Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Fre3dombear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Didnt need em then with art briles breaking college football
Fre3dombear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Didnt need em then with art briles breaking college football
BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Thee University said:Fre3dombear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Didnt need em then with art briles breaking college football
Kind of like when he broke that American Athletic Conference powerhouse UCF. Remember them? We let them put 52 points on us when we were favored by 16. Big 12 got bent over a log!
Or maybe you were thinking about a year later in the Cotton Bowl? Again, an 11-1 team gives up 42 points to a Big 10 pansy@$$. 21 in the 4th Q alone.
Boy howdy we were breaking college football all right.
Oh, one other thing, TCU, our CO-Champ brother from the Big 12, upheld their end of representing the Big 12. They drill Ole Miss 42-3 in the Peach Bowl to finish 12-1.
blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
Johnny Bear said:Thee University said:Fre3dombear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Didnt need em then with art briles breaking college football
Kind of like when he broke that American Athletic Conference powerhouse UCF. Remember them? We let them put 52 points on us when we were favored by 16. Big 12 got bent over a log!
Or maybe you were thinking about a year later in the Cotton Bowl? Again, an 11-1 team gives up 42 points to a Big 10 pansy@$$. 21 in the 4th Q alone.
Boy howdy we were breaking college football all right.
Oh, one other thing, TCU, our CO-Champ brother from the Big 12, upheld their end of representing the Big 12. They drill Ole Miss 42-3 in the Peach Bowl to finish 12-1.
As long as we're selectively focusing on failures, why don't you tell us about a couple of the BU teams you played on that lost to Alabama by a combined score of 75-2 and also blew a chance to at least be in the NC picture on New Year's Day by blowing a home game to San Jose State.
Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
IBleedGreenandGold said:
I think their all time record is way worse than bu's. But they're a sleeping giant with a huge alumni base.
LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
Thee University said:Fre3dombear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
Didnt need em then with art briles breaking college football
Kind of like when he broke that American Athletic Conference powerhouse UCF. Remember them? We let them put 52 points on us when we were favored by 16. Big 12 got bent over a log!
Or maybe you were thinking about a year later in the Cotton Bowl? Again, an 11-1 team gives up 42 points to a Big 10 pansy@$$. 21 in the 4th Q alone.
Boy howdy we were breaking college football all right.
Oh, one other thing, TCU, our CO-Champ brother from the Big 12, upheld their end of representing the Big 12. They drill Ole Miss 42-3 in the Peach Bowl to finish 12-1.
Johnny Bear said:BUATX2000 said:Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
We don't have mark cuban writing $30M checks. And we never did.
We had Dayton McLane at the time and that was plenty.
I am and always have been convinced that the best was yet to come with CAB at the helm before everything got needlessly blown up.
IBleedGreenandGold said:
I think their all time record is way worse than bu's. But they're a sleeping giant with a huge alumni base.
no coincidence that all the allegations broke only after Briles turned Texas down.Chuckroast said:LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
But turning down Texas (which I'm sure was hard for him to do) was history at that point. All indications were that he was happy at Baylor. Not sure what other school would have interested him as much as Texas.
BUATX2000 said:Chuckroast said:LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
But turning down Texas (which I'm sure was hard for him to do) was history at that point. All indications were that he was happy at Baylor. Not sure what other school would have interested him as much as Texas.
no coincidence that all the allegations broke only after Briles turned Texas down.
Quinton said:
Art was very good and would have contended for titles. Not close to Cignetti. Smarter, even better eye for talent, more structured and disciplined. This years Indiana team is one of the best coached Cfb I've ever seen.
Cignetti is generational.
LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
whitetrash said:IBleedGreenandGold said:
I think their all time record is way worse than bu's. But they're a sleeping giant with a huge alumni base.
IIRC Indiana is second worst all time among P4 schools, ahead of only Wake Forest. Northwestern and Kansas St used to be worse, but they have passed IU over the last 30-35 years.
And will all those alumni, their stadium holds only 53-55K (although it may have increased when they built an endzone facility a few years ago). It really wasn't much more than a glorified Floyd Casey before that.
Redbrickbear said:whitetrash said:IBleedGreenandGold said:
I think their all time record is way worse than bu's. But they're a sleeping giant with a huge alumni base.
IIRC Indiana is second worst all time among P4 schools, ahead of only Wake Forest. Northwestern and Kansas St used to be worse, but they have passed IU over the last 30-35 years.
And will all those alumni, their stadium holds only 53-55K (although it may have increased when they built an endzone facility a few years ago). It really wasn't much more than a glorified Floyd Casey before that.
