MWC Fall Notes

JPicks

Pretty much a regular
I honestly just need a place to organize all incoming news from MWC camps and I figured I might as well share it here in case some are interested. They'll be coming in no particular order and will probably end up looking like RJ's injury thread by the time it's over. Feel free to add if you have something that isn't in here. Off we go:
 
UNLV starting CB Quinton Pointer carted off from Wednesday morning’s practice

By Ryan Greene · August 6, 2008 · 9:51 AM

Quinton Pointer, a sophomore cornerback who started eight games a year ago for UNLV, was carted off the practice field Wednesday morning at Rebel Park.

The Cape Coral, Fla., native was on a cart with two members of the team's training staff, with an air cast covering his left forearm. He appeared to be in significant pain, as the injury was a result of a collision going for a ball over the middle during 7-on-7 passing drills.

Rebels coach Mike Sanford said after practice that the prognosis is a dislocated left elbow The severity is yet to be determined, though Pointer was loaded onto an ambulance about 30 minutes after being carted off to head to the hospital for x-rays.

"Obviously, it's very frustrating and disappointing, and I feel bad for him, but we've just got to see how the thing comes out," Sanford said. "We've got to evaluate. We're in a process of evaluating who our third corner was going to be when you look at Pointer and Jeff Howard. We're in the process of evaluating who our third and fourth corners were before this happened, so this is going to speed that whole process up.

Sanford said he doesn't know who the candidates are just yet, and it won't be discussed a ton until following today's evening practice session.

Backup quarterback Mike Clausen, who watched the play from the side, said it appeared that as part of the collision, Pointer was pulled down to the ground and landed awkwardly on his arm.

Today is the team's first day in partial pads, as the players are sporting shoulder pads and helmets.

Pointer registered 50 tackles as a freshman last year and this season is a preseason third team All-MWC selection by Athlon. He also recorded two picks and a fumble recovery in 2007. Regarded as one of the team's fastest players, Pointer is expected to be the centerpiece of the secondary this season.
 
Sanford ends suspense early, taps Clayton starting QB

Dixon moves to safety, Clausen takes over No. 2 QB role


<!-- end story-header -->By <CITE>Ryan Greene</CITE>
Tue, Aug 5, 2008 (1:25 a.m.)
Omar's the Man

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So much for that preseason storyline.
The focus will now shift elsewhere by default with more than three weeks left until the 2008 season opener, as UNLV football coach Mike Sanford Monday evening put an end to the quarterback question facing his team. Before the first practice session of the summer for his group of veterans, Sanford bestowed the honors upon sophomore Omar Clayton.
At the same time, he covered another base by announcing the move of sophomore Travis Dixon - who figured to be Clayton's top competition for football's glamour gig - to safety. That then slides redshirt freshman Mike Clausen into the No. 2 quarterback slot.
"It's the best thing for our football team, I think there are a lot of things that are win-wins here," Sanford said following Monday's veteran practice.
Sanford said the decision was talked about four or five days ago, but reality went into motion in the last two.
The announcement seemed to put almost a calm over the evening at Rebel Park.
Dixon's move - Sanford said he will be competing for a starting spot - could add some depth in the secondary, while Clayton taking the majority of the snaps with the first team offense set the tone for some normalcy over the next few weeks leading up to the Aug. 30 opener at Sam Boyd Stadium against Utah State.
"I don't think anybody was really expecting that," senior wideout Casey Flair said of the announcement. "You can tell he's playing a lot more free."
Clayton seemed to only get better as the two hour practice wore on Monday. To cap off the night, he hit Ryan Wolfe down the right sideline for a long touchdown strike, flipped a nice pass over coverage right on target to Rodelin Anthony and then reminded everyone of what he's can do with his feet on a couple of nice runs.
Flair pointed out the familiarity all of UNLV's receivers have with Clayton, since he's seen reps with both the No. 1 and No. 2 offensive units. Add in the experience of the returning wideouts, such as the 120 combined receptions last year by Flair and Wolfe, and a groove might not be too tough to find.
Of course, this was all sans pads, and was just one practice. But a positive sign, nonetheless.
"He had the best practice I've seen him have," Sanford said. "Just, he was sharp, he was upbeat, he was accurate. He was having fun, doing a good job leading."
While Sanford and teammates praised Clayton's debut as the clear No. 1 in terms of his poise and presence, the slinger himself agreed for different reasons.
"I think I was more relaxed just because we were back into it," he said. "I always planned on being the starter. That's the only way you can think when you're in a competitive position, so I already planned on starting. Now that that's for certain, it hasn't really changed too much."
That mentality stemmed from the fact that Clayton, well, actually started three games for the Rebels a year ago, and saw action in seven when it was all said and done. He threw for 618 yards on 58 completions with four TDs and five interceptions. He also flashed a bit of the dual-threat billing with 179 yards and two scores on the ground.
Monday's news was another positive note on Clayton's resumé since arriving in Las Vegas. Originally a walk-on, he paid his own way a year ago while commuting an hour each way to campus on the bus from his grandfather's house outside of the city.
"I try not to think of it that way," Clayton said of not looking at the starting job alone as a major accomplishment. "I still feel like I owe the team something - To prove that I'm able to win games, not just be the starter."
Dixon's defensive debut pretty good, too ...
Dixon admitted following Monday's practice that, for the time being, he's mostly going on athletic ability rather than techniques and whatnot in trying to earn a starting spot in the Rebels' secondary.
Largely, that's because he hasn't played defense since the seventh grade.
Though physical contact aside, Dixon got a confidence boost Monday by recording a pick during the latter stages of the practice.
He said he anticipates the leadership qualities needed to play quarterback could now come in handy at a position which unofficially serves as the signal-calling post in the defensive backfield.
Come Friday it'll be better known how Dixon can handle the other major duty that comes with playing safety - hitting.
And not just that, but hitting hard. That'll be seen Friday when pads come into play for the first time.
"Hopefully when we get on pads I can set the tone and let them know I'm not a prima donna quarterback," he said with a laugh, adding that he can now call quarterbacks prima donnas.
And the last time he dished out a hit?
"Not any time recently," he said after racking the brain for a moment.

Wednesday practice notes: UNLV starting CB Quinton Pointer dislocates elbow, out 2-4 weeks

By <CITE>Ryan Greene</CITE> · August 6, 2008 · 9:51 AM
<STORY>Quinton Pointer, a sophomore cornerback who started eight games a year ago for UNLV, was carted off the practice field Wednesday morning at Rebel Park.

The Cape Coral, Fla., native was on a cart with two members of the team's training staff, with an air cast covering his left forearm. He appeared to be in significant pain, as the injury was a result of a collision going for a ball over the middle during 7-on-7 passing drills.

Rebels coach Mike Sanford said after practice that the prognosis is a dislocated left elbow. Pointer was loaded onto an ambulance about 30 minutes after being carted off to head to the hospital for x-rays. Sanford said later in the day the results showed no broken bones, and Pointer will miss 2-4 weeks of action. There are 24 days to go until the Aug. 30 opener.

"Obviously, it's very frustrating and disappointing, and I feel bad for him, but we've just got to see how the thing comes out," Sanford said. "We've got to evaluate. We're in a process of evaluating who our third corner was going to be when you look at Pointer and Geoff Howard. We're in the process of evaluating who our third and fourth corners were before this happened, so this is going to speed that whole process up.

Sanford said he doesn't know who the candidates are just yet, and it won't be discussed a ton until following today's evening practice session.
Backup quarterback Mike Clausen, who watched the play from the side, said it appeared that as part of the collision, Pointer was pulled down to the ground and landed awkwardly on his arm.

Today is the team's first day in partial pads, as the players are sporting shoulder pads and helmets.

Pointer registered 50 tackles as a freshman last year and this season is a preseason third team All-MWC selection by Athlon. He also recorded two picks and a fumble recovery in 2007. Regarded as one of the team's fastest players, Pointer is expected to be the centerpiece of the secondary this season.

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BYU battling injuries
August 5, 2008 4:30 PM

Posted by ESPN.com's Graham Watson
PROVO, Utah -- Brigham Young is one of many teams around the country that have not been able to avoid the injury bug. Below is a rundown of the injuries, according to coach Bronco Mendenhall. He expects all but center Tom Sorensen to return for the team's first game against Northern Iowa.
  • Junior first-string receiver Austin Collie was diagnosed with a stress fracture in his right leg prior to practice last Saturday and is expected to miss 10-14 days. Collie's absence has allowed freshman Spencer Hafoka, sophomore Luke Ashworth and freshman O'Neill Chambers to get more reps than they would have otherwise.
  • Starting center Tom Sorenson injured his right shoulder and will have surgery. He will be out 4-6 weeks. Mendenhall said Dallas Reynolds will move from left tackle to center and redshirt freshman Matt Reynolds, Dallas' brother, will start at the left tackle spot.
  • Running back Fui Vakapuna has been hampered with a sore right hamstring and has been limited in practice. Mendenhall said he's not going to rush him back to give the injury time to heal.
  • Starting linebacker Matt Bauman has missed every practice while recovering from a scooter accident prior to camp. Mendenhall said he expects him to be back in the middle of the week.
 
