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Oregon - JMU Pre-Game Reports, Interviews, Etc.
ESPN's Bill Connelly, DraftKings, and SP+ Look at 1st Round PO Games - Split on Bama at Oklahoma; unanimous for A&M, Ole Miss, and OBD - Per SP+ OBD's O ranks 13th. OBD's D ranks 5th - The best Oregon Defense in 67 years! Six rematch games in CFB this season. The only team that won both games was Texas Tech's double-beatdown of BYU by 22 and 27 points. ESPN.comRematches, underdogs and chaotic teams -- We've got it al...Can this year's CFP match 2024's first round? It certainly won't lack for storylines.
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Oregon - JMU Pre-Game Reports, Interviews, Etc.
Latest weather report says no rain after noon, tomorrow, Friday, until Sunday.
- Today
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Transfer Portal Interests to Ducks (3)
Can't ever have too many talented linemen! Plus another example to tweak the nose of SUC fans.
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Film Analysis: Plays To Watch For From James Madison Univ. Against Oregon
Great find and nice breakdown. If JMU wants to mimic the Husky game plan, that’s all right with me.
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Film Analysis: Plays To Watch For From James Madison Univ. Against Oregon
I think he brings up some good points, and it will be interesting to watch for...
- Yesterday
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Gatlin Bair is an ABSOLUTE PROBLEM...
Nothing but spring and snowmelt. That’s the Idaho secret.
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Transfer Portal Interests to Ducks (3)
Oregon Ducks in the mix for USC transfer Devan Thompkins, per report "Sources have told On3 to keep an eye on Alabama, Oregon and Georgia at this point for Devan Thompkins," Pete Nakos reported.
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Oregon - JMU Pre-Game Reports, Interviews, Etc.
Dan Lanning Addresses Challenge Of Transfer Portal And Coaching ChangesThe Oregon Ducks have had a lot on their plate in the past few weeks. Ducks' coach Dan Lanning has had to balance running coaching searches and planning for a first-round College Football Playoff game and his comments on the challenges are refreshing. Oregon Ducks On SIDan Lanning Addresses Challenge Of Transfer Portal And Co...The Oregon Ducks have been busy since the conclusion of the regular season. Not only has coach Dan Lanning had to worry about game planning for their first-rou
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NFL Draft Potential for Players on all Playoff Teams.
Historic NFL Draft class? ESPN’s Matt Miller projects massive 2026 haul for Oregon ESPN NFL Draft expert Matt Miller projects a potentially record-breaking 2026 NFL Draft class for Oregon, led by QB Dante Moore and TE Kenyon Sadiq.
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Oregon - JMU Pre-Game Reports, Interviews, Etc.
AUTZEN AWAITS
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Whoa! Fans at Oregon's Playoff Game Will Get a Halftime DRONE SHOW...
AUTZEN AWAITS
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
A chance to play in the semi's would make my season. Never expected to win it all or even have a shot for the finals so everything after TTU is icing on the cake.
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Fueled Up: Game Week Video
Love this game week video. Nice to add a layer of lore to one of our great game day traditions! (Helpful hint: Crank up the sound when watching, and try to identify who is riding the Harley???)
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Whoa! Fans at Oregon's Playoff Game Will Get a Halftime DRONE SHOW...
Okay... weather .com forecast for Saturday is predicting 5% chance of rain by day, and a "few showers" in the evening. If this forecast holds, here are my early score predictions: 1) If we get two of our three stud receivers back, and the weather forecast holds, I've got the Ducks spanking JMU 50-20. If no stud receivers, plus serious rain, Ducks 38-20. How's that for hedging my bets.
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
Oh I've been there! And... yeah a loss to Texas Tech would really suck.
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Whoa! Fans at Oregon's Playoff Game Will Get a Halftime DRONE SHOW...
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
Sure, we've enjoyed the ride of the season and what each and every game brings. Im not discounting that. Simply put, I feel if the Ducks lose to Texas Tech that they fell short of where I believe they should be. If they get to the semis then in my book they've have gotten to where they should be. Anything more than that of course would be dreamy. And, embellishing in the title a little with a word like "bust" to hopefully draw interest? No, not me! 😛😉
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
Well, we'll see if Lanning's "peaking at the right time" plan pans out.
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
Yeah, Texas Tech should be in the category you mentioned. But. Ya never know....
