Oh okay.
So it was more of a case of Brohm making Hazell look like the top recruiter of the bunch by figuring out a way to win with the mess that he left in his wake.
Makes sense.
But yeah, Hope and Hazell were back to back duds for the Boilers; aside from of course their propensity to give OSU fits. Tiller and Brohm are clearly the best coaches to take bites out of the range covered by this list. But it was the last two Tiller years, which were somewhat craptastic iirc.
Yeah, Brohm took Hazell's recruits and scrapped and clawed to two .500 regular season finishes, before an injury-derailed 2019 dropped to 4-8.
Whereas I still say Jim Colletto did a decent job as a recruiter, but not as a coach, which is why Tiller came in and turned a team that had gone 3-8 the year before into an 8-3 squad which then won its bowl game to finish 9-3.
Tiller's problem is that he never quite turned his on-field success into recruiting wins. He came into the conference with a dynamic spread offense that Big Ten defenses weren't even equipped to defend. They didn't have the rosters or the schemes to defend 5 wide when the rest of the conference was ground & pound. In a way it was similar to Mike Leach, although he wasn't of the "air raid" lineage.
But eventually teams started recruiting differently, and Tiller couldn't adapt. He got to the point that if he had equal talent to his opponent [or better], Tiller was great. If he was facing a team with legit top-end talent, they'd just jam receivers at the LOS with press man coverage, completely disrupt the timing of the offense, and a QB like Curtis Painter wasn't good enough to overcome it. And even then he had 10 of 12 years with >.500 finishes.
Tiller went out leaving the cupboard not exactly bare, but not great for Hope, too. His final season was the end of the road for top passer Curtis Painter, top rusher & #4 receiver Kory Sheets, and the #1 and #2 pass-catchers in Greg Orton and Desmond Tardy. There were still some good players on that roster in 2009; quite a few on the defensive side of the ball. But Tiller's recruiting was NEVER stellar.