Monday, October 26, 2009

College Football Monday Wrap-UP


All About The Journey
www.espn.com
The college football played Saturday embodied the wisdom found in self-help books and coaching manuals. You know, the one about the journey being more important than the destination. When the day concluded, only one of the top 15 teams had lost. Ho, meet hum. Seven teams began the day undefeated. They ended it that way, too. In the end, nothing much changed.
Try telling that to fans in Tuscaloosa and Iowa City. No. 2 Alabama and No. 6 Iowa did not win until each team made a play with the clock on :00. Try selling that analysis to No. 1 Florida and No. 7 USC, which got pushed to the end by conference opponents who seemed to know just how to probe their vulnerabilities.
In the end, only No. 10 Miami lost, 40-37 in overtime, to Clemson. That seemed unlikely on a Saturday when eight of the top 13 teams in the BCS standings played on the road. No. 8 TCU asserted itself with a 38-7 crushing of No. 16 BYU. The Horned Frogs' victory would have stood out on its own merits.
But given the way that other top teams struggled, TCU's dominance of a ranked team indicates that No. 4 Boise State may have trouble holding on to its status as the top wannabe among the non-automatic-bid teams.
Crimson Tide defensive tackle Terrence Cody blocked his second field goal attempt of the fourth quarter on the final play of the game, saving a 12-10 defeat of longtime rival Tennessee. Cody's block arrested what had been a stunning reversal over the last three minutes of the game for the 8-0 Crimson Tide.
Tennessee forced Heisman candidate Mark Ingram to lose a fumble for the first time in his college career, scored a touchdown, recovered the onside kick and nearly escaped with a game that Alabama had dominated. Instead, Cody made another play, and the Tide escaped. If any team ever needed an off week, it's this one.
Iowa's 15-13, last-play defeat of Michigan State smelled nothing like escape. Ricky Stanzi's fourth-down, 7-yard touchdown pass became an instant legend. If Dr. Seuss ever had written a sports book, he would have named the hero Marvin McNutt. The Hawkeyes receiver made a great move at the line and got open on an inside slant.
Every championship team has one game that it wins almost in spite of itself -- Tennessee's hand-of-God fumble recovery against Arkansas in 1998; Nebraska's foot-of-God reception against Missouri in 1997. If you're an optimist, Alabama and Iowa had their moments Saturday. If you're a pessimist, both teams have offensive problems too great to think that a crystal football awaits them.



Mountain Man

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The noise thundering through the stadium had changed. The confident roar heard all afternoon had morphed into a different sound.
Still deafening. But now unmistakably desperate.
Alabama led 12-10 but was on the verge of losing everything -- a game it had controlled, a season it had dominated, a national championship it coveted. Hated rival and major underdog Tennessee had risen from the dead in the final 3½ minutes and, after a stunning sequence of events, was a 44-yard field goal away from inflicting one of the most painful losses in Crimson Tide history.
Anxiety was rampant in the stands at Bryant-Denny Stadium. On the front row, a family of four suffered together. The gray-haired father in the crimson pullover hugged his arms to his body, almost folding into himself. His wife sat down, face set in stone. On her right, their two houndstooth-clad daughters nervously shook their crimson pompons.
They were a single swing of Daniel Lincoln's right leg from devastation.
"That's how fragile a season can be," Alabama coach Nick Saban said.
And that's when Mount Cody put himself on Alabama's Mount Rushmore of heroic defensive performances.


Tebow Left Speechless

STARKVILLE, Miss. -- There were a couple of firsts for Florida quarterback Tim Tebow on Saturday night at Scott Field, neither one the kind we've grown accustomed to from the Gators' record-setting quarterback.
He threw two interceptions that were returned for touchdowns by Mississippi State freshman Johnathan Banks, the first one putting the Bulldogs right back in the game when it looked like the Gators were about to take command at the end of the first half.
The second pick was even more inexplicable. Tebow was trying to throw out of his own end zone with less than four minutes to play and the game already in hand when he was hit by Mississippi State's Pernell McPhee, and the ball fluttered right to Banks.
And then after the game, which No. 1 Florida hung on and won 29-19 despite repeated woes in the red zone and a determined effort by Dan Mullen's Bulldogs, Tebow declined to talk to the media for the first time in his career.
At least, the first time when he was healthy enough to talk to the media after a game.
Several Florida officials were asked about Tebow's availability, but they said he opted not to come down and speak with reporters and was already on the bus.
So all the way around, it wasn't one of Tebow's better performances, especially for a guy who's been showered with positive publicity throughout his career.