Safety Thomas injures his knee


By JAKE SCHALLER THE GAZETTE
Air Force’s first full-contact practice was marked by sophomore tailback Kyle Lumpkin’s strong running, a pair of impressive stops by junior linebacker Clay Bryant and —unfortunately for the Falcons — an injury to standout junior strong safety Chris Thomas’ right knee.

The severity of the injury was not clear after Tuesday’s practice, but coach Troy Calhoun said at the minimum it was a sprained medial collateral ligament. If that’s all it is, Thomas will miss about a week, Calhoun said. Calhoun said he’d know more today.

Last season Thomas made 110 tackles (second-most on the team) and earned honorable mention All-Mountain West Conference honors. Asked if he had his fingers crossed about the injury, Calhoun said, “Yeah. But that’s also part of football.”

Thomas was injured during the Falcons’ high-intensity “lightning drill.” In the drill there are three levels of oneon-one battles — an offensive lineman against a defensive lineman, a tight end or fullback against a linebacker and a receiver against a defensive back — with a running back running the ball through them in a narrow space. Thomas twisted his knee while trying to shed a block, then got up, slammed his helmet down in frustration and limped o1/2 the field. Thomas watched the remainder of practice with his knee bandaged.

Thomas injured the same knee early in the 2007 preseason, but after missing one day he returned to practice with a brace.

Thomas due back next week, Dekker hurt

An MRI revealed that Chris Thomas suffered a mild sprain of his right knee in Tuesday's practice and the starting safety should be able to practice early next week.
Thomas, second on the team with 110 tackles last season, dressed for practice but wore a red jersey to signify that he was not allowed to participate in drills. He wore a brace on his knee but didn't walk with a limp.
Offensive guard Nick Charles, bothered by a pulled hamstring, saw limited practice time Thursday but tight end Travis Dekker, Air Force's leading returing receiver, suffered a sprained right ankle and could miss up to 10 days of practice.

Air Force tight end Dekker out eight weeks

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Only returning skill position player has slight ankle fracture


August 8, 2008 - 7:05PM
BY JAKE SCHALLER, THE GAZETTE

<!-- Video goes here -->Air Force senior tight end Travis Dekker will be out for about eight weeks because of a slight fracture in his right ankle, coach Troy Calhoun said Friday.

Dekker injured the ankle Thursday during a seven-on-seven passing drill. He was on crutches Friday with a cast on his right foot and ankle. Monday he will have surgery to have a plate put on the side of his ankle (fastened by screws).

"You could maybe let it go without putting a plate on the side, and yet we're better off in the long haul making sure there is something there," Calhoun said.

"Otherwise I think there's going to be a little more instability if he is able to get back to playing shape where he can play those last six, seven games."

The injury is a significant blow to the Falcons' early season chances, as the 6-foot-4, 245-pound Dekker is the Falcons' leading returning receiver and lone returning starter at an offensive skill position. He caught 25 passes for 382 yards and two touchdowns in 2007. His 25 receptions were the most by an Air Force tight end since 1989 and were more than all tight ends had caught in the previous four seasons combined.
"It's part of football," Calhoun said of the injury.

With Dekker out, the Falcons suddenly seem precariously thin at a spot where they appeared to have quality depth heading into the preseason. Highly regarded sophomore Steve Shaffer, the Falcons' third-string tight end, is out until the middle of next week because of a concussion. And senior Keith Madsen, Dekker's backup, was limited in practice Friday because of minor muscle strains (he should be back Monday, Calhoun said).

"Right now you don't have a lot of bodies out there that are experienced," Calhoun said. "That's why being able to use various personnel groups may come into play."
 
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TCU PRACTICE PLAYBOOK: Receivers grab attention during drills

A week off from doing seven-on-seven drills left the TCU receivers needing to work the kinks out and get the rust off during Monday’s practice, sophomore Bart Johnson said.

Tuesday the Horned Frogs’ receiving corps was ready to go, and it was evident since the wide receivers generally got the better of the secondary in one-on-one drills.

Johnson beat Stephen Hodge on one play and had a nice catch over Hodge on another. John Brown made a catch that caught the attention of the entire team, and Jeremy Kerley had several catches, including probably the play of the day when he made a one-handed grab over Sir Demarco Bledsoe.

"We’re pretty young, and we lost a lot of stars last year," Johnson said. "But a lot of us got a lot of playing time. We’re a lot closer this year with our camaraderie on and off the field. And we have a lot of speed. We have the most speed we’ve had in a while."

TCU coach Gary Patterson quickly pointed out the receivers, but he was also pleased with the younger players in the secondary, specifically sophomore Colin Jones and redshirt freshman Bledsoe.

"They’re doing a nice job of covering people," Patterson said. "We’re better at wide receiver, so that means it’ll make us better in coverage."
Briefly
Freshman TB Ed Wesley was fine and back at practice Tuesday after being carted off the field with what Gary Patterson called "excitement" cramps.

Senior Drew Combs, who was TCU’s kickoff specialist last year, redshirt freshman Kevin Sharples and freshman Ross Evans all worked on kickoffs Tuesday, but Combs stayed with the first team.

Gary Patterson said junior TB Joseph Turner looked better Tuesday than he did Monday.
 
TCU junior tailback gives knee a good workout<!--sizec--><!--/sizec-->

By MERCEDES MAYER
mmayer@star-telegram.com
He'd been working out all summer and he participated in the morning walk-through Monday, but it wasn't until the first official practice Monday afternoon that junior tailback Joseph Turner finally made a hard cut on his surgically repaired left knee.

"Once I did that at full speed, then I knew it wasn't a problem," Turner said. "I just had to get the first one over with, and once I knew there wasn't anything wrong, I just went with it."

Cue the collective sigh from Horned Frogs fans.

Turner led TCU with 597 rushing yards last season and had a knack for getting the tough yards. But a knee injury in the first quarter of TCU's 20-13 win over Houston in the Texas Bowl left him sidelined throughout the spring.

"He's got a way to go to be full speed," TCU coach Gary Patterson said. "But it was good to see him. This will be a pretty hard 14 days for him."

Junior cornerback Rafael Priest called Turner his practice MVP.

"I feel like he pushed through today without complaining," Priest said. "He's got to be ready for the first game, no excuses. He's doing his part, and everybody else needs to push through just like he is."

Competition keen along TCU offensive line

The TCU Horned Frogs lost just one offensive lineman to graduation — guard Matty Lindner — but that doesn’t mean there’s not competition for positions in the line.

So far, sophomore Josh Vernon has been playing with the first team at left guard instead of senior Preston Phillips, who was first on the depth chart going into camp.

"Preston’s a senior, and he has the potential to be anything he wants to be," TCU coach Gary Patterson said. "Right now he hasn’t been that. He’s worked a lot harder this fall, and he’s had a good two-a-days so far."
Also, junior Nic Richmond and sophomore Marcus Cannon have been
rotating with the first team at right tackle. Richmond started all 13 games last season at that position.

Senior Heath Raetz, who has battled injury problems throughout his career, hasn’t missed any practice. Patterson is "happy with where [Raetz] is at and what he’s doing."

Freshman kicker Ross Evans made 3 of 3 field goal attempts that were all in the 30-yard range, while sophomore Kevin Sharples made 2 of 3. Patterson said Evans would be the starting field-goal kicker and senior Drew Combs would handle the kickoff duties if there were a game tomorrow.



CSU

Quarterbacks crumble under pressure
Posted by KellyLyell at 8/8/2008 11:42 AM MDT on coloradoan.com

Anyone wondering why new coach Steve Fairchild hasn't settled on a
starting quarterback yet should have been at today's practice.

All of the quarterbacks were flustered by blitzing defenses and pressure
situations during third-down drills. Interceptions were frequent, open
receivers were missed and the familiarity with the offense that the top
contenders said they developed over the summer was noticeably
absent.

''I thought the quarterbacks were awful today,'' Fairchild said, repeating
that assessment three more times for emphasis. ''They've got to get a
lot better. Not one of them was good today. I might have to move (Matt)
Yemm, back to quarterback.''

