Monday, September 29, 2008

Oklahoma’s No. 1, Bama No. 2 in AP poll

NEW YORK (AP)—Oklahoma, where the No. 1 ranking rests again.

The Sooners sit atop the AP Top 25 on Sunday after the first upset-filled weekend of the season gave the media poll a powerful shake. Alabama was both a mover and a shaker, as the Crimson Tide rose to No. 2 after a surprising 41-30 pounding of Georgia.

Previously top-ranked Southern California lost at Oregon State to set the tone for a weekend that brought back memories of the topsy-turvy 2007 season.

On Saturday, two more top-five teams fell. Florida was stunned at home by Mississippi, 31-30. Georgia, which started the season No. 1, was down 31 points by halftime to Alabama and never recovered.

Overall, nine ranked teams lost, six to unranked foes.

The last time such a shake-up occurred? One year ago, when in the last week of September three of the top-five teams fell and seven ranked teams lost to unranked opponents.

“I think we talked (Friday) that anyone can beat anyone on any given Saturday, and that’s why you’ve got to come out and you’ve got to play on edge, full tilt every game because if not, someone’s liable to come in and beat you,” Oklahoma quarterback Sam Bradford said after the Sooners’ 35-10 victory over TCU on Saturday.

Oklahoma is No. 1 for the 96th time in the history of the AP poll, breaking a tie with Notre Dame for the most ever. The last time the Sooners were No. 1 was 2003, when they were atop the polls all season before losing the Big 12 title game to Kansas State.

Oklahoma received 43 of a possible 65 first-place votes and 1,599 points.

Alabama’s impressive performance jumped the Tide six spots. Alabama hasn’t been ranked this high since it was No. 2 for the first eight polls of the 1993 season.

The Tide received 21 first-place votes and 1,565 points.

LSU is No. 3, moving up two spots. No. 4 Missouri, which received a first-place vote, and No. 5 Texas also moved up two places and left the top five under the control of the Big 12 (three teams) and Southeastern Conference (two).

Penn State moved up six spots to No. 6 after its 38-24 victory against Illinois.

Texas Tech was idle, but took advantage of the attrition in the top 10 to move up to No. 7. BYU is eighth, USC dropped eight spots to No. 9 and South Florida is No. 10.

In the USA Today coaches’ poll, Oklahoma was No. 1, but LSU was No. 2, followed by Missouri, Alabama and Texas. In the Harris, poll which came out for the first time this season Sunday and is used in the BCS standings, Oklahoma was No. 1, followed by LSU, Alabama, Missouri and Texas.

Georgia and Florida each dropped eight spots in the AP poll. The Bulldogs are No. 11 and Florida is No. 12, followed by fellow SEC rival Auburn at 13th.

No. 14 Ohio State is followed by Utah, Kansas, Boise State and Wisconsin, which dropped nine spots after blowing a 19-point lead and losing to Michigan 27-25.

No. 19 Vanderbilt and Virginia Tech, which moved back into the rankings with 35-30 win at Nebraska, rounded out the top 20.

No. 21 Oklahoma State is ranked for the first time since 2004.

Fresno State, Oregon, Connecticut and Wake Forest, which was upset 24-17 at home by Navy, are the final five. UConn is in the rankings for the first time this season.

Clemson, Illinois, East Carolina, which lost its second straight game, and TCU all fell out of the rankings.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Oregon 27, USC 21

CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP)—It had been 41 years since Oregon State knocked off a No. 1 team.
Freshman Jacquizz Rodgers helped the Beavers pull off another stunner—and Southern California was the victim again. Rodgers ran for 186 yards and two touchdowns, and Oregon State built a 21-point first-half lead before capitalizing on a late turnover and upsetting the Trojans 27-21 on Thursday night.

Beavers fans, clad in orange, rushed the field when the clock ran out after the 25-point underdogs shook up college football with a victory over the team that was expected to roll right through its conference straight to the national championship game.
“I think we made a statement, like we can come out and beat anybody on any given day. It’s not always the best team that wins on a day. It’s who plays hard,” Rodgers said.

