Pretty sure it was Texas fansKansas fans trolling Texas with SEC chant![]()
He really wasn't a good OC for the Falcons eitherSark was awful at UW. Then he failed again at USC. People assumed two years as an assistant under Saban would undo 7 years of previous poor head coaching? LOL.
Its going to get really expensive really fast for Texas to undo this mess.
The color guy on the Kansas game had some of the most insane takes ever too. Thought a 20 year FG was harder than a 35. Kept asking out loud what the analytics “book” had to say about certain calls. Just really insane.
The color guy on the Kansas game had some of the most insane takes ever too. Thought a 20 year FG was harder than a 35. Kept asking out loud what the analytics “book” had to say about certain calls. Just really insane.
Commitment and opportunity. UF’s revenue is double Ole Miss…recruiting isn’t comparable…and you get out of the division and neighborhood of the GOAT.But why?
I know Mississippi is not a dream destination, but neither is Tuscaloosa, AL. I assume Ole Miss can match money. Seems to me that The Grove represents a cushy job in the heart of a recruiting hotbed.
I know Texas is having a rough patch right now, but you gotta give Kansas big time credit for playing hard and believing they could win.
Leipold didn't even get on campus until MAY of this year.
Those kids have played hard for him all year and let's be honest - their talent cupboard is pretty bare compared to a program like Texas. But he's done a great job so far.
The big knock on Leipold here was recruiting. His classes at UB were consistently bottom-half of the conference, somewhere in the 100-ish range nationwide. Coming from D-3 in Wisconsin, he did not have the established pipelines that you'd hope most coaches would.I know Texas is having a rough patch right now, but you gotta give Kansas big time credit for playing hard and believing they could win.
Leipold didn't even get on campus until MAY of this year.
Those kids have played hard for him all year and let's be honest - their talent cupboard is pretty bare compared to a program like Texas. But he's done a great job so far.
Thanks for the info. Hopefully he has some good recruiters on his staff to help things.The big knock on Leipold here was recruiting. His classes at UB were consistently bottom-half of the conference, somewhere in the 100-ish range nationwide. Coming from D-3 in Wisconsin, he did not have the established pipelines that you'd hope most coaches would.
Where he excels is maximizing the talent of the players he does have, and finding some diamonds-in-the-rough under-the-radar guys. During his time here, he completely reinvented the entire offense from a spread passing offense in his first years into maybe the best running game in the country in the last years, simply based on personnel. In terms of gameplan, scheme, he's absolutely a tremendous coach. It doesn't surprise me that he's been able to take the hodgepodge of players on a short turnaround time and at least make them somewhat competitive.
The recruiting point worries me though. You can recruit comparatively poorly and beat Toledo and Northern Illinois. It's a lot more difficult do that against Big 12 schools.
gump said:
I lost it when you see him running directly for his parents. Knew exactly where they were. Left his teammates and ran to the opposite endzone for them.....". . . that's our boy, that's our son. . ." - not even gonna try to lie about it, I cried like a baby when I heard that. Thanks for posting that. This is part of what makes college football so special and great.
gump said:
Thinking on playoff expansion, if we're going to get bigger, I still want to see the regular season as meaningful. I'm curious as to others' thoughts on something like this 7 team version outlined below:
All P5 conference champions*, 1 G5, 1 Wildcard
* If the P5 champion is below 15th/20th in committee rankings, they forfeit their auto-bid in favor of another wildcard
Round 1
Round 2
- 1 seed gets a bye
- 2 vs. 7 at 2
- 3 vs. 6 at 3
- 4 vs. 5 at 4
Playoffs them proceed with lowest vs. highest remaining in the existing bowl format
This only adds one week additional of games, makes the regular season matter as teams strive to be the 1 seed and/or win their respective conference, and guarantees a non-P5 team a shot at a title. You could also get some really interesting first round matchups against teams that rarely play and/or in conditions they avoid (i.e. Bama playing in the snow if they were a lower seed).
