All of this is true. But it was certainly regional. Nobody had the resources to rank recruits from coast to coast.
@SWFLHurricane and I have discussed the great Bill Buchalter, but he was based in Orlando, so anyone he ranked outside the southeast was based on word-of-mouth and the occasional videotape. Bill was great at talking to guys from all over, but he still had a limited radius, just like everyone else (though he had some of the best info of anyone at the time, an amazing memory, and a
@Liberty City El like ability to compile the facts and stats and recall it all.
So, yes, there were rankings before Rivals/Scout, but they were inherently limited in scope. The "Parade All Americans" were based on hype. Not that there wasn't some accuracy, but that the Parade kids were the product of "this is the best kid in our area" and was not an exhaustive list.
It's hard to compare apples-to-oranges when you look at the pre-internet era and the Rivals/Scout era and beyond. Obviously, there were "highly-recruited" kids even in the pre-internet era, but it's misleading to call them "2-star" or "5-star" when there was no consensus. That's why it's funny to hear guys referring to star-ratings for recruits who never had star-ratings.