CFB Week 1 (8/28-9/1) News and Picks

Sanchez will be named starter

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by Paragon SC on Aug 24, 2008 5:00 AM PDT in USC Football
With camp breaking yesterday it is pretty clear that Mark Sanchez will be the starting QB when SC takes the field against Virgina next Saturday. The dislocated patella he suffered two weeks ago appears to not be an issue as Sanchez has been through drills that will prepare him to resume full duties as starter on Monday.
When Mark Sanchez dislocated his left kneecap Aug. 8, the injury clouded USC's quarterback situation.
The clouds have parted.
Sanchez (Mission Viejo High) went about business in Saturday's game-situation scrimmage session as if the knee injury was a thing of the past.
"The trainers worked diligently with Mark and he was in the right frame of mind to heal well," USC coach Pete Carroll said.
"And he fought his way through it and it is looking like he's ready to go."
Sanchez first worked in the 7-on-7 drills early in the practice and later in the 11-on-11. Afterward, he deemed himself ready.
Its been a trying couple of weeks for SC fans as we have had to wait patiently to see who would step up in the QB derby between Mitch Mustain and Aaron Corp. Neither lit the shies up, not that anyone should have expected that with both still learning the offense. But the sense of urgency with both the coaching staff and the fans is a little new to us going into the season so getting Sanchez back in the primary role should reduce the concerns about who will lead the team.
Sanchez back in the starting role will also further calm things down on the offensive line. With great strides being made to bring the unit closer together his leadership and comfort level will go a long way to help the team focus on their game plan against UVA.
Of course the lingering question is who will back Sanchez up if he were to go down again?
The answer to that is still not clear.
It is a question USC's coaches are loathe to answer. They took the easy way out when the Trojans released their depth chart, with freshman Aaron Corp "or" sophomore Mitch Mustain listed behind Sanchez.
"I don't foresee us saying who is the No. 2 guy," offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian said. "We want to keep these guys going."
But did they give a hint? Corp was listed first, which might make sense if the names were listed in alphabetical order. But the other positions with co-starters did not go in alphabetical order, so maybe Corp earned the edge.
If that were true, it would be especially devastating for Mustain, who is a year older and started eight games at Arkansas.

Aaron Corp has pretty much "caught up" to Mitch Mustain but both have had their ups and downs in preparing for the starting role. It would be great if we didn't have to answer that question for some time. Of course Sanchez needs to take a few hits before he is completely back in the saddle and 100% comfortable.
You can tell that there is a whole different approach to the QB battles yesterday.
With Sanchez's return, and USC committed to getting him the starting quarterback's standard seven of every 10 plays in practice, the Aaron Corp-Mitch Mustain head-to-head battle looks to be a thing of the past. Mustain barely got three snaps Saturday

That pretty much says it all...
Briefly looking ahead, if SC takes care of business early against UVA then one or both could see some action in garbage time but I am not yet confident that that will be the case. The defense will do more than its share next Saturday but the offense still needs to put the points on the board and I want to see how the receivers and offensive line perform.
Sanchez being healthy is only part of the story. with all sorts of pre-season injuries happening throughout the country, just look across town, SC has been pretty fortunate in regards to guys getting injured.
This may come as a shock to folks who have only skimmed recent headlines and concluded that a walking-wounded bunch of USC Trojans will traipse into Virginia's Scott Stadium on Saturday.
But listen to Coach Pete Carroll almost giggling over the fact that USC has become just about 100 percent healthy as it heads into game-prep week Monday.
"A beautiful thing, isn't it?" Carroll said, not anticipating a single debilitating injury for a player expected to play. "It's not always that way."

There were some scares out there like the "injuries" to McKnight and Gable and there were the groin pulls and tweaked or turned ankles that come up in every camp and who can forget the chaffing issue that so many loved to make fun at. There were minor dents and dings that always come up but for the most part outside of the Sanchez scare we did OK.
Minor Update - I just saw this on SI.com:
The moment Mark Sanchez cemented himself as USC's starting quarterback this season didn't come when he led the team to a fourth-quarter comeback win over Arizona last season in his first career start. It didn't come when he threw four touchdowns passes and no interceptions in a 38-0 rout of Notre Dame in South Bend. It didn't even come this spring when coach Pete Carroll named him the starter in April, leading to No. 6 jerseys being printed and sold in the campus bookstore.
It came after he dislocated his kneecap on Aug. 9, sidelining him for nearly two weeks.
It happened as he relaxed inside a golf cart and watched Mitch Mustain throw one mind-boggling interception after another in practices. As he sat on the bench and watched Aaron Corp struggle to hit open receivers and run out of the pocket the moment he felt pressured. As he stood on the sidelines and watched Garrett Green play as well as a quarterback turned safety turned wide receiver who was asked to turn into a quarterback again could.
[...] Sanchez is USC's best quarterback and it isn't even close.
That the gap is as wide as it is may come as a surprise to those that figured Mustain, who went 8-0 as the starting quarterback at Arkansas as a freshman in 2006, would win the job after proving his metal in the SEC with back-to-back wins over ranked Alabama and Auburn, the latter coming on the road.
The realization that Mustain's Arkansas credentials meant nothing at USC came fairly quickly for the quarterback after he reviewed the Trojans' telephone-book-sized playbook. His transition is basically the equivalent of an award-winning cook at the Whole Hog Café taking a job as a sushi chef at Katsuya. He's literally starting from scratch with no carryover.
OK, that's brash but its fair and its pretty much spot on.
I was one of those who thought that Mustains experience would be the difference but obviously I was wrong. I think a lot of were a little surprised that there wasn't a clear leader when Sanchez went down so that is a bit of a concern should something happen to Sanchez.
Also, the depth chart was released. In some spots it is very "politically correct" in how they name the starters "OR" back-ups at some positions. I am jot into conspiracy theories, coaches like to keep their options open.
So now we focus on UVA!
 
From the wonderful guys at underdogsofwar.com. You might know them (Garf and Matador):

