Scofrosghost
New member
I don’t know about you guys but I personally love that there are no SEC teams in the natty.
Fluke or parity?
Fluke or parity?
The start of much needed parity. NIL/transfer portal makes it a lot tougher for the Bama, Georgia, tOSU of the world to consistently hoard 5 star talent across the depth chart. Bama was the only team in the playoff who's starting QB didn't start their career elsewhere.I don’t know about you guys but I personally love that there are no SEC teams in the natty.
Fluke or parity?
I don’t know about you guys but I personally love that there are no SEC teams in the natty.
Fluke or parity?
But next year with 12 the playoff it is going to be the B1G/SEC invitational.
2 years in a row now that a team made the final with around a 30th average recruiting class rank in the past 5 season. Last year it didnt end so well but this Washington team is much better than TCU.
That stat is pretty crazy. Penix was a world beater this year, though.
I had thought that Jalen Milroe wasn't maybe up to snuff with some more recent Alabama QB's but then I looked up his passing stats for the year...he had a 65.8% completion percentage this year, along with 23 TD's and 6 INT's.
Kind of reinforces how you pretty much don't make it to the top these days without an elite QB. Good thing we have one coming in.
I still think last years game could have easily been Michigan vs tOSU had a few things gone differently.
Michigan gave that game on a platter. tOSU had their chances.
Yes, you can do ifs all day long and that is what I’m doing. But it’s applicable to this thread.Yes but you could say that about so many football games, right? In the Michigan vs. TCU game, the turnover margin was 0 (both teams had 3 turnovers). Michigan's defense just didn't really show up to play, IMO. Giving up 488 yards on defense puts you in a position to lose just about any game you're playing in that position.
There is parity. It's been here for a bit. For example,
Kansas won 9 games this year.
Kansas State won 9 games this year.
Missouri (SEC) went 11-2 and beat Ohio State.
Oklahoma State won 10 games for the 8th time since 2010. They have won 11 or 12 games in a season 3 different years.
Baylor has won 10 games in a year, 6 times since 2011. And they won 11 games in a year 4 times. Played in CCG twice in 5 years and won it once. They even had a Heisman Winner 2011 Before 2011, they typically won 2 or 3 games when they joined the Big 12 in 1997. Occasionally 4 games.
Look at what Duke and Kentucky have been able to do recently. Even Pitt had a heisman candidate a few years ago. Wake Forest wins. Oregon State wins, Northwestern wins, Purdue wins, Minnesota wins. Sure it's up and down at times, but still shows there is parity.