Thinking on playoff expansion, if we're going to get bigger, I still want to see the regular season as meaningful. I'm curious as to others' thoughts on something like this 7 team version outlined below:
All P5 conference champions*, 1 G5, 1 Wildcard
* If the P5 champion is below 15th/20th in committee rankings, they forfeit their auto-bid in favor of another wildcard
Round 1
Round 2
- 1 seed gets a bye
- 2 vs. 7 at 2
- 3 vs. 6 at 3
- 4 vs. 5 at 4
Playoffs them proceed with lowest vs. highest remaining in the existing bowl format
This only adds one week additional of games, makes the regular season matter as teams strive to be the 1 seed and/or win their respective conference, and guarantees a non-P5 team a shot at a title. You could also get some really interesting first round matchups against teams that rarely play and/or in conditions they avoid (i.e. Bama playing in the snow if they were a lower seed).
Of course Alabama would in your second scenario. I doubt it would even be a conversation on the committee.So if Alabama wins out and beats an unbeaten Georgia in the SEC title game, they and Georgia would be in the playoff. If Oregon and Ohio State win out, they are both probably in, Leaving Cincinnati out.
The big question is if Alabama loses a close game to Georgia in the SEC championship game, and Oregon and Ohio State win out, does a 2 lose Alabama team get into the playoff over an undefeated Cincinnati team? I say yes. Not that I agree with that, but I think the NCAA will do whatever it can to appease the power 5 schools.
Given the ridiculous SEC bias they would be in even if they lose by 2 or 3 TDs.So if Alabama wins out and beats an unbeaten Georgia in the SEC title game, they and Georgia would be in the playoff. If Oregon and Ohio State win out, they are both probably in, Leaving Cincinnati out.
The big question is if Alabama loses a close game to Georgia in the SEC championship game, and Oregon and Ohio State win out, does a 2 lose Alabama team get into the playoff over an undefeated Cincinnati team? I say yes. Not that I agree with that, but I think the NCAA will do whatever it can to appease the power 5 schools.
I like this idea. Anything to take the upper part of the bracket away from biased selectors and put it on the field where it belongs is good by me.I like what you have here. I would prefer going with the 12 team playoff, so the top 4 teams get byes. Automatic qualifiers would be Power 5 conference winners and highest ranked group of 5 team. other 6 teams would be wildcards. Round of 12 would be played Christmas weekend, quarterfinals would be played New Years eve weekend, semis a week later and championship two weeks after.
More teams means the regular season means less than under your plan, but giving 4 teams byes gives those teams a distinct advantage, so it benefits those having a great vs. good season.
@Steve TaskerWatch Kansas win 7+ games in the next 3 years. Lance Leopold won a number of D3 championships at UW whitewater, then went to Buffalo and helped them be semi respectable. Dude can coach
Given the ridiculous SEC bias they would be in even if they lose by 2 or 3 TDs.
"Washington Announces Leadership Change"......that's how we're saying "Jimmy got fired" now?
The ONLY reason ND is in the conversation is because of how bad the top is this year. ND shouldn't sniff the playoffs with how weak our schedule turned into and how we've played, but it's entirely possible we sneak into the end because of the forthcoming chaos.
However, if my options are Michigan State/Pittsburgh in some nothing-bowl vs. a likely curb stomping by Georgia, I still probably take the Georgia game. I suppose making the playoffs is better since there doesn't appear to be any second tier major bowl matchup/win we could hope for.
ND wouldn't and shouldn't sneak in at the expense of Cincinnati despite this committee's amnesia with respect to Michigan/Michigan State.I guess that would be the ultimate insult to Cincinnati, if ND got in over them when they beat ND by 11 at Notre Dame
I'm not in favor of putting a 2-loss Alabama team in, especially with their cupcake non-conference schedule. They beat Mississippi and lost to Texas A&M (the only 2 decent teams they have played) and barely beat a bad Florida team. The rest of their schedule was weak.I guess we just put Notre Dame in?