think in the last 6-7 years JB has done a much better job of recruiting only guys who would work in our system. You hardly even see a recruit now who you look at and wonder how they are going to fit into what we do (Coleman maybe). Pre 08 I think we were either a little less disciplined or maybe it was more just circumstances, but we ended up with more guys who were not great zone fits. Devo, Harris, Flynn, D Wright come to mind. Course the first 3 guys on that list were top 20 recruits...I guess we would probably take them now too.let's compare a couple of forwards from the 2010 recruiting class.
North Carolina got Harrison Barnes, the consensus #1 recruit in America. Behind him, North Carolina won 72% of their games and went to back to back Elite 8s . . .then he left
In the same class, Syracuse got forward CJ Fair, the consensus #96 player in America. Behind him, Syracuse has wan 82% of its games and has gone to back to back Elite 8s . . . and counting
now, you can be worried about recruit rankings if you wish, but I trust JB to go out and get the guys who are best suited to his system and then to make it work.
The lack of proven one and dones (excl. Carmelo), whether due to talent (Xmas, Melo) or circumstance (MCW) is likely reason 1 or 1A why we don't get the very cream of the crop.
In regards to the lack of one and dones due to circumstance, I'd say this is a fair point. Especially when discussing top 5-10 ranked guard prospects, those guys all think they can & should be playing right away, year 1, with the goal of leaving asap for the NBA.
And when they see top 20 guard recruits like Dion Waiters (ESPN ranked #15 overall, #2 SG) and MCW (ESPN ranked #21 overall, #4 SG) not get many minutes at all in their 1st years - and, even worse (in their minds), sitting behind "just eh" type of talents like Scoop Jardine & Brandon Triche - well, I get a sense that these elite, top recruits don't even want to risk having that scenario play out. (No matter how well it ended up working out for Dion & MCW in the end.)
All they see is that after their 1st years of college, neither Dion or MCW could/would have been drafted in the first round (if they had left after that 1 year at SU) - and even though they both ended up as high 1st rounders after 2 years of school, I don't think that is a risk they are willing to take. (If seemingly better opportunities exist for immediate playing time at another high-end school.)
Duke had Maggette but that was a long time ago.Unless my counting is off, Duke has only had four players (Deng, Irving, Rivers, and now Parker likely) leave after one year.
Kansas has had three (Henry, Selby and Wiggins)
In the last decade, I should say.
Duke had Maggette but that was a long time ago.
Wow I am oldI know...I was limiting it to the last decade. Corey Magette was 1999.