ADVERTISEMENT

Quinn Ewers enters portal

Does he have to give the NIL money back?

That's a great question. Give the kid credit -- he cashed in and when the coaching staff didn't bow to his hype, he took his cash and left.

I'd imagine Texas or Texas A&M will come at him hard.
 
Does he have to give the NIL money back?

giphy.gif
 
  • Like
Reactions: hlstone
No pot stirring, just completely uniformed/behind on my on my part. I remember reading something a while back about Ewers possibly transferring and The potential for tOSU to go after him.
Sorry, I apologize if I was rude. There are so many trolls back on the board it is, at times,, difficult to separate the good from the bad.

From what I’ve read, Allar is 100% bought in to Yurcich and PSU, and really has no interest in O$U. This idea is backed by O$U taking another QB this week.
 
Sorry, I apologize if I was rude. There are so many trolls back on the board it is, at times,, difficult to separate the good from the bad.

From what I’ve read, Allar is 100% bought in to Yurcich and PSU, and really has no interest in O$U. This idea is backed by O$U taking another QB this week.
No worries.
 
We need to worry about Allar. I know a couple of football coaches. Christian Hackenberg's de-evolution (less developed prospect leaving Penn State than when he arrived which takes a special kind of incompetence) as a QB under Franklin is consistently used in recruiting, especially at the quarterback position. With USC and LSU's jobs now secure by top tier coaches, and the best pro style coach in the nation (Bill O'Brien) out there possibly wanting a job, Penn State is in a weak position.
 
We need to worry about Allar. I know a couple of football coaches. Christian Hackenberg's de-evolution (less developed prospect leaving Penn State than when he arrived which takes a special kind of incompetence) as a QB under Franklin is consistently used in recruiting, especially at the quarterback position. With USC and LSU's jobs now secure by top tier coaches, and the best pro style coach in the nation (Bill O'Brien) out there possibly wanting a job, Penn State is in a weak position.

I understand your angst, but this kind of post (from a lot of people I've seen) is the kind of post you'd expect from a fan base that has never had an elite recruit before, and is constantly on edge that they'll lose him.

He's not going anywhere.

The bigger concern is what happens if we have another 7-5 season next year, or if Veilleux gets the starting nod. In this era, big time recruits that don't play or prosper right away are looking elsewhere. That's just the way it is.

But Allar will be signing with us.
 
We need to worry about Allar. I know a couple of football coaches. Christian Hackenberg's de-evolution (less developed prospect leaving Penn State than when he arrived which takes a special kind of incompetence) as a QB under Franklin is consistently used in recruiting, especially at the quarterback position. With USC and LSU's jobs now secure by top tier coaches, and the best pro style coach in the nation (Bill O'Brien) out there possibly wanting a job, Penn State is in a weak position.
Hackenbergs “de-evolution” had little to do with Franklin. The OL can claim that responsibility. Hack was getting killed on passing downs. MY will have this kid a 1st round draft pick.
 
We need to worry about Allar. I know a couple of football coaches. Christian Hackenberg's de-evolution (less developed prospect leaving Penn State than when he arrived which takes a special kind of incompetence) as a QB under Franklin is consistently used in recruiting, especially at the quarterback position. With USC and LSU's jobs now secure by top tier coaches, and the best pro style coach in the nation (Bill O'Brien) out there possibly wanting a job, Penn State is in a weak position.
If Allar signs with PSU, you agree to never post here again. Deal?
 
Hackenbergs “de-evolution” had little to do with Franklin. The OL can claim that responsibility. Hack was getting killed on passing downs. MY will have this kid a 1st round draft pick.
Hackenberg’s failures had more to do with Hackenberg than anyone else. He just wasn’t a very good QB. The same offensive line worked fine for McSorley the following year.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT