I wouldn't say we had significantly more talent over Stanford, not at all positions. Tanner McKee threw for 1000 yards more than Pyne did last year. They also had a WR go over 300 yards, a few actually. They didn't have a strong running game, but they also didn't have any fumbles or turnovers in that game like we had. Pyne passed for 100 yards if you take away the one big play to Merriweather, it was an average of 5.6 yards a completion still. We made a lot of mistakes outside of the Estime fumble. We shouldn't have been giving the ball to Tyree between the tackles so many times, he was getting 3.1 yards a carry while Estime and Diggs were getting 7.1 and 6.3 respectively. We needed more production from our WRs. At the end of the day the two turnovers cost us quite a bit, and that's on our guys. I'm not sure how Kelly would have mitigated that.
The Marshall game was a fluke. A lot of Buckeyes from what I saw claimed that victory, and maybe some of that is true. Our boys came out flat after the big game, and Marshall came out prepared. We again lost the turnover battle by -3, one of which was a pick 6 and would have changed the outcome of the game. Again, the players made those mistakes, and I'm not sure what Kelly would have done differently to prevent those 3 INTs.
You forget that Kelly had his own problems in 2021, especially the first 6 games of the season. He nearly lost that Toledo game, and that was with Coan, Kyren, Hamilton. You talk about significantly more talent, what about Cincinnati? They weren't good enough for the playoffs, but they got there because of a win over the Irish. That was a winnable game, Cincinnati had no business coming into South Bend and walking away with a win.
Point is Kelly knew he had some problems after 2021, and he wouldn't have a Coan to bail him out. It was going to be a young offense that was going to make mistakes and have some deficiencies. It's one of the reasons he bailed, he knew his stock was not going to improve after 2022. You can't say with certainty that Kelly pulls that team to 10-2 when he was the one that dropped the ball to begin with in recruiting that offense with Long. He's a big reason lots of Rees' first class had to start in '21 and '22 instead of upperclassmen.