I used to love to mock McDonald’s All-Americans who were busts in college. But over time I realized how much noise there is in the recruiting rankings. Outside the top-10, players are rarely a sure thing. A few years ago Steward Mandel asked a more provocative question about the recruiting rankings. He asked whether Duke was really getting elite players, or whether Blue Devils recruits only earned their ranking because they had a scholarship offer from Mike Krzyzewski.

Last fall, I came up with a new methodology to address this question. Using player data I looked to see which coach’s recruits have performed at the highest level. And then I looked to see which coach’s players developed the most over their careers. I am now launching the second version of those rankings that includes several important improvements.

- I now include data from the 2011-12 season. There are now 10 years of data in my analysis.

- I now control for shot volume. Last fall North Carolina’s recruits looked inefficient relative to Notre Dame’s recruits because Roy Williams allows his first year players take a high volume of shots while Mike Brey does not. I use the 1 to 1.25 ratio often cited by NBA folks as the proper tradeoff for shot-volume and efficiency.

- I now group freshmen recruits and transfers into the same recruiting category. When I presented the numbers last fall, Stan Heath looked like he was great at player development because his juniors far out-shined his freshmen. But many of his juniors were transfers, not returning players. Thus I now group transfers in with freshmen recruits. (See Recruiting Rank in the table.)

- Of course, if you group freshmen and transfers, then transfer-dominated teams will fly up the recruiting rankings. So I equalize the value of recruits based on the average development between freshmen and junior year. (Or senior year if appropriate, although transfers disproportionately join teams as juniors.)

- Next, I solve what I like to call the Frank Haith dilemma. A number of people have said you can’t evaluate Frank Haith this season because he inherited Mike Anderson’s players. But when you have 10 years of player data at your fingertips as I do, it is pretty easy. For a typical coach with Missouri’s returning roster, average player efficiency would jump by 3.6. But under Frank Haith, average player efficiency has jumped 8.6 points. That may not prove Frank Haith is the right choice in the long-run, but for this season he has more than doubled the player development of an average coach.

In general, instead of looking at the current rating, I now evaluate the average improvement of returning sophomores, returning juniors, and returning seniors. Instead of the current efficiency, I look at the change in efficiency. For those of you that feel that Bruce Weber only went to the Final Four because he had Bill Self’s players, the rankings now reflect that. To the extent Bruce Weber transformed Luther Head into an efficient senior, he gets credit. But to the extent that Roger Powell was already an efficient post player, Weber does not get credit.

- I examine sophomores, juniors and seniors separately because sophomores tend to develop at a much more rapid rate. Then I calculate the three-year player development total, the sum of the development for returning sophomores, returning juniors, and returning seniors for each coach. (See Development Rank in the table.)

- Because a change in a starter’s efficiency is much more important than a change in a bench player’s efficiency, all figures are based on a weighted average. Weights are based on the percentage of the team’s total possessions used on the season.

- For the Recruiting Rank, I believe it only makes sense to incorporate the school where the coach is currently employed. Sean Miller gets a different caliber of player at Arizona than he did at Xavier. (See the column Tenure in the table for the number of years at the current school.) But when looking at how Miller develops players, I think we can learn from how he improved players at Xavier too. Thus the Development Rank includes data at all schools that the coach has been at in the last 10 years. (See the column All in the table for the years of player development data.)

- Next, as a hypothetical exercise, I ask what coach would have the most efficient seniors if he recruited freshmen and they stuck around for four years. I take the recruiting rank plus the three-year development rank, and calculate the efficiency of a fourth year player under the coach. (See Overall Rank in the table.) What the table suggests is that if you combined John Calipari’s recruiting with his player development, he would be the top offensive coach in the nation. Of course this is just a hypothetical exercise. John Calipari has not consistently had the top offensive team in the country at Kentucky because of players leaving for the NBA. But for coaches with normal rates of attrition the exercise makes a lot more sense. Andy Kennedy and Leonard Hamilton have been fairly equivalent, but they have succeeded in different ways. Kennedy has built his offense with recruiting while Hamilton has been more effective at developing returning players into stars.

- Finally, very unusual things tend to happen in a coach’s first year with his new team. (Just ask Tom Crean.) Therefore I give 50% less weight to a coach’s first season in a new job. I also only include coaches with at least three years of tenure in the table, and there are 49 of these in the Power 6 conferences.

Coach

Team

Tenure

All

Recruiting

Rank

Development

Rank

Overall

Rank

John Calipari

Kentucky

3

10

1st

35th

1st

Thad Matta

Ohio St.

8

10

3rd

12th

2nd

Bo Ryan

Wisconsin

10

10

17th

2nd

3rd

Mike Krzyzewski

Duke

10

10

4th

18th

4th

John Beilein

Michigan

5

10

14th

8th

5th

Lorenzo Romar

Washington

10

10

19th

4th

6th

Mike Montgomery

California

4

6

25th

5th

7th

Bill Self

Kansas

9

10

7th

21st

8th

Rick Barnes

Texas

10

10

2nd

37th

9th

Jim Boeheim

Syracuse

10

10

6th

29th

10th

Buzz Williams

Marquette

4

5

26th

9th

11th

Ben Howland

UCLA

9

10

12th

25th

12th

Jay Wright

Villanova

10

10

24th

14th

13th

Tom Izzo

Michigan St.