Yemm, a redshirt freshman who played quarterback at Fort Collins High
School, is playing wide receiver for the Rams and currently working with
both the first and second offense.

Senior Billy Farris and junior Grant Stucker have been getting most of
the practice repetitions with the first-string offense, while redshirt
freshmen T.J. Borcky and Klay Kubiak work with the second unit. Alex
Kelly, a true freshman out of Rocky Mountain High School is mostly an
observer during the 7-on-7 and full-team drills as he familiarizes himself
with the offense. Most of his work in practice is in individual drills with
the quarterbacks and receivers.

''I have no question in my mind, down the road when I have a chance to
be here for a period of, time, we'll have very good quarterback play
here,'' said Fairchild, who was the Rams' starting quarterback in 1978
and 1980. "It's a developmental position. I like it when I can bring a guy
in, and he knows from the get-go what's expected, waits his turn and
plays. We'll be all right, but that's obviously not the situation now.''

DeAngelo Wilkinson, a contender for a starting cornerback job, has been suspended from the CSU football team indefinitely for undisclosed violations of team rules, coach Steve Fairchild said Thursday

He violated some team rules," Fairchild said, following the Rams' morning practice. "I'm not going to go into any specifics, but we'll suspend him indefinitely until I feel like I'm comfortable with it."

A school spokesman declined to provide additional information.

Wilkinson, a 5-foot-10, 182-pound sophomore from Las Vegas, did not participate in the nearly 2-hour workout on the practice fields south of Moby Arena. Wilkinson played in five games last year and assisted on one tackle.

Fairchild acknowledged that Wilkinson was in the running for a starting spot at cornerback, identified repeatedly over the past few weeks as the biggest spot of concern on the team, but said the Rams would be "all right" there without him.

WYOMING

Cowboys are still undecided on starting quarterback


LARAMIE -- Wyoming's not trying to keep anything secret about its uncertain quarterback situation.

The Cowboys really just don't have any idea how it's going to play out.

UW coach Joe Glenn tried his best to say nothing at all about his signal-callers, then sidled up beside new offensive coordinator Bob Cole to listen to him do the same after Thursday's practice at War Memorial Stadium.

"Is (the reporter) trying to get you to fill him in on the quarterbacks?" Glenn said. "He worked me, too. He's working you now."

All kidding aside, Glenn and Cole are well aware of the importance of finding a starter under center, and it's not like they have anything to hide.

The simple fact is that UW really isn't any closer to settling on one guy from its pool of candidates -- junior Karsten Sween, junior college transfer Dax Crum and senior Ian Hetrick
 
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Air Force tight end Dekker out eight weeks

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Only returning skill position player has slight ankle fracture


August 8, 2008 - 7:05PM
BY JAKE SCHALLER, THE GAZETTE

<!-- Video goes here -->Air Force senior tight end Travis Dekker will be out for about eight weeks because of a slight fracture in his right ankle, coach Troy Calhoun said Friday.
Dekker injured the ankle Thursday during a seven-on-seven passing drill. He was on crutches Friday with a cast on his right foot and ankle. Monday he will have surgery to have a plate put on the side of his ankle (fastened by screws).
"You could maybe let it go without putting a plate on the side, and yet we're better off in the long haul making sure there is something there," Calhoun said.
"Otherwise I think there's going to be a little more instability if he is able to get back to playing shape where he can play those last six, seven games."
The injury is a significant blow to the Falcons' early season chances, as the 6-foot-4, 245-pound Dekker is the Falcons' leading returning receiver and lone returning starter at an offensive skill position. He caught 25 passes for 382 yards and two touchdowns in 2007. His 25 receptions were the most by an Air Force tight end since 1989 and were more than all tight ends had caught in the previous four seasons combined.
"It's part of football," Calhoun said of the injury.
With Dekker out, the Falcons suddenly seem precariously thin at a spot where they appeared to have quality depth heading into the preseason. Highly regarded sophomore Steve Shaffer, the Falcons' third-string tight end, is out until the middle of next week because of a concussion. And senior Keith Madsen, Dekker's backup, was limited in practice Friday because of minor muscle strains (he should be back Monday, Calhoun said).
"Right now you don't have a lot of bodies out there that are experienced," Calhoun said. "That's why being able to use various personnel groups may come into play."
Etc.
Air Force will practice special teams this morning on the fields behind the Falcon Athletic Center from 9 to 9:30. The team then will move to Falcon Stadium and practice there for about two more hours.
 
CSU QB responds to challenge

It was only one practice on one day, but CSU football coach Steve Fairchild was pleased to see senior Billy Farris respond Saturday to the challenge he issued to his quarterbacks.

A day after calling the play of all of his quarterbacks "awful," Fairchild said Farris clearly was sharper during the first full-pads, full-contact practice of fall camp.

"Billy was a lot better than Grant (Stucker) today, there's no question," Fairchild said after the 1-hour, 45-minute session before 100 or so fans at Hughes Stadium. "But we won't anoint anybody."

Nevertheless, Farris, the backup to Caleb Hanie the past two seasons and the leader coming out of spring drills, appears to have the edge heading into what likely will be the final week of what Fairchild promised would be open competition for the starting job. The Rams, who will practice in full pads twice today, have three more weeks of practice leading up to their Aug. 31 season-opener against the University of Colorado.

"We've got a good stretch, a week, coming up where we can still look at guys, still look at schemes, still kind of find out what kind of team we are, not only from a scheme standpoint, but from what type of team we are," the first-year coach said. "How tough are we to fight through this next week.

"But then when we hit the following week, we'll start to prepare for CU, and everything toward that mock game will be geared in that regard."
All the quarterbacks were a bit off with their passes for the first few plays in 7-on-7 and 11-on-11 drills, but Farris settled into a groove as the practice wore on and was on target when it counted most, during a live scrimmage period of 20 plays at the end of practice.
 
Farris chosen as Rams' starting QB

Billy Farris was named CSU’s starting quarterback today, first-year football coach Steve Fairchild said.

“I really liked the leadership and demeanor Billy showed in the spring,” said Fairchild, himself a former Rams starting quarterback. “But he didn’t take anything for granted at that point. He really took charge over the summer, during our conditioning program and the players’ workouts. That was where he earned the respect and confidence of his teammates.

“Now, it’s clear at this point in camp that he has the trust of his coaches, in addition to his head coach. We’ll move forward with Billy as one of our leaders.”

Farris, a 6-foot-3, 223-pound senior from Baton Rouge, La., will make his first career start Aug. 31 in Denver in the Rams’ opener against the University of Colorado. The game will be televised on FSN.

Farris has played in nine games and thrown 39 passes for CSU. He had the most experience of the five quarterbacks on the CSU roster.

The other QBs are junior Grant Stucker, redshirt freshmen T.J. Borcky and Klay Kubiak and true freshman Alex Kelly, a 2008 Rocky Mountain High School graduate.




No big suprise there. It'll be interesting to see how long the Senior holds off the younger guys.
 
San Diego State opened full pad contact workouts this morning, with 9-players out with injuries, 2-players missing, and 1-changing position. Wide receiver Jon Toledo is undergoing X-rays for a turf toe injury; running back Davon Brown is out with a strained knee ligament; defensive tackle Neil Spencer will have an MRI-Thursday and is facing major shoulder surgery. Star receiver Vincent Brown came out with a hamstring problem, as did linebacker Zac Shapiro. Safety Corey Boudreau will be held out a week with shoulder problems.
…The Aztecs have lost JUCO-tackle Taylor Wallace with personal problems off the field, missing practice the second day in a row. DB-Brandon Vannoy has left the team with family issues.
…On the field, a shaky day on offense. Travis Crawford, Davion Mauldin and Vince Carmada all picked off passes today. Tight end Tony DeMartinis shined on offense, as did wide receiver Roberto Wallace. The Aztecs moved Lance Louis to a starting right tackle spot.
 
Thanks RJ.

Rebels moving their 2nd QB to the defensive backfield already this fall. Puts them VERY thin at QB if Clayton goes down with only freshman Claussen backing him up.

Another QB goes to safety

Jones joins Dixon in switching to defense

ELY -- UNLV assistant Vic Shealy doesn't need to jump on airplanes to find safeties.

All he has to do is walk over to the Rebels' backfield and look for someone wearing a green non-contact jersey.

For the second time since camp opened last Monday, the Rebels have moved a quarterback to safety. Last week it was sophomore Travis Dixon. On Sunday it was incoming freshman Chris Jones, a Shadow Ridge product.

