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So is the defense good or are they elite?
Because that will be huge when determining the ceiling of what the crimson tide
can do this upcoming fall.
Hello and welcome in.
It's always Kellogg's with me.
I'm your host Greg McElroy.
Look spring is over.
The pads are off.
If you've been listening to this show for any part of this offseason,
you probably already know the big story lines.
You know about the quarterback competitions.
You know about the portal classes.
You know about the coaching changes.
We've covered all of that, right?
We know that.
But what we have not done is put it all together and take all 16 SEC teams
and find just one question from each one.
The single biggest thing that's standing between each one of these programs
and a great 2026 season.
Not a spring recap, not a power ranking.
It's a question that if it goes wrong,
unravels everything else.
And we'll go in alphabetical order like we always do.
So we will kick things off with Alabama.
But before we do, I encourage all of you to go and subscribe to the podcast
if you haven't already.
If you want to subscribe to the ESPN College Football YouTube page,
that'd be terrific as well.
You'll see cut-ups.
You'll see full episodes.
You'll see stuff that is specific to your team.
So you can do all of that.
But we will kick things off.
Talk at some spring questions here on Always College Football.
The Alabama Crimson Tide.
The question, can this defense be elite enough
to carry the program while the offense figures itself out?
Because we've talked about the Alabama quarterback competition in the show.
Like, you'll know where that stands.
We know that Keel and Russell had a really big day on A Day.
We know that Austin Max kind of battling through something.
And Keel and the board is not going to name anyone until fall.
But here's the question that nobody is really talking about surrounding the Crimson Tide.
What about the other side of the ball?
Because we know about Alabama's offense.
We know they ranked 125th last year in rushing offense.
We know they got beat badly by Indiana.
And everyone is focusing on the offense.
But no one is focusing enough on the fact that the defense
has also had some decent turnover.
And David's coordinator, Kane Womack,
terrific.
He's one of the best in the country.
He returns.
But the continuity that they have on defense
is a legitimate question.
And we know that Alabama lost some serious pieces at several levels.
And they're replacing them with a mix of transfers and some freshmen
that haven't really proven that they have done it at that place together.
But the silver lining from the A Day was real.
The secondary, I think most of us agree as a chance to be one of the best in the country.
You have some young players that are getting some real repetitions.
Feels like the rotation was deep.
It felt like the energy was right.
And the honest calculus for Alabama in 26 is that the offense,
it could have some growing pains.
It doesn't matter which quarterback wins the job.
You got a brand new offensive line.
You got a first year starter at quarterback.
You got a receiver room that is still trying to establish the pecking order.
And that might not be a unit that can carry you all the way through October.
The defense might have to be that unit.
And the question coming out of the spring is whether Womack has enough talent
and continuity to be able to shoulder that load.
Because at the Alabama's defense is elite.
We're talking a top 10 unit nationally.
This is a 10 win football team.
So is the defense good or are they elite?
Because that will be huge when determining the ceiling of what the crimson tide
can do this upcoming fall.
The Arkansas razor backs.
The question, can Ryan Silverfield build a winning culture fast enough
to keep the players that he has from kind of getting a little uneasy
as the season goes along?
Because there's an aspect of this Arkansas situation
that probably not getting enough attention, right?
If Ryan Silverfield is not just rebuilding a roster.
I mean, he's rebuilding kind of the trust.
There's a lot of players that were lost to the portal under the previous staff.
And the program had a bit of a, I don't want to see toxic roster situation,
but there's a lot of new.
And this is Silverfield's first opportunity at the P5 level.
And beyond the exos and before the depth chart,
you have to walk into Fayetteville.
And you have to make the players believe that it was going to be different.
Right? And here's the thing.
The spring game was actually really encouraging on that front.
It sounds like the energy was described as genuine.
Sounds like the defense of players were competing at a really high level.
You hear the names, Steven Souls, who transferred over from Kentucky.
Sounds like he was visibly upset when he didn't get a third sack recorded.
