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I find the 2014 Louisiana class very interesting upon lookback accuracy of ratings
Posted on 7/24/25 at 12:49 am
Posted on 7/24/25 at 12:49 am
247 2014 Louisiana Recruti Rankings
Of all these guys, which Louisiana had 10 in the top 100 composite, I feel the best career of all these was Davon Godchaux who was rated around 200th best player in country.
Russel Gage was the lowest LSU Louisiana commit in 2014, a mid 3 star. He ended up putting up back to back 800 yard years in the NFL. Which is odd because he average 85 reception yards a year over 4 years at LSU. Ended with 340 total reception yards at LSU. He nearly tripled entire college output in 1 year in the NFL.
DJ Chark was near the very bottom 3 star of LSU commits on 247. 2nd round pick. Still in the league today. Had 4 seasons over 500 yards, and 1 over 1,000 yards.
Will Clapp started 14 games season before last on the Chargers I believe, and is one of lowest ranked recruits in that LSU class.
Cam Robinson has been an average OT in the NFL his entire career. That's still great to be a mid-grade starting tackle in the NFL. He's 29. OT can play longer into age. Does it match being rated as a Top 3 overall player in the class of 2014? Maybe not.
Fournette I'd say had a good NFL career. He had 6 solid years. I wouldn't say he matched a #4 pick expected production, but he finished top 8 in NFL in rushing yards 2 years, and then was an RB1 for the time. Just can't play more than that in the NFL at RB duration.
Most of these top Louisiana recruits didn't pan out. Even at the collegiate level didn't pan out. The lesson which I know is extremely hard to ignore, is that it's not just about ratings. Does a 5 star have a better shot at making the NFL than a 3 star? Yes. But it's not nearly as much as recruiting hawks put value in.
I do think that Transfer Ratings are much, much more accurate than high school recruit ratings because they have actual Power 4 level data to work with.
Of all these guys, which Louisiana had 10 in the top 100 composite, I feel the best career of all these was Davon Godchaux who was rated around 200th best player in country.
Russel Gage was the lowest LSU Louisiana commit in 2014, a mid 3 star. He ended up putting up back to back 800 yard years in the NFL. Which is odd because he average 85 reception yards a year over 4 years at LSU. Ended with 340 total reception yards at LSU. He nearly tripled entire college output in 1 year in the NFL.
DJ Chark was near the very bottom 3 star of LSU commits on 247. 2nd round pick. Still in the league today. Had 4 seasons over 500 yards, and 1 over 1,000 yards.
Will Clapp started 14 games season before last on the Chargers I believe, and is one of lowest ranked recruits in that LSU class.
Cam Robinson has been an average OT in the NFL his entire career. That's still great to be a mid-grade starting tackle in the NFL. He's 29. OT can play longer into age. Does it match being rated as a Top 3 overall player in the class of 2014? Maybe not.
Fournette I'd say had a good NFL career. He had 6 solid years. I wouldn't say he matched a #4 pick expected production, but he finished top 8 in NFL in rushing yards 2 years, and then was an RB1 for the time. Just can't play more than that in the NFL at RB duration.
Most of these top Louisiana recruits didn't pan out. Even at the collegiate level didn't pan out. The lesson which I know is extremely hard to ignore, is that it's not just about ratings. Does a 5 star have a better shot at making the NFL than a 3 star? Yes. But it's not nearly as much as recruiting hawks put value in.
I do think that Transfer Ratings are much, much more accurate than high school recruit ratings because they have actual Power 4 level data to work with.
This post was edited on 7/24/25 at 12:56 am
Posted on 7/24/25 at 9:34 am to Saunson69
quote:
Russel Gage was the lowest LSU Louisiana commit in 2014, a mid 3 star. He ended up putting up back to back 800 yard years in the NFL. Which is odd because he average 85 reception yards a year over 4 years at LSU. Ended with 340 total reception yards at LSU. He nearly tripled entire college output in 1 year in the NFL.
Is it all that odd, though?
Anthony Jennings
Brandon Harris
Danny Etling
But, even more importantly, Les Miles.
Posted on 7/24/25 at 10:45 am to GeauxldMember
This is by far the best argument. Still feel bad for Malachi Dupre
Posted on 7/24/25 at 4:21 pm to Nyctigah
Dupre wasn’t a football player. Baw was soft.
Posted on 7/24/25 at 5:56 pm to Saunson69
I agree with the point. The rankings guys will say the rankings evaluate where you're drafted 3-5 years down the line. For those purposes Robinson and Fournette wouldn't be considered busts at all and the rankers were right. But relative to their hype and expectations you can't help but feel unfulfilled by both pro careers. Robinson is far from elite and Fournette was no different than the other 90% of RBs that peak, get worn down and become a novice/situational back. Nothing special. The level of hype he reaped expected Derrick Henry. Thin line between great and solid.
Posted on 7/24/25 at 6:37 pm to Saunson69
quote:
Russel Gage was the lowest LSU Louisiana commit in 2014, a mid 3 star. He ended up putting up back to back 800 yard years in the NFL. Which is odd because he average 85 reception yards a year over 4 years at LSU. Ended with 340 total reception yards at LSU. He nearly tripled entire college output in 1 year in the NFL.
Nothing odd about it. Matt Canada only threw to backs and TEs, WRs only ran jet sweeps.
Posted on 7/24/25 at 6:40 pm to Saunson69
Davin Godchaux on pace to have the longest NFL career
Posted on 7/24/25 at 6:59 pm to Saunson69
Thank you for your insight
Posted on 7/26/25 at 10:23 am to Saunson69
quote:
Does a 5 star have a better shot at making the NFL than a 3 star? Yes. But it's not nearly as much as recruiting hawks put value in.
Looking only at this one year for LA only, I don’t see what you are seeing. 2 of 5 5* players had significant NFL careers. 2 of 16 4* players did enough in the NFL for you to specifically call out their careers. There are 45 3* players on the list. You only called out 2 for their play in the NFL. There would need to be 5-6 for the percentages to approach 4* and 18 to equal 5*.
Posted on 7/27/25 at 12:08 am to Saunson69
Chark and Godchaux may end up the best of the bunch. Fournette and Robinson have been solid pros, but were both 5 star prospects.
Posted on 7/27/25 at 12:43 am to GeauxldMember
I'm convinced Les would have never run the ball if he didn't have to. An absolute cancer to anyone contemplating a forward pass.
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