by Bluejay Bilas » Tue Feb 12, 2013 11:54 am
Would have been nice to get him, but it's not like he committed to Penn State or Nebraska, or one of many other lowly power six programs. It shows what we’ve accomplished and how low Georgia Tech has recently sunk that people on here are questioning why they’d beat us out for a recruit.
For the past couple of years Georgia Tech has been one of the bad power six conference teams, but they’ve actually been to the NCAAs more than Creighton has since Korver graduated. They’ve easily had more historical success in the NCAAs than any MVC team, by far. As conference realignment currently stands, ACC hoops will improve, and regardless of some recent conference struggles, the ACC is probably still the premier basketball league. Georgia Tech apparently just opened a new basketball practice facility a couple of years ago, and their arena was just renovated. In terms of college rankings, only about a dozen schools with legit basketball teams can claim to be better. I far prefer Omaha to Atlanta, but Atlanta’s a huge city with lots of appeal to some. And the weather is much nicer. Finally, my guess is that Jorgenson envisioned and was sold more playing time at Georgia Tech. I know virtually nothing about the 2012-2013 Yellow Jackets, but they’re rebuilding and probably have few positions that are locked in for the next few years. If you’re Jorgenson, you guess that Chatman’s got two more years of starting, and you know you’re not the only other PG behind him. I also think kids and parents of kids who go the prep school route are more likely to want the competition and prestige of a power six school, as the reasoning behind those transfers usually seems grounded in a desire for more national exposure and competition.
I guess what I’m trying to say is that even assuming both schools targeted and courted Jorgenson with the same force, I am less bothered by losing this battle than I was in losing the Foster battle with K. State, and I am sure that a lot of kids would rather commit to K. State than Creighton. I just don’t want to see us consistently losing out to true power six bottom feeders or actual mid-majors. Kind of like Uthoff, where a kid had previously turned us down to go or commit elsewhere, there was a second chance. But, you knew that if the relationship and Creighton dream was overwhelmingly strong, the first commitment would not have happened.
As for landing a "top" target, reports were that Hegner was a "top" target, as alluded to above by Chicagojayfan. The staff obviously wanted the other guys badly, or they would not have been able to give their verbals. My understanding is that staffs do not give non-contingent offers unless they actually want a kid to potentially be given a scholarship. Meaning that it is not as if staffs simply hand out 20 truly committable offers and hope that not all 20 accept. But, because the rules require most every detail about recruiting to be shrouded in mystery, us fans have no clue as to what an “offer” means, what staffs really think about the recruits, or many of the other realities of recruiting. That mystery helps make recruiting way shadier and dirtier than it needs to be, IMO. Even Mac has been painted in a not completely favorable light (e.g., brief passage in Play Their Hearts Out on Justin Hawkins of UNLV’s (pretty sure it was Hawkins, but could have been one of the other HS players) college recruitment and his trip to ISU, a school Hawkins thought wanted him more than they did).
Whatever the case, I would be disappointed if we did not target a handful of nationally ranked players every year. Better than only targeting mid major guys. Gotta start winning in March on a regular basis and/or get in that new conference. The new practice facility will also help, and having Doug for one more year would be good, too.