10

10

20th

19th

14th

Roy Williams

N. Carolina

9

10

5th

40th

15th

Jamie Dixon

Pittsburgh

9

9

13th

32nd

16th

Bob Huggins

W. Virginia

5

9

15th

24th

17th

Kevin Stallings

Vanderbilt

10

10

31st

13th

18th

Jim Calhoun

Connecticut

10

10

18th

26th

19th

Mike Brey

Notre Dame

10

10

10th

38th

20th

Sean Miller

Arizona

3

8

29th

17th

21st

Billy Donovan

Florida

10

10

8th

43rd

22nd

Frank Martin

Kansas St.

5

5

9th

45th

23rd

John Thompson

Georgetown

8

10

22nd

27th

24th

Tony Bennett

Virginia

3

6

33rd

15th

25th

Travis Ford

Okl. St.

4

10

38th

7th

26th

Tubby Smith

Minnesota

5

10

32nd

16th

27th

Matt Painter

Purdue

7

8

37th

10th

28th

Mark Fox

Georgia

3

8

47th

1st

29th

Craig Robinson

Oregon St.

4

6

46th

3rd

30th

Herb Sendek

Arizona St.

6

10

28th

31st

31st

Tom Crean

Indiana

4

10

27th

34th

32nd

Andy Kennedy

Mississippi

6

7

16th

44th

33rd

Leonard Hamilton

Florida St.

10

10

43rd

11th

34th

Ken Bone

Wash. St.

3

7

34th

28th

35th

Johnny Dawkins

Stanford

4

4

30th

36th

36th

Rick Pitino

Louisville

10

10

11th

49th

37th

Scott Drew

Baylor

9

10

23rd

46th

38th

Rick Stansbury

Miss. St.

10

10

21st

47th

39th

Seth Greenberg

V. Tech

9

10

42nd

20th

40th

Bruce Weber

Illinois

9

10

40th

22nd

41st

Bill Carmody

Northwestern

10

10

35th

41st

42nd

Trent Johnson

LSU

4

10

45th

23rd

43rd

Kevin O'Neill

USC

3

4

48th

6th

44th

Anthony Grant

Alabama

3

6

41st

33rd

45th

Darrin Horn

S. Carolina

4

9

39th

42nd

46th

Mick Cronin

Cincinnati

6

9

36th

48th

47th

Doc Sadler

Nebraska

6

8

44th

39th

48th

Stan Heath

USF

5

10

49th

30th

49th

- Cal doesn’t exactly have UCLA’s prestige, but Mike Montgomery chugs along developing players, just as he did at Stanford.

- And Mark Fox has truly been fantastic at getting the most out of his players. Nevada is better this season, but there was clearly a gigantic drop-off when he left the school.

- Rick Barnes is a better recruiter than Bill Self, but he is not nearly as good at player development. But if Barnes' players weren’t leaving for the NBA at such a ridiculous rate, he would probably look very similar to Bill Self.

Many other coaches have struggled:

- What is scary is that Kevin O’Neill has actually been very good at developing players at USC. But the cupboard has been more than bare. NCAA sanctions and a run of injuries will do that.

- Rick Pitino is shockingly low on this list, and I think injuries are a large reason why he has struggled to develop players at Louisville. His success at Louisville has also mostly been fueled on the defensive end of the court.

- Anthony Grant also has his defense to fall back on, but his inability to develop consistent offensive players at Alabama is starting to be a concern.

- Over his tenure at Illinois, Bruce Weber has not been able to get much out of freshmen whether they have a RSCI Ranking next to their name or not.

- Darrin Horn’s player development looks bad at 42nd, and that is giving him credit for what he did developing players at Western Kentucky. If this only included his time at South Carolina, his ranking would be worse.

- Mick Cronin and Stan Heath want you to evaluate them based on the recent trend, not their full tenure. But most of their success has come from defense not offense.

Three thoughts on coaches not listed:

- Penn St.’s Ed Chambers got a late start on the job, had almost no chance to recruit, and has had very little production out of his first year players. (This is why I give 50% weight to a coach’s first season.)

- But Arkansas’ Mike Anderson, Rutgers’ Mike Rice Jr., Iowa’s Fran McCaffery, and Providence’s Ed Cooley are achieving some early recruiting success.

- Because of the team’s overall record, Cuonzo Martin is not getting enough credit, but he has done wonder’s developing Tennessee’s returning players this season.

Two final thoughts on the table:

-All schools suffer some attrition, so I am probably punishing the good recruiters too much in the overall rank column.

- To the extent that the great coaches can get freshmen to reach their potential sooner, they may look like stronger recruiters in my table. “Recruiting Rank” could very easily be called “Recruiting Rank plus First Year Development.”