This time it was the player's idea. Jones saw himself buried on the quarterback depth chart, staring at a probable redshirt season, so he approached head coach Mike Sanford to find a way onto the field in 2008.
It doesn't hurt that Jones (6 feet 2 inches, 175 pounds) was an outstanding linebacker at Shadow Ridge, where he made 63 tackles, including three sacks, last season.

"He's a great-looking player to play a lot of different positions, to be a quarterback, to be a receiver, but he's got a safety's body," Sanford said.
No one ruled out a return to quarterback, but Jones said his focus is on his new position.

• MORE ROSTER MOVES -- Junior Luke Plante has switched from defensive end to tight end, and the Rebels also added incoming freshman cornerback Deante Purvis (5-11, 185).

"In our opinion, (Purvis is) a Pac-10-level recruit who was a non-qualifier," Sanford said. "I think people got off of him because of that, and (cornerbacks coach Mike) Bradeson stayed on him."

Also, incoming freshman defensive lineman Litani MoiMoi (6-2, 270) practiced for the first time. He had planned to grayshirt and enroll full time in January, but now will be available immediately.

• INJURY REPORT -- Senior tailback David Peeples (foot) was out of the walking boot, but the Cheyenne High graduate will not be rushed back.
Sophomore defensive end Preston Brooks bruised his ribs, but the severity was unknown.

• MEN IN BLACK -- Junior wide receiver Ryan Wolfe and senior cornerback Geoffery Howard wore black jerseys, signifying they were the outstanding practice members for the first week of camp. Coaches plan to return to giving a black jersey daily.

<!-- endclickprintinclude -->
 
TCU coach not happy with defense

By MERCEDES MAYER
mmayer@star-telegram.com



TCU coach Gary Patterson seems to be a morning person, or at least that’s when he’s been the most animated lately.

At Monday’s 8 a.m. practice in the Sam Baugh Indoor Practice Facility, Patterson was all over his defense when quarterback Andy Dalton found [COLOR=blue! important][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif][COLOR=blue! important][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]wide [/FONT][COLOR=blue! important][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]receiver[/FONT][/COLOR][/FONT][/COLOR][/COLOR] Jimmy Young in the end zone for the play of the day, which also happened to be the first play of the red-zone drills.

Later, backup quarterback Marcus Jackson and receiver Alonzo Adams connected for a TD pass, then tailback Jercell Fort made his way into the end zone on a run.

"I was happy with the offense in the red zone, but I wasn’t happy with the defense," Patterson said. "We were the No. 1 defense in the red zone in the nation last year, so that expectation level is a lot different than what they just played."

Red-zone defense is not actually an official NCAA stat, and the Frogs were third in the Mountain West last year in red-zone defense. But TCU was No. 1 in the MWC in 2005 and 2006 in that category. They gave up only nine TDs in 26 trips to the red zone in 2006 and 15 TDs on 37 possessions in 2005.

Broughton brings it
Redshirt freshman defensive end Braylon Broughton, who was selected the preseason Mountain West Conference Freshman of the Year, had two sacks on quarterback Marcus Jackson in the morning practice. "He picked it up a notch," Gary Patterson said. "He was really tired at the end of the week. The day off really did him some good."

And Vess, too ...
Defensive tackle James Vess missed all of last year after violating [COLOR=blue! important][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif][COLOR=blue! important][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]university[/FONT][/FONT][/COLOR][/COLOR] policy, and nearly the entire defense keeps talking about how great it is to have him back. Vess said it has taken him awhile to get back into the flow of practicing even though he was able to practice on the scout team last season. "I notice in practice I don’t feel the same," Vess said. "I’m not in my comfort zone yet, but I feel like I’m getting it with every practice."

Scuffle time
Monday morning provided the first real good fracas of practice. Linebacker Robert Henson and defensive end Clarence Leatch got into it for just a moment while the defense was getting through the frustration of the red-zone drills. Henson came up from a few of the plays yelling at his teammates to give more and practice harder so they could improve.

Briefly
LB Daryl Washington collided pretty hard with Stephen Hodge when the Frogs were in just shells and shorts in the evening practice. He took a few plays off but continued practicing.

Add Gary Patterson to the injured list — he was hit by a player running a route in the morning practice and said he might have cracked or bruised a couple of ribs.

In the morning, freshman kicker Ross Evans missed a 50-yard field-goal attempt, but not long after hit three in a row from 37 yards. Patterson has most been impressed with Evans’ demeanor, he said.

The Frogs will scrimmage this morning but it will be closed to the public.
 
Defense Controls First Football Scrimmage

Offense struggles early before finishing strong.

The defense dominated in the first scrimmage of Utah’s’ fall camp, allowing just two touchdowns – both during red zone drills – in Rice-Eccles Stadium Tuesday morning. All-American Louie Sakoda completed the scoring by making all three of his field goal attempts.

By design, second and third string players saw the bulk of the action in the 85-play scrimmage, although nearly all of the starters played. Co-starting running back Matt Asiata sat out with a mild ankle injury and rover linebacker Stevenson Sylvester rested a sore knee (tendonitis). According to head coach Kyle Whittingham, both could have played if necessary.

Whittingham lamented a poor start by the offense, but liked what he saw from the defense.

“The offense got off to a slow, sloppy start before finishing strong,” said Whittingham. “Our offensive execution needs to improve. The defense flew around well. Our defense is very fast, as has been the case for the last four-five years. (Safety) Joe Dale and the corners played particularly well. We are still trying to firm up the situation at defensive tackle. Greg Newman is solid, but we like to rotate four guys and we need some players to step up.”

Backup nose tackle Aaron Tonga exited the scrimmage early with a knee injury that is not believed to be serious. His return date, as well as that of receiver Collin Robinson and safety RJ Rice, who both suffered concussions in the scrimmage, is to be determined.

Of Utah’s quarterbacks, only Brian Johnson (9-of-10 passing for 93 yards) put up relatively good numbers against a defensive pass rush that finished with nine sacks. Defensive end Koa Misi (three sacks for 16 yards) and Dale (one sack for eight yards) made some particularly memorable hits.

Backup QB Corbin Louks completed 7-of-13 passes for 46 yards, including a 12-yard touchdown pass to running back Ray Stowers. Stowers had a team-best four receptions for 49 yards and rushed four times for eight yards. In a deviation from Utah’s usual one-back set, he started in the backfield with Darrell Mack in the first play from scrimmage for the No. 1 offense. Mack concluded a short day with three rushes for 13 yards.

Eddie Wide led all rushers with seven carries for 32 yards and a 1-yard touchdown. Trevor Moss rushed five times for 31 yards. Receivers John Peel (25 yards) and Jereme Brooks (18 yards) both grabbed three passes.

The scrimmage included some special teams drills. Sakoda made field goals from 47, 32 and 25 yards out and also punted well. Whittingham praised the work of the kickoff returners, but said he wants to see improvement in the punt return game.

The session concluded with a short scrimmage between the ‘three’s.
 
The Falcons are looking thus far as a dominate under team IMO. Elevating players to the first unit, based solely on their ability to hold on to the ball.


Senior quarterback moves to top of chart


By JAKE SCHALLER THE GAZETTE
Air Force coach Troy Calhoun released a two-deep chart Monday that included several notable changes — including at quarterback — and the promotion of three freshmen to backup spots.

At quarterback, senior Shea Smith moved ahead of junior Eric Herbort as the starter. Herbort entered fall practice with a slight lead over Smith, but Smith passed him on the strength of his performance in scrimmage situations Saturday.

“I thought Shea clearly played the best on Saturday, and that’s what we’re going to go on,” Calhoun said.

Asked what Smith did better, Calhoun said, “First and foremost, ball security. He wasn’t as good as he has to be, but he was the best ball handler out of the group.”

Calhoun said the competition to replace four-year starter Shaun Carney remains “close,” and Smith said he knew he had not cemented the starting spot.

“It’s a one-day-at-a-time thing,” Smith said. “Depth chart could be different tomorrow.”

Perhaps more head-turning than the switch at quarterback was the presence of three freshmen in the two-deep. A.J. Wallerstein (right guard), Jon Davis (strong safety) and Anthony Wright (cornerback) were listed as backups.

Calhoun has said he’d like to get his program to a point where he was playing almost exclusively juniors and seniors. But he’s also said the best players will play, regardless of age. On Monday, he said “right now” those three freshmen are the second-best players at those spots.

While Davis and Wright attended the academy’s prep school, Wallerstein is fresh out of high school. That makes his ascent even more impressive, considering Calhoun said that after quarterback, offensive line is the toughest spot for freshmen to contribute.

“He’s still got a long, long ways to go, but you can absolutely see that the guy has some talent,” Calhoun said.

