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Buffalo completes Hail Mary but falls to Kent St.

Written By Sepatu on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 22.22

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Dri Archer ran for 127 yards and a touchdown, and Kent State beat 23-7 on Wednesday night.

Julian Durden had a 2-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter, and Freddy Cortez added three field goals for the Golden Flashes (2-1, 1-0 Mid-American). Trayion Durham added 112 yards rushing, and Kent State finished with 239 yards on the ground.

Alex Zordich threw a 46-yard touchdown pass to Alex Neutz in the second quarter for the lone score for the Bulls (1-2, 0-1).

The Bulls had five sacks of David Fisher and Spencer Keith, but committed four turnovers and converted only 3 of 13 third downs.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/ncaa/gameflash/2012/09/19/51446/index.html#recap?xid=si_ncaaf
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John Walters, lookahead

Cecil Hurt interview, Week 1 preview -- Aug. 30, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory discuss the games they're most looking forward to in Week 1. Cecil Hurt of the Tuscaloosa News previews Alabama as it gets set to face Michigan.
Listen Subscribe itunes ACC, Big East, Non-AQ preview -- Aug. 24, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory preview the ACC and Big East races. Non-AQ enthusiast Holly Anderson joins the show to preview the little guys. Plus: previewing the independents and answering your listener mail.
Listen Subscribe itunes Big 12 and SEC preview -- August 16, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory present another segment of their conference previews. This week is Champions Bowl week -- the Big 12 and the SEC conferences.
Listen Subscribe itunes Big Ten and Pac-12 preview -- August 8, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory present the first of several conference previews to come. Up today is the Rose Bowl Preview -- the Big Ten and the Pac-12 conferences.
Listen Subscribe itunes

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/podcasts/stewart_mandel/#?xid=si_ncaaf
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Acting PSU A.D. to stay through at least 2014

Dave Joyner took over for Tim Curley in November when Curley was charged with perjury and failure to report a crime.

LM Otero/AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) Penn State's acting athletic director will stay on the job as long Rodney Erickson remains the school's president.

Erickson said in response to a question Wednesday at a Penn State student forum that Dave Joyner was doing an excellent job at athletics.

Erickson has said he plans to step down when his contract expires in June 2014. The search for his replacement will begin in November.

It was appropriate, Erickson said, for his successor to decide whether to go in another direction with athletics.

Joyner replaced Tim Curley last November after Curley was charged with perjury and failure to report a crime in connection with a sexual abuse allegation against retired defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.

Curley, who faces trial in January, has denied the charges. He is on administrative leave.

"Dr. Joyner has provided excellent leadership for our programs" and monitoring athletic integrity programs, Erickson said at the forum. "I want to have continuity there."

Joyner has said since being appointed acting athletic director that he would stay on as long as desired. Joyner joined Erickson and other administrators at the student forum Wednesday. He said later that he was happy with Erickson's decision "because I want to continue to help," he said. "I love this university, I believe in it."

The employment agreement for Joyner is worth $396,000 a year. The agreement calls for the school to give Joyner 30 days' notice before parting ways.

Joyner said he only learned of Erickson's vote of confidence after a friend passed along a story of an interview Erickson had Tuesday in New York with Bloomberg News, which first reported the decision. Penn State leaders are in the midst of conducting interviews with national media outlets in New York as part of a public relations campaign.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/09/19/penn-state-joyner.ap/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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Report: Smith has over $25 million in liabilities

Another day, another John L. Smith headline. Brent Schrotenboer of USA Today obtained a copy of the happy Arkansas coach's recent bankruptcy filing, which shows that Smith has $25.7 million in liabilities and just $1.2 million in assets, mostly in retirement accounts.

The documents claim that Smith had only $300 cash on hand and just $500 in his checking account on the date of the filing, Sept. 6. The coach said in July that he lost a lot of money on bad real-estate deals, with one claim against him for $20 million.

Smith's only real property is a quarter share, worth $2,000, in an eight-acre plot in Idaho owned by his deceased parents.

Among his monthly expenses is nearly $12,000 to Mushtaque Juneja, a Louisville anesthesiologist who also develops commercial real estate.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://tracking.si.com/2012/09/20/john-l-smith-bankruptcy-filing-checking-account/?xid=si_ncaaf
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ABC to interview Sandusky abuse case's Victim 1

ABC will interview the young man whose sexual-abuse allegations launched the investigation against former Penn State assistant Jerry Sandusky.

AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- ABC will interview the young man whose sexual-abuse allegations against former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky launched the investigation that produced criminal charges against him.

Attorney Michael Boni represents the teenager known in court papers as Victim 1. He said Wednesday that ABC landed the first interview with his client, who has a book coming out this fall.

The New York Post was first to report the ABC exclusive.

Sandusky was accused of fondling Victim 1 and performing oral sex on him multiple times beginning when he was 11 years old. Sandusky was barred from the boy's central Pennsylvania high school in 2009 after his mother alerted school officials.

Sandusky was convicted of abuse involving 10 boys and awaits sentencing. He maintains his innocence.

ABC hasn't returned a message seeking comment.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/09/19/abc-sandusky-abuse-interview/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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Commissioners discuss tweaking playoff format

BCS executive director Bill Hancock (center) says conference commissioners have discussed the possibility of adding another game to be part of semifinal rotation for college football playoff.

AP

ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) -- The BCS executive director says conference commissioners have discussed the possibility of adding another game to be part of the semifinal rotation for the new college football playoff.

Bill Hancock says nothing was decided during meetings the last two days near Chicago.

The postseason plan approved by university presidents in June called for the national semifinals to rotate among six bowl sites. The years those sites do not host semifinals, they would be marquee bowl games, involving other highly ranked teams.

Hancock says commissioners talked about whether there would be enough access to those marquee games for conferences that do not have contractual ties to high-profile bowls, such as the Pac-12 and Big Ten's partnership with the Rose Bowl.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/09/19/commissioners-bcs-postseason-format.ap/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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TCU back James out for season with knee injury

TCU running back Waymon James will miss the rest of the 2012 season with a knee injury.

AP

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- TCU leading rusher Waymon James will miss the rest of the season for the 17th-ranked Horned Frogs because of a knee injury.

School spokesman Mark Cohen said Wednesday that James has a season-ending injury.

James, who appeared to get hurt in the fourth quarter of Saturday's win in Kansas, was averaging 9.9 yards on his 17 carries. He had 168 yards and a touchdown for TCU (2-0).

When asked Tuesday, coach Gary Patterson said James would be a game-time decision for Saturday's home game against Virginia. He didn't elaborate then.

With James and Matthew Tucker, TCU came into this season as one of only five FBS schools returning a pair of 700-yard rushers.

Tucker has 19 carries for 100 yards and a score, the 27th of his career.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/09/19/waymon-james-tcu-injury.ap/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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Breaking down Kent State-Buffalo

Will Branden Oliver and Buffalo buffalo the Golden Flashes? Tune in and find out or we cannot be friends anymore. (AP)

Kent State and Buffalo play the first Wednesday college football game of the year tonight. We're sure you have so many questions.

• What information do I, the discerning consumer, need to consume this game? The Bulls and Golden Flashes kick off in Buffalo at 7 p.m. ET. The game will be televised on ESPNU. Both teams are 1-1 entering their first conference contest.

Why should we care? Because MACtion! Weeknight games are the perennial best bet for high-scoring all-nighters.

But Kent State is averaging fewer than 28 points per game! First, that's after two games. Second, Buffalo is averaging close to 40. Finally, through two games, there is a statistical certainty that Kent State will do something like this, or like this, on television. We want to be there to see it.

From whom can we expect to see some neat breakaway plays? Names to remember for the space of this evening: Buffalo's Branden Oliver and Kent State's Dri Archer. Oliver, a junior running back, had a 111-yard outing against Georgia in Week 1. Archer is right on Trayion Durham's heels for the team lead in rushing yards but shines more as a kick return man. And he knows which way to run, with these kicked balls that he catches? It would appear that he does. Archer has recorded 253 yards and a touchdown after just six return attempts in two games.

• Can we please now discuss the greatest sentence in the English language, "Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo"? WE CAN INDEED. Buffalo?

So, buffalo who live in Buffalo (e.g., at the Buffalo Zoo, which does, indeed, have buffalo), and who are buffaloed (in a way unique to Buffalo) by other buffalo from Buffalo, themselves buffalo (in the way unique to Buffalo) still other buffalo from Buffalo.