All Clear Now?

As long as Miami, Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech kept winning, the ACC Coastal Division was headed for nightmare tiebreaking scenarios. As coach Lee Corso would say on "GameDay," "Not so fast, my friends." Clemson's OT win in Miami over the 10th-ranked Hurricanes cleared up the picture in not only the Coastal Division, but the Tigers' own Atlantic Division as well.

Coastal Division: With Miami's (2-2) loss, Georgia Tech (5-1), Virginia Tech (3-1), Virginia (2-1) and Duke (yes, Duke at 2-1) all have one conference loss. The Yellow Jackets have already beaten Virginia Tech and Virginia and have Duke and Wake Forest left to play. Wins in those final two conference games would send Georgia Tech packing for Tampa and its first berth in the ACC title game.

Atlantic Division: Clemson put itself in position for its first trip to the ACC title game. The Tigers (3-2) are tied with Boston College (3-2) and a half-game ahead of Wake Forest (2-2). The Tigers have already beaten both teams, so wins over FSU, NC State and Virginia will give Clemson the ACC Atlantic Division title. Not bad for a team that started the season with losses in three of its first five games.

Long way to go, but the ACC is currently looking at Georgia Tech versus Clemson in Tampa, Fla., for the ACC title. Back in September, Georgia Tech won a thriller between the teams on a field goal with 57 seconds left.




College football remains without a dominant team.
www.rivals.com
Alabama, Florida and Texas seem to be a cut above everyone else. Cincinnati, Iowa and USC also remain in the hunt. Boise State? Not so much. Look for the Broncos to sink in the rankings as they notch unimpressive win after unimpressive win. And LSU (against Alabama) and Oregon (USC) could move into contention with big wins in coming weeks.
There is another theme among the teams in contention to play in the BCS title game: great defense.
Entering Saturday's games, Alabama's defense ranked No. 1 in the nation. Florida was No. 2, Texas was No. 6, USC was No. 9, Oregon was No. 15, Iowa was No. 22, LSU was No. 35 and Cincinnati was No. 36.
Knowing that, maybe we should focus on the top defenders on these teams as Heisman candidates, guys such as Rolando McClain of Alabama. Joe Haden of Florida and Earl Thomas of Texas. A defender won't win the Heisman, but we can expect a mad scramble to the BCS title game.

Top 5 Contenders

1. Alabama. In the past two weeks, the Crimson Tide have had to survive fourth-quarter scares to secure home wins over South Carolina and Tennessee. Alabama is getting by on suffocating defense. And this week, it needed two blocked field goals to hold on. How much longer can this last? Maybe all the way to the BCS title game, as the Crimson Tide should cruise past its last tough foe (LSU) and into the SEC title game against Florida.

2. Florida. The Gators march on in lackluster style. Like Alabama, Florida is built on defense. But the Gators' offense seems even more limited since quarterback Tim Tebow came back from a concussion suffered in a win at Kentucky. Since then, Florida has beaten LSU (13-3), Arkansas (23-20) and Mississippi State (29-19). And Tebow hasn't been Tebow, completing 39 of 63 passes for 518 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions and rushing 66 times for 195 yards with one touchdown over the past three games. The Gators need to be wary of a game at South Carolina on Nov. 14.

3. Texas. Sure, the Longhorns have a middling offense, but the defense is dynamite. Of all the elite unbeaten teams, the Longhorns have the best chance to finish perfect. If Texas wins at Oklahoma State next week, the Longhorns should cruise with remaining games against UCF, Baylor, Kansas and Texas A&M.

4. Iowa. Some wanted to pick the Hawkeyes to win the Big Ten but were scared by a schedule that included games on the road against Penn State, Wisconsin, Michigan State and Ohio State. Well, Iowa has won at three of those venues; the game with Ohio State is on Nov. 14.

5. Cincinnati. The Bearcats showed their resilience Saturday by winning with quarterback Tony Pike out. That's nothing new for Cincinnati, which had to start four quarterbacks last season because of injury and still won the Big East. There still is a visit from West Virginia and a season-ending game at Pittsburgh.