Other noteworthy changes on the chart:

• Calhoun did not list a backup at three positions — left guard, right tackle and one of the outside linebacker spots.

“Clearly nobody earned it,” he said.

• Junior Sean Quintana is listed as the starter at X receiver and the backup to Keith Madsen at tight end. Calhoun said that has something to do with the injuries to tight ends Travis Dekker (fractured ankle) and Steve Shaffer (concussion) but also because “I think there’s some things we can do with (Quintana) in a tight end spot.

“I think he’s a physical player. I think he plays bigger than what he’s listed at, height- and weight-wise (6-foot-2, 200 pounds), and he’s smart and he’s tough.”

• Senior Brandon Reeves, a backup at the start of fall practice, moved to a starting inside linebacker spot along with Ken Lamendola. And junior Clay Bryant, not listed on the two-deep chart heading into fall practice, now is listed as a backup at inside linebacker. Assistant Matt Wallerstedt, who is in charge of the inside linebackers, said late last week that Reeves and Bryant have been impressive in camp.

Sophomore Savier Stephens moved in front of sophomore Kyle Lumpkin as the starting tailback based on his blocking Saturday.
 
Yikes. Hold off on any and all CSU bets.


The cornerback position, already a concern for the Colorado State University football team, took another blow this morning when likely starter Nick Oppenneer walked gingerly off the practice fields with an ankle sprain during the morning workout.

Oppenneer, a junior from Littleton, was participating in 11-on-11 drills in full pads when he suffered the injury. Coach Steve Fairchild said afterward that it was an ankle sprain and didn’t appear to be too serious.

Neverthless, the Rams can ill afford to lose another player on the corner. Both of last year’s starters were seniors and two of the top contenders this year are not likely to be available for the season opener Aug. 31 against Colorado.

Redshirt freshman DeAngelo Wilkinson, who played in five games as a reserve last season, has been suspended from the team indefinitely for his involvement in a fight outside an Old Town nightclub Aug. 3. Wilkinson, 20, was charged with two counts of third-degree assault and one count of being a minor in possession of alcohol.

Elijah-Blu Smith, a redshirt freshman from Los Angeles, still wears a protective boot on his injured left foot and has not practiced since breaking a bone in that foot on the first day of fall camp. Fairchild said today that Smith has been able to do some load-bearing exercise but that he definitely would not be available for the season opener.

That leaves the Rams unusually inexperienced and young at a key position. Redshirt freshman Brandon Owens has been the other cornerback working with the first-team defense in practices, and sophomore Scott Zick, redshirt freshman Ivory Heard and true freshmen Gerard Thomas and Jamon Allen also took turns with the first “D” after Oppenneer left for the training room.

Fairchild said it was too soon to determine any sort of depth chart at cornerback, a position he had called a concern well before fall camp began.
 
Vet Louis may move to shore up tackle<!---- END STORY TITLE -------->

Besides quarterback, perhaps the biggest question this fall for San Diego State's football team is protection: Are his tackles good enough to keep him standing up?


Right now, the Aztecs have a redshirt freshman first-team quarterback, Ryan Lindley, who entered fall camp with two other redshirt freshmen as his main outside blockers at right and left tackle. It's not an optimal situation, especially if your team is opening the season just three weeks from today.
Which is why the Aztecs might soon do some tinkering, possibly moving fifth-year senior Lance Louis from guard to tackle.

“We're working Lance around the formation,” coach Chuck Long said yesterday. “We think Lance can play a number of spots, guard and tackle. ... We're still working toward that front five, and don't be surprised if he goes out to tackle.”


Louis (6-3, 294) has been splitting time at right guard this week with junior Ikaika Aken-Moleta, who hasn't seen much action since his arrival in 2005. Louis, on the other hand, started four games at tight end in 2005 before knee surgery sidelined him in 2006. He returned as a guard and played last year as a backup in eight games.

“I'm just trying to attack it and help the youngsters out and get them ready for a good year,” Louis said. “I'm just trying to give it my hardest. I want to win.”
Sophomore Trask Iosefa started every game at center last year and is back this year. At left guard, senior returning starter Mike Schmidt is probably the Aztecs' most solid offensive lineman.

J.C. transfer misses opening of two-a-days<!---- END STORY TITLE -------->

Taylor Wallace isn't practicing and his coach isn't talking

Wallace, the junior college transfer who was expected to compete for a starting job at offensive tackle, was a no-show yesterday as San Diego State staged its first two-a-day workout of fall camp.

Taylor is working through something right now and I'm not going to disclose it at this point,” Long said.


The 6-foot-5, 290-pound Wallace, who transferred to SDSU this fall from El Camino College in Torrance, originally attended Utah State. During his time at Utah State, Wallace was placed on probation for a drug-dealing conviction after being accused of providing marijuana to five teammates in July 2006. He originally was charged with felony drug distribution, but pleaded guilty to a Class A misdemeanor. According to Utah records, Wallace was sentenced to six days in jail, plus a fine of $1,850 and one year of probation, which concluded on Jan. 22.


Attempts to reach Wallace yesterday for comment were unsuccessful.
“It was a big mistake on my part,” Wallace told the Union-Tribune shortly before the completion of his probationary period in January. “I was in Utah and was really bored all the time. I got involved in the wrong things, and I turned my life around. From that point on I said I'm not going to be that way. That's why I had to get out of there. I went to El Camino and earned another scholarship.”

Wallace, who enrolled at Utah State in 2005 before transferring to El Camino, was expected to join the Aztecs in time for spring drills in April. His arrival was delayed until the start of fall camp because of academic issues. The Aztecs currently feature a pair of redshirt freshmen – Mike Matamua and Kurtis Gunther – at the starting tackle spots.

While Long declined to say whether Wallace's absence was related to academics, fall classes have yet to start at SDSU and Wallace has been practicing with the team, something he would be unable to do if he were academically ineligible. Long routinely has been forthcoming in acknowledging if a player's absence is because of academics.

Asked if Wallace would be returning to the team, Long said, “We'll see; we're working some things out right now.”
Wallace has two years of eligibility remaining.
 
Rebels put faith on the line

Sanford: Defensive, offensive fronts his best at UNLV

ELY -- Mike Sanford didn't hesitate to answer.

Yes, he said, these are the best offensive and defensive lines UNLV has fielded during his four seasons as coach.

"Without a doubt," he said, adding there is depth "especially on defense. Some depth on offense, but we need to develop more. But we have some depth on the defensive line, quality players, not just guys."

He has plenty of reasons to be optimistic.

The defensive line, led by tackles Jacob Hales and Malo Taumua, was the team's best unit during spring drills. It could be even stronger after two walk-ons were added last week.

The offensive line loses only left guard Tim Goins from the last year's starting unit and has at least two potential stars.

But what does it all mean?

Will UNLV finally dictate the action at the line of scrimmage or be pushed around?

"That remains to be seen," Sanford said. "We haven't played a game yet. That's something I would want."

Despite the preseason promise, both lines have room for improvement as the Rebels prepare for their season opener against Utah State on Aug. 30 at Sam Boyd Stadium.

Last season UNLV ranked eighth in the nine-team Mountain West Conference in sacks made and allowed, seventh in rushing defense and sixth in rushing offense despite having a nearly 1,000-yard back in Frank Summers.

New defensive line coach Andre Patterson said he likes what he has seen going back to the spring. All four starters were in his office every day watching video and asking questions before successfully transferring that knowledge onto the practice field.

"It just didn't happen by chance," Patterson said. "They put in the work.
"If I can get the whole group to buy in like that, then we've got a chance to be pretty good."

Hales (6 feet 5 inches, 295 pounds) and Taumua (6-0, 270) particularly stood out in the spring. Hales, a senior from Las Vegas High School, was the spring's best player as recognized by the coaches, and the sophomore Taumua was second.

"It just makes football fun to go out there and make plays," Hales said. "You don't want to come off the field."

A more committed Perry Eppenger (6-3, 300), a junior from Cheyenne High, also figures to bolster the interior, along with last week's junior college transfers, Martin Tevaseu (6-3, 320) and Lale Taiese (6-3, 275).

The ends are pretty well established, with senior Thor Pili (6-3, 285) and sophomore Isaako Aaitui (6-3, 300) starting and junior Heivaha Mafi (6-1, 250) and sophomore Preston Brooks (6-3, 250) the leading backups.

"I play eight guys," Patterson said. "I try to keep the D-line fresh. ...

There's no difference between the ones and twos, and we just roll through the course of the game. If we play 50 plays, and (each player plays) 25 and 25, I'm happy because now we have a chance to play fast the whole game."