Hope that clears everything up.

• What should I do until kickoff? Definitely reacquaint yourselves with "Guy on a Buffalo" so you can improvise football-themed lyrics on the fly this evening.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://college-football.si.com/2012/09/19/wednesday-night-bites-kent-state-at-buffalo-faq/?xid=si_ncaaf
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Stewart Mandel: Alabama-LSU national title rematch remains unlikely; more Mailbag

Though they're currently ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in the AP Poll, Alabama and LSU are unlikely to again play for the national title.

Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

The Mandel Initiative Podcast
John Walters joins the show to talk Notre Dame. Stewart and Mallory preview this weekend's big lineup of games.

Later in this column, we're going to take a trip down memory lane and revisit a prominent figure from Mailbags past. Hint: It's a lady.

In the meantime, looking back at more recent history, the first Mailbag mention last year of a possible Alabama-LSU rematch came on Oct. 18. I, of course, dismissed the notion as silly and presumptuous. Whoops. I should probably not repeat that mistake ... but c'mon. We haven't even reached Week 4!

Here we go again! Everyone has said two SEC teams will never be in the National Championship Game again. Being still early in the season, LSU and Alabama are head and shoulders above the rest of college football. If the game Nov. 3 in Tiger Stadium is close, what's the chance we possibly see a repeat of last year?
-- Derek, Baton Rouge

So with USC now out of the picture (sure they could bounce back, but let's be real, their lack of depth was exposed), are we doomed to another year of SEC oppression?
-- Adam Lienau, Not the South

News flash: USC was never the country's lone non-SEC team capable of winning a national championship. The reason it may seem that way is because several other viable contenders have yet to play their first meaningful game.

Oregon, overlooked all preseason amid the USC hype, has continued to fly under the radar thanks to three opening games against non-AQ opponents. This week the third-ranked Ducks face No. 22 Arizona, and if Chip Kelly's team hangs half a hundred on Rich Rodriguez's Wildcats (Oregon is averaging 54.0 points), I expect Oregon will become a standard part of the conversation. No. 4 Florida State plays a showcase game against Clemson this week. If it wins, people are going to start looking at the Seminoles' schedule and realizing just how few obstacles they have the rest of the way. No one's really seen No. 6 Oklahoma play yet, but they will against No. 15 Kansas State this weekend. In fact, it feels like the entire Big 12 has had a bye to this point. I'm eager to see No. 8 West Virginia and No. 12 Texas face tougher conference competition.

And as vulnerable as USC looked last weekend, I wouldn't rule the Trojans out just yet, either. They lost on the road to a team that went 23-3 over the last two years. It happens.

It's entirely possible Alabama and LSU are indeed the cream of the crop again. The Tide have outscored their first three opponents (including two preseason top-10 teams) 128-14, and a purportedly inexperienced defense has pitched consecutive shutouts. I'm certainly not picking against them anytime soon. Meanwhile, the Tigers have won their first three games by a margin of 145-31, but I'd like to see them play someone better than Washington, which has the look of a 6-6 team, before fully jumping on board. This week's opponent, Auburn, might not be any better.

That brings up a different point. One reason to feel confident in Alabama and LSU running the table outside of their head-to-head meeting is the rest of the SEC West, which doesn't look nearly as imposing as it did before the season. In fact, it's pretty darn bad. On the other hand, the East may produce a champion this year (possibly Georgia) with an actual chance of winning in Atlanta.

Finally, at the risk of looking stupid again, I'd be willing to bet three months of Andy Staples' barbeque expenses that voters will not allow another SEC rematch this year. There was too much backlash to last year's game, and even though it's not voters' fault the second game was lopsided (Alabama may well have beaten a different opponent by far more than 21 points), the dissatisfaction is still going to factor into their thought process this time. The people desperately want to see the SEC play someone else, and they're going to get their wish. I don't know who that team will be, but you might want to tune in this weekend for possible clues.

This Saturday, I would watch Florida State-Clemson, Oklahoma-Kansas State and Notre Dame-Michigan if they were televised in separate time slots. Instead, I will watch only one of those night games and none earlier in the day because there are none worth watching. Do the networks really garner better overall ratings by having such premier games go head-to-head at night rather than spreading them throughout the day?
-- Gary Swider, Sherman Oaks, Calif.

