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Topic:  Possible Optimism

Topic:  Possible Optimism
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Doc Bobcat
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  Message Not Read  Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 8:15:18 AM 
Some seem bent toward pessimism…..but here are a few reasons not to give up on next season already:


1. Rickey Hunt.

2. At least 2 potentially decent QBs.

3. Linebackers galore….albeit inexperienced.

4. D Line guys like Weaver and Henderson and Gorman.

5. Another decent recruiting class.

6. Young DBs with some speed.

7. Hopefully return of most of the coaches.

8. Decent kicking game.

9. Deep WR corps. With stars like Hendricks and Jacoby.

10. Smiling Skull got their liquor license back.


A person could do reasons to be pessimistic…..like losing Nowinsky….but I’ll leave that to more of a darksider fan.
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OhioBobcat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 9:38:16 AM 
Doc Bobcat wrote:
Some seem bent toward pessimism…..but here are a few reasons not to give up on next season already:


1. Rickey Hunt.

2. At least 2 potentially decent QBs.

3. Linebackers galore….albeit inexperienced.

4. D Line guys like Weaver and Henderson and Gorman.

5. Another decent recruiting class.

6. Young DBs with some speed.

7. Hopefully return of most of the coaches.

8. Decent kicking game.

9. Deep WR corps. With stars like Hendricks and Jacoby.

10. Smiling Skull got their liquor license back.


A person could do reasons to be pessimistic…..like losing Nowinsky….but I’ll leave that to more of a darksider fan.


All very good points. This idea from some that Ohio is somehow going to fall back to what it once was next season is baffling to me. There is a football “program” in Athens, not just a football “team” from year to year. Ohio is the model of consistency in the MAC. If there was ever a program that showcases that notion it is Ohio. Sure, the MAC Championship is missing. But the rest of the proven results are not. Look at the highs and lows that much of the rest of the MAC goes through. For many of them their year to year results track like a roller coaster. Meanwhile, Ohio hums right along as an annual title contender and keeps racking up bowl wins left and right. Look at the amount of talent that sat out of the bowl and how well the talent behind those guys did. GSU was overwhelmed by it. This stems back to how well Ohio recruits. You take just about any other MAC team and strip them of their top 2 qb’s, top 2 rb’s, 2 of their top wr’s and their best lb and tell them to try and win a bowl game and they’re going to get rolled. What this team did under those exact circumstances can’t be overlooked. Sure Ohio came into the game the much better team. But after the portal defections, this game could have had a much different look and flavor. I for one wonder if Ohio had all of the guys it didn’t if they could have produced the same kind of result as the one the team produced without them??? It would be tough to duplicate, that’s for sure. Ohio football is here to stay and rest assured Ohio will be right in the mix for a MAC Championship next season. Hell, they might even go ahead and finally win it!
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Ohio69
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 9:45:50 AM 
OhioBobcat wrote:

All very good points. This idea from some that Ohio is somehow going to fall back to what it once was next season is baffling to me. There is a football “program” in Athens, not just a football “team” from year to year. Ohio is the model of consistency in the MAC. If there was ever a program that showcases that notion it is Ohio. Sure, the MAC Championship is missing. But the rest of the proven results are not. Look at the highs and lows that much of the rest of the MAC goes through. For many of them their year to year results track like a roller coaster. Meanwhile, Ohio hums right along as an annual title contender and keeps racking up bowl wins left and right. Look at the amount of talent that sat out of the bowl and how well the talent behind those guys did. GSU was overwhelmed by it. This stems back to how well Ohio recruits. You take just about any other MAC team and strip them of their top 2 qb’s, top 2 rb’s, 2 of their top wr’s and their best lb and tell them to try and win a bowl game and they’re going to get rolled. What this team did under those exact circumstances can’t be overlooked. Sure Ohio came into the game the much better team. But after the portal defections, this game could have had a much different look and flavor. I for one wonder if Ohio had all of the guys it didn’t if they could have produced the same kind of result as the one the team produced without them??? It would be tough to duplicate, that’s for sure. Ohio football is here to stay and rest assured Ohio will be right in the mix for a MAC Championship next season. Hell, they might even go ahead and finally win it!


Very well stated.




Can somebody hit a pull up jumper for me?.....

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rpbobcat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 11:12:15 AM 
Ohio69 wrote:

There is a football “program” in Athens, not just a football “team” from year to year. Ohio is the model of consistency in the MAC. If there was ever a program that showcases that notion it is Ohio.

