Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1472 of 1503)

Weekend Wrap: College Football

How many seasons hung in the balance late in the second halves of today’s games in college football? It was scary Saturday for programs like Ohio State, USC and to a lesser extent Michigan and Florida, but no team escaped the grips of death more than ninth ranked Georgia.

Lets highlight what turned out to be the big games in the week of college football, then get a quick shot of the rest of the action.

(#9) Georgia 14, Colorado 13
Oh, what most people would give to be freshman quarterback Joe Cox right about now on Georgia’s campus.

With the Bulldogs down 13-0 and starter Matt Stafford struggling to move the offense, Georgia coach Mark Richt inserted Cox late in the third quarter. What ensued might turn out to be the comeback that saved the Bulldogs entire season.

With a little more than nine minutes left in the game, Cox threw two touchdown passes – including a 20 yard completion to Martrez Milner with just 46 seconds to go in the contest – to clinch a 14-13 victory for Georgia and allow Bulldog fans everywhere a chance to change their pants.

Most impressed with: Obviously Cox, who had attempted just five passes in Georgia’s first two games, before going 10 of 13 for 153 yards and two touchdowns in the rescue job against Colorado. As Georgia is set to start its SEC schedule against Mississippi next weekend, Cox might have earned a starting job.

Least impressed with: The Buffs defense, which had stuffed the Bulldogs for over three quarters only to wilt at the end. I don’t know who has a longer ride back to Colorado this weekend – the Buffalo players or the actual buffalo that the school hauled over 1,500 miles just to make an appearance at the game.

(#1) Ohio State 28, (#24) Penn State 6
Anybody who actually saw this game and not the final score knows that OSU had its hands full today with Penn State – especially early in the contest.

Penn State shut down and shut out OSU in the first half while preserving a 3-0 lead. Early in the third and fourth quarters, however, the Buckeyes got touchdowns from RB Antonio Pittman on a 12 yard run and Brian Robiskie on a 38 yard pass reception after QB Troy Smith did his best Houdini move to keep the play alive (that might have been the play of the day).

With the score 14-3 midway through the fourth, PSU tailback Tony Hunt broke off a 34 yard run to get Penn State down to the Buckeyes five-yard line. OSU’s defense took over from there, however, and stuffed Penn State on three plays from the goal line and forced the Nittany Lions to settle for a field goal to close the gap to 14-6.

The Buckeye defense was doesn’t there though, as they picked off PSU quarterback Anthony Morelli twice on the Nittany Lions final two offensive possessions and took both passes back for touchdowns to seal the game.

Most impressed with: Ohio State’s defense has been impressive all season, but it was possibly at its best Saturday. The goal line stop and the two interceptions were remarkable (that was excellent body control to stay in bounds by Malcolm Jenkins on his 61 yard TD return).

Also, Hunt (24 carries for 135 yards) worked for every single yard he gained today. I know his team lost, but he was PSU’s only offensive weapon and he ran hard all day.

Least impressed with: Morelli wasn’t asked to do too much today – just don’t lose the game. Well, that’s exactly what he did while finishing with 106 yards and threw two game changing interceptions. If he put together even a decent performance Saturday, Penn State might have opened up a bigger lead than 3-0 in the first half and possibly could have won the game.

Quick Shots:
As nice as Troy Smith to Ted Ginn Jr. usually looks on Saturday, the Big Ten might have an even more exciting duo in (#6) Michigan’s Chad Henne and Mario Manningham. After torching Notre Dame for three scores last week, the two hooked up twice more today in the Wolverines 27-13 victory over Wisconsin. Although Michigan came out a bit flat and Henne got picked off twice, the Wolverines defense is playing fast and aggressive and will be a tough task for any opponent the rest of the season…Possibly the most surprising top 25 team in the nation right now is (#19) Clemson. Coming off an upset victory over Florida State last week, the Tigers clinched their third victory of the year with 52-7 shellacking of North Carolina. With the way its playing, if Clemson didn’t lose a one-point heartbreaker in Boston College a few weeks ago, the Tigers would be ranked significantly higher than No. 19…No real surprises came in the rest of the top 10: (#2) Auburn handled Buffalo 38-7…(#3) USC wasn’t overly impressive, but did secure a 20-3 win over Arizona…(#4) West Virginia held off East Carolina 27-10 with Steve Slaton only gaining 72 yards on the ground…(#5) Florida had a margin of trouble with Kentucky, but rallied to secure a 26-7 win over the Wildcats…(#7) Texas scored 30 points in the first half alone and crushed Iowa State 37-14…(#8) Louisville keeps persevering and trumped Kansas State 24-6 on the road…(#10) LSU nearly had a shutout against Tulane in a 49-7 blowout…and finally just outside the top 10: (#11) Virginia Tech held off a pesky Cincinnati team 29-13 despite being down at halftime.