He just had two, but one of that third one.
I mean, that competitiveness, that's a good indicator of culture.
And I think if you listen to Silverfield,
they wish they probably had a few more weeks of practice.
That's also a culture indicator.
It's not like guys are all, man, I'm so glad spring is over.
They wanted more.
That's big.
But here's the risk, right?
There is only one portal window now.
So if a player for whatever becomes kind of disillusioned
between now and at the end of the year,
on a team that's projected to win three or four games,
well, that can be problematic, right?
This locker room's got to hold together,
because it could be tough.
It's a brutal schedule.
And the moment the scoreboard says that things aren't working,
that's not good.
So the question, I think, for Arkansas in 26,
is not necessarily talent.
It's about establishing a foundation.
It's about creating a culture of resilience.
And I'm optimistic that they'll be able to do that.
I really am under coach Ryan Silverfield.
Let's go next to the Auburn Tigers.
The question, can Alex Goulish install this offensive identity
fast enough to be competitive in year number one?
So this is not about talent necessarily.
It's kind of about timing, right?
Alex Goulish, he's a really smart offensive mind,
really built something special at South Florida.
Byron Brown, his quarterback, we know he's legit.
He's operated the system for four straight years.
But the spring game didn't show us a whole lot.
I mean, Brown was a little underwhelming.
The offense is not quite where they need to be
from a consistency standpoint.
The receivers, they didn't create the consistent separation
that we expected them to create.
The defense, they looked like they were in a really good spot.
And that's normal for the first year of an installation.
The problem is that Auburn's schedule,
it does not give Goulish a long runway
to kind of get things going in the right direction.
You got Florida, LSU, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama.
And you got five big time defenses.
And that'll be challenging.
So a six and six season is possible.
And we all know what's happened in Auburn the last few years,
right?
Five and second, five and seven years
that have become kind of normal.
And people are frustrated.
So for whatever reason, it doesn't start really well
for Goulish there in SEC play
because the offense is still trying to find their identity.
That's going to be a challenge.
And they're going to have to be able,
we know the scheme works.
We know that.
That's not a question.
That's been established.
The question is whether or not it works fast enough
to make Auburn immediately competitive
while this new era kind of installs itself.
So that's the big question coming out of spring for Auburn.
The Florida Gators question,
can John Summerall and his staff fix the offensive line
before September?
Or is that asking for too much?
Because we've talked about the Florida quarterback competition
on the show over the last few weeks
and the conversation's still going on.
It's unresolved.
Now here's the thing.
The quarterback question and the offensive line question
are actually kind of the same question, right?
Because it doesn't really matter which quarterback wins the job.
If that quarterback is running for his life behind a line
that Summerall himself has called a genuine concern.
Then he said directly after the spring game,
he said, quote, those guys have to have a great summer
or we got no chance end quote.
That's what he said.
That's a first year head coach
giving you an honest scouting report on his own team.
And here's the specific problem
that the offensive line's been a little bit of a revolving door
of roster construction the last couple years.
And Summerall said that he's pretty uncomfortable with the death.
So is everybody.
That's not unusual.
Now he overhauled the coaching staff on that unit.
You bring in a veteran offensive line coach
to rebuild an offensive line
that shouldn't be a spring practice project.
Spring is not when you have to show results.
It should be a fall camp practice project.
You don't need to be where you need to be yet.
You need to get there though soon
because week three, week four, week five,
that's when the results start to show up.
You can tell by protection time.
You can see it through running lanes.
And we all know what things look like
for the Florida Gators on their schedule this year.
With Georgia and Ole Miss and Oklahoma,
this line, they have got to be better than it was
under the previous staff
because this matter if it's Tremel Jones
or Aaron Filo, if they're getting pressured
on nearly half their dropbacks,
this will team that will struggle
to be super competitive in those games.
And if you look at Summerall's track record,
it's excellent. It's been real.
He's always built on giving his quarterback time to operate.
Now, the question is whether he can rebuild
the foundation fast enough
to allow his system to take hold here in year number one.