Sure, the MAC Championship is missing. But the rest of the proven results are not.

Meanwhile, Ohio hums right along as an annual title contender and keeps racking up bowl wins left and right.



To make a "cross over" to the "did Frank hold the program back ? " thread.

My wife and I met one of Frank's uncles at a game ,during his first season.

Hs uncle said that he came to O.U. to "build a program, not just win a few games".

Seems he accomplished that.






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shabamon
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 11:26:46 AM 
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.
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Bobcat1996
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 12:39:17 PM 
rpbobcat wrote:
Ohio69 wrote:

There is a football “program” in Athens, not just a football “team” from year to year. Ohio is the model of consistency in the MAC. If there was ever a program that showcases that notion it is Ohio.

Sure, the MAC Championship is missing. But the rest of the proven results are not.

Meanwhile, Ohio hums right along as an annual title contender and keeps racking up bowl wins left and right.



"To make a "cross over" to the "did Frank hold the program back ? " thread.

My wife and I met one of Frank's uncles at a game ,during his first season.

Hs uncle said that he came to O.U. to "build a program, not just win a few games".

Seems he accomplished that."



There will always be naysayers of this football program and Coach Solich. What Coach Solich brought to Ohio University was consistency. He did more than win a few games; he built this football program. His long time assistant Coach Albin has continued to strengthen the program with back to back ten win seasons. The Bobcats have never accomplished consecutive ten win seasons. With the portal and NIL changing college football as we know it, it will be a huge challenge for coaches in the future. I have the utmost confidence in Coach Albin and his staff to prepare this team for success.

Last Edited: 12/19/2023 12:52:04 PM by Bobcat1996

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Bobcat1998
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 1:01:45 PM 
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.
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Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 1:23:56 PM 
Bobcat1998 wrote:
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.


Our first team all conference quarterback is playing at. . .Indiana. As a 5th year senior.

Unless I'm missing it, I'm not seeing much sign that there's a pipeline from OU to major college football. And certainly not one that suggests that a single good game against a 6-6 Sun Belt team nabs somebody an offer and a ton of money from the P5. To call that a "sad reality" ignores the actual reality.

Last year we had two players transfer "up" -- Daxon to Illinois, Vakos to Wisconsin. This year, we have two commits to Indiana and a few folks uncommitted. But it's not like our guys are leaving for million dollar pay days at Texas. The idea that the transfer portal has upended our program in a way that means we're unable to be optimistic about the future seems pretty unfounded to me.

Last Edited: 12/19/2023 1:36:03 PM by Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame

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Doc Bobcat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 1:42:40 PM 
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
Bobcat1998 wrote:
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.


Our first team all conference quarterback is playing at. . .Indiana. As a 5th year senior.

Unless I'm missing it, I'm not seeing much sign that there's a pipeline from OU to major college football. And certainly not one that suggests that a single good game against a 6-6 Sun Belt team nabs somebody an offer and a ton of money from the P5. To call that a "sad reality" ignores the actual reality.

Last year we had two players transfer "up" -- Daxon to Illinois, Vakos to Wisconsin. This year, we have two commits to Indiana and a few folks uncommitted. But it's not like our guys are leaving for million dollar pay days at Texas. The idea that the transfer portal has upended our program in a way that means we're unable to be optimistic about the future seems pretty unfounded to me.



+1.
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rpbobcat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 2:17:49 PM 
Bobcat1998 wrote:


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.



Hunt had a great game.
But no one knew anything about him.
So there was no way to know how to defend him.
Also Georgia Southern was not exactly a defensive power house.

The kid has talent.
But we'll have to see how he does when defenses know more about him.

I could be wrong, but I think a lot of schools might be hesitant
to offer him, based on one game.

As they say "you don't propose on the first date".









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OhioBobcat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 3:06:50 PM 
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
Bobcat1998 wrote:
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.


Our first team all conference quarterback is playing at. . .Indiana. As a 5th year senior.

Unless I'm missing it, I'm not seeing much sign that there's a pipeline from OU to major college football. And certainly not one that suggests that a single good game against a 6-6 Sun Belt team nabs somebody an offer and a ton of money from the P5. To call that a "sad reality" ignores the actual reality.

