CBS college football analyst Gary Danielson has some great insights as usual:
-- Danielson says a rookie salary cap is looming in the NFL. So big-time juniors will all go to the NFL this year. Danielson had a great point about the NFL -- teams can't afford to waste any money. So he expects owners to change the system in the very near future.
-- Danielson says Tim Tebow is healthy and the Gators are starting to play like champs again.
-- Georgia's Matthew Stafford is a Jay Cutler clone and should be a valuable NFL player.
-- Danielson says that in the NFL every quarterback is going to look bad at certain points, so you have to make some big plays. That's a function of how advanced NFL defenses have become.
-- Danielson says that the economics of the BCS are hard to fight against. But Danielson says a change is possibly on the horizon. The SEC has hit the mother-load with CBS and ESPN. Those teams have also gotten much better. Here's the problem -- they'll all beat each other up and have two losses in November. Than CBS and ESPN will say, why are we paying for all that money for games that don't have national title implications. That might shake some things up.
CBS college football analyst Gary Danielson has some great insights as usual:
-- Danielson says a rookie salary cap is looming in the NFL. So big-time juniors will all go to the NFL this year. Danielson had a great point about the NFL -- teams can't afford to waste any money. So he expects owners to change the system in the very near future.
-- Danielson says Tim Tebow is healthy and the Gators are starting to play like champs again.
-- Georgia's Matthew Stafford is a Jay Cutler clone and should be a valuable NFL player.
-- Danielson says that in the NFL every quarterback is going to look bad at certain points, so you have to make some big plays. That's a function of how advanced NFL defenses have become.
-- Danielson says that the economics of the BCS are hard to fight against. But Danielson says a change is possibly on the horizon. The SEC has hit the mother-load with CBS and ESPN. Those teams have also gotten much better. Here's the problem -- they'll all beat each other up and have two losses in November. Than CBS and ESPN will say, why are we paying for all that money for games that don't have national title implications. That might shake some things up.