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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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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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Andy Staples: Arkansas searching for answers with dream season already lost

Interim coach John L. Smith has given his critics an arsenal of ammunition, but Arkansas' struggles aren't his fault.

Ryan A. Miller/Icon SMI

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- The group included trustees, wealthy donors and even a head of state. As a steady rain fell last Friday, they gathered on one of the luxurious suite levels of Reynolds Razorback Stadium and did what Arkansas people do. They called the hogs.

Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!

They all called, from Arkansas chancellor G. David Gearhart to mega-donor and Dallas Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones to Panamanian president Ricardo Martinelli, who learned to call the Hogs as a business administration student at Arkansas in the early 1970s.

Pig!

They came for a "topping off" ceremony on the eve of the Razorbacks' game against top-ranked Alabama. This ceremony was originally intended to kick off a weekend that might see Arkansas vault into national title contention. A crane would lift a beam into place on the construction site that will become the Arkansas football program's palatial, $40 million facility. The muckety-mucks, many of whom wrote the checks to make the construction of that facility and the recently approved $23 million "Student-athlete Success Center" possible, would revel in the ascension of their beloved Razorbacks.

Sooie!

Even a week earlier, on the eve of a game against lightly regarded Louisiana-Monroe, no one expected the ceremony would close with an explanation from athletic director Jeff Long. Then the Warhawks stunned the Razorbacks in overtime. An explanation, even if not explicitly demanded, was certainly required. Here, in its entirety, is the explanation Long provided.

"I want to say a few things about last week's football game. It's been the topic of everybody around this state and around Fayetteville. I want to make it very clear to all of you here today with us. One game does not make a season. One game does not define a program. One game does not indicate the success or failure of a program. One game does not cause me to doubt the direction of our athletics program. With your help, we're building a program that can compete year-in and year-out with the very best in this conference and in this nation. Six years running, the national championship in football has come from this conference. We'll be successful. We'll not be deterred. We'll not be discouraged. And make no mistake about it, the future of the University of Arkansas Razorback athletics is very bright."

All of them -- the trustees, the big-money donors, even the head of state -- cheered. Then they called the hogs again. The following afternoon, Alabama beat Arkansas 52-0.

John L. Smith, the head coach Long hired after he fired Bobby Petrino in April amid a salacious scandal, could find no words to describe the loss or to console his team. Tyler Wilson, the all-everything quarterback who missed the Alabama game because his linemen failed to block Louisiana-Monroe's pass rushers a week earlier, knew exactly what to say. He said some of his teammates quit, and he wasn't wrong. Later, Wilson would say he delivered that message through the media because he knew the Arkansas people needed to hear it. Someone had to say it. Someone had to prove the Razorbacks gave a damn.

How did it all fall apart so quickly? How did a team set up to be one of the best in school history hit the skids in mid-September?

It's easy to blame Smith, who once parlayed two good seasons at Louisville into the Michigan State job before crashing and burning in East Lansing. Plenty have blamed him. Whether it's the distraction of his recent bankruptcy filing or his poor game-preparation decisions or his insistence that people SMILE! during a period of pigskin mourning, Smith has given his critics an arsenal of ammunition. But it isn't Smith's fault.

Some have blamed Long, who fired Petrino and who hired Smith. Petrino had gone 21-5 the previous two seasons, and with Wilson returning for his senior season and Alabama and LSU coming to Fayetteville, this was Arkansas' best chance to win the SEC West -- a title which would make the Hogs automatic national championship contenders. To listen to some of the callers on Bo Mattingly's statewide radio show, it wasn't a big deal that Petrino manipulated the university's usual hiring process to give his mistress a job and then lied to Long's face after an April 1 motorcycle crash exposed the whole sordid mess. The man won, and that mattered more than the school's integrity or the millions of dollars the school might be on the hook for in hiring discrimination lawsuits had Petrino remained employed. That's what the Petrino apologists think, and they blame Long. But it isn't Long's fault, either.

Regardless of Arkansas' coach or QB, the Razorbacks' defense wouldn't have been able to stop Eddie Lacy and the Crimson Tide.

Ryan A. Miller/Icon SMI

The blame falls on Petrino, who flushed a potential dream season not because he gave into his libido, but because he let his libido affect the football program's payroll. It was an act of colossal stupidity from a man who, while far from lovable, had proven quite wily when calling plays or building college football programs. Every nadir Arkansas hits this season can be traced back to the moment when Petrino had the brilliant idea that Jessica Dorrell, who had recruited him so well, should assist in the Razorbacks' recruitment of players. Everything else -- the motorcycle crash that exposed the relationship, the firing, the hiring of Smith -- only served to highlight the absurdity of that decision.

Still, some of the heartbreak over the on-field events of the past two weeks is a bit melodramatic. In all the January-to-April excitement about Wilson's decision and Petrino's offensive acumen and tailback Knile Davis' return from injury, certain key losses were glossed over. Without defensive end Jake Bequette, would the Razorbacks be able to rush the passer as well? Who would replace the leadership of linebacker Jerry Franklin or the ball-hawking of safety Tramain Thomas? Is the SEC not a defense-first league, even for the team with the explosive offense? Anyone who watched the Alabama game objectively could see that even had Petrino -- Bobby, not Arkansas offensive coordinator Paul Petrino -- called the plays and had Wilson been healthy, the Hogs' defense wouldn't have stopped Alabama enough for Arkansas to win. Taking away the touchdown drive Arkansas gift-wrapped with a snap over punter Dylan Breeding's head, Alabama scored five touchdowns and a field goal on its first nine possessions. Petrino and Wilson would not have matched that pace against one of the nation's top defenses. The Hogs would have faced similar problems against LSU, which also enjoys ramming the ball down the throats of opposing defenses while terrorizing the opposing quarterback with a seemingly endless string of athletic freaks.

