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2023 Baseball Hall of Fame voting: 11 takeaways, including hope for Carlos Beltrán and Todd Helton

The results of the 2023 BBWAA portion of the Baseball Hall of Fame vote have been revealed and Scott Rolen is now a Hall of Famer, having received 76.3 percent of the vote. Here are the full results with official vote percentages. Players needed 75 percent of the vote to make it and at least five percent of the vote to remain on the ballot for next year, up to 10 years. 

Let’s dive deeper into the bigger takeaways from our Hall of Fame season. 

1. This is actually a two-man class

First of all, the Contemporary Era committee already selected Fred McGriff. There will be a Hall of Fame ceremony honoring two players this coming summer. McGriff is 59 years old while Rolen is 47. Both played for a handful of teams and it should make for a fun event weekend. 

2. Rolen’s case can provide hope 

In 2018, on a much more crowded ballot, Rolen got just 10.2 percent of the vote. But as the ballot cleared over the years with inductions of Hall of Famers and big-name players falling off without induction, spots cleared on the ballots of voters for Rolen. There was also a swell of support from several corners of the internet, pointing out Rolen’s defense deserved a lot more credit and that showed up in stats like WAR. 

Rolen’s move from 10.2 percent of the vote to making it via the writer vote was the biggest in history. It’s a record that might not stand long, as there are a few players we’ll discuss below making a move similar to Rolen. 

Certainly, big moves after pretty small beginnings is a theme with several of the prominent candidates on this ballot. 

3. Helton right on the precipice

As I detailed in discussing Rolen last month, it’s incredibly rare for players to top 62 percent with time to spare on the ballot and not get voted in shortly thereafter, whether just one or two more rounds of voting. Rolen was over that mark last year and made it this time around. Next up, Todd Helton. 

Helton, in his fifth year, got 72.2 percent. It would be unprecedented for a player to get to that level of the vote in his fifth year and not be inducted into the Hall. 

Using the available data, zero public ballots had 10 votes that did not include Helton. This is to say that even with players like Adrián Beltré and Joe Mauer coming on the ballot next year, the overwhelming majority of voters either voted for Helton or have spot(s) available to add him. There will be new voters. Some voters will lapse due to not covering the game anymore. Some voters reconsider their stance on players once they get this close to the 75 percent marker. 

For all those reasons, Helton is almost certainly going to be voted in next year. 

4. Beltrán has hope

Carlos Beltrán has a statistical dossier that belongs in the Hall of Fame, but since his retirement, the sign-stealing scandal has clouded his Hall of Fame chances (full breakdown here). 

The good news here for Beltrán is he’s starting at a pretty decent number: 46.5 percent of the vote in his first try. 

It’s not the best comparison to loop in PED-connected players, but it’s the best we’ve got. The players who have been held out of the Hall of Fame due to being tied to PEDs started in the mid-30s in percentage or lower. Most of them were lower, actually, it was really only Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds in the mid-30s. 

With Beltrán starting out here, he’s already in much better position. Anecdotally, I’ve also read several columns from prominent writers who said they are planning to reconsider in future years after not voting for Beltrán here in his first time on the ballot. And some people really do hold up “first-ballot Hall of Famer” as a sacred honor.

In all, I think the results for Beltrán are a net positive. We’ll see how much headway he makes next time around — with the “first ballot” thing not being attached and possibly a few of those aforementioned writers reconsidering his case — without making any sweeping declarations, though. 

5. A-Rod has less hope 

The Hall of Fame case for Alex Rodriguez is complicated. We all already knew that. Before the vote last year, we couldn’t be sure how exactly the vote would start shaping up for him. This was his second go-round on the ballot and it was his first without the likes of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. 

Bonds could be the best road map here between the PED connections and all-time great numbers by a position player, though Bonds never was suspended under MLB’s JDA and A-Rod was nailed with one of the biggest punishments in history. Bonds started in the mid-30s and topped out at 66 percent in his final year. The voting body will continue to evolve toward a more new-school mindset, but there are future voters who would’ve voted in Bonds and won’t go with A-Rod due to the suspension. 

Well, A-Rod got 34.3 percent of the vote last year and 35.7 percent this time. 