That is what makes Cignetti so special
Indiana football was a joke
But give Indiana some time…they are already talking football stadium expansion and the fan base it all in now that they have Cignetti…the school has a lot of upsides and advantages (it's not Kansas State or Wake Forest)
Chuckroast said:LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
But turning down Texas (which I'm sure was hard for him to do) was history at that point. All indications were that he was happy at Baylor. Not sure what other school would have interested him as much as Texas.
EvilTroyAndAbed said:Chuckroast said:LTBear19 said:Chuckroast said:blackie said:
I know many of you give Thee a hard time, but his statements above are factual history. Plus, I doubt CAB would have been here long enough for Baylor to be Indiana today. Were Briles committed to Baylor he would have shut down all the UT talk well before we arrived in Tempe for that game against UCF. I was out there. Few were talking about the game. All the talk was about how to keep Briles from leaving. And the team's performance mirrored the distraction. He didn't go then, supposedly because he wouldn't lower himself in his mind for a UT interview, but I think you are dreaming to believe he would have stayed at Baylor another 10 years.
Regardless the landscape has changed. Even with Briles here, would Baylor have been able to keep the players we had with the likes of the money being thrown around today.
It is pointless to bring up these kinds of threads. People are beating a dead horse. We all know the story. Woulda, coulda, shoulda doens't matter now and continuing to bring it up just plants negativity concerning Baylor with people that may not even know the history. And regardless of who is coaching this team in 2026, 2027 or 2028 if the money isn't there to buy players it isn't going to matter.
Baylor had a couple of crushing bowl losses, but our program was still on an a significant upward trajectory. We were dominating the Big 12 and recruiting better than ever when Baylor sacrificed its football program.
It's hard to say how Baylor would have performed under Briles in the NIL age, but he was without question a coach on par with Cignetti … getting the most out of his talent.
Its pretty useless to play what if, but I still wish Baylor would own up to its mistakes.
I think Blackie makes an excellent point.
Had we continued to have success, Briles might not have been around for the long haul.
I think our fanbase has been spoiled into thinking that every coach is going to pull a Scott Drew and stay at the same school forever.
And even Drew was reportedly entertaining Kentucky's offer when they came sniffing around.
The UT talk was definitely a distraction leading up to the Fiesta Bowl.
And if UT was looking into Briles, then I'm sure other programs would have come after him as well, and been willing to write very big checks for his services.
And this includes the NFL.
One needs to look no further than Matt Rhule, who was picked up by a pro team and didn't have near the success as Briles.
At the end of the day, money talks - especially in this day and age.
Now whether Briles could have parlayed that success into a National Championship in the short time he would have remained here at Baylor, we'll never know.
But the chances of Briles sticking around long enough to have a statue like Teaff were slim, imo.
With all the drama going on within the program at that time, he might have pulled a Harbaugh and got out while the gettin' was good - if he'd been able to.
But turning down Texas (which I'm sure was hard for him to do) was history at that point. All indications were that he was happy at Baylor. Not sure what other school would have interested him as much as Texas.
If no scandal had happened, Texas would have come right back to him a few years after their next coaching stumble. And they wouldn't have interviewed. They would have offered. And he would have taken it. Or A&M would have come calling. He wouldn't have stayed at Baylor for the long haul.
canoso said:Quinton said:
Art was very good and would have contended for titles. Not close to Cignetti. Smarter, even better eye for talent, more structured and disciplined. This years Indiana team is one of the best coached Cfb I've ever seen.
Cignetti is generational.
Can't argue with you. Maybe the best thing BU athletics can do is ID another successful coach from Saban's tree, whatever level he's currently at, and get him to BU asap.
canoso said:Quinton said:
Art was very good and would have contended for titles. Not close to Cignetti. Smarter, even better eye for talent, more structured and disciplined. This years Indiana team is one of the best coached Cfb I've ever seen.
Cignetti is generational.
Can't argue with you. Maybe the best thing BU athletics can do is ID another successful coach from Saban's tree, whatever level he's currently at, and get him to BU asap.
Fre3dombear said:
Only better but the baylor bor san hedrin committed suicide to try to avoid anyone seeing their sins
canoso said:Quinton said:
Art was very good and would have contended for titles. Not close to Cignetti. Smarter, even better eye for talent, more structured and disciplined. This years Indiana team is one of the best coached Cfb I've ever seen.
Cignetti is generational.
Can't argue with you. Maybe the best thing BU athletics can do is ID another successful coach from Saban's tree, whatever level he's currently at, and get him to BU asap.