
Blue Ribbon writes:
"It's possible that no team in ACC history has ever started a season with as little experience on hand [as Donahue's 2011-2012 Boston College team]. Donahue will open the year with two sophomores... a junior transfer... and a senior transfer... Everybody else who will play this year is a freshman -- and it's not an especially well-regarded class by the recruiting gurus. 'We're convinced we got great kids,' Donahue said, disputing the rankings. There's a common theme -- they can all shoot the ball, pass the ball and dribble the ball. The guys who rank recruits usually look for length and athleticism. 'We're not always able to compete for that type of prospect. We think this the best way to go.' That strategy worked for Donahue at Cornell, where he built an Ivy League powerhouse, breaking the Penn/Princeton stranglehold on that conference. He did it with a similar recruiting strategy & and a similar foundation class. That was in 2006-07, when Donahue's Big Red opened the season by winning at Northwestern with four freshmen and sophomore Adam Gore in the starting lineup. Late in that game, Gore blew out his knee and was lost for the season -- leaving Donahue's 2006 recruiting class to carry the load. 'It was midway through that year that we sensed they were something special,' Donahue said. They were holding their own. They finished 9-5 in the league. That class would anchor three straight Ivy League championship teams. As seniors, they led the Big Red to 29 wins and the NCAA Sweet 16... even if the Eagles do take a beating this season, withhold judgment for another year or two until we see whether this bunch of recruits can grow up like his Cornell class of 2006-07 did."
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