2009 Schedule For SEC College Football
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College Football Week 9 - Oregon, Texas & Iowa Notch Critical Wins in the National Ttile Chase
Copyright © 2009 Ed Bagley
Oregon, Texas and Iowa won huge, critical victories to remain in
contention for the National Championship Game during college football's
9th week of play.
None of the three victories was more impressive or substantial than
10th-ranked Oregon's convincing, ultimately dominating 47-20 upset win
at home over 4th-ranked Southern California. Oregon was a 3-point
underdog in the game.
The USC Trojans had won at least 11 games a season and had 7
consecutive BSC bowl-game appearances for 7 straight years; now the
streak has been broken as there is no way Southern Cal can win 11 games
this season. With another loss, USC's 8th straight BCS bowl-game streak
would also be in jeopardy.
The win pushed the Ducks to 7-1 and dropped the Trojans to 6-2 and,
perhaps more important, left Oregon on top of the Pac 10 Conference
race with an unbeaten 5-0 mark and pushed USC into a 3-way tie for 4th
place at 3-2. The Trojan loss was its worst since 1997 when they were
beaten by the Washington Huskies 27-0.
The Trojans came into the game ranked 16th nationally in both
scoring defense and total defense, and flew home in defensive disarray.
How convincing was Oregon's upset? This convincing: Oregon
double-threat Jeremiah Masoli threw for 222 yards and a touchdown, and
ran for 164 more yards and another score. Redshirt freshman LaMichael
James ran for 183 yards and a touchdown as the Ducks racked up 391
yards rushing on the 5th best rushing defense in the nation. USC's
defense gave up a total of 613 yards to Oregon. The Trojan loss was the
worst ever for head coach Pete Carroll during his 9 years at USC.
None of the three key victories was more important to a
front-runner than the 3rd-ranked Texas Longhorns' 41-14 smash-mouth win
on-the-road over 13th-ranked Oklahoma State. Texas led 41-7 after three
quarters when Longhorn quarterback Colt McCoy left the game for good.
The Cowboys (now 6-2) allowed McCoy to go 16-for-21 for 171 yards
and a touchdown, and Longhorn defenders Curtis Brown and Earl Thomas
each returned an interception for a TD. The win definitely keeps the
Longhorns (8-0) in the running for the national title game, especially
if either Florida or Alabama now loses down the stretch.
None of the three victories was more exciting than Iowa's 4th
quarter, come-from-behind 42-24 win over a 4-5 Indiana team. The
Hoosiers led 24-14 after three quarters and Iowa looked like burned
toast, but the Hawkeyes exploded for 4 last quarter touchdowns to win
the 4th quarter 28-0, and the game.
Iowa's Ricky Stanzi threw 5 interceptions before the explosion,
which started with an interception and 86-yard TD return by Tyler Sash.
The defensive score ignited the Hawkeyes as Stanzi then made up for his
errant ways by connecting with Marvin McNutt on a 92-yard TD pass, and
Darrell Johnson-Koulianos on a 66-yard TD pass. Brandon Wegher added 6
and 27-yard scoring runs to end the rapid comeback.
Iowa has made a career out of winning close games this season—7 of
the 9 Hawkeye wins have been by 11 or fewer points. Last year Iowa lost
4 games by combined total of 12 points. The Hawkeyes perfect 9-0 record
is the best start in school history.
There were 4 upsets of ranked teams this week by unranked teams
that included North Carolina, South Florida, Tennessee and Auburn.
Unranked North Carolina (5-3) went calling on 14th-ranked Virginia
Tech (now also 5-3) and upset the Hokies 20-17. Unranked South Florida
(now 6-2) traveled to 20th-ranked West Virginia (now also 6-2) and
upset the Mountaineers 30-19. Unranked Tennessee (4-4) upset
21st-ranked South Carolina 31-13 at home, dropping the Gamecocks to 6-3
on the year and showing which team has the better defense.
Unranked Auburn (now 6-3) upset 24th-ranked Mississippi 33-20 at
home, dropping Ole Miss to 5-3. Can we now just shut up about how great
the Rebel team is going to be this year? Mississippi was ranked 10th in
the pre-season Coaches Top 25 Poll.
Four other ranked teams came home with away victories—Cincinnati, Georgia Tech, Penn State and Miami (FL).
Unbeaten and 5th-ranked Cincinnati (8-0) beat 100th-ranked Syracuse
28-7, scoring a touchdown in each quarter to inflict a slow, painful
death on the Orange.
No. 11-ranked Georgia Tech scored 28 second-half points to gun down
129th-ranked Vanderbilt 56-31. The Yellow Jackets' win was not
impressive as they gave up 31 points to a lousy team, but at least
their offense scored touchdowns in every quarter, and at least two TDs
in 3 of the 4 quarters. Georgia Tech is now 8-1 on the season.
