Posts Tagged ‘matthew stafford’

Auburn or Georgia? & Other College Football Today

AJ and AuburnNovember 14, 2009, Athens, GA.

This week, the South’s “oldest rivalry” is re-ignited when the Auburn Tigers (7-3, 3-3 SEC)  and Georgia Bulldogs (5-4, 3-3 SEC) meet for the 113th time at 7pm in Athens at Sanford Stadium. Former Bulldog head coach Vince Dooley played his collegiate ball at Auburn, and that’s why this is referred to as the “Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry.” Auburn is 1 of 2 teams that Georgia has played more than 100 times in their history.

Out of all of the meetings of these two teams, the Tigers hold merely a two game advantage. The rivalry is fierce and the outcome of their games is always close. The Tigers, however, have won 10 of their last 13 games at Sanford Stadium. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2.

Both teams are coming off homecoming wins. Auburn’s 63-31 win over Furman catapulted it into the Top 25 in the coaches’ poll. Georgia shut out Tennessee Tech 38-0.

Last time the two teams met in 2008, Georgia beat Auburn 17-13. But that was with Matthew Stafford and before Joe Cox was their quarterback. I am hoping Joe Cox can step up his game for the matchup!

Auburn player, Ben Tate has rushed for 1,142 yards this season. Auburn is currently the second highest scoring team in the SEC. Auburn’s defense is last in the league in scoring, and they are allowing more than 26 points per game.

The Tiger’s offense ranks 13th nationally in red zone offense, scoring on 31 of 33 opportunities.

This could be a high scoring game with many penalities and turnovers. From what I have read, and based on the record at Sanford Stadium, the Georgia Bulldogs are not favored to win. I am hoping they can dig deep to fight, fight, fight! and we can all see a great game tonight!

In other college football this week:

The key game this week isn’t in any of the major conferences, but in the Mountain West, where No. 4 TCU hosts No. 16 Utah at 7:30PM ET on Saturday. TCU is a 17-point favorite at home.

Another key matchup this week is in the Big Ten when No. 10 Ohio State hosts No. 15 Iowa. The Buckeyes are 14.5-point favorites at home against the Hawkeyes. This game will likely decide the winner of the Big Ten title and the automatic BCS bowl bid.

Steve Spurrier faces his old team  as well when South Carolina hosts Florida. The Gators are 15-point road favorites. Last year, Florida posted a 56-6 win over the Gamecocks in the Swamp. South Carolina has lost three of its last four games, but has yet to lose at home this season.

Saturday Football Fever commences with many great games to watch, as the college football season starts to wind its way down! I will be watching to see how all of these matchups turn-out!

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Fade to Black

By now, you’ve probably read that UGA is going to pull the “blackout” for the Alabama game this weekend.  You’ve probably also read all the other hoopla surrounding the blackout.  Here’s my take on the blackout and the game itself.

First of all, when the black jersey’s were used in the Auburn game, it was a great way to get the team and the fans hyped up.  And to some extent, it psyched out the Tigers.  Then the black was used in the bowl game and it wasn’t quite as exciting.  Now its being used for the Bama game and it seems to have lost a little bit more of its luster.  I’ve even talked to many UGA fans who agree.

There’s a resaon that Notre Dame only wears the green jersey’s (and not just because they lose when they wear them) – it’s because they are meant to jack fans and players up for the game every few years that is hugely important to the program.  For UGA, that was the Auburn game was last year – it helped keep the momentum going after the Florida win and carried the team for the rest of the season.  But three times in the span of nine games?  That takes something away from the experience.

What it really comes down to is who is the better, more prepared team.  And both teams are good and will come in well prepared.  Honestly, I think the media is reading too much into the give and take between Saban and Richt.  They are just two coaches having a little fun, trying to keep things light going into a big game.  In the end, laundry will have no bearing on this game.

Breakdown

UGA - The offense is solid.  Moreno takes a load of pressure off Stafford with his ability to run the ball and AJ Green has emerged as a reliable threat at receiver, which UGA hasn’t had in several years.  That being said, I’m still not sold on Stafford as the “best NFL QB prospect in the country”.  From what I’ve seen of him this year, he still makes bad decisions and struggles against good defenses.  You also have a young offensive line that is still trying to figure out how to play with each other after a rash of injuries have caused some shuffling of positions.  The defense has been solid, but they haven’t faced a very good or balanced offense yet.  The Dawgs are also the most penalized team in the SEC, averaging almost 11 per game, which is double the next closest team.