Last year we had two players transfer "up" -- Daxon to Illinois, Vakos to Wisconsin. This year, we have two commits to Indiana and a few folks uncommitted. But it's not like our guys are leaving for million dollar pay days at Texas. The idea that the transfer portal has upended our program in a way that means we're unable to be optimistic about the future seems pretty unfounded to me.


Ohio fans/alums are finally getting a true taste of what the transfer portal is truly about. This is what many other schools have been facing on a yearly basis for the last few seasons and Ohio has somehow managed to avoid it for the most part. I have friends who went to a lot of other MAC schools and their schools were ripped by the portal the last few years, while Ohio was relatively untouched. I made the comment that Ohio was living in a bubble at the time. Well, that bubble finally popped and Ohio is getting its first real taste of what it's like to have guys leaving. The Bobcats were able to avoid the mess that many of our peers have experienced and dealt with for the past several years. Now that it's also happening at Ohio, I think it's coming as a little bit of a shock to some Ohio fans/alums because it seems so new. But it's not new, it's the new norm, it's just new to Ohio, but not to most of the rest of the college football world. It just took a few years later for it to hit Ohio fans/alums like it did our peers years ago.
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Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 4:59:25 PM 
OhioBobcat wrote:
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
Bobcat1998 wrote:
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.


Our first team all conference quarterback is playing at. . .Indiana. As a 5th year senior.

Unless I'm missing it, I'm not seeing much sign that there's a pipeline from OU to major college football. And certainly not one that suggests that a single good game against a 6-6 Sun Belt team nabs somebody an offer and a ton of money from the P5. To call that a "sad reality" ignores the actual reality.

Last year we had two players transfer "up" -- Daxon to Illinois, Vakos to Wisconsin. This year, we have two commits to Indiana and a few folks uncommitted. But it's not like our guys are leaving for million dollar pay days at Texas. The idea that the transfer portal has upended our program in a way that means we're unable to be optimistic about the future seems pretty unfounded to me.


Ohio fans/alums are finally getting a true taste of what the transfer portal is truly about. This is what many other schools have been facing on a yearly basis for the last few seasons and Ohio has somehow managed to avoid it for the most part. I have friends who went to a lot of other MAC schools and their schools were ripped by the portal the last few years, while Ohio was relatively untouched. I made the comment that Ohio was living in a bubble at the time. Well, that bubble finally popped and Ohio is getting its first real taste of what it's like to have guys leaving. The Bobcats were able to avoid the mess that many of our peers have experienced and dealt with for the past several years. Now that it's also happening at Ohio, I think it's coming as a little bit of a shock to some Ohio fans/alums because it seems so new. But it's not new, it's the new norm, it's just new to Ohio, but not to most of the rest of the college football world. It just took a few years later for it to hit Ohio fans/alums like it did our peers years ago.


According to this ranking, there are 4 MAC players in the top 200 ranked players in the transfer portal.

https://247sports.com/season/2024-football/transferportaltop /

There'll be plenty of transfers from the MAC, but suspect most of them are going to be transfers down, or lateral moves. If that trend continues, it's won't surprise me if the volume in the portal drops a bit going forward.

Right now it and the NIL are shiny new toys, and they're immature markets. Nobody is quite sure how best to utilize either, and strategies will become more refined as people create more data on the success of the portal as a recruiting tool.
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Campus Flow
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 5:53:33 PM 
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:

According to this ranking, there are 4 MAC players in the top 200 ranked players in the transfer portal.

https://247sports.com/season/2024-football/transferportaltop /

There'll be plenty of transfers from the MAC, but suspect most of them are going to be transfers down, or lateral moves. If that trend continues, it's won't surprise me if the volume in the portal drops a bit going forward.

Right now it and the NIL are shiny new toys, and they're immature markets. Nobody is quite sure how best to utilize either, and strategies will become more refined as people create more data on the success of the portal as a recruiting tool.


Its going to take a long time to optimize around NIL particuarly down the G5 level.

One comparison point is TV. Oklahoma vs. NCAA was in 1984. Regular TV deals for power conferences as we know today didn't mature for about 10 years after that ruling and for what those TV deals were going to be like for MAC level conferences another 10 years after that.

Elimination of the year sit out rule was in April 2021. Only the third year of it. The NCAA Transformation Committee compressed the transfer window time for this season. Also if instutional NIL is allowed for schools who opt-in that could further disincentivize movement down. It could become more of a graduate transfer thing like Rourke is doing.