The Georgia Bulldogs.
The big questions can Gunner Stockton
make the explosive throws
that have at times not really been attempted
or does the passing game have a bit of a ceiling on it
that would hinder their ability
to chase a national championship?
Look, we know that Georgia can
and will compete for the SEC title.
We know they do it almost every year.
We know they make the college football playoff
almost every year.
We know that they're capable of getting to the quarterfinals
and then that's where they've lost the last two seasons.
But here's the thing about quarter final exits
that nobody really wants to talk about.
The Gunner Stockton was really, really functional
and solid in those games.
But sometimes when you have a super dynamic quarterback
on the opposite side,
Aalot turned into that chameless last year.
You have moments where it's needed
to have a quarterback that just takes over.
And Gunner Stockton was not able to do that last year.
Now, I thought it was really good.
And in large part, the defense was disappointing
for the dogs against the rebels last year.
But I think if you look at it,
even Kirby Smart is saying we got to be more explosive offensively.
He said a lot of their explosive plays
are going to come when it's a bit unscripted
whether they're broken plays
or quarterback improvised moments or scrambles.
As opposed to designed vertical strikes.
And they're going to have to have those designed
in system, in scheme.
That's the blueprint for I think taking the next step
and beating those elite level playoff defense.
So the question is not whether Georgia can
and or will when the SEC, they probably will.
When the SEC, they do it almost every year.
The question is whether Gunner Stockton
can become the guy who makes the throw
that beats a team like Oregon
or Indiana in the college football playoff.
And the addition of Isaiah Canyon from Georgia Tech
is potentially the answer to that on paper.
We know he's got length.
We know he created big plays time and time again last year.
And we know he was targeted a lot throughout their spring game
and that Gunner Stockton has already been praising
what Canyon might be capable of.
But here's what we actually need to see.
We need to see Stockton threading the needle
on a back shoulder throw to Canyon
on a third and a fourth quarter
of a college football playoff game with the game on the line.
We just see him make that designed throw
not the improvised throw.
That's the question.
Can Gunner Stockton become that guy?
I am super optimistic that he can.
The Kentucky Wildcats.
The question is will Stein's system
different enough from what Kentucky has had
to actually change the trajectory of this program?
Because I think Will Stein's the best.
I think he is awesome.
Really, really good.
Honest challenge though.
I mean, Kentucky's had a lot of offensive coordinators
that were supposed to fix the offense
and it hasn't really worked very consistently.
Part of that is because Mark Stoops
they built the program's identity around the defense
and ball control and physicality
and they won a lot of games because of it.
But the offense, there was always a little bit
of a ceiling on the offense for Kentucky.
So Will Stein now comes over from Oregon
with a reputation for being tremendous
when it comes to quarterback development.
He's never been a head coach
but the early signs from spring
are really encouraging.
Kenny Minchi transfers over from Notre Dame.
Sounds like he has a really good feel for the system already
and that Stein says that he's already feels
like he's been in the office for years.
You got some weapons and one in Wipen
in particular in Willie Rodriguez at tight end
that's really emerging and they're saying
we got to feed this guy.
So that's the kind of direct and enthusiasm
that you hear about a player within the position group
that has kind of been a little bit underutilized
over the last few years.
But the real test is that they have to be able to score.
Like that's going to be a necessity.
Whether it's against Alabama, Tennessee,
LSU, Florida, Mizzou, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
A&M, Louisville.
Like this is going to be a big step for Minchi.
He's never been a day one starter at this level.
We've never seen Rodriguez carry the load
and have to shoulder this kind of responsibility
in the passing game.
But the offense here, I think it's going to be very, very different.
I really believe that because this program
has been hovering above or just beyond 500,
the offense now has a chance to take them to the next level.
We know Stein has the credentials.
Now they just need the results.
The LSU Tigers are up next.
And the big question around them is,
can Lane Kiffin install a culture fast enough
to hold this roster together?