So maybe that's the better way to look at this: It's not as big of a mess as it seems, because it didn't cost the Razorbacks what many in Arkansas think it cost them. Arkansas was going to finish No. 3 in the SEC West this year even if Petrino had never been fired and Wilson had never gotten hurt. Looking at the schedule objectively, the Razorbacks can still finish No. 3 in the West. Wilson hopes to be cleared in time to play against Rutgers on Saturday. A win wouldn't count in the conference standings, but it might salvage some wounded pride. Then the Hogs face, in order, Texas A&M, Auburn, Kentucky, Ole Miss and Tulsa. The Aggies are a relative unknown under first-year coach Kevin Sumlin, but the Tigers also went to overtime with Louisiana-Monroe and have an anemic offense. Kentucky and Ole Miss are the worst teams in their respective divisions. By the time the Razorbacks take a break from SEC play to face the Golden Hurricane, they could be 4-1 in the league and 6-2 overall. That's the best-case scenario, but it isn't that far-fetched if Wilson returns to health.

A midseason resurgence probably won't be enough to win Smith the job permanently. Long insists Smith's candidacy will be considered, but the events of the past two weeks have doomed Smith to an exit once his 10-month contract ends. Plenty of rank-and-file fans have called for Smith to be fired now. After all, there is precedent. Long's predecessor, Frank Broyles, once fired football coach Jack Crowe the day after a season-opening loss to The Citadel. But Long believes more chaos won't solve anything. Neither will a weekly evaluation of Smith's performance. "I'm not going to come out each game and talk about the job he's doing," Long said last Friday. "That doesn't do anybody any good in my opinion. We'll play the season out, and then we'll know by the end of the season what direction we're headed."

More than anyone else, Bobby Petrino deserves blame for flushing away Arkansas' chances of a dream season.

AP

At the moment, Long is doing exactly what he said he'd do after he fired Petrino: looking for a coach and continuing to raise money to fulfill his $300 million athletic facilities master plan. "We brought coach Smith back there to hold this program together. We were obviously in a very difficult situation at that time," Long said. "He wanted to come back and help us, and that's what he did. I said at the time that I'm conducting a coaching search. That hasn't changed."

Long also understands the recent history of the Arkansas football program. In the year before Long hired Petrino in December 2007, fans had split into factions. One group supported coach Houston Nutt. Another rebelled against Nutt after he chased off offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn -- the beloved former coach at nearby Springdale High -- and quarterback Mitch Mustain following the 2006 season. One fan even used the state's open records law to obtain Nutt's phone records. The records showed the coach had exchanged 2,104 text messages with a local television news anchor in four months, and after that information got out, the conflict between pro-Nutt and anti-Nutt camps escalated and didn't end until Nutt took off for Ole Miss shortly after the 2007 season. This is the fan base Long must please, so it's no wonder he is pleading for unity. "We talk about pulling together and not apart," Long said. "We know with this program in this state, we have to pull together. We've seen what happens when we pull apart."

Long is convinced he has an elite job to offer. The construction outside the stadium suggests the next coach will have a dazzling array of resources with which to build a winning program. That new coach will still have to find a way to compete against Alabama, but remember, the Crimson Tide were the ones losing to Louisiana-Monroe five years ago. Things change, and football is cyclical. That's important to consider after two losses rocked the Arkansas program to its core. "It doesn't make what we're doing any less important or any less correct," Long said. "I think we're on the right path."

Two losses do not define a program. How that program responds to those losses can, though. At the moment, all those who call the hogs face a choice. They can wallow in the mud, or they can raise their voices together and try to make the best of an already lost season.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/andy_staples/09/19/arkansas-football-big-picture/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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Tulane's Walker moved to new facility for rehab

Written By Sepatu on Selasa, 18 September 2012 | 21.32

Tulane's Devon Walker (right) is 'alert and actively participating' in therapy following his spinal injury on Sept. 8.

Chuck Cook-US PRESSWIRE

TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- Tulane officials say seriously injured football player Devon Walker has been moved to a new facility as he continues therapy for his fractured spine.

The university released a statement Tuesday night from Walker's parents, Booker and Inez Walker. They said "we are pleased to have completed the transfer of Devon to a comprehensive in-patient rehabilitation center to continue his recovery."

The Walkers said they were grateful to doctors and staff at St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa, where their son was taken after he was injured during the Tulane-Tulsa game on Sept. 8.

They did not disclose the name of the rehabilitation center and said they appreciated "everyone's understanding of our request for privacy as we focus on his recovery."

Tulane spokesman Roger Dunaway said recently that Walker is "alert and actively participating in respiratory and other therapies that are part of his recovery."

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

19 Sep, 2012


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Georgia LB Jones expects to play against Vandy

Jarvis Jones sat out during Georgia' 56-20 win over Florida Atlantic last Saturday.

Dale Zanine-US PRESSWIRE

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -- Georgia linebacker Jarvis Jones is back at practice and expects to play when the fifth-ranked Bulldogs host Vanderbilt on Saturday.

The junior sat out last week's 56-20 victory over Florida Atlantic, allowing him to rest a groin injury. But he made it clear Tuesday that he intends to play against the Commodores.

Jones says he "ready to get out there and just pick up where I left off from."

He strained his right groin before the Missouri game, but played through the pain in perhaps the best performance of his college career - two sacks, two forced fumbles and an interception that he nearly brought back for a touchdown.

Jones won numerous defensive player of the week awards, but Georgia decided to rest him against overmatched Florida Atlantic.

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

19 Sep, 2012


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Report: Arkansas' Smith asks reporters to 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.

19 Sep, 2012


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Pelini: LB Anderson out for year with knee injury

Nebraska linebacker Zaire Anderson tore his ACL during practice last week.

Joe Robbins/Getty Images

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -- Nebraska coach Bo Pelini has announced that linebacker Zaire Anderson is out for the season because of a right knee injury.

Anderson said Tuesday that he tore his anterior cruciate ligament in practice last week but didn't know it at the time. He played with the injury while making his first start in the Cornhuskers' 42-13 win over Arkansas State.

Anderson, a transfer from Riverside (Calif.) Community College, backed up senior Alonzo Whaley at weakside linebacker the first two games. The junior made three tackles against Arkansas State.

Either freshman David Santos or Whaley will take over Anderson's spot in Saturday's game against Idaho State.

Pelini said Anderson might apply for a medical redshirt to save a season of eligibility.

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

19 Sep, 2012


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Tabor player on life support; police investigating

MCPHERSON, Kan. (AP) -- Officials at Tabor College in central Kansas say a football player is on life support and police are trying to determine how he was injured over the weekend.

