Monday, October 26, 2020

College Football Week 9 - Indiana diminishes Ohio State-Penn State game

 

College Football Week 9 – Indiana diminishes Ohio State-Penn State game

In Justin Fields, the Buckeyes grow

 They stacked the Corn row on row

The Big Ten began play over the weekend. It looks like the Big Ten will be very much like the ACC and the SEC. Where the ACC is Clemson and the 14 dwarfs and where the SEC is Alabama and the 13 dwarfs, the Big Ten is Ohio State and the 13 dwarfs.

Ohio State stacked the Corn on Saturday. The Buckeyes beat Nebraska, 52-17.

Yes, the Big Ten is very much like the ACC and the SEC. Where you never know what the rest of the teams in the ACC will do and where you never know what the rest of the teams in the SEC will do, you never know what the rest of the teams in the Big Ten will do.

Hence, Rutgers 38, Michigan State 27; Indiana 36, Penn State 35 (OT), and Purdue 24, Iowa 20.

Get the picture?

Ohio State’s cobbing of Nebraska was led by none other than the Buckeyes’ quarterback, Justin Fields. On the day, Fields completed 95.2% of his passes. He was 20-for-21, throwing for 276 yards and two touchdowns, with no interceptions. Fields rushed for another touchdown, as he led all Ohio State rushers with 54 yards.

Nebraska did manage to keep the score close – for a while. Deep into the second quarter, the score was 14-14. But only for a while. During the remainder of the game, Ohio State outscored Nebraska, 38-7.    

Then there were the surprises in the Big Ten. Where you never know what the rest of the teams might do. In East Lansing, Michigan, Rutgers came into its contest against Michigan State, having lost 21-straight games in Big Ten competition. Well, the losing streak is over. Rutgers surprised Michigan State, 38-27.

Now, the Spartans did have seven turnovers. But Rutgers had three. The Scarlet Knights’ defense held Michigan State to only 60 yards rushing. Hats off to Rutgers coach Greg Schiano.

Is Rutgers that good? Or was the game a fluke? We’ll find out this week when the Scarlet Knights host Indiana. And speaking of Indiana, the Hoosiers pulled off the biggest surprise in the Big Ten. Indiana beat Penn State, 36-35 in overtime.

Penn State dominated the game – in everything, including penalties. But the Nittany Lions didn’t dominate the final score. However, the final score came with its share of controversy.

In the overtime, instead of kicking the extra point to tie the score, Indiana went for two to end the game – one way or the other. On the play, Indiana quarterback Michael Penix was tackled short of the goal line. As he was going down, he stretched the ball out to the pylon in the corner of the end zone.

Did he or didn’t he? The referees ruled he did and awarded Indiana the two points. But on the replay, it wasn’t necessarily certain that Penix caught the pylon before the ball was on the ground and out of bounds. However, there wasn’t enough there to overrule the initial call. Or so they say. Penn State fans will question the call from now until eternity.

And finally, in yet another surprise in the Big Ten, Purdue knocked off favored Iowa. Trailing the Hawkeyes, 20-17, the Boilers scored a touchdown on a six-yard pass from Aidan O’Connell to David Bell, with 2:15 to go in the game. Purdue held on and beat Iowa, 24-20. Purdue running back Zander Horvath rushed for 129 yards.       

The Big Ten closed out its weekend slate of games Saturday night, with Northwestern smashing Maryland, 43-3, and Michigan tumbling Minnesota, 49-24.  

Week 8 got off to a start on Thursday night in Boone, North Carolina. Appalachian State ran and passed over Arkansas State, 45-17. App State quarterback Zac Thomas threw four touchdown passes and Daetrich Harrington rushed for 137 yards. The Little Mountaineers improved to 3-1.

The next night was the busiest Friday night of the season so far. A quartet of games was played, highlighted by the return of the Big Ten. In the Big Ten’s initial game of the 2020 season, Wisconsin smashed Illinois, 45-7.

Wisconsin quarterback Graham Mertz was 20-for-21 passing, throwing for five touchdowns. The Badgers’ defense held the Banned Indians to only eight first downs and 218 total yards. Wisconsin maintained time of possession for more than 43 minutes. Unfortunately, the next day, Mertz tested positive for COVID.

In Tampa, South Florida’s woes continued. The Bulls fell to 1-5, as Tulsa beat South Florida, 42-13. South Florida had three turnovers. In Birmingham, UAB lost a close encounter to Louisiana, 24-20. An evenly matched game, both teams had 17 first downs and were within a yard of each other in total yards – 286 total yards for Louisiana to 285 yards for UAB. 

And finally, Jacksonville State took care of FIU, 19-10. Talk about humiliation and frustration, FIU only had six first downs, only had 156 total yards and only maintained possession of the ball for less than 18 minutes. Jacksonville State became the first FCS school to beat an FBS team this season.

The action was hot and heavy on Saturday. In the Alabama and the 13 Dwarfs Conference, the Crimson Tide dwarfed Tennessee, 48-17. Alabama quarterback Mac Jones had another sensational day. Jones was 25-for-31, passing for 387 yards.

But the rest of the conference was a little wacky. Auburn and Ole Miss put on a barn burner in Oxford. The game was tied no less than three times. When it was over, Auburn pulled out a win. The Tigers scored late to beat Ole Miss, 35-28. Trailing, 28-27, Auburn scored a touchdown on a 42-yard pass from Bo Nix to Seth Williams with 1:11 on the clock.

Surprising Missouri continued to surprise. The Tigers beat Kentucky, 20-10. Missouri’s defense held the Wildcats to only 145 total yards – 98 rushing and 47 passing. In the SEC nightcap, LSU’s win over South Carolina wasn’t such a surprise. But the score of the game was. The Tigers beat the Gamecocks, 52-24. LSU maintained possession of the ball for more than 37 minutes.

Then in the Clemson and the 14 Dwarfs Conference, the Tigers dwarfed Syracuse, 47-21. But the game did get a little tense for Clemson – for a while. All looked normal at first, as the Tigers jumped out to a 17-0 first quarter lead. However, as the third quarter was coming to a close, Clemson just had a six-point lead on the Orange – 27-21. No sweat – the Tigers went on to score 20 unanswered points.

The wacky game in the ACC occurred in Winston-Salem. Wake Forest upset Virginia Tech, 23-16. The Hokies had three turnovers. And almost as wacky, Virginia put a serious scare into Miami. The Canes held on and beat the Cavs, 19-14