6. USC. The Trojans are beginning to come to life on offense behind true freshman quarterback Matt Barkley. In a win at Notre Dame last week, Barkley threw for 380 yards. And the Trojans kept rolling Saturday, outlasting Oregon State 42-36. Maybe USC was looking ahead to its game at Oregon next week, the Trojans' toughest remaining game.

Miami wakes up from BCS dreams
When the initial BCS standings were released last Sunday, Miami was the top-ranked ACC team with a No. 10 ranking.
Randy Shannon's job may be safe but his BCS dreams may be over for this season.
It was time to start dreaming big.
Miami was 5-1 overall, and 2-1 in the ACC. Beat Clemson, and many felt the Hurricanes could finish 11-1 and earn a BCS bowl berth either as ACC champ or as an at-large entrant.
It made sense. Miami already had survived the toughest four-game start of any team in the nation, posting a 3-1 record with wins over Florida State, Georgia Tech and Oklahoma and a loss at Virginia Tech.
What was left after the visit from Clemson? Wake Forest, Virginia, North Carolina, Duke and USF.
But Saturday's 40-37 overtime loss to Clemson has changed all of that. Miami's loss likely will cost it a shot at winning the ACC Atlantic Division. In fact, Miami likely will end up third in the division, behind Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech.
And the defeat delays what looked like a breakthrough season under third-year coach Randy Shannon.
The Hurricanes' offense rolled up 434 yards against a Clemson defense that had been among the best in the ACC in a back-and-forth game that had nine lead changes in the final three quarters. But Hurricanes quarterback Jacory Harris was undone by three interceptions and three sacks. One of Harris' picks was returned for a touchdown, and Miami also allowed Clemson to run back a kickoff for a touchdown.
The Hurricanes had a 34-31 lead before Clemson kicked a late field goal to tie the game and force overtime. After Miami kicked a field goal in its first possession, Clemson quarterback Kyle Parker tossed a 26-yard scoring strike to Jacoby Ford on third-and-11 for the 40-37 win.
Miami has made great strides in its third season under Shannon. And that's good, because many felt he entered this season under pressure. Over his first two seasons, Miami was 12-13, including a 6-10 mark in ACC play, with one bowl appearance.
Unhappy with his offense, Shannon fired coordinator Patrick Nix and hired Mark Whipple. It has proven to be a key hire that likely has saved Shannon's job.
Shannon wanted a pro-style attack, and Whipple has been just the guy to do it. He arrived after stints in the NFL as an assistant with the Pittsburgh Steelers and Philadelphia Eagles, where he worked with quarterbacks Ben Roethlisberger and Donovan McNabb.
Miami entered the Clemson game with the No. 6 offense in the ACC (385.7 ypg). But more than anything, Whipple has played a big role in the development of Harris, who was 17 of 27 passing for 259 yards with two touchdowns against Clemson.
Miami's loss makes the ACC race more muddled. Clemson looks to be in good shape to win the Atlantic Division thanks to a victory over Boston College, while Georgia Tech looks primed to win the Coastal. Those two teams already have played this season, with Georgia Tech taking a 30-27 decision in Atlanta on Sept. 10.


WINNERS

Houston Nutt: For the second year in a row, Nutt beat his former employer as Ole Miss topped Arkansas 30-17. The Rebels' offense finally came to life, with quarterback Jevan Snead completing 22 of 33 passes for a career-high 332 yards.
Houston Nutt defeated Arkansas for the sesond time since leaving the Razorbacks.
Duke: The 17-13 win over Maryland was the Blue Devils' second in a row over an ACC foe after they toppled North Carolina State last week. The last time Duke posted consecutive ACC wins was 1994, which also happens to be the last time the Blue Devils played in a bowl.

Clemson: By winning 40-37 in overtime at Miami, the Tigers look to be in the driver's seat in the ACC Coastal Division.

Colt McCoy: Finally, a Heisman-like effort for the Texas quarterback, who was 26 of 31 passing for 268 yards with three touchdowns in a 41-7 rout at Missouri.

Tennessee: Yes, the Vols lost 12-10 at Alabama, but program is making strides under rookie coach Lane Kiffin. Tennessee outgained Alabama 318-233 and held the Tide without an offensive touchdown for the first time since 2007. At 3-4, the Vols have legit bowl hopes.

TCU: An emphatic 38-7 win at BYU makes it loud and clear -- the Horned Frogs are the nation's best non-Big Six school. Anyone who ranks Boise State ahead of TCU should be ashamed of themselves.

