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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 20, 2023

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For this reason it seems totally plausible to me that there's an early filter in QB development, where kids trying to play QB for the first time are going to be outcompeted for practice snaps by kids whose parents could pay for them to start playing football earlier or to attend football camps. Or who just had parents who could coach them up enough that they could win the initial practice snaps and improve.

You need to be a QB all the way through, like, from grade school. And at that level, the QB is always a coach's kid, and I don't even blame them for that. My son is a strong contender for smartest, quickest-thinking kid on the field and has a hell of an arm... but I don't know shit about the position, and don't have the time or capacity to volunteer. So it makes perfect sense that that demanding position goes to a kid who can get an extra 10 hours a week of coaching from their dad on top of normal practice and game time. And then you need to get that kid into a high school where he'll get 2 (preferably 3) years of time as a starting QB under a strong coach just to have a shot at playing in college.