Gotta pull names out of a hatWho gets to be Illinois is the question
Gotta pull names out of a hatWho gets to be Illinois is the question
Either:Gotta pull names out of a hat
I hope the kid breaks out this year and gets his own video game.Wow! This means that EA is going to be paying Luke an NIL deal on top of the standard $600. This is how they are rewarding the top players in the sport. Look at the names he is in the company of:
Alabama QB Jalen Milroe
Alabama DB Malachi Moore
Clemson QB Cade Klubnik
Colorado WR/DB Travis Hunter
Illinois QB Luke Altmyer
LSU QB Garret Nussmeier
Michigan CB Will Johnson
Michigan RB Donovan Edwards
Missouri QB Brady Cook
Ohio State CB Denzel Burke
Ohio State RB Quinshon Judkins
Penn State RB Nick Singleton
Texas QB Quinn Ewers
Texas Tech RB Tahj Brooks
I mean cmon that is HUGE!
Getting benched (after injury) for Paddock had to be a rude wakeup call for Luke after not winning the starters job at Ole Miss.I hope the kid breaks out this year and gets his own video game.
Along these lines, I wonder how much of a gap exists, practice performance-wise, between QB1 and QB2, LA and D.Leary, going into spring ball. BB seemed pretty pleased with DL's development at times. Would be great to see the QB depth see the field this year (really tough to do when every game is a close battle)Getting benched (after injury) for Paddock had to be a rude wakeup call for Luke after not winning the starters job at Ole Miss.
I suspect Luke will be working extra hard this off season to improve his progressions, timing and accuracy. After HS its not just athleticism. QB is a hard job.
hope EA comes back with the NCAA basketball games too. loved those and college hoops 2k games back in the mid-late 00s
For over a decade, the NCAA March Madness title was a staple of EA Sports offerings, however, its demise was not attributed to the same legal concerns that plagued the college football franchise, but rather market preferences that did not make the game as profitable as its football counterpart. The final NCAA March Madness title sold a little over 150,000 copies; compared to the 1.5 million copies sold by NCAA Football 14, it was clear to EA Sports that a college basketball game was not a prudent business venture.