NCAAF Preview: Some random teams

from underdogsofwar.com by TheGarfather
So, I started doing some other conferences and divisions in the last few weeks, but it takes a lot longer to write things up after doing the capping, than it does to just cap and research, and its far more tedious to boot. On top of that, once the lines get released there is so much more to look into than general info. I won’t get any more team previews (other than the following half-dozen) done this year and I apologize to those of you who are fans of squads and conferences that I couldn’t get to. Next year I will get a healthy start in May right after the draft and ought to be able to finish. Call it a lesson learned. These are the others I had completed. Hope you all enjoy.
Central Michigan - 2007: 7-5, covered both the MAC championship and bowl game, a mildly profitable 7-5-1in the money stakes. 08 Garcast: tough to say if they will get back to the MAC title game as there are three or even four other good teams just in their division, but one thing is certain, barring any injuries to Dan LeFevour the offense will be a load to handle for everyone on their schedule other than the UGA Bulldogs. A repeat of last season’s 7-5 looks right about right. Dan LeFevour just missed joining Tim Tebow as the only QBs to get 20 TDs both rushing and passing in the same year. His command of the offense is superb and he usually finds the open man. You do get the feeling that at some point he will take a big shot, so the more he can learn to read defenses and check down the better off he will be and the more attractive NFL scouts will find him. Every skill position is loaded not just in terms of quality, but also depth. Justin Hoskins led the RBs in yards and scores last season, but really Ontario Sneed is the more experienced of the two and probably the better long term pro prospect (if either one is.) Bryan Anderson followed up his 867 yard frosh effort with a 90 catch, 1132 yard job last season, while scoring ten TDs. Its unusual that a 102 catch season can be over-shadowed but that is exactly what happened to Antonio Brown because of Anderson’s success at reaching the end zone. The OL will be one of the 2 or 3 best in the conference with 4 returning starters including LT Andrew Hartline who has received all conference honors as both a soph and jr. The only newbie is Joe McMahon at RG who transferred in from Iowa State.
The reason to be excited if you are a fan of the Chippewas is that while the offense returns in tact, the defense couldn’t be any worse if it wanted to. They allowed over 65% completions by their opponents and were the second worst in the nation in pass defense. Some of this was the secondary’s fault, but the DL is also blameworthy for not putting consistent pressure on their foe’s signal caller. 4.0 ypc allowed wasn’t up to their recent standards even if it was a respectable number in the context of the MAC. With 8 returning starters you have to believe both aspects of the defense will be on the mend. Frank Zombo is the star of the front seven at one DE spot while Larry Knight and Sam Williams will fight it out at the other. The tackles are both under-sized in terms of stuffing the run and jamming up the works, but they do have the athleticism to shoot the gap and wreak havoc in the opponents backfield so look for that tackles for a loss number to rise this year. Nick Bellore is the only returning linebacker as Red Keith and Ike Brown depart, but there is talent to fill those spots even if they are still a little wet behind the ears. Tommy Mama will be picked on heavily at one corner spot because he has only 6 starts and a size disadvantage as juxtaposed to the other CB in Josh Gordy who was productive last season (4 picks, 5 PBU) in 8 starts and had 14 starts in 06. Chaz West and Eric Fraser will be the safeties and both have a knack for the ball. Anything the defense can give the team will be gravy as they were embarrassing at times last year and the offense won games in spite of them.
Rice - 2007: 3-9, no post season, 5-6 against the spread. 08 Garcast: more shootouts. 4-8 looks most likely, but 5 or even 6 wins isn’t a silly notion. I still don’t see them in a bowl, meaning they won’t get their first post-season win since 1953. Pure passing spread offenses in football are like 3-pointers in basketball, and home runs in baseball, if you live by them, sooner or later you will die by them. They aren’t a reliable M.O. and aren’t a fundamentally sound approach to being a great team, although they do provide excitement and put butts in seats. Ultimately, football is still won the same way it always has been, rushing the football, and great defense, and those aren’t two areas where Rice excels. Fortunately for the Owls, that is the norm in this division and because of said circumstances they will be fighting for a bowl game going into early November. And provided they hold serve at home vs. Army and Marshall, there is a very real shot that the season finale against rival UH could make the determination on whether or not they are post-season bound. QB Chase Clement and WR Jarrett Dillard share the same brain and will forever be linked in the minds of college football fans. I read from a guy “in the know” that their timing so far this summer has been as good or better than it ever was, which is a scary thought for a lot of CBs. Tommy Henderson and Toren Dixon are great options at WR as is TE/WR/FB/DE/QB/everything James Casey who has great size and athleticism after giving up on playing minor league baseball. The offensive line features 4 upperclassmen and 3 returning starters. The lone youngster, LT Scott Mitchell, might be the best of them all in time according to the coaching staff. The biggest question about the offense is who will run the ball to help keep the defense honest, and is the coaching staff really committed to having a running game or is it all lip service at this point?
They had worst pass defense in the land according to the numbers. Will it improve? Well, yeah, it has to, but that doesn’t mean they will be any good. When you give up 42.9 pts/game there is a lot of improvement required before you can be called “good” again. By comparison to the nation’s 119th best pass defense, the 100th ranked run defense isn’t too bad and it will likely improve as the trio of linebackers are all seniors and pretty fast. Now they just need to stop missing tackles. Scott Solomon is the gem of the DL even though he is just a sophomore. With 4.5 sax and 6.5 TFL as a true frosh the future appears bright, especially if he adds another 25 pounds on his 6′3″ frame. Cheta Ozougwu will be the other end with beefy (302) Chris Ptaszek and Chance Talbert on the interior. SLB Brian Raines is the second leading tackler and also made an appearance on the second team All-CUSA list. He will be joined by Vernon James and Bencil Smith. The secondary brings back 3 of the 4 pieces from last year’s travesty. Brandon King was the second leading interceptor with 3, and 16 pass break-ups. Andrew Sendejo is the best of the bunch having already started 23 games in his first two years, and will try in vain to improve upon his 107 tackles and 5 picks. All-in-all, it looks like an improved group based on experience, but the talent is rather mediocre and the offense should expect to have to win games again this year.
Southern Miss - 2007: 7-5, with a backdoor cover bowl loss to the Bearcats, 6-6 against the line. 08 Garcast: the first time in 14 years the Golden Eagles will not acheive a winning record and it has less to do with schedule or talent and everything to do with a total philosophical overhaul of the offense. Larry Fedora is the new head man in Hattiesburg, and if any of you have watched Oklahoma State the last few years then you have an idea of what the Mustard Buzzards will look like in a couple years. They won’t look like that right out of the gate though. They don’t have the personnel in place and it takes a couple years to get that timing established in a spread offense. The OLmen they have had on the roster for over a decade are geared towards drive-blocking where you just bust the DL in the mouth and push them back. Unfortunately, the spread doesn’t necessitate that as much as it requires nimble lineman with good footwork that can pull, drive, and form a pocket when needed. Both of the most experienced QBs from last year are gone, but its all immaterial as they were complete trash anyway. Martevious Young is scheduled to be the man this year, but will need to learn to throw in a hurry and I wouldn’t be surprised if a true frosh recruit gives him a run for his money. Damion Fletcher is back once again and will try to get another 1000-yard effort which does seem within his reach and ability. The guy I want to see is DeAndre Brown a 6′6″ 215 pound dynamo who was covetted by every major program under the sun, but chose Fedora’s squad because the opportunity to make an immediate impact presented itself. This will be TE Shawn Nelson’s last hurrah before he becomes an NFL draft pick.
The cornerstone of much of USM’s recent success has been a good defense and in particular a front seven that was too athletic and powerful for the OLs they matched up against. The loss of all 4 starters on the DL from last season as much as anything is was causes me to predict a gloomy scenario for the Golden Eagles. The size is there and the talent is still pretty good, but the experience, and the production that go along with it, are a far cry from what a conference contender must possess. The defense’s best player is Gerald McRath at middle linebacker. The Conference USA Defensive Player of the Year last season, brings back 21 starts and almost a 250 stops, just in his first two years. Big things will be asked of him this season not just in production terms, but also in leadership qualities as nobody else boasts his talent/experience combo. The secondary will be in decent hands with returning starter Eddie Hick at FS, CJ Bailey at cornerback, and former wideout Ivory Bradshaw who the coaches have high hopes to fill in adequately for the departed and excellent Brandon Sumrall. The schedule is pretty standard for a CUSA team, a no-shot-in-hell-road game (Auburn) and a couple small conference foes, that on paper could be wins. The problem is that this has become a high-octane offensive league and USM doesn’t have a team structured that way (easy scores), at least not this season. Let say they drop 2 games to 5-7, but stay competitive because of good recruiting pipelines and a solid roster.
Boston College - 2007: 10-2, non-covering loss to VT in title game with another ATS loss to MSU in the Champs Sports Bowl, 6-7 on the cash overall. 08 Garcast: the defense won’t let them struggle so much that they have a losing year. There will be an adjustment period with the offense, but the schedule doesn’t become daunting until a visit from the Hokies in mid-October at which point they could already be 5-0. 7-5 seems about right with a lot of tough games in November. Chris Crane will replace Matt Ryan and although there isn’t much of a comparison yet (one career start vs. 1st rd. draft pick) I would just as soon have a 5th-year starter in charge of my offense. He does have better than advertised athleticism. The top two ball carriers are gone and the #1 guy is a true frosh so that is one potential weakness, but that is an area where youth can serve a team. The WRs are a fine group. Rich Gunnell provides a little electricity, while TE Purvis and wideout Robinson are the chain movers. Great depth as well. The hallmark of BC’s teams under Tom O’Brien was great offensive linemen and for the time being that will continue. LT Anthony Castonzo (who has moved over from RT) is considered a future NFL draft choice. Matt Tennant at center and Clif Ramsey at LG are tough to handle internally.
The rush ends of the DL are solid if unspectacular players in Jim Ramella and Alex Albright. Albright led the team in sacks with 8.5 and similar production will be needed again. You won’t be able to run up the middle on this team for anything. Ron Brace and BJ Raji - who are both seniors with outside shots at the next level - are a combined 650 pounds and each is athletic enough to ocassionally shoot a gap and land on the QB. The second level of the front seven is probably even better than the first. It seems strange to say it after losing Pruitt and Dunbar, but the return of Brian Toal really bolsters what is already a solid group. There is both depth and quality in the 2-deeps. WLB Mark Herzlich is a name you may hear more of in the next two seasons. The secondary is not only the ***** in the armor of the defense, but really of the whole team. Jamie Silva departs as the do-it-all FS with 125 stops and 8 interceptions. it appears Jr. Marcellus Bowman will replace him. Paul Anderson returns at SS. He loves to hit, but must continue to improve his pass coverage. CBs Rollins and Guase should expect a great deal of work. Other than Notre Dame, you can’t get a much softer non-conference schedule so its a certainty this team goes bowling, its just a matter of will they finish 5th or 2nd in the division. Even though their financial backers have lost in each of the last two bowl games, BC does hold the distinction winning the most consecutive bowls (8, with Utah at 7) in terms of active streaks.
Clemson - 2007: 9-3, lost outright as a favorite to Auburn in OT of their bowl, 6-6 against the number. 08 Garcast: the biggest weakness on the team this year is coaching where Tommy Bowden often makes you wonder if he a sane human, but in terms of player personnel they should win this fucking division and I project they will likely do just that even if FSU and Wake (both on the road!!!) have a little something to say about it. I think their first and last games will be their toughest, both against the SEC - Alabama and South Carolina. 9-3 again this year. The offense will be borderline unstoppable even against suitable defenses. If per chance your DL is shaky in stuffing the run, you may as well just mail it in because Clemson will rush for 300 on you no problem. James Davis who I loosely rate as the best back in the country this year (along with Chris Wells and LeSean McCoy) will split carries with the electric CJ Spiller who can take it the distance on any play whether rushing, receiving, or returning kickoffs. The wideouts are all back and ready to cause trouble. There is size, speed, and strength in the group and Jacoby Ford should be healthy this season instead of just playing 5 games like last year. The man distributing the ball will be Cullen Harper who was a pleasant surprise last season taking over for Will Proctor. Its awfully tough to argue with a 27:6 ratio. The OL may not be up to snuff the way it has been recently, but even if a little on the young side of things (Jr x3, So, and RFr) it is a very talented group. They are specifically geared towards drive-blocking and if they are able to poke holes in the defensive wall it will be a long year for opponents. Specifically replacing Barry Richardson at LT will be a huge key.
I have no qualms about the interior of the defensive line. Dorell Scott is a likely draftee at the conclusion of this season as he possesses the size scouts want to see (6′4″ 320) and the athleticism to go along with it. His partner in crime is Rashaad Jackson who will start sometime in October after regaining his health, and can hold his own even if he does have a lower ceiling in terms of potential. Its the ends where I have questions. Da’Qaun Bowers is a true frosh - albeit a very highly regarded one - and Ricky Sapp is simply an edge rusher who gets eaten alive too many times in run support. If I were an opposing coach looking to score points on the Tigers, I would run it off-guard right at these two and see if they are man enough to resist. A lot of what I have read makes it sound like these two fellas don’t represent a dropoff from Gaines Adams and Phillip Merling, but that is totally ridiculous as those guys were each about 275 and had experience in both edge rushing and run defense. These guys will be good in time (09) but are greenhorns right now. I realize Sapp had a nice season last year, but that was a function of playing along side so much other talent. The LBers are a huge problem. Cortney Vincent wasn’t reinstated meaning they went from 1 returning starter to zero. Recently Clemson has had some good linebacker corps and they were all built on speed, so I would expect this to be the same…a bunch of small fast guys like DeAndre McDaniel (200 lbs) and Brandon Maye (215 lbs). The secondary has no such issues, especially at CB where Crezdon Butler and Chris Chancellor can both be left on an island as they have the experience to jam and the speed to turn and run. Its because of these two natural corners that I think you will see the safeties being able to be used moreso in run support than anything else. In summary, absolute disappointment if they aren’t at least co-champs of the conference.
NC State - 2007: 5-7, no post season for second straight year, 5-6 ATS. 08 Garcast: I think they drop a game and land on or around 4-8. That is a young defense and too many ?s on offense. Tom O’Brien and Dana Bible prefer a power running game, but most of the OLmen they have were recruited for a passing attack and don’t have great leverage or the straight ahead toughness needed to knock a DL backwards. Daniel Evans was the QB, but RFr Russell Wilson will get the start. The running backs are talented, experienced, and have depth. Andre Brown (228) and FB Toney Baker (225) are a formiddable duo when rushing at a defense downhill, now Baker just needs his knee to hold up. Jamelle Eugene brings more of a speed element and catches well out of the backfield. Anthony Hill returns from a red-shirt year (ACL) and will be the offense’s best player. The OL is veteran, but has a couple folks playing out of position (former DTs) and a couple other position switches. Like the offensive skill players, this group has the potential to be good in time. 3 seniors do lend some hope of a decent offensive year. This whole group really just needs continuity and live reps. The best thing the offense can do is stop turning the ball over as that is largely what created a huge negative differential in giveaways vs. takeaways last season (-16).
This side of the ball is where the talent is in question. Lots of youth and all kinds of size issues from the defensive tackles back to the safeties. There is no Mario Williams, Manny Lawson, Tank Tyler, John McCargo, or even DeMario Pressley on this roster so the DL flatout won’t be up to recent standards. Willie Young brings back 6 sacks and 10 tackles for a loss to his defensive end spot which is good news. All three LBers are gone from last season leaving incredible youth and in experience. There is even discussion that true freshman Dwayne Maddox could see some time on the pitch. Most of them are in the 215-225 range which is fine in a mid-major conference but won’t really cut it in the BCS. I expect this team to have all sorts of trouble trying improve on last season’s 4.3 ypc allowed and doubt very much that number will go anywhere but up. The best news for the stop unit comes from the secondary where the safeties are small but talented and both CBs return as starters. DeAndre Morgan needs to get bigger and stronger, but has good enough wheels to never get beaten deep. Jeremy Gray is physical and may lead the team in interceptions yet again. If NCSU is going to go bowling it will have to be because they outscore a lot of teams and I really don’t see that potential. This program is still 2 years away from being heard from. Its tougher to change the culture of under-achieving than it is to change the roster and O’Brien was brought in to do both.
 
holy shit! matador! so thats where he went.....

guy used to take so much undeserved shit from the peanut gallery idiots across the street, because people said he was pompous or came off as a know-it-all.
but the bottom line is that guy knows his shit.

wouldnt mind trying to get him over here unless anyone else has a problem with it...
 
Monday Headlinin': Delayed response edition

By Matt Hinton
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Count the Touchdowns and Think About What You've Done. Robert Marve will be the starting quarterback for Miami, Randy Shannon revealed Saturday -- eventually. In the meantime, the redshirt freshman will be one of seven Canes suspended for the tomato can opener with Charleston Southern, along with running back Damien Berry, fullback Eric Houston, defensive end Adewale Ojomo, safety Randy Phillips, outstandingly-named receiver Kanye Farquharson and, probably most costly of all for an opener, long snapper Chris Ivory. If the Buccaneers make any noise at all Thursday, it will be at least in part because the backup long snapper sails one over the freshman punter's head.
Presumably the point of Charleston Southern on the schedule to begin with, other than an easy home payday, is to get a tuneup before the visit to Florida on Sept. 6, but with true freshman Jacory Harris running the show for the opener, Marve will come back to the lineup with zero career snaps to his name heading into Gainesville. If Harris plays well enough this week, Marve might have to wait to come back at all.
The really strange thing, as noted by the Miami Herald's Greg Cote, is that Marve's (apparently) curfew-related infraction occurred almost a year ago, last Halloween, in the middle of his redshirt season. Shannon could have had him run it off in practice then, or suspended him for the spring, or any number of reasonable reactions over the last nine months, rather than take away his only chance to play in a game situation before being thrown into the Gators' den. But that's a hard line for you.
Score More Points than the Other Team. Guess which team needs to follow these five keys for a successful season:
1. Win the games they are supposed to win, especially at home
2. Open it up some on offense.
3. Stay healthy.
4. Turn them over as opposed to the other way around.
5. Block 'em early and often [i.e. focus on the run -- ed.].
If you said those were the keys for <i>Pittsburgh</i>, congratulations: you're probably a reader of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Because otherwise I don't know how you could have possibly distinguished that list from the "keys to success" of any other team.
Sorry for the Scare, Guys. Aaron Corp and Mitch Mustain looked much better in Saturday's scrimmage at USC, but all the hullaballoo about Mark Sanchez's dislocated knee cap? Fuhgetaboudit:
Sanchez (Mission Viejo High) went about business in Saturday's game-situation scrimmage session as if the knee injury was a thing of the past."The trainers worked diligently with Mark and he was in the right frame of mind to heal well," USC coach Pete Carroll said.
"And he fought his way through it and it is looking like he's ready to go."
Sanchez first worked in the 7-on-7 drills early in the practice and later in the 11-on-11. Afterward, he deemed himself ready.
"It was a great day," he said. "I got some good game-like situation experience. I felt fine scrambling the little bit that I did and I didn't even think twice about it, so that was good. I'm glad I'm back and Monday should be full go."
In the meantime, the L.A. Daily News' Scott Wolf says the Trojans need to be wary of UCLA spies and the new seats at the L.A. Coliseum.
They've Been Paying Attention. Say what you will about Tennessee fans -- at least they're realistic:
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Also check out the News-Sentinel's preseason report card and updates of oft-injured David Holbert and ex-Vol Antonio Wardlow.
And UCLA will probably be relying on true freshman running back Aundre Dean against the Vols next Monday.
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Quickly . . .
All-Pac Ten projection Rob Gronkowski missed Arizona's "Meet the Team" night and may be diagnosed with mononucleosis. . . . Kevin Riley is settling in as the top quarterback at Cal, while Andrew Luck may be pulling away for the starting job at Stanford. . . . Maybe recruiting legend Willie Williams just needed a small town to stay focused, says Willie Williams from Glenville, West Virginia, pop. 1,544. . . . Clemson's Aaron Kelly grew up an Alabama fan while watching his cousin, Derrick Lassic. . . . Auburn's still waiting on its starting quarterback for UL-Monroe, another good sign both Kodi Bruns and Chris Todd will play. Although Ben Tate seems to have his own opinion: "I think everybody can pretty much see who should be the guy out there." (Mobile Press-Register writer Evan Woodberry: "I can't.") . . . Hawaii will have the same philosophy in the opener at Florida, but everything else has changed. And PErcy Harvin practiced for the first time Friday. . . . If Kentucky's passed Louisville on the field, it's done it with Louisville natives. . . . Louisiana Tech expects a big turnout for Mississippi State, a big-timer by Ruston standards. . . . Ohio State receiver Dan Potakar will undergo radiation for testicular cancer that has spread to his brain. . . . Daryll Clark and Pat Devlin will split time against Coastal Carolina, but the distribution should favor one of the other after the opener. . . . New Wisconsin quarterback Allan Evridge has been there, done that at Kansas State, albeit very poorly, for the most part. . . . Colorado has no idea what to expect from Colorado State. In the meantime, hyped freshman running back Darrell Scott has lost 17 pounds since practice began and wants to get down to 205. . . . Either Mike Gundy doesn't know who'll be calling Oklahoma State's plays Saturday at Washington State, or, more likely, he's just not telling. . . . The Austin American-Statesman ranks the Longhorns' two-deep, with suspicious results (John Chiles the second-best on offense?). . . . The Charlotte Observer has five things you should know about new N.C. State starter Justin Wilson. . . . Not that he has all that much competition, but Appalachian State's Armanti Edwards is the most exciting player in the Carolinas. Wait, what about C.J. Spiller and James Davis? . . . And the biggest surprise of the weekend: the Detroit Free Press got 17 pictures out of Drew Henson's career. But why?
 
