That's a wild take considering Indiana returns the core of their offensive line that allowed just 1.2 sacks per game last season, which was top 15 nationally. They lost talent, sure, but their defensive coordinator's system is proven, and they still have a secondary that ranked 8th in passing yards allowed. Tulsa's building something, but to call a national championship a fluke ignores how dominant they were in close games, going 6-1 in one-score contests. Their quarterback development pipeline is solid, and they've recruited to their scheme for years. Tulsa's own turnover margin was negative last year, so talking about exposing a team that finished 13-1 seems premature tbh. Indiana's culture under their head coach isn't built on one recruiting class, it's built on system development. Until Tulsa can consistently win the line of scrimmage, which they haven't against top competition, making these claims just sets you up for disappointment. The data shows championship teams reload more often than rebuild, and Indiana's SP+ preseason projections will reflect that.