As you know, the first round of the NFL Draft is in the books, which can only mean one thing: It's time for the annual trip into the recruiting archives to get a kick out of how badly the rankings whiffed on today's heroes when they were mere teenage pups. Here's the Cliff's Notes version of Thursday's first-round crop as Rivals saw them as high school prospects three to five years ago:
2011 First-Round Picks by Recruiting Ranking
Click on the player's name to go to his high school recruiting profile.
Five-Star (7): Cam Newton; A.J. Green; Patrick Peterson; Julio Jones; Tyron Smith; Blaine Gabbert; Jonathan Baldwin.
Four-Star (12): Von Miller; Jake Locker; Robert Quinn; Mike Pouncey; Corey Liuget; Adrian Clayborn; Phil Taylor; Danny Watkins; James Carpenter; Mark Ingram; Cameron Heyward; Derek Sherrod.
Three-Star (11): Marcell Dareus; Aldon Smith; Christian Ponder; Nick Fairley; Ryan Kerrigan; Nate Solder; Prince Amukamara; Cameron Jordan; Jimmy Smith; Gabe Carimi; Muhammad Wilkerson.
Two-Star (2): J.J. Watt; Anthony Castonzo.
Even by first round standards, it's a top-heavy group: Six of the top 10 were accorded five-star status as recruits, which is even more impressive when you consider just how few players make up the upper crust in recruiting rankings. Using Rivals' ratings, five-star players make up a little more than one percent of all Division I-A signees every year, and four-star players less than 12 percent; a full 87 percent of incoming players are rated three stars or lower. (In Rivals' system, all DI-A signees are automatically granted two-star status; walk-ons are usually unranked.) But that group produced a grand total of 13 picks Thursday night from a cast of more than 10,000 last year.
Which sounds about right. Based on data from the recruiting classes (2003-08) that have supplied the last five draft classes (2007-11), five-star players go in the first round at a rate of about 1 in 6.5 — that is, one of every 6.5 five-star signees goes on to become a first-rounder — almost 13 times better than the average for all players, which consistently hovers around one first-rounder for every 83 signees across the board. It's a fairly predictable pattern:
The bottom of that graph really doesn't do justice to the huge gulf between the ratio of four-star prospects who go in the first round (roughly 1 in 22, on average) and the ratio of two-star/walk-on players who go in the first round (roughly 1 in 300) but you get the idea: The four and five-star players, a group that makes up a little under 13 percent of the entire population of college players, accounts for just shy of 60 percent of first-rounders.
If that trend looks familiar to regular readers, it should: The distribution of All-Americans in the star system is nearly identical, year after year. Funny how the probabilities never seem to change.
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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.
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