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  • TheWombat
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by jackrabbit1979 View Post
    Wombat - I'll ask my question again...who do you think this staff, or the staff before them, missed on in SD the last five years when SDSU wrestling has been relevant at the D1 level and had a chance to recruit talent? Who is having success elsewhere (as a starter, backup, etc.) that should be at SDSU if the staff would have put a little effort into SD as you referenced?
    Dan Stiebral, Tyler Waterson, and now Cooper Voorhees and Kylen March would be some DI people off the top of my head that would fit the bill. Colby Kost, Clayton Walstrom, Wyatt Turnquist, Tanner Brengle, Brandon Carroll, and Lincoln Turman have done well at the DII level and would be useful to have in the room.

    More impressive to me is the list of people who didn't go on to wrestle who we possible could have snagged: Alex Aesoph, Chase Sigdestad, Barrett Wren, Cooper Baloun, William Turman, Spencer Stockman, Michael Lusk, Trey Hage, Donte Colicheski, Logan Warzecha, Andrew Sorenson, Peyton Smith, Dylan Hanisch, Eddie Miller, Spencer Sarringer, John Lemer, and Ryley Ostbye are some names that I came up with though I haven't done a ton of research on all of them.

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  • MontanaRabbit
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by GopherHole View Post
    I'm just going off of active rosters, so that should give an idea of wrestlers who graduated high school in the last 4 or 5 years.

    A trend that I'm seeing is that outside of a couple, most SD wrestling talent is either going to SDSU, D2 or not wrestling in college. Outside of the two I found wrestling for NDSU and Nebraska, they just aren't out there. Makes me wonder if there is more of a need for coaching some of these kids in national tourneys during the summer. Our local high school in Kearney, NE has been sending top talent to Fargo Nationals for a number of years. Only one of those kids is at a D! program and the rest are at D2. Phillip Moomey is a kid I tried to get to Brookings, but he's at Cornell and doing well. He won Fargo Nationals and represented the US at an international tourney because of his exposure at Fargo. He'd likely be wrestling D2 if it were not for that exposure. Maybe we need more kids from SD competing at that level.

    Wombat - you may be on to something. Not specifically that Hahn's staff needs to work SD better, but that the talent in the state is not being challenged and exposed to more by not competing nationally.
    Or it could be the talent just hasn't been there the last few years.

    I also don't really like leveling criticism to a coaching staff when it comes to recruiting if they are successful. Likely no one on this board has a true understanding what is going on with recruiting within the program. If they do they are so connected to program they wouldn't dare divulge that information here. At the end of the day there are sooooo many variables involved in the process (academics, desire to wrestle at this level, maybe they hate SDSU, team needs, etc.) that it's impossible to be critical of a successful program.

    I've said this before, but I went to high school with a two-time state champion. He absolutely could have wrestled collegiately, but he literally had no desire to wrestle after high school. He was completely burned out. A lot of these kids have been wrestling since they were 5.

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  • UWMandSDSU
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by jackrabbit1979 View Post
    Is that someone we'd consider a miss?
    No. But it seems like Wombat wants all SD kids to come to SDSU.

    Leave a comment:


  • MontanaRabbit
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by jackrabbit1979 View Post
    Is that someone we'd consider a miss?
    Considering he's at Mary now, I'd say no.

    Leave a comment:


  • jackrabbit1979
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by UWMandSDSU View Post
    Dakota Galt. Went to Arizona State is now at UMary.
    Is that someone we'd consider a miss?

    Leave a comment:


  • jackrabbit1979
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by MontanaRabbit View Post
    Logan Storley and Robert Kokesh. Although those guys were before SDSU was relevant again.
    Yep - would have loved to have them and if SDSU was at the place we are at now when they were being recruited, I think there is a decent chance that we would have been in the running. Where our program was at when they were being recruited basically eliminated us.

    Leave a comment:


  • GopherHole
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by MontanaRabbit View Post
    Logan Storley and Robert Kokesh. Although those guys were before SDSU was relevant again.
    I'm just going off of active rosters, so that should give an idea of wrestlers who graduated high school in the last 4 or 5 years.

    A trend that I'm seeing is that outside of a couple, most SD wrestling talent is either going to SDSU, D2 or not wrestling in college. Outside of the two I found wrestling for NDSU and Nebraska, they just aren't out there. Makes me wonder if there is more of a need for coaching some of these kids in national tourneys during the summer. Our local high school in Kearney, NE has been sending top talent to Fargo Nationals for a number of years. Only one of those kids is at a D! program and the rest are at D2. Phillip Moomey is a kid I tried to get to Brookings, but he's at Cornell and doing well. He won Fargo Nationals and represented the US at an international tourney because of his exposure at Fargo. He'd likely be wrestling D2 if it were not for that exposure. Maybe we need more kids from SD competing at that level.