That’s probably within the range of stagnation, right? I know I often mention things about the voting body changing, opinions evolving and stuff like that, but he barely moved. 

Simply, while things could change, he seems to be stuck. 

6. Wagner, Jones in decent shape now

Billy Wagner started off in 2016 with around 10 percent of the vote (take note of the Rolen section above). Through four rounds, it was just 16.7 percent, but he’s on the move now. 

2020: 31.7%
2021: 46.4%
2022: 51%
2023: 68.1%

Wagner still has two ballots left and a real shot at getting home. It might even happen next year. He’s really close now. 

Not quite as close, but moving in range nonetheless is Andruw Jones. He started off having to sweat out just staying above five percent. He got just 7.5 percent in his second ballot, but then he started to get some traction. 

2020: 19.4%
2021: 33.9%
2022: 41.4%
2023: 58.1%

This was Jones’ sixth time on the ballot, so he’s got four more voting cycles to make up less than 20 percent. If so, he would snap Rolen’s record with ease. 

Still, with both players but particularly Jones since he’s further away: There’s always the danger of plateauing. That is, a player can get to a certain percentage and then stagnate. It varies player to player because, well, every single Hall of Fame case is unique and they are all being voted on by an ever-changing electorate. 

Overall, though, things are looking up for Wagner and it really seems like Jones has the momentum to get him in eventually. Someone who plateaued in recent years who had a possibly-great night was an all-time great bat waggler. 

7. Sheffield within range?

This was Gary Sheffield’s ninth time on the ballot. He made big gains in 2019-21, going from 13.6 percent to 40.6, but he got exactly 40.6 percent again in 2022. It looked like maybe all hope was lost. Instead, he’s moved into the possibly-overused-but-still-fun “so you’re telling me there’s a chance” range. 

Sheffield got 55 percent of the vote this year.

Perhaps there will be a nice final-year bump? Kent got a boost of more than 13 percent, though that wouldn’t be enough. One of the largest single-year, final-ballot jumps ever seen was Larry Walker, who leaped from 54.6 percent in his ninth year to 76.6 to get in on his final try. 

If Sheffield can make such gains with the voting body next year, he’ll get in. That’s a very tall hill to climb, obviously, but it’s possible. 

8. Kent falls off the ballot

Jeff Kent was the one player on this ballot for the 10th time. As such, it was his proverbial swan song. We knew he wasn’t going to get close, but he did establish a new high with 46.5 percent of the vote, more than 10 percentage points above his previous high of 32.7 percent. It’s a feather in his cap to get nearly 50 percent of the vote while hanging around on the ballot for a decade. It’s tough just to get on the ballot and Kent can rest easy knowing he obviously made a mark on baseball history. 

Plus, my hunch is Kent will fare much better with the committee votes (like McGriff), so this could be a blessing in disguise. I’d wager he’s in the Hall within the next decade. 

9. Possible reason for optimism? 

The following players are lower on the ballot but have a chance to catch lightning in a bottle the way Rolen did (and similar in fashion to how it appears Helton, Jones and maybe Sheffield and Wagner are). 

  • Andy Pettitte jumped from 10.7 percent to 17. This is his fifth year on the ballot, so he’ll need some bigger leaps, but it’s a starting point. 
  • Bobby Abreu went from 8.6 to 15.4 percent in this his fourth year. It’s a very nice bump. 
  • Jimmy Rollins went from 9.4 to 12.9 percent. Very modest indeed on the gains and vote percentage, but it’s only his second ballot and Chase Utley is coming soon. It’s always possible when discussing Utley and Rollins together on the ballot that there’s a mutual push in voting for the double-play combo. It didn’t work for Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell, but the times are changing. 
  • Mark Buehrle went from 5.8 to 10.8 percent. I dove into his case as an all-time workhorse recently and maybe more will continue to come around on him.
  • This was the ballot debut for Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez. He started with 10.8 percent of the vote. While Rolen’s entry provides hope for all players, the movement of Wagner is particularly telling with K-Rod and other elite-level closers moving forward. It’s much more difficult for closers to make the Hall, but Wagner getting in next year could help clear the way for some momentum for K-Rod. 

10. No-man’s land

Now onto the players who seem to not have a chance at induction even though they continue to linger on the ballot. 

