Posted by Dave as Alabama Crimson Tide, Auburn Tigers, Boston College, Clemson, College Football, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Georgia Tech, Illinois Illini, LSU Tigers, Miami, Michigan Wolverines, Mizzouri Tigers, Ohio State Buckeyes, Oklahoma Sooners, Tennessee Volunteers, Texas, USC Trojans, Virginia, Virginia Tech Hokies, Washington Huskies, West Virginia Mountaineers at 3:14 PM CDT on September 1st, 2008
Opening weekend of college football is just about done, but the game I’ve really been looking forward to — when my Vols head to California to face UCLA — will close the weekend tonight (and Rutgers and Fresno St. are about to go at it right now).
With that said, here’s a few thoughts on what’s transpired thus far.
Jackonsville State 14, Georgia Tech 41: The Jackets were able to run for 385 yards in its first game running the triple option. You don’t watch a D-I school beat Jackonsville State and say a system will work, but if Thursday night was an indication, then the system will work.
UGA 45, Georgia Southern 21: This isn’t the kind of game you want to see from the No. 1 team in the nation. That offensive line of Georgia has got to be a question mark.
Youngstown State 0, Ohio State 43: The biggest thing about this game wasn’t the score but the health of Chris Wells. If he’s out for a duration of time, and from what I saw from USC, you’ve gotta give the Trojans the nod during their showdown in two weeks.
USC 52, Virginia 7: Ouch. The ACC really showed that they’re an inferior conference this weekend.
Chattanooga 2, Oklahoma 57: Sadly, the score wasn’t even this close. It was 50-0 at halftime, and then the reserves came in.
Hawaii 10, Florida 56: They didn’t look as sharp as I expeted, but keep in mind that Percy Harvin is still out, but expected to play next week against Miami.
Illinois 42, Missouri 52: Chase Daniel had 323 yards and 3 touchdowns. As good a start as that was, he was outplayed by Juice Williams, who had over 400 yards throwing and 5 TD’s.
Appalachian State 13, LSU 41: There wasn’t going to be another miracle this year. Not against that defensive size and speed.
Villanova 21, West Virginia 48: They’re one of the teams I’ve said will play in the BCS Title game. It wasn’t the best showing, but a win’s a win.
Alabama 34, Clemson 10: Again: The ACC just didn’t show up. The Clemson game was never close, and Tommy Bowden proves again why you can’t rely on Tommy Bowden. You can’t say Alabama has more talent, but they sure did look like it Saturday night.
Louisiana Monroe 0, Auburn 34: I watched this game, and though the score shows a blowout, this game was a lot closer. Auburn’s offense never did click, and that’s hopefully just some rust in the new spread system they’re implementing.
Northern Arizona 13, Arizona State 30: Does anyone really think Arizona State will beat UGA? I hope they do, but I’m not really buying into it.
Virginia Tech 22, East Carolina 27: Again: Wake up, ACC.
Washington 10, Oregon 44: Say goodbye to Ty Willingham. He’s on thin ice as is, and losing by 34 points in the opener isn’t the way to start the season.
Posted by Dave as Alabama Crimson Tide, Auburn Tigers, Clemson, College Football, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Georgia Tech, Kentucky Wildcats, LSU Tigers, Mizzouri Tigers, Ohio State Buckeyes, Oklahoma Sooners, South Carolina Gamecocks, Tennessee Volunteers, USC Trojans, Virginia Tech Hokies, West Virginia Mountaineers at 8:46 AM CDT on August 26th, 2008
ESPN has a group of “experts” together to make their picks, and they range widely. There’s a common theme of teams in the BCS Title game: Oklahoma, UGA, Florida, USC, Ohio State, Georgia, and one brave soul picking Missouri, but some of the picks seem off. Two people say Ohio State will win it, and if there’s anything history’s taught us about Ohio State being in a national title game, it’s that won’t not just win, but they’ll get absolutely blown out.
To Todd McShay’s credit — he picked THE Ohio State University to win it all — he at least has them victors over Oklahoma, and not a team from the SEC. Other predictions throughout:
-If they’re right, Clemson will dominate the ACC. If I’m right, Clemson will be a dark horse all year long, and maybe the team that busts the BCS (think Auburn a few years back when they went undefeated in the SEC and got shafted). If Clemson beats Alabama, they’ll be a decent sized favorite the rest of the year.
-Recent odds calculated Georgia of having a 6.2 percent chance of reaching the BCS Title game. It seems low until you look at their schedule, and then you have to wonder if Vegas shot a little high. They play at South Carolina, at Arizona State, Tennessee and Alabama in back-to-back-to-back-to-back games. They get a breather with Vandy, and then it’s off to a gauntlet the likes college football has never seen: At LSU, Florida in Jacksonville — and don’t think Mighty Tim Tebow has forgotten last year — Kentucky in Lexington and then Auburn on the road. So, if you think they’ve got a 6.2 percent chance of going undefeated or only losing one, then you’re clearly no mathmetician, and you’re obviously a tad insane.
