I enjoyed this...
995 Percent!
Also, in looking at the Pro Football Hall of Fame...
http://www.profootballhof.com/history/general/draft/round.aspx
104 members were 1st Round Draft Picks (46.84%)
32 members were 2nd Round Draft Picks (14.41%)
21 members were 3rd Round Draft Picks (9.46%)
8 members were 4th Round Draft Picks
6 members were 5th Round Draft Picks
1 member was a 6th Round Draft Pick
9 members were 7th Round Draft Picks
3 members were 8th Round Draft Picks
5 members were 9th Round Draft Picks
2 members were 10th Round Draft Picks
1 member was an 11th Round Draft Pick
2 members were 12th Round Draft Picks
1 member was a 13th Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 14th Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 15th Round Draft Pick
2 members were 17th Round Draft Picks
1 member was an 18th Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 19th Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 20th Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 21st Round Draft Pick
1 member was a 27th Round Draft Pick
18 members were either a "special" selection or not drafted.
In other words, 157 members of the Hall of Fame (70.72%) were drafted in the first three rounds. 65 members were drafted after the fourth round, or not at all.
Exactly.
Nobody is saying that every 4 or 5 star recruit is going to be a hall of famer. However, to ignore the evidence that those players are
usually far more successful and say that Rankings are meaningless is simply being willfully ignorant of clear data to the contrary. Rankings are not a perfect measure, but historically, they have done a pretty good job.
Congrats to all those teams with good recruiting classes...I was quite pleased to see Clemson finish with a top 5 class. Not so coincidentally, Clemson's rise back to prominence also coincided with the Tigers' recruiting classes being higher ranked.