Cardinal slink to No. 11 in the Pac-12 Recruiting Race

Photo by David Madison/Getty Images

The Stanford Cardinal are one of just three teams to have fewer than 10 committed players for the class of 2021. Though unconcerning at this time due to head coach David Shaw’s policy on early enrollees, the Cardinal class of 2021 ranks just 11th in the conference and is behind notable teams such as Colorado and Arizona, each of whom struggled to receive commitments early on.

Despite a low ranking, however, the Cardinal have one thing to hang their hats on so far for the class of 2021. The fact that their 247Sports average ‘recruit points’ accumulated for each recruit ranks as the fourth-highest in the conference.

Essentially what that means is that if they were to have 21 commitments like that of Arizona, they’d absolutely be in fourth place or in the top half, at least, of the conference based upon total recruit points.

The fact that Stanford has just seven committed players this far through August is one thing, but the approach is clearly quality over quantity.

Stanford’s class currently sees a recruit average 86.95 recruit points per commit, according to 247Sports and their Composite Ranking system. Those include:

QB Ari Patu — 88.97

S Josh Moore — 87.68

TE Shield Taylor — 87.02

CB Jimmy Wyrick — 86.67

S MItch Leigber — 86.28

S Caleb Ellis — 85.06

P Connor Weselman — no rating on composite

Patu is the nation’s 14th-best dual-threat quarterback while Moore and Leigber sit as top-50 prospects at their positions. Wyrick is the country’s 46th-best corner while Taylor is the nation’s 26th-ranked tight end. Ellis is a top 150-player in the state of Texas, which should have their own ranking system essentially, and Wesselman ranked out as the nation’s sixth-best punter by a different rating system.

So clearly, the approach is quality per recruit, and that may also explain why the likes of USC, Oregon and all but Utah, Oregon State and Stanford have at least 12 committed players for 2021.

With conference’s 11th-ranked recruiting class to date, though, where does Stanford go from here? We’ll take a look at their top targets utilizing 247Sports and their knowledge base as well.

According to them, Stanford’s top four targets are Patu, Moore who have already committed as well as four-star CB Ceyair Wright (96.56 Composite) and four-star DE Aaron Armitage (92.07). It’d be no doubt that if these two were to commit to Stanford that they’d rise in the rankings and 247Sports has the Cardinal as one of the top four teams of choice for Wright and top five teams for Armitage.

It all remains to be seen how this class will shake up, but for those teams in the Pac-12 that find themselves on the outside looking in at the top half of the recruit rankings, Stanford has to absolutely be the least concerned about where they stand now.

For many reasons.

Comments

Quality Over Quantity??

Currently, all of our 2021 commits are 3 star recruits. Our punter might be a little better than that.

Look, nothing wrong with hopefully high ceiling 3 stars who fit Stanford’s system. And I personally think that Stanford will sink or swim depending on its ability to develop 3 star rated recruits into high impact players. But the jury is still way out on this class – both in quality and quantity.

Look at it this way

Arizona has 19 3-star recruits and their average ‘recruit points’ are just above 84. Very few of them are in the stratosphere to potentially garner an additional fourth star (if we had a normal high school season). While Ari Patu is the closest thing to a four-star QB and Josh Moore is just a few players off a four-star safety.

Also — I’m just trying to be nice. Can’t help that I’m a glass-half-full kinda guy.

Yeah....My 3 Star Is Better Than Your 3 Star ........

Not really being negative, as I noted "hopefully we have high ceiling 3 stars who fit Stanford’s system" – reflecting the fact that our 3 stars are relatively higher rated by "recruit points". And I love the fact that Stanford has historically built dominant teams on the back of developing 3 star recruits (which is what Stanford is going to have to be able to do given the relatively shallower pool of recruits who will qualify academically). This seems to be something we have done less well in recent years – perhaps with an impact on performance.

Just looking forward to the rest of the class before I get too excited. But I am glad you are avowedly positive at this point!

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