-Pittsburgh and South Florida are being picked to win the Big East. Have we forgotten about West Virginia? The team that was one game away from playing for the national title? I know South Florida has had WVU’s number over the last couple of years, but if you think they’re going to have an overall better record than WVU, then you’re smoking that same stuff the guys and gals at UGA are.
-Oklahoma seems to be a lock by these guys to win the Big 12. Missouri has a lot of talent returning, and OU is kind of notorious for late season melt downs (of course, that usually happens in a bowl game).
-Where’s some pub on my Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets? No love for my Tennessee Vols? These guys don’t know anything.
Posted by Dave as Alabama Crimson Tide, Clemson, College Football, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Miami, Notre Dame, Oklahoma Sooners at 8:22 PM CST on February 6th, 2008
Signings have come and gone, except for Terrelle Pryor, who has decided to continue torching the Wolverines and Buckeyes with patience, and there were a few surprises. A Georgia Tight End, whose name I don’t know because he’s going to Georgia and he’s only in high school, screwed the Dogs and went to Clemson instead.
Look: I don’t keep up with college football recruiting much. To me, it’s one of those things that’s a lot of hype and not a lot of substance. So many of these kids come in highly recruited and we never hear from them; others, kids that were three and four stars, blow up in college and end up the best players in the NFL. Regardless, I’m forced to do a job, even if it’s half-ass. Here’s the Top 5 recruiting classes this year, according to ESPN.
1. Miami Hurricanes
2. Clemson Tigers
3. Florida “Urban Meyer Pays Well” Gators
4. Alabama Crimson Tide
5. Georgia “We Would Be Better If It Wasn’t For Clemson” Bulldogs
According to Rivals, here’s how it goes:
1. Alabama
2. Notre Dame
3. Florida
4. Miami
5. Oklahoma
Like I said: I don’t think recruiting means that much. How they play against another level is something Rivals or ESPN can’t tell us. That said, it’s nice to see Miami getting talent again. There was something always fun about watching a team with speed, and then watching Miami. It’s the old saying: “There’s speed, and then there’s Miami speed.” Say hello to seven more 1st Round NFL Draft Picks.
Posted by Dave as Arkansas Razorbacks, Auburn Tigers, College Football, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Illinois Illini, Michigan Wolverines, Mizzouri Tigers, Tennessee Volunteers, Texas Tech, USC Trojans, Virginia, Virginia Tech Hokies, Wisconsin Badgers at 9:19 PM CST on January 1st, 2008

The scores of today’s games, minus the Georgia/Hawaii game, which will probably result in a UGA blowout. It’s just underway, but everything else is official. Tomorrow features VT and Kansas.
Wisconsin Badgers 17, Tennessee Vols 21: With it being the 11:00 a.m. game the day after New Year’s Eve, I was a little late to tune in, even being a UT fan. What I watched was a game where Tennessee tried at every possession to give the game away, only for Wisconsin to give it right back. Erik Ainge passed for 365 yards and two touchdowns, 229 of those yards coming in the first half. Tyler Donovan played courageously against the Vols, getting hit every time he seemed to drop back, but finished with only 150 yards passing and one touchdown. It was the Vols first 10-win season since 2004.
Missouri Tigers 38, Arkansas Razorbacks 7: This game was pretty much over before it started. Featuring Felix Jones and Darren McFadden, you’d think one of those guys would have the big day on the ground, but instead Mizzou’s Tony Temple ran all over Arkansas’ D for 281 yards, a Cotton Bowl record.
Michigan Wolverines 41, Florida Gators 35: There was trash talking back and forth, but in the end Mike Hart and Chad Henne made sure to send Lloyd Carr out a winner. Florida’s defense couldn’t do anything all game, and while Tebow and the offense were successful, they often looked out of sync. Percy Harvin finished up with 166 yards rushing to go with 77 yards receiving.
Texas Tech 31, Virginia 28: I watched very little of this game. It was taking place during the Tennessee/Wisconsin game and also during the Michigan/Florida game. Both games featured more high profile teams, but neither was probably as good as this one. Virginia had a ten point lead in the second half, but fell short in the fourth quarter when Texas Tech nailed a game-winning field goal with .02 left.
Illinois 17, USC 49: If you watched this game — or at least the first half, upon which you became as bored as I did — then you saw one team that was really good and one team that was really, really overmatched. Illinois probably shouldn’t have been there in the first place. Illinois will be an exciting team to watch next year, but they never stood a chance in this one.
