Few players in college football history have been as productive as Case Keenum. His career numbers are not just impressive. They are historic. Yet despite holding multiple FBS records, he remains ineligible for the College Football Hall of Fame, and that reality exposes a flaw in how greatness is defined. Keenum’s resume is undeniable. He finished his career as the all-time leader in passing yards with 19,217, touchdown passes with 155 and completions with 1,546. Those are not just strong numbers for a productive system quarterback. Those are records that have defined an era of college football offense and continue to serve as the benchmark for every quarterback who follows. The issue is not performance. It is technicality. The Hall of Fame requires a player to be named a first-team All-American by an NCAA-recognized selector , a list that includes organizations such as the Associated Press and others used to form consensus teams.…