Twenty-six-year-old Brandon Brown was found unresponsive early Sunday along a street in McPherson, a town about 25 miles away from the Tabor campus in Hillsboro. A Tabor spokeswoman told The Salina Journal on Tuesday that Brown has not regained consciousness at a Wichita hospital.

McPherson police have not released details about Brown's injuries or the investigation, except to say he was found unconscious at 4:10 a.m. Sunday when officers responded to a complaint about loud music.

Brown, a defensive lineman from Sacramento, Calif., transferred this fall as a red-shirt junior to the NAIA Tabor Bluejays from a California junior college.

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19 Sep, 2012


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NCAA task force will oversee $60M Penn St. fine

A 10-member task force has been named to establish guidelines for how to distribute the $60M fine Penn State will pay as part of unprecedented sanctions levied by Mark Emmert (above) and the NCAA.

AP

A 10-member task force has been named to come up with guidelines for how to distribute the record $60 million fine that Penn State will pay in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal, the NCAA said Tuesday.

The money will fund programs designed to combat child sexual abuse and help victims around the country. The task force will set policy for the endowment and hire a third-party administrator who will choose which nonprofit groups receive funding each year.

"This fund will exist, presumably, for a long, long time, and putting it together right, putting a good solid foundation under it, a thoughtful philosophy under it, is just going to mean it will be an effective, respected source of funding in this area for a long time," said task force member Nan Crouter, dean of Penn State's College of Health and Human Development.

The NCAA imposed tough sanctions on Penn State over its handling of sex-abuse allegations against Sandusky, a retired assistant football coach convicted of abusing 10 boys over 15 years.

The governing body acted swiftly following a school-sanctioned report by former FBI Director Louis Freeh that accused coach Joe Paterno and three top officials of hiding child sexual abuse allegations against Sandusky to protect the school and its powerful football program.

Paterno died in January at age 85. His family and the other school officials have all vehemently denied Freeh's allegations.

But the NCAA levied a four-year postseason ban, significant scholarship cuts and other sanctions to punish Penn State over its failure to report a serial child predator to authorities.

Penn State also agreed to pay $12 million a year for the next five years into an endowment to fund programs for the detection, prevention and treatment of child abuse.

Prominent Pennsylvania politicians including Republican Gov. Tom Corbett and House Democratic Leader Frank Dermody wanted the NCAA to keep all the funds in state. Instead, 25 percent of the annual grants will be reserved for Pennsylvania organizations. In-state groups will also receive the first round of funding.

"Recognizing that child sexual abuse is a national issue, the NCAA has determined that grants from the endowment will be available in other states as well," Penn State President Rodney Erickson said in a statement. "Penn State appreciates the commitments of the task force on this important endeavor that will help countless victims of child sexual abuse."

An NCAA spokeswoman declined comment on a timetable for the first distribution of funds.

Penn State got to name two people to the task force: Dr. Craig Hillemeier, vice dean for clinical affairs at the medical school, and Crouter, who expressed high hopes for the money.

"I'm going into it hoping that we can come up with some good strong guidelines that will mean the money goes to worthy organizations that can make the most of it," she said. "Just the existence of this fund will shine a light on this important area for years to come."

Other members of the task force include administrators from other NCAA member schools; nonprofit executives including United Way Worldwide CEO Brian Gallagher; and a representative of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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

19 Sep, 2012


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Arkansas' Wilson 'optimistic' he'll play vs. Rutgers

After being ruled out against Alabama, Tyler Wilson is 'extremely optimistic' he'll be able to play against Rutgers.

AP

FAYETTEVILE, Ark. (AP) -- Tyler Wilson had a moment before the Alabama game when he wanted to do anything but heed his doctors' orders.

Concussion or not, the Arkansas quarterback wanted to play against the No. 1 Crimson Tide.

"Give me my helmet," Wilson thought. "I don't care what anybody else says, I'm playing."

Of course, Wilson didn't play in the 52-0 drubbing at the hands of Alabama. The first-team All-Southeastern Conference quarterback couldn't overrule what he said was an absolute "no" from his doctors.

The Razorbacks (1-2) put up little fight against the Crimson Tide without Wilson, losing their second straight game and putting an early end to their preseason hopes of a national championship run. They face another difficult test at home against Rutgers (3-0) on Saturday, and Wilson is "extremely optimistic" he'll be able to play.

Wilson acknowledged for the first time Monday that a concussion that kept him out of the second half of a loss to Louisiana-Monroe and the Alabama game. Arkansas had previously referred only to a head injury, but Wilson said he suffered from headaches and other symptoms.

"I didn't feel like my 100-percent self," he said.

The senior practiced sparingly last week and even took part in warm-ups before the game against the Crimson Tide. However, he knew he hadn't been cleared by doctors and wouldn't play, viewing the throwing session as just another step in his recovery.

After bypassing the NFL draft following last season, Wilson listened to the doctors about his health - with regard to both his short- and long-term future.

"You have some of that," Wilson said. "But the deal is you've got to play football. That's why I came back. I'm not going to risk my complete health, but when I feel good enough to play and I feel good right now ... I feel a lot better, and I think it will continue to get better. I'm going to be out there on the field, period."

Rutgers coach Kyle Flood said he's preparing this week as though Wilson will play in the nonconference matchup, the schools' first meeting.

"And I think to do it any other way would be a mistake," Flood said. "He's one of the elite quarterbacks in the country. So, you don't get to be an elite quarterback just on physical talent alone. He's obviously a tremendous leader for their program, and when he steps on the field he probably makes everybody else in the huddle more confident just by his presence alone."

Wilson took part in Arkansas' practice Sunday night, running with his teammates while working to get back on the field this week against the Scarlet Knights. It was less than a day after Wilson had publicly questioned the effort of some of those teammates during an impromptu news conference following the Alabama loss, a game in which Wilson said he thought the Razorbacks "gave up."

Arkansas coach John L. Smith praised Wilson's statement and said the Razorbacks will prepare this week as though they'll have their starting quarterback against Rutgers. Smith said Arkansas will also continue to prepare redshirt freshman Brandon Allen and junior Brandon Mitchell should Wilson be unable to play.

