Favorite team:Alabama 
Location:2500 mi from Tuscaloosa due west
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Interests:Alabama Sports
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Number of Posts:5696
Registered on:6/22/2012
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Where would Aiden Sherrell be on that board? Just wondering.
This looks like a good get and one that will stick. Good pedigree too.
quote:

The schools with billionaires who are committed to the support are probably golden until that billionaire croaks and the wealth needs to be split up among their entitled, soft spawn


We had ONE billionaire supporting us ,Hugh Culverhouse; he croaks, son takes over , possibly a non-alumnus and promptly finds a reason to turn off the spigot.
Don’t think we have had another billionaire funding us since then.

re: Pavia goes undrafted

Posted by My2Bits on 4/29/26 at 9:49 am to
Ravens offered him a 3- year contract after his visit. Must’ve been awfully impressed.
Arizona has Jacobi Brissett as the designated starter but he is holding out.
They have Minshew as the back up.
Thats it.
They feel Brissett can start the season but Simpson if selected can finish.
Most Mocks I have seen and I do not have the patience to watch All of them, have Proctor and Simpson going in the First round and Bernard at the top of 2nd .
They have the Cardinals trading up to First round from the 2nd and selecting Simpson anywhere from 28 to 32.

From: NY Times:
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Until Saturday

Jason Kirk
By Jason Kirk
Hey, it's NFL Draft week. As always, I think your alma mater does the best job of preparing young men for pro football — and life in general. However, every time your rival gets mentioned alongside a pick this weekend, that'll be nothing but portal-farming.
Grad School


Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images
Pluses, minuses for NFL in new CFB world
The NFL is still catching up to the 2020s' many landmark college football changes. From COVID's extra eligibility year to NIL keeping players in school longer, drafts in this era have featured prospects ranging in age from 20-ish to 25-ish, all while transfers have made the whole thing more complicated for NFL scouts.

This year, the effects of change are particularly evident in a thin QB crop. Almost everyone believes in Indiana's Fernando Mendoza at No. 1, but after him? Well, look at who's still in school.

We can complain about Arch Manning's fame all we like, but some teams absolutely would've considered him a first-rounder. Oregon's Dante Moore was a potential top-five pick before he chose to stick around. Five years ago, players comparable to Ole Miss' Trinidad Chambliss would've gone pro, rather than fighting to stay.

On that note, one quote from our Bruce Feldman that jumped out right away in his 2026 NFL Draft confidential:

"After two months of talks with more than two dozen NFL coaches and scouts, granted anonymity for their candor, the consensus is that we’ve got a bad draft for quarterbacks, a 'not great' one for receivers and the worst draft for defensive tackles in at least a decade."

To be clear, a lag in the NFL's free talent-development pipeline is the NFL's problem, meaning it's not actually a problem. The world's richest sports league can figure out how to deal with it. As a college football partisan, I think it rocks that we get to keep star players longer, sometimes by paying them more than the NFL would. Even better, it's not my money that's being spent. ??

Interestingly, some of the biggest names that did enter this draft might be especially unfinished products. In Bruce's story, coaches used the word "raw" to describe eight prospects, which might or might not be a high amount. Multiple used that description for Ohio State linebacker Arvell Reese, the likeliest No. 2 pick, while also praising his enormous upside. (He'll likely turn out great.)

As for the likeliest No. 2 quarterback, merely a 15-game college starter:

"'There are some things about (Alabama’s) Ty Simpson I appreciate, but the lack of experience and real starter traits is a concern,' said the personnel director. 'He needed to stay in college.'"

And he certainly could've, at Bama or elsewhere, having reportedly been offered $6.5 million by Miami. That's about three times what he'll make in 2026 if he's picked in the second round. But would competing against Manning, Moore and company next year have been the bigger long-term risk? Newly complex considerations.

The NFL might also benefit from this era, however. After safety Dillon Thieneman excelled in different schemes at Purdue and Oregon, one NFL DB coach told Bruce that Thieneman is "one of the more versatile safeties I’ve seen." Similar story for No. 1 safety Caleb Downs, who "picked up Nick Saban’s system as a true freshman and led the Tide in tackles by a wide margin, and then as a leader on the Buckeyes defense."

Also, that story gave us the latest head-turning anecdote about Downs being a professor on the field, from an NFL defensive backs coach:

"This guy sat down at his formal interview and installed his defense, and then talked about how he would play it in our defense. He knew the rules of our defense before he came into the meeting. Nobody’s doing that."

What's more impressive than a young player becoming a leader on one college team? Becoming a leader on two, perhaps by having walked into Columbus as a chip off the old Saban block. Might say something about his ability to do the same at the next level, right?


Just Wow! He might end up being a HOF.
Did you guys know that Labaron has a cousin 6-8 plays at Monteverde Academy.
Name is Joe Philon and he has committed to UCLA. Don’t know much about him but he is obviously a decent player for a blue blood to want him. Guess we were not interested.
Those two felonies are a killer. I hope somehow he can skate past them and play for us next season.
I agree too. I loved his game and his passion. He always seem to try hard except during his last two or three games , he just seemed a little off. Distracted maybe?
Definitely want him back.
It was so sad to see him get into trouble for something like Weed. Don’t know if he was selling; that would certainly be bad, but if it was for personal use it is something as common as beer today on college campuses . Hope Aden is back and learns to lay off the pot at least during the season.
Wimp was always a player and talent short of the best teams of his time. He had wonderful players but never enough.
He was a terrific coach before he blew it all with his Peccadillos.
I saw Michigan after we played Arizona and I thought they were the best team in the country. Tonight I think Arizona maybe slightly better. We’ll see.
36% FGs and 29% 3 point. 92% FT
How did we not get Yaxel. Heard he turned down Awbarn according to Pearl. We could have traded two signings for him.
Yes we are very proud.
But Oats has to learn from these repetitive defeats. That is the disappointing part of this year.
How is Allen a draftee this year?
Our energy is just not there in the second half. Here is where we miss Holloway. Cant rest Philon.
Their plans are working we have no counter.