Ben, all the pieces get healthy and all come together, right?
Well, we've talked about Sam Levitt in particular.
We know he's had the Liz Frank injury.
We've talked about the offensive line rebuild.
Like those are real things.
But the question, I think, is more fundamental
for LSU entering in 26.
Like Lane Kiffin has never really done
what he's being asked to do this year.
He's never just taken over a program
and immediately they've been expected
to compete for championships.
That's different.
I mean, that is different.
Now, he's probably also never had access
to the resources that he has now.
Because this is a roster that has 39 new portal additions
and they try to make it all function
in 15 practices is really hard to do it.
Because Kiffin, what we know about him at Ole Miss,
he was working with a roster that was recruited
and developed over the course of time.
And yes, they used a lot of transfer portal success
to bolster their opportunities every single year.
But this entire roster for the most part is new.
New offensive line that's never really played together.
A starting quarterback who is yet to really practice
with the first team.
A defense that has some continuity under Blake Baker,
but an offense that Kiffin himself called
like a bit of an expansion team at the start of the spring.
But the encouraging part is that Kiffin
has kind of embraced this culture creation.
His players at Ole Miss talked about the environment
that he created, kind of the accountability,
the competitiveness, the offensive identity
that made everyone kind of feel
like they were a part of something special.
And one of the questions, how fast can that transfer
to Baton Rouge?
Because we know the LSU has Clemson on September 5th
and Clemson's not gonna wait for this culture
and this continuity to arrive, right?
If the culture is real and Sam Levitt is healthy,
then LSU's a genuine cultural ball playoff contender.
But if the culture is still kind of being installed there
the first week or two of the season,
then it could be pretty revealing
there in September in Baton Rouge.
Up next, Mississippi State.
And the question is, is Camario Taylor special?
Or is he just really good in a wide open offense?
Because Jeff Levitt is now in year number three.
And this is the year we kind of need to know, right?
Mississippi State had a decent year last year.
When 5 and 7th, there was progress made.
And the league is now going to nine games.
There's a lot of talent all over the place.
It's gonna be an uphill treadmill for sure.
But Camario Taylor is the player
that everyone inside the program is really, really excited about.
I mean, there are guys that are calling him
from within the locker room,
a guy that could contend for the highest patrophium.
That's extreme.
But it is interesting that they're saying that internally.
And Levitt runs a really exciting wide open offense
that can make quarterbacks look really good
when the matchups are correct.
And the question for Taylor,
and really for the program as a whole,
is what happens in the hard matchups?
What happens when Mississippi State goes
and takes on LSU?
What happens when you take on Alabama?
When the defense on the other side
that you're having to go against
is totally zoned in on Taylor
and might be the best defense the Taylor's ever seen.
That's what we got to find out
if Taylor is special,
and then they're gonna be in a really good spot.
And if the system,
we know the system's gonna make them look good, right?
We know that.
But if he can take the system
and take it to the next level with his own talent level,
then that's a pretty big opportunity.
A special quarterback wins those big upset games
and a system quarterback
if he doesn't play up to their potential
against the top level competition.
So Mississippi State needs Taylor
to be special this year
if they're gonna try to contend.
The Missouri Tigers are next.
The question,
can Austin Simmons give Mizzou
the consistent quarterback play it needs?
Or does the turnover issue
that we saw early in his Ole Miss career
follow him to Columbia?
Because Eli Drinkwoods,
though he made Austin Simmons
the official quarterback one on March 19th, right?
That's probably the fastest public commitment
of any starter of any SEC program this spring
outside of an incumbent and tells you something.
I mean, Drinkwoods wanted this to be resolved.
He wanted the roster to know
who the quarterback was going to be
so everyone kind of build up around him.
But here's the challenge with Simmons.
In the six games that he was at Ole Miss last year,
he threw four touchdowns against five interceptions.
That's not great.
And they did see some questionable decision-making
there at times early when he was a starter,
maybe pressing just a little bit.
Now there's a different system,
different offense coordinator,
different receivers,
and he got hurt in week two.
