In this episode, we introduce a new game called “Bed or Built,” where we take some of college football’s most repeated narratives and decide whether it’s time to put them to bed or if they’re still built to last. With the 2026 season creeping closer, we sort through the stories that have followed programs, coaches and fan bases for years, and ask which ones still make sense in the current version of the sport.
We dig into Mario Cristobal and Miami, Matt Rhule’s turnaround reputation, Lane Kiffin’s chaos factor, Ryan Day’s “born on third base” label, Texas A&M’s hard ceiling, Oregon’s late-season hurdle, Clemson’s attempts to adapt, James Franklin’s big-game baggage and the difficulty of following Nick Saban at Alabama. Along the way, we get into the transfer portal, coaching hires, College Football Playoff expectations, roster-building, fan perception and how quickly old narratives can become outdated.
Timecodes: 0:00 - Intro 5:46 - Mario Cristobal & Miami will trip up 13:45 - Matt Rhule is a turnaround genius 20:38 - Lane Kiffin is misunderstood 26:25 - Ryan Dan was born on third base 32:35 - Texas A&M has a hard ceiling 38:56 - Oregon will fall flat late 45:33 - Clemson can't adapt 54:08 - Big Game James Franklin 56:09 - Being the guy after Nick Saban
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