Mid-Major Monday: On the widespread faith in BYU

By Matt Hinton
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It's happened three times in the last four years, and both years since the big-money club expanded from eight teams to ten, so the question has appropriately evolved from "Can any Cinderella bust the BCS?" to "Which Cinderella will bust the BCS?" And since we have six months to run with the possibilities, the answer has more than enough time to emerge, gain steam and ascend to conventional wisdom by late August. Last year, the mid-major darling was Hawaii. This year, it's BYU.
The New York Times is the latest to anoint the Cougars the under-the-radar darling, citing the usual strengths (Max Hall, ten returning starters on offense, a much older-than-average roster seasoned by the selfless trials of missionary work) and speculating for a readership that generally doesn't know much and could care less about college football that, "B.Y.U. will spend the season trying to convert college football’s traditionalists into believing that it is good enough to play in a Bowl Championship Series game." This is not exactly true: "convert" is not the right verb when the Cougars enter the season ranked 16th by the Associated Press and 17th by the Coaches' Poll, and are explicitly projected for the Fiesta Bowl by USA Today, on top of top 20 rankings by Lindy's, Athlon, Phil Steele, The Sporting News, Blue Ribbon/ESPN and Sports Illustrated -- higher and more consistent preseason accolades than accumulated by successful BCS insurgents Utah in 2006 or Hawaii last year. It's not a conversion that's necessary as much as it is a confirmation of the already-willing believers. Unlike any of the other would-be party crashers, after all, the same elite coalition has elected BYU No. 1 in the last 25 years.
As a storyline, "BYU hopes to earn BCS bid" makes a lot of sense, and Bronco Mendenhall himself dubbed the season the "Quest For Perfection." But internally and externally, the Cougars may not be in position to hit quite the sweet spot their predecessors did on their runs.
To begin with, Utah, Boise and Hawaii had only marginal challenges outside the conference -- between them, only Boise faced a winning team from a BCS conference, and it would be another month before that team, Oregon State, found its footing in a string of razor-thin wins. Maybe more importantly, neither Utah nor BOise faced a significant challenger in-conference; when Hawaii had to put away the Broncos last year, it got the game at home.
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On the former front, the Cougars' fortune depends largely on the fates of UCLA and Washington, projected as afterthoughts in the Pac Ten but neither a mere stumbling block for less-talented BYU: the Huskies wrecked Boise State's BCS aspirations in a similar early test last year in Seattle, while the Cougars lost head-to-head to the healthy version of UCLA last September and probably should have fallen again to a very banged-up, lame duck L.A. team under an interim coach in the Las Vegas Bowl rematch if not for a blocked field goal at the last second; the '06 Cougars, which scored significantly more and allowed significantly fewer points than last year's team, lost early nail-biters at Arizona and Boston College, dropping BYU's overall record against BCS conference teams under Mendenhall to 2-6. With two of said opponents back-to-back, even if the Bruins and Huskies are as mediocre as expected, that's not a minor quibble.
At least as significant, though, is that there are two legitimate challengers to the Mountain West throne, and the Cougars have to face both, TCU and Utah on the road. The Utes have earned most of the non-BYU attention in anticipation of a winner-take-all finale, but TCU was a heavier hitter than Utah in 2005-06 and found its footing late last year after a disappointing start, winning four of the last five and convincingly taking the bowl game for the third year in a row. The Horned Frogs have also been nearly impenetrable at home, sitting at 15-2 in Fort Worth since hooking up with the Mountain West three years ago.
That, of course, is all assuming the Cougars are as strong an outfit as they've been the last two years. On offense, maybe, that's a good bet -- another similarity with Utah in '04 and Hawaii last year is the presence of a veteran quarterback off a breakout season and expected to dominate the conference again -- but virtually none of the tacit "BCS Buster" endorsements has dwelt long on the massive attrition on defense. That side of the ball has improved dramatically under Mendenhall, but it's much harder to get on board with any unit replacing seven of its back eight.
The secondary is relying on new starters at all four positions, likely including redshirt freshmen at one corner and strong safety, and linebacker was thin enough that Vic So'oto, who spent his first three tears at wide receiver and tight end, where he started six games last year, was moved to defense and might start immediately. As Brian Cook is fond of pointing out, any dramatic position switch involving an established veteran is likely a bad omen for said player's new position.
With 16 straight Mountain West wins, clearly BYU has been the class of the conference, but ubiquitous deference of all the offseason headlines seems as much like atonement for sleeping on the Cougars during their outstanding run than closely scrutinizing exactly what lies in front of them on the Yellow Brick Road to Cinderella HEaven. Compared to their fellow travelers this time around (Utah, Fresno State, Boise State), the Cougars may be in the best position to break through, but next to the very small cadre of perfect upstarts they aspire to follow into the heavily-logo'd promised land, they have a higher bar to clear in terms of the schedule and many more holes on the depth chart. At any rate, if the challenge of vanquishing the rest of the Mountain West seems like a foregone conclusion, it's probably only because assumptions always lag so far behind reality.
 
BYU will not go unscathed in the MWC this year...their defense is no better than 4th best in the conference.
 
Depth chart for UK game revealed

from Card Chronicle by Mike Rutherford
Per U of L:
OFFENSE
QUARTERBACK1. Hunter Cantwell
2. Tyler Wolfe
3. Matt Simms​
RUNNING BACK
1. Brock Bolen
2. Bilal Powell
3. Victor Anderson
FULLBACK
1. Joe Tronzo
2. Brock Bolen
WIDE RECEIVER
1. Troy Pascley
2. Josh Chichester
3. Andrew Robinson
WIDE RECEIVER
1. Doug Beaumont
2. Chris Vaughn
3. Trent Guy
LEFT TACKLE
1. George Bussey
2. Greg Tomczyk
LEFT GUARD
1. Mark Wetterer
2. Josh Byrom
CENTER
1. Eric Wood
2. Nick Borgelt
RIGHT GUARD
1. Abdul Kuyateh
2. Brian Roche
RIGHT TACKLE
1. Jeff Adams
2. Ryan Kessling
3. Bryon Stingily
TIGHT END
1. Pete Nochta
2. Johnnie Burns
3. Rock Keys
DEFENSE
DEFENSIVE END
1. L.D. Scott
2. Rashad Roberts​
NOSE TACKLE
1. Earl Heyman
2. L.T. Walker
DEFENSIVE TACKLE
1. Adrian Grady
2. Tyler Jessen
DEFENSIVE END
1. Maurice Mitchell
2. Rodney Gnat
3. Greg Scruggs
SAM LINEBACKER
1. Dexter Heyman
2. James Bryant
WILL LINEBACKER
1. Jon Dempsey
2. Chris Campa
3. Brandon Heath
MIDDLE LINEBACKER
1. Antwon Canady
2. James Bryant
3. Keith Baker
FIELD CORNERBACK
1. Johnny Patrick
2. Travis Norton
3. Chaz Thompson
STRONG SAFETY
1. Latarrius Thomas
2. Josh Wiley
3. C.J. Peake
FREE SAFETY
1. Bobby Buchanan
2. Richard Raglin
3. Daniel Covington
CORNERBACK
1. Woodny Turenne
2. Marcus Folmar
3. Karldell Dunning
SPECIAL TEAMS
PLACEKICKER/KICKOFFS
1. Chris Philpott
2. Tim Dougherty​
PUNTER
1. Corey Goettsche
2. Jon Payne
LONG SNAPPER
1. Dane Mattingly
2. Daniel Weedman
HOLDER
1. Bill Ashburn
2. Corey Goettsche
KICKOFF RETURN
1. Bilal Powell
2. Victor Anderson
3. Doug Beaumont
4. Chaz Thompson
PUNT RETURNER
1. Doug Beaumont
2. Karldell Dunning
THOUGHTS
--I've been told that Chris Vaughn suffered a minor injury at practice last week, but will play on Sunday, and could take the starting spot from Troy Pascley with a solid week of work.
--Mozell Axson's absence on the depth chart would appear to validate the rumors that he is out for this weekend.
--Also absent: Will Savoy, who began camp as a starter at defensive end.
--Latarrius Thomas returns to the starting lineup, as he and Bobby Buchanan swap the positions they held coming into fall camp.
--Louisville's starters at linebacker are two junior college transfers and a true freshman. Quite crazy.
--Freshman Chris Philpott holds on and beats out Tim Dougherty to become the Louisville special teams equivalent of Aaron Rodgers.
--If Rock Keys were to score a touchdown on Sunday, my pants would be off.
--Powell and Anderson returning kicks guarantees that I will completely overreact if we win the toss and elect to receive.
 
Virginia Tech: Falling in line, out of the gate

By Matt Hinton
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On paper, anyway, East Carolina physically owned Virginia Tech in last year's opener in Blacksburg, outrushing the Hokies by more than 100 yards on a three-yards-per-carry advantage. If you watched the game, there's nothing misleading about that: the Pirates consistently controlled the line of scrimmage and kept the Hokie offense in check from start to finish -- the real catalyst for the final ten-point margin was an interception return for touchdown by Macho Harris (at right) in the third quarter, ECU's only major mistake of the afternoon (it was +2 in turnover margin), and virtually the sole difference between a dramatic upset bid and the ho hum defeat it turned out to be.
Mostly because of versatile quarterback Patrick Pinkney, the Pirates are more settled now offensively than they were at this point last year, even without lightning bolt first round pick Chris Johnson in the backfield. But as much as ECU's tepid national stock and Conference USA ambitions would take off by completing what it started in '07, the more compelling questions are on the other side: do the Hokies have a quarterback? Do they have two? Do they have a glimmer of a playmaking hope from among a completely decimated lot of running backs and receivers? Is the defense that won this game last year and so many others over the last four on the same after the mass exodus of overwhelmingly successful multi-year starters?
East Carolina has every reason to come into this game with confidence after a potentially monumental bowl win over Boise State (a major momentum-builder because it was the kind of game the Broncos just don't lose over the last six years), and if last year's opener was a virtual standstill on the road, in a hostile, emotional environment with no such momentum and extreme uncertainty under center, it's the underdog here that seems to be coming back stronger, with nine returning starters on defense and an established quarterback working behind a veteran line, at home. I'm not sure "they're just better" is enough to push the Hokies over the top here, much less to the level of a 9.5-point favorite.
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But as long as we're looking at last year's game for direction on this year's game, remember also that ECU didn't move the ball with any consistency, either, and without Johnson, the one player who could turn the tide in an instant, is similarly devoid of difference-makers on offense. That's a formula for another defensively-oriented, clutch-and-grab slugfest, and in that case, there's still no one better in ugly games than Virginia Tech.
 