The two were a combined 11 of 25 passing for 79 yards against Alabama, a game in which Arkansas looked like anything but the team that finished last season ranked No. 5 and with a win over Kansas State in the Cotton Bowl.

"It was good to see (Wilson) get up and talk," Smith said. "He's the spokesman of our football team. And I think he's saying nothing more than we all have to be accountable, we all have to go to the field and we all have to get our jobs done. That's something we talked about as a football team last night. We all have to be accountable. Let's go get it done. Playmakers make plays."

The native of Greenwood, Ark., said his intention wasn't to speak to the team following the loss, but rather to fans across the state.

"And I wanted everybody to know that that is not acceptable here, and going forward we are going to do the best we can," Wilson said. "I'm going to do the best I can to keep everybody together and display a much better product out there on the field. Period."

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

19 Sep, 2012


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Shaw named South Carolina's starter vs. Mizzou

Steve Spurrier announced that quarterback Connor Shaw will start for South Carolina against Missouri.

Mary Ann Chastain/Getty Images

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- There's no controversy for South Carolina's Steve Spurrier, not concerning the status of starting quarterback Connor Shaw or the Southeastern Conference's suspension of safety D.J. Swearinger.

Spurrier said Tuesday Shaw would start Saturday when the seventh-ranked Gamecocks (3-0, 1-0 SEC) face Misssouri. He also didn't take too much issue with the league's one-game suspension of Swearinger for a helmet-to-helmet hit on UAB's Patrick Hearn last week.

"Five, 10 years ago, they would call that `it's part of football,' but it's not," Spurrier said of Swearinger's hit.

Freshman T.J. Gurley will start for Swearinger, who had a 65-yard fumble return touchdown in the 49-6 victory over UAB.

"We're going to miss one of our brothers out there," Gamecocks linebacker Shaq Wilson said. "But our defense is 11 people to the ball. We just have to go out there and be able to communicate, keep guys positive."

Spurrier said Shaw will bring plenty of positives to South Carolina's offense, despite the injury to his right, throwing shoulder. The quarterback was first hurt in the Gamecocks' opener against Vanderbilt last month. He missed the next game, a 48-10 win over East Carolina, before starting against the Blazers. Shaw took another big hit on his shoulder right in the UAB game before halftime and did not return for the second half.

Shaw said afterward he had a hairline fracture in the shoulder.

Dylan Thompson has thrown for 507 yards and five touchdowns in relief of Shaw the past two games. Still, Spurrier said Shaw is ready to play against the Tigers (2-1, 0-1).

"Connor Shaw was throwing the ball around very well" Monday night, Spurrier said. "He'll start. He's fine. If there's a place for Dylan to come in the game and help us try to beat Missouri, we'll certainly consider that."

Shaw's running ability has been critical to South Carolina's rise the past two years. Despite the injury, Shaw rushed for 92 yards against Vanderbilt and led the game-clinching touchdown drive in South Carolina's 17-13 victory.

Shaw, perhaps worried about his injured shoulder, rushed only five times against UAB. Spurrier acknowledged without that dimension, the Gamecocks' offense won't be as good. Spurrier also won't alter the game plan to protect Shaw's shoulder.

"There's no question that running the ball is what Connor does, which makes him a good quarterback," Spurrier said. "So if he plays, he'll run it some. If he can't run, I don't think he's quite as effective."

Thompson doesn't have to run to be effective. He has given the Gamecocks a passing game they've rarely displayed with Shaw under center.

Still, Spurrier brushed aside any growing quarterback debate over Shaw and Thompson among the players. The two QBs are good friends who've always showed a team-first attitude, Spurrier said.

"I hope Connor feels, `Hey, Dylan can play. If I'm not doing very well, if I'm hurting a little bit, Dylan can help us go in there and win the game,"' Spurrier said "So, I think both of them hopefully feel pretty good about each other. Maybe the team is a little stronger because we have two quarterbacks who can play."

Missouri has some quarterback issues of its own.

Tigers' starter James Franklin sat out Missouri's 24-20 victory over Arizona State last week with inflammation in his shoulder. Franklin has said he's 90 percent certain he'll play in Missouri's first-ever SEC road game.

"Anybody that questions James Franklin's toughness, they have to have been in a coma for the last two years," Missouri coach Gary Pinkel said. "He's one of the toughest athletes I've ever been around."

Spurrier expects to see Franklin on the field for Missouri.

Franklin won't have to worry about Swearinger, who's had nine tackles and an interception to go along with his fumble recovery this year. The SEC determined Monday Swearinger's hit on UAB's Hearn was a "flagrant and dangerous act," worthy of the one-game suspension.

Spurrier took the high road about the incident.

"We're going to live with it and D.J. will be ready next week," the coach said. "He'll be with us on the sideline. He'll be a good teammate and hopefully help the guys that are on the field."

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

19 Sep, 2012


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After hot starts, are ND, Florida St. for real?

Everett Golson threw a 36-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter, but finished 14-of-32 in Notre Dame's upset of Michigan State.

Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Week 3 Rewind

Top 25 team review: Week 3

Top 25 team review: Week 3

Stewart Mandel: Cardinal top Trojans

Mandel: Cardinal top Trojans

Well, you knew this was coming. After a late night at Stanford Stadium recounting the Cardinal's takedown of preseason national title favorite USC, I woke up this morning to a bevy of e-mails and tweets like this one from @NikkiFree:

I FULLY expected #USC to fall. You guys in the media ram teams like USC down our throats because you WANT them to be relevant.

Hey, now. Don't go lumping me in with the masses. I did my part to warn people that the NCAA-impacted Trojans were no shoo-in to even win their own conference.

But if Nikki (if that's her real name) is right about one thing, it's this: We in the media do tend to get overexcited when a fallen power appears poised to return to glory. And by now, we all know the two annual champions of undue hype/subsequent on-field disappointment: Notre Dame and Florida State.

After eyebrow-raising performances by both, and with each facing a high-profile opponent this weekend, you might as well prepare now for a rash of "[Notre Dame or Florida State] is back" headlines should either or both prevail next Saturday.

So is this the year the buzz is actually merited? Or is this merely a prelude to slapping ourselves in the face for the umpteenth straight season?