All of that is context, right?
But here's what we have to know
about the Missouri schedule.
He's at Georgia, he got Texas,
you're at Oklahoma and those three games,
turnovers don't just cost you drives,
they cost you the season potentially.
He's got a great offense coordinator in Chip Lindsey,
came down from Michigan,
and they are gonna specifically build an offense
around what Simmons does well.
One big difference is the fact that Simmons is a lefty,
whereas this offense,
based on how they cut the field in half,
it's predominantly always had righties.
So that's a difference in and of itself.
The supporting cast is real too.
We know a mod hearty at running back is unbelievable.
When the end room is really underrated,
and we know the drink which is track record,
you gotta feel like he's gonna maximize the talent.
A maximize in the talent requires a quarterback
that doesn't make pivotal mistakes
by putting too much trust and too much faith in his arm.
And that's the question Simmons has to answer.
And Missouri has to answer it too without a spring game.
So we're gonna be going in,
kind of knowing what they have in fall,
but taking care of the football and game management
will be important for Austin Simmons this season.
The Ole Miss Rebels are next.
And the question is, can Pete Golding build a defense
that's good enough to continue to protect a program
that just made it one game away from the national championship
because we know the offense gonna be just fine?
Like, let me just say this about Ole Miss.
And the thing that just keeps getting buried,
I mean, everyone keeps talking about the,
oh well, no Kiff and no Kiff,
like that narrative is so gone, right?
The offense is not the question.
The trade-out channelist is gonna be successful
through for nearly 4,000 yards last year.
He was in the top eight in the highest trophy voting.
There are new offensive coordinator, John David Baker.
He comes down, knows the system,
channels knows the system.
Their portal class was outstanding.
I'm just not worried about their offense.
The big question is really on the deep
it's the side of the ball.
You lose Prince Wellum on Miellen.
He's now at LSU.
You have five new additions along the deep it's of line.
I really actually like their deep it's of line additions.
I didn't think they had a ton of depth last year
in the front seven.
Hopefully they're deeper now.
And part of the uncomfortable truth last year
is they really weren't great last year.
They ranked outside the top 30,
but they had some holes in the secondary.
They had some holes in the front and in times.
They had some defenders that had to play 80 plus snaps
in the game because they weren't comfortable substituting
because their backups and their starters
there was a pretty decent size gap there.
The reason why they made the fiestibles
because Chambles was unstoppable
there for a little while.
But to take that next step to beat the teams
yet to beat in January,
that defense has to be outstanding as well.
And Golding has built his reputation as a defense coordinator.
This is his chance to prove that reputation translates
to running the whole operations.
Because if the defense can somehow find them
or maybe in the top 20, top 25,
and Golding is gonna have this team
in contention to maybe win an Asher Championship.
But if the defense kind of stays where it's at
or maybe regresses in some spots,
that could be really different.
But they're gonna be a really fun offensive team.
But the defense is the depth better
than what it was a year ago.
The Oklahoma Sooners are up next in the question.
Is John Matier healthy enough
and has he fixed enough to be the quarterback
that this offense needs for them to collectively be elite?
Now, we've talked about this on the show for a while.
Now, Matier's thumb injury in week four last year,
fundamentally altered how things happened for Oklahoma.
I mean, his arm slot kind of dropped,
his accuracy suffered.
He, as a result, kind of led to him making some
so, so decisions.
And here's what's new.
If you look at the spring game,
it's probably the most encouraging public evidence yet
that Matier has been working very, very hard
on his mechanics this off-season.
The numbers were pretty good, 12 and 19 for 192
and a touchdown and zero turnovers.
The release looked pretty clean.
Even Bob Stoops, the Hall of Famer,
went to practice and kind of endorsed
what he saw that the offensive line,
which returns mostly intact,
they're gonna really protect Matier,
probably better than he's ever been protected before.
You have some really good personnel coming in
at wide receiver.
There's a lot of guys excited about this wide receiver group.