Washington Tries to Turn Fortunes Around With Young Lineup. Please Don't Laugh at Them

from The FanHouse - NCAAfootball
Filed under: Washington, Pac 10, NCAA FB Coaching
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The Pac-10's saddest sack of sad continues to be the Washington Huskies, a backwards, underarmed prgram that benefits only other Pac-10 teams and Notre Dame fans who really didn't need the boost in self-assuredness to begin with. Ty Willingham keeps trying, and God bless him for it, but we're starting to wonder if even he realizes what little good the effort does.

The latest sign of impending structural failure comes from today's AP piece where everybody acknowledges that Willingham will be fielding "perhaps the youngest team he's ever put out on the field":
Those youngsters will get a quick initiation in one of the most heated atmospheres in college football when the Huskies travel to rival Oregon on Saturday night. Willingham plans to start 10 sophomores or freshman - including a pair of true freshmen - against the No. 21 Ducks.

[...]

The reliance on inexperienced players at key positions only highlights how hard the first three weeks could be for Willingham. After opening at Oregon, the Huskies return home for games against No. 16 BYU and No. 4 Oklahoma.​
Three Top 25 games to start the season, and almost half of their starters are underclassmen? Mercy. Sure, Jake Locker's one of those sophomores and talent is talent, but come on. This isn't Olympic China, Tyrone; it's okay to use older players. And for God's sakes, stop forging little girls' passports.

While the Great Washington Youth Movement might be the best idea for the Huskies' long-term success, it seems pretty clear that the "long term" doesn't necessarily include Willingham's gainful employment. Maybe, in some weird way, such selflessness will endear him enough to another school to merit another head coaching job.

What's that? No? Dumb idea? Horrible? Gotcha. Nice move anyway, Ty.
 
What's a 'sub B'?

from Bevo Beat
Commenting on yesterday’s item about the Horns’ initial depth chart, Larry J. asks this question:
“How come the Depth Chart on MackBrown.com doesn’t show Malcolm Williams or Collins?”
Here’s how come, Larry:
Williams and Collins are vying for playing time at a position that UT refers to as “sub B.” You’ll never hear the announcers use that term (and you’ll rarely read it in our paper, either), because, well, no one knows what that is. It’s Greg Davis’ term for a third receiver, sent into the game in place of a tight end or fullback.
Any astute watcher of Longhorn formations under Davis knows that the three-receiver set is pretty much Texas’ base offense. They’ll mix in some two tight-end formations, as well as some traditional two-back sets and even a three-back “jumbo” set for short yardage. But really, you’ll see that three-receiver formation most of the time — assuming that Texas can find a third receiver that it trusts to fill the role.
And on Monday, Mack wasn’t sounding too certain about that. Suzanne Halliburton mentions that situation her story today on Texas’ depth chart decisions:
Brown’s not sure about a third receiver and dropped hints that the Longhorns could open in a two tight end/two flanker formation. The Longhorns’ offensive base since midseason 2003 has been three receivers, one back. Later in the day, offensive coordinator Greg Davis said the Longhorns’ most favored formation would be three wides. Redshirt freshman Malcolm Williams, who had been in contention for split end, will be used at the “sub B” spot. That’s basically a split end without as many blitz adjustment responsibilities.​
And so, the bottom-line answer to Larry’s question is this: Williams and Collins aren’t on that online depth chart because they play a position that’s technically not in Texas’ starting lineup — even though we all know that “sub B” will see plenty of playing time on Saturday.
 