The Beavers (2-2, 1-1 Pacific-10) also upset USC at Reser Stadium in 2006, when the Trojans were ranked third. The team’s lone victory over a No. 1 team came in 1967, when Oregon State beat the O.J. Simpson-led Trojans 3-0. USC quarterback Mark Sanchez’s pass was intercepted by safety Greg Laybourn on the 30 with less than 3 minutes to play. Laybourn ran the ball back 28 yards to put Oregon State on the 2, and Rodgers ran in the final 2 yards to make it 27-14.
Fans carried Laybourn on their shoulders after the game.
Sanchez hit Patrick Turner with a 14-yard scoring pass with 1:19 left, but time ran out on the Trojans (2-1, 0-1). “I’m beside myself,” USC coach Pete Carroll said. “They didn’t hide what they were doing, they just did it. We couldn’t stop it. We couldn’t tackle.” Rodgers’ rushing yards were the most by a Trojans opponent since Vince Young ran for 200 for Texas in the BCS national championship game in 2006.


Rodgers’ brother James had six catches for 36 yards and two scores for Oregon State. Lyle Moevao completed 18 of 26 passes for 167 yards and two scores. “They came out and competed,” Oregon State coach Mike Riley said of his team. “We were respectful, but not in awe.” USC tailback Joe McKnight rushed for just 10 yards against the Beavers, after gaining 105 yards in the Trojans’ 35-3 victory over Ohio State. Sanchez completed 18 of 29 passes for 227 yards and three scores, with the one crucial interception. “Not our sharpest tonight—everybody, every position. There’s not need to point fingers,” Sanchez said. “I’m as guilty as anyone else. I threw an interception—costly late in the game.” McKnight took the loss upon himself.
“I didn’t make the plays. Fumbled the ball, Dropped a pass,” he said. “You can’t blame anybody else but me.”
The game opened with drama, as USC safety Taylor Mays was called for a personal foul on James Rodgers on an 8-yard touchdown reception.
Carroll asked that the score be reviewed, because it did not look as if the ball had crossed the line. The touchdown stood, giving the Beavers a 7-0 lead.
The Beavers more than held their own through the first half, with the Trojans appearing confused about how to handle Jacquizz Rodgers, who is just 5-foot-7 and 185 pounds. He somehow pushed through USC’s defensive line for a 2-yard touchdown run to make it 14-0.
His big brother saw the end zone again before halftime. Moevao’s pass was nearly intercepted by USC cornerback Kevin Thomas, but the ball was tipped into the hands of James Rodgers to make it 21-0.
USC answered on its first series of the second half with Sanchez’s 26-yard scoring pass to Ronald Johnson.
Sanchez found wide-open receiver Damien Williams, who sprinted down the sideline—and narrowly avoided Laybourn’s efforts to push him out of bounds— to narrow it to 21-14 with 2:56 left in the third quarter.
The Beavers squandered a chance to add to the lead midway through the fourth when they tried for a field goal, but Sean Sehnem’s 41-yard attempt was blocked.
The Beavers opened this season with two losses, at Stanford and Penn State, before returning home for a victory over Hawaii.
Despite their struggles, the Beavers had seen steady growth on offense and the emergence of Jacquizz Rodgers, who went into the game against the Trojans as the nation’s leading freshman rusher with 87.7 yards per game.
“For whatever reason we just couldn’t tackle him,” Carroll said. “We’d hit him in the backfield and he’d keep bouncing. Him hiding behind the line of scrimmage was very effective. We had troubles with it all day.”
USC had shown little vulnerability in victories at Virginia and then at home against then-No. 5 Buckeyes. But Carroll noted earlier in the week that the familiarity of Pac-10 play posed a danger.
The Beavers certainly seemed to have the Trojans figured out, holding them to 313 yards total offense. Stafon Johnson was USC’s leading rusher with 48 yards. Williams had six catches for 94 yards.
“The reality of the Pac-10 is obvious,” Carroll said after the game.
USC was without cornerback Shareece Wright, who will miss several games due to a hairline vertebra fracture suffered in the Ohio State game.
Carroll had said Wright was being disciplined after being charged with felony resisting a police officer earlier this month, but would have played against Oregon State had he been cleared medically.
USC has lost three of its last four games in Corvallis.

