2009 Schedule For SEC College Football
Your Most Reliable Schedule on the Internet!
|
|
College Football - Alabama
& Florida Barely Win, 12 Others Put on Muscle Shirts &
Strut Their Stuff
Copyright © 2009 Ed Bagley
There was only one real upset in college football's 8th week of play as
12 of the 20 top-ranked teams put on their muscle shirts and showed
what they have, a sure sign that teams have begun to stabilize for
their last 4 games.
Only 21st-ranked Texas Tech was caught flat-footed at home by unranked
Texas A&M, 52-30. The Red Raiders (now 5-3) were favored by 22
and lost by 22, a 44-point negative swing that sent Texas Tech reeling.
The Texas A&M Aggies meant business, piling up a 38-22 lead
after 3 quarters, and then outscoring the Red Raiders 14-8 in the 4th
quarter.
Texas A&M was trounced 62-14 last week by Kansas State and
decided to take it out on Texas Tech. The high score was no real
surprise; both teams came in as scoring machines—Tech was ranked 2nd
nationally at 41 ppg, and A&M was 19th at 33 ppg. A&M
piled up 559 yards of offense and Tech 520; the contest was strictly
offensive with a combined 1,079 yards of offense. Exciting, but not
good football.
One other upset occurred when unranked Clemson hung in and hung on for
a 40-37 overtime upset of 8th-ranked Miami (FL) on the Hurricanes' home
field. Miami (now 5-2) was favored 5. Kyle Parker threw a 26-yard
scoring strike to Jacoby Ford to win the game. It was big deal for
Clemson because the Tigers have been toothless for some time. The win
was Clemson's first in 9 tries over ranked teams, and its first win
over a Top 10 foe in more than 8 years.
Here are the 7 of 12 teams that put on their muscle shirts looking for
more BCS poll support by dominating their opponents in away games:
No. 3-ranked Texas (7-0) over Missouri 41-7, 6th-ranked Boise State
(7-0) over Hawaii 54-9, 10th-ranked Texas Christian (7-0) over Brigham
Young 38-7 (TCU was favored by 2.5 and won by 31), 11th-ranked Georgia
Tech (7-1) over Virginia 34-9, 13th-ranked Penn State (7-1) over
Michigan 35-10, 14th-ranked Oklahoma State (6-1) over Baylor 34-7, and
25th-ranked Oklahoma (4-3) over 24th-ranked Kansas 35-13 (this was not
an upset as the Sooners were favored by 8 an won by 22).
Three other away game victories by ranked teams were less dominating.
No. 2-ranked Florida (7-0) led Mississippi State 16-13 after 3 quarters
and then outscored the Bulldogs 13-6 in the final quarter to win 29-19.
The victory was Florida's 17th straight, the nation's longest winning
streak. Gator Tim Tebow threw two interceptions for touchdowns;
Mississippi State's Johnthan Banks ran one back for 100 yards and
another for 20 yards.
No. 7-ranked Iowa (8-0) used a last play 7-yard TD pass by Ricky Stanzi
to Marvin McNutt to come-from-behind against Michigan State 15-13. The
Spartans had successfully defended 3 downs and led 13-9 before the last
play. Iowa has now won 12 straight dating back to last season, the
second-longest streak in the nation.
The Hawkeyes are becoming a bigger deal nationally because they have
won more close games than a pack of termites at a timber feast. Seven
of their 8 victories have been by 11 or fewer points, including 1, 2
and 3-point victories over Northern Iowa, Michigan and Arkansas. Last
year Iowa lost 4 games by a combined total of 12 points. The Hawkeye
defense has 15 interceptions this year and 9 fumble recoveries.
No. 14-ranked Oregon (6-1) got a lot of help from Washington in its
43-19 victory, which might have appeared more dominate than it actually
was. The Huskies managed to let a rusher go untouched on a punt attempt
that was blocked and resulted in a loose ball in the end zone that
Oregon recovered for a TD. While Washington was rushing to get into
position for the extra point, the holder ran it in for a 2-point
conversion.