The offensive line returns sophomore Matt Murphy (6-4, 290) at the left tackle spot that protects quarterback Omar Clayton's back side.

Murphy played in all 12 games last season, started the final nine and earned Freshman All-America status by the Football Writers Association of America.

He said last year was a confidence-boosting season, "but it still doesn't change the fact that you've still got to come and work hard."

Another sophomore, Evan Marchal (6-7, 290), is the starter at right tackle.

Center was a big concern coming out of the spring when sophomore John Gianninoto (6-3, 290) sat out because of mononucleosis and an enlarged spleen, but he is back running with the first team.

Junior Joe Hawley (6-3, 300) played center last season, but has moved to right guard.

Johan Asiata (6-4, 310) is No. 1 at left guard, and fellow senior Sifa Moala (6-1, 325) is expected to see significant time and could switch between right guard and center.

"Right now, I'd feel real comfortable with the first four guys we've got right now," interior offensive line coach Keith Uperesa said.
 
Wyoming to name a starting QB on Friday after Wednesday's scrimmage.

If a tree falls in a forest...

Seriously though, I already have a bet on the Cowboys and I just don't care who it is. I'm not sure that one is better than another. Has anyone heard how Crum has looked?
 
Rebels put faith on the line

Sanford: Defensive, offensive fronts his best at UNLV

ELY -- Mike Sanford didn't hesitate to answer.

Yes, he said, these are the best offensive and defensive lines UNLV has fielded during his four seasons as coach.

"Without a doubt," he said, adding there is depth "especially on defense. Some depth on offense, but we need to develop more. But we have some depth on the defensive line, quality players, not just guys."

He has plenty of reasons to be optimistic.

The defensive line, led by tackles Jacob Hales and Malo Taumua, was the team's best unit during spring drills. It could be even stronger after two walk-ons were added last week.

The offensive line loses only left guard Tim Goins from the last year's starting unit and has at least two potential stars.

But what does it all mean?

Will UNLV finally dictate the action at the line of scrimmage or be pushed around?

"That remains to be seen," Sanford said. "We haven't played a game yet. That's something I would want."

Despite the preseason promise, both lines have room for improvement as the Rebels prepare for their season opener against Utah State on Aug. 30 at Sam Boyd Stadium.

Last season UNLV ranked eighth in the nine-team Mountain West Conference in sacks made and allowed, seventh in rushing defense and sixth in rushing offense despite having a nearly 1,000-yard back in Frank Summers.

New defensive line coach Andre Patterson said he likes what he has seen going back to the spring. All four starters were in his office every day watching video and asking questions before successfully transferring that knowledge onto the practice field.

"It just didn't happen by chance," Patterson said. "They put in the work.
"If I can get the whole group to buy in like that, then we've got a chance to be pretty good."

Hales (6 feet 5 inches, 295 pounds) and Taumua (6-0, 270) particularly stood out in the spring. Hales, a senior from Las Vegas High School, was the spring's best player as recognized by the coaches, and the sophomore Taumua was second.

"It just makes football fun to go out there and make plays," Hales said. "You don't want to come off the field."

A more committed Perry Eppenger (6-3, 300), a junior from Cheyenne High, also figures to bolster the interior, along with last week's junior college transfers, Martin Tevaseu (6-3, 320) and Lale Taiese (6-3, 275).

The ends are pretty well established, with senior Thor Pili (6-3, 285) and sophomore Isaako Aaitui (6-3, 300) starting and junior Heivaha Mafi (6-1, 250) and sophomore Preston Brooks (6-3, 250) the leading backups.

"I play eight guys," Patterson said. "I try to keep the D-line fresh. ...

There's no difference between the ones and twos, and we just roll through the course of the game. If we play 50 plays, and (each player plays) 25 and 25, I'm happy because now we have a chance to play fast the whole game."

The offensive line returns sophomore Matt Murphy (6-4, 290) at the left tackle spot that protects quarterback Omar Clayton's back side.

Murphy played in all 12 games last season, started the final nine and earned Freshman All-America status by the Football Writers Association of America.

He said last year was a confidence-boosting season, "but it still doesn't change the fact that you've still got to come and work hard."

Another sophomore, Evan Marchal (6-7, 290), is the starter at right tackle.

Center was a big concern coming out of the spring when sophomore John Gianninoto (6-3, 290) sat out because of mononucleosis and an enlarged spleen, but he is back running with the first team.

Junior Joe Hawley (6-3, 300) played center last season, but has moved to right guard.

Johan Asiata (6-4, 310) is No. 1 at left guard, and fellow senior Sifa Moala (6-1, 325) is expected to see significant time and could switch between right guard and center.

"Right now, I'd feel real comfortable with the first four guys we've got right now," interior offensive line coach Keith Uperesa said.


Everything out of the spring and fall ahs been about how good the defensive line has looked...... which has me concerned about the offensive line of course.
 
If a tree falls in a forest...

Seriously though, I already have a bet on the Cowboys and I just don't care who it is. I'm not sure that one is better than another. Has anyone heard how Crum has looked?

I'm 90% sure Karsten will get the first shot with Crum backing him up. None of the QB's have looked great from what I've read. The OL and tandem RB's are going to have to deliver any wins along with a solid defense. Pretty sure they just want a QB that can get rid of the ball under pressure and not turn it over.

Everything out of the spring and fall ahs been about how good the defensive line has looked...... which has me concerned about the offensive line of course.

That defensive line better be really good as the secondary looks to have a couple of former QB's playing back there. I still think UNLV is an especially good over team starting the season off.
 
JP-

Give me the answer I've been looking for.....who wins the MWC? Mormons or the Utes?

BYU has the easier non-conf schedule, so they are getting more BCS talk, but they have to play at Utah, as does TCU, so Ive got the edge going to Utah.

You might have answered this elsewhere, but interested in your thoughts.....
 
JP-

Give me the answer I've been looking for.....who wins the MWC? Mormons or the Utes?

BYU has the easier non-conf schedule, so they are getting more BCS talk, but they have to play at Utah, as does TCU, so Ive got the edge going to Utah.

You might have answered this elsewhere, but interested in your thoughts.....


It's hard to pick the Utes when BYU has gone two straight seasons witout losing a MWC game, but I'd lean towards Utah as they have both TCU and BYU @home while the Cougars have to face both on the road.

There are a couple of other potential land mines for the Utes (@NM, @WYO) so it's not just a matter of beating the top dogs at home. They haven't shown the ability to avoid head scratchers (see UNLV last year) with Whittingham at the helm so that's always a worry. If they can somehow get a W @ Michigan I'd expect them to keep their focus throughout the year or at least until their first loss.

Looking at Utah's schedule it couldn't set up any better. After they play Michigan, which would normally be a huge letdown spot, they face UNLV whom they want revenge with more than anybody on their entire schedule. No letdown possible. Their next big game would be @home against Oregon St. on a Thursday night. Another letdown following this one? Not a chance as they head to Laramie which will be talked about quite a bit because of flipgate last year. The other landmine is @NM and they have a bye heading into that game so the schedule is there. They just have to avoid the injuries.

To be 100% honest the conference title will most likely come down to the final game and as things are this moment I'll take the Utes to win @ home.


***All of this through Crimson glasses***
 
Conference may come down to TCU at Utah. The more i have dug into tcu , the more there is to like with that team.

Unlv was a head scratcher ?? I thought we were just far superior to those utes !!

Did we get as many fans to our scrimmage as Alabama ?


That's really a bad spot for the Frogs. Having played @Vegas on a Saturday, traveling back to Texas, and then back to Utah for a Thursday game. Major disadvantage with travel alone.

My apologies about the Rebels being a head scratcher. I just hope to keep it within two touchdowns this year. :36_11_6:
 
That's really a bad spot for the Frogs. Having played @Vegas on a Saturday, traveling back to Texas, and then back to Utah for a Thursday game. Major disadvantage with travel alone.

My apologies about the Rebels being a head scratcher. I just hope to keep it within two touchdowns this year. :36_11_6:


Yeah and throw in the frogs thursday performances that you made note of in other threads......definitely a bad spot. Suspect that utah spends half of their bye week preceding unm looking at the frogs as well. So they get extra prep time for that game as well.
 
kyle, isn't it BYU's race to lose at this point?...


Not so sure. They play both TCU and Utah on the road and lets face it , thats the competition for them. The good news for them i think is that they dont play tcu until mid-october and dont have to go to utah until the last game of the year. In my opinion , if utah were to play byu right now , utah wins. Byu has too many new faces on defense. But they luck out ,,,, because by the time they play utah , those guys will all have a season under their belt and that makes it a whole new ballgame.