Penn State (8-1) beat the 98th-ranked Northwestern Wildcats 34-13.
Northwestern (now 5-4) was 9-4 a year ago and lost a tough overtime
game 30-23 to Missouri in the Alamo Bowl. Joe Pa and his 12th-ranked
Nittany Lions still must beat Ohio State and Michigan State to have
much to crow about since he selected and beat 4 cupcakes on his way to
8 wins so far. Penn State would play another team's scout unit for a
victory if they could get away with it.
The 18th-ranked Miami Hurricanes (6-2) needed two 4th-quarter
touchdowns to nip 65th-ranked Wake Forest 28-27. The Demon Deacons led
27-14 after three quarters, but folded when it counted in the 4th
quarter, which must make Wake Forest a pretty good three-quarter team.
Nine other ranked teams won at home—Florida, Boise State, Texas
Christian, LSU, Houston, Ohio State, Utah, Oklahoma and Notre Dame.
No. 1 Florida went 8-0 by beating 35th-ranked Georgia, 41-17, as
the Gators continue to roll on unbeaten toward another National
Championship Game and a defense of their 2008 National Title last year.
No. 6 Boise State went 8-0 by ripping apart a terrible 1-6, 97th-ranked San Jose State team 45-7 in a cakewalk.
No. 8 Texas Christian shut out a 3-6, 113th-ranked UNLV team 41 to
nothing, which pretty well describes the Rebel team this year. UNLV has
not been to a bowl game since 2000; it's a good thing the Rebels
chalked up a bowl appearance early in the century because they may not
make it back to another one until 3000 at the rate they are going.
No. 9 LSU (7-1) shut out the 2-6, 145th-ranked Tulane Green Wave 42-0.
No. 15 Houston (7-1) had its hands full with the 73rd-ranked
Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles, barely winning in a genuine,
old-fashioned gunfight, 50-43. Southern Miss was ranked 25th nationally
in scoring defense coming into the game, so the Golden Eagles had a
defense and could not stop Houston's 3rd-ranked scoring offense.
The Houston Cougars, who have no total defense (they were ranked
112th among 120 major college teams), did what they always do, they
gave up a horrendous number of points. If Houston had no offense, the
Cougars would probably lose every game 26-0.
No. 17 Ohio State (7-2) shut out a 3-6, 148th-ranked New Mexico
State team 45-0. The Buckeyes led 45-zip after three quarters and
decided to shower early in the 4th quarter.
No. 19 Utah came up with another unimpressive 22-10 victory, this
time over the 107th-ranked Wyoming Cowboys. Despite their impressive
7-1 record, the Utes must beat Texas Christian and Brigham Young to be
in any discussion about who is good at the national level.
No. 22 Oklahoma (5-3) won 42-30 in a lackluster performance over a
5-3 Kansas State team. Now you know why the Sooners are 5-3 and really
going nowhere.
The No. 25 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (6-2) might have surprised
themselves in finally becoming bowl eligible by crushing a woefully
weak 1-7, 119th-ranked Washington State team, 40-14. Last year the
Washington Huskies were a winless 0-12; this year the Washington State
Cougars are just as bad.
Eight unranked teams became bowl eligible this week with their 6th
win—Wisconsin, Rutgers, Boston College, Texas Tech, California, Temple,
Troy and Ohio.
Wisconsin (6-2) shut out Purdue 37-0 in a Big Ten face-off. Two
weeks ago Purdue had a huge 26-18 upset of visiting Ohio State, and
this week the Boilermakers became a doormat for the Badgers; nothing
could better describe the ups and downs of a college football team.
Rutgers (6-2) turned back Connecticut 28-24 after letting the
Huskies score two 4th-quarter touchdowns to narrow the margin. You
remember Rutgers, it's that New Jersey school on the East Coast, where
sportswriters and sportscasters think all great football is played;
they suffer from other delusions too.
Boston College (6-2) beat visiting Central Michigan 31-10. The
Central Michigan Chippewas (now 7-2) are lucky that this loss was not
to a Mid American Conference opponent.
Texas Tech (6-3) ripped Kansas 42-21, California (6-2) held off
Arizona State 23-21, Troy (6-2) clobbered Louisiana Monroe 42-21, Ohio
(6-3) just nudged by a pathetic, 163rd-ranked Ball State team 20-17,
and Temple (6-2) used a 4th-quarter field goal to edge a 6-3 Navy team,
27-24. The Temple Owls have now won their 6th game in-a-row, their
longest win streak since 1974.
Three teams were idle this week—No. 2 Alabama, No. 17 Pittsburgh and No. 24 Arizona.
Check out "Ed Bagley's Top 25 Poll" for Week 9 and find out why
the Oregon Ducks are getting the bum's rush in the national ranking
polls.
"College Football - A Season of 2 Games: One Becomes Abject Heartache, The Other Extreme Joy - Part 1"
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