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Finally found a cut of that Strong throw to Horton.
Yeah saw him a little watching Mond last year but I'll definitely put him on the watch list to get to this weekend vs Colorado. It's hard to chose who to watch this week coming up. Lots of cupcake games for big name guys. Might check out OU vs West Carolina, it'll be the sort of game you want to see Rattler not try and be a hero and just win because his guys are then their guys....something tells me he'll still try to be a hero thoughKeep an eye on Jalen Wydermyer this year Dannyreed , one of my fav prospect out there
Yeah saw him a little watching Mond last year
A couple of guys who I noticed from the games I've seen.
Sam Howell QB UNC
Rough one for Sammy. Not his fault entirely as the offense was just completely overmatched and he was out there having to try and make magic which isn't his game. Hopefully this isn't a sign to come because they did lose a boatload of talent to the NFL this past draft. He still made some great throws in the few times he got a clean pocket but yeah this looks very similar to when Jordan Love lost his OC, HC and 8 offensive starters in the year before he came out. Hope for Sam they can get something going and give him a chance.
Me too, if he was at a bigger school he would be getting way more love. His athleticism gets talked about but the arm is something else, he has an absolute cannonI love Willis
First defender drafted
I would so love him on the Ravens but there's no way he's making it out of the top 10 surely
Never know with safeties, Derwin James dropped , but agree, he looks special, on top of the play look at his physical traits, the speed he moves with that length is amazing
Is this going to impact anyone?NFL, NFLPA agree to treat 2020 as a year of college participation
Posted by Mike Florio on September 28, 2021, 12:45 PM EDT
The pandemic dramatically altered the 2020 college football season. It has prompted the NFL and the NFL Players Association to after the rules for the 2020 draft.
An agreement struck recently by the league and the union treats the 2020 season as a year of participation. In other words, even if a player did or didn’t play in 2020, 2020 counts toward his four years of eligibility for draft purposes.
This means that, for example, if a player opted out in 2020 and otherwise has played three years of college football, he’ll automatically enter the 2022 draft — even though he has an extra year of college eligibility. Such players, if they want to refrain from entering the draft, must affirmatively opt out of the 2022 draft.
So be aware, college players who have three years of participation other than 2020. You’ll automatically become part of the next draft class if you don’t exercise your right to opt out of the 2022 pool.
Huh. The pandemic and associated cancellations make this _seem_ like a business-as-usual compromise (with no hidden aspects) that is good for the incoming prospects. And regardless of what I'm about to say, this _is_ a good thing and I'm glad the NFL and NFLPA issued this statement now, before too much of the CFB campaign has passed. Guys who missed games through no fault of their own won't have it held against them. Good.
But this is also a _very convenient_ escape hatch for college players, many of whom got Kavanugh'ed out of future existence in July. CFB is going to be a literal bloodbath this offseason, as universities are facing huge (pandemic related) budget problems and a Supreme Court opinion of their football business as "flatly illegal", requiring cash payments _to_ athletes instead of getting their talent for scholarships. We're talking tens of millions of dollars in budget shortfalls that will get much deeper, very quickly if athletes have to be paid OR can be 'paid off' and zeroed out by cutting the football program and its costs. We've already seen it start: UConn is not a small school, despite it's shitty football reputation. CFB as it has been in the past is going to cease to exist, probably two weeks after the Bowl games. Which is why Texas and Oklahoma joined the SEC, because big programs with TV contracts are still in the football business. So mid-January, a ton of program are going 'out of business' and players will need to transfer or go pro.
And the NFL just gave the whole (rotten) thing a kick. Every prospect at top tier programs who lost a year will go pro to make their money. Some second-tier prospects from borderline programs will declare as well. Other second-tier prospects will be able to transfer IN to top-tier programs (unless the NCAA is going to be complete assholes - always a possibility). Thus, talent will be redistributed and the 'feeder' doesn't break completely while re-organizing itself.