But, what if TVD really DOES use this opportunity...?

You do know they only put the good plays on highlight film, right?
TVD Conference Stats: 8 Games in 2021 + 2 Injury Free games in 2022: 10 Games, 63.4% for 3,508 yards, 351 ypg, 27 TDs, 7 ints. Annualized to full season plus a bowl game is 4,560 yards, 35 TDs.

2nd half of 2021 + 2 full conference games in '2022: 8 Games, 66.9% for 3,041 yards, 380 YPG, 25 TDs, 4 int. Annualized to full season plus a bowl game is 4,942 yards and 41 TDs.

for those of you who will say he was not good in first part of this season.....

Game 1: B. Cookman: 13-16 81% for 193 yards, 2 TD, 0 Int. He was not asked to do more
Game 2: S. Miss: 20-29 69% for 261 yards, 1 TD, 1 Int. 1 bad read on int.
Game 3: TAMU. 21-41 51% 217 yards 0 TD, 0 Int. 7 drops, 3-5 thrown away, under constant pressure.
Game 4: MTSU. 16-32 138, 1 TD, 2 Int. No a good game sure. But it was bad by everyone one, Gattis, OL WR, RBs DBs. name it.

So basically, in the last 12 games he played before getting hurt vs Duke, He had one poor game where things went south for everyone.
 
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If by some miracle, the offensive line becomes one of the best in the nation next year, TVD’s numbers will still be pedestrian. The passing game is designed for game manager type quarterbacks. Very few throws to the outside. Everything is an underneath route for a slot receiver or a dump off to a back or tight end. Look at Michigan’s passing offenses under Gattis. Even in 2021, with the best line in the nation, Michigan’s quarterback only averaged around 220 yards per game and had 15 touchdown passes in 14 games.
Exactly- dude could have 5 seconds to throw and he still won’t have anyone open to throw to due to offensive scheme and inability for receivers to get open.
 
Honest question and I’m not trying to be a ****, but do you think anything is better now than it was in the 80’s?
If you're talking about WR play, maybe 2000-2002, mostly because of the depth. But if you're talking about an individual player, the only one that should be in the same sentence as Irvin is Eddie Brown.

Let's face it, for the last 20 years Miami is not known for sterling WR play.
 
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