I remember the name Mackenzie Elaine,
the lot of buzz about him.
And here's what I keep coming back to.
If you look at the three healthy games
that Matier played in 25, he was outstanding.
You look at what he did the year before at Washington State.
He was really, really good.
He's capable of being one of the best quarterbacks
in college football when everything's going right.
So the question's never been about town.
The question is whether or not he can somehow avoid
trying to do too much.
The question is whether he's maybe adjusted
his mechanics just a little bit,
knowing that Thumb was hurt for part of last season
and now he can maybe be a little better
on some of the deep balls, be a little more accurate,
maybe not try to do too much.
You gotta see that interception rate
drop down significantly because it was just under 3% last year.
That's not gonna be good enough.
If the answer to all those questions is yes,
then the spring game suggests it might be by the way.
Well, Oklahoma's not just a 10-win team,
it's a college football playoff national championship threat.
So a lot of buzz,
but it all centers around Matier.
They're in Norman, Oklahoma.
The South Carolina game cocks,
the big question, does Kendall Briles have enough time
to rebuild the Norse cellars confidence
and is that fixable before things get going in September?
And that's the question that kind of keeps me up
right now about South Carolina
because they have talent, the schemes good,
the confidence could be important.
Because the Norse cellars, he entered 25
as a real Heisman trophy candidate
and then he took 42 sex.
He didn't have a ton of great performances
in those first three quarters of the season.
They decided to fire the offensive coordinator
and he kind of watched season that you thought
was gonna be man to break through.
It just never really got going.
Well, now he has Kendall Briles.
This is his third different offensive coordinator
in three years and his system is really built
for the Norse cellars.
I mean, Briles wants to run it up.
He wants to utilize some quarterback run.
He wants to create some space with RPO.
He wants to utilize play action.
All of that stuff really fits what the Norse cellars does well.
And if you listen to Shane Beamer,
he has really pleased with the progress
that's been made by the Norse cellars.
And he also really talked about how important it was
for the relationship between Briles and sellers
to continue to be mended, to be long, strong
and to have a really good understanding
of how each other think.
But here's what I'm curious about.
I need to see sellers in a tight game in September
with the game on the line make that throw.
Not the improvised scramble.
I want to see him stand in there and throw
because that's kind of what disappeared at times in 2025.
That willingness to just trust himself
with the ball in his hands,
stay in the structure of the offense.
And if Ken and Briles has rebuilt that,
if sellers could come out those first couple of weeks
and play confident and free, is a dangerous team.
But if there's a little bit of hesitation in there
and then the game starts to speed up for him,
then it could be another up and down season
offensively for the South Carolina game box.
We'll go next to the Tennessee volunteers.
And the big question surrounding Tennessee
is can Jim Knowles build an elite defense in year number one
or does his system take a year or two to really fully take hold?
Because we've talked about the quarterback competition
at Tennessee between Brandon and McIntyre.
I mean, you know the story by this point, right?
But here's the question.
It actually determines whether Tennessee
is a college football playoff team or a seven-win team.
And it's Jim Knowles.
The Knowles left Penn State
where he built one of the better defenses
in the country over the last couple years,
really, Dayton, back to his time at Ohio State, right?
Now he's come to Knoxville.
He brought some familiarity with him,
brought a few of his own players.
And the defense is clearly more polished
than what we anticipated here coming into the season.
The secondary was praised throughout spring.
They are really excited about the defense
that Knowles is installing.
And if you look at Ohio State,
Knowles's first defense ranked 10th nationally.
At Penn State, his first defense ranked 6th nationally.
So his track record says year one can be elite.
But Tennessee's defense was a bit of a mess last year.
Not just personnel-wise, but kind of fundamentally,
schematically.
Knowles is not just installing a new scheme.
He's kind of replacing habits
and some of the communication and some of the technique
that the unit lacked at times last year.
And sometimes that's a little harder
than kind of inheriting a clean slate.