  • Manny Ramirez actually went from 28.9 percent to 33.2 percent, but he’s still not even halfway home and has only three ballots left. I just can’t see enough room for improvement there. 
  • Omar Vizquel’s descent continues. From 52.6 in 2020 to 49.1 to 23.9 and now to 19.5 percent in his sixth try. There’s a better chance he’ll fall off the ballot before his 10 years are up than turning things around and gaining enshrinement. 
  • Torii Hunter went up from 5.3 to 6.9 percent, but he’s still awfully close to being five-percented after a very small gain in his third year. He probably needs to get up over 10 percent next year to have any sort of hope, but my guess is this is all a formality. 

11. Five-percented

The following players failed to reach five percent of the vote, meaning they are removed from the ballot moving forward: Bronson Arroyo, R.A. Dickey, John Lackey, Mike Napoli, Huston Street, Matt Cain, Jacoby Ellsbury, Andre Ethier, J.J. Hardy, Jhonny Peralta, Jered Weaver and Jayson Werth. Notably, these were all first-timers. Every holdover got at least five percent of the vote. 

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Clay Helton hired at Georgia Southern: Ex-USC coach gets immediate chance to reinvigorate career

Less than two months after he was fired from USC, Clay Helton was announced Tuesday as the next coach at Georgia Southern. Helton, 49, replaces Chad Lunsford, who was fired on Sept. 26 after a 1-3 start to the 2021 season. Helton’s deal will be for five seasons at nearly $800,000 per year, according to Yahoo Sports’ Pete Thamel, and he is expected to start working immediately on tasks such as recruiting and building a staff. 

Helton was fired from USC on Sept. 13, two days after the Trojans lost at home to Stanford after beginning the season favored to win the Pac-12 South. He was two games into his seventh season as USC’s head coach. He went 46-24 (36-13 Pac-12) during his tenure after taking over for Steve Sarkisian midway through the 2015 season. Helton had been on staff at USC since 2010.

Though he’s never coached in the Sun Belt, Helton does have ties to the southeast. Helton began his playing career at Auburn and worked at Duke and Memphis before arriving in Los Angeles. During Helton’s childhood, his father was an assistant for Florida, Miami and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Kevin Whitley, who was the cornerbacks coach under Lunsford, has been serving as the interim coach since Lunsford’s dismissal. Whitley is 1-3 in that role. With a 2-6 record, Georgia Southern will need to win its final four games in order to reach a fourth-straight bowl game. 

Lunsford took over as Georgia Southern’s interim coach for the last six games of the 2017 season and ended his tenure with a 28-21 overall record, including a 17-14 mark in Sun Belt play. Georgia Southern just joined the FBS ahead of the 2014 season, but the program has a strong record at the FCS level with six national championships.

Let’s have a look at now some key takeaways from Georgia Southern turning to Clay Helton to lead its football program moving forward. 

Chance for redemption

At 49, Helton still has time to restore his head coaching career and land another big job, and Georgia Southern is a solid place to do some rehabilitation. The program has a good history and competes in the Sun Belt, which has sent several coaches on to power conference jobs over the past decade. Among the most recent are West Virginia coach Neal Brown (Troy) and Missouri’s Elijah Drinkwitz (Appalachian State). Current Sun Belt coaches Jamey Chadwell (Coastal Carolina) and Billy Napier (Louisiana) are also potential candidates for Power Five openings in this upcoming hiring cycle.

Helton is regarded as one of the nicest guys in the coaching profession and is leaving USC with less baggage than his two most-recent predecessors, Lane Kiffin and Steve Sarkisian. Both were also fired from USC mid-season and are now in attractive jobs with Sarkisian in his first season at Texas and Kiffin in his second at Ole Miss. Helton could position himself for a similar type of opportunity with a few good seasons leading the Eagles.

Moving on from the option

Helton’s hiring likely signals that Georgia Southern will move away from the option-based attack which has defined the program through the years. Its best days as an FCS program came with the option, and so did some of its more recent success. The Eagles won nine games in 2014 and 2015 — their first two seasons as an FBS team — with strong option themes under then-coach Will Fritz, and they won 10 games in 2018 under Lunsford while running the ball 49.1 times per game.