Random thoughts:

– Boy, when (#21) Nebraska schedules powder puff teams it really doesn’t push the envelope too much does it? Louisiana Tech, Nicholls State and Troy? Geez, don’t strain yourself Nebraska.

– As good as Ohio State’s defense has played, the Buckeyes have to be somewhat concerned that they have been gauged on the ground in every contest expect the Cincinnati game.

(#18) Florida State threw a 57-yard touchdown pass with just five minutes remaining in a game the Seminoles were already up 47-7 on Rice. Do you feel good about yourself now that you ran up the score against the Owls, after choking against Clemson last week FSU?

– Is it just me or does (#21) California seem like the kid who messed up with its parents and is now trying to make up for it any way it can? Sorry Golden Bears, but you already lost everybody’s trust when you were ranked in the top 10 to start the season and then you laid an egg in Tennessee.

NFL Game Preview: NY Giants (1-1) at Seattle (2-0)

Date: Sept. 24
Time:4pm ET FOX

Why to tune in:
As hard as the Seahawks tried to hand a win over to the Giants last year when these two teams met in Seattle, New York just thwarted their effort and returned the favor. PK Jay Feely missed three field goals in the Giants 24-21 loss to the Seahawks, including game winners in the fourth quarter and two in overtime. New York faced starting its season 0-2 when the Giants dropped their opener to Indianapolis and then falling behind 24-7 last weekend in Philadelphia. New York did rebound, however, and came all the way back in the fourth quarter to beat the Eagles 30-24 in overtime and even up its record. Seattle had an unimpressive 9-6 win in week one against Detroit and a more convincing victory last weekend against Arizona. Can Feely and the Giants pay back the Seahawks and springboard themselves into the diver’s seat in the NFC East? Or will the Seahawks increase their lead in the NFC West and be on the fast track to home field advantage for the playoffs?

When the Giants have the ball:
New York is going to have to get its passing game going early and not have to rely too much on Tiki Barber. Seattle is holding opponents to a stifling average of just 51.5 yards on the ground and rank second in the NFL at stopping the run. Barber was held to only 51 yards last week against Philadelphia and the Seahawks defensive line is just as apt to get a good push up the field as the Eagles are. Seattle likes its defensive front four to put pressure on the offensive line and then rely on the linebackers to make sure teams can’t bounce a run on outside of the tackles. Lofa Tatupu and Julian Peterson are extremely hard to get a hat on and they won’t run themselves out of plays, so look for the Giants to try and attack Seattle’s secondary vertically. Plaxico Burress and Amani Toomer have had a lot of success so far this season and Eli Manning is starting to develop into a clutch quarterback. Tight end Jeremy Shockey was shut out of the first half last weekend, but found soft spots in the Eagles zone in the second half, which contributed to the win. If Barber can’t get going, the Giants are going to become one dimensional and that plays right into Seattle’s game plan on defense.

When the Seahawks have the ball:
The Giants are no slouches against the run themselves, so RB Shaun Alexander’s woes may continue. Alexander only has 145 yards in two games and is barely over 3.0 yards a carry. Mike Holmgren isn’t afraid to abandon his run, however, so if Alexander is slow to develop in the early part of the game, Holmgren will certainly allow QB Matt Hasselback to play with his wide array of weapons at receiver. Darrell Jackson, Bobby Engram, Nate Burleson and newly acquired Deion Branch will get plenty of opportunities to exploit New York’s biggest weakness on defense – its secondary. The Giants have given up a couple of deep plays over their first two games, so I wouldn’t be surprised if Holmgren tries to set the run up with the pass. Talk about a disappointment, CB Sam Madison was supposed to come in for the Giants and be an equal replacement for Will Allen. But Madison struggled in preseason and now has carried that over into the regular season. Madison has been hampered by a foot injury, but is expected to play in Seattle on Sunday. With New York giving up more than 300 yards a game through the air in two contests, Hasselback might have a field day against the Giants secondary unit.