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Semifinals or Bust for the Ducks
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Whoa! Fans at Oregon's Playoff Game Will Get a Halftime DRONE SHOW...
Holy crapoly! That's just nuts. As somebody else pointed out above, thankfully it's cooled down in the mountains so most of that up there will stay. But wow 5 inches in a day is insane.
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Oregon Football: Should Dante Moore Go to the NFL?
Moore is not ready to go to the NFL. He hasn't demonstrated the ability to manage the pass rush consistently, and he's playing behind one of the best OLines in the country. If he goes to the Raiders that has one of the worst OLs in the country, he'll be a disaster at best and injured at worst. I'd love for Dante to prove me wrong though, especially in the playoffs against some teams with a great pass rush like TTU, Indiana, OU, etc.
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An Athletic's Article on the Playoffs.
The Athletic’s Stuart Mandel’s mailbag. Am I wrong in my thinking that Michigan isn’t a Top 10 job right now? No big names will go there if they understand the AD has one foot out the door. And if they fire the AD, no way the coach goes there until they hire a new AD. It’s a dumpster fire of epic proportions at the moment. — Patrick B. How viable would it be for Michigan to go the interim coach route for one season and make a hire during/after the 2026 season? Are there any lessons or comparisons to be drawn from Stanford’s year under Frank Reich? — Dan G. You know, I predicted that about LSU after the governor got the AD fired, said he might let Donald Trump hire the next coach and proclaimed the school wasn’t going to give out another guaranteed contract. And I couldn’t have been more wrong. LSU ended up beating out two other SEC schools (and Florida State?) for Lane Kiffin. Michigan is absolutely a Top 10 job. It won a national championship two years ago. Many coaches would love to lead such an iconic program. But the timing is, admittedly, not ideal. Penn State already hired a guy, Matt Campbell, who would have been high on the list. Several other potential candidates have either already changed jobs or signed extensions. And, oh yeah, the Sherrone Moore fallout is far from over. AD Warde Manuel is a dead man walking, and there’s an ongoing investigation into the athletic department’s culture. I don’t think the Stanford route is realistic because Michigan doesn’t have an NFL-style GM like Andrew Luck, who is more the face of that program now than the head coach. A lame-duck interim would have a hard time recruiting and make things that much harder for the next guy. Michigan hired one of the big search firms, Turnkey, so it’s conducting a full-on search. Washington’s Jedd Fisch became the candidate du jour after Kalen DeBoer recommitted to Alabama. Fisch is by no means a slam dunk, but he took on a much-bigger challenge rebuilding Arizona. While I believe Kenny Dillingham is unlikely to leave Arizona State, Michigan could try to lure Clark Lea from Vanderbilt. One potential wild-card: Kyle Whittingham, 66, who just stepped down at Utah after 21 seasons and, to some surprise, is looking for other coaching opportunities. While he may not be a long-term guy, he’s overly qualified to come in and win right away. Whoever it is, this needs to be a full break from the past five years or so of Michigan football. (Fisch is nine years removed from Jim Harbaugh.) Those 2021-23 seasons were fun, but the program needs to cleanse itself at this point. Too much stench. How much damage has Notre Dame brought on itself by its reaction to not being in the Playoff and refusing to play in a bowl game? I have read reports some ADs are saying they will not schedule games with Notre Dame in the future. — Terry G. The bowl opt-out may have offended fans more than those within the industry. And I’ll believe it when I see it that ADs refuse to schedule Notre Dame because ADs like to sell tickets, and the Irish coming to your stadium is a guaranteed sellout. But Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark was hardly the only one to see AD Pete Bevacqua’s three-day temper tantrum, especially his attack on the ACC, as “egregious.” Its main long-term impact might be a shared mindset of, “Why are we still bending over backwards for these guys?” Buried within that media cycle was Bevacqua revealing that the CFP contract starting next year guarantees the Irish an at-large berth if they finish in the top 12. That certainly seems like special treatment. I asked around, and it appears this was to counter the possibility that from time to time the ACC or Big 12 champions could finish well below No. 12 and still get an automatic berth (as Clemson did last season and Duke might have this season). However, that ESPN deal only covers a 12- or 14-team field. If/when they go to 16, it seems unlikely that Notre Dame would get a separate carve-out