A look at how Brent Venables defensive recruiting stacks up vs. team recruiting rankings over the last decade

A look at how Brent Venables defensive recruiting classes stack up nationally by average composite rating for the last decade.

A lot has been made of the Oklahoma Sooners’ current ranking in the 2023 cycle. They’re currently No. 35 in the team recruiting rankings over at 247Sports after picking up a commitment from linebacker Phil Picciotti on the Fourth of July.

We’ve preached patience as recruiting classes aren’t built in June or July, and the Oklahoma Sooners and the rest of the country are still eight months away from national signing day. Recall that Brent Venables needed two months on the job at OU to take the Sooners recruiting class from No. 28 in the country after Lincoln Riley left to a class that finished No. 8 in the country for the 2022 cycle.

That’s pretty good. Now imagine what he’ll be able to accomplish with a full year to recruit for the 2023 class.

With Venables, the Sooners recruiting classes will be more marathon vs. sprint in the race for the nation’s top recruits. The Sooners would prefer their players not to visit other teams after they commit, so players trending to Oklahoma will not likely commit until they’ve gone through their entire process. This means the Sooners may not do well in May or June of a recruiting cycle, but July and August should be fruitful months full of commitments to Oklahoma.

However, there’s been some question about how well Venables can recruit. So, I took a look back at the last decade, predominantly from his time at Clemson to see how well he performed relative to the rest of the country. Taking the average score for the commits on the defensive side of the ball for each class over the last decade, we compared that average rating with the average team score for the rest of the country to see how they compared.

If Clemson’s recruiting class in 2018, 2020, or 2021 had been strictly defensive players, the Tigers would have finished with the highest average among their commitments. Those classes were all top 10, but team recruiting rankings are based on a total score, not an average, so they finished seventh, third, and fifth instead of No. 1.

Here is a synopsis of what we’re looking at here.

  • The comparison is Brent Venables defensive recruiting classes on average using the 247Sports composite rating for each player in the class and comparing that to the team recruiting rankings from 247Sports.
  • Removed Clemson’s 2012 recruiting class as Venables was just getting started with the Tigers.
  • I allowed Venables to get partial credit for both Clemson and Oklahoma’s 2022 recruiting classes. He was a big part of Clemson’s 2022 recruiting cycle but wasn’t there to finish it and the class would have been better had Jaren Kanak not flipped. Conversely, he was a huge part of recovering Oklahoma’s 2022 class after Lincoln Riley left, but several players were also recruited under the previous regime.

Venables’ defense has helped quite a few players get selected in the top 100 of the NFL draft over the last decade, and there’s little doubt he’s going to help Oklahoma defenders hear their names called early in future NFL drafts.

Of course, Venables isn’t solely responsible for how well a recruiting class turns out. Dabo Swinney played a big part in that too and so Venable’s defensive assistants. But as the defensive coordinator, the buck stopped with Brent Venables. He’d be responsible for how well or poorly they recruited.