Dwyer the #4 heisman candidate on SI.com

I think that our depth will hurt Dwyer's chances. Running backs need to have astronomical numbers game in and game out to remain in contention for the Heisman, and I think there will be a few games where Roddy and the A-Backs will get the bulk of the yards. I bet McCoy wins.
 
It would take Dwyer having a monster season and the other three having mediocre seasons for him to win it.
 
I think that our depth will hurt Dwyer's chances. Running backs need to have astronomical numbers game in and game out to remain in contention for the Heisman, and I think there will be a few games where Roddy and the A-Backs will get the bulk of the yards. I bet McCoy wins.

I'd put my money on McCoy. Tebow will prob be second again. Bradford lost 4 starters on the O Line. Dirty Dwyer won't get enough touches.
 
I think Knowshon Moreno should win the Heisman this year. Tebow and those Big 12 quarterbacks were given an unfair amount of exposure last year. I don't know if any of you are aware of this, but Knowshon Moreno actually jumped over a defender in a game. It was against either the University of Southern California or Central Michigan; I can't remember for sure. To be clear about this, what Knowshon did was run towards the defender, propel himself upwards and at an angle in the manner of a grasshopper or bunny rabbit, and actually land on the other side of the defender. Have you played leapfrog before? It was kind of like that. ESPN unfairly refused to interrupt their scheduled programming in order to show the highlight over and over and over again. Coach Richt pointed this out, and was actually mocked by some jealous fools. Normally, players do not jump over other players. Usually, running backs try to run past defenders or sometimes run into them with enough contact as to knock them backwards and gain more yards that way, or sometimes they might dance around all which ways and try to confuse the defender into, say, moving easterly while the running back proceeds westerly. What Knowshon did was to leap, in a manner of speaking, so that Knowshon's body reached a higher altitude than the defender's. Most estimates are that Knowshon got as high as eight feet in the air, if measured from the top of his head. After the hurdle, Knowshon landed on the field and sort of fell down, and then he patted himself on the top of the helmet for, I don't know, 6 or 7 weeks after that. Any idiot can throw a touchdown pass or cry after losing the Ole Miss game and it's really unfair that more people did not hear about what Knowshon did, and that more people have not seen it. If they had, he'd have won the Heisman trophy, and I think they should make an exception to the rule that only college football players are eligible for the Heisman (a techincality) and award it to Knowshon in recognition of what he did, which was jump up in the air and land on the other side of a defender, who was foolishly trying to get Knowshon to the ground, and then land on the ground.
 
I think Knowshon Moreno should win the Heisman this year. Tebow and those Big 12 quarterbacks were given an unfair amount of exposure last year. I don't know if any of you are aware of this, but Knowshon Moreno actually jumped over a defender in a game. It was against either the University of Southern California or Central Michigan; I can't remember for sure. To be clear about this, what Knowshon did was run towards the defender, propel himself upwards and at an angle in the manner of a grasshopper or bunny rabbit, and actually land on the other side of the defender. Have you played leapfrog before? It was kind of like that. ESPN unfairly refused to interrupt their scheduled programming in order to show the highlight over and over and over again. Coach Richt pointed this out, and was actually mocked by some jealous fools. Normally, players do not jump over other players. Usually, running backs try to run past defenders or sometimes run into them with enough contact as to knock them backwards and gain more yards that way, or sometimes they might dance around all which ways and try to confuse the defender into, say, moving easterly while the running back proceeds westerly. What Knowshon did was to leap, in a manner of speaking, so that Knowshon's body reached a higher altitude than the defender's. Most estimates are that Knowshon got as high as eight feet in the air, if measured from the top of his head. After the hurdle, Knowshon landed on the field and sort of fell down, and then he patted himself on the top of the helmet for, I don't know, 6 or 7 weeks after that. Any idiot can throw a touchdown pass or cry after losing the Ole Miss game and it's really unfair that more people did not hear about what Knowshon did, and that more people have not seen it. If they had, he'd have won the Heisman trophy, and I think they should make an exception to the rule that only college football players are eligible for the Heisman (a techincality) and award it to Knowshon in recognition of what he did, which was jump up in the air and land on the other side of a defender, who was foolishly trying to get Knowshon to the ground, and then land on the ground.

What are you trying to say here?
 
Don't forget he had t-shirts made with his skyward silhouette that he wore on draft day for the ESPN cameras. Not everybody can just have t-shirts made up of themselves.
 
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