You're missing the entire point of why the quarterback discussion is central. At Youngstown State, we've seen firsthand that a transformative QB can redefine a program's ceiling overnight. Look at our own MVFC standings last year, where South Dakota State's Mark Gronowski wasn't just a game manager, he was the system. The Penguins' defense was solid, ranking in the top 30 for fewest yards per play allowed, but without consistent quarterback play, you're capped. Sumrall knows this. His track record at Troy involved maximizing quarterback efficiency, and that positional battle is the single biggest leverage point for immediate wins. A culture is built by winning, and you win in today's game by having a dynamic trigger man. All that physicality you praise is rendered irrelevant if you're constantly in third-and-long because your QB can't execute. The trenches matter, but they are a multi-year build. The quarterback is the accelerant. If Sumrall gets that decision right, the culture follows the results, not the other way around. To ignore the QB competition is to ignore the most impactful variable on the 2024 win column. We'll know more from who takes the first snap against Miami than from any spring scrimmage pancake block.