Posted by Dave as Alabama Crimson Tide, Arkansas Razorbacks, Auburn Tigers, Clemson, College Football, Florida Gators, Florida State, Georgia Bulldogs, Georgia Tech, Ohio State Buckeyes, Southern California, Tennessee Volunteers, Virginia Tech, West Virginia Mountaineers at 1:56 PM CST on November 25th, 2007

I don’t pretend to know what bowls feature what conferences — outside of the Rose Bowl and the Peach, which are pretty obvious — so I won’t even attempt to claim some of these bowl projections as my bowl projections. These are the predictions that CBS Sportsline has put out, and I find that CBS is often more accurate than ESPN. To read all of their bowl projections, go here; I’m going to just highlight some of the good ones that I noticed.
-Emerald Bowl, Dec. 28: Georgia Tech vs. Cal
-Independence Bowl, Dec. 30: Colorado vs. Alabama
-Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl, Dec. 31: Auburn vs. Clemson
-Capital One, Jan. 1: Illinois vs. Florida
-Outback, Jan 1: Tennessee vs. Wisconsin
-Rose Bowl, Jan. 1: Ohio State vs. USC
-Orange Bowl, Jan. 3: VT vs. Georgia
-National Championship Game, Jan. 7: Mizzou vs. West Virginia
Posted by Dave as College Football, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs at 7:27 PM CDT on October 29th, 2007
I didn’t realize there was much debate over the UGA celebration in the Florida game, but Fox Sports Radio (on XM) was going off this morning about it, asking whether or not Richt should incur a huge fine and some sort of lengthy suspension.
The opinions were pretty mixed: Some felt it wasn’t that big of a deal, while others, presumably Florida fans, felt that Richt should be banned from football and burnt at a stake.
Let me make something clear: I’m not UGA fan. I’m not even close. My favorite team is Georgia Tech, through and through, and my second-favorite team is Tennessee (I grew up a Tech fan, but went to school at UT — GPA was a bit low to get into the former). I hate Georgia probably more than anyone on this earth hates Georgia. That said, what they did wasn’t that bad.
This team isn’t USC three years ago, they aren’t the New England Patriots of NCAA Football, and, to be quite honest, they’re not even Florida. Richt did this to fire up his guys, and good for him — he’ll be paying for it the next fifteen years, the same way Georgia’s been paying for it the last fifteen years against Florida.
Next year I assure you Florida won’t be overlooking the Bulldogs — it’s easy to come into a game and overlook an opponent you’ve beaten 13 times in the last 15 games, but now things have changed — and anyone who thinks UGA’s more on the rise than Florida is being plain silly. Tim Tebow was 50% and Florida’s defense is incredibly young.
Suspensions? Fines? Not necessary. He’ll get it back his way next year.
Or maybe sooner.
Posted by Dave as Central Florida, College Football, Duke, Florida Gators, Georgia Tech, Michigan, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Tennessee Volunteers, Texas, Virginia at 7:28 PM CDT on September 12th, 2007
Last Week: 1-3
On the season: 3-5
How I’ll do this week: Hopefully better
Last week was tough. This week will be better. Here’s my picks.
-Virginia @ North Carolina (-3): Virginia got waxed by Wyoming and then played a close game against Duke. I know nothing about either of these teams. But I know plenty about Duke. UNC covers, wins by 10.
-Notre Dame @ Michigan (-7): One team can’t score, the other team can’t stop anyone from scoring. This is a game people used to have marked on their calendar, now it’s a game to see which coach is closer to being fired. That coach is Lloyd Carr. But it’ll be at the end of the season. As long as Michigan has Mike Hart and Notre Dame has, uh, who they’ve got, Michigan covers.
-Tennessee @ Florida (-8): I hate picking against the Vols — I went to school there a couple years, ya know? — but they couldn’t stop Cal on the road, which leads me to believe they won’t stop Florida, either. I’d love to be wrong about this one. But I think I’m right. Gators cover, do the Tebow-Chomp.
-Texas (-19) @ Central Florida: It was a close game, but the scoreboard in the TCU/Texas game wouldn’t indicate so. Even when they’re sloppy, they still cover. Central Florida? Gimme a break. Horns cover, win a blowout.
-Boston College (+6.5) @ Georgia Tech: My Yellow Jackets are looking as good as they’ve ever looked, but unfortunately so is Boston College. This is the first year in a long time I can remember being 2-0 and thinking we’ve got a chance — I mean, I’m just saying a chance — of playing for a National Title. Problem is, Matt Ryan’s pretty good, and averaging 400 yards, regardless of who you’ve played, is pretty solid in a two-game span. My National Title dream won’t come to an end this week; that said, BC covers, loses by a field goal.