Most Memorable Bobcat Events Attended
2010 97-83 win over Georgetown in NCAA 1st round
2012 45-13 victory over ULM in the Independence Bowl
2015 34-3 drubbing of Miami @ Peden front of 25,086

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L.C.
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/19/2023 6:32:15 PM 
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
According to this ranking, there are 4 MAC players in the top 200 ranked players in the transfer portal.

https://247sports.com/season/2024-football/transferportaltop /

There'll be plenty of transfers from the MAC, but suspect most of them are going to be transfers down, or lateral moves. If that trend continues, it's won't surprise me if the volume in the portal drops a bit going forward.

Right now it and the NIL are shiny new toys, and they're immature markets. Nobody is quite sure how best to utilize either, and strategies will become more refined as people create more data on the success of the portal as a recruiting tool.


That list goes down to 375, and here is what I found. Players leaving the MAC:
#40 DeQuan Finn, Toledo QB (To Baylor)
#76 Kurtis Rourke, Ohio QB (To Indiana)
#119 Jalen Husky, BG CB (To Maryland)
#127 Devin Grant, Buffalo S (To Syracuse)
#181 Vinny Sclury, Toledo IOL (To Texas Tech)
#185 Tanner Koziol, Ball St TE (To Louisville)
#219 Corey Steward, Ball St OT (To Purdue)
#258 Trey Jones, CMU S (To Texas A&M)
#269 Andreas Paaske, EMU TE (To Arkansas)
#274 Mikah Coleman, EMU DL (To U. Cincy)
#308 Ryan Johnson, Akron DL (To S. Miss)
#333 Casey Thomas, Akron LB (To Virginia)
#353 Corey Thomas, Akron LB (To Virginia)
#375 Zach Conti, EMU IOL (To S. Miss)

Players to the MAC:
#297 Jaddarrius Perkins, to Toledo CB (From Florida)
#309 Porter Rooks, to EMU WR (From NC St)
#331 Jefferson Adam, to Buffalo Edge (From Iowa St)
#345 Drew Vlotto, to EMU QB (from Minnesota)
#348 Stanley King, to Kent St WR (from Northwestern St)

So, from that group, about nine are moving up to P5 teams from the 1-290 group. Above 290, it is a mix of players coming and going, players moving up, and players moving down.

It's a new world, and those that adapt will do fine. I expect:
1.The best teams will become even better, as they can shed their worst players, and replace them from the best proven players from elsewhere, plus very good Freshmen.
2. Bottom P5 teams will either have to come up with a lot of NIL money, or find themselves always several steps behind, a step in recruiting Freshmen, and another in the portal, as they lose their best players, and have to look for not-quite tip-top replacements
3. G5 programs will have to be nimble. They will lose many of their best players later in their career, but can replace them with top FCS or Division II talent, or with players who didn't make the team at P5 schools.
4. FCS and below will lose their best players, but have an ample supply of players moving down.

Overall, things will remain more or less the same, with the exception that the top teams will get even better, and that second tier teams will have the possibility of spending their way into a higher tier...if it works.


“We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.” ― Epictetus

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Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/20/2023 9:25:22 AM 
L.C. wrote:
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
According to this ranking, there are 4 MAC players in the top 200 ranked players in the transfer portal.

https://247sports.com/season/2024-football/transferportaltop /

There'll be plenty of transfers from the MAC, but suspect most of them are going to be transfers down, or lateral moves. If that trend continues, it's won't surprise me if the volume in the portal drops a bit going forward.

Right now it and the NIL are shiny new toys, and they're immature markets. Nobody is quite sure how best to utilize either, and strategies will become more refined as people create more data on the success of the portal as a recruiting tool.


That list goes down to 375, and here is what I found. Players leaving the MAC:
#40 DeQuan Finn, Toledo QB (To Baylor)
#76 Kurtis Rourke, Ohio QB (To Indiana)
#119 Jalen Husky, BG CB (To Maryland)
#127 Devin Grant, Buffalo S (To Syracuse)
#181 Vinny Sclury, Toledo IOL (To Texas Tech)
#185 Tanner Koziol, Ball St TE (To Louisville)
#219 Corey Steward, Ball St OT (To Purdue)
#258 Trey Jones, CMU S (To Texas A&M)
#269 Andreas Paaske, EMU TE (To Arkansas)
#274 Mikah Coleman, EMU DL (To U. Cincy)
#308 Ryan Johnson, Akron DL (To S. Miss)
#333 Casey Thomas, Akron LB (To Virginia)
#353 Corey Thomas, Akron LB (To Virginia)
#375 Zach Conti, EMU IOL (To S. Miss)