Prediction:
A lot of folks in the media world like the Giants in this game, because of what they saw in New York’s come from behind victory in Philadelphia last week. On top of that, Seattle hasn’t looked that impressive in both of its two victories and should have lost last year against the G-Men. Fair enough, but I’m not getting fooled on this one. If this game were in New York, I wouldn’t stammer to lock the Giants into a victory. However, the Seahawks at home are as tough as listening to Tony Kornheiser try to think of something significant to say on Monday Night Football broadcasts. Add the lift that Seattle will get from Branch and how soft that Giants’ secondary is and I’ll take the Seahawks in a high scoring air show on Sunday.

Seattle doesn’t need overtime this year to beat the G-Men: Seahawks 34, Giants 24.

NFL Game Preview: Cincinnati (2-0) at Pittsburgh (1-1)

Date: Sept. 24
Time: 1pm ET CBS

Why to tune in:
By winning its first two games each of the past two seasons, Cincinnati has now put together back-to-back 2-0 starts for the first time in franchise history. The Bengals have won their last five September games by a combined score of 145-55. The Steelers on the other hand, come into this contest with something to prove offensively after being shutout by the Jaguars 9-0 on Monday night. The last time these two teams met in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati came out victorious 38-31, but that’s not the game everybody remembers. In last year’s Wild Card playoff round, the Steelers knocked out Bengals QB Carson Palmer on just his first throw of the game and almost cost Palmer his entire career. Pittsburgh won the game 31-17 and eventually became Super Bowl winners, but many in Cincinnati believe that if Palmer played the entire game, the AFC North champs would have routed the Steelers. Needless to say, hate wouldn’t be a strong enough word to describe how these two teams feel about each other.

When the Bengals have the ball:
Would you believe me if I said that the Bengals are ranked higher in the league rushing the ball than they are passing? Well, you should (Cincy is ranked fifth in the NFL in rushing and 13th in passing) and hear this – RB Rudi Johnson has been the biggest reason why Cincinnati has started 2-0 not Palmer or superstar WR Chad Johnson. Rudi Johnson has rushed for 241 yards and three touchdowns in two games this season, but the more alarming stat is that he has gained 221 yards and three touchdowns in his last two trips to Hines Field. That stat is interesting due to the fact that Pittsburgh is usually stout against the run. The Steelers are wilting an average of just 74 yards on the ground in two games as opposed to giving up almost 250 through the air. Watch for head coach Marvin Lewis to try and get a big play early on Pittsburgh’s secondary to try and take the crowd out of it. Cincinnati is banged up at receiver, however, and as John Paulsen reported in his fantasy football update, T.J. Houshmandzadeh didn’t practice on Friday. Palmer would love to have Houshmandzadeh back in the fray, but corners Ike Taylor and Deshea Townsend would be no pushover and will get plenty of help from safety Troy Polamalu (who is battling a shoulder injury right now) even if the wide out were to play on Sunday. Bengals players throughout the week have mentioned Joey Porter in a couple of their quotes and it hasn’t been to congratulate the linebacker on winning a ring either. I don’t understand why anybody would want to motivate that guy anymore than he already is, but suit yourself Cincinnati.

When the Steelers have the ball:
To say the entire Steelers offense struggled in the Monday night loss to Jacksonville would be an understatement. QB Ben Roethlisberger looked shaky in coming off of emergency appendectomy surgery and winced in pain throughout the entire game. One thing he did that was unlike the Big Ben of his first two seasons was duck out of the way of being hit while throwing. Every time a Jaguars defender would get close to Roethlisberger, the big QB would quickly get rid of the ball to avoid getting hit. That led to interceptions and poor throws, so if Roethlisberger can’t stand in the pocket under pressure, the Bengals might have just as much success as Jacksonville did against Pittsburgh’s offense. However, if the Steelers can get RB Willie Parker going in the run game, Roethlisberger won’t be forced to be in so many passing situations. Look for coach Bill Cowher to attack the weakness in Cincinnati’s defense, which is mostly on the left side because of injuries. First year NFL player Rashad Jeanty was inserted into the starting lineup because of the season-ending neck injury that LB David Pollack suffered. Jeanty won’t be the only player that will get a starting nod because of injury, either. Kevin Kaesviharn will start in place of Dexter Jackson at the strong safety position, which makes TE Heath Miller an all around great option in the Steelers passing game because Kaesviharn might be too eager to play the run with Jeanty in front of him.