SMART FOOTBALL ON CLEMSON/ALABAMA

from Every Day Should Be Saturday by Orson Swindle
Smart Football is here to explain the nuts and bolts of what’s actually happening on the field–or what should happen–in the biggest game in week one, Clemson versus Alabama at the Georgia Dome. Warning: long, brilliant, and extremely informative, meaning it should be a jolt to regular readers’ senses given the usual fare here. Enjoy.–O/S.
This article presents my own Smart Football brand of review for the upcoming Clemson-Alabama game, which is great for me because I’m not actually going to predict who wins the game at all, thus saving me the humiliation of being wrong and preventing this article from becoming irrelevant a week after having been written.
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Saban brings the Belichick-brain to the game. Spence brings the refab’d Run ‘n Shoot. NERD JAM GO!
The reason I’m not making such a prediction is because I’m talking today about schemes, and who actually wins this game probably will have done so less because they outschemed their opponent (since both coaches will have great schemes), but instead because of some combination of talent, execution, and luck, and these are things I don’t have any particular insight into.
So I’m just going to analyze one of the better coaching matchups of this season. Both Saban and Spence are great coaches, and writing about their schemes is difficult because both are quite flexible and aren’t beholden to just one thing. And both have prove quite adept at implanting their complex schemes into the brains of the 18-20 year olds they coach, since what a coach knows but his players don’t is irrelevant when it comes to winning games.
A further caveat regarding my discussion of their schemes is that since they both do so many different things so well, it’s difficult for me to say with any certainty what exactly they will do (and would be in any event impossible for me to summarize all that here, anyway). So here I will just address their styles by hitting the highlights and pick out a few things they have done in the past as examples.
The other thing that makes these guys particularly interesting are their influences: Saban has always been a pro-style defensive guy, but he will always be defined by the years he spent with Bill Belichick. And while many now look at Rob Spence as a guy who coaches a multiple-set pro-style offense that combines a high percentage passing game with a dynamic running attack, for most of his career he was a tried and true Run & Shoot guy. So in this article I’ll talk a little about some of these guys’ influences, what they now currently do and how those influences might have shaped them, and then I’ll just touch on how they might prepare for each other.
Nick Saban: Still Billy’s Boy
Saban has been coaching defense – and coaching it quite well – for decades. But there is no question that the defining period of his coaching career was 1991-1994, when he was Bill Belichick’s defensive coordinator with the Cleveland Browns. Just knowing that tells you a great deal about Saban’s defense: he (primarily) uses the 3-4; he’s very aggressive, especially on passing downs; he wants to stop the run on first and second down; he’s not afraid to mix up schemes, coverages, blitzes, and looks of all kinds; and, most importantly, he is intense and attentive to detail, which is the hallmark of any great defensive coach.
Let’s allow Saban to explain his defensive philosophy in his own words. From one of his LSU defensive playbooks:
“[Our] philosophy on first and second down is to stop the run and play good zone pass defense. We will occasionally play man-to-man and blitz in this situation. On third down, we will primarily play man-to-man and mix-in some zone and blitzes. We will rush four or more players versus the pass about ninety-percent of the time.
“In all situations, we will defend the inside or middle of the field first – defend inside to outside. Against the run, we will not allow the ball to be run inside. We want to force the ball outside. Against the pass, we will not allow the ball to be thrown deep down the middle or inside. We want to force the ball to be thrown short and/or outside.
“… Finally, our job is to take the ball away from the opponents’ offense and score or set up good field position for our offense. We must knock the ball loose, force mistakes, and cause turnovers. Turnovers and making big plays win games. We will be alert and aggressive and take advantage of every opportunity to come up with the ball . . . . The trademark of our defense will be effort, toughness, and no mental mistakes regarding score or situation in any game.”
None of this is revolutionary and much of it is coach-patois (there is another section in his playbook where every position is required to put in “super human effort” or else they are deemed to have failed), but it’s a good place to start. Most good defenses begin with the premise that, to be successful, they must stop the run on first and second down to force known passing situations on 3rd down. (Which is one reason why Bill Walsh – in words far too often unheeded – advocated doing much of your dropback passing on first down.)
Indeed, the book on Bob Stoops’s defense is known to everyone: first and second down expect an eight-man front and on third down you will see some kind of base or nickel personnel zone-blitz. No mystery there. A final brief prefatory note is that while Saban bases out of a 3-4, he quite commonly has one of his linebackers put their hand down and line up as would a 4-3 defensive end.
So let’s get a bit more specific. First I’ll discuss what is maybe Saban’s most common defense, Cover 1 Robber. Second, when Saban does use zones on known passing situations he likes the overload blitz and the common 3-3 zone blitz behind it, so I’ll show a basic example of what this might look like. And finally, I’ll discuss a couple coverage techniques that Saban likes to use.
Cover 1 “Robber”
Cover 1 is maybe the most common defense in the SEC. (Though “Cover 2” is close if you lump together all its variants.) Base Cover 1 is quite simple: the “1” refers to a deep safety who aligns down the middle, while all the offense’s skill guys are covered man to man. This doesn’t necessarily mean it is bump and run – it could be loose coverage – but it often is bump and run. The defense needs a great centerfielder back at Free Safety who can stop the deep ball and cover sideline to sideline.
The nice thing about this defense is it is simple and, once you’ve locked in five guys in man and a free safety, you can do whatever you want with the other five. And, maybe most importantly, with just one free-safety deep, the defense can get in a lot of eight-man fronts. On passing downs, the defense can find ways to creatively blitz five guys, have a deep safety, and all the while still account for all five of the offense’s receivers. The defense cannot really outnumber the pass protectors, but it can still collapse the pocket. That’s base Cover 1.
Cover 1 “Robber” works the same, except there are only four rushers and, along with the deep middle safety, another defender comes down to an intermediate level to read the QB’s eyes and “rob” any pass routes over the middle, like curls, in routes, and crossing routes. “Robber” is the most popular term for this technique but Saban’s is “Rat.” (I was always partial to Homer Smith’s term, “floaters,” which is the most descriptive.)
There’s nothing magic about this coverage; every NFL team and most BCS college teams use it. Indeed, despite all the bluster about the Indianapolis Colts being a “Cover 2 team,” on first and second down you see lots of Cover 1 and Cover 1 robber from them, except they use their strong safety, Bob Sanders, as the “floater.” The key is for the floater to be able to read run, screen, or pass, and to use his eyes to get to the receiver and the ball.
It’s particularly effective nowadays with the increased use of spread formations which most offenses use to open up passing lanes over the middle. Floaters or rat players can stop these inside passes and make game-changing interceptions. Below are some diagrams, and I expect to see Saban use this coverage a lot this season. (As a final note, Cover 1 Robber is useful against spread offense teams with mobile QB’s because the floater’s job becomes to not only read the QB’s eyes on passing downs but also to watch him for scrambles and to simply mirror the him on run plays like the option and the zone read.)
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Base Zone Blitz
I won’t say too much because I’ve written extensively on pass protection and the zone-blitz here. But Saban will go to the zone-blitz in some passing situations and also when he feels like he can use the blitz in a way to attack an expected run and still play zone behind it. For example, if a team likes to run off tackle to the TE side on a particular down and distance, he might call a blitz that attacks that area and the zone blitz lets him still play sound coverage behind it. And like most modern defenses, Saban’s most common coverage behind a zone-blitz is a 3-3 or three-deep and three-intermediate defense with five rushers. Cover two behind a zone blitz is often dangerous because of the added uncovered deep seams, but most defenses feel comfortable with the 3-3. Below is a good example of an overload zone-blitz Saban uses to the open side of a one-back formation.
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The thing to remember is that for years, when a team blitzed it was playing either Cover 1 or Cover 0 man (or simply left holes in its zone), and quarterbacks were coached to throw the ball where the blitzer had come from. Nowadays, there’s a common perception that a zone-blitz works because a defensive linemen gets in the throwing lane – no. What the dropping defensive end in the diagram above does is allow the defense as a whole to stay in zone coverage, and further notice who is covering the area where the blitzers came from: the strong safety, who is usually an effective pass defender, certainly moreso than a defensive end. That is how zone-blitzes cause confusion.
Other Techniques - Cornerback Leverage and Pattern Reading
Finally, let’s discuss some coverage techniques. The first is that Saban likes to have his cornerbacks adjust their “leverage” on a receiver based on the receiver’s split from the tackle and sideline. The theory is that if the wide receiver has cut his split down he has done one of two things: (a) given himself more room to run an out breaking route, or (b) cheated in to run a crossing or deep in-breaking route. So if the receiver cheats his split in, Saban has his cornerbacks align outside the receiver to defend the out-breaking route, because if he runs the in-breaking route the corner has help from the linebackers and safeties. Similarly, if the receiver lines up very wide (bottom of the numbers, let’s say), he has given himself room to run an in-breaking route like a slant. So the cornerback will align inside the receiver to take that route away and on the belief that an out-cut from that wide will be very difficult for the quarterback. To coach this Saban uses a “divider” line where they believe the receiver’s tendencies change to reflect one of the above two strategies. Nevertheless, the defensive back still must defend the route the receiver actually runs and maintain proper technique, but this is an important starting point.
More significant, however, is that Saban heavily coaches up “pattern reading” within his zone drops. The two zone-dropping schools of thought are to teach “spot-drops” or “pattern-reading.” One can overemphasize the distinction, but generally spot-dropping is easier to teach and was the traditional approach. For example, if your outside linebacker is responsible for the weak-flat, he will take his read steps and, upon reading pass, will drop to a spot and then react to the QB’s eyes. A big advantage with spot-dropping is simply that it is easy to teach to, say, a run-stuffing inside linebacker who spends most of his time on run game pursuit and shedding blocks. But the weakness is that well coached receivers – who have enough time – can become excellent at settling in the “zone holes” between defenders. And, with good receivers and good QBs, offenses have become more and more adept and finding and exploiting these zone holes.
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Pattern-reading, on the other hand, is much like a matchup-zone in basketball. Defenders are responsible for zones but they basically play man on the receivers who come into their zones. Moreover, pattern-read teams begin by immediately coaching their defenders on how to recognize popular pass combinations (and indeed, the very concept of pass-combinations themselves), and each week zero in on the 5-15 most common pass concepts they will see from that opponent. When done correctly, pattern-reading defenders know exactly how to cover receivers in their zones and seamlessly (in a quite literal sense) pass the receivers onto other defenders as they run their routes.
One thing that distinguishes Saban is that he uses pattern-reading in almost all of his coverages, including the traditional Cover 3, whereas many coaches only let certain defenders pattern read or only use it with certain defenses like Cover 4. Sounds a lot like Belichick, no?
Rob Spence: From the Run and Shoot to the Pitch, Pull, and Scoot
Background and Influences
Rob Spence’s influences are difficult to pin down because his current approach is so ecumenical. But, to my mind, he is another data-point in the argument that, while many of the game’s best offensive minds cut their teeth in the infamous Run & Shoot, the stigma of the offense – both in the media and within coaching circles – caused many of those minds to abandon the pure ‘Shoot to avoid media vilification and to keep their career options open. Kevin Gilbride, the New York Giants’s offensive coordinator, has a similar pedigree.
At around the same time that Saban was coaching under Belichick and later establishing his own brand of Billy-ball at Michigan State in the 1990s, Spence spent nearly a decade coaching in the Run & Shoot. Spence coached under Mark Duffner at Holy Cross in 1991 (where they went 11-0) and then at Maryland from 1992-1996, where they set numerous school records but had only one winning season. Then Spence went to Hofstra as the offensive coordinator (and quarterback coach) from 1997 to 1999, where they also ran the ‘Shoot. During this time Spence was steeped in the Run and Shoot and was seen as a rising star within that community.
Right now many of you Clemson fans might be having a heart attack thinking about Spence abandoning the beloved Davis-Spiller one-two rushing attack in favor of some kind of defunct chuck ‘n duck, but that’s not going to happen and I assure you, this pedigree is a good thing.
Even back in the ‘Shoot days, Spence’s offenses have always been successful, and in particular his quarterbacks. In Kevin Gilbride’s case sportswriters and commentators like to say that he is now successful only because he abandoned the obscure and bizarre gimmickry of the Run & Shoot. These people don’t know they are talking about, as I have discussed previously that while the ‘Shoot “died” in one sense, in another it lives on, and its tenets, concepts, and principles have been assimilated across college and in the NFL.
In any event, I have no idea whether Gilbride would say he abandoned the ‘Shoot because of the stigma or because of a genuine evolution in his thinking, but I’d bet the former. And I am certain that if Gilbride was still 100% committed to the ‘Shoot he would not be an NFL offensive coordinator. I would also wager that Spence made a similar calculation, figuring that so long as he was committed to the ‘Shoot, he wouldn’t be able to coach at a level much higher than Hofstra.
So in 2000 Spence made a seemingly lateral step to run Louisiana Tech’s spread offense under Jack Bicknell. To the untrained eye, the difference in the schemes used at Hofstra and LaTech likely would appear infinitesimal – both spread it out and threw the ball quite a bit – yet the difference in schemes was quite real. LaTech for years had been an established spread team, going back to Gary Crowton (including the 500+ yards passing from Tim Rattay and 400+ receiving from Troy Edwards against Nebraska), but had never been a Run & Shoot squad, and they did not become one under Spence. Spence discarded the the base ‘Shoot concepts like the Go, the Switch, and the Choice routes that he had been around for years, and instead went with the traditional spread and west coast concepts – like the shallow, the all-curl, the smash, and other “Pro-Style” concepts run from three, four, and five receiver sets. And the run scheme was also different.
In spite of these differences, Spence successfully coached freshman Luke McCown to conference freshman of the year honors. Spence’s next coaching stop – at Toledo – is more widely known. At Toledo Spence ran an offense basically similar to what he currently runs at Clemson: he has converted what was essentially a true-spread into a kind of multiple-power spread that, by using so many two-tightend and tightend-wing formations, isn’t really a spread at all. Spence has assimilated lots of concepts into this generation of his offense.
(As an aside, I think this evolution, which involves lots of multiple tight-end sets, is one of the natural progressions for a spread coach who must react to the fact that the “spread” in its various forms has become so ubiquitous across college football.)
Spence’s Current Schemes
Generally, Spence wants to put structural and numerical stress on the defense. He does this in a variety of ways, from spreading out receivers to ganging up tight-ends and fullbacks. By doing this he forces the defense to make choices regarding how it is going to defend the run and the pass in terms of leverage, technique, and just where to line their guys up. If Spence and his QB are on the same page, they can force the defense to choose between the Scylla of high-percentage passes and the Charybdis of obvious running lanes from Spence having stretched a three- or four-man defensive front across five linemen and two tight-ends.
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To tie this in with the ‘Shoot, most Run & Shoot teams use basically two formations: a balanced doubles set (two-receivers to each side) and an unbalanced trips set (three receivers to one side, single receiver to the other). R&S teams will see how the defense lines up against these two sets and take advantage of any structural weaknesses in the defense, such as a singled up backside receiver or not enough defenders lined up over the three split receivers. Spence has extrapolated this principle to a multitude of sets.
For a particularly quirky example of football as a counting game, in the final drive against South Carolina last season, on fourth and absolutely necessary, Spence ran a formation known in some coaching circles as the “Hanover Bunch.” (Named after Hanover College in Indiana which has been a well-coached spread team for years.) I don’t expect to see this formation against Saban – though you never know – but what it demonstrates is Spence’s willingness to “go there.” He pulled it out on fourth down on the final drive against Clemson’s primary rival, and with his Head Coach’s job on the line (as it perennially is.)
The Hanover Bunch formation involves a single split receiver backside, a traditional “bunch” set to one side, with another receiver outside the bunch. The offense then just plays a numbers and personnel game. The numbers tell you which side you are working, and often the other team’s cornerback (their best pass defender) will usually line up on the outside receiver, so the QB can work the three-man bunch all against weaker interior pass defenders. Against South Carolina, Spence went to this set and ran a slant with the singled-up split end and ran the “spacing” concept (which is sort of like a miniature all-curl route from a 3-step drop) to the bunch side.
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In the game, the quarterback saw a good matchup to the single-receiver side and hit him on the slant for a first down. See the video below at around the 4:30 mark.
<embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/YprnW6eBbJY&hl=en&fs=1" allowscriptaccess="never" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="344" width="425">Popout From the run-game perspective, Clemson is at base a zone-blocking team. Now is not the time to try to explain zone blocking in detail, but I want to make one point to correct a common misunderstanding regarding zone blocking.
The common misperception is that everyone “zones.” No. For linemen who are covered – i.e. there is a defender lined up over them – they block the man across from them. Simple as that. (Well, almost that simple.) The “zone” part comes from the guys who are uncovered. They try to combination block the defender to the playside. For example, if the zone play goes to the right, the center is covered, and the left guard is uncovered, the center will block man on and the left guard will try – but won’t always succeed – in combo blocking the man over the center. The one of them will move up to the “second level” to block the linebacker.
This is important because, as I said before, Saban likes to use three or sometimes four man fronts, while Spence likes to put extra tight ends on the field to create more opportunities for uncovered linemen to get combination blocks.
But what makes Spence’s run game a bit different is that he, in conjunction with the zone running game, runs a number of traps and counter plays. These are excellent complements to the zone running game because they can be used to counteract aggressive defenders by trapping and countering them and they rely often on misdirection and a numerical advantage rather than simply finding running lanes and getting double teams. Below is an example of the kind of common counter play to a two-tight end set that Spence favors.
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When Spence throws downfield he tries to put his QB in position to succeed, and to do that he effectively uses play-action passing. Below is an example of the kind of simple play-action route with big play potential that Clemson has effectively used in the past. It is a double skinny-post or “glance” play where the QB fakes a run play (the zone, counter, or draw) and then reads the rotation of the free safety. If the Free Safety stays weak he will work to the Z’s side and if the Free Safety works strong he will work to the weak side.
A good QB will manipulate this player with his eyes. From there he just works a simple 1-2-3 progression. (Here I didn’t draw it up but the idea is to get the flat defender to widen to open up a throwing lane for the skinny post while holding the inside linebackers with the play-action fake.)
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Moreover, Spence still knows how to spread it out. See below for a clip of some of Clemson’s five-wide routes and protections from a five-wide look.
<embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/gsZMi_cC_Wg&hl=en&fs=1" allowscriptaccess="never" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="344" width="425">Popout Finally, the other thing that makes Spence unique is his willingness to try gadgets and tricks. Clemson runs lots of reverses, fake reverses, jet sweeps, and the like. The thing to realize is that very often all Spence is doing is telling a receiver to come around on a fake reverse while the rest of the offense simply executes the counter play I diagrammed above. Then the next time they will hand it to the guy on the reverse, but Spence makes it simple on his guys by telling his linemen to block the same as on a sweep or outside option play.
There’s no doubt that Spence has been successful in showing lots of things while keeping it simple: he must be, or else his kids wouldn’t be able to execute it.
The Matchup
So what will the matchup look like? That’s hard to say. It’s both teams’ first game, so I wouldn’t expect an extensive opponent-specific gameplan. And, as I’ve indicated, neither Spence nor Saban are easy to prepare for. I would expect Saban to follow along with the philosophy outlined in the statement quoted above: he’ll try to stop the run on first and second down and force Clemson into known passing situations, where he can more readily spring his traps. The tests for Alabama will be whether they can stop the run on first and second down and second whether Alabama’s pass defenders can play man like Saban wants them to.
Spence will do a lot of probing of the fronts early to try look for weak spots and to spring his runners, and he will try to avoid having his QB have do a lot of pure five-step dropback throws in known passing situations. To avoid Alabama’s pressure he’ll have to do the usual assortment of screens, quicks, action passes, and draws and traps to deter and defeat the pressure
.
Who wins will likely depend on who executes these schemes the best, rather than simply who outfoxes the other. Nonetheless, it should be a good cat and mouse game.
(Postscript: I want to thank and acknowledge Hemlock for some valuable insights on Rob Spence and Spence’s offense.)
 
USC is daunting, yes, but there's always jet lag

By Matt Hinton
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Virginia won nine games last year and went 4-1 against eventual bowl teams in the regular season, not including the 48-0 rout that kicked off the demolition of the Orange Bowl. UVA was minutes away from a tenth win in the Gator Bowl, which would have tied the 1989 Cavs for the best record in school history. All in all, razor-thing margins aside, this was a pretty good team.
But what, exactly, was it good at? In searching for any reason, any tiny shred of hope that might save a margin-riding, attrition-riddled also-ran from a complete de-pantsing Saturday at the hands of the mighty Trojans, there's not even a modicum of positive energy emanating from Charlottesville entering the season, not a scrap, even if it was the exact same team as last year: the Cavs were 79th or worse nationally in every offensive category, and have neither a quarterback with any significant experience or expectations nor a receiver that strikes the slightest fear in anyone across from him. The lone bright spot of last year's team on paper was the front four, anchored by Chris Long, which helped the defense finish 16th against the run and sixth in sacks. Even here, though, the fates are almost mocking this time around: UVA loses not only Long, a program hall-of-famer who could be expected to dominate regardless of the opposition, but also up-and-coming sack leader Jeffrey Fitzgerald, one of a handful of key suspensions, and Allen Billyk in the middle.
But you didn't need a roster run-down to know the Cavs look like they're in a no-win situation: USC's offense may be in some danger of sputtering, with either a gimpy and still inexperienced Mark Sanchez or one of his even greener replacements at the helm, no established, go-to runner or receiver and an almost entirely new offensive line; but the Trojans are still a juggernaut on their worst day compared to Virginia's cobbled-together attack, which might shock the world to score a point not gifted by an SC turnover. Even then, this matchup would seem well out of the reach of mere opportunism.
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Assuming its talent advantage really is that great, USC has plenty of cushion to do whatever it needs to do to work out the kinks before it begins preparing in earnest for Ohio State. Under the circumstances, they're no doubt aiming to look crisp, dominant and intimidating to the bone, like a big gun that's fully reloaded and more than willing to keep firing at the slightest threat. Virginia might not be that, but Southern Cal's offense wasn't very often the loaded .22 in opposing defenses' faces last year, either, not in the way the partisans expect to see from an alleged championship frontrunner.
With Sanchez essentially cleared to return to the lineup, no other major injuries and only about a dozen practices standing between them and the epic showdown with OSU on Sept. 13, anything short of a balanced breakfast of mangled Cavalier flesh will summon the doubters for two weeks of hand-wringing in anticipation of the Buckeyes. Sanchez and the rebuilt offensive line, particularly, need to pick up where their predecessors left off against a much stouter foe in the Rose Bowl.
- - -
 