It appears Georgia Southern would have been willing to stick with the option-based offense if it could have landed the right coach. Former Georgia Tech, Navy and Georgia Southern head coach Paul Johnson, one of the option’s modern faces, declined when approached by the school about a return, according to The Athletic’s Jeff Schultz. Johnson won back-to-back NCAA Division 1-AA national titles at Georgia Southern in 1999 and 2000, and was also the program’s offensive coordinator during a pair of titles in the 1980s.

The Eagles have thrown the football more frequently this season than in any other since joining the FBS ranks. They are averaging 23.5 pass attempts per game but are still running it nearly twice as often as they throw it. By contrast, USC threw the football 44.2 times per game last season under Helton while running it just 30.7 times per game.

Headstart on the recruiting trail

Helton’s early hiring gives him a chance to recruit for Georgia Southern well in advance of the early signing period, which starts Dec. 15. The early signing period, which was introduced in 2017, has changed the dynamics of the sport by flipping the signing date for most prospects from February to December, which has made it difficult for coaches starting new jobs to salvage their first classes.

Helton needs the extra time to hit the trail in search of prospects because Georgia Southern has just two commitments in the Class of 2022, according to 247Sports. Just as important now in the age of mass transfers is that Helton will be in position to land players who enter the transfer portal when the regular season ends for most teams later this month. 

Transitioning away from an option-based system can be an arduous process because of the unique personnel the scheme requires. But with all players now allowed to transfer once without sitting a season, Helton’s early hiring will give him a chance to load up on transfers who can help him implement a new system right away without being overly reliant on freshmen or misfits.

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USC’s Clay Helton evaluation plan that led to his firing

The criteria for the most consequential decision of Mike Bohn’s career was established ahead of the football season, weeks before the disastrous defeat that accelerated the end of Clay Helton’s disappointing tenure as USC’s coach.

In the late summer it was understood among Bohn, USC President Carol Folt and Rick Caruso, chairman of USC’s board of trustees, that the athletic director would take stock of his embattled football coach at specific points during the 2021 season. At each pre-assigned benchmark, Bohn would evaluate the criteria they agreed upon, from the energy and culture of the team to its on-field performance and competitiveness to recruiting momentum and fan sentiment, among other variables. How would firing — or retaining — Helton affect each of those variables going forward?

Bohn ultimately needed just one evaluation. The first of four planned benchmarks, according to a person familiar with the decision to fire Helton, came last Saturday night.

As USC fell in humiliating fashion, 42-28 to Stanford, every discernible flaw of the Helton era was laid bare in front of a half-empty Coliseum. There were sloppy mistakes and ill-timed penalties, a stagnant offense and a defense that lacked discipline. The stands were draining before the fourth quarter, with USC trailing by four scores. The sideline was lifeless, sending an ominous message to the university decision makers watching from on high.

That night, Helton spoke like a coach who assumed he had time. “We didn’t play our best tonight, but I know this, at the end of the season, see where we’re at,” he said. “See where we’re at.”

USC coach Clay Helton runs onto the field at the Coliseum with his players before losing to Stanford on Saturday.

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

But that time had run out on Helton after six full seasons, the last three of which were clouded by intense on-field scrutiny. Had he passed that first benchmark, Helton likely would’ve lasted until the bye week, on Oct. 16, which was slated as the next evaluation point.

Bohn said Tuesday that he didn’t want to make a major decision Saturday night, “in the heat of the emotions associated with a game,” but the next step was clear at the time to the program’s decision makers.

That seemingly sudden choice would call into question why Bohn bothered to keep Helton past the 2020 season and what has changed since USC’s athletic director told The Times in January that he “can’t think of one area we didn’t improve [in 2020]”.

“I just don’t think we had that same sense of belief that with all the resources and the commitment that we put together that we could really aspire to those national championship aspirations that we talk about all the time,” Bohn said on Tuesday. “It just felt like the right time. There’s a sense of knowing when to play things a certain way and just having that gut feeling. I think that we have the right one.”

His calculus is this: With 10 games remaining, USC can still salvage its season.