The migration of more big games to prime time began six years ago when ABC figured out it could draw better ratings on Saturday nights by showing college football instead of scripted dramas or second-rate reality shows. We had previously counted on the broadcast networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) to show the biggest games in the afternoon, with evening spots primarily reserved for ESPN's SEC and ACC broadcasts or Fox Sports Net's old late-night Pac-10 games. But with FOX joining the fray this year, yet another marquee game moves from 3:30 p.m. ET to 7:30 or 8 (like Kansas State-Oklahoma). Even NBC is even doing it now, with Michigan-Notre Dame this week.

The result, unfortunately, is that fans are now forced to pick and choose between high-profile matchups. Last year in Week 3, ABC garnered a very good 5.8 rating for its prime time game, Oklahoma-Florida State. A year earlier it notched a 4.7 for Texas-Texas Tech. This year it got just a 3.2 for Notre Dame-Michigan State. ESPN's Florida-Tennessee broadcast, which overlapped during the second half, produced a 3.1, and FOX's USC-Stanford showing netted a 2.5. Granted, there was a lot more buildup leading into that Oklahoma-Florida State game last year, but networks can usually count on Notre Dame to draw a big audience, especially against a top-10 team. However, if you combine the ratings for the head-to-head ABC and FOX games you get 5.7 -- almost identical to ABC's number last year.

On the bright side, the afternoon options should improve once teams get into conference play and there are multiple games of interest in each league. Unfortunately, though, the cluttered prime time lineup is here to stay.

Stewart, through three weeks, Ohio State's Braxton Miller has accounted for 988 yards, 12 touchdowns and only two interceptions. Through three weeks in 2007, Tim Tebow had 1,027 yards, 13 touchdowns and only one interception. Does Miller have any chance to repeat Tebow's feat of winning the Heisman as a sophomore playing for Urban Meyer? Or will the Buckeyes' lack of postseason eligibility take him out of the race?
-- Josh L., Columbus, Ohio

It's a good question. Miller is already starting to pop up in the top five of various Heisman watches -- but it's early. I certainly think he can continue putting up his current numbers over the course of the season (though probably not Tebow's 51 touchdowns in 2007), but as the year progresses, our attention will increasingly turn toward the BCS race, one in which the Buckeyes won't be involved. Will Miller get overlooked? It's possible. Last year, USC folks felt the Trojans' ineligibility cost Matt Barkley a trip to New York. Then again, Barkley and his team started slow and had to play catch-up. Miller is already gaining acclaim, and his team has yet to lose.

My guess is if Miller has a truly spectacular season, his team's postseason status won't affect him very much. Ohio State needs to win, and he needs to perform well in big games. Other than that, he plays for one of the most visible teams in the country, and the votes are tallied before the bowl games. And lest we forget, Tebow's team lost three regular-season games the year he won the Heisman. Florida was playing for the Capital One Bowl by late October, yet he still ran away with the trophy. Miller could do the same, but he'd have to truly distinguish himself. If, for example, Geno Smith keeps putting up the same gaudy numbers and West Virginia contends for the Big 12 title, the advantage goes to Smith.

Just when I thought you were going to ignore another classic, absolutely bizarre Holy War, you go and post something like this ... AND TOTALLY REDEEM YOURSELF.
-- Nick Driggs, Los Angeles

If I know Utah fans like I think I do, they'll invite me right in for tea and strumpets.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/stewart_mandel/09/19/alabama-lsu-national-title-contenders/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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Arkansas head coach Smith demands that you SMILE!

Arkansas interim coach John L. Smith has a reputation for being, shall we say, colorful when put in front of a microphone, and Monday was no exception. Despite coming off a 52-0 shellacking by Alabama that was one of the worst home losses in school history, Smith was in no mood to wallow.

In case you missed it, here are his introductory remarks: "You guys act like it's — pick it up a little bit. OK? Get your chin up. Smile! SMILE! OK? Dang, you guys … all right? If not, I'M NOT TALKING."

And, of course, here's the video:

Not quite Allen Iverson's rant about practice, but then again, Smith is a 63-year-old coach.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://tracking.si.com/2012/09/19/arkansas-john-l-smith-smile/?sct=hp_t13_a1&eref=sihp&xid=si_ncaaf
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