At least for this week, the Irish deserve plenty of acclaim for their defensive clinic in a 20-3 win at No. 10 Michigan State. Notre Dame has had its share of offensive stars (Brady Quinn, Jimmy Clausen, Golden Tate, Michael Floyd) in recent years, but it hasn't fielded a truly elite defense since before some of its current players were born. Its first win in seven years over a top-10 team offered a strong case that may finally be changing.

"It's a big leap," said Irish coach Brian Kelly. "It's a signature win."

Starting with a heroic performance by senior linebacker Manti Te'o (12 tackles, two pass breakups, a sack and a fumble recovery), who tragically lost both his girlfriend (to leukemia) and his grandmother within a 24-hour span last week, the Irish limited Spartans star Le'Veon Bell to 77 yards on 19 carries and allowed just 237 total yards. The game marked Michigan State's worst scoring output at home in 21 years.

While Kelly was hired largely for his Cincinnati teams' offensive prowess, the third-year coach made defense his top recruiting priority upon his arrival -- and it shows. Even after touted freshman defensive end Aaron Lynch transferred to USF during the offseason, Notre Dame finally boasts the type of disruptive defensive linemen (defensive ends Stephon Tuitt and Sheldon Day, nose guard Louis Nix) that were few and far between under Bob Davie, Tyrone Willingham and Charlie Weis.

"Our defense continues to be the group that we committed to in building when we started this process," said Kelly. "They're starting to get to that level that can play against anybody."

Now, the requisite caveats. Michigan State did not come in as an offensive juggernaut, as first-year starting quarterback Andrew Maxwell also struggled in the opener against Boise State. The Spartans' hallmark was their defense, and outside of an early 36-yard touchdown pass to John Goodman, Irish quarterback Everett Golson largely struggled (14-of-32 for 178 yards). And Notre Dame's inexperienced secondary suffered a significant blow when senior safety Jamoris Slaughter went down with a season-ending Achilles injury Saturday night.

The Irish -- which jumped from No. 20 to No. 11 in Sunday's AP poll -- play another primetime showcase against Michigan on Saturday night. After three straight last-second heartbreakers at the hands of Tate Forcier and Denard Robinson, Kelly's program would take another important step by beating the Wolverines. But in light of Alabama's season-opening rout of Michigan, a win should not merit national adulation. Those chances will come later this season, when the Irish take on No. 9 Stanford (Oct. 13) and No. 6 Oklahoma (Oct. 27).

No. 4 Florida State, on the other hand, requires no such patience. Its toughest test to date -- and possibly the highest-ranked opponent it will face all season -- comes Saturday when No. 10 Clemson visits Tallahassee.

Following a pair of tuneups against Murray State and Savannah State, the 'Noles finally faced a legitimate opponent last weekend in Wake Forest. Florida State proceeded to treat the Demon Deacons just the same as Murray State and Savannah State in a 52-0 whitewashing.

Wake Forest, mind you, had won four of its last six meetings with FSU and was coming off a 28-27 win over North Carolina. Deacons quarterback Tanner Price went 27-of-38 for 327 yards in that game against the Tar Heels. On Saturday, however, FSU's touted defense was even better than advertised. Relentless pressure from 'Noles defensive ends Tank Carradine (2.5 sacks) and Bjoern Werner (1.5 sacks) helped hold Price to 8-of-22 for 82 yards, and Wake managed just 126 total yards on the day.

Meanwhile, running back Chris Thompson -- who suffered a season-ending injury in the same game last year, breaking two vertebrae -- made a dazzling return, breaking second-quarter touchdown runs of 74 and 80 yards.

"It was impressive watching them play today," Wake Forest coach Jim Grobe said of the 'Noles. "This is a really, really special football team."

On Saturday, Florida State's loaded defense will look to shut down Clemson's explosive offense, which has now regained the services of suspended star Sammy Watkins (he had a 58-yard run against Furman). But the real intrigue may be whether quarterback E.J. Manuel, whose services have barely been required thus far, can play a consistent game against a BCS bowl-caliber opponent.

From a national standpoint, beating Clemson doesn't hold the same water as beating Alabama or LSU, but thanks to those ever-generous preseason rankings, the 'Noles are already within two poll spots of Les Miles' Tigers. If FSU wins Saturday, it may essentially be "back" before we know for certain whether that's accurate.

If nothing else, perhaps the 'Noles will manage to ride that momentum longer than USC did.

Stanford's secondary shines

No. 21 Stanford topples No. 2 USC
Source: SI
Stewart Mandel analyzes the Cardinal's BCS-landscape-altering 21-14 victory over the Trojans.

The last time we saw Stanford face a top-10 opponent before Saturday, Oklahoma State quarterback Brandon Weeden and receiver Justin Blackmon shredded the Cardinal's secondary in last January's Fiesta Bowl. Under Jim Harbaugh and David Shaw, Stanford has produced NFL-caliber talent at almost every position, but defensive back remained its notable Achilles' heel.

That being the case, the most impressive aspect of the Cardinal's 21-14 upset of USC was the spectacular job their new-look secondary did containing Marqise Lee and Robert Woods.

"Our defensive backs played as well tonight as they ever have since I've been here," said Shaw. "Those are the two best wide receivers in the nation and we held them to 254 [passing] yards."

Stanford lost three starters from last year's unit, including veteran safeties Michael Thomas and Delano Howell. Their replacements are less experienced but more athletic. Save for a 49-yard first-quarter catch and run by USC freshman Nelson Agholor, cornerbacks Terrence Brown, Barry Browning and Wayne Lyons, safeties Jordan Richards and Ed Reynolds and nickelbacks Usua Amanam and Ronnie Harris did a nice job keeping Lee and Woods in front of them. While it certainly helped that Matt Barkley was frequently under duress and was relegated to mostly short-yardage throws, Lee and Woods have broken more than a few of those for touchdowns. For the most part, Stanford's defensive backs wrapped up USC's receiving corps.

"We tried to make them one-dimensional and throw the ball," said Shaw. "That sounds crazy to put it in the hands of that quarterback and those receivers, but we knew we could play smart, sound football and keep those receivers in front of us."

With quarterback Josh Nunes still growing into his role, Stanford may need to win more games behind the strength of its defense than during the Andrew Luck era. Saturday's performance should give the Cardinal confidence as they prep for a season-long gauntlet of facing Pac-12 aerial offenses, a slate that continues a week from Thursday at Washington and quarterback Keith Price.