So the question for Tennessee,
is whether Knowles can compress what might,
in some cases, take a couple of years into one year.
When the defense can be good enough in year one
to carry a young quarterback
through some of those difficult weeks.
Because if Knowles is elite in year one,
the Tennessee is a team that could win 8, 9, 10 games.
And even though they're projected total right now
is seven and a half.
But if it takes a couple of years,
then you're looking seven-eight.
So the defense is really the key
for the volunteers heading into this season.
The Texas Longhorns are up next.
And the big question for them is pretty obvious.
Does the offensive line hold up against Ohio State early
in the season?
And if it doesn't, does the whole season kind of unravel
and unravel to the point in which they maybe are
on the edge of the playoffs?
But no quarterback in the SEC faced more pressures
last year than Archmantic.
Think about that.
Arguably the best quarterback in the conference,
on arguing with the best team with the most resources.
And he was getting hit like crazy
in the first five, six, seven games in the season.
And Steve Sarkies had fixed in the offensive line.
Was the number one priority this off scene.
So they bring in some transfers.
They got some encouraging spring reports on pass pro
and depth.
We know that Cam Coleman being a Texas
is big out on the outside.
And the chemistry that could be built up there.
So the supporting cast and the weaponry
will be the best that Manning has ever had.
But here's what defines everything.
It's week two, Ohio State, and Austin.
This is big, a relentless defense, a well-coached defense,
coming at Archmantic with a rebuilt offensive line.
It made it at that foot procedure this off season
and was a little limited and Texas didn't hold a spring game.
So we don't really have a public evaluation
of the live under pressure that we saw since the bowl game.
Which means the first real answer for us
is the offensive line?
Are they going to be in prime time game shape,
going against the national championship contender
in the first two weeks of season?
Because if that line holds and Manning has a clean pocket
against Ohio State, this Texas team
is arguably the most dangerous team in the country.
But if the line struggles and Manning
gets hit 10 times against the buck guys,
well, the narrative surrounding the offense
becomes kind of much of the same.
And that could change the entire shape of the season.
So the old line is of the utmost importance
for the long horns this off season.
The Texas A&M Aggies, the big question,
can Marcel Reed eliminate the turnover problems
in big games?
Or is that just kind of who he is?
Because we've covered this A&M offensive line.
We've covered how this offense now has a new coordinator.
And we know that the offensive line
showed better than most people expected on the 18th.
It says it sounds like things are above average
in the spring game.
That's progress, that's big.
But the question that might keep Mike Elko up at night
is Marcel Reed.
Because look, he was 11 and 0 in those first 11 games.
He was at one point in the Heisman conversation.
And then an A&M's last couple of games against Texas
and Miami read through four picks and zero touchdowns.
He had 10 turnovers in the five biggest games of the season.
And that is the number that defines the question.
Because we know Reed's dynamic.
He's dual threat.
He makes him really difficult to scheme against.
And the spring game showed that he's sharp.
He's connected multiple times with Craver
and new receiver Isaiah Horton.
Looks like a legitimate big body option
that can go and get it out of the year.
But the real question is whether,
it's not really whether Reed can be good.
We know he can be good.
The question is whether, can he be good
when the game is on the line?
When the defense knows that he is going to be dropped back
and needing to have a pass when the pressure is real.
Because in 2025, when those moments arrived,
he made some occasional mistakes.
For you to schedule, add LSU, add Alabama,
add Oklahoma, add Missouri, Texas is a tough schedule.
And Reed has the answer.
If he's the guy and makes the right decision,
then TANM will be in the playoff again.
If he doesn't, then they're kind of right back
in the talented but frustrating category
that is to find the program for the better part of a decade.
Finally, the Vanderbilt Commodore.
The question, can Clark Lee keep this thing going
without Diego Pavia and does Jared Curtis
arrive fast enough to make 2026 matter?
Like this is a program that's at a bit of a crossroads, right?
I mean, Vanderbilt is, they're a real team now.
I mean, they are, they are a big time.
They've won 17 games over the last two seasons.
