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Topic: ELA 2019 Countdown

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Brutus Buckeye

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #140 on: March 13, 2019, 09:45:40 AM »
The Dragon is an obnoxiously underused mascot. Doesn't get much more bad ass than that.
1919, 20, 21, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 42, 44
WWH: 1952, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 74, 75
1979, 81, 82, 84, 87, 94, 98
2001, 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #141 on: March 13, 2019, 09:58:50 AM »
Oh this is getting good. One CUSA and one MAC. The Belt is the dark horse candidate. Can all three of their remaining teams suck worse than the top team in each of the other two conferences?

Getcha popcorn ready!
C USA takes the Gold.
1919, 20, 21, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 42, 44
WWH: 1952, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 74, 75
1979, 81, 82, 84, 87, 94, 98
2001, 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19

ELA

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #142 on: March 14, 2019, 09:55:51 AM »
68. Ohio Bobcats
#1 in MAC
Is this the year that Frank Solich finally gets over the hump?  He’ll be 75 a week into the season, so he doesn’t have many seasons left to win a MAC Championship.  He’ll pass Bill Hess to become the second winningest coach in program history this year, and has a chance to become the winningest in program history next year.  He’s 16 wins behind Don Peden, who coached the Bobcats from 1924-1946.  But I think he’d rather finally win a conference title.  For all of that success; 4 division titles, 6 years of 6 or more conference wins, bowl eligibility in 10 straight seasons, but he’s 0-4 in MAC Championship Games, and the Bobcats haven’t won a league title since 1968.  Similar to UAB, this is not Solich’s best team, but he might have enough in a year where the league looks to still be down.  Primarily because he has the conference’s best quarterback in senior Nathan Rourke.  Rourke finished third in the league in passing efficiency, completing 60% of his passes, with 23 touchdowns to go with only 8 interceptions, but was probably an even bigger threat with his legs, finishing with 860 rushing yards, on 6.2 ypc.  He might be a bit of a one man show early on though.  He was a major part of the reason that the Bobcats had the best rushing game in the conference, averaging 258 ypg, on 6.0 ypc, which was fifth best nationally.  But he had help from a pair of great fifth year senior running backs, A.J. Ouellette, who returned better than ever from an injury two years prior, which limited him to just 3 carries, and led the conference with 1,306 yards, the only back to average over 100 ypg in the MAC, and Maleek Irons, who finished third in the conference.  His top two receivers are gone, but Cameron Odom is back, and showed great upside early in the year, before fading over the second half.  Odom had 20 receptions for 326 yards in the first six games (3.5 rpg and 54.3 ypg), but just 10 receptions for 92 yards in the second half.  The line is solid on the right side, returning a pair of third year starters in guard Hagen Meservy and tackle Austen Pleasants.  The defense should be much improved after running out six new starters in the front seven a year ago.  Ohio dodged bullets, and allowed only 24.6 ppg, third best in the MAC, despite allowing the fifth most yards, and the third most yards per play.  They allowed nearly 8 ypa through the air, but did have a conference best 16 interceptions, as part of the nation’s fourth highest turnovers created rate.  Ohio’s style of offense, which averages over 33 minutes of possession per game, helped hide some of those defensive issues.  But a more experienced group this year should help Ohio replicate those ppg numbers, but without causing us to wonder exactly how they got there.  Getting Javon Hagan to return for his senior year is a huge boost, as the experience shifts for the third straight year, this time back to the front.  Hagan would have been a sure NFL pick, albeit probably a middle round one, if he had left.  If Ohio gets the Nathan Rourke they got from the second half of last season, when Ohio was the best team in the MAC, he is the quarterback who can finally give Solich his conference title.
KEY PLAYERS
QBNathan Rourke, Senior
WRCameron Odom, Junior
TAusten Pleasants, Senior
.
LBJared Dorsa, Junior
SJavon Hagan, Senior
PMichael Farkas, Senior

Cincydawg

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #143 on: March 14, 2019, 10:18:21 AM »
The Dragon is an obnoxiously underused mascot. Doesn't get much more bad ass than that.
There aren't many Eagles in College outside BC.  Hawks?  Hawkeyes?  Not many birds in college.  Dinosaurs I guess infers old timey.
The Georgia State Velociraptors sounds pretty cool.
I'd vote for the Wisconsin Black Hats.  That has some historical significance.

