The average college football Spring Game is never meant to show much. In most instances, teams barely scratch the surface of the playbook, competition is light, and the stars almost never make it too far past halftime. Above all else, the main priority is to make it out injury-free.
In several instances, though, a player outside the box a bit will make a flashy play or two to turn heads. The players coaches rave about all spring can separate themselves on the depth chart going into the summer. It’s dangerous to take too much away from the game as a whole, but strong individual performances can’t hurt optimism about specific position groups, increased playing time, etc.