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New era of QB free agency?

Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:32 pm
Posted by miz_zombie
Member since Dec 2014
391 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:32 pm
Is this stage one of a new era in college qb free agency?

With the overwhelming norm to red-shirt as a freshman.

And the 12 month a year campus lifestyle, affording kids to graduate quickly.

Is it going to be the norm for relatively high end qb's to be available on a yearly basis?



Posted by TheJones
Member since Nov 2009
33333 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:37 pm to
College football as we know it will be dramatically different now that shitty QBs looking for a second chance can graduate early and sit on the bench behind running backs that play QB.
Posted by Jobu93
Cypress TX
Member since Sep 2011
19209 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:41 pm to
This has been happening for years.
Posted by allin2010
Auburn
Member since Aug 2011
18151 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:45 pm to
Cam
Posted by HempHead
Big Sky Country
Member since Mar 2011
55446 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:51 pm to
Masoli.
Posted by Farmer1906
The Woodlands, TX
Member since Apr 2009
50381 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 4:55 pm to
A&M has lost 5 guys to transfer in the last 3 years.

We also had a RS Freshman, RS Sophomore, and a true freshman as our starters so when upperclassmen get beat out, it happens.
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
83459 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 5:16 pm to
Anyone think these offenses have something to do with it? There are tons of offenses that Braxton Miller could walk in day one and be really successful running.

My buddies were pumped about him potentially replacing Winston. Kinda chuckled at the thought of BM running that offense like Winston. But he could do it at Auburn couldn't he? We saw how nasty they were with NM year one. You don't have to be THAT good of a QB anymore.
Posted by Prof
Member since Jun 2013
42621 posts
Posted on 1/9/15 at 6:19 pm to
There really aren't any more now that graduate early or red-shirt than there were before we just live in a more connected world and college athletics is even more covered by traditional press, online media and social media than it was. Before only on campus stars were covered and not nearly as much as today and recruiting was barely covered at all and was more a coach's thing that fans knew little about (it was a new moment in sports journalism, and an enormous one with huge implications for where sports journalism would go in the future, when a Knoxville radio station sent a reporter to cover the announcement of some High School kid named Peyton Manning -- that action is now standard but it was unheard of then).

Speaking of Peyton... When he announced he was returning for his 'senior' year, it was even more about simply returning to college than folks realized. He'd already graduated in 3 years and was pursuing a graduate degree for his 4th or 'senior' year.

Our program is setup to graduate most athletes in 3 years whether they red-shirt or not. And really, it makes sense given that athletes are often on campus as early enrollees and some are there in part of the summer or mini-term. It's fairly easy to take an extra course in one or more of the three non-standard terms and pile up credits.

That said, where I think today IS different is that talent is accumulating over a handful of schools that pull in top 25 recruiting classes every year, particularly those pulling in top 10 classes yearly, whereas in years past talent was more evenly spread out among all schools. When you combine red-shirts and graduating early with a stacked roster, you're going to start seeing high profile transfers. But I don't think it's enough to call it a type of free agency -- I think we're seeing a few high profile guys because a few schools hit the QB lottery and they have 3-4 QBs that could all be starters. That's not happening everywhere but at a few schools that have recruited the QB position very well.
This post was edited on 1/9/15 at 6:23 pm
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