saintpauljeff
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Listing any WRs seems a little silly to begin with. When's the last time a WR (not a two way player) won the Heisman?How do two LSU WRs get odds with their QB graduating but Batemen doesn't get a look...
To answer my own question, there have been two WR Heisman winners in history: Tim Brown in '87 and Desmond Howard (also a PR) in '91.Listing any WRs seems a little silly to begin with. When's the last time a WR (not a two way player) won the Heisman?
For a WR to to have any shot at a, he'd need to be on a top 10 team with a prolific passing offense - but in that case the QB would be a much more likely candidate. What would a realistic heisman season even look like for a WR?
My point wasn't that a WR could win, it was that those two lost the key reason why they had the seasons they did.Listing any WRs seems a little silly to begin with. When's the last time a WR (not a two way player) won the Heisman?
For a WR to to have any shot at a, he'd need to be on a top 10 team with a prolific passing offense - but in that case the QB would be a much more likely candidate. What would a realistic heisman season even look like for a WR?
Oh I agree, I think Bateman should be ahead of both. My point was about the WR odds in general.My point wasn't that a WR could win, it was that those two lost the key reason why they had the seasons they did.
While not two way players per say.....Both Brown and Howard were prolific special team threats and returned punts or kick offs for touchdowns.Listing any WRs seems a little silly to begin with. When's the last time a WR (not a two way player) won the Heisman?
For a WR to to have any shot at a, he'd need to be on a top 10 team with a prolific passing offense - but in that case the QB would be a much more likely candidate. What would a realistic heisman season even look like for a WR?
You have a track record of pumping Gopher QBs for the Heisman award.BetOnline_ag sounds pretty valid....
Bovada has Tanner Morgan opening at 80/1 and is now 60/1 - I'd suggest placing your TM2020 bet there.
I feel like being a part of a prolific passing offense almost hurts the WR's chances because everyone will view it as being a great offense with a great QB. I think it has to be a WR that dominates that's on a team that overall isn't great in the passing game. Like essentially he is the whole offense. Probably would also have to be a guy that does well in the return game also.Listing any WRs seems a little silly to begin with. When's the last time a WR (not a two way player) won the Heisman?
For a WR to to have any shot at a, he'd need to be on a top 10 team with a prolific passing offense - but in that case the QB would be a much more likely candidate. What would a realistic heisman season even look like for a WR?