Texas A&M: The Aggies' 52 points were the most they ever scored against Texas Tech, and A&M showed it still has life after getting drubbed by Kansas State.

Ball State: Finally! The Cardinals ended a nine-game losing streak that stretched to last season with a come-from-behind victory over winless Eastern Michigan. It was coach Stan Parrish's first win in 23 years -- a winless streak that covered 35 games in a row. He last won as a head coach when he was at Kansas State, which he led past Kansas on Oct. 18, 1986.

Iowa State: The Cyclones' 9-7 win at Nebraska was the school's first in Lincoln since 1977. And Iowa State did it with backups at quarterback and tailback. The victory was first-year Iowa State coach Paul Rhoads' fifth as Cyclone coach, matching the two-year total of Gene Chizik, who left Iowa State to take the Auburn job after going 2-10 last season.

Georgia Tech: The Yellow Jackets scored their first win at Virginia since 1990, when Tech won a share of the national title. The Jackets used 362 rushing yards to score a 34-9 win puts them in the drivers' seat in the ACC Coastal Division.

Kansas State: Don't look now, but the Wildcats sit atop the Big 12 North with a 3-1 record after a solid 20-6 win over Colorado. It's K-State's first 3-1 Big 12 start since 2000. How did this team lose to Louisiana-Lafayette and get beat 66-14 by Texas Tech?


The Heisman 5
1. QB Tim Tebow, Florida
2. RB Mark Ingram, Alabama
3. QB Case Keenum, Houston
4. QB Christian Ponder, Florida State
5. QB Colt McCoy, Texas


Northwestern: The Wildcats avoided a mega-embarrassment in rallying from a 25-point hole to kick a game-winning 19-yard field goal with 21 seconds left to beat Indiana, 29-28.

Pittsburgh: Dave Wannstedt finally is having that breakout season. A 41-14 rout of USF makes the Panthers 7-1 for the first time since 1982, when Dan Marino quarterbacked Pitt to its last No. 1 ranking.

Terrelle Pryor: Was this the same guy who was sacked five times and committed four turnovers in a 26-18 loss at Purdue last week? Pryor was 13 of 25 passing for 239 yards with two TDs and one interception and ran 15 times for 104 yards in an impressive 38-7 win over Minnesota. Pryor is back -- at least this week.

Oklahoma State: A dominating 34-7 win over Baylor was Oklahoma State's fifth in a row and gives it momentum heading into a huge visit from Texas next Saturday. Even more impressive about the Cowboys' streak: The past four wins have come without RB Kendall Hunter (hurt) and WR Dez Bryant (suspension).

Oregon: Many felt the Ducks would get clipped at Washington, but Oregon kept rolling with an impressive 43-19 victory to remain unbeaten in the Pac-10. Oregon was sparked by the return of quarterback Jeremiah Masoli from an injury. The Ducks have won a school-record six in a row over Washington, all by more than 20 points. Up next: A visit from USC.


LOSERS

Auburn: The Tigers have lost three in a row after a 31-10 defeat at LSU. That once-dynamic Gus Malzahn offense is sputtering, with just 47 points over the past three games after averaging 41.1 over the first five games. The bleeding doesn't figure to stop with games remaining against Ole Miss, Georgia and Alabama.

BYU quarterback Max Hall had a rough night against TCU.
BYU: TCU was too fast and just too good for the Cougars, who managed only 298 yards in a 38-7 loss at home. And BYU quarterback Max Hall (162 yards, with one touchdown and one interception) was outplayed by counterpart Andy Dalton (242 yards, three TDs).

Big 12 North: Who is going to win this pathetic division? Saturday, Kansas got trounced by Oklahoma, Nebraska got dumped by Iowa State and Missouri got whipped by Texas. Kansas State sits atop the division after beating Colorado.

North Carolina: UNC blew a 24-6 lead early in the third quarter in losing 30-27 at home to Florida State. The Tar Heels are 0-3 in the ACC.

Texas Tech: The Red Raiders endured an epic meltdown in a 52-30 home loss to Texas A&M. The Aggies hadn't won in Lubbock since 1993. All of that momentum the Red Raiders had coming off big wins over Kansas State and Nebraska is gone.

Illinois: A 24-14 loss at Purdue was the Fighting Illini's fifth in a row and dropped them to 1-6.