Another Husky drive that should have been a touchdown became a field
goal, and another Husky drive ended at 2nd-and-goal and Washington
could not get it in as Jake Locker threw an interception on 4th down
and the Huskies came away with nothing. Oregon would rush for 259 yards
and Washington could not stop them.
Here are the 5 of 12 teams that put on their muscle shirts looking for
more BCS poll support by dominating their opponents in home games:
No. 5-ranked Cincinnati (7-0) over Louisville 41-10, 9th-ranked
Louisiana State (6-1) over Auburn 31-10, 17th-ranked Houston (6-1) over
Southern Methodist 38-15 (Houston led 31-3 after 3 quarters),
18th-ranked Ohio State (6-2) over Minnesota 38-7, and 20th-ranked
Pittsburgh (7-1) over South Florida 41-14.
Five other home game victories by ranked teams were less dominating.
Least impressive was 1st-ranked Alabama's block of a 44-yard field goal
on the last play of the game by the Tide's 350-pound nose guard
Terrence Cody to preserve a 12-10 lead and victory over the unranked
3-4 Tennessee Volunteers. The blocked field goal by Cody, now dubbed
"Mount Cody", was his second of the game. The Crimson Tide (now 8-0)
came into the game ranked No. 1 in total defense; Alabama's offense,
which averaged 34 points a game coming in, got all of its points on 4
field goals by Leigh Tiffin, including a 49-yarder and a 50-yarder.
No. 4-ranked Southern California was lucky to get by the unranked 4-3
Oregon State Beavers. A 63-yard punt return by Damian Williams in the
4th quarter and a late drive that bailed out the USC defense saved the
day as the Trojans outlasted the Beavers, 42-36. Southern Cal was
ranked 9th in the nation in total defense, but its scoring defense was
ranked 41st (the Trojans were giving up 30 points a game). Now you know
why USC is beyond lucky to be ranked No. 4 in the country. Think about
it, the Trojans gave up 36 points to a 4-3 Oregon State team. The
Beavers were the only team to beat USC last year, and they did it at
home 27-21.
No. 19-ranked Utah (6-1) went lame in a 23-16 victory over a 4-4 Air
Force team. This is not the same Utah team that went 13-0 last year as
the only undefeated team in the nation, and then took down Alabama
31-17 in the BCS Sugar Bowl. Utah still must face major opponents in
Texas Christian (7-0) and Brigham Young (6-2).
No. 22-ranked West Virginia (6-1) needed a 56-yard touchdown run by
Noel Devine in the closing minutes to get by Connecticut, 28-24, and
23rd-ranked South Carolina (6-2) keep a weak 2-6 Vanderbilt team at bay
long enough to win 14-10. The 15th-ranked Virginia Tech Hokies were
idle this week.
Here are two unranked teams still on the move and hoping to get ranked.
Central Michigan (now 7-1 and getting more impressive every week) beat
Bowling Green 24-10, and Navy (6-2) beat Wake Forest 13-10.
Nebraska, which I publicly identified as a fraud in last week's
wrap-up, lost again, this time to Iowa State 9-7 in what sounded like a
scrum match. The Idaho Vandals, who had been flying high at 6-1, got
crushed by a 4-3 Nevada team, 70-45. Ouch, that was some crash landing;
nonetheless, the Vandals are still 6-2 and bowl eligible.
Tell Rudy to crank up that typesetting machine, this wrap-up is
finished (just for the record, you have to be at least 65 years old to
use the noun typesetting in an article like this; we do it primarily to
confuse younger people between downing shots of Jameson).
(Editor's Note: The rankings in this article are from the AP Top 25
Poll of sportswriters and sportscasters, and any ratings are from Jeff
Sagarin.)
Check out "Ed Bagley's Top 25 Poll" for Week
8—you get rankings plus humor.
"College Football – A Season of 2 Games: One Becomes Abject Heartache,
The Other Extreme Joy – Part 1"
"College Football – A Season of2 Games: 'The Immaculate Footception'
Will Live Forever in Washington Husky Lore – Part 2"
http://www.edbagleyblog.com
http://www.edbagleyblog.com/Sports.html
Source: http://www.submityourarticle.com
Permalink: http://www.submityourarticle.com/a.php?a=71768
|