like that one. As for the ACC relationship, there may be “permanent damage” on both sides. Much has changed since their partnership began in 2014, the first year of the four-team CFP, when there were fewer berths available and the most a school could receive from making the field was $6 million. Now, a school can earn as much as $20 million for its conference. But Notre Dame keeps all of that for itself. The ACC should have been, of course, as aggressive as possible promoting Miami over the Irish. People in that league were truly befuddled by why Bevacqua made such a stink about that issue. Also, Notre Dame is not exactly a powerhouse in most ACC sports it competes in. It was the conference’s ninth-highest ranked member in last year’s Directors Cup standings (No. 36 overall). I’m not sure it would hurt the ACC Network that much if the school returned to the Big East. Meanwhile, on Notre Dame’s side, the benefits of its ACC arrangement are dwindling. The ACC has fallen to a second-tier status in football, and most of its programs do not help the Irish’s schedule strength or perception. And having access to the conference’s non-CFP bowls is now a non-factor. Conveniently, the ACC’s lawsuit settlement with Florida State and Clemson makes it easier for Notre Dame to exit. While the Grant of Rights remains in effect until 2036, the exit fee drops to a less-prohibitive $75 million in 2030, allowing the school to leave and take its media rights with it. The question is, would the Big Ten be willing to make a similar partial arrangement? (The SEC would not.) If not, Notre Dame will need to decide whether to stay independent, with no built-in opponents, or to bite the bullet and join a conference in football. As of now, that answer would be the former. Check back in five years, though. Choose homes for the big-name transfer QBs (Sam Leavitt, DJ Lagway, Dylan Raiola, Brendan Sorsby, etc.) — Michael M. It’s difficult to play matchmaker without knowing the rev-share or NIL offers they’ll be getting, or which big names will join the pool before New Year’s. But I’ll give you what I think will be the most appealing programs for guys entering the market. All will be looking for a new starter in 2026. 1. Indiana. Fun fact: Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza is the fifth of Cignetti’s last six QBs to win conference player of the year. The sixth was 2024 Indiana starter Kurtis Rourke, who made the second-team All-Big Ten. Seems like an ideal spot for someone looking for a big year of development. 2. LSU. Lane Kiffin knows what he’s doing with quarterbacks, most recently transforming D-II transfer Trinidad Chambliss into an All-SEC QB. He and OC Charlie Weis Jr. helped Jaxson Dart become a first-round pick before that. 3. Miami. After seeing what Cam Ward and Carson Beck did in Shannon Dawson’s offense — not to mention how much money they made — this could be the perfect opportunity for someone looking to boost his draft stock in his final season. 4. Texas Tech. The reigning Big 12 champs will pay you a small fortune and spend another small fortune surrounding you with talent. Seems fun. 5. Florida. Jon Sumrall made a sneaky-good OC hire in Georgia Tech’s Buster Faulkner, who helped turn Haynes King into a star the past three seasons. Three others that would displace at least Florida if their QBs turn pro: Oregon (Dante Moore), Alabama (Ty Simpson) and Duke (Darian Mensah). Please update us on the current discussion to fix the CFP selection process, which had zero credibility this year. The CFP is broken and has terribly damaged college football. Who wants to even watch the CFP when they don’t have the right 12 teams to start? There should be a serious investigation into the CFP for potential conflicts of interest given the broadcasting contracts involved, and for providing misleading information on team rankings for a month before their final selection. — Tim K. It could be a while before we get these answers. Anything CFP-related moves slowly. But now I’m curious to see if anyone will watch this broken, terribly damaged event this weekend. Stew, momentum seems to be building for a 16-team CFP. If that happens, is there any chance conference championship games will go away? And if so, could Rounds 1 and 2 both be held on campus? It seems ridiculous to push the season all the way to Jan. 20 just to protect conference championship games. — Tom Well, here’s the thing. According to Nielsen, 18.3 million people watched the supposedly meaningless Ohio State-Indiana Big Ten championship game — higher than three of the four CFP quarterfinals and one of the two semifinals last season. And another 16.9 million watched the Alabama-Georgia SEC championship. So, the conference championship games aren’t going anywhere. If/when they expand to 16 teams, they will likely work within the calendar they have now, and cram in games wherever possible. Maybe Thursday and Friday night doubleheaders? A weekday afternoon? It’s tough to find new