What was the play call? Did the receiver run the right route? Was the protection excecuted. He sill had 4 TD’s. Threw for 300 yards. We will be in a bidding war over him after the season. It’s crazy how everyone wants 100% perfection from the coaches, players and the school and yet the Rich UH guys are not donating millions to buy more players to help our QB. You know what is not a good play, UH Millionaires not giving enough money to buy players in the portal… now that is “not a good play”
Those are good stats vs a 2-6 team.
Still really good

They are good stats for any team.
If Weigman doesn’t fumble twice and throw a pick 6, then UH wins that game by a large margin.
UH gave WVU the dub due to self inflicted turnovers.
If we outscored every team we’d be undefeated!
Ooh, you should let the coaches know about that so that they can make a plan.
If you’re careful with your money for 20 days out of a month, you can spend whatever you want to on the other 10 days and you’re still rich, right?
If, would, should.
I think some people need to attend a Kelvin Sampson lecture on making winning plays vs putting up stats. If they would do that, then we would all win. ![]()
The point is that Wegiman made mistakes that aren’t typical
A typical Weigman game would’ve resulted in a win (taking care of the football)
He just had a bad game with the turn overs. It happens to everyone…I expect he will bounce back in a big way for us in these upcoming games.
Like CWF says” quarterback gets too much credit when you win it gets too much blame when you lose!” CW make some costly mistakesand also made some very good decisions. He would probably say the biggest thing is that we lost.
I will never understand why folks bet on college games. I can understand a small bet with a friend from the opposing school, but college football is too volatile in my opinion.
The offense took a dump.
The thrill-seekers would say that that’s what makes it fun
I believe!
I believe!!

In my betting days the college games were WAY more predictable than the pros.
