The postseason narrative surrounding BYU quarterback Bear Bachmeier was completely rewritten in Orlando. Forced to navigate the Pop-Tarts Bowl without LJ Martin, offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick took the training wheels off his freshman signal-caller. The result?
A masterful 25-21 comeback victory over Georgia Tech. The performance triggered mass euphoria across Cougar Nation, igniting offseason hype that Bachmeier is ready to morph into an aerial assassin. But BYU insider Jeff Hansen is urging everyone to hit the brakes.
Why BYU Needs to Temper Expectations for Bear Bachmeier
Hansen appeared on “Cover 3 Podcast” and delivered a grounded, analytical reality check regarding who Bachmeier actually is right now and the critical flaw he must fix if BYU is to truly conquer the expanded Big 12.
He said, “He (Bear Bachmeier) looked pretty dynamic as a passer. That’s where the biggest step needs to come. But you saw some signs that, okay, I think there’s something in there.”
Hansen warns that expecting the Pop-Tarts Bowl air-raid explosion to become the weekly norm is a fundamental misreading of Bachmeier’s baseline profile. Instead, Hansen points to a more efficient, balanced threshold as the realistic sweet spot for the offense.
“I think Bear can take a step forward as a passer. I don’t think he’s going to be a 300-yard type game like we saw in the Pop-Tarts Bowl,” Hansen noted. “That’s not who he is every week.”
“I think he can complete 65% of his passes. He can make big throws when he needs to and hit that 225 to 250 yards per game mark. If Bear Bachmeier can get there, the BYU offense is going to be just fine.”
Statistically, Bachmeier’s freshman campaign perfectly mirrors Hansen’s blueprint. He finished the year with 3,033 passing yards, a 64.9% completion rate, and a 15-to-7 touchdown-to-interception ratio.
He paired that aerial production with a punishing ground game, logging 527 rushing yards and 11 scores. He doesn’t need to be Patrick Mahomes; he needs to be an efficient, dual-threat distributor.
The A-Rod offense could also help him. Hansen pointed out how Roderick has transformed the likes of Zach Wilson and Jaren Hall.
The infrastructure surrounding Bachmeier is arguably the best in the conference. A healthy LJ Martin returns to anchor a lethal zone-run game, instantly alleviating the pressure on the sophomore quarterback’s shoulders. Combined with an elite returning offensive line snap-count, the Cougars project to boast a top-20 offense nationally.
If Bachmeier can sharpen his decision-making, limit the turnover-worthy mistakes, and consistently navigate the 240-yard median passing metric, BYU won’t just compete in the Big 12. They might just win it. Especially given Joey McGuire’s crisis with the quarterback situation.
Currently, PFSN’s CFB Playoff Meter gives the Cougars a 29% chance to make the College Football Playoff.
