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QB1 Julian Sayin (National Champion)

I was surprised when I found out he was only 6'1 halfway through the season. I could tell he wasn't 6'4+, but he plays taller than 6'1 IMO.

It’s a bit more negligible when he has excellent field vision. Look at how many 6’5 guys don’t see open dudes. Doesn’t mean shit if you can’t see them

See:

A shit ton of tall
QBs that have sucked ass
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Penn State Cult (Joe Knew)

Ive been saying that since Franklin was fired. Firing him mid season is going to an incredible amount of damage to the program, with recruits, current players, incoming coaches, AD and program as a whole. I tried telling this to a co worker who’s a Ped St fan. He said that they had to do something to make another step. I made the point that what if they were already at their ceiling. His counterpoint was JoePa, and then mine was that if you’re using an NC from 40yrs ago as your level of success, than your program is not an NC relevant program. They’re a 9-10win program which is where Franklin had them. Firing him just made the next HC’s job almost impossible because his seat is hot if he doesn’t win the B1G in year 2 and an NC by year 3. And if the coach has less than 9 wins(which I think he will since so much talent will be leaving and recruiting is a massive burden there) than you’re going to have some embarrassed and pissed off big money donors who will have caused this entire mess
:blush:

Taking this from the recruiting thread.

Their whole identity as a football program is so fucked up. An old demon coached there for 60 years, won 2 titles in 5 years, and then a total of 3 conference championships post ‘93. PSU won enough to stay relevant, but the real draw was JoePa and his following. The fans, media, and sport paid reverence to him, not Penn St, and it created monsters and a rudderless program after he left in disgrace.

The sooner they move on, the better, but they never will. His success is all they can point to that seperates them from Iowa or a dozen other decent programs. And the more they point to him as the pinnacle of football, the longer it’ll take to develop their own identity.

Franklin wasn’t a great coach but he was as or more consistent than JoePa was in his final 2 decades. And that’s all you really need to know about the quality of JoePa and their program.
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Indiana Hoosiers (your shinebox, go f'n get it)

I dont think it will be an exposure like the game last year. IU is the legit #2 team in the country (go work a glory hole, aggy), and they'll have something of a home field advantage. We beat them, but it's a 7-12 point win. Sayin picks that night to have a bad game, and it's not out of the question that they win.
We're winning by 30 but cute story
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DC Matt Patricia (Official Thread)

I’ll second this. Moreover, I’d highly recommend their podcast overall. Downs2Business, I think it’s called. It’s really great on so many levels… Brothers, elite athletes, thoughtful and articulate young men… Hat is off to Mr. and Mrs. Downs.

I concur. I just picked it up last week, but it's a good watch.
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Assistant HC/Secondary/CB Coach/Co-DC Tim Walton (National Champion)

Walt just seems so smooth, calm and under control. You can see how the DBs play with that same attitude. He’s like the dawg whisperer, keeping the energy of his boys harnessed. They aren’t flying all over the field getting PIs and flags playing reckless. They play calm and confident. “Attitude reflects leadership.”

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DT Eddrick Houston (National Champion)

As Urban would say ..... When we needed you the most, you gave us your very best.
And he's critical to stopping ttun and its run game. We need every developed and able player in the front 7 to counter ttun's run game. This kinda goes without saying, but we can't let that beat us again. The bigger the fresh rotation up front is the better chance we take care of business against ttun. They may be losing games they shouldn't and have looked iffy, none of that ever matters in The Game.
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2025-2026 Ohio State Men's Basketball

Penn State Transfer Puff Johnson Files Lawsuit Against NCAA After Seeking Medical Hardship Waiver to Play for Ohio State​

By Dan Hope on November 6, 2025 at 12:38 am @dan_hope
Puff Johnson

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A potential addition to the Ohio State men’s basketball team is suing the NCAA after his request for a medical hardship waiver was denied.
Puff Johnson, who previously played for Penn State and North Carolina, filed a legal complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio against the NCAA on Wednesday. Johnson is seeking the opportunity to play for Ohio State this season after his request for a medical hardship waiver was denied.
According to the complaint, which was shared publicly by attorney Mit Winter, Johnson – who enrolled at Ohio State in July – sought a medical hardship waiver in conjunction with Ohio State to play for the Buckeyes this season. While Johnson has not been formally added to Ohio State’s roster, the complaint states that Johnson was offered a scholarship to play for the Buckeyes.
Johnson argues that he should be eligible for a medical hardship waiver due to a multitude of injuries he suffered over the past five years. He alleges that the denial of his waiver violates the Sherman Antitrust Act as well as Ohio’s Valentine Act.
As a freshman at North Carolina in 2020-21, Johnson suffered a broken foot that “severely limited his participation.” After returning to competition midway through his sophomore season, Johnson battled patellar fat pad inflammation that caused him to miss time in his junior season.
Johnson tore his patellar tendon after transferring to Penn State in 2023, causing him to miss multiple games. He was limited to 17 games for Penn State last season due to a heel stress fracture, a right wrist injury, a concussion and a broken right hand.
In addition to his physical injuries, Johnson has also been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and has “experienced family emergencies and mental health challenges” during his college career, according to the complaint.
The NCAA denied Johnson’s request because he played in more than 30% of Penn State’s games, the limit to receive a medical hardship waiver, during the 2024-25 season. Johnson and Ohio State “timely appealed the NCAA’s denial, acknowledging that Johnson appeared in more than thirty percent (30%) of Penn State’s games but emphasizing the extraordinary and extenuating medical circumstances that characterized his 2024–2025 season.” The appeal stated that Johnson’s wrist injury was misdiagnosed and that he should not have been cleared to return to play.
Collectively, Johnson has played in 114 games over the past five years, using the fifth year of eligibility all athletes received due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to play for Penn State last season. That said, the complaint argues that Johnson should be eligible for a medical hardship year because he missed 54 total games over those five years due to his injuries.
The NCAA has not yet issued a decision on Johnson’s appeal. However, Johnson is seeking an injunction against the NCAA that would require it to “immediately issue a waiver” to allow him to play for Ohio State this season.

Right, so as I understand it, his argument to get the extra year comes down to PSU clearing him to play when he was still injured and playing him when he was still injured 2 games more than allowed. I didn't realize what he went through exactly last year, but if a school did clear a player and put him out there when he was still injured 2 games beyond the cut-off, that's a pretty good justification for not counting that year against him.
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