A college program can rank high-school, JUCO, and portal targets on one scale, the amateur KR, by how much each moves the team, and the recruiting decision is a bet with its confidence. The engine reads three different pools as comparable numbers through KLVN, each at the confidence its data supports, then ranks the board not by raw grade but by team-KR movement, against the program's real gaps, its park, and its level. And it treats the shifting amateur rules and dollars as the contested, current-as-of constraints they are, held in the Amateur Money Reference rather than presented as settled fact.
The engine reads all three target pools on the one amateur KR scale through KLVN, so a high schooler, a JUCO arm, and a portal transfer are comparable numbers, each at the confidence its data supports. Then the board is ranked not by raw KR but by team-KR movement: how much each target moves this specific program's Team KR, given its roster gaps, park, and level.
Three intake pools, one amateur KR scale, and a board ranked by how much each target moves this program, not by his raw number. The highest-graded target, the 86 high schooler, ranks third here, because the ranking is team-KR movement and his band is the widest and his position the deepest. One currency across three pools, ranked by team movement, not raw grade.
Illustrative engine read on the real one-currency recruiting board (HS, JUCO, and portal on the amateur KR scale through KLVN, ranked by team-KR movement, each at pool-appropriate confidence). Composite program and recruits, demonstration figures.
The program's three-phase coverage is folded in: a target that fills a real hole, an up-the-middle glove, a left-handed bat, a leverage arm, moves the team more than a higher-KR target at a position of strength. The recruiting value is team-relative, so the same player is a different priority at two programs.
Fill a real hole and a target moves the team well beyond its raw grade; add to a strength and it barely moves the needle. The same 82 bat is a top priority at one program and an afterthought at another, because recruiting value is team-relative and read against the program's actual gaps. A target that fills a hole beats a higher grade at a position of strength, every time.
Illustrative engine read on the real team-relative recruiting value (the same player priced against two programs' three-phase coverage, the gap read that makes him a different priority at each). Composite player and programs, demonstration figures.
The recruiting and signing calendar and the moving amateur rules ride the board as constraints: the eligibility clock, the House-settlement roster regime, and the proposed draft overhaul, all flagged current-as-of and contested. A draft-eligible target carries the draft as an outside option, and the recruiting read prices what it takes to land or keep him against that option.
The calendar gates when a target can commit, the eligibility clock and the House-settlement regime shape what the board can hold, and a draft-eligible target is priced against the draft as his outside option, all at rules flagged contested and current-as-of. The engine treats the shifting amateur landscape as the moving constraint it is. The amateur rules are moving constraints, flagged current-as-of, not settled facts the board pretends to know.
Illustrative engine read on the real recruiting calendar and contested landscape (the signing calendar, eligibility clock, House-settlement regime, proposed draft overhaul, the draft as a draft-eligible target's outside option), flagged v0 and current-as-of. Composite targets, demonstration figures.
Recruiting is one board in one currency, ranked by how much a target moves this team, not by his raw grade. The engine prices a high schooler, a JUCO player, and a portal transfer on the same scale at honest confidence, the high schooler the widest band and the portal player with production the tightest, reads each against the program's real gaps, and treats the shifting amateur rules as the moving constraints they are, flagged current-as-of and held in the Reference. The board answers a team question, not a talent-ranking one.
Recruiting reads high-school, JUCO, and portal targets on the one amateur KR scale, ranks them by how much each moves this program, prices every target against the real gaps, and treats the amateur rules and dollars as the contested, current-as-of constraints they are.