I think TCU might deserve a look as a team that could surprise in this conference. They don't have a single glaring weakness other than being average at WR. Easily the best defense in the league. Under the radar right now for this conference. Tough game at utah though and i think a mobile qb is the best attack against tcu defense. of course , utes johnson is usually hurt by november too.

utah gets both tcu and byu at home. Not sure how this is going to pan out but i am excited to watch the big games. This is my favorite conference by far.
 
you make a good point about BYU having to play Utah and TCU on the road...Mendenhall just seems like he always puts his team in a position to win the conference by year's end...
 
If a tree falls in a forest...

Seriously though, I already have a bet on the Cowboys and I just don't care who it is. I'm not sure that one is better than another. Has anyone heard how Crum has looked?


A tree fell in the forest today.....


LARAMIE -- One day and some film review seemed to take the edge off Wyoming.

It might have also provided enough evidence to name a quarterback.

The doomsday attitude that prevailed after Wednesday's first scrimmage of the fall was replaced Thursday by praise for the defense, satisfaction with the running game and, maybe, an answer under center.

The Cowboys once again are planning on naming a starter today, but the whispers around the program indicate there may already be one -- junior college transfer Dax Crum.

"We'll finish talking about it (Thursday night), and right now I anticipate (an announcement today), but it hasn't been settled yet," UW coach Joe Glenn said. "We're going to stay on the same timeline as we have been, we just need to finish talking about it.

Glenn didn't seem close to a decision after the disappointing, touchdown-less scrimmage, but Cole hasn't wavered from the original deadline. The Cowboys might have been closer to a decision on Thursday if Glenn hadn't had to make an appearance for the conference in Denver, which clearly wasn't his preference.

Either way there should be one today, and as much as it was expected to be an arms race between Crum and returning starter Karsten Sween, the battle might hinge more on the ability to manage the ground game.

Neither quarterback got to do much passing against the second-team defense on Wednesday, but UW's best drives featured Crum calling the signals -- even if they were led by the running backs.

"That's a big part of our offense, making run checks and getting in the right running play to make sure we put our offensive line in the best position to make the right blocks," Crum said. "That's a big part of being a quarterback here.

"People think you just drop back and pass it, but there's a lot more to it than that."

Eventually the starter will have to handle the passing game though, and at least during Thursday's indoor practice, Crum seemed to be the leading candidate.

More often than not he took the first snap during drills, and if run checks are indeed a deciding factor, Crum handled nearly all the snaps in live work with the rushing attack.

Most of those came before Glenn returned to practice midway though the session, which is yet another reason the team wasn't prepared to make an official statement Thursday.

"I think right now the ball is in Joe's court, so whenever he decides to announce it, he'll announce it," Cole said. "But at this point in time, that's not my call to make."

After some uncertainty on Wednesday, that time appears to be approaching.

Not a moment too soon, either --- virtually everyone around the program seems ready to move forward.

"Here's what's tough, I watch the tape and I see, then I leave," Glenn said. "I really don't know exactly what's been said, I just didn't need to be gone right now when we're making this choice.

"In all fairness, let's give me a little more time with Bob. Hang with us."

At least for one more day.
 
The Aztecs landed a BIG run stopper.


Straight from Hacksaw's headlines...
...San Diego State landed a big JUCO lineman today. XTRA-Sports has confirmed Darias Jones, a 6-4, 354-pound offensive tackle, has transferred into the Aztecs program from Butte College. He chose SDSU over Boise State, and will move to nose-tackle, where he played as a freshman at Division III-Greensboro College.. Jones was all-conference as an offensive lineman, but has quick feet and a strong upper body. He has 2-years of eligibility left and took and passed 25-hours of courses his last 2-semesters at Butte to sign at State.

Coach Long seems do be doing pretty well in bringing in some big bodies for both lines. 354 lbs!!...Damn that's a big dude! I was just listening to Hacksaw and he says that they wil put him at NT to anchor our D line. That would be a VERY big body to move in the middle. I hope that this guys can play.
 
354 is going to be more like 315 by the time he is really in D1A playing condition.

Same goes for a guy like Jerrel Powe at Ole Miss.

If Long can recruit (even locally) there is no reason SDSU cannot be a good program. How many high school kids would turn down a chance to play in SD for a winning program?
 
A tree fell in the forest today.....


LARAMIE -- One day and some film review seemed to take the edge off Wyoming.

It might have also provided enough evidence to name a quarterback.

The doomsday attitude that prevailed after Wednesday's first scrimmage of the fall was replaced Thursday by praise for the defense, satisfaction with the running game and, maybe, an answer under center.

The Cowboys once again are planning on naming a starter today, but the whispers around the program indicate there may already be one -- junior college transfer Dax Crum.

"We'll finish talking about it (Thursday night), and right now I anticipate (an announcement today), but it hasn't been settled yet," UW coach Joe Glenn said. "We're going to stay on the same timeline as we have been, we just need to finish talking about it.

Glenn didn't seem close to a decision after the disappointing, touchdown-less scrimmage, but Cole hasn't wavered from the original deadline. The Cowboys might have been closer to a decision on Thursday if Glenn hadn't had to make an appearance for the conference in Denver, which clearly wasn't his preference.

Either way there should be one today, and as much as it was expected to be an arms race between Crum and returning starter Karsten Sween, the battle might hinge more on the ability to manage the ground game.

Neither quarterback got to do much passing against the second-team defense on Wednesday, but UW's best drives featured Crum calling the signals -- even if they were led by the running backs.

"That's a big part of our offense, making run checks and getting in the right running play to make sure we put our offensive line in the best position to make the right blocks," Crum said. "That's a big part of being a quarterback here.

"People think you just drop back and pass it, but there's a lot more to it than that."

Eventually the starter will have to handle the passing game though, and at least during Thursday's indoor practice, Crum seemed to be the leading candidate.

More often than not he took the first snap during drills, and if run checks are indeed a deciding factor, Crum handled nearly all the snaps in live work with the rushing attack.

Most of those came before Glenn returned to practice midway though the session, which is yet another reason the team wasn't prepared to make an official statement Thursday.

"I think right now the ball is in Joe's court, so whenever he decides to announce it, he'll announce it," Cole said. "But at this point in time, that's not my call to make."

After some uncertainty on Wednesday, that time appears to be approaching.

Not a moment too soon, either --- virtually everyone around the program seems ready to move forward.

"Here's what's tough, I watch the tape and I see, then I leave," Glenn said. "I really don't know exactly what's been said, I just didn't need to be gone right now when we're making this choice.

"In all fairness, let's give me a little more time with Bob. Hang with us."

At least for one more day.


great thread jpicks and thanks for for this info.
 
I am pleased with these developments...

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=rivals-231211&prov=rivals&type=lgns

Dax Crum Announced Starting QB

By UW Sports Information 3 hours, 52 minutes ago
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<!--Start Dax150 Image--><!-- End Dax150 Image-->Laramie, Wyo. (Aug. 15, 2008)— The updated Wyoming Football depth chart was released by head coach Joe Glenn on Friday, and sophomore Dax Crum was named the starting quarterback entering the 2008 season opener versus Ohio on Aug. 30. On defense, brothers Marcell and Tashaun Gipson were named the starters at the two cornerback positions for Wyoming.
“It has been a battle, and we feel we have two very good quarterbacks,” said Glenn. “But at this point, we have to get one guy ready for the opener against Ohio. Dax (Crum) will get the start, but Karsten (Sween) needs to stay sharp and I know he will. We feel good about both of them.
“What we’re looking for is a quarterback who can manage our offense. Both of these young men have shown they can do that. Both are ready to play, however one needs to get the ‘Lion’s Share’ of the reps over the next couple of weeks.”

