I think it is ludicrous and outdated to suggest that our program should live and die by NYC recruits. Yes, I want to recruit good players from NY/NJ, but as many have stated, the reality is that many of those with similar (or better) programs chasing them want to get away from the area. We landed Harkless, Obekpa, Felix and ADR. Missed on Briscoe, Kyle, Lawrence, and Whitehead, but not because of a lack of pursuit. Maybe we lost McCullough because Lavin and Co. got outworked - or maybe he went to Syracuse, following the long line of NYC/NJ kids who have gone that route. As long as we are bringing in quality players, I don't care where they are from. I don't think anyone minds all of the good players we've brought in from the Midwest or Southeast. That is something prior coaches couldn't do, and I give Lavin all the credit in the world for getting that done. If I'm choosing between a local recruit and one from another state of equal skill, sure I'd like to have my fair share of NY/NJ players, because there is something to be said for keeping those in your backyard home. But if we miss on a NY/NJ kid and get an equal caliber player from Texas, Ohio, Michigan, Louisiana, etc -- I have no issue with that. Too long we ignored the fact that while NY/NJ kids may want to get away from the area for college, plenty of top players view NY and MSG as a destination.
The last two recruiting cycles were not a bust because we missed on NY kids. It was because we missed on players who could contribute meaningful minutes to this year's squad. Had we pulled in a couple of good players from outside the area, no one would care and the lack of depth this year wouldn't be an issue.
The problem with the Lavin era has been defining player roles, X's and O's and, to some extent, player development (which goes hand in hand with defining roles). Five of our best 6 players were ranked between 20 and 60 by most publications, and Phil was a borderline top 100 kid. The issue is that the cover looks fairly bare next year because of the last two cycles.