2009 Schedule For SEC College Football
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College Football Week 10 - Upstart Northwestern Hands Iowa Its First Loss, 5 Other Teams Are Upset
Copyright © 2009 Ed Bagley
Unbeaten Iowa suffered the biggest loss as one of six AP Top 25
teams to be upset during college football's 9th week of competition.
The others were Oregon, Penn State, Notre Dame, Oklahoma and
California.
The 8th-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes (now 9-1) had their 13-game winning
streak—second longest in the nation—come to a crashing halt at home
after losing their quarterback Ricky Stanzi to a second-quarter ankle
injury as an upstart Northwestern team ground out a methodical 17-10
upset victory.
Iowa had been making a career out of launching comebacks and
winning close games all season; it seemed only a matter of time before
they would get found out. Who knew it would be Northwestern to get the
job done? For the 6-4 Wildcats, the win over a Top-10 opponent was
their first since knocking off No. 6 Ohio State 33-27 in overtime five
years ago, and their victory over Iowa made them bowl eligible this
season.
Northwestern led 14-10 at the half and added a 4th-quarter field
goal as the Iowa offense never did get going after losing Stanzi. The
Hawkeyes, who had climbed as high as 7th in the AP Top 25 Poll, slipped
to 13th.
No. 7-ranked Oregon's 47-20 upset win over 4th-ranked Southern
California last week that vaulted the Ducks (now 7-2) into the national
title picture, was short lived as they were upset at home 51-42 by the
Stanford Cardinal (6-3), who became bowl eligible in the Pac 10
contest. Despite the upset win, Stanford could not climb into the AP
Top 25, and Oregon slipped to 16th.
Oregon lost because it ran into a runaway diesel locomotive named
Tony Gerhart, Stanford's senior running back who rushed for a
school-record 223 yards and scored 3 touchdowns. Gerhart is a battering
ram about to happen; he can run through tacklers.
No. 11-ranked Penn State (8-2), a 5-point favorite at home, was
upset 24-7 by 15-ranked Ohio State, putting the Buckeyes into a
first-place tie with Iowa at 5-1 in the Big Ten Conference race.
No. 19 Notre Dame (6-3) was upset at home 23-21 by 41st-ranked Navy
(7-3). Navy led 21-7 after 3 quarters, and two 4th quarter touchdowns
by the Fighting Irish was not enough to overcome the loss against the
Midshipmen.
No. 20 Oklahoma (5-4) suffered a humbling 10-3 upset loss at the
hands of the 35th-ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers (6-3), who became bowl
eligible. The Sooners have had a tremendous fall from the top this
year, losing also to Brigham Young, Miami (FL) and Texas. There is
trouble in Soonerland.
No. 23 California (6-3) was favored at home but done in 31-14 by
the Oregon State Beavers (6-3), who became bowl eligible in the
process. California never fails to disappoint; the Bears, who are
always predicted to be better than they are, continually lose at the
wrong time, many times to the wrong team.
Eight other ranked teams continued to move on by winning games on-the-road.
No. 5 Boise State (9-0) remained unbeaten by winning 45-35 over
96th-ranked Louisiana Tech (3-6). No. 6 Texas Christian (9-0) also
remained unbeaten by scoring at least two touchdowns in 3 of 4 quarters
in a 55-12 drubbing of 95th-ranked San Diego State (4-5). No. 12-ranked
Southern California (7-2) won 14-9 in a close contest with 53rd-ranked
Arizona State (4-5).
No. 13-ranked Houston (8-1) managed to win a close 46-45 victory
over 92nd-ranked Tulsa (4-5). The Houston Cougars have the 2nd best
major college scoring offense in the country (41ppg), but have
absolutely no defense, allowing opponents like Tulsa to run up big
scores and make games close. No. 18-ranked Oklahoma State (7-2) won
34-8 over 73rd-ranked Iowa State (5-5).
No. 22-ranked Virginia Tech (6-3) won 16-3 over 67th-ranked East
Carolina (5-4) to become bowl eligible. No. 24-ranked Wisconsin (7-2)
won on a field goal 31-28 over 91st-ranked Indiana (4-6). No. 25-ranked
Brigham Young (7-2) notched a 52-0 shut out over 108th-ranked Wyoming
(4-5).