Monday, September 22, 2008

LSU wins past Auburn

AUBURN, Ala. (AP)—LSU made the final big play, and as usual that’s what settled the annual down-to-the-wire clash with Auburn.

This time the winning connection wasn’t Flynn-to-Byrd, but Lee-to-LaFell.

Jarrett Lee and Brandon LaFell hooked up on an 18-yard touchdown pass with 1:03 left to lift No. 6 LSU to yet another dramatic comeback win over No. 10 Auburn, 26-21 Saturday in an SEC West showdown that once again produced a fantastic finish and wild momentum swings.

The last five meetings have been decided by a collective 19 points in a rivalry that has produced more than drama. The winner has gone to the SEC championship game in six of the last eight seasons.

And last year Matt Flynn’s last-second TD pass to Demetrius Byrd helped propel LSU to a national title.

“We expected such a battle when we came here,” LSU coach Les Miles said. “I thought they showed great poise. To be tested away and be tested by a very, very capable opponent and answering that test is just what this team needed.”

The only major difference in this one was the road team came out on top. The last eight games in the series had gone to the home team. LSU (3-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) also snapped Auburn’s streak of six consecutive victories at Jordan-Hare Stadium against Top 10 teams.

Lee took over for an injured Andrew Hatch in the third quarter and produced a series of big plays to make up for a lousy start for LSU. Lee missed his first five throws, with an interception returned by defensive end Gabe McKenzie for a touchdown.

Auburn (3-1, 1-1) moved to LSU’s 47 on the final drive, with help from Rahim Alem’s roughing the passer penalty. Alem atoned with a sack of Chris Todd to recoup the 15-yard loss.

Todd’s desperation fourth-and-25 pass to Rod Smith came up short of the first down.

Byrd came up big again for LSU. He pulled in a 22-yard halfback pass from Keiland Williams on the final play of the third quarter for a 17-14 lead. Miles said the coaches installed that play in practice this week.

“It just happened to be the right time for that play,” said Miles, who also had successfully converted an onside kick after LSU’s first TD. “We needed a fast score.”

Colt David added a 32-yard field goal with 8:27 left and set LSU’s career record for points scored by a kicker.

Todd and Auburn’s offense kept the team alive. He hit Robert Dunn for a 15-yard touchdown pass with 6:40 left on third-and-9 to give Auburn a 21-20 lead. It was set up by a 58-yard heave to Tim Hawthorne when Todd rolled left, turned around and saw Hawthorne running free near the right sideline.

Lee, who had been platooning with Hatch, was 4-for-4 on the winning drive for 43 yards.

“We had the ballgame,” Tuberville said. “We had the lead, we lost it; we had the lead again, we lost it. We’ve got a disappointed bunch of guys in the locker room. We felt like the way we played at times, we should have won it. They made a few more plays than we did.”

It was the first major test for the defending national champions, who opened with wins over Appalachian State and North Texas.

Once again, LSU passed. And ran, too.

Charles Scott rushed for 132 tackle-breaking yards against an Auburn defense that was virtually untouchable in a 3-2 win at Mississippi State last weekend but appeared to weaken under the 233-pounder’s barrage.

LSU had never had a 100-yard rusher at Jordan-Hare.

Lee was 11-for-22 for 182 yards and two touchdowns, including a 39-yarder to Chris Mitchell in the third. LSU gained 284 of its 389 yards in the second half.

“In the first half, receivers were getting open and the offensive line was blocking,” Lee said. “I was just making poor decisions. I knew I would get back in and I knew when the opportunity came back, I had to make the right decisions.

“I just felt comfortable out there.”

Scott said LSU players at halftime felt they would pull it out.

“I know we had no doubt,” he said. “We knew it would be like this, we knew it would be a four-quarter game and we were ready to play.”

