Signing Day is in the books, and if you missed out on how the top recruiting classes shook out, we thought we’d give you a quick synopsis. Here are the top 15, according to the 247Sports Composite.

No. 1: Alabama

For the seventh year in a row, Alabama is the recruiting king. This ended up being Bama’s highest-scoring class ever, partially because the Tide were able to take such a large class this year. The cherry on top is RB Najee Harris, the Composite No. 3 player in the country. Alabama’s class has more five-stars in it than any other team’s does because the rich need only get richer.

No. 2: Ohio State

The Buckeyes roll on with talent at all positions, but QB Tate Martell is the No. 2 ranked QB in the country and perhaps the biggest get. That’s thanks to the reliance on that position in Urban Meyer’s offense. The Buckeyes also sign the fewest players of anyone in the top 10 with only 21 players, giving them a very real quality-over-quantity argument.

No. 3: Georgia

This might just be the biggest story of Signing Day. The Bulldogs finishing this high is an absolute coup for Kirby Smart; he’s lapping the SEC East in doing so. Five-star Isaiah Wilson anchors this class, and possibly Georgia’s entire offense moving forward.

No. 4: USC

The Trojans haven’t done anything wrong since October, it seems like. Not only did they close strong for the 2016 season, they finished Signing Day strong, as well. They added six blue-chip commits on the day, two of them teammates from the same Los Angeles high school (five-star WR Joseph Lewis, four-star ATH Greg Johnson).

No. 5: Michigan

When you lose over 40 seniors, you’d better make the subsequent recruiting class count. It’s safe to say the Wolverines did. They landed DT Aubrey Solomon, who decommitted from the Wolverines and recommitted on Signing Day, which isn’t a common thing.

No. 6: Florida State

Florida and Miami can close strong, and the FAUs and USFs of the state can do what they like, but the Noles are still the recruiting power in the state. The massive get in this class was undoubtedly five-star Marvin Wilson, an absolute anchor of a defensive tackle. He committed with these incredible custom Jordans.

No. 7: LSU

Ace recruiter Ed Orgeron assembled a great class, though it had room to be better. The Tigers did keep up the DBU theme, with five-star Jacoby Stevens and some four-stars among their DB commits. This class will be judged on the QBs, however, specifically whether four-stars Myles Brennan or Lowell Narcisse can give the Tigers what they’ve been looking for.

No. 8: Oklahoma

The class didn’t have any five-stars, but it does have four-star guys in spades (18). Only Michigan has more of those. CB Justin Broiles leads the group as the No. 9 corner in the country. OU also totally dominates its conference, with four more blue-chips than the whole rest of the Big 12 signed.

No. 9: Auburn

Perhaps the quietest class in the country belonged to Gus Malzahn & Co., despite late-cycle turnover with the offensive coaching staff. Four-star DE Markaviest Bryant was a pleasant surprise, since he seemed to favor Georgia at one point. The most important signee, however, was Baylor transfer QB Jarrett Stidham, who is already on campus.

No. 10: Florida

Somehow the Gators snuck into the top 10 with a flurry of commitments on Signing Day, after quite a bit of doubt they’d finish higher than No. 15. Jim McElwain now has something to hang his hat on, recruiting-wise. They reversed course on four-star WR James Robinson to land a key Signing Day surprise.

No. 11: Notre Dame

Despite a 4-8 season, the Fighting Irish still had an impressive class. The school’s brand will always be strong, no matter what the team does on the field. Four-star TE Brock Wright is an elite prospect at the position and can both block and catch at a high level.

No. 12: Texas A&M

Who knows if September Sumlin will again falter during the season, but the Aggies again bank a talented class. They lay claim to the state’s recruiting title, and it wasn’t close. QB Kellen Mond could be the future at the position as the No. 3 dual threat signal-caller in the country.

No. 13: Miami

The Canes finished strong this cycle, the first full one under Mark Richt. If channeling the old days of The U is ever going to happen again, Signing Day is where it starts. Four-star WR Jeff Thomas can channel those days, because this NSD commit can flat-out fly.

No. 14: Stanford

What the Cardinal’s class lacks in quantity — 14 signees — it more than makes up for in quality. Stanford signed the best player in the country at two positions (five-star pro-style QB Davis Mills and five-star TE Coby Parkinson). They missed on the top OT, but it’s cool, because they signed Nos. 2 and 3 (five-star Foster Sarell and five-star Walker Little).

No. 15: Penn State

The Nittany Lions barely edged out Clemson for this spot in the Composite rankings. It’s the third-best class in the Big Ten, but Penn State will increasingly have to deal with Maryland challenging for this mantle after what the Terps did. Lamont Wade is the player this class will hang its hat on, a four-star CB who is the fifth-best player at the position in the country.