And Diego Pavia was kind of the engine of it all
and now Pavia's gone.
And Clark Lee was pretty clear about it.
His team's not gonna go about it
trying to replace Diego Pavia.
That's good instinct.
I mean, I think most people know that.
You can't replace that.
You have to build something new.
And here's what we've seen.
Jared Curtis is the highest rated recruit
in Vanderbilt program history.
And he's got a real, real weapon for an arm.
I mean, this guy can launch deep balls and did it
in the first spring and appearance
that people go into social media immediately.
But there are also a few rush throws.
I mean, really hunted the big play as opposed to,
all right, getting through the progression,
taking the check down.
He went five of 13 for 89 yards
and they rotated all over the place.
And those are freshmen.
Those are expected numbers.
I mean, it's these freshmen in the SEC,
they're gonna have some ups and downs.
That here's the risk for Vandy in 26th.
The program has built something real
and has a real chance to build on it.
But if Curtis is still trying to find himself by October
and if the offense is inconsistent
while the defense carries the load,
then Vanderbilt could easily drop
into the 5, 6, 7 win range down from 10 a year ago
and losing some of that momentum kind of matters.
Not just for this upcoming season,
but for recruiting for the NIL conversation
for everything that Lee has built successfully
over the last few years.
So Jared Curtis, he's got to grow up really fast, right?
This is a freshman quarterback
and he's probably got to grow up faster
than most any freshman quarterback
and recent SEC memory.
Not because the program demands it
but because the moment demands it, right?
Like he's got to be able to continue to build on
what's been already built.
And if he can, Vanderbilt's got chance
to play the spoiler again.
A couple of hot takes before we get out of here, right?
I think Tennessee's gonna be pretty good.
I think we're looking at a team that's gonna win eight games.
I really do.
I think Noel's defense is good.
I think the spring game showed me some progress there.
I think the quarterback in this style of offense
is gonna be just fine.
Win total right now about 7.5.
I kind of lean towards the over right now for Tennessee.
I think they're being slipped on a little bit as well.
Hot take too.
Ole Miss is probably one of the more complete teams
in the SEC and no one's really talking about them.
We have a Heisman Trophy contender in Trinidad Chameless.
The portal class was really, really good.
And I think the defense collectively,
I think they're gonna be deeper than they were a year ago.
Hot take number three.
I'm still leaning Georgia in the SEC right now.
It's early.
It's early that the defense could be the best in the conference.
I think you have a legitimate deep threat in Isaiah Canyon
that gives Stockton a real vertical threat.
Last year they were very catch and run heavy team.
Now you really have that vertical threat.
And I think Georgia's still right now in the preseason
is the team to beat in the league right now.
Hot take number four.
The NM story in 2026 is not gonna be about anything
other than Marcel Reed taking that next step.
I mean, that's the step.
Because I think the align will be fine.
The defense will be fine.
They'll be extremely well coached.
It's all about them finding that quarterback
that can take that step and win those games
when they gotta have it against top-tier competition.
Where games are often lost,
he's gotta be able to make that play
and not make the critical mistake.
And then hot take number five.
Meg Lane Kiffin's first season at LSU
is gonna be better than some people think,
but I'm not sure they're quite national championships
you've attended just yet.
I mean, there's just so much new.
The talent is there.
There's no doubt.
I just think there's a lot of new.
So I could see a nine win season where everyone's like,
oh, what the heck?
The first year, nine wins is pretty dang impressive.
So we'll see what happens.
I'm a believer in LSU, but I got to find out more
before I'm going to insert them
into the college football playoff
and insert them into the SEC championship conversation.
That'll do it.
We did all 16.
Every single question is a little different.
Every answer might change what a program's trajectory looks like
and that's what makes the league what it is.
The SEC does not give you a soft landing.
It gives you a schedule.
It gives you a clock.
It gives you a verdict.
That's it.
And we'll have ours by December.
Now, I'm Greg Mackle.
We're glad to have you with us as always.
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