Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1439 of 1503)

USC tops Notre Dame, puts dagger in Florida and Michigan title hopes

USC 44, Notre Dame 24
This rivalry will never amount to Michigan-Ohio State, but nevertheless, fans that tuned into this contest saw some fireworks. USC just had way too much firepower for the Irish defense. It seemed that whenever Notre Dame needed a stop on defense, it never came. Losing safety Chinedum Ndukwe to a knee injury certainly hurt the Irish in trying to defend a tremendous effort given by Dwayne Jarrett (7 rec. 133 yards, 3 TDs). But John David Booty (266 yards, 3 TDs, 2 INTs) looked calm and in control all night (more so than Hesiman hopeful Brady Quinn), so I don’t think Ndukwe’s injury was the difference maker. The USC wide out duo is just too much to deal with for most opponents. If the Trojans beat UCLA next weekend, what a match up it will be between USC’s receivers vs. Ohio State’s secondary.

While I’m on the subject, I’m warming up to an USC-Ohio State national championship. I don’t think either defense would completely shut down the opposing offense and we might see sixty points, but it would certainly be entertaining. The way the Trojans dismantled Notre Dame Saturday night, it doesn’t bode too well for a Florida team that barely escaped a win over Florida State. I know it was a rivalry game, but USC completely thrashed the No. 6 team in the country, while UF squeaked by an unranked FSU program that was playing with a quarterback in Drew Weatherford that seemed to barely try. It also doesn’t help that Florida plays Arkansas in the SEC Championship game next week after the Razorbacks just fell to LSU at home. Beating a one-loss Razorback team would have obviously held more water than if Florida knocks off Arkansas now.

If USC doesn’t fall asleep like it did against Oregon State next week, count me in for one who believes the Trojans deserve an outright chance at the Buckeyes come January 8th.

Arkansas falls, makes ND-USC huge

Even with Darren McFadden performing like a one-man wrecking crew, Arkansas won’t be playing for a national title in ’06. The Razorbacks were defeated by SEC rival LSU 31-26 Friday, which dropped AU to two losses and virtually out of national championship contention. McFadden rushed for 182 yards, was 2 for 2 passing for 33 yards and scored twice. However, the AU defense couldn’t stop JaMarcus Russell (14 of 22 for 210 yards and two TDs) or Trenton Hilton early in the fourth quarter. After an 80-yard McFadden touchdown run that brought the Razorbacks within eight, Hilton returned the ensuing kickoff 92 yards to put the Tigers up for good.

What the Arkansas loss means to the BCS has a resounding effect on the Notre Dame-USC game Saturday. A win over the Irish might be enough for USC to knock Florida out of contention, even if the Gators beat the Razorbacks in the SEC Championship game. A loss by the Trojans, and Florida might be able to set a date with Ohio State if the Gators beat Arkansas. To further complicate things, Michigan still has a shot if both USC and Florida fall. I doubt a one-loss Notre Dame leapfrogs a one-loss Wolverines team after Michigan dismantled the Irish earlier in the season. But hey, this is the BCS, where anything can happen.

Astros agree to terms with Lee, ballclubs seem to be targeting hitters

The Houston Chronicle is reporting that the Astros have come to terms with free agent left fielder Carlos Lee. The deal is reportedly worth six years for around $90 million.

Lee, a career .286 hitter, finished with a .300 batting average, 37 home runs and 116 RBIs over 161 games between the Brewers and Rangers.

Lee will provide plenty of power in Houston’s lineup and was viewed along with Alfonso Soriano as the big-money bat of the free agency class. With his power, Lee is a terrific cleanup or fifth hitter in the order. On the down side, Lee is average in the outfield, doesn’t take many walks and isn’t in the best shape.

What’s interesting is that teams, at least thus far, are targeting position players instead of starting pitching. We hear it time and time again about how pitching wins championships, but at least earlier on, that’s not how organizations are choosing to build through free agency. With Barry Zito, Jason Schmidt, Andy Pettitte, Roger Clemens, Ted Lilly and Randy Wolf still available, it’s a bit surprising that ballclubs are spending mega bucks on hitters.

Coker done in Miami

It didn’t take the University of Miami more than 15 hours after finishing the 2006 season 6-6 to fire head coach Larry Coker. Even after the Hurricanes topped Boston College 17-14 Thursday night, the writing was obviously on the wall for Coker, who will finish with a 59-15 mark at Miami. Coker won more games in his six years than any other Hurricane coach other than Dennis Erickson.

A Miami official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Coker’s firing would be announced later today. Coker was informed of the decision by athletics director Paul Dee early Friday. Coker has three years remaining on a contract that pays him nearly $2 million annually, and the school will owe him between $2.4 million and $3 million in a buyout.

It’s high time “The U” gets a disciplinarian in its program and cleans up all of the off the field crap that goes hand in hand with Miami football. Although, it should be noted that Coker’s athletes had a higher graduating percentage under him than in year’s past. However, shootings, deaths, on-field fights and robberies have haunted this program over the past decade and while Coker can hardly take the brunt of all the problems, he was obviously never part of the solution either. Hopefully Coker’s firing will signify much more than just a win-loss record or I’m afraid we might not be seeing the last of Miami’s issues.

Thanksgiving Day Action in the NFL

The theme for Turkey Day in the NFL yesterday had to be the play of the quarterbacks. Joey Harrington goes back into Detroit, where he was tormented, abused and damn near made fun of, and throws for 213 yards and three touchdowns in a 27-10 thumping of the Lions. Nobody outside of Detroit, or non-Lions fan for that matter, can understand the magnitude of Harrington walking into Ford Field and burning his former team. This guy served as an absolute whipping post for Lion players and fans for four years. Revenge is best served cold, I think.

Tony Romo, a.k.a. Greatest Quarterback in ESPN Land, had an unbelievable game against the Bucs, tossing five touchdowns and 306 yards in Dallas’ 38-10 victory. I know it was only Tampa, but Romo continues to look calm, cool and best of all for Bill Parcels, like he completely knows what he’s doing. Terrell Owens had a nice game in Dallas (eight receptions for 107 yards and one TD) as well. Of course he also dropped three passes in the first half, including a touchdown where he acted like he was hurt on the play. Please.

Now for the overcooked, dried out and overall bad tasting turkey that is Jake Plummer. Mike Shanahan, in my opinion, now has nine days to get Jay Cutler ready for Seattle. Once again, if you look at Plummer’s stats (25 of 39 for 216 yards, one TD, one INT) in the 19-10 loss to the Chiefs, they’re not that bad. However, you watch this guy and he seems like he’s one play away from mucking everything up. At 7-4 in the NFC, the Broncos damn near clinch home field advantage. At 7-4 in the AFC, however, it’s time to firm up your team for the stretch run. Switching gears, the job that Herman Edwards has done in Kansas City is remarkable. Consider for a second who he has lost since arriving in KC: All-Pro tackle Willie Roaf in the offseason, quarterback Trent Green for virtually the entire season and Pro Bowl tight end Tony Gonzalez. Yet, Edwards has the Chiefs at 7-4 and right in the thick of things in the division. Great job.

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