ELA

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #144 on: March 14, 2019, 10:32:24 AM »
There aren't many Eagles in College outside BC.  Hawks?  Hawkeyes?  Not many birds in college.  Dinosaurs I guess infers old timey.
The Georgia State Velociraptors sounds pretty cool.
I'd vote for the Wisconsin Black Hats.  That has some historical significance.

Eastern Michigan and Southern Miss

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #145 on: March 14, 2019, 10:38:27 AM »
There are way too many bird teams. A few of the Eagles ought to change their name to the Beagles.
1919, 20, 21, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 42, 44
WWH: 1952, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 74, 75
1979, 81, 82, 84, 87, 94, 98
2001, 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19

FearlessF

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #146 on: March 14, 2019, 10:48:23 AM »
Go Get 'em Frankie!
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ELA

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #147 on: March 15, 2019, 01:06:48 PM »
67. South Florida Bulls
#5 in American
While their early record seemed to defy the experts who thought the Bulls had lost too much to compete for a conference title, the numbers behind the 7-0 start seemed to suggest that South Florida was living a charmed life, and eventually their luck would run out.  Granted, even the biggest disbelievers didn’t expect that 7-0 start and #21 ranking in the polls to be followed by an 0-6 finish.  It’s hard to evaluate South Florida as a 7-6 team though, when they enter the season on a 6 game losing streak, all of the losses by double digits.  Early, it seemed like the well travelled Blake Barnett was finally going to realize his potential from multiple transfers ago, when he was a 5* recruit to Alabama.  Instead, after the first couple of weeks, the team was winning in spite of him.  He only threw for 5 touchdowns after the first three games (in which he threw for 7), and only had a QBR of over 50 once over his final 9 games.  What has to bother Charlie Strong though was the drop off on defense, even in a league becoming increasingly about offense.  The Bulls were the best defense in the conference across the board in 2017, and while they did have some graduations, they were expected to still be in decent shape in 2018, to help carry an offense that suffered far more production loss.  Instead, they gave up 446.6 ypg, third most in the league, primarily due to a run defense that allowed 5.1 ypc, saved from being worst in the conference by, yes again, UConn.  The line only returned one starter from the previous season, and he, Greg Reaves, was moved to linebacker.  That was part out of necessity, and part from the emergence of senior Josh Black, who had been nothing but a rotation player his whole career, and then emerged as a senior to lead the team in sacks and tackles for loss.  With his graduation, and the presumed healthy return of linebacker Nico Sawtelle, who missed seven games with an injury, there is a chance Reaves moves back to end, in the Bulls’ 4-2-5 scheme.  If not, it does make for a nasty two linebacker core, but with massive, massive questions along the line.  The whole thing will look a lot better is South Florida can get more of the big plays they got in 2017, and will put less pressure on the unit to be as sound on a down to down basis.  The Bulls were top five nationally in 2017 in interceptions (20) and tackles for loss (101).  Tackles for loss dropped slightly to #33 in the nation, and interceptions dropped to 60th.  The secondary looks to be improved, from a group that was hardly the problem.  Coaches were high on true sophomore Naytron Culpepper taking over at safety, with the ability to play cornerback.  Instead he was passed over by a freshman, and has since transferred.  That freshman, now sophomore, Nick Roberts looks like an absolute star in the making, and he’s paired with lockdown cornerback Mike Hampton, who made the all conference team a year ago, as a sophomore, in his first year starting.  If the line play doesn’t dramatically improve, teams may see little need to waste their time even trying to pass on this group though.
KEY PLAYERS
QBBlake Barnett, Senior
RBJordan Cronkite, Senior
TEMitchell Wilcox, Senior
.
LBGreg Reaves, Senior
CBMike Hampton, Junior
SNick Roberts, Sophomore

MrNubbz

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #148 on: March 15, 2019, 01:25:51 PM »
So one of the best teams in the MAC is can't crack the top 60?Dayum
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Cincydawg

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #149 on: March 15, 2019, 02:29:45 PM »
Arizona  UCLA Colorado
Ole Miss and Arky
Kansas
Illinoi and Rutger
Laville UNC

Is Baylor next?  Vandy?  These teams are of midmajor quality at best.