Nine other ranked teams kept moving on by winning home games. They included:
No. 1 Florida (9-0) remained unbeaten as the Gators took care of
business with a 27-3 victory over 119th-ranked Vanderbilt (2-8). No. 2
Texas (9-0) also remained unbeaten with a dominating 35-3 victory over
83rd-ranked Central Florida (5-4).
No. 3 Alabama remained 1 of only 6 unbeaten teams with a 24-15
signature win over No. 9-ranked LSU (7-2). A 73-yard touchdown
reception-and-run by sophomore receiver Julio Jones in the 4th quarter
didn't hurt a lick. Alabama is now 9-0 for a second consecutive season,
which hasn't happened since the glory teams of 1973 and 1974.
The victory for Alabama, which was favored by 7.5 points, was huge
in that the Crimson Tide continues on a crash course with No. 1-ranked
Florida (9-0) for the SEC Championship and a spot in the National
Championship Game, probably against Texas (9-0) if the Longhorns remain
unbeaten.
No. 4 Cincinnati (9-0) remained undefeated with a narrow 47-45 win
over 52nd-ranked Connecticut (4-5). The Huskies scored 3 touchdowns in
a 4th-quarter comeback try but it was not enough. No. 10 Georgia Tech
(9-1) needed a 30-27 overtime victory to turn back 55th-ranked Wake
Forest (4-6). No. 14 Pittsburgh (8-1) scored in every quarter to win
37-10 over 93rd-ranked Syracuse (3-6).
No. 16 Miami of Florida (7-2) scored at least two touchdowns in 3
of 4 quarters to win 52-17 over 65th-ranked Virginia (3-6). No 17 Utah
(8-1) won 45-14 over 164th-ranked and winless New Mexico (0-9). No. 21
Arizona (6-2) became bowl eligible with its 48-7 stomping of
115th-ranked Washington State (1-8). The Wildcats led 34-zip at the
half, and went though the motions in the second half rather than
playing harder and winning even bigger.
Eight more unranked teams became bowl eligible this week. They
included Mississippi, Clemson, Air Force, Fresno State, Northern
Illinois, Kansas State, Middle Tennessee and North Carolina.
Mississippi (6-3) won 38-14 over 109th-ranked, 1-AA Northern
Arizona (5-4). Clemson (6-3) won 40-24 over 39th-ranked Florida State
(4-5), hastening an end to Bobby Bowden's storied career with the
Seminoles. If Bowden doesn't bow out this year, they may kick him out.
Air Force (6-4) put a 35-7 stomping on 144th-ranked Army (3-6). Fresno
State (6-3) won 31-21 over Idaho (7-3). A 14-point surge in the last
quarter was not enough for the Vandals to pull out another victory.
Northern Illinois (6-3) put a 50-6 beating on 179th-ranked and
winless Eastern Michigan (0-9). Kansas State won 17-10 over in-state
rival Kansas (5-4). Middle Tennessee (6-3) came up with a 48-21 win
over 138th-ranked Florida International (2-7). North Carolina (6-3) won
19-6 over 69th-ranked Duke (5-4).
Four other teams were worth noting. Temple (7-2) won its 7th
consecutive game 34-32 over Miami of Ohio (1-9). Troy (7-2) won 40-20
over 182nd-ranked and winless Western Kentucky (0-9). Western Kentucky
is the worst major college team this year; the Hilltoppers (now Bottom
Droppers) are so bad you can smell them in Idaho.
Auburn (7-3) scored a blowout 63-31 win over poor, 168th-ranked,
1-AA Furman (4-5) to climb into the AP Poll at No. 25. Southern
Methodist (5-4 and ranked 80th) climbed over the .500 mark with a close
31-28 home victory over 165th-ranked and winless Rice (0-9).
Check out "Ed Bagley's Top 25 Poll" for Week 10 and find out
why honesty and a little humor makes reading Top 25 polls so much more
enjoyable.
"College Football Wrap-Up – Week 9 – Oregon, Texas & Iowa Notch Critical Wins in National Title Chase"
http://www.edbagleyblog.com
http://www.edbagleyblog.com/Sports.html
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