Tuesday Headlinin': Tell us what you really think

By Matt Hinton
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I Hear Willie Mays Hayes Is Available to Walk On. So, Penn State fans, you want another nine or ten-win, January bowl sort of season, huh? Are you sure that's what you really want? Because Ron Cook of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette finally comes right out this morning with the ugly truth about what's really in the Lions' best interest, and it's not exactly glory in the New Year:
Where and when in college football might a 6-6 record be better than 10-3 or 11-2?That's an easy one.
At Penn State, this season.
A bad year would make it a lot easier to get rid of Joe Paterno.
[...]
There's no reason to think Paterno will be any more eager to leave after a big season this year. He has talked consistently of coaching three, four, maybe five more years. He was practically defiant with Spanier and Curley this spring -- yet again -- when he said he doesn't need a contract to continue coaching.
What's frightening is that Paterno truly believes that.
It's not hard to imagine Spanier and Curley having to change the locks to keep Paterno out of the school's football complex when they replace him.
Even then, Paterno probably would bang on the door and scream, "Let me in, damn it. I'm still the coach here!"
Sadly, Paterno appears to be that out of touch with reality.
That's why a 6-6 season might be better this season. Not even Paterno's most loyal supporters could back him after that. Many, if not most, already think he has stayed on too long and that the football program needs a new beginning. It's not just the 46 player arrests since 2002 and the embarrassment they caused, especially in a damning ESPN report on "Outside The Lines" earlier this summer. It's that Penn State is a mediocre Big Ten Conference program. It is 32-32 in league games this decade, including 2-6 against Ohio State and an abysmal 0-6 against Michigan.
So be careful what you root for, Penn State fans.
A big season might mean three, four, maybe five more years of Paterno.
Even one more year of Paterno would be one too many.
Uh, no comment, since I believe this is it for Paterno whether he likes it or not. But I'm sure one or two Lion fans are willing to put in their two cents, you know, if you asked them.
Thirty-fifth Time's a Charm. Ben Mauk was turned down again Monday in his quixotic bid for a sixth year of eligibility at Cincinnati, the second of a series of final appeals Mauk will apparently be granted in perpetuity, as long as it will keep his lawyers at bay.
In all, the NCAA has told Mauk 'no' four different times, but still left the door open after the latest rejection: the Association scheduled a phone conference with Mauk to listen to his argument yet again Thursday, just hours before Cincinnati opens the season against Eastern Kentucky, which probably means Mauk will be talking to them in full uniform, with his helmet on, ready to walk right out onto the field like Willis Reed. Petty bureaucracy cannot keep him from his destiny.
Horrible Things Come to Those Who Wait. Oregon's quarterback derby between Nate Costa and Justin Roper may have solved itself when Costa's knee popped during practice last Thursday. It looked like a minor tweak, but now Costa will have surgery on Wednesday and could miss 8-10 weeks, minimum, which is another way of saying, "Out for the season," probably.
That essentially wraps it up in a nice little bow for Roper, although more mobile freshman Chris Harper seems likely to get some "change of pace" snaps to see what he can do in the 'option' portion of the spread option.
. MarQueis Gray's mom is confident her son will play for Minnesota this fall, but in the meantime, there is some situation, some things that are going on with the star quarterback recruit's grades that have temporarily sent him home to Indianapolis. Tim Brewster actually referred to Gray at one point this offseason as "the number one quarterback in America," which is a little over the top based on everyone else's assessment, but he was one of the prizes of the Gophers' surprisingly strong class and might have pushed meh returnee Adam Weber.
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Quickly...
Tennessee's Donald Langley and Brett Vinson will not travel to UCLA, per an SEC class attendance violation. . . . Alabama will start three first-year players against Clemson: Julio Jones, Don'ta Hightower and JUCO transfer Terrence Cody. . . . Florida's Brandon Spikes (right) might be slowed by a bad foot against Hawaii, if he plays at all. Percy Harvin's status remains in the air. . . . Steve Spurrier said South Carolina plans to start a white tailback against N.C. State on Thursday. Worked all right for LSU, I guess. . . . Like Les Miles, Rich Rodriguez has 'a gut feeling' who Michigan's starting quarterback will be Saturday, but he's not naming names -- it's like both will play, anyway. . . . Three days after the Big Ten Network called a Time Warner proposal a "publicity stunt," the two sides reached a deal to distribute Big Ten games almost no one wants to see. . . . Why are Penn State fans actually actually paying to watch a scrimmage against Coastal Carolina? Maybe just to find out who will be the Lions' quarterback? . . . Colorado should call the shots in its series with Colorado State. . . . At least five true freshmen could play right away for Kansas. . . . Texas issued a depth chart, which meant basically nothing at all. I mean, what's a sub B, anyway? . . . No anxiety for Jacory Harris in his first start. He's from Miami: Coastal Carolina isn't so intimidating. . . . Cory Surrency is for real and Antone Smith looks good, but still, quarterback is the issue for Florida State. . . . Mark Sanchez is going to start, apparently, but USC's backup quarterback? Up for grabs on a weekly basis. . . . And talk about a trend that will never catch on anywhere else: unsatisfied Stanford fans might actually get their money back.
 
Beamer: Taylor to redshirt, Glennon to drive Hokie fans insane

By Matt Hinton
You might remember Sean Glennon as the generally nice but only moderately talented, within-the-offense everyman who's spent much of his first two seasons eliciting a fairly consistent reaction from Virginia Tech partisans:
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Actually, that may not be entirely fair: Glennon doesn't drive fans crazy so much as he puts them to sleep, which is hardly the worst thing a quarterback in his position could do. Thanks to the Hokie defense and a run-oriented philosophy that helped keep him out of trouble, Glennon is 16-6 as a starter over two years, including last year's ACC Championship game. Still, when he was pulled for very Vick-like (athletically, not socially) freshman Tyrod Taylor after a horror show first quarter at LSU last September, the torch was being passed: although Glennon eventually finished the season as a starter and had two of the strongest games of his career against Virginia and Boston College, Taylor continued to share time, and Glennon's second subpar bowl game in as many years (he lobbed two killer interceptions vs. Kansas, after throwing three in the loss to Georgia in '06) seemed to confirm he was only moving sideways. If one of the pair was going to make the job his own this year, naturally it would be the rapidly up-and-coming Taylor, whose athleticism would be sorely needed in an offense otherwise devoid of playmakers, yes?
Ah ha -- not so fast, my friends, Beamer style:
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Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer has announced that he will redshirt sophomore quarterback Tyrod Taylor this season, as Sean Glennon has officially landed the No. 1 job.
[...]
"For Tyrod, having a year to continue to learn and develop is only going to get him better and better," he said. "The two quarterbacks worked, but one didn't put themselves ahead. What we are hoping is that Sean with his experience, he has been successful in several situations. He has made really good plays for Virginia Tech. We want to play him and get Tyrod Taylor a redshirt, so we can have him three more years in the long term. That is good for Virginia Tech and that is our plan as of today. We'll see how it goes."​
Again: with Branden Ore out of the picture, his top two backups banged up throughout practice, and the presumed replacements for last year's top four receivers suspended and out for the season, respectively, Virginia Tech is devoid of even slightly proven offensive skill talent. So either a) the prospects are so grim offensively that it's not even worth burning another year on shuffling Taylor in and out in an attempt to breathe a little life, b) the prospects for the offenses in rest of the Coastal Division are so grim that 14-17 points per game will be enough to win the majority of the time. I'm not quite cynical enough to think a), although c) Taylor is not progressing as expected, might better pass the "Occam's razor" test.
 
Bluegrass rivalry is back to basics

By Matt Hinton
There was that brief moment last September, when Louisville was ranked in the top ten and Kentucky was knocking on the door of respectability, Brian Brohm and André Woodson were slicing the air with touchdowns, that the Bluegrass rivalry held the nation's attention for the first time in its relatively short history. And it delivered:
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One year, eleven combined losses, two drafted quarterbacks and innumerable suspensions later, the Lexington Herald-Leader's suggestion this week that Kentucky has passed Louisville in football by snatching Derby City recruits from under UL's nose/beak is hardly worth a shrug. And? After forfeiting its defensive dignity over the rest of the season, Louisville also lost its star quarterback, leading rusher, top four receivers, four of its top five tacklers, its best pass rusher, a two-year starter at cornerback who absentmindedly stuck up a gas station, a projected starter at receiver who had a little too much chemically-aided fun on multiple occasions, a backup quarterback with a very green thumb, a mega-talented linebacker currently chowing down on deer in rural West Virginia, and, if you hadn't heard, will be lucky to avoid the cellar in the Big East. Maybe no team has fallen harder from the start of 2007 to '08.
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Still, with a a manageable schedule through the first two months of the year, the Cardinals can make something of this year if they get off on the right foot Sunday. As dismal an eleven-and-a-half months as Louisville's had since losing in Lexington, Kentucky's prospects aren't much better: the Cats, too, are bidding adieu to their record-setting, NFL-bound quarterback, leading rusher, four of their top five receivers and their defensive MVP, and also lost their heir apparent under center to acute knuckleheadedness. Personnel-wise, they're equally obscure. If these teams were equals before, they still are, in virtually every way -- only on a much lower level, the kind only the vitriolic homers can really appreciate.
Because, like last year, the game should be competitive and tense, with the sense among the faithful that a lot is at stake; unlike last year, the pundits outside the state won't pay much attention either way, and the ambition of winning is overwhelmed by the relief of not losing. When you're playing for January, the fruits of winning may be sweet -- after last year's mild upset, Kentucky moved into the rankings for the first time in a decade, en route to a fleeting stint in the top ten -- but it's in the leaner years, when both sides have to joust their way off of the rickety bridge swaying perilously above the purgatorial abyss of the 6-6 season that awaits them anyway, that's when territorial rivalries show what they're made of.
 
thread was a excellent read... routine..

im on 3 of 4 of your plays but not as good of a number on socar and texas...

considering any 1H plays? florida? KU?

BOL this season:shake:
 
Very few empty seats early.

Be Early! Vince Young's Jersey Retirement Set For Pregame

from Burnt Orange Nation by 40AS
Be Early! Vince Young's Jersey Retirement Set For Pregame

"Fans attending Saturday's game against Florida Atlantic should plan on getting to their seats as early as possible. The official retirement ceremony of Vince Young's Longhorn jersey No. 10 is set for about 25 minutes before kickoff. With the kick time set for 6 p.m., fans should be seated no later than 5:30 p.m. to be present to honor the quarterback that led Texas to the 2005 National Championship."
 
thread was a excellent read... routine..

im on 3 of 4 of your plays but not as good of a number on socar and texas...

considering any 1H plays? florida? KU?

BOL this season:shake:

Thanks. No 1H plays yet this week. I'd be leaning to Florida or KU though. Those look like the most powerful offenses against weak defenses.
 
That story on BYU was poorly written. Tons of false inormation beyond anything else. First off Utah didn't go to a BCS game in 2006 and secondly the author states that BSU was the only team to face a winning team from a BCS conference. Well Utah beat A&M in '04 and they ended up 7-5 with losses to #13 Tennessee, #3 Oklahoma, #5 Texas, and #4 Utah. I wouldn't say that's a horrible record considering the schedule. Just making a point that anybody can become a "journalist" with the internet these days.


Best of luck this season RJ and thanks for all the great info that you share with the forum. Always very imformative.
 
Phil Steele:

4* Wyoming
3* USC
3* WMU
2* La Tech
2* Mizzou
2* Ark St

Got that in mail yesterday. I canno disagree with much he says. Hoping to get the hook on WMU. Have wanted 2 TD's all along and hoping it pushes just a bit more.
 
Got that in mail yesterday. I canno disagree with much he says. Hoping to get the hook on WMU. Have wanted 2 TD's all along and hoping it pushes just a bit more.

I really want to play Wyoming. The 4* is usually a very solid play. My frustration is how much the line has moved already. Still, at -11, it still looks pretty solid.
 
I really want to play Wyoming. The 4* is usually a very solid play. My frustration is how much the line has moved already. Still, at -11, it still looks pretty solid.