17 Sep, 2012


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Andy Staples: Stanford, Notre Dame, Florida rise, but how do they fit in big picture?

Last week: 1

Nick Saban wasn't pleased with how some of his players prepared for the Crimson Tide's pasting of Arkansas. Which players? The backups. Perhaps the second-teamers didn't think they'd see much playing time against a team that started the year in the top 10, but The Process accepts no excuses. Besides, Alabama's backups should probably expect to play plenty in the coming weeks. With Florida Atlantic and Ole Miss coming to Tuscaloosa, Alabama's second-stringers are going to get a workout. "You've got young guys that have to learn by doing it, and, hopefully, they'll learn," Saban told reporters Saturday. "It does them good when they get their butt chewed out a little bit, too."

Last game: Beat Arkansas, 52-0
Next game: Saturday vs. Florida Atlantic

 

Last week: 2

Alex Cassara, an LSU football beat writer for student paper the Daily Reveille, posted this photo Monday -- shortly after authorities cleared the entire LSU campus because of a bomb threat. This pretty much explains everything you need to know about the school that almost annually produces a football team loaded with mutant swamp people who feast on opponents' souls. Did we mention Auburn needed overtime to beat Louisiana-Monroe Saturday? This weekend's game telecast deserves an R rating.

Last game: Beat Idaho, 63-14
Next game: Saturday at Auburn

 

Last week: 4

One of the best features of Luke Winn's College Basketball Power Rankings last season was the Aaron Craft Turnometer, which measured how often Ohio State's point guard forced opponents to cough up the ball. I always give credit when I blatantly rip off someone, so thank you, Mr. Winn, for inspiring the De'Anthony Thomas Yards-Per-Touch-O-Meter. When we evaluate running backs, we tend to look at rushing stats only. Such a narrow measure would be grossly unfair to Thomas, the most exciting player in college football. While he has rushed for 228 yards in Oregon's first three games, that doesn't even begin to tell the story. First, those 228 yards came on only 13 carries. Now that you're done cramming your eyeballs back into their sockets, consider this: Thomas also leads the Ducks in receiving yardage. Basically, if your punt-return numbers bring your yards-per-touch average down, you are a bad mamma jamma. We'll see if Thomas can keep up his Ludicrous Speed-pace -- uniform idea: plaid jerseys to simulate Thomas' hyperspace jumps -- against Pac-12 competition, but at the moment, the numbers are nothing short of astounding.

Last game: Beat Tennessee Tech, 63-14
Next game: Saturday vs. Arizona

 

Last week: 8

No, Wake Forest is not an elite team. Not even close. So why did the Seminoles get the big bump after pounding the Demon Deacons? Because in the past few years, this was the type of game Florida State wouldn't have taken seriously. The Seminoles would have struggled early, and they might have won or they might not. Saturday, Florida State was dialed in completely. The defense will have to maintain that level this week against Clemson, which has more playmakers than any other team on Florida State's schedule.

Last game: Beat Wake Forest, 52-0
Next game: Saturday vs. Clemson

 

Last week: 7

Vanderbilt coach James Franklin made nice Monday, joking that he and Georgia defensive coordinator Todd Grantham vacationed together over the summer. But don't be surprised if some lingering animosity remains after the two screamed it out at the end of last year's meeting in Nashville. Georgia enters a critical stretch here. With one SEC East win (Missouri) under their belts, the Bulldogs face a three-week run of division opponents (Vanderbilt, Tennessee, South Carolina). Each is better than the last, but the Dawgs can't afford to look ahead at any point. The first two have the talent to pull the upset if Georgia gets sloppy.

Last game: Beat Florida Atlantic, 56-20
Next game: Saturday vs. Vanderbilt

 

Last week: 6

Do a Google News search on West Virginia quarterback Geno Smith, and the word Heisman pops up a lot. People, it's September. He's played Marshall and James Madison. Let's let Smith play a BCS AQ-conference opponent before we book his trip to New York. What? His first AQ-conference opponent is Maryland? Strike that. Let's let Smith play a Big 12 opponent before we book his trip to New York. That said, Smith looks awfully comfortable in his second season in coach Dana Holgorsen's offense. Smith's touchdown-to-incompletion ratio (currently 9:9) puts him in RGIII-in-2011 territory. If he can keep it up, he may be watching the skaters at Rockefeller Plaza in early December.

Last game: Beat James Madison, 42-12
Next game: Saturday vs. Maryland

 

Last week: 20

The Cardinal get a week off, which probably eliminates the possibility of a post-USC letdown. Unlike a lot of people, I'm of the mind that we didn't overrate the Trojans so much as we underrated the Cardinal. Yes, Andrew Luck was a once-in-a-generation quarterback, but we neglected to look at the whole picture. This is a program that has played in two consecutive BCS bowls. This is a program that specializes in a bruising, clock-eating power running game. This is a program that gets after the opposing quarterback. Given those characteristics, we should have given the Cardinal the benefit of the doubt even after they lost Luck.

Last game: Beat USC, 21-14
Next game: Sept. 27 at Washington

 

Last week: 9

The Gamecocks will play Saturday without safety D.J. Swearinger, who was suspended by the SEC Monday for a helmet-to-helmet hit on UAB's Patrick Hearn. "I thought it was a lot similar to the hit that [South Carolina tight end] Justice Cunningham took at Vanderbilt where the kid just ran in there and tried to break it up," Gamecocks coach Steve Spurrier told reporters on a Sunday conference call. "That's sort of a new rule that came in this year. They're doing everything they can to protect against concussions." On Monday, the SEC released a statement to The State newspaper in Columbia saying Vanderbilt's Andre Hal was not suspended for that hit because, unlike the Swearinger hit, Hal did not appear to launch himself headfirst into the receiver. If leagues are going to retroactively suspend players for these hits, they had better get ready to explain every headshot that doesn't draw a suspension. The emphasis on safety is a good thing, but it needs to be applied fairly. Also, the leagues still aren't addressing a bigger issue. While cracking down on headshots is admirable, what about the repeated head-to-head collisions along the line that the research shows are just as dangerous over time as the highlight-reel slobberknockers in the secondary? When a 300-pound center and a 320-pound nose tackle playing a zero technique slam heads 75 times a game, that's a problem. But addressing that issue would require some serious conversations about the manner in which the sport will be played in the future, and it doesn't seem as if anyone in charge at any level of football is ready to have those conversations yet.

