People keep pointing at Dante Moore's arm talent or Dylan Raiola's transfer to Oregon as the gold standard for QB play, but the real efficiency conversation nobody is having is about what happens when your quarterback doesn't have a 5-star offensive line or a stable of blue-chip receivers. Capital Crusaders quietly finished last season with a 68.4 completion percentage and a 9-to-3 TD-to-INT ratio in conference play, and that's with a patchwork offensive line that ranked 6th in the OAC in sacks allowed. The national narrative around QB efficiency is completely warped by the SEC and Big Ten because those guys operate in clean pockets against defenses that can't generate pressure without elite athletes. Put our QB behind Oregon's line with that receiver room and those numbers jump to 75 percent and 15 touchdowns. The gap between raw efficiency stats and context-adjusted efficiency is the single most misunderstood number in college football.