time slots that don’t clash with the NFL. But it doesn’t have to be that way. As I’ve been urging for three years, shift the regular season a week earlier. Hold the first round on what’s currently conference championship weekend, before the NFL is allowed to play Saturday games. (I previously had this as an off week, but we’d need an NFL-free weekend to play eight games.) Then comes the week off (except for Army-Navy). Quarterfinals on campus in the third week of December. Semifinals on New Year’s Day. Championship game a week later. Just like it was before last season. The problem is, they’ve already agreed to keep the quarterfinals at the bowls for another six years, and it seems silly to hold the Rose Bowl or the Sugar Bowl on Dec. 20. So my fix may still be a few years away. But of course, if/when Tony Petitti gets his wish and it goes to 24 teams, at that point they’d have to do away with the conference championship games unless they want the season to go practically to February. But I’d be curious how he plans to sell Fox on replacing that 1 vs. 2 Ohio State-Indiana game with No. 9 Alabama vs. No. 24 James Madison and No. 10 Miami vs. No. 23 Iowa. Stew: We keep seeing 5-star QBs failing. Do the people who rate the high school players have to come under scrutiny? We automatically think five-stars will resurrect programs. It hasn’t always been the case. — Marc N. Quarterback has always been the toughest position to evaluate because of all the intangibles involved. Look at how badly the NFL misses on first-rounders, despite having several years of college tape, pro days, combine interviews and more. The folks at 247Sports and college coaches are often going on low-res high school film (against overmatched competition), and maybe a couple of days at one of their camps. But the hit rate may be improving slightly. There were 11 five-star QBs from 2013-17, of which I’d call two a home run (Kyler Murray and Tua Tagovailoa), five a college-level hit (Jarrett Stidham, Josh Rosen, Shea Patterson, Jacob Eason and Davis Mills) and four an out (Christian Hackenberg, Kyle Allen, Max Browne and Blake Barnett). That’s not a bad ratio, to be honest. The latest window includes 14 guys, with five home runs (Trevor Lawrence, Justin Fields, Bryce Young, Caleb Williams and Drake Maye), five hits (Spencer Rattler, Quinn Ewers, Drew Allar, Cade Klubnik and Ty Simpson, who could still turn into home runs), and four outs (JT Daniels, DJ Uiagalelei, Sam Huard and Connor Weigman). On a percentage basis, more superstars, slightly fewer busts. The question is whether the trend is starting to reverse. While I think it’s too early to rule out recent classes, things don’t look great for Jackson Arnold (2023) and Malachi Nelson (2023), and there are only two home runs: Dante Moore (2023) and Julian Sayin (2024). Still plenty of time for Arch Manning (2023), Dylan Raiola (2024), DJ Lagway (2024) and others. Once upon a time, Manning’s career path — waiting his turn, then having ups and downs as a first-time starter — was typical. Now, everyone expects immediate success, and if it doesn’t happen right away, they transfer, which doesn’t always aid development either. But perhaps Dante Moore can serve as a case study. He started as a true freshman and didn’t look good, and he did transfer … but then he sat for a year to develop without the scrutiny. Look at him now. He made the evaluators look smart. But had he taken a different route — like transferring down to start immediately — he might have ended up in the other group. Looking back at your preseason predictions during the Playoff era, has it become harder year-over-year to predict the final CFP rankings, particularly at the top of the rankings? — Martin D. Yes, much harder. There was a time in the mid-2010s when you could just take the top 10 teams at the end of the season, rearrange it a little and look like a genius. Case in point: In 2018, five of my top six teams on Jan. 9 finished in the top seven 12 months later. Not because I’m a Nostradamus, but because Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State, Georgia and Oklahoma kept all their best players and reloaded every year. The portal actually started that year but was barely a thing, because players still had to sit out a year before playing. Fast forward to 2025, and it’s nearly the opposite. My top three teams in May (No. 1 Texas, No. 2 Penn State and No. 3 Clemson) all missed the Playoff, along with No. 5 Notre Dame and No. 7 LSU. I did have nine of the 10 Power 4 CFP teams in those rankings (all but Ole Miss), but top seed Indiana was only No. 18. Perhaps I’ve lost my touch, or, perhaps because there’s so much player movement and roster turnover, and far more parity within the major conferences. But I’ll make one prediction right now that I’m certain will hold true: Next season’s predictions will be even more baseless because so many new coaches will be taking over major programs, most of which will try to overhaul their rosters.