Todd had his most productive game as Auburn’s starter, going 17-for-32 for 250 yards. The junior college transfer was intercepted twice by Chris Hawkins.

“It was real exciting. There’s nothing like it,” Todd said. “The adrenaline rush, playing on that stage was awesome. You’d like to win, but it came down to the end, and those are the type of games you like to play in.”

Auburn’s Ben Tate was held to 45 yards on 19 carries. Fellow tailback Brad Lester left with a right leg injury in the third quarter, but Tuberville said he could have returned.

McKenzie had returned an interception 24 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter for a 14-3 lead.

Hatch was only 2-for-6 for 16 yards for LSU, but ran for 51 yards. He looked wobbly after his final run and was helped off the field after going to the ground while trying to walk to LSU’s sideline.

“We think he’ll be fine,” Miles said. “He had his neck yanked and it kind of stung.”

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Tressel: RB Wells now doubtful for USC game

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said Thursday it is doubtful that starting tailback Chris “Beanie” Wells will play Saturday night against No. 1 Southern California.

Tressel said there was lingering soreness for Wells in his right foot after he worked out on Wednesday night. Wells did not practice with the team Thursday morning just before it departed for Los Angeles.

“We were hoping he’d wake up this morning and feel even better than yesterday,” Tressel said shortly before boarding the team bus to the airport. “But it didn’t happen. We’ll see from here.”

Wells injured his right foot in the fifth-ranked Buckeyes’ opener against Youngstown State, did not play last week against Ohio and has not had contact in partial practices this week. He flew with the team on Thursday afternoon.

Tressel did not rule out the possibility of the junior seeing action, but did not sound optimistic.

“Beanie practiced about 20 carries yesterday, and maybe 20 percent of the practice,” Tressel said. “We didn’t have him work today. He had more soreness this morning than we had hoped for. A late afternoon practice followed by a morning practice, we’re hoping that’s a little bit of the reason why. So we’ll just have to play it by ear.”

Co-offensive coordinator Jim Bollman said after Wednesday night’s practice that Wells was about 75 percent healthy.

“The chances of him being 100 percent are not high, I would think,” Bollman said. “That would be a miraculous recovery.”

Ohio State is a 10 1/2 -point underdog against the Trojans in the first meeting between the teams in 18 years. USC has won its last seven meetings with Big Ten teams, by an average margin of 27.8 points.

With Wells out of last week’s come-from-behind 26-14 victory over 33 1/2 -point underdog Ohio, redshirt freshman Dan Herron, sophomore Brandon Saine and senior Maurice Wells handled the load at tailback. They have also been seeing most of the action in practice this week, with Wells working out on Monday and Tuesday on his own away from his teammates under the supervision of team trainers.

Tressel said the three backups would share the job of replacing Wells, who rushing for 1,609 yards and 15 touchdowns last season and was considered a top Heisman Trophy prospect this season.

“I would call it more by committee,” he said. “Now if someone starts really feeling it, no matter who that is, you would (play them). But we’re pleased with all those guys.”

Tressel said team doctors, trainers and the coaching staff would monitor Wells’ condition and then consult with him before ruling on whether he will play in the game at the Coliseum.

He said the Buckeyes’ playbook would not be severely hampered by Wells’ absence. But he did say that it still might come as a shock to Wells’ teammates if he cannot play in a game of this magnitude.

“Our guys have seen that we’ve practiced for quite some time without him,” Tressel said. “I suppose maybe when you get to the realization that, OK, maybe he won’t play, then perhaps there’s a ‘Man!’ type of thing. But we’ve got to go (on).”

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Ohio State 26, Ohio 14

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Beanie Wells didn’t play. The Ohio Bobcats sure did.

Lightly regarded even in the Mid-American Conference, Ohio put a scare into No. 3 Ohio State before the Buckeyes righted things in the fourth quarter and went on to win 26-14 Saturday.

With star tailback Chris Wells sidelined by a foot injury, the Buckeyes (2-0) struggled to move the ball until Brandon Saine’s short plunge on the third play of the final quarter finally put them on top and Ray Small added some breathing room with a late 69-yard punt return.

