OK - who wins the game on Sept. 9th ?

Yes, he was the former Hawkeye QB, then hawkeye DB and then redskin.


Didnt turn out terrible for him switching, did it?
I'm just glad Lanning gets to keep playing, way too good of an athlete to keep off the field even if we don't need him taking snaps. Park seems to fit the offensive mold that Campbell wants better, and Lanning can also be used effectively elsewhere. Everybody wins.
 
I'm just glad Lanning gets to keep playing, way too good of an athlete to keep off the field even if we don't need him taking snaps. Park seems to fit the offensive mold that Campbell wants better, and Lanning can also be used effectively elsewhere. Everybody wins.

Definitely. He was bouncing around his RS year so he has seen some work there before this year also. Gotta put the best athletes out there and let them make plays.
 
Thats random.

And not even close to the same situation as Lanning.


What I see are two guys who were at qb (lanning as a jr and bowen as a rs) and both starting the next year. I might see what you are saying though. Lanning was doing some LB work as a RS and he had some background there, so he might have an unfair advantage there.
 
Yes, he was the former Hawkeye QB, then hawkeye DB and then redskin.


Didnt turn out terrible for him switching, did it?
I'm not going to get into the Lanning thing, as I have no idea how he will do, but I really can't believe you just tried to compare that situation to Matt Bowen's switch from QB to safety before his sophomore year. I honestly think he might have switched before his freshman season ended.
 
Thats random.

And not even close to the same situation as Lanning.
Definitely an experiment to watch. I am sure Lanning will make mistakes early on and will grow as the season goes on. Which doesn't bode well against iowa.
 
I'm not going to get into the Lanning thing, as I have no idea how he will do, but I really can't believe you just tried to compare that situation to Matt Bowen's switch from QB to safety before his sophomore year. I honestly think he might have switched before his freshman season ended.


So how is Bowens RS freshman year different than this year for Lanning? Lanning worked some there during RS and moved after last season to get spring drills in. Pretty similar to Bowen from what I've heard. I'm just asking about comparable first years changing. Didn't Bowen start as a freshman?
 
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So how is Bowens RS freshman year different than this year for Lanning? Lanning worked some there during RS and moved after last season to get spring drills in. Pretty similar to Bowen from what I've heard. I'm just asking about comparable first years changing. Didn't Bowen start as a freshman?
No, he didn't start until his junior year. He had 1-1.5 years of defensive work under his belt before he ever even started as a junior.

Not. Even. Close.
 
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The Big 12 has one "Air Raid" offense. One! It is not a "pass happy" league. That is simply one of the biggest myths in college football. On average over the past five years, the Big 12 actually passes less than the Pac 12 and ACC.

iSu has also has been utilizing a 4-3 in fall camp
I suppose I was using "Air Raid" as more of a blanket statement for the Spread Offenses almost all the Big 12 uses. And, while I agree the Big 12 is trending away from being pass happy, there was a 5 year stretch where a large chunk of teams did nothing but air it out. Baylor post RG3, Tx Tech (obvi), Oklahoma State with Weeden and then tried and failed with Chelf and that scrambling QB they used, and TCU liked to go deep with Boykin, who could also run.

Oklahoma and Texas have always been very balanced in their attack, although TX hasn't had a decent QB since McCoy (almost longer than us)
 
I suppose I was using "Air Raid" as more of a blanket statement for the Spread Offenses almost all the Big 12 uses. And, while I agree the Big 12 is trending away from being pass happy, there was a 5 year stretch where a large chunk of teams did nothing but air it out. Baylor post RG3, Tx Tech (obvi), Oklahoma State with Weeden and then tried and failed with Chelf and that scrambling QB they used, and TCU liked to go deep with Boykin, who could also run.

Oklahoma and Texas have always been very balanced in their attack, although TX hasn't had a decent QB since McCoy (almost longer than us)
I'd only call Tech a true air raid. Tech doesn't care if they throw 50 times. Any other spread in the Big 12 wants to dominate on the ground as much as they do in the air. Baylor, for instance, basically ran a play-action offense out of spread formations, running 55% of the time. They passed for a lot of deep touchdowns, but usually because the defense's safeties had crept into the box to stop the run.
 
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