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An Athletic's Article on the Playoffs.
Coaches talk to Bruce Feldman This has been one of the most entertaining college football seasons in recent memory. Neither of the top two teams in the preseason AP Top 25, Texas or Penn State, made the College Football Playoff. Nor did No. 4 Clemson or No. 6 Notre Dame. In fact, just five of the preseason top 17 made the field. We polled more than two dozen coaches from the Power 4 and Group of 5 and asked them: Who will win it all? Who is the biggest fraud? Who is the best coach and the biggest sleeper? Which team will win it all? • Georgia: 50% • Ohio State: 42% • Indiana: 4% • Oregon: 4% “I don’t think there’s any team that is just great this year. Or as good as Alabama or Georgia were when they won it, or even as good as Ohio State last year. Georgia’s O-line has matured, so that team has taken a jump. The QB is a winner. Defensively, Georgia can play big and can match up. They’re really good and they’re battle-tested.” — Group of 5 head coach “Ohio State. Georgia seems flawed. I know Indiana just beat them but I don’t think they can beat them twice. Ohio State was pretty banged up in that game. The wideouts will be healthier. On defense, Ohio State is really sound with great players. Their red zone defense is unbelievable.” — Big Ten offensive assistant coach “Indiana. They’ve played big in big games. I was really impressed with them winning at Oregon and beating Ohio State the way they did.” — Group of 5 head coach “Georgia. They look the cleanest. They’ve been getting better as the season’s gone on. They’re gonna stop the run and find your weaknesses. And they’re good at using them against you.” — SEC defensive coordinator Who do you think is the biggest fraud in the field? • Ole Miss: 29% • Texas Tech: 17% • Alabama: 17% • JMU: 8% • Oregon: 4% • Oklahoma: 4% • No answer: 21% “Ole Miss. They’ve had so many distractions with Lane Kiffin leaving, and Oklahoma is probably their only good win this year.” — Group of 5 head coach “I think Alabama should have, like, five losses this year. They shouldn’t be there.” — SEC defensive coordinator “Alabama. Maybe I’m old-school, but I don’t believe a three-loss team should have a shot to win a national title. I’ve watched them. They’re not that good this year. I didn’t see enough from them to get this chance.” — Big Ten defensive line coach “Texas Tech. Their D-line is really phenomenal. They can hold their gaps and they let those linebackers play freely. But their offense has had so many opportunities and they really struggle in the red zone. (QB Behren) Morton is talented, but he’s played a ton and some of his decision-making is pretty poor.” — Big 12 offensive coordinator “JMU. They have no business in the Playoff. If you put them in the ACC, they wouldn’t even be .500. Defensively, they’re legitimate, but offensively, they are not good.” — Group of 5 head coach “Oklahoma. The defense is awesome, but I don’t think their offense can piss a drop.” — Group of 5 tight ends coach Which team is the biggest sleeper in the field? • Miami: 21% • Oregon: 17% • Oklahoma: 17% • Alabama: 13% • Ole Miss: 13% • Texas A&M: 13% • Texas Tech: 4% “Oklahoma. I don’t think they have had any movement on their staff or roster. Cohesiveness could play a key role in the Playoff.” — Big Ten defensive backs coach “Alabama is good enough to beat anybody in the field, but can Ty Simpson get his form back from the middle of the season? They don’t run the ball well, but schematically, they do some things to mitigate their running game.” — Group of 5 head coach “Ole Miss. With everything going on with Lane (Kiffin) and around their program, I can see why people might be doubting them, but they played Georgia so tight and could’ve beaten them. I feel like they’re gonna rally around Lane not being there. I think they can get into the semifinals.” — Group of 5 tight ends coach “If Notre Dame was in, I’d have said them, to be honest. I’ll say (Texas) A&M.” — Big Ten running backs coach “Miami. Their D-line is scary, and those guys can change a game. (WR) Malachi Toney is the most dangerous player in college football. I’m not sure how many people actually watch the ACC, but that kid is special. Notre Dame has a really good secondary and they couldn’t touch him, and he kept getting better and better as the season went on. They’ll use him at QB — and he can throw. They’ll line him up outside, in the slot. No one can cover him. He’s fast and super quick. They do so much stuff with him now.” — ACC offensive analyst Is there a path for the Group of 5 teams (Tulane and