Bama – The offensive line is mean, nasty and is dominating.  Andre Smith, Antoine Caldwell and Co. open up huge holes for the running game and they make John Parker Wilson look like Tom Brady with all the time they give him.  Mark Ingram is the bruiser and Glen Coffee is the speedster and they combine to make one of the best RB tandems in the conference.  Julio Jones and Nick Walker are excellent targets for JPW.  The defense has been stingy this year, allowing only 9.2 points per game.  They are lead by the disruptive Terrance “Mount” Cody, a 365 pound beast in the middle.  The linebackers, while young, have been solid and the secondary has been good.  Javier Arenas is the X factor on special teams, having already returned one punt for a TD and averaging 18.7 yards per return.

(In the interest of full disclosure, I should mention that I’m a Bama alumni and psychotic Tide fan.)

Prediction

I think this game will be closer than either side wants to believe.  It will be physical and relatively low scoring.  In the end, I think penalties will kill the Dawgs and special teams will be the difference.  Leigh Tiffin will kick the winning field goal in the final minute and Bama will win 27-24 in a thriller.

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Week 3 Thoughts

Here’s some random thoughts on the week 3 games after having a day to digest everything.

- As I watched the Maryland-Cal game, something stuck me: it wasn’t too long ago that these were two programs on the rise.  Neither seems to have been able to make the leap to occasional challenger to elite power.

The team Ralph Friedgen inherited in 2001 had gone 5-6 the previous year.  They went 10-2 and won the ACC and followed that up with 11-3 (2002) and 10-3 (2003).  In 2004, things seemed to turn sour, with the Terps going 5-6 followed by 5-6 in 2005.  They snuck up on some folks in 2006 and finished 9-4, only to drop back to mediocre in 2007 at 6-7.  They just can’t seem to take that next step to become a major player in the ACC year in and year out.  With the ACC having an off year so far, maybe this is the year Maryland can turn things around.

In 2003, Jeff Tedford finally got his shot as head coach, taking over a Cal team that had won only 1 game the previous season.  He immediately raised expectations when he finished 7-5 in his first season.  Over the next few seasons, Cal steadily improved, going 8-6 (2003), 10-2 (2004), and 8-4 (2005).  Tedford finally broke through and lead Cal to a 10-3 record and became co-Pac-10 champions in 2006.  They promptly took a step back last year, when they 6 of their last 8 and finished 7-6 on the season.  In each year that Tedford has been at Cal, they have been mentioned as the team that could knock USC of their throne, but each year they slip up against teams that they should beat.  They just can’t seem to become the Pac-10 challenger that the conference needs.

It was strange to see these two teams who are on opposite sides of the country and have taken the same path face off.

- Speaking of the Maryland game, they have one ugly end-zone.  It’s not as bad as the one in Knoxville, but it’s certainly not attractive.  I don’t understand why they decided to put the state flag in the end zone as opposed to the team name or logo.

- Did anyone else notice that stands were pretty bare at the Clemson-NCSU game?  The cameras panned the crowd right after the start of the 3rd quarter and it looked like an Atlanta Hawks game.  The announcer even mistakenly said a “crowd of 80” before correcting himself to 80,000.  Memorial Stadium has a seating capacity of 80,301 and the attendance for the game was reported as 76,500.  But the stands looked to be holding considerably less.  I was hoping that the good people of Clemson had finally realized that their season could only end in heartbreak as long as Tommy Bowden was their coach and decided not to show up in protest.  But I guess that’s not the case.

- USC dominated Ohio State.  It wasn’t even close.  USC looked like they were playing a high school team.  That makes 3 straight big games in which Ohio State has choked.  At some point, the coaches and the AP writers will have to realize that they are over rated and stop ranking them in the top 5, right?  It’s one thing to beat up on the weak teams in the Big Ten, but its whole different beast trying to beat teams with equal or greater talent than you.  And Ohio Stat just can’t do it.

- The Gamecocks seem to have some sort of hex on the Bulldogs.  They always manage to keep the game close, no matter the talent disparity (and it is considerable).  They almost stole the game from the Dawgs, but Chris Smelley struck again and threw a killer pick near the goal line in the closing seconds that would have sent the game in to OT.  SC also lost a fumble in the end zone that could have tied it up earlier in the game.  But in the end the Dawgs escaped and their title hopes live on.

- Another thing I noticed about the UGA game was the announcers unashamed love for Matthew Stafford.  They couldn’t do enough to kiss the ass of the “best NFL QB prospect in the country”.  This is the same Matthew Stafford who needed his defense to make plays to beat the Gamecocks because he couldn’t.  The same Matthew Stafford that could only manage 146 yards and no TDs against SC.  When he made a mistake, it was the fault of his offensive line or his receivers.  In fact, the announcers were talking about his progression over the years and mentioned that he struggled at times last year.  And why did he struggle?  Not because he’s not a very good QB or because he makes poor decisions.  It was because “his receivers let him down.”  When will people stop making excuses for Stafford?  If he played on any other team, he’d be labeled a bust or an underachiever.  But fortunately for him he has a great offensive line and a stable of stud running backs that are able to carry the team.  Because he is clearly not cut out to do so.