Yeah, was just talking to Yanks about tha last night. Really never moved off 10 for longest time. I know a true value bettor will be a bit scared off at this number. I personally have no problem with it. I prolly would shaved off a half unit perhaps at this number. Either way hopefully its much like last years opener in Laramie.
 
Wednesday Headlinin': Lou's boy gets paid

By Matt Hinton
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I'm not going anywhere, until I feel like it. Skip Holtz has the name and the nearly-complete turnaround of one of the lowliest outfits in the country, topped by the biggest upset of the bowl season, so it's only natural East Carolina would lock up its young coach for as long as possible, as it did Tuesday, extending Skip's contract through the next six seasons. But how likely is Holtz to actually the honor the deal through its completion in 2013 if a bigger school comes calling, or ECU to honor it if the good vibes go sour? Just ask Mike Shula, Karl Dorrell and West Virginia how much those contract extensions are worth in real-world loyalty.
I guess you can keep your stuff here until you find a place of your own. The Miami Herald is even-handed about the Hurricanes' move to Dolphin Stadium, but it tells you all you need to know about the makeshift atmosphere before Thursday's debut:
• Field presentation: There will not be a ''U'' at midfield Thursday, but there will be beginning either Sept. 27 against North Carolina, if the Marlins have been eliminated from playoff contention by then, or Oct. 4 against Florida State if the Marlins do not make the playoffs.The letter ''U'' will be painted on turf that is being grown at an off-site turf farm. That turf will be implanted on the Dolphin Stadium field before games, then removed afterward.
They can take their logo away to make room for the infield, but on the bright side, Cane partisans can now spend $9 on a turkey croissant.
Acupuncture. Of Course he does acupuncture. Add another tributary to the "Boy, Mike Leach Sure Is Eccentric" stories that began trickling out of mainstream outlets this summer, and that no doubt will threaten to become a flood when Texas Tech stands at 8-0 with Texas coming to town in early November -- although no one who's been reading about the guy since Michael Lewis made him a cult hero three years ago will be even a tiny bit surprised that the feared Pirate Coach enthusiastically thrusts needles into his body to make himself a more perfect man:
Simple willpower worked for Leach when he decided to do without coffee. The other stuff, he tackled with acupuncture.“Went for asthma. I felt like it helped asthma,” Leach said. “To stop dipping, I thought it worked great. I mean literally, right then, right there. You go (for treatments) three or four days straight and you’re done.”
Leach, who will stop throwing the football before he stops talking with his hands, gestured high and low on his body to point out spots where he’s been pricked with acupuncture needles.
Just about everywhere, an onlooker deduced.
“Yeah, pretty much,” Leach said. “Well, I’ve seen that chart there, and I damn sure haven’t had them where the chart suggests some of them go. They definitely put them places where I haven’t had a necessity to dabble in.”
You heard it here first. Arkansas' first depth chart includes 20 freshman out of 48 players in the two-deep. And this isn't like the freshman infusion at Alabama or Miami, where Nick Saban and Randy Shannon are taking command of their mediocre outfits with two of the strongest classes in the country -- the only widely-regarded star in the Razorbacks' class was running back De'Anthony Curtis. This is more like Bobby Petrino admitting, "Yeah, you got me for now," and setting up the chips for 2009, when he'll have his quarterback, Ryan Mallett, and one of the more battle-scarred rosters in the conference. Emphasis, of course, on scarred.
Headline of the Day. Courtesy wire fluff on David Cutcliffe's impact at Duke:
Duke players feel like winners -- without the wins
Awwww. Good for them.
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Quickly. . .
Oft-sacked Iowa quarterback Jake Christensen will be back in the saddle against Maine. . . . Auburn's first depth chart didn't list a starter at quarterback or running back, but demoted Robert Dunn from first team receiver to fourth. . . . Carl Moore's progress is pleasing Urban Meyer, who was "devastated" at the transfer's lackluster spring. . . . The Atlanta Journal-Constitution breaks down ten teams that missed the cut in the BCS. . . . LSU fans, going easy on the booze? It's positively un-Louisianan. . . . Finally settling in at Ole Miss, vagabond Jerell Powe is scheduled to play against Memphis. . . . New Kansas tailback Jocques Crawford has a rather, shall we say, electrifying goal for his first season. . . . Bo Pelini is still waiting for his defense to earn the coveted blackshirts. . . . There are a dozen bigger names, but is Brody Eldridge Oklahoma's best player?. . . . More on the Age of the Spread in the Austin American-Statesman: "Forty years later, the spread is the new wishbone." . . . Walk-on Pierre Singfield may be winning a starting cornerback job at Arizona State. . . . Jeff Tedford praises poor, beaten-out Nate Longshore for his attitude. . . . Mark Sanchez is officially cleared to play at Virginia, but then he goes out and throws two picks in practice; Aaron Corps will back him up. Meanwhile, Al Groh is looking to the Super Bowl for inspiration as an underdog. . . . Injured UCLA lineman Micah Kia is trying to work his way back in time to start against Tennessee. . . . Head-buttin' Washington State tackle Andy Roof was expelled for his role in a brawl. . . . Pitt offensive coordinator Matt Cavanaugh is excited about the Panthers' skill talent, just like everybody else. . . . Wisconsin's Travis Beckum thinks he'll play against Akron, but he's still taking it easy on a sore hamstring. . . . And new Navy head coach Ken Niumatalolo was once fired at a McDonald's. That's cold, man. But the guy who fired him? He's spent the last six years at UL-Monroe. What goes around, comes around.
 
Rj, best of luck this season, your insight is always great buddy!! hopefully this year would treat you much better than last year. I think that last year was bad for a lot of people. Love your style and posts!! Once again good luck this year.
 
Thursday Headlinin': Quarterbacks on a need-to-know basis

By Matt Hinton
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Let 'em sweat. Les Miles sounds like he knows which of his dueling quarterbacks will start for LSU Saturday against Appalachian State, but the kids were still in the dark as Andrew Hatch and Jarrett Lee continued to share time Wednesday. The USA Today, then, is surprisingly confident Hatch will be the starter, Gustav willing, though it also leaves the door open for "a late rally by a redshirt freshman," Lee. If Miles' last reaction to an early-breaking story is any indication, TUSAT will find out soon enough what you get when you assume in the name of rehashing the "LOL Harvard o rly" angle on Hatch (to which LSU fans are now programmed to respond, "BYU recruit! BYU recruit!").
Miles' old offensive coordinator, Jimbo Fisher, has another week to name Florida State's starter, then a pair of games against I-AA tomato cans Western Carolina and Chattanooga to get into a rhythm with one or two guys, and he's not in any hurry. There's no indication whatsoever who Fisher will send out to bludgeon the Catamounts, but even if the default nod goes to Drew Weatherford, the Tallahassee Democrat's Steve Ellis says Christian Ponder should be the guy.
Mauk appeal denied; security heightened at Nippert Stadium. After a few days of confusion, obsessed eligibility-seeker Ben Mauk was officially rejected a fourth time in his never-ending quest for a sixth year. So if at some point tonight a kid in the 6'1", 200-pound range wearing an ill-fitting jersey with no name and a number that's not listed in the program lines up at quarterback for Cincinnati's warmup against Eastern Kentucky, there could be two explanations: a) he talked the NCAA's Reinstatement Committee into an eleventh hour reversal this afternoon, or b) Dustin Grutza is bound and gagged in his underwear in the stadium's boiler room.
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Quickly...
Oregon quarterback Nate Costa's initially minor knee injury is a season-ending ACL tear for the second year in a row. . . . USC says it won't name a starting tailback but will send guys in according to plays and formations in the script. After the first 15 plays, though, the "hot hand" gets priority. . . . UCLA tackle Micah Kia will start against Tennessee Monday night. Meanwhile, the Vols are looking closely at Tennessee Titans film to get a bead on Norm Chow. . . . Percy Harvin and Brandon Spikes will likely sit out Florida's opener with various injuries. . . . Defensive lineman Emmanuel Dunbar left practice in an ambulance Wednesday with a potentially serious back injury. . . . Missouri's prolific offense leaves camp heaping praise on the Tiger defense. . . . The Lincoln Journal Star gets into the grisly details of the night that ended with Husker lineman Andy Christensen facing a sexual assault charge. . . . Arizona State running back Keegan Herring might miss the Devils' opener against Northern Arizona with a sore hamstring. . . . And after losing out on the starting job for Penn State's opener with Coastal Carolina, Pat Devlin was feeling down and out, but he isn't going to transfer. Probably.
 
Michigan, Utah, spread-on-spread, and how to beat blasphemy

By Matt Hinton
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Since we last saw Michigan, it's lost an extremely prolific senior class and another platoon's worth of underclassmen -- eleven players with remaining eligibility gone since Rich Rodriguez was hired last December -- and so the Autumn of Wolverine Winter dawns with temptation: Utah, on the road, now a mere field goal from even to the oddsmakers?
The Utes are a chic upset pick (in some circles, perhaps, the ones who have really digested this matchup for weeks and long ago convinced themselves of the possibilities, they're even a mild favorite), and given the inevitably sluggish debut by the hopelessly young, inexperienced and ill-fitting Michigan offense, and the noriously spread-phobic Wolverine defense, any significant outburst by the Utes' balanced, up-tempo attack is likely to get them out of the Big House with a win.
Under this template, one that assumes some stumbling, a little improvisation and ultimately somewhere in the neighborhood of 14-20 points from the Wolverine offense, the 'X-factor' may actually be one of the most experienced players on either team: Brian Johnson may generally fall into the "good quarterback" column, from what you read about his ability and solid record as a starter, but the combination of injuries and inconsistency that's slowed him the last three years make him possibly the biggest question mark in this game -- we know Michigan will struggle on offense and won't let things get carried away defensively, but after a disappointing return last year (his passing and rushing yards, TD:INT ratio and efficiency plummeted from their highs in 2005, and he continued to nurse a sore shoulder throughout the spring) there's no good idea which way Johnson will go.
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At his best, Johnson does a mean Armanti Edwards/Dennis Dixon impression, but that's been too rare for an unfettered endorsement. The Utes have been slow starters (4-6 in September vs. teams that aren't Utah State or Northern Arizona) and a very mediocre road team (8-9 on opponents' fields) under Kyle Whittingham, and one of the few constants from the old regime to the new is that the Wolverines are still the bigger, stronger and faster team by a wide margin, whatever its experience. Another is that Michigan will be better than just solid again defensively, especially along the front four and the corners, and in that regard should be more than capable of keeping the bewildered fledglings on offense on task by slowing the fireworks to a crawl. When even the stadium won't look exactly like it did before, that bit of cloud-of-dust familiarity should turn out to be surprisingly welcome.
 
Adding:

Troy -6' (-110)
Oreg St -3 (-105)


Two road favs on the Thursday. Troy is just as much a play on their lines controlling the game as it is a fade play on MTSU who has been hit hard by injuries.

Oreg St is one of the few games that jumped out at me as a value play when I did the lines. I made the game -8 and now it is down to -3. Gives me pause and Stanford returns a great deal to their team. Oregon St also has a pretty green OL, but they will start Moevae who played better at QB than Canfield, bring in a solid RB, and get Strougher back on the outside. Oreg St's D should also be very solid in this Pac-10 opener. I expect a close, low scoring game but at a FG I'll take the better team.
 
15 must-haves for the 2008 college football season!

<script type="text/javascript"><!-- google_ad_client = "pub-0237893561790135"; google_ad_width = 300; google_ad_height = 250; google_ad_format = "300x250_as"; google_ad_type = "text_image"; //2007-11-27: entries, fanblogs, inpost google_ad_channel = "0603066557+5452098552+3119009114"; google_color_border = "FFFFFF"; google_color_bg = "FFFFFF"; google_color_link = "003399"; google_color_text = "333333"; google_color_url = "999999"; google_ui_features = "rc:10"; //--> </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"> </script><iframe name="google_ads_frame" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/ads?client=ca-pub-0237893561790135&dt=1219943899112&lmt=1219943898&format=300x250_as&output=html&correlator=1219943899112&channel=0603066557%2B5452098552%2B3119009114&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.fanblogs.com%2Ffanblogs%2F007699.php&color_bg=FFFFFF&color_text=333333&color_link=003399&color_url=999999&color_border=FFFFFF&ad_type=text_image&ref=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2Freader%2Fview%2F&frm=0&ui=rc%3A10&cc=100&ga_vid=1671092221.1219943899&ga_sid=1219943899&ga_hid=741132605&ga_fc=true&flash=9.0.115&u_h=1024&u_w=1280&u_ah=1024&u_aw=1280&u_cd=32&u_tz=-420&u_his=1&u_java=true&u_nplug=24&u_nmime=88" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" vspace="0" hspace="0" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0" height="250" scrolling="no" width="300"></iframe> College football season starts... tonight!
Here are the 15 must-have internet resources to prepare you for the 2008 college football season:

Every Season Preview - Check out the outstanding paperless preview project with almost every online preview for each and every FBS team - all 120 of 'em!