James Madison) to win a game this year? • No: 88% (my number is 12% higher) • Yes: 12% “I’d like to see it happen personally, because it keeps the hopes alive of like, 50-plus G5 programs, but they just can’t match up physically.” — Big 12 head coach “I think Tulane can pull off the big upset. Everybody’s thrown off by that first score (45-10 in late September). I think they have enough talent to be very competitive, but (Tulane QB Jake) Retzlaff has to be on. They don’t have the depth that Ole Miss has.” — Group of 5 head coach “No way. Tulane’s gonna be beat by 20-plus. JMU may lose by 40. They’re gonna get embarrassed.” — Big Ten running backs coach “The only shot is if someone’s buses break down.” — ACC offensive analyst Who do you think will pull off an upset? • Miami: 58% • No one: 25% • Oklahoma: 13% • Tulane: 4% “Miami over A&M. The Aggies are really good, but both their coordinators might be distracted, and Miami is really talented.” — Group of 5 tight ends coach “Oklahoma over Alabama. OU is playing at home. Their defense is really good and they have a pretty nasty pass rush. (QB John) Mateer hasn’t looked good since he got hurt in September, but he should be better with a few weeks off.” — Big Ten defensive line coach “Miami over A&M. Miami has a lot of talent top to bottom and (QB Carson) Beck has played in a ton of big games.” — Big 12 head coach Which team would you least like to play? • Georgia: 46% • Ohio State: 21% • Indiana: 17% • Miami: 8% • Ole Miss: 4% “Georgia. They can win in a bunch of different ways. They can beat you 40-something to 30-something or win a 13-7 game. There’s not a lot of those types of teams out there.” — Group of 5 head coach “Indiana. Their defense is a problem. Their scheme makes you work a lot harder. They’re very multiple. They’re so good with fire zones, simulated pressures, and do a good job of fitting the run. (Defensive coordinator Bryant) Haines does such a great job of breaking his own tendencies. He does some stuff that is NFL-complicated, and (QB Fernando) Mendoza’s post-snap decision-making is exceptional.” — Big Ten running backs coach “Ole Miss. They have that up-tempo spread. Their offense is a little different. They’re a headache to play against. Their running back (Kewan Lacy) is really good. He can take it the distance, and (Trinidad) Chambliss is a really good college quarterback.” — SEC defensive coordinator How many teams actually have a legitimate shot at being champions? • Three teams: 38% • Four teams: 21% • Six teams: 13% • Five teams: 8% • Seven teams: 8% • Eight teams: 8% • 10 teams: 4% Who do you think is the best coach in the Playoff? • Kirby Smart: 50% • Curt Cignetti: 38% • Dan Lanning: 8% • Joey McGuire: 4% “(Kirby) Smart. He’s won multiple national titles. He learned well from (Nick) Saban. It’s how he recruits and the schemes he has. Georgia’s a machine.” — Group of 5 head coach “Curt Cignetti. It’s really hard to argue against him. He talks so damn much, but give it to him. He’s backed it all up. I’d love to see them win it all.” — Group of 5 head coach “Both Kirby and Cignetti have their teams ready to play, and they have good game plans every week. That’s really all you can control. Kirby’s amazing. But as for who is doing the most with the least, that’s Cignetti.” — Big Ten running backs coach “Cignetti. Indiana’s gone to the Playoff in back-to-back years? Are you friggin’ kidding me? I know guys who used to work there. That place was a football graveyard. That place hadn’t been in the top 10 in like 100 years. (Editor’s note: 57 years.)” — ACC offensive coordinator “Smart. He’s won two national championships. He’s doing a great job of being a head coach and not just being a defensive guy. It feels like he helps their offense out a lot.” — SEC defensive coordinator “Cignetti. When he was talking his s—, I was like, who is this guy? But he backs it up. And when you watch them on both sides, his team is seriously well-coached. I just think he’s the best coach. And I respect his path too; to leave Alabama (as an assistant) to take a small-school job is so impressive.” — Big Ten defensive line coach
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Oregon Football: Should Dante Moore Go to the NFL?
depends on what he looks like in the high pressure playoffs. I get wanting to be a 1st round pick, but I would absolutely dread playing for the Raiders Jets, maybe Arizona??? Now New Orleans would be better. I trust Kellen Moore to put Dante in a good position... but hey. but does Dante want to take a chance in another OC's offense that isnt Will Stein in what would be a crucial year next year??