    Wombat - you may be on to something. Not specifically that Hahn's staff needs to work SD better, but that the talent in the state is not being challenged and exposed to more by not competing nationally.

    Leave a comment:


  • UWMandSDSU
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Dakota Galt. Went to Arizona State is now at UMary.

    Leave a comment:


  • MontanaRabbit
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by GopherHole View Post
    Wombat - you bring up great passion and thoughts to ponder. This friendly banter is making my day too.

    By the way, if you look at my post #50, you will see that I've found two native South Dakotans on other D1 rosters. Only David Jensen (Mobridge) from Nebraska has qualified for the NCAA's. I'm not digging yet either as I can't believe there are not more. There may be some credence to past talent from the state that have chose not to pursue collegiate wrestling at the D1 level.
    Logan Storley and Robert Kokesh. Although those guys were before SDSU was relevant again.

    Leave a comment:


  • GopherHole
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Wombat - you bring up great passion and thoughts to ponder. This friendly banter is making my day too.

    By the way, if you look at my post #50, you will see that I've found two native South Dakotans on other D1 rosters. Only David Jensen (Mobridge) from Nebraska has qualified for the NCAA's. I'm not digging yet either as I can't believe there are not more. There may be some credence to past talent from the state that have chose not to pursue collegiate wrestling at the D1 level.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheWombat
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    I just want to pause and say that I hope you all are having as much fun as I am. Getting into little forum debates like this are one of my favorite ways to pass the time (I got to look up the last 40 years of Iowa Hawkeye line-ups and I'm about to take a deep dive into the past five years of South Dakota recruits!) but I suspect that that isn't the case for everyone. If I detect that people are getting upset, I have no problem walking away from this one.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheWombat
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by UWMandSDSU View Post
    How do you know they are not doing all of what you say you want to happen w/ in-state recruiting? Are you aware of how they are handling their in-state recruiting or are you basing on that at what the current roster looks like? I am asking as I don't know.
    I don't know and If anyone does I'd love to hear it. But judging by the rate with which they pull wrestlers out of Iowa and Minnesota, where they are competing with other DI programs and some of the top DII and DIII programs in the country, they ought to be able to recruit in-state with incredible efficacy. They aren't doing that, in fact they are doing to opposite of that. If it isn't due to lack of recruiting talent, funding, or reputation which we know that it isn't. I don't know what to attribute it to outside of lack of interest or effort. Maybe there's some character issues that make them these kids unrecruitable or maybe they're all burned out on wrestling but you would have a hard time convincing me that they can't find a wrestler who is willing to be a jackrabbit that they can work with.

    Leave a comment:


  • jackrabbit1979
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by TheWombat View Post
    Yes, for what is likely the first time in their history (definitely the first time in at least 40 years) Iowa may have no native Iowans in their line-up at their conference tournament. That's as significant a stat as you're likely to find this year. It's important to note that almost all of their immediate back-ups are from Iowa, three of their four coaches are from Iowa, they do have 14 Iowans in the room (of 36 wrestlers) and they have three Iowan committed to the class of 2020 with another already committed to the class of 2021. It's not as if they're turned their back on their state, this is an aberration in the same way that it was when Minnesota started ten home grown wrestlers in a handful of duels a couple of years ago.

    I don't think that we're arguing against each other here. I would also like to have a dozen or so blue-chip, out-of-state recruits and if we ever put out a line-up of ten South Dakotans out at the big 12 tournament, I think that the coach should be fired. This is not a yes or no question, it's a question of degree. To what degree ought the coaching staff to focus on in-state recruiting? Right now, I'd say that that focus is probably minimal at best. Nine is a very low number of local wrestlers and, looking at high school results, I have to assume that at least four of them were unrecruited walk-ons. In a five year recruiting cycle, thats an average of one recruit a year, now they probably failed to retain a couple and maybe they recruited some that I though they didn't, so lets be generous and say it's two. Is it unreasonable to say that they ought to average more than one or two in-state recruits a year? I don't think they need to break the bank, but make a couple of phone calls, show up at club practices, watch a tournament or two and hold some roster spots for the ones who are going to go there anyway. Let's at least get some recruited walk-ons. What exactly is Rotert doing on staff as "Recruiting Coordinator" if he can't recruit his own state?
    Wombat - I'll ask my question again...who do you think this staff, or the staff before them, missed on in SD the last five years when SDSU wrestling has been relevant at the D1 level and had a chance to recruit talent? Who is having success elsewhere (as a starter, backup, etc.) that should be at SDSU if the staff would have put a little effort into SD as you referenced?