Players to the MAC:
#297 Jaddarrius Perkins, to Toledo CB (From Florida)
#309 Porter Rooks, to EMU WR (From NC St)
#331 Jefferson Adam, to Buffalo Edge (From Iowa St)
#345 Drew Vlotto, to EMU QB (from Minnesota)
#348 Stanley King, to Kent St WR (from Northwestern St)

So, from that group, about nine are moving up to P5 teams from the 1-290 group. Above 290, it is a mix of players coming and going, players moving up, and players moving down.

It's a new world, and those that adapt will do fine. I expect:
1.The best teams will become even better, as they can shed their worst players, and replace them from the best proven players from elsewhere, plus very good Freshmen.
2. Bottom P5 teams will either have to come up with a lot of NIL money, or find themselves always several steps behind, a step in recruiting Freshmen, and another in the portal, as they lose their best players, and have to look for not-quite tip-top replacements
3. G5 programs will have to be nimble. They will lose many of their best players later in their career, but can replace them with top FCS or Division II talent, or with players who didn't make the team at P5 schools.
4. FCS and below will lose their best players, but have an ample supply of players moving down.

Overall, things will remain more or less the same, with the exception that the top teams will get even better, and that second tier teams will have the possibility of spending their way into a higher tier...if it works.


I think this is astute. Looking through the portal, I definitely have the sense that 2 and 3 are very true right now.

The bottom part of the P5 seems to be faring the worst. By and large, it seems like the top programs don't have a ton of respect for the MAC and don't see it as a particularly fertile ground for talent. On the other hand, players who have proven themselves at lower level P5 schools seem to move up often. For the MAC, it seems to be only the outliers -- the very, very top echelon -- that moves up, and even then they're rarely moving to powerhouses, and instead are moving to mid or lower tier P5 schools.

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L.C.
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/20/2023 9:47:09 AM 
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
I think this is astute. Looking through the portal, I definitely have the sense that 2 and 3 are very true right now.

The bottom part of the P5 seems to be faring the worst. By and large, it seems like the top programs don't have a ton of respect for the MAC and don't see it as a particularly fertile ground for talent. On the other hand, players who have proven themselves at lower level P5 schools seem to move up often. For the MAC, it seems to be only the outliers -- the very, very top echelon -- that moves up, and even then they're rarely moving to powerhouses, and instead are moving to mid or lower tier P5 schools.

Exactly. I'm seeing MAC players moving "up" to Baylor, Indiana, Maryland, Syracuse, Texas Tech, Louisville, Purdue, Pitt, Minnesota, and Arkansas. I'm not seeing them moving to tOSU, Michigan, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, USC, etc. The result is that, on a second tier P5 team, the players will get more exposure, and play against the best players, but they will do so with a weaker supporting cast, and usually in a losing effort. Will they put up big numbers? Will they stand out, and attract draft interest? I think the odds are against them. Will they collect more NIL than they would at Ohio? Without a doubt, and that will be the reason they go.

Could a MAC player jump to, say, Minnesota, do well, and then jump a year later to Alabama (and collect really big NIL money)? Sure, it could happen, but you are right, it's unlikely they will go directly from the MAC to the big bucks.

In glancing through the portal, there are a number of lower tier P5 schools that are obviously spending a lot in the portal. Schools I saw a lot were Mississippi State, Arizona State, and Colorado, and a few others. We shall see if the spending produces the results they are after. If it does, others will follow.


“We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.” ― Epictetus

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Campus Flow
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/20/2023 10:44:57 AM 
L.C. wrote:
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
I think this is astute. Looking through the portal, I definitely have the sense that 2 and 3 are very true right now.

The bottom part of the P5 seems to be faring the worst. By and large, it seems like the top programs don't have a ton of respect for the MAC and don't see it as a particularly fertile ground for talent. On the other hand, players who have proven themselves at lower level P5 schools seem to move up often. For the MAC, it seems to be only the outliers -- the very, very top echelon -- that moves up, and even then they're rarely moving to powerhouses, and instead are moving to mid or lower tier P5 schools.