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Crum earned Honorable Mention National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) All-America honors while leading Mesa Community College of Mesa, Ariz., to a 9-2 record and a No. 8 national ranking in the Final 2007 NJCAA/JC Football.com Poll. He was named the NJCAA Co-Region I Offensive Player of the Year, and also was selected First Team All-Western States Football League in his first and only year at Mesa Community College.
The Cowboy defense returns seven starters from a unit that ranked 22nd in the nation in total defense a year ago, but both starting cornerbacks, 2007 seniors Julius Stinson and Michael Medina, are gone. The Gipson brothers of Dallas, Texas, will step into those starting spots.
“These two (Marcell Gipson and Tashaun Gipson) are very talented players,” said Glenn. “They have a unique combination of speed, toughness, athleticism and competitiveness. Cornerback is one of the hardest positions to play on the defensive side of the ball. It takes a blend of all the attributes I mentioned to describe Marcell and Tashaun. These two guys are a rare breed—they’ve got it.
“All that’s left is they have to have a short memory—that is part of playing that position. They are young, and with young players you will have some mistakes, but for every mistake they make they will make a lot more big plays. And wait until people see how they hit.”
Wyoming’s defense has three experienced safeties returning in seniors Quincy Rogers, Michael Ray and sophomore Chris Prosinski, who is a native of Buffalo, Wyo. All three rotated last year and will continue to in 2008, but the safeties have been moved around some from last year. Rogers, who started at free safety a year ago, will start at strong safety. Ray, who was the starting strong safety last year, will back up Rogers. Prosinski, who was the backup at free safety in 2007, will now start at the free safety position. A fourth safety who has earned a spot in the rotation is senior Derrick McMahen, who will back up Prosinski.
“Quincy (Rogers) is an experienced veteran,” said Glenn. “He leads both by example and as a vocal leader. Chris Prosinski brings added speed to our defense, and has the ability to cover deep routes with a flair. There will be times when we play three safeties, and Michael Ray is a guy who has done a great job of fitting into the eight-man in the box defense that Coach (Mike) Breske uses sometimes. Michael Ray will continue to be an integral part of our defense. Derrick McMahen has also played himself into the mix, and we all feel Derrick will make a contribution this year. I will mention one other player at safety, who had a rough start to fall practice. Brian Kuhtz got sick with a virus shortly after fall camp started, but is a big guy (6’3”, 220 pounds) who can run and make plays and in time will contribute to our defense and special teams in a big way.”
Most of the depth chart remained the same from spring drills among the offensive linemen, defensive linemen, linebackers, running backs and fullbacks. At tight end, junior Chris Sundberg has battled back from a right knee injury, that ended his 2007 season prematurely, to be listed as the co-starter at tight end with returning starter Jesson Salyards. Those two will also be utilized together in two tight-end sets for the Cowboys. Sundberg received a sixth-year of eligibility from the NCAA this summer, and so enters the 2008 season as a junior rather than a senior.
At wide receiver, junior Greg Bolling is back after missing spring drills due to academic ineligibility. He is the projected starter at one outside receiver spot. Junior Donate Morgan has earned the other starting spot at outside receiver, while redshirt freshman Brandon Stewart is listed No.1 at the slot receiver position.
On special teams, one kicking position has been decided. Junior Jake Scott is the clear choice at place-kicker. Scott hit four of five field goals in Wyoming’s first fall scrimmage this past Wednesday, including two from 41 yards out.
“Jake (Scott) has really made a move this fall,” said Glenn. “I’m so happy with his confidence and his poise. He’s ready for a great season. You can feel a difference when he takes the field now—it’s total confidence. He’s hitting the ball as good as I’ve ever seen him. His timing has been great. He’s getting the ball up quick, and his accuracy has been outstanding. I’m looking forward to watching Jake this season.”
The punting position is still locked in a three-way competition between sophomore Nick Landess, true freshman Austin McCoy and junior-college transfer Cody Bousema. The three are listed as co-starters with two weeks to go before the season opener.
“One of the better battles we’ve got going is at punter,” said Glenn. “All three kids have been hitting the ball well with excellent hang time. We’ll continue to track all their kicks in practice for the next few days before naming a starter there.
“We’re also very happy with our deep snappers—not only four-year starter Danny Dutmer, but Chris Sundberg has been doing a nice job snapping for punts. Garrett King is our backup to Danny for field goals and PATs. Garrett has improved dramatically, and will get some reps. Ian (Hetrick) and Kyle (Jacobo) have done a great job holding. We’ve also worked David Leonard into that spot some.”
The Cowboys will continue two-a-day practices through next week. Wyoming will hold its second and final scrimmage of the fall on Wednesday, Aug. 20 in War Memorial Stadium, beginning at 5 p.m.
 
354 is going to be more like 315 by the time he is really in D1A playing condition.

Same goes for a guy like Jerrel Powe at Ole Miss.

If Long can recruit (even locally) there is no reason SDSU cannot be a good program. How many high school kids would turn down a chance to play in SD for a winning program?

As a MWC fan there is nothing more frustrating than to see SDSU and UNLV both suck ass in what is possibly two of the top ten markets any kid should want to go to college.

On an unrelated note the UNLV basketball class they recruited for '09 is rediculously talanted. The days of Rebels basketball in the sweet 16 may be back.
 
Also agree about Crum being named the starter.

Wyoming is heading to Provo (BYU) 3-0. Should be a better game than anticipated. Honestly it'll just give a better line for BYU backers.
 
BUMPS AND BRUISES: UW coach Joe Glenn has had more guys in street clothes than he might like, but until Monday he'd avoided many injuries deemed to be too serious.

Starting wide receiver Brandon Stewart's break in his shoulder easily qualified.

"That's a tough one," Glenn said. "Just hope beyond hope that we can get him back this season. It's going to take some time."

Glenn said the early word from trainer Robb Williams was a recovery time of four to six weeks, which will force some juggling at receiver before the season opener against Ohio on Aug. 30.

Stewart won the battle in camp to start at inside receiver, edging sophomore David Leonard on the latest depth chart.

Leonard could easily be elevated, but the Cowboys are also considering a move for Chris Johnson to the inside.

"We can go a lot of different directions," Glenn said. "David Leonard's there, CJ could go inside now, we've got some guys that can work at it and see what we've got.

"I'm still saying everybody else is coming back. We still don't know (Marcus) Felker's deal, trying to get a brace for his arm, and we've got a lot of guys jogging around. We've been pretty fortunate, but at the same time, I don't like losing anybody. Brandon's been doing a super job for us, been money for us on offense and special teams."
 
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UNLV loses Hales to dislocated elbow

Starting defensive tackle to have X-rays today


<!-- End Hot Topics area --><!-- ||| UNLV Football ||| --><!-- endclickprintexclude -->UNLV senior starting defensive tackle Jacob Hales dislocated his left elbow Wednesday night at Rebel Park, and his status is unknown for the Aug. 30 opener against Utah State at Sam Boyd Stadium.

Hales, a Las Vegas High School graduate, will be X-rayed today, and the results probably will be known in the afternoon

"It was put back in place by the doctor," coach Mike Sanford said. "That's a good sign."

Two other players returned to practice -- junior defensive tackle Perry Eppenger and junior linebacker Jimmy Miller.

Eppenger, who went to Cheyenne High, was sent home last weekend from training camp in Ely for violating team rules. On Wednesday, Eppenger told coaches he wanted to return to the team.

"What he's got to do is earn his way back," Sanford said. "He's got to earn the respect and trust of the coaches and the players."

Miller was back on the practice field but has not been cleared academically. UNLV should soon find out if he is eligible to play.

Also in the same article:

BOISE STATE -- Coach Chris Petersen named redshirt freshman Kellen Moore as the Broncos' starting quarterback, ending a lengthy battle with senior Bush Hamden.

It's the first time in school history that a freshman will open the year as the starter.
 
So UNLV has lost their best corner and best DL to injuries. Combined with Clayton running a talented offense and their totals are looking even better.
 
So UNLV has lost their best corner and best DL to injuries. Combined with Clayton running a talented offense and their totals are looking even better.


yep. I wonder if when Dixon is playing in the secondary if he knows where he is ..... I mean he never knew where the Defensive backs were when he was quarterbacking .......

no article on the cheating lobos ?
 
lmao. that was funny about dixon.

Didn't post anything about the lobos as I didn't figure it has any affect on them this year. Still sucks for them though. Oh hell I'll toss it in here for those who haven't seen it.


NCAA puts New Mexico on probation

Aug. 21, 2008 12:00 AM
Associated Press
The NCAA put New Mexico's football program on three years of probation Wednesday and cut five scholarships as punishment for academic violations involving two former assistant coaches.

The sanctions imposed by the NCAA's infractions committee went beyond the university's self-imposed penalties, which included two years of probation and fewer scholarship reductions.

New Mexico head coach Rocky Long was not accused of any wrongdoing in the case.

The NCAA concluded that the former Lobos assistants in 2004 improperly helped three recruits to obtain fraudulent academic credits through correspondence courses they never completed at Fresno Pacific
University, a fully accredited four-year college in California that also offers online degrees.

In its report, the infractions committee said course-registration materials at Fresno Pacific showed the home addresses for the three New Mexico recruits as the home address in California of a brother of one former assistant. Coaches' office or cellphone numbers were listed as the recruits' phone numbers. The recruits admitted to NCAA investigators that they "received no course materials and did no work" but received course credit.
 
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