Kansas: Where did that 5-0 start go? Kansas' entered its game against visiting Oklahoma with the second-best offense in the nation. But OU limited the Jayhawks to two field goals before Kansas scored a meaningless late touchdown in 35-13 Sooners rout. KU has lost two in a row and is slipping fast.

Maryland: The Terps seemingly reach new depths each week. This week's downer: a 17-13 loss at Duke. It was Maryland's third loss in a row and fifth in its past six games.

Michigan: That's three Big Ten losses in a row for the Wolverines following a 35-10 drubbing by visiting Penn State. Games with Wisconsin and Ohio State loom.

Nebraska: That win at Missouri on a rainy Thursday night seems like it happened years ago. Texas Tech administered a 31-10 dubbing at Nebraska last week. Now, this: a mind-numbing 9-7 home loss to Iowa State that saw the Cornhuskers commit eight turnovers, with four coming inside Iowa State's 5.

USF: The Bulls moved into the Top 25 two weeks ago. In its two games since, USF has been outscored 75-31 in consecutive defeats to Cincinnati and Pitt.

Virginia: The Cavaliers entered the day as the only unbeaten team in ACC play. No more, thanks to a 34-9 drubbing by Georgia Tech that ended a three-game winning streak. And Al Groh's faint hopes of remaining as Cavs coach also may have gone out the window.

HOT SEAT
Rick Neuheisel, UCLA. The Bruins started 3-0. UCLA has lost four in a row after Saturday's 27-13 setback at Arizona. Outside of Washington State, this is the Pac-10's worst team.


TOP STORY LINES FOR NEXT WEEK

THE COCKTAIL PARTY: The bad blood between Georgia's Mark Richt and Florida's Urban Meyer has gone from a simmer to a boil. In 2007, Richt irked Meyer with his "Gator Stomp," a premeditated group touchdown celebration after Georgia's first score in a 42-30 win. Last season, Meyer hung a 49-10 rout on Richt, the worst loss of Richt's Georgia tenure, and called some fourth-quarter timeouts.

PAC-10 SHOWDOWN: Oregon is the lone unbeaten team in Pac-10 play. But here comes USC, which has won or shared the past seven conference titles. The last time USC visited Eugene, it lost 24-17. Still, since 2002, the Trojans have ruled this series, winning four of five meetings -- and two of those triumphs have come in Eugene.

BIG 12 SOUTH TITLE GAME? Texas' Mack Brown never has lost to Oklahoma State, as the Longhorns have won 11 in a row over the Cowboys dating to a 42-16 loss in Stillwater in 1997 when John Mackovic was coach. Since then, the Longhorns have won five in a row at Oklahoma State, with many in dramatic fashion. The last time Texas visited Stillwater, the Longhorns staged the largest fourth-quarter comeback in school history by scoring 24 points en route to a 38-35 win.

FLORIDA STATE IS ALIVE: It's hard to believe, but the 3-4 Seminoles control their own destiny in the awful ACC Atlantic Division. It starts with a visit from struggling N.C. State.

3 Observations from the weekend:
Tebow 1. The more I see of Tim Tebow this season, the more I think the emperor isn't wearing his entire uniform. Hey, I'd love to have him on my team, and without him at quarterback I don't know where Florida would be. But whether it's the recovery from the concussion, the lack of downfield threats or just misfortune -- who gets two tipped passes returned for touchdowns? -- Tebow isn't meeting the standard he set for himself the last two seasons.

2. Stanford may be 5-3, but with its 33-14 victory over Arizona State on Saturday night, the Cardinal have four victories by at least 19 points. That's more than No. 1 Florida, No. 6 Iowa or No. 7 USC. All four of those Cardinal wins came at home. However, Stanford has a lot to do to qualify for its first bowl since 2001. The remaining opponents are the Trojans, No. 11 Oregon, archrival California and Notre Dame. The good news is, only the USC game is on the road.

3. If Michigan State (4-4) can pull itself together, watch out. The Spartans have three losses by a total of seven points, all of them heartbreakers. Michigan State gave up two scores to Central Michigan in the final 32 seconds to lose 29-27 and turned the ball over at the Notre Dame 4-yard line in the final minute to lose 33-30. No. 13 Penn State's scariest game isn't the visit from No. 19 Ohio State on Nov. 7. It's that season-ending trip to East Lansing two weeks later.

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