Risers
Alterique Gilbert: 36 to 34
Mamadou Diarra: 142 to 134
Christian Vital: UR to 146
Fallers
Juwan Durham: 31 to 47
Vance Jackson: 71 to 80
Risers
Alterique Gilbert: 36 to 34
Mamadou Diarra: 142 to 134
Christian Vital: UR to 146
Fallers
Juwan Durham: 31 to 47
Vance Jackson: 71 to 80
Risers
Alterique Gilbert: 36 to 34
Mamadou Diarra: 142 to 134
Christian Vital: UR to 146
Fallers
Juwan Durham: 31 to 47
Vance Jackson: 71 to 80
I thought Diarra was closer to the 80-90 range, and Jackson closer to 50-60.
Durham dropping is understandable, but what's the story with those two?
Well, Diarra is 93 on ESPN, is that what you were thinking of? And Jackson has been slipping.
I don't think in the last year or two Jackson has ever been ranked in the 50-60 range you have listed.Probably.
I'm mostly curious about why Jackson has been dropping. Did he have a mediocre season or unimpressive results against top competition?
Jackson was 49th in the ESPN 100 when he committed. His shortcomings are athleticism and ball skills. He's 6'8" and can shoot though which gives him the top 100 ranking. He'll be a good player, just needs to work on conditioning. He's the type of guy that would benefit from Rip Hamilton's model of moving off the ball and getting open shots.I don't think in the last year or two Jackson has ever been ranked in the 50-60 range you have listed.
We're talking about the Rivals rankings.Jackson was 49th in the ESPN 100 when he committed. His shortcomings are athleticism and ball skills. He's 6'8" and can shoot though which gives him the top 100 ranking. He'll be a good player, just needs to work on conditioning. He's the type of guy that would benefit from Rip Hamilton's model of moving off the ball and getting open shots.
He's been dropping in almost all the rankings. At one point, if I recall correctly, he was a consensus top 50 recruit.We're talking about the Rivals rankings.
Yup. Give me a forward who can shoot & pass any day, even if he's not an exceptional, NBA-style athlete.Shouldn't be seen as such a bad thing though, because he is still a top 100 player that will hopefuly arrive with a chip on his shoulder and have an immediate impact at UConn
Pretty simple. He doesnt improve has much as the players that were ranked behind him.I'd love to know how a scout watches a guy play and says "Hm. I thought this guy was the 50th-best recruit in his class, but now I think he's the 80th-best."
I'd love to know how a scout watches a guy play and says "Hm. I thought this guy was the 50th-best recruit in his class, but now I think he's the 80th-best."
The players are evaluated on their skills and given numerical scores and then those are scores are ranked. It's not hard to see how other kids could improve scores while someone else stagnates.
The type of program and names of coaches after kids heavily influence these rankings as well. I haven't checked the 2016 rankings in a few months but I have a strong hunch that Sacha Killeya-Jones and Wenyen Gabriel rose in the latest ESPN rankings.They don't actually see these kids enough is dead on. Even at the big events theirs six games going on at once. Plus teams are spread out all over the country.
I think the bottom line is its very hard to quantify what makes a kid the 40th best player instead of the 50th or so, especially when these recruiting experts only see a kid a handful of times each year at best. That's how you get scouting reports like "Daniel Hamilton is a ballhog" and "Roscoe Smith is a great 3-point shooter."
They dropped Charles Matthews a ton and he was a Kentucky kid. But I agree a kid commits to a blue blood it's rare they drop him.