But that first required navigating a potentially awkward transition. Bohn didn’t want to call a team meeting and cause alarm among players and staff. So he sat on the news through Sunday before he and his chief of staff, Brandon Sosna, met with Helton at 1:30 pm on Monday. They pulled Donte Williams aside just before a team meeting and informed him that he would be the interim coach in Helton’s place.

Helton himself had first been hired after a stint as an interim, ascending to the role of permanent coach before the 2015 season was complete. However, a similar track is unlikely for Williams.

Williams said Tuesday he had “full faith” that USC would make the right decision in hiring its coach. According to a person close to the matter, however, it was made clear to Williams that USC would conduct a full national search whether the Trojans win the next 10 games under Williams’ watch or lose them. Regardless, a person told The Times, the expectation is that USC will work diligently to retain Williams even if, as expected, it goes outside the program for a permanent replacement.

Before they moved forward, however, Bohn thought it important to allow Helton a chance to say his own goodbye. So the coach broke the news to his team during its 2:10 team meeting. Star wideout Drake London called the moment “heart-wrenching.”

“That meant a lot to a lot of players to have that kind of moment after we heard the news,” USC captain and punter Ben Griffiths said. “None of us were really ready for it.”

Meanwhile, at 2:11, Bohn posted a statement on social media that he was making a change.

In the wake of Bohn’s decision, the urgency within the department to get the next coaching hire right— and avoid the fate of so many other FBS bluebloods who have fallen further from relevance because of bad hires — is tremendously high. For Bohn, who previously hired football coaches at both Colorado and Cincinnati, the pressure has never been greater.

“We’re doing everything we can to show our next head coach, wherever that head coach is, that we’re fully committed to winning a national championship,” Bohn said.

USC will conduct a deliberate search, with the expectation that it could drag into December, assuming any of the university’s top candidates are still coaching into the postseason.

What that ideal candidate looks like remains to be seen, but Bohn offered some insight Tuesday into the qualities he covets.

“Leadership, high integrity, character, the ability to connect with young men,” Bohn said. “As you all know, our vision is to be the most student-athlete-centered program in the country, so we want somebody that understands the connectability with young men that are a part of this program and the ability to recruit and bring high-quality, character people to USC and again to pursue championships.”

When asked whether the ideal coach will have previously led his own program, Bohn said, “there’s no replacement for head coaching experience.”

With Helton out just two games into the season and the search for his replacement only just beginning, there will be no shortage of time to craft a fuller portrait of what that ideal coach looks like.

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What went wrong for Clay Helton at USC

It finally happened.

Nearly six years after his unexpected appointment as the head coach at USC, Clay Helton’s tenure in Los Angeles is over. Athletic director Mike Bohn’s decision to cut bait Monday just two games into the 2021 season is an acknowledgment of what most people who watch the Trojans have understood for years: Helton was never going to restore USC as a consistent national power.

It’s as apparent as it was on Monday as it was in 2018 when Helton coached the Trojans to their first losing season since 2000, but the reality is the job was always too big. Had it not been for Steve Sarkisian’s early-season dismissal in 2015, Helton never would have received the opportunity to lead a program anywhere near USC’s caliber. His coaching résumé wouldn’t have allowed it.

At the time, however, Helton was the adult in the room, and that’s what USC needed to navigate the rest of that tumultuous year without further off-field embarrassment. As an interim coach, he made sense and he did about as well as he could have, winning five of seven games before Pat Haden removed the interim tag and made him the permanent coach. Haden’s decision was baffling in the sense that he didn’t make a serious attempt to fill the job with an external candidate, and it predated his own resignation announcement by only two months.

It’s easy to say Haden shouldn’t have been the one to make the hire, if not for the ineptitude of his replacement, Lynn Swann.

To understand Helton’s tenure, it’s important to know how well-liked he was by those around him. The list of people who don’t respect his football acumen is long, but as a person? It’s nearly impossible to find someone who has interacted with him who has something bad to say.

Whether that should factor into a coach’s job security is certainly debatable, but that — and some fortuitous timing — is the primary reason why he lasted so long.