ELA

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #150 on: March 18, 2019, 09:17:34 AM »
Saturday and Sunday

66. Houston Cougars
#4 in American
Houston proved they are serious about being the marquee program in the conference by firing Major Applewhite after only two years and a 15-10 record to poach Dana Holgorson away from West Virginia.  Simply being good mostly, isn’t good enough.  This program seemed right on the cusp before losing Tom Herman to Texas, and they now see Central Florida, and want that.  Really, there’s no reason not to, they see a currently top 10 ranked basketball program, hosting College Gameday, and have the resources the fund it.  He takes over a team that has plenty of offensive weapons, but is a very, very sad case on defense.  That’s where things began to tumble under Applewhite, although I’m not sure how exactly Holgorson is a guy who is going to change that trend.  Yes, Houston was about offense, but they had elite defensive talent, and up until last year had been also one of the best defenses in the league too, even aside from Ed Oliver.  But that side, even starting 7 seniors, plus Oliver last year took a total nosedive, allowing over 500 ypg, which was (everyone together again) the most in the league of anyone not named UConn.  Looking at the returning talent, it’s tough to find much of it.  Seven of the nine leading tacklers are gone.  The Cougars return a solid pair of starting safeties, but how much you want back from a secondary that allowed 277 passing yards per game, is anyone’s guess.  Holgorson is still an elite offensive mind, but offense was not an issue for Applewhite last year.  The Cougars averaged 43.9 ppg, most in the conference, and fifth most in the nation, and yet went 8-5, including losses in four of their last five, and a pair of losses when scoring 49 points themselves.  The other four teams in the top five in scoring lost 5 games...COMBINED.  So unless you think a guy like Holgorson, replacing 8 starters, is actually going to make the defense better in 2019, the question is can the offense be any better?  Actually, it possibly could.  With McKenzie Milton suffering his horrific injury, no AAC school enters 2019 with more certainty at the quarterback position than Houston.  D’Eriq King is dynamic, rushing for 674 yards and 14 touchdowns on 6.1 ypc.  But where he has surprised everyone is in his development as a passer.  There was always room for improvement, but he blew past his supposed ceiling last year, completing 64% of his passes with 36 touchdowns to go with just 6 interceptions, to lead the conference in passing yards, completion percentage, passer rating, and total offense.  Honestly, if not for his reputation going into the year, Milton may not have even won AAC Player of the Year over King.  He returns his top 5 receivers to throw to, although tight end Romello Brooker, and his 7 touchdowns will not be easy to replace.  Patrick Carr gets overlooked as a back in probably the conference with the deepest stable of production, but he averaged 5.7 ypc.  The interior of the line needs to be revamped, but both tackles, who were first year starters a season ago, are back.  With those rave reviews, it’s hard to remember how low I have this team, until you remember everything I just said could be said about last years team, except the defense may actually be worse, and it’s tough to average more points than the Cougars did.  Long term, the program should be fine.  The commitment has never been higher.  You could argue their level of commitment exceeds any other Group of 5 school right now, and they have a wealth of talent in their backyard.  So it should continue to be good enough for now, and better in the future.
KEY PLAYERS
QBD'Eriq King, Senior
RBPatrick Carr, Senior
WRMarquez Stevenson, Junior
.
LBLeroy Godfrey, Senior
SGleson Sprewell, Junior
SDeontay Anderson, Junior

65. Maryland Terrapins
#12 in Big Ten
If nothing else, 2019 hopefully provides the Maryland football program with some stability after a 2018 that was anything but.  That has already been hashed out plenty, and speculating on how much it impacted on the field results is pointless.  It is worth noting that Maryland was one of the hardest teams in the nation to peg last year, looking as good as anyone in the Big Ten on some days, and looking like they belonged in the basement on others.  The beat Texas, should have beaten Ohio State, and their three Big Ten wins all came by 27 points or more.  But they also got throttled by Temple, Michigan State, Iowa, Penn State and Michigan, all by 21 points or more.  Gone is Ty Johnson, and his low usage, freaky ypc numbers, but in Anthony McFarland Jr., they found a freshman, who actually put up better ypc, and did it on 11 carries per game, as opposed to just 7 for Johnson.  The chunk play reliant ground game has been a staple of Maryland for a few years now, so it will be interesting to see if the new staff can keep that aspect rolling.  It has made their offense far more fun to watch than a typical offense with similar overall numbers.  It’s not the guy(s) carrying the ball that concern me, it’s the guys blocking for them, with Maryland graduating three all-Big Ten offensive linemen.  Granted, those honors may have been more a product of those rushing numbers, than their actual performance, because the S&P+ numbers for their offensive line, are not pretty.  #83 in the nation in line yards, #108 in stuff rate, bottom ten nationally in sack rate, for both all downs and standard downs.  At least just bottom twenty in passing downs.  Oddly, that may actually be a positive for Maryland fans, that the guys they lost weren’t actually as good as the postseason honors would suggest.  One of the odder decisions of the previous regime was how adamantly they stuck with Kasim Hill at quarterback.  Between the two, Tyrrell Pigrome was the better runner, and Hill thought to be the better passer, except he never looked right passing last year, failing to throw for even 100 yards in six of his ten starts.  Hill suffered his second torn ACL, and entered the transfer portal, but Pigrome is not getting the job by default.  Virginia Tech transfer Josh Jackson, and incoming four star recruit Lance LeGendre should be in the mix.  It does not appear LeGendre is enrolling early, so him winning the job out of the gate would be surprising.  New defensive coordinator Jon Hoke, who at 62 is getting his first solo coordinating job since 1999-2001 under Steve Spurrier at Florida, is tasked with continuing the growth from a year ago.  The Terps rose from being probably the worst defense in the Big Ten in 2017, to firmly in the middle last year, led by an outstanding secondary, that could be even better this year.  Maryland was susceptible to the big passing play, but held opponents to just 54% completions, and forced the second most interceptions in the Big Ten.  With a pair of all-conference cornerbacks returning, the back line will need to lead the defense again.
KEY PLAYERS
RBAnthony McFarland Jr., Sophomore
WRJeshaun Jones, Sophomore
KJoseph Petrino, Sophomore
.
CBAntoine Brooks Jr., Senior
CBTino Ellis, Senior
SAntwaine Richardson, Senior

64. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
#12 in ACC
Very few coaches anymore are allowed to plateau for as long as Paul Johnson did at Georgia Tech.  After a great start, that included the school’s first ACC Championship in 11 years in 2009, his second season.  Since then the Yellow Jackets went 4-4 or 5-3 in ACC in eight of Johnson’s remaining nine seasons, with a 6-2 season in 2014, which included a win as an at large Orange Bowl participant.  That was also the only time during that stretch that Georgia Tech finished ranked.  So, while it’s unfortunate that we don’t get to see his offense at the highest levels of college football anymore, it’s also understandable.  The school hired Geoff Collins away from Temple as their next coach.  A Georgia native, who has made two previous stops at the school, as a graduate assistant under George O’Leary from 1999-2001, then in an administrative role under Chan Gailey in 2006.  By bringing his offensive coordinator, Dave Patenaude, with him from Temple, Collins made clear that the offensive philosophy is in for a major overhaul.  His style is more of the tempo, spread look, that has seemingly become commonplace.  Prior to Temple, he honed his style at Coastal Carolina, where in five years, he had four of his players named as finalists for the Walter Payton Award, which is the FCS Heisman.  Give this thing a minute though.  Transitioning to this offense from a pro style look was much less dramatic than going from a triple option look, and even still Temple ranked #97 in offensive efficiency in his first year in Philadelphia, improving to #56 last year, while setting a school record with 34.9 ppg.  Putting up that many points, while only ranking #56 in terms of efficiency means a lot of pressure on the defense, there are going to be a ton of possessions in Georgia Tech games.  That looks to spell trouble for a group trying to replace 7 starters off a defense that was fairly lousy against the pass a year ago.  The Yellow Jacket pass defense was the worst in the ACC outside of Louisville, ranking second to last in yards per attempt allowed and pass defense efficiency, allowing opponents to complete 64.7% of their passes, worst in the ACC.  The biggest difference is simply going to be the number of plays they are on the field for.  Georgia Tech allowed a respectable 369 ypg last year, fourth best in the ACC, but when you consider that, thanks to their offensive style, they were only on the field for 805 plays (61.9 per game), fewest in the ACC, their 6.0 ypp allowed was actually third worst.  Adjusting to Temple’s pace for last year, that jumps up to nearly 440 ypg allowed.  And that’s assuming a defense with 7 new starters can maintain that same 2018 level.  But all eyes truly are on the offense, where KirVonte Benson returns as running back after suffering a season ending injury in the second game a year ago, but Parker Braun, Georgia Tech’s best player, became the best offensive lineman in the transfer portal, and wound up at Texas.  The quarterback issue isn’t getting fixed this year.  Lucas Johnson, coming off a serious injury himself, is easily the best passer of the group.  Tobias Oliver saw action in 12 games last year, but to show how confident they are in him as a quarterback, he attempted 16 passes, and had 152 rush attempts.  I think it’s more likely he winds up at a different position once the quarterback depth chart fills out a bit.  But James Graham has academic issues, and both quarterback recruits in the 2019 class are dual threat guys who committed to Johnson.  It’s no surprised that Collins jumped on a 3* pro style kid from Tampa as the first commit to his 2020 class.  He may take a second one.  The goal is to avoid the systemic change disaster season, previously mentioned in regards to Rich Rodriguez at Michigan and Chip Kelly at UCLA, that kills the thing before it even gets started.
KEY PLAYERS
RBKirVonte Benson, Senior
WRJalen Camp, Senior
TJahaziel Lee, Senior
.
LBDavid Curry, Senior
STariq Carpenter, Junior
PPressley Harvin III, Junior

