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Miami Might Turn to Quinn Ewers at QB
horns96 replied to Michelle Lynn's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Isn't Miami running a bunch of heavy 6 OL sets and leaning on the run already? Quinn can run some RPOs. -
OTF Premium What's next for Texas at wide receiver and linebacker?
AusMOJO replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
I think if all the WR's have a good off-season with Arch, that should help. I also think if you can grab a proven guy in the portal who isn't a top tier guy like Coleman, for a good price, that would also help. It's more of a luxury than a need, imo. But we need a playmaker somewhere on O, Wingo was it sometimes but nowhere else really. Perhaps Bishop makes massive strides early on and gets playing time? Maybe one of the current Fr step up and contribute, who knows. LB is a whole other thing. With Lefau now gone, that leaves us in a bad spot, imo. Need to hit on the portal, unless they've been backdooring some guys. - Today
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OTF Premium What's next for Texas at wide receiver and linebacker?
MikeH replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Even if they think Wingo can make the leap, they still need to have the mindset of "needing" two WR1s. We've been at our best when we've had Worthy AND Mitchell and then Bond AND Golden. I think you could even make the case that Bond falling off the face of the earth for whatever reason late last season could have been the difference between what we got and a natty. And when Sark had his best offenses of his career at Alabama, we all know the insane amount of WR talent those teams had together. We need Wingo AND _________, especially if Endries doesn't return. I really like Mosley a lot, but I'm not sure he's got future first round WR type talent and that's ultimately what we need in 2026. -
Miami Might Turn to Quinn Ewers at QB
Alex Butler replied to Michelle Lynn's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Wait Quinn is going back to college to show Beck up hahaha?!?! The canes could probably beat the dolphins just like in the old days when they took a pay cut to go to the NFL 😂😂😂 -
Too many teams, too few games, too many unbalanced schedules. This discussion has centered entirely around the number of teams. The inequality of seedings is impactful. Ole Miss and Oregon are getting gifts this year due to seeding. Tech is the #4 because of their weak schedule. Tech and Ole Miss were gifted their seeds and to a lesser degree Oregon. OU was fortunate to get a spot yet gets a home game. Miami played what 8 home games? They never left home until October. We played as many games away from home in October as they and Ole Miss did the entire season. Also due to imbalanced schedules you have to address whether you want the best X number of teams or the x best seasons. It’s a legitimate case that Texas and Notre Dame were top 6-ish teams at the end of the year. They’re actually two teams that could impact things. If you want to chase a system for playoff purposes, you have to limit the teams so you can balance the schedules. Even within a divisional structure you’ll still have unbalanced schedules, but you have some defined structure.
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Miami Might Turn to Quinn Ewers at QB
AusMOJO replied to Michelle Lynn's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Wish him all the best, that Miami OL is pretty bad, so he'll have his work cut out for him. -
CFP to 16 Teams: Outrage Is a Renewable Resource
Lnghrn replied to Steamboat Willie's topic in On Texas Football Forum
There will be a lot of mediocre football in the SEC with a 9 game SEC schedule where you play 4-5 ranked teams and some unranked teams that are still very tough outs. Meanwhile teams like Tech and ND will coast into playoffs as overrated 1 and 2 loss teams. -
CFP to 16 Teams: Outrage Is a Renewable Resource
Kevin C replied to Steamboat Willie's topic in On Texas Football Forum
We have a current system that enabled James Madison and Tulane to make the playoffs but excluded ND and Texas (3 top 15 wins and top SOS among top 15 teams by far). In a new world where Top 24 get in, this year that’s one total team with 8-4 record (Iowa). They likely lose in the road and the play it on the field works as designed. I’m fully on board with 24 team playoff so play on field determines final outcome. -
CFP to 16 Teams: Outrage Is a Renewable Resource
CHorn427 replied to Steamboat Willie's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Thinking of an 8-4 team in the playoffs disgusts me. It really does. I do not give one rat’s behind about the fans of 8-4 teams being engaged at the end of the season, even if those are Texas fans. Teams that have separated themselves as more than mediocre are the ones that deserve a shot at the end of the season. 8-4 is mediocre. It just is -
Hope he runs all over kiffins defenses.
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Yes he is! Helps Juluke too! Glad LSU didn’t keep him.
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OTF Premium Men's Hoops Game Thread: Texas vs. Le Moyne
Fan of the Game replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Turnout should improve with local fans on holiday break next week. -
He’s going to be a pain in Lane’s ass for years to come 🤣
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Add whoever plays ND
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OTF Premium What's next for Texas at wide receiver and linebacker?
Brho replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Given Wingos drops and body language on the sideline it’s a stretch to consider him a #1. Hopefully we make a move and get a legit #1. -
CFP to 16 Teams: Outrage Is a Renewable Resource
Junior replied to Steamboat Willie's topic in On Texas Football Forum
I agree there is a point where playoff expansion can go too far, where we may differ is not on whether expansion is warranted, but on scale. Given the number of teams there are in Division 1 college football, disparities in schedule difficulty across teams/conferences, and the role of a selection committee, a 24-team playoff strikes a reasonable balance. More outcomes would be decided on the field, rather than in the committee room. Teams just outside the cutoff of a 24 team format would still object, but the risk of excluding a legitimate championship contender is lower than in the current 12-team format. Regarding college basketball, its regular season may suffer from factors beyond just playoff size—most notably a 30-plus game regular season schedule that dilutes the importance of individual games. That dynamic doesn’t exist in a 12-game football season played once a week, where each result carries real consequence. Talent continuity also matters: college basketball’s one-and-done model has weakened team identity and overall quality of play, gradually eroding fan interest. College football, by contrast, retains most elite talent for multiple seasons and benefits from being the nation’s dominant sport, which sustains engagement throughout the regular season. Given football’s cultural prominence, there is less risk that a 24-team playoff would diminish regular season interest. In fact, it could increase engagement, as more fan bases would remain invested longer, with more teams realistically in contention for a playoff spot.