If Helton never had any success, his nice-guy persona wouldn’t have really mattered, but he did. USC won the Rose Bowl in his first season as the permanent head coach and finished ranked No. 3 in the AP poll. The Trojans won the Pac-12 the next year. That type of early success would buy any coach some time, even if it did mask lopsided losses to Alabama (52-6), Stanford (27-10), Notre Dame (49-14) and Ohio State (24-7) during those two years.

Helton’s third year in charge was an absolute disaster. To go 5-7 at USC while the Pac-12 was in a collective downturn was a fireable offense, but Swann didn’t have the ruthlessness it would have taken to fire a coach a year after he won the conference.

play

2:43

Keyshawn Johnson explains why USC losing recruits to out-of-state programs was a significant reason why the program parted ways with coach Clay Helton.

Swann felt obligated to issue a statement defending Helton’s retention and extended his contract two months later, saying Helton “has shown that he can lead our team with integrity and stability and that he has the ability to win conference and national championships.”

The following September, Swann followed Haden out the door, and it wasn’t until November 2019, with one game left in the regular season, that Bohn was hired. Again, Bohn would have been justified to make a change — it certainly would have ingratiated himself with the school’s proud fan base — but there was apprehension about rushing into a process that he needed to get right.

Ultimately, Bohn wanted more time to evaluate what he was inheriting, so when it came to making a change, he was better equipped to find the right coach.

Then came the pandemic. Nothing about the 2020 season, especially in the Pac-12 and Los Angeles, was anything close to normal, so it makes little sense to place much value on what happened on the field. He wasn’t going to be fired after going 5-1 with that loss in the conference title game, which brings us here.

In firing Helton after just two games, Bohn delivered a statement that USC fans have long been waiting for. Mediocre isn’t good enough. Blowout losses at home won’t be tolerated. As soon as Stanford’s lead was insurmountable, it ensured Helton’s job status would be the primary topic of discussion for the rest of the season. Unless, of course, Helton was let go.

The timing helps on two fronts: First, it will allow USC fans to feel optimistic again. Savior speculation can be fun. Second, it gives Bohn — who undoubtedly has had candidates in mind since he arrived — time to go about the search in a methodical fashion.

Despite the relative lack of success since Pete Carroll’s departure, USC remains a place where winning big should be the expectation. It checks all the boxes that have always been necessary to compete for national championships and now, with the introduction of name, image and likeness rules, is even better positioned to attract the best talent in the country.

Let the speculation begin.

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USC fires football coach Clay Helton after loss to Stanford

After years of unfulfilled promises and festering frustration over the direction of its underachieving football program, USC has fired football coach Clay Helton.

In a message posted to Twitter on Monday, USC athletic director Mike Bohn announced his decision to “make a change in the leadership of our football program” and thanked Helton for his time as coach.

Associate head coach Donte Williams is set to serve as USC’s interim head coach. Williams is the first Black head coach in USC football history.

The decision to fire the embattled coach comes in the wake of a deeply disappointing 42-28 loss to Stanford on Saturday at the Coliseum, one of the worst defeats in recent memory for the Trojans. The coaching change came a week after USC struggled before eventually pulling away from San Jose State in the season opener and followed multiple tumultuous seasons. Fan discontent has swelled, reaching a feverish pitch during the loss to the Cardinal.

Helton closed his tenure with a 46–24 record, but the team is 19-15 since 2018.

USC’s performance and swelling outrage among boosters apparently outweighed any concerns that came with paying a hefty buyout in the midst of a financial crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. That price tag, which has been difficult to pin down because USC is a private school not required to release contracts in response to public records requests, was believed to be one of the primary factors in Bohn’s previous decision to retain Helton.

Many thought USC might part ways with Helton after last season’s Pac-12 championship game loss to Oregon, which capped a year marked by more unfilled promises of progress. USC closed the 2020 season in the same position it was at the end of the 2019 campaign, when Bohn made the controversial decision to give Helton another chance.

As the health crisis wiped out games in 2020 and threatened to upend the season at any moment, the Trojans managed to win their first five contests and earned a place on the fringes of the College Football Playoff semifinal conversation.

Yet three of those victories required furious comebacks in the final minute against teams that would finish with a 5-11 record during the shortened season. The luck finally ran out during the Pac-12 title game loss. USC did not earn a bowl bid and entered the offseason with more questions that Helton ultimately ran out of time to address.

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