Prediction:
My head says to pick the Bengals, but my gut tells me the Steelers. Both teams have something to prove, if you will, with Cincinnati wanting to exact revenge on Pittsburgh for hurting Palmer last year while the Steelers would love to rebound from their first loss of the season. Another injury note for the Bengals is that their starting center Rich Braham is out and will be replaced by second year pro Eric Ghiaciuc. Ghiaciuc played in five games last year, so he isn’t a complete downgrade, but Pittsburgh’s Casey Hampton is possibly the best defensive tackle in the league at overpowering centers. Cincinnati might have too many injuries to overcome a pumped up Steelers team, even with the Bengals array of weapons on offense. RB Chris Perry would have helped in this game too, since Rudi Johnson will probably have to earn every inch he runs for this weekend.

I’ll go with my gut feeling and pick the Steel-curtain: Steelers 30, Bengals 27.

NFL Game Preview: Chicago (2-0) at Minnesota (2-0)

Date: Sept. 24
Time: 1pm ET FOX

Why to tune in:
There are just three match ups this weekend in the NFL that feature undefeated teams battling against each other. While the game in Indianapolis that features the Colts and Jaguars should get the most hype, the contest in Minnesota might be the most intriguing. The Bears defense has only allowed seven points in two games, which is no surprise since Chicago boasted the best defense in ’05. However, Chicago also has the seventh rated offense in the league and – get this – the top rated QB in Rex Grossman, who has posted a rating of 128.7. Rookie head coach Brad Childress has seemingly cleaned up the love boat mess in Minnesota and has his team buying into his disciplined philosophy. The Vikings have displayed a balance attack on offense and a much-improved defense. Minnesota has not blown away its opponents, but has beaten two playoff teams from ’05 in Washington and Carolina. The early battle for first place in the NFC North kicks off this weekend in Minneapolis – someone sound the foghorn.

When the Bears have the ball:
Grossman has done what? That’s right, the former Gator and injury-lover is completing over 70% of his passes and has thrown five touchdowns with just one interception. Is that a Desmond Clark sighting? While Muhsin Muhammad is starting to become the go to guy that the Bears singed him for last year, Clark and third year pro Bernard Berrian (hell of a catch against Detroit last week) have proven to be steady targets for Grossman. Head coach Lovie Smith would love for his running game to be more effective, but with Grossman throwing as well as he is, the Bears can get buy with averaging less than three yards a carry right now. Minnesota isn’t stifling opponents on running plays, but has been solid against the pass, so watch for Chicago to try and keep a balanced attack on the road. Smith loves to run the ball on second downs and put his offense in manageable third down situations, so if the Vikings can’t bear down early in possessions they’ll be susceptible to passing plays over the top of their defense (hear that Berrian?). Without DE Erasmus James (out for the year with a knee injury), the Vikings better generate a pass rush and force a turnover or two or else they’re going to have a hard time putting up points against the Bears defense.

When the Vikings have the ball:
Remember when Carolina’s Steve Smith torched the Bears in the playoffs last season? Lovie Smith sure does and that’s why after watching free safety Chris Harris struggle a bit in covering the ground necessary for the Tampa 2 defense, the coach announced after Wednesday’s practice that rookie Danieal Manning will start in Minnesota. Manning gives the Bears a better playmaker at the position while covering in space – where as Harris is bigger and more of run-stuffer. There isn’t any big secret to Childress’ offensive scheme – stick to the game plan, don’t turn the ball over and never abandon the run. Chester Taylor has given Minnesota a physical runner who has proven in two games that he can carry the load. If the Vikings are going to have any success running against the Bears defense, however, they better not try to run too many stretch plays against a Chicago team that is fast on the outside with Lance Briggs and Hunter Hillenmeyer. There’s no better middle linebacker that plays sideline to sideline than Brian Urlacher. If the Bears can be had, however, it’s against a downhill running game like the Packers showed with Ahman Green in week one. For some reason, the Bears defense can play a bit soft at times up the middle. If Brad Johnson can’t get the passing game going, however, that’s a moot point.