- Sure it was against Nevada, but Chase Daniel put up some impressive numbers.  That kid is good.  He‘s another one who falls into the height trap that I don’t understand.  Under 6 foot and foolishly shunned by the big schools in favor of “prototypical” QB’s.

- The Tide seemed to get their act together again, after not scoring an offensive TD against Tulane.  Arkansas is up next and Bama hasn’t won in Fayetteville since 2002.  They are to Alabama as SC is to UGA.  They just play us tough every year, no matter how good or bad they are.  This will be the first real test (and no, Clemson was not a test) that the Tide will face.  This will give us a better idea of how the season will go.

- And I have to include this, since Mickey is a Michigan fan, but they performed poorly against Notre Dame.  Michigan turned the ball over 6 times.  With that many turnovers, even Notre Dame will be able to stay in the game.  The good news is that Michigan has a much brighter future ahead of them.  Rodriguez has been able to win at every place he’s coach.  Weis struggled against New Mexico State, despite having the talent from three straight top 5 recruiting classes on his side.

- I’m guessing that the win over Tennessee was just a fluke.

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I don’t get it

I’m watching the Kansas-South Florida game and I don’t understand something.

The announcers have said that Reesing was not heavily recruited by “the big boys”.   Why?

Reesing, Joe Hamilton, Pat White, Doug Flutie and others have proved time and again that height is not as important at the QB position in college as it is in the pro game.  You don’t have to be tall to be a successful QB in the NCAA.  That being the case, why don’t schools like Georgia take a shot on Reesing (5-11, 200, stats) rather than Matthew Stafford (6-3, 237, stats)?  To this point, Reesing has been the better QB, despite being 4 inches shorter than Stafford.

At some point, someone will be able to explain to me why height is such a big deal in college, despite evidence to the contrary.

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Thoughts after Week 2

Some random thoughts about week after having a day to digest everything.

- Washington got screwed. I understand that the excessive celebration penalty was called as it is stated in the NCAA rule book, but I think the spirit of the rule was not upheld.  Did Locker toss the football in the air?  Yes.  Did he do it to taunt BYU or excessively celebrate?  No.  He was charged up from scoring in the final seconds of the game to seemingly send the game to OT and give his team a chance to win.  There is a lot of emotion in college football and as long as Locker wasn’t doing it in an unsportsman like manner (and he wasn’t), then it shouldn’t be called.  The game should have been decided on the field and not by a poor call by a referee.

- Why were Matthew Stafford and Knowshon Moreno still playing late during their blowout of Central Michigan?  My guess is that it had something to do with padding their stats for thier Heisman campaigns.  But doesn’t Richt know what can happen when a coach foolishly leaves in his best player late in a blowout?  That was a dangerous move to keep those two in the game, especially when UGA is trying to make a title run.

- Notre Dame looked BAD (3-12 on 3rd down, 4 turnovers) against San Diego State. Jimmy Clausen didn’t look very good and they didn’t run the ball very well (3.1/carry).  And I LOVE it!!!!!  I HATE Notre Dame.  They won 3 games all of last year and they got more coverage than teams like BYU and Cincinnati, that actually had winning seasons.  This year, its more of the same.  They are undeserving of all the hype and media attention they get.  And I hope they fall on their faces again.  HARD!

- Miami is on its way back to being a dominant program.  They played Florida tough, but just ran out of gas at the end.  That is attributed to their lack of quality depth, but that will be solved with a few more recruiting classes like this past one.  Randy Shannon is going to turn them around.

- How about East Carolina?!?! They knock of their 3rd consecutive ranked opponent (going back to the bowl game last year) and their first top 10 team since 1999.  And they didn’t just squeak by West Virginia – they DOMINATED them.  Looks like Skip Holtz could be on his way to a Conference USA title and giving BYU a run at being this years BCS buster.  Keep your eye on ECU.

- If Alabama is going to be taken seriously, then they’ll need to have more games like the Clemson game and less like the Tulane game.  They didn’t score a single offensive TD and only had 172 total yards.  Sure, they were missing some O-Linemen, but they need to execute better to be able to beat the heavy weights in the SEC.

- The ACC didn’t do much to redeemed itself after being beat up in week 1.  Maryland was whipped by Midde Tennessee State, Duke lost to Northwestern in the Turd Bowl, Virginia managed to only put up 16 points against FCS team Richmond and Miami was beaten by Florida.  When they added BC, VT and Miami back in 2004, they expected to beocome the new superpower in college football.  We are still patiently awaiting that moment.

- Sam Bradford continues to put up better numbers than Matthew Stafford agasint similar (if not better) competition.  Why does he still not get as much Heisman love?

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