Morning Sun

With ‘relentless recruiting,’ ‘Bama, UGA build all-star teams

- By Ralph D. Russo

After Georgia beat Florida in November, Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart was asked about the importance of recruiting. His response was both obvious and emphatic:

“The best coach to ever play the game better be a good recruiter because no coaching is going to outcoach players,” he said.

Georgia will play Alabama in an all-southeaste­rn Conference national championsh­ip game on Monday night in Indianapol­is. How they got here is pretty simple.

Smart and his mentor, Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban, have assembled the most star-studded teams —recruiting stars, that is — in recent college football history. The Bulldogs and Tide have been so far out in front of most of the competitio­n on the recruiting trail that they were practicall­y too talented to fail this season.

Both schools benefit from being located in the heart of the most fertile recruiting territory in the country and pour huge amounts of manpower and resources into evaluating and procuring talent.

“It’s a relentless approach to recruiting, not just a relentless approach to football coaching. And that’s what Coach Saban has done here and it’s been proven and it’s been awesome,” said Bill O’brien, the Alabama offensive coordinato­r and former Penn State coach.

Georgia and Alabama then consistent­ly send those highly touted recruits on to the NFL, which is the best recruiting tool of all.

“Just coming from high school to here I wanted to surround myself by people who had the same mindset as me, same competitiv­e nature as me, same standard and expectatio­n as me no matter the outcome of whether I was playing or not,” All-america linebacker Will Anderson Jr. said.

247 Sports has been ranking the rosters of each FBS team based on the high school recruiting ratings of each player since 2015. Alabama

and Georgia were not only Nos. 1 and 2 in the talent composite this season, but their rosters each received the highest scores ever recorded by the site.

Georgia defensive coordinato­r Dan Lanning played in Division III and his young coaching career has taken to him to Pittsburgh, Arizona State, Sam Houston State and Memphis. He also did a one-year stint as graduate assistant at Alabama before coming to Georgia.

Lanning said when it comes to the sheer number of talented players at the SEC powers, there is nothing else like it in college football.

“Yeah, I mean, there’s a big difference,” said Lanning, who has already been named Oregon’s new head coach. “There’s a big difference.”

Of the 85 scholarshi­p players listed on Alabama’s roster to start the season, 74 were either four- or five-star recruits, including 14 fivestars. The Crimson Tide’s score in the talent composite was 1.000.89.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Alabama linebacker Will Anderson Jr. (31) stops Auburn wide receiver Elijah Canion (17) during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Nov. 27, in Auburn, Ala.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Alabama linebacker Will Anderson Jr. (31) stops Auburn wide receiver Elijah Canion (17) during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Nov. 27, in Auburn, Ala.

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