Injuries - Check College Injury Report for the latest injury reports for your team and your opponents.

Statistics - From the official NCAA statistics to past seasons stats to offical football records to the team history database... we want it, you got it.

Gear - Check out the NCAA Fan Store at Amazon for all the hats, shirts, and tail gating gear your could ever want. (And if you want the best portable grill out there, check this out. Just got this one this summer and it's fantastic! Plus free 2 day delivery if you enroll in Amazon Prime!)

BCS Polls - BCS Poll, Harris Poll, Coaches Poll, Computers (Jeff Sagarin, Anderson & Hester, Richard Billingsley, Colley Matrix, Kenneth Massey, Dr. Peter Wolfe) and FCS Top 25 Poll.

Get Online with Fans - Check out a free 7-day subscription to Rivals.com. If you join directly on your team's page, you'll get premium access to your private team message boards.

Team Spirit - Digital team logos, animated team flags, and online fight songs (here and here).

Taunt-ology - Need a joke about your rivals? Check out RivalJokes.

Gamers - Get your copy of EA NCAA Football 2009 and play your team's season. Or simulate games to find your opponents strengths/weaknesses.

Away Games - Check out hotels, restaurants, and tailgating spots for any stadium with MapGameDay or check out video reviews from stadiums across the country.

Bowls - The 2008-2009 college football bowl schedule, complete with TV listings

Helmet-ology - Check out the Helmet Project for a list of all the new helmets in the 2008 season.

Schedules - 2008 college football schedules for all 120 FBS teams and the FBS teams (plus future year schedules) and the ultimate football helmet schedule resource.

Television Guides - The ultimate college football television guide listings, plus ESPN GamePlan schedules, and HD broadcasts.

Fanblogs to Go - Take Fanblogs with you by following us at Twitter, FriendFeed, and RSS feeds. Or... listen to Fanblogs on your iPhone or on the web!
 
Jesus. Out for the night and I'm at the bottom of page 2. You guys are making this forum rock. Best CFB forum on the net. Hands down.
 
Friday Headlinin' faces the ugly truth about N.C. State

By Matt Hinton
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Glass half empty, half shattered into a thousand pieces. In a night consisting mostly of I-AA teams getting hammered, no single set of players looked more overmatched than N.C. State's offense at South Carolina. At one point in the second half, as NCSU began to visibly sag and the Gamecocks began to pull away, Chris Fowler suggested the growing margin was "misleading." I dunno, Chris, it may have taken Carolina's offense a couple quarters and a quarterback change to get rolling, but I'd say the goose egg for the Pack tells their story pretty well: NCSU averaged 2.4 yards per snap, lost two fumbles, and quarterbacks Russell Wilson, Daniel Evans and Harrison Beck completed almost as many passes to South Carolina defenders (four) as they did to their own receivers (five). Wilson may have had the best night of the three, and he was carted off the field with a scary-looking concussion (looks like he'll be OK, by the way).
At this rate, the Pack will continue to struggle next week against William & Mary and may not score for another month after that. Prediction: the redshirt can't stay on blue chip slinger Mike Glennon for long, no matter how much he begs them.
Most hilarious offseason headline in retrospect: "O'Brien focuses on line play."
Full speed ahead. On the complete opposite end of the spectrum, there was Georgia Tech's 41-14 rout of Jacksonville State, in which the Jackets showed not the slightest hint of uncertainty or rust in Paul Johnson's flexbone: Tech ran for 349 yards, did not fumble once, and broke big runs all over the place -- eight runs of 20 yards or longer, and six touchdowns, plus three passes that went for 20 or more. Paul Johnson wasn't completely satisfied, but a win is a win, and this win was a big middle finger to the many flexbone doubters. Now: do the same thing at Boston College and at Virginia Tech the next two weeks.
Ryan Perrilloux, for the record: 22/37, 136 yards (3.7 per pass), 2 TD, 2 INT, 67 yards rushing, four sacks. He may just make it in the Ohio Valley Conference.
Go to the hat. Bow to the hat. Well this was inevitable:
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The towering, 2,000-foot, 60-ton statue to go beneath the hat is in the works, complete with animatronic growl and factories' worth of Coke and Lay's to sit atop the world's largest table, under which to pass cash to recruits.
Quickly...
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• "Old defensive coach" Tommy Tuberville is coming around to the spread. . . . Hawaii's Solomon Eliminian offers his three-step gameplan for stopping Florida to the Orlando Sentinel. . . . Hyped JUCO linebacker recruit Gerald Williams still doesn't know if he's eligible for Tennessee's opener at UCLA Monday. . . . Texas expects a record crowd for its opener with Florida Atlantic, courtesy 10,000 new end zone seats. . . . Mark Sanchez has 'some rust' after a couple weeks on the sidelines. But not a single Trojan missed practice with injury Thursday. . . . The Doak Walker list snubbed USC running backs. . . . One-on-one battle of the weekend: Illinois corner Vontae Davis locking horns with Missouri's Jeremy Maclin. . . . Just because you went 1-11 in your first year doesn't mean you have to go and start changing everything around. . . . A solid Plain Dealer profile on Ohio State's five seniors. . . . And Michigan's quarterbacks will know who's starting Saturday against Utah, but Rich Rodriguez doesn't see any reason you (or the Utes) should know. Hint from the Detroit Free Press: first man out is Nick Sheridan.
 
Go to the hat. Bow to the hat. Well this was inevitable:
ept_sports_ncaaf_experts-428263419-1220014985.jpg

The towering, 2,000-foot, 60-ton statue to go beneath the hat is in the works, complete with animatronic growl and factories' worth of Coke and Lay's to sit atop the world's largest table, under which to pass cash to recruits.
:36_11_6:
 
Friday Morning Quarterback can see this 'neutrality' thing really catching on

By Matt Hinton
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With Alabama-Clemson, Illinois-Missouri, Virginia Tech-East Carolina and Colorado-Colorado State all moving off-campus, the theme of the week is neutrality, and I have to admit: the big neutral site clash is a terrific idea, especially for a season opener, in the vein of the ACC-Big Ten O'ahu NIT Shootout Challenge in basketball.
As a matter of fact, when the playoff inevitably descends in another decade or so, would anyone really complain if the bowl games were just moved to the beginning of the season? If Atlanta is swarming with subversive Chick-Fil-A cows and the restaurant is contacting bloggers about hosting tailgates (not me, personally, but trust me on that one), to promote Clemson-Alabama, I'm not sure there's really any tangible difference in this atmosphere and a bowl game. Certainly Alabama is more excited than it's been the last two Decembers.
Onwards...
Finally, We’ll Learn About...
Technically, everybody, since no one's actually, you know, played a game. But from the moment Rich Rodriguez was hired, Michigan's immediate fate in its transition from bone-grinding behemoth to fleet slasher has been the most fascinating and haphazardly analyzed storyline of the offseason. It's true, the Wolverines are hopelessly green on offense and don't have a spread quarterback or, in a pinch, a fully-functioning offensive line, but they're four-deep at tailback with guys old coaches have been raving about and Rodriguez has proven an unmitigated success everywhere he's been -- although, at West Virginia, his first year with a more 'traditional' dropback quarterback ended with the Mountaineers at 3-8.
Michigan won't be that bad (they can still play a little defense up there), but surviving chic upset pick Utah would go a long way towards staving off chatter of impending disaster.
Most to Gain:
One of the factors in the unanimous anointing of Clemson as preseason favorite in the ACC is the Tigers' schedule, which features two games they could be reasonably expected to lose barring wholesale collapse: one is at Wake Forest in October, the possible rubber match for the ACC Atlantic's bid to the conference championship game. The other is Saturday's ACC-SEC Classic Brought to You by Chick-Fil-A™, probably the only game all season Clemson can't claim a sizable advantage in raw talent. A loss would leave the Tigers scrambling from beneath the 'underachiever' stamp that's branded them the last two seasons, but a win -- especially an impressive win -- solidifies their early standing in the polls and leaves them with a clear shot to a banner season with eleven games they'll be mostly heavily favored to win.
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Most to Lose:
The Tigers in Missouri are in a similar position to their ACC doppelgangers, facing high expectations against a solid, capable underdog at a neutral site as a prelude to a regular season in which they'll probably be favored in every game if all unfolds according to plan. But Mizzou's expectations are just slightly higher than Clemson's, and if it struggles against Illinois -- which includes, possibly, a close win, depending on the circumstances -- the mythical championship buzz will fade in a hurry. There's a lot of competition up there, you know.
...And All the Children Learned to Multiply by Seven...
Into the miserable realm of blowouts and other morbid curiosities.
Inevitable Massacre of the Week.
Not that it was necessarily representative of their best, but if the performance of the best Hawaii outfit ever assembled in the Sugar Bowl was any indication, the new-look Warriors are in for one unfathomably long flight back to the islands after being torn to shreds by Florida in The Swamp. Well, it's already unfathomably long, of course, it being Hawaii, but if the UH offensive line isn't slightly quicker afoot against Jermaine Cunningham and Carlos Dunlap, a considerable amount of physical pain can be added to the distance, as well.
Florida International Line Watch: The Golden Panthers had fallen in 23 straight games before beating North Texas to close last season, but have not been favored to win in 18 straight weeks and have entered exactly two games as greater than one-point favorite since moving up to Division I-A in 2002. This week, FIU is a 36-point underdog at Kansas, the weekend's largest spread not involving a I-AA team. The Panthers lost in Lawrence last year, 55-3.
Lame Game of the Week.
UNLV and Utah State combined for four wins last year, and one of them was the Rebels' opening week, 23-16 victory over USU in Vegas. The Aggies finished in the bottom 20 (100th or worse) in every major statistical category and have to replace their quarterback and unquestioned best player, sixth-round draft pick Kevin Robinson. UNLV finished in last place in the Mountain West on the, uh, strength of losing to then-winless Colorado State by 25 points and also lost its unquestioned leader, linebacker Beau Bell.
Weird Line of the Week.
Rice is a field goal-favorite tonight over SMU, which stems from the Owls playing at home, returning dangerous pass-catch combo Chase Clement and Jarett Dillard and having beaten SMU by one point, 43-42, on a last second field goal last year in Dallas. But virtually no one thinks Rice will be better than SMU over the entire season, and if June Jones' system takes quickly, the Mustangs will not be outgunned. The unanimous opinion on SMU is that it's supposed to be greatly improved from last year's 1-11 disaster, and if that's true, the bottom-dwelling Owls are a team it has to beat.
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The Smart Money
Fearless -- and occasionally brainless -- predictions.
• Take the over in SMU-Rice.
• Both quarterbacks will play often for Auburn against UL-Monroe, but Chris Todd will take most of the snaps and look better than expected in an easy win.
• Kevin Riley won't set the world on fire but, contrary to Jeff Tedford's promise, will play well enough to keep Nate Longshore on the bench throughout Cal's close win over Michigan State.
• Oregon will sputter on offense and at some point turn to true freshman Chris Harper at quarterback to help fend off a strong upset bid by Washington.
• After Northern Illinois challenges his team well into the second half, Minnesota's Tim Brewster will hail his team's "progress."
• Pittsburgh will second guess its optimism after a to-the-wire struggle with Bowling Green.
• Michigan will get off to a slow start offensively but will eventually surprise everyone by scoring in the mid-to-high-twenties in a close-but-not-too-close win over Utah.
• And as always, someone will win a game that destroys everything I thought about them and/or their opponent for the last eight months.
 
Using a couple of freeplays on these:

Temple -7 (-110)
Okie Lite -7 (-110)


Couple of road favs here again. Ugh.
 
LSU moves Appalachian State kickoff to 10 a.m., dooms fans to slow, dehydrated death

By Matt Hinton
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Dude. Oh my god, dude, we are never going to be able to make this:
Due to concerns regarding the evacuation of residents in the southern parishes of Louisiana, state officials have moved the kickoff for LSU's season-opener against Appalachian State on Saturday to 10 a.m.The game was originally set to begin at 4 p.m.
Whoever decided to put a bunch of hungover Tiger fans who were not aware there was such a time as 10 a.m. out to bake in the morning Louisiana sun had also better be prepared for massive cleanup when the aisles of Tiger Stadium begin to run gold with various bodily substances all matching the color of the jackets on the Golden Band From Tiger Land. There's a reason South Louisiana is known for night games, and it has nothing to do with the moon or tides.
Appalachian State? They're game any time, the cute little buggers.
 
Cock fans are.....cocks.

NC State QB gets knocked out and SCar fan takes the opportunity to give 2 1-finger salutes.

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