Posted by Dave as Auburn Tigers, College Football, Florida Gators, Kentucky Wildcats, LSU Tigers, Miami, Mississippi State Bulldogs, Southern California, USF Bulls, Virginia Tech, Win Some Money: College Football Spreads at 8:13 PM CDT on September 5th, 2007
Okay. I’ve posted on this a lot, which means I shouldn’t go over it much more, but recapping can never be done too much. Last week I went 2-2. This week? I’m switching up my style a little, have a couple of twists, and am expecting to be rolling in the dough somewhere around 9:00 Saturday night (only to start rolling in it again Sunday night, but those NFL picks will wait until tomorrow).
Anyway, in case you didn’t notice, last week had a few “misprints.” I didn’t pick an FSU team that can’t block, and I definitely didn’t pick a Tennessee team that can’t tackle. This week is free of any possible misprints that my editor may let sneak through. On we go.
--Teaser
Miami (+21) @ Oklahoma
South Florida @ Auburn (+3)
Kent @ Kentucky (-2.5)
It’s a teaser, which is one of those bets that always looks good until the games actually play themselves out. That said, I feel this one is pretty solid: I can’t see a Miami defense losing to an Oklahoma offense (without AP, mind you) by more than 21 points; Auburn looked shaky against Kansas State, sure, but at home, against South Florida, as a two point underdog? That’s money in the bank. As for Kentucky and Kent, well, it seems like a sure bet to me. Andre Woodson is one of the best players in the nation, and as hard as it is for me to bet on a Kentucky football team that doesn’t feature Tim Couch (pre-NFL-deadbeat days, obviously), it’s something I’ve got to jump on. This teaser’s a lock. Trust me.
-Straight up
-Virginia Tech (+14) @ LSU
LSU beat Mississippi State by 45. VT beat Eastern Carolina by a much slimmer margin than they were supposed to. But Matt Flynn only had 123 yards passing against Croom’s boys, and their top rusher boasted a measley 68 yards. This was against Mississippi State. Not against Xavier Adibi and Vince Hall. Sean Glennon’s as bad as they get, but VT can sit back on Brandon Ore and win a game. LSU can’t sit back on Jason Hester and Richard Murphy — Richard Murphy! — and expect to win much. Beamer knows special teams and defense. Matt Flynn’s gonna know this isn’t Mississippi State anymore. They probably won’t win, but take VT and the touchdowns.
-Troy @ Florida (-25)
Hey, it’s Troy. And better yet, it’s Florida. I don’t give a damn that Tebow’s new. Percy, Percy, Percy. Gators cover.
-Bowling Green @ Michigan State (-17)
Michigan State is that team that comes out of the gates hot and then really tanks. Thankfully, we’re in luck: It’s week two, where MSU does its best impersonation of USC. It won’t be like last week (my God, was that game ever really in question?), but MSU rolls, covers the 17.
Posted by Dave as College Football, College Football's Upon Us, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Kentucky Wildcats, South Carolina Gamecocks, Tennessee Volunteers at 8:21 PM CDT on August 16th, 2007

A lot of blogs are doing this, so I feel I should jump in. And with the recent nothingness in sports, why not? When the top story from yesterday was a non-related dog stabbing, football posts become a must. Which brings me to this: Each day I will try and post major conference breakdowns for all you college fanatics out there. The Big Twelve, SEC and ACC will be broken into two parts, since there’s two different divisions. All other conferences will be done in whole. Today we’ll focus on the SEC East, tomorrow the SEC East. Monday we’ll pick up again and, I dunno, maybe cover the Pac 10; it’ll have to be a surprise.
I’ll have a ranking posted next to each team, and for the teams in conferences broken down by divisions, that ranking doesn’t represent the ranking for the division. . . it represents the ranking for the entire conference. On we go.
Posted by Dave as College Football, Florida Gators, Ohio State Buckeyes at 11:36 PM CST on January 9th, 2007

If you’re an Ohio State fan, then you’ve just hated your week, partly because your team has stunk it up against good teams, and partly because Florida is being made out to be the Team of the Decade. Florida took the hardwood tonight and beat Arkansas 79-72. Ohio State, meanwhile, lost to number 4 Wisconsin when Jamar Butler’s last-second three clanked off the back iron, making certain that Ohio State have its most miserable 24 hours in school history.
Look. I rooted for the Gators last night. But this happy-happy string of good fortunes is getting a little old, and I’m actually starting to find myself feeling sorry for the Buckeyes. That sympathy doesn’t stretch far enough to cover Jim Tressel, though. I’m happy he’s suffering.