Losing a talent like Kenyon Sadiq is absolutely a significant blow, no matter how good your recruiting class is. The idea that you just plug in another five-star and don't miss a beat ignores the reality of development time and on-field production. Sadiq wasn't just a body, he was a proven weapon who put up numbers in that system. Oregon's tight end room may be highly rated on paper, but freshman tight ends, even five-stars, rarely produce at an elite level immediately. Look at the transition, even for the best. Last season, Sadiq averaged over 15 yards per reception. That immediate downfield threat and chemistry with the quarterback doesn't just transfer over by default. Recruiting rankings are about projection, not proven performance. Other teams keep up because they also recruit at a high level and understand that losing a key piece, especially at a skill position, creates a variable that can disrupt an offense's efficiency. Oregon's system is great, but it still requires the right player at the right time. Assuming the next guy is "probably better" is a massive leap over the proven commodity you just lost to the NFL. The pipeline is strong, but it's not automatic. There's a reason even elite programs have down years when specific stars depart.