ELA

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #151 on: March 18, 2019, 09:57:27 AM »
63. Georgia Southern Eagles
#3 in Sun Belt
The job that Chad Lunsford has done in his limited time as head coach has been nothing short of remarkable.  Tyson Summers changed the identity of the program, and in less than two years had driven the program straight into a ditch, losing 16 of 18 at one point, sitting at 0-9 late in the 2017 season.  Lunsford was able to win a pair of games in November, including 52-0 over South Alabama, and then rolled through 2018, going 10-3, and handing Appalachian State their lone conference loss.  Changing offensive philosophies goes a whole lot smoother when the quarterback you already had in place, was actually recruited to play the system you are changing back to.  Shai Werts looked infinitely more comfortable in Bob DeBesse’s system, which was more like the Willie Fritz system that everybody identified Georgia Southern with.  He ran the ball 182 times for 908 yards, but was effective when asked to throw, completing 60% of his passes with 10 touchdowns and no interceptions.  Finding Wesley Fields’ replacement is going to be the challenge.  Unlike most other triple option attacks, the carries were not well distributed.  Fields had 200 carries, and nobody else had even half that.  Granted the pistol option, is not like what Georgia Tech or the service academies ran, so it’s not as important.  Wesley Kennedy III is the most tantalizing talent, with a team high 7.9 ypc last year.  Impressive enough to earn honorable mention all conference honors averaging under 5 carries per game.  Therein lies the problem, is whether he can be stretched out to handle a bigger workload.  Monteo Garrett, who was second on the team in both carries and yardage among running backs, also graduated.  So while Kennedy has the talent, this offense can’t survive without finding more backs to take some of the carries.  Matt LaRoche is an option.  LaRoche was second on the depth chart, as a redshirt freshman, entering summer practice a year ago, but fell down the depth chart.  He needs to show the same thing this spring that the coaches bought into last spring.  This is also a complicated blocking scheme, and the graduation of the two best members of the offensive line means that group has questions too, particularly at center, where no obvious replacement exists.  It seems more likely they shuffle some guys around to move someone over to center, either Aaron Dowdell or Jakob Cooper, and move Lawrence Edwards into the starting group.  Georgia transfer Jake Edwards is pencilled in as the starter at left tackle now.  The defense should be solid again, and the secondary should be improved if they can get better play from their safeties.  Both cornerback spots are locked down with a pair of guys who both should be on the all conference honors list at the end of the year.  There’s no reason with those guys back there, to allow opponents to complete 62% of their passes again.  Improvement there would push this defense to compete with Appalachian State’s as the best in the Sun Belt, but the offense on paper looks far too reliant on Shai Werts right now to be as good as it was last year.  If Kennedy can prove to be the 200 carry back that Fields was, then I’ll be wrong there, but he doesn’t seem to be that guy to me.  The schedule is a whole separate issue.  The Eagles have road trips to both LSU and Minnesota in the first three weeks, then play a four week conference gauntlet starting on Halloween, playing the four best teams in the Sun Belt, other than themselves, in consecutive weeks, three of which are on the road (at Appalachian State, at Troy, vs. UL Monroe, at Arkansas State).
KEY PLAYERS
QBShai Werts, Junior
RBWesley Kennedy III, Junior
KTyler Bass, Senior
.
DERaymond Johnson III, Junior
CBKindle Vildor, Senior
CBMonquavion Brinson, Senior

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #152 on: March 18, 2019, 05:47:03 PM »
ELA just blew past the halfway point in his preseason rankings. 
1919, 20, 21, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 42, 44
WWH: 1952, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 74, 75
1979, 81, 82, 84, 87, 94, 98
2001, 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19

Cincydawg

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Re: ELA 2019 Countdown
« Reply #153 on: March 18, 2019, 06:18:35 PM »
Georgia Tech sounds about right to me, good analysis based on what little I know.  The change in offense is going to "take some time", and may not work even then.

 

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