Last game: Beat UAB, 49-6
Next game: Saturday vs. Missouri

 

Last week: 11

Do not let the women in sundresses fool you, Longhorns. Ole Miss is not a representative SEC team. Scoring 66 points against the Rebels' defense does not mean you should expect to hang 50 on everyone in the Big 12. But it should give everyone in Austin confidence heading into the conference schedule that Mack Brown wasn't kidding when he said the offense had improved. For the first time since Colt McCoy left, Texas has a quarterback (David Ash) everyone can rally around, some legitimate playmakers and a line that can actually push a defense off the line of scrimmage. Add that to the Big 12's best defense, and the optimism is justified.

Last game: Beat Ole Miss, 66-31
Next game: Sept. 29 at Oklahoma State

 

Last week: 3

Maybe the Trojans didn't put one over on the NCAA, after all. Just when it seemed USC might field a national title contender in spite of Committee on Infractions-mandated scholarship reductions, a depth issue cost USC in a key conference game. The loss of center Khaled Holmes during the Syracuse game did serious damage to USC's line, and Stanford's pass rushers exploited that weakness all night, sacking Matt Barkley four times. It's unfair to blame Holmes' replacement, Cyrus Hobbi, for all the issues. But it is fair to wonder if things might have been different had USC been able to carry 85 players on scholarship. Some of the players USC declined to recruit because of the sanctions were undoubtedly offensive linemen. Those linemen -- now at other schools -- might have been good enough to win a job, or they might have pushed the starters to be better. This doesn't excuse USC's loss, but it does merit consideration.

Last game: Lost to Stanford, 21-14
Next game: Saturday vs. Cal

 

Last week: 10

Landry Jones threw for a school-record 505 yards, and the Sooners sacked Collin Klein seven times in last year's 58-17 win at Kansas State. It was a perfect-storm game for both teams: Oklahoma was never as good the rest of the way, and Kansas State was never as bad. The Sooners expect a more representative performance as each team opens Big 12 play. "I think they are as dangerous as anybody in the conference," senior defensive end R.J. Washington told SoonerSports.com. "You have a quarterback that rushes for 22 carries in one game. The first two games they averaged 51 points a game. We played them last year so I know how good they are. People can say what they want, but we know."

Last game: Beat Florida A&M, 69-13
Next game: Saturday vs. Kansas State

 

Last week: 21

The most shocking thing about Notre Dame's win in East Lansing was how much more athletic the Fighting Irish seemed than the Spartans -- a team that is extremely athletic in its own right. This week, Notre Dame will face a premier athlete in Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson. If the Fighting Irish are indeed faster, then this should be an easier game to win than last week's. Containing Robinson on the ground and forcing him to throw should create turnovers. I realize that last year this created touchdowns for Michigan, but it's difficult to imagine Notre Dame's coverage being any worse than it was when Robinson spent the fourth quarter playing the world's most-watched game of 500.

Last game: Beat Michigan State, 20-3
Next game: Saturday vs. Michigan

 

Last week: 12

Though Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops joked Monday that he had scrapped the package, Kansas State defenders should know exactly what to do if the Sooners send in backup quarterback Blake Bell near the goal line. Oklahoma used the Belldozer package late last season to punch in touchdowns, and Stoops' staff got the idea from Stoops' former boss, Bill Snyder. Stoops admitted as much to Klein during Big 12 media days. "I said, 'I saw you running all those plays, and I got a guy just like that ... we started running all your plays,'" Stoops told The Oklahoman. "He started laughing and he said, 'I saw all those plays. They looked just like ours.'"

Last game: Beat North Texas, 35-21
Next game: Saturday at Oklahoma

 

Last week: 16

Receiver Sammy Watkins returned from suspension with 110 yards on five offensive touches, including a 52-yard touchdown run. Before I break out the graphic design skills and create a Sammy Watkins Yards-Per-Touch-O-Meter, let's see how he performs against Florida State's filthy-good defense. Last year, Watkins torched the Seminoles for 141 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Watkins, fellow receiver Nuke Hopkins and tailback Andre Ellington will all need to play their best if the Tigers want to beat Florida State for the seventh time in 10 seasons and take command of the ACC Atlantic Division race.

Last game: Beat Furman, 41-7
Next game: Saturday at Florida State

 

Last week: NR

Where did that come from? For the first time since Tim Tebow graduated, Florida appeared to have playmakers on offense. Watching receiver Frankie Hammond Jr. -- who also delivered a critical block to help seal the Gators' win the previous Saturday at Texas A&M -- wind his way through the Tennessee defense for a 75-yard touchdown felt like a flashback to the Steve Spurrier era. Florida definitely seems better than last season, but heed this warning: We won't really know anything about the Gators until LSU comes to Gainesville Oct. 6. The Aggies and Volunteers are also unknowns, so it's difficult to judge what those two wins mean. An October that includes LSU, South Carolina and Georgia will define Florida's season. Destroying Kentucky on Saturday might be fun, but it won't provide much clarity.

Last game: Beat Tennessee, 37-20
Next game: Saturday vs. Kentucky

 

Last week: 13

The Bears trailed Sam Houston State by 10 points at halftime. If they start that slowly against Louisiana-Monroe, the Warhawks might step on their throats. Louisiana-Monroe is a national darling after upsetting Arkansas on Sept. 8 and taking Auburn to overtime at Jordan-Hare Stadium Saturday. The Warhawks aren't afraid of anyone, and a home game in front of a national television audience on a Friday night offers the perfect conditions for an upset. "It will give us a chance to bond as a team and to grow together, to get into a hostile environment and rely on each other," Baylor coach Art Briles said on Monday's Big 12 teleconference. "It will help prepare us down the road as we get into Big 12 play." Typically, power conference coaches are just saying that as they prepare to play a Sun Belt opponent. Briles meant every word.