    Leave a comment:


  • UWMandSDSU
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by TheWombat View Post
    Yes, for what is likely the first time in their history (definitely the first time in at least 40 years) Iowa may have no native Iowans in their line-up at their conference tournament. That's as significant a stat as you're likely to find this year. It's important to note that almost all of their immediate back-ups are from Iowa, three of their four coaches are from Iowa, they do have 14 Iowans in the room (of 36 wrestlers) and they have three Iowan committed to the class of 2020 with another already committed to the class of 2021. It's not as if they're turned their back on their state, this is an aberration in the same way that it was when Minnesota started ten home grown wrestlers in a handful of duels a couple of years ago.

    I don't think that we're arguing against each other here. I would also like to have a dozen or so blue-chip, out-of-state recruits and if we ever put out a line-up of ten South Dakotans out at the big 12 tournament, I think that the coach should be fired. This is not a yes or no question, it's a question of degree. To what degree ought the coaching staff to focus on in-state recruiting? Right now, I'd say that that focus is probably minimal at best. Nine is a very low number of local wrestlers and, looking at high school results, I have to assume that at least four of them were unrecruited walk-ons. In a five year recruiting cycle, thats an average of one recruit a year, now they probably failed to retain a couple and maybe they recruited some that I though they didn't, so lets be generous and say it's two. Is it unreasonable to say that they ought to average more than one or two in-state recruits a year? I don't think they need to break the bank, but make a couple of phone calls, show up at club practices, watch a tournament or two and hold some roster spots for the ones who are going to go there anyway. Let's at least get some recruited walk-ons. What exactly is Rotert doing on staff as "Recruiting Coordinator" if he can't recruit his own state?
    How do you know they are not doing all of what you say you want to happen w/ in-state recruiting? Are you aware of how they are handling their in-state recruiting or are you basing on that at what the current roster looks like? I am asking as I don't know.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheWombat
    replied
    Re: Recruits

    Originally posted by GopherHole View Post
    First of all, I LOVE the debate going on with this thread. It shows how much passion there is for wrestling at SDSU. We are not that far removed from the days where this program was in serious consideration for being dropped.

    When I was reading about the debate of landing more top recruits, it made me wonder how the big time programs build their teams. I watched much of the Hawkeyes vs. Huskers dual Saturday night after tuning in to see Peyton Robb take the mat for the Huskers. Yep, the same Payton Robb who inititally committed to SDSU.

    The Hawkeyes have an impressive team. Many think this is the first team since the Gophers accomplished it in the early 2000's to potentially have All-Americans at every weight class. I looked at their roster and they have an impressive list, including 15 native sons wrestling for their homestate and legendary program. Care to guess how many wrestled against the Huskers? ZERO!

    Their starting lineup consisted of 5 from Pennsylvania, 3 from Illinois, and 1 each from Florida and Ohio. This is the #1 ranked team in the nation, with no native Iowan in the starting lineup. No doubt it is important for them to lockup the best talent from Iowa, but even the Hawkeyes have to load up their roster from out of state talent to compete at the highest level.

    I'd love to see 2-4 starters in our lineup from South Dakota, but I'm not willing to sacrifice competing at the highest level by not recruiting the best talent and students to Brookings. Stig and AJ have consistently built winning teams that are competitive at the highest levels with in-state talent. Just don't kid yourself, we have to build our team with talent from outside of our state border. Getting the best South Dakotans would be icing on the cake.
    Yes, for what is likely the first time in their history (definitely the first time in at least 40 years) Iowa may have no native Iowans in their line-up at their conference tournament. That's as significant a stat as you're likely to find this year. It's important to note that almost all of their immediate back-ups are from Iowa, three of their four coaches are from Iowa, they do have 14 Iowans in the room (of 36 wrestlers) and they have three Iowan committed to the class of 2020 with another already committed to the class of 2021. It's not as if they're turned their back on their state, this is an aberration in the same way that it was when Minnesota started ten home grown wrestlers in a handful of duels a couple of years ago.

    I don't think that we're arguing against each other here. I would also like to have a dozen or so blue-chip, out-of-state recruits and if we ever put out a line-up of ten South Dakotans out at the big 12 tournament, I think that the coach should be fired. This is not a yes or no question, it's a question of degree. To what degree ought the coaching staff to focus on in-state recruiting? Right now, I'd say that that focus is probably minimal at best. Nine is a very low number of local wrestlers and, looking at high school results, I have to assume that at least four of them were unrecruited walk-ons. In a five year recruiting cycle, thats an average of one recruit a year, now they probably failed to retain a couple and maybe they recruited some that I though they didn't, so lets be generous and say it's two. Is it unreasonable to say that they ought to average more than one or two in-state recruits a year? I don't think they need to break the bank, but make a couple of phone calls, show up at club practices, watch a tournament or two and hold some roster spots for the ones who are going to go there anyway. Let's at least get some recruited walk-ons. What exactly is Rotert doing on staff as "Recruiting Coordinator" if he can't recruit his own state?

    Leave a comment:

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