They just don't want to face it rb23. The kids in that class were there since grade school with 95% since kindergarten. But all they can do is look at that little number the ohsaa puts out there. It all comes down to Ironton doesn't have the staff to coach up their own like the burg does so they have to bring in a bunch of talent from numerous schools. I promise you 2 things.RBH23 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 19, 2023 7:09 pmSo based on your logic, since Perkins counts as a Tier 0 (does not add anything to CB), he did not transfer into Ironton?Ironmen98 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 19, 2023 11:57 amHomegrown kids from other school districts. Check the above numbers.RBH23 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 19, 2023 11:34 am
The numbers are not the problem, your understanding and interpretation is.
CB is not a good indicator of transfers. Why? Because if the family moves into the school district, the kid is a tier 0; adds nothing to the CB even though this is obviously a transfer.
So back to my point, Burg rarely gets high school transfers, and their CB number is mostly due to kids that have been in the systems from k-12. And yet they produce winning programs with their homegrown kids. Have won many state titles!
A kid who went to a school since kindergarten but lives in a another school district (on the border)? A transfer.
A kid who moves to another high school starting his junior year? Not a transfer.
That is what you are claiming by blindly pointing at the CB number. You are so obsessed over the CB number that you have forgotten what the word “transfer” means.
1. If burg coaching staff had the talent Ironton has brought in in the last 4 years they would have at least 2 rings.
2. If Ironton would have the talent burg has had the last 4 years they would be lucky to make the playoffs.