Last game: Beat Sam Houston State, 48-23
Next game: Friday at Louisiana-Monroe

 

Last Week: 15

The Buckeyes might be the class of the Big Ten, which isn't saying much at the moment. Ohio State coach Urban Meyer was mortified watching his defense Saturday against Cal. This season, the Buckeyes have allowed 20 or more yards on 13 separate plays. Considering the quality of the competition -- remember, Cal lost to Nevada earlier -- that's particularly troubling. "That is the most alarming thing," Meyer told reporters Monday. "I've watched Ohio State's defense for a long time, and I can't remember a defense I've been around that's given up this many [big plays]. We've got to stop, or we'll lose a game." Fortunately for Ohio State, quarterback Braxton Miller continues to shine. Miller threw for 249 yards and four touchdowns and rushed for 75 more and a score against the Bears.

Last game: Beat Cal, 35-28
Next game: Saturday vs. UAB

 

Last week: 14

Horned Frogs coach Gary Patterson is treating his team's gaffes at Kansas as a particularly ugly set of anomalies. TCU left a ton of points on the board by committing three red-zone turnovers, but Patterson has elected not to dwell on those miscues. He considers them uncharacteristic and best forgotten. "I felt fortunate that we had won a ballgame, but I'm not making a big deal out of it. Those guys have played a lot of football," Patterson told The Dallas Morning News. "They have never showed that it's been a recurring thing. It happened in one ballgame. For us, sometimes if you keep talking about those kinds of things, they keep happening." The good news? Those mistakes happened against Kansas and not against any of the Frogs' other Big 12 foes. Any of the other eight would have handed TCU a loss under those circumstances. Instead, TCU is 1-0 in its new league.

Last game: Beat Kansas, 20-6
Next game: Saturday vs. Virginia

 

Last week: 5

The Spartans are my reach of the year. I misjudged them badly. I thought they could win the Big Ten and potentially challenge for a national title. Instead, they got outplayed at home by Notre Dame. Even if the Fighting Irish turn out to be very good, that doesn't bode well for the rest of the season. Of course, somebody still has to win the Big Ten title, and Ohio State isn't eligible.

Last game: Lost to Notre Dame, 20-3
Next game: Saturday vs. Eastern Michigan

 

Last week: 19

Before the season, this seemed like the point where Notre Dame might succumb to the rigors of a tough schedule. Instead, it's Michigan that could be staring at the possibility of needing to win a Big Ten title to play in a BCS bowl. Michigan got whipped on both lines of scrimmage against Alabama, and while no one except LSU is as good as the Crimson Tide in the trenches, the fact that Fighting Irish pushed around Michigan State's lines should give the Wolverines pause. Brady Hoke said forcing turnovers will be a point of emphasis this week, and it should be. The Wolverines might not be able to go toe-to-toe with the Irish and win, so they'll have to make their own breaks.

Last game: Beat UMass, 63-13
Next game: Saturday at Notre Dame

 

Last week: 22

Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez makes the genesis of the zone-read concept -- which happened when he coached at tiny Glenville State -- sound like a happy accident. He doesn't give himself enough credit. Rodriguez is the godfather of a schematic tweak that provided the foundation for the offenses run by some of the nation's best coaches. One of those is Oregon's Chip Kelly, who has taken the basic tenets of Rodriguez's offense and elevated them to an ethereal plane. Saturday will feel like Obi-wan Kenobi versus Luke Skywalker. Not Star Wars Luke, but Return of the Jedi Luke.

Last game: Beat South Carolina State, 56-0
Next game: Saturday at Oregon

 

Last Week: 24

Why is Louisville visiting Florida International? Take a look at the Cardinals' two-deep depth chart, and the answer is obvious. Sixteen players on the first or second team are from Florida. Most of that group comes from South Florida, which has been a goldmine for Louisville coach Charlie Strong since he took over prior to the 2010 season. The group includes quarterback Teddy Bridgewater (Miami Northwestern), receiver Eli Rogers (Miami Northwestern) and cornerback Andrew Johnson (Miami Southridge). This gives a lot of potential Louisville recruits a chance to see the Cardinals play without having to board a plane.

Last game: Beat North Carolina, 39-34
Next game: Saturday at Florida International

 

Last week: 25

It's odd that a hurricane that originated in the Atlantic Ocean would affect the Oregon State-UCLA game, but Isaac, the storm that made landfall in Louisiana earlier this month, will do just that. The hurricane kept Nicholls State from preparing for its season opener against Oregon State and forced the postponement of the game. Oregon State beat Wisconsin the following week and then had a bye. So Bruins coach Jim Mora has only one Beavers game from this season to study, while Oregon State coach Mike Riley has three games worth of UCLA film to use while formulating a gameplan. UCLA has shown most of its cards, but Mora won't know until kickoff whether the Beavers did anything specifically for Wisconsin or whether the win against the Badgers was representative of how this group will play. Mora hopes the latter isn't the case. "I don't know if I want to see more than one game tape the way they played against Wisconsin," Mora joked to the Los Angeles Times.

Last game: Beat Houston, 37-6
Next game: Saturday vs. Oregon State

 

Last week: NR

Congratulations to the Wildcats for being the only team in the six BCS automatic qualifying conferences to beat three fellow AQ opponents in the first three weeks. Of course, those opponents were Syracuse, Vanderbilt and Boston College, but the very thought of an AQ-conference team scheduling this way is commendable. Now, on to South Dakota week.

Last game: Beat Boston College, 22-13
Next game: Saturday vs. South Dakota

 

Last week: NR

It's difficult to rank a team with a loss this early in the season, but Missouri's win against Arizona State -- while playing backup quarterback Corbin Berkstresser -- combined with the way the Tigers played Georgia for three quarters is enough to merit cracking the Top 25. If the Gamecocks are anywhere near as good as I've suggested they are here, they should beat Missouri. But if the Tigers learned anything about playing in the SEC from their debut against the Bulldogs, they should be able to put it to use this weekend in the conference's original Columbia. A win against South Carolina would put Missouri in the thick of the SEC East race. A loss probably means the Tigers can forget a trip to Atlanta in their first year in the league.

Last game: Beat Arizona State, 24-20
Next game: Saturday at South Carolina

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/andy_staples/09/18/college-football-power-rankings-week-3/index.html?xid=si_ncaaf
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