
Not too long ago Stanford football was operating with a questionable recruiting model. The coaches seemed to be recruiting by waiting until January, then contacting the handful of high school athletes who A) qualified academically for admission to the University and B) still hadn't yet accepted scholarship offers to any other schools. The results on the field reflected the quality of this plan.
Things have obviously changed in recent years, as evidenced by the highly-ranked recruiting classes brought to the Farm over the past four years. (Stanford's recruting rankings according to Rivals.com from 2006-2011: 54th, 51st, 50th, 20th, 26th, 22nd, and 5th. Of course, it should be noted that that '08 class, initially ranked 50th, included Andrew Luck, David DeCastro, Jonathan Martin, and Chase Thomas. Not bad.)
All the credit for this turnaround was initially given to Jim Harbaugh, a human force of nature who convinced an entire university that Stanford could actually field a competitive football team. But when Harbaugh left, not only did the recruiting success continue, it actually elevated. David Shaw and his staff, most notably last year's National Recruiter of the Year, Lance Anderson, and current recruiting coordinator, Mike Sanford, have built on Harbaugh's momentum, and last February they signed what could be the best recruiting class in school history. Heck, they've even got a secret weapon in Condi Rice.
But is that all it is? A few dynamic personalities drawing some of the nation's top football players to a place that was irrelevant in the college football world as recently as five years ago?