This was not the tuneup the Buckeyes needed before traveling next week to meet No. 1 Southern California.

Ohio (0-2) had five costly turnovers—two in the fourth quarter—to help its bigger, badder neighbors escape.

Wells, mentioned as a Heisman Trophy hopeful after gaining 1,600 yards a year ago, injured his right foot a week ago in a 43-0 rout of Youngstown State. He watched the game from the sidelines while three players got his carries.

A week after a capacity crowd sat in stunned silence when Wells was injured, they were again quieted, this time by Ohio’s inspired play. Ohio State had not lost to an in-state foe since a 7-6 setback to Oberlin in 1921—a string of 36 victories, most of them lopsided.

Ohio, which wore T-shirts with “O-S-Who?” on them during its Friday walkthrough, led 7-6 at the half, 14-6 midway through the third quarter and 14-12 heading into the fourth.

Maybe the Buckeyes were looking ahead to next week’s showdown. Maybe they were missing Wells. Or maybe the Bobcats had their number, at least for three quarters.

And Ohio did it without its starting quarterback. Theo Scott was brought to his knees by a hit late in the first quarter and was replaced by Boo Jackson. Scott had an injured shoulder and did not return.

Jackson did just enough to bedevil the Buckeyes, completing 9 of 25 passes for 86 yards with three interceptions and rushing for 55 yards on seven carries.

Had the Bobcats pulled it off, the only comparable upset of a Big Ten team might have been Appalachian State’s astonishing victory over Michigan in 2007 at The Big House.

With Ohio State trailing 7-6 in the third quarter, Ohio drove to the Ohio State 34 and punted, with Matt Schulte’s kick downed at the 6. Three plays later, center Jim Cordle’s snap was 3 feet over quarterback Todd Boeckman’s head and flew into the end zone. Boeckman lost the handle, the ball slipping to his feet where it was recovered by defensive end Curtis Myers. Barrett May’s extra-point kick made it 14-6.

After the ensuing kickoff, the Buckeyes put together their first extended drive of the day, capped by Dan Herron jutting off tackle for a 2-yard touchdown. But the Buckeyes capped that with a mistake. After Tressel passed on a tying 2-point conversion try, 29-year-old kicker Ryan Pretorius missed the kick wide left.

The Bobcats then began to falter. Ohio State was forced to punt, but returner Mark Parson was hit by the Buckeyes’ Shaun Lane and fumbled, with Lane falling on the ball as it tumbled out of bounds at the 25. The play was confirmed on video review.

Six plays later, the Buckeyes were back in the end zone—and back in the lead. Saine carried on the final three plays covering 14 yards, including the 2-yard TD run, and Pretorius converted for a 19-14 lead.

Small then sailed 69 yards with under 6 minutes left to essentially end the threat.

The Buckeyes sputtered on offense all day, netting just 272 yards. Boeckman was 16-for-26 passing for 110 yards, but was sacked three times. Herron had 50 yards on 12 carries, Maurice Wells 48 on nine and Saine 15 on five in place of Beanie Wells.

The Bobcats, who lost 21-20 at Wyoming in the opener, led 7-3 after Donte Harden slalomed 15 yards through the defense for a score midway through the second quarter. Ohio State was largely anemic on offense, mustering just two Pretorius field goals until late in the third quarter.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

LSU-Troy game postponed - Damage to Tiger Stadium

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP)—LSU has postponed its football game against Troy after Hurricane Gustav rolled through Louisiana this week.
A person with direct knowledge of athletic scheduling at LSU told The Associated Press the Tigers’ game versus the Trojans will be played Nov. 15. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team had not been formally notified yet.
LSU has scheduled a press conference for 3 p.m. EDT.
LSU’s football team met at the Tigers’ on-campus training center Tuesday afternoon, then went ahead with practice.
Gustav caused some damage at Tiger Stadium, including broken glass and torn awnings over club seats. Debris littered the stands and playing field.