Exactly. I'm seeing MAC players moving "up" to Baylor, Indiana, Maryland, Syracuse, Texas Tech, Louisville, Purdue, Pitt, Minnesota, and Arkansas. I'm not seeing them moving to tOSU, Michigan, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, USC, etc. The result is that, on a second tier P5 team, the players will get more exposure, and play against the best players, but they will do so with a weaker supporting cast, and usually in a losing effort. Will they put up big numbers? Will they stand out, and attract draft interest? I think the odds are against them. Will they collect more NIL than they would at Ohio? Without a doubt, and that will be the reason they go.

Could a MAC player jump to, say, Minnesota, do well, and then jump a year later to Alabama (and collect really big NIL money)? Sure, it could happen, but you are right, it's unlikely they will go directly from the MAC to the big bucks.

In glancing through the portal, there are a number of lower tier P5 schools that are obviously spending a lot in the portal. Schools I saw a lot were Mississippi State, Arizona State, and Colorado, and a few others. We shall see if the spending produces the results they are after. If it does, others will follow.


Right there is an ordering and flow. The guys with the 1 million dollar endorsements are stars at the blueblood programs. 5 stars with a big social media following from their time in HS and now producing with the big school.

There is a chance a guy like Bangura could in Minnesota have a 1,000 yard season and put him in conversation for one of those 1 million dollar endorsement. From what I can see if you're a G5 player you won't be in line for that regardless if the school plays in a big market because the valuations are brand/conference dependent.

For that reason Ohio doesn't have to worry about falling behind its G5 peers and of course it takes a lot to go right to make a big endorsement happen. Some of OSU's higher valuation players don't have one because they don't have the social media presence together. Big NIL deals are 5 star guys not 3 star guys.


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Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/20/2023 11:00:54 AM 
Campus Flow wrote:


There is a chance a guy like Bangura could in Minnesota have a 1,000 yard season and put him in conversation for one of those 1 million dollar endorsement. From what I can see if you're a G5 player you won't be in line for that regardless if the school plays in a big market because the valuations are brand/conference dependent.


In football in general, it feels like there's been a major shift in how RBs are valued and it seems very rare that a RB is so elite that they end up with a massive payday. Look at Jonathan Taylor and Saequon Barkley, for instance.

RBs are more or less anonymous at this point, aside from a top 1% of guys. If other schools want to dole out big NIL money for them, cool. But I hope we never do. It seems like the definition of a 'next man up' position.
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BillyTheCat
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  Message Not Read  RE: Possible Optimism
   Posted: 12/21/2023 9:25:13 AM 
OhioBobcat wrote:
Bobcat Love's Sense of Shame wrote:
Bobcat1998 wrote:
shabamon wrote:
Can't share the optimism because it is so easy to bounce up out of here at any moment. At this point last year, you could say the kicking game looked strong for the future and then Vakos peaces for Wisconsin.


This is the sad reality. Someone joked that Hunt had 5 TDs and now has his name in the portal. That should be funny to me but I can't guarantee that he will be back next year.


Our first team all conference quarterback is playing at. . .Indiana. As a 5th year senior.

Unless I'm missing it, I'm not seeing much sign that there's a pipeline from OU to major college football. And certainly not one that suggests that a single good game against a 6-6 Sun Belt team nabs somebody an offer and a ton of money from the P5. To call that a "sad reality" ignores the actual reality.

Last year we had two players transfer "up" -- Daxon to Illinois, Vakos to Wisconsin. This year, we have two commits to Indiana and a few folks uncommitted. But it's not like our guys are leaving for million dollar pay days at Texas. The idea that the transfer portal has upended our program in a way that means we're unable to be optimistic about the future seems pretty unfounded to me.


Ohio fans/alums are finally getting a true taste of what the transfer portal is truly about. This is what many other schools have been facing on a yearly basis for the last few seasons and Ohio has somehow managed to avoid it for the most part. I have friends who went to a lot of other MAC schools and their schools were ripped by the portal the last few years, while Ohio was relatively untouched. I made the comment that Ohio was living in a bubble at the time. Well, that bubble finally popped and Ohio is getting its first real taste of what it's like to have guys leaving. The Bobcats were able to avoid the mess that many of our peers have experienced and dealt with for the past several years. Now that it's also happening at Ohio, I think it's coming as a little bit of a shock to some Ohio fans/alums because it seems so new. But it's not new, it's the new norm, it's just new to Ohio, but not to most of the rest of the college football world. It just took a few years later for it to hit Ohio fans/alums like it did our peers years ago.


110% agree
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