Prediction:
Anybody thinking that Minnesota is going to let Chicago come into its house and blow them out hasn’t been paying attention to the first two weeks of the season. However, the Bears defense loves playing these kinds of games in which a team tries to match wits with them on offense. Watch Chicago make Childress abandon his game plan for the first time this season and that’s when the Bears will strike. You can’t play catch up against Chicago and Smith won’t hand the game over to Minnesota the way that John Fox and his over-hyped Panthers did last week.

Close game, Grossman comes back down to earth a bit, but Da Bears get the run game going and escape the Metrodome undefeated: Bears 16, Vikings 10.

The Billy Volek story comes to light

In 2003, former Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair fell victim to a variety of injuries. The Titans backup at the time was Billy Volek – a former undrafted rookie free agent from Fresno State that the team signed in 2000.

Volek stepped in to the starting role and played in a total of seven games that season in ‘03. His completion percentage was 63.8, he threw four touchdowns, no interceptions and finished the season with a QB rating of 101.4.

That season opened up eyes in the Tennessee organization that the kid could play. In 2004, the Titans fought off other teams for the rights to keep the free agent to be, and thought of Volek as an eventual replacement for McNair.

Fast forward to this past offseason when Tennessee essentially tossed McNair out on the streets (a player who had served the franchise well for over 10 seasons) and handed the starting role over to Volek.

Now granted, the Titans did select NCAA National Championship winner Vince Young of Texas with the third overall pick in April’s draft, but head coach Jeff Fisher was adamant that Volek was his man.

However, something happened between then and last week, when Tennessee traded Volek to the San Diego Chargers for a sixth round pick and a ham sandwich.

What happened to the guy everybody in Tennessee thought would be McNair’s replacement?

In a story posted on Tennessean.com on Wednesday, Volek wanted to know the same thing:

“If you want to point the finger at me, point the finger at me. I am fine with that. But let me know why I am not playing, and that never happened here. No one told me. Yes, I leave with some bitterness. But I am trying to think of the good times. And I am excited about my new opportunity.”

“When Steve left, I was told it was my job, but I was never told I earned it. I was always told I inherited it. I remember Coach (Jeff) Fisher floating that out there, and that bothered me,” Volek said.

The story doesn’t end there.

Fisher, a man who is regarded in high standards by many NFL officials and someone who normally doesn’t speak on in-house issues, responded to Volek’s comments with a barrage of slams on his former QB in a follow-up Tennessean.com article:

I never at anytime in my career have gone into such detail (about a trade). But I felt the responsibility, as Billy felt he was thrown under the bus,” Fisher said. “Billy threw this organization under the bus, along with a number of his teammates.”

“He was untruthful with me, untruthful with his head coach, about where he was and what he was doing. So we started off on the wrong page there, and that did not sit well with me,” Fisher said.

In the same interview, Fisher goes on to say that after the team signed veteran quarterback Kerry Collins before the final preseason game, Volek marched into Fisher and general manager Floyd Reese’s office and demanded a trade.

The most intriguing quote from Fisher’s interview was the comment about Volek lying to the head coach.

Fisher wouldn’t go into detail about what Volek lied about, but gauging from the little Fisher did unveil, maybe the quarterback wasn’t preparing for the season like a starter normally would (whether that means studying the playbook, getting into playing shape or being a leader in the locker room).

This is all speculation of course, but perhaps Volek didn’t show the kind of desire or work ethic in demonstrating that he wanted to be more than just the backup. Volek did say that Fisher told him he inherited the position – he didn’t earn it.

The man mum on the situation in both of these articles is Norm Chow, the Titans offensive coordinator. Something tells me he is behind the story as well – maybe he and Volek weren’t on the same page, which led to Fisher saying he was lied to about where the quarterback “was”?

Regardless of what really happened in Tennessee with Billy Volek, it’s interesting that Fisher has admitted that the quarterback was on bad terms in the organization. Because I found it a little odd that all of a sudden after a few bad preseason games the Titans gave up on him and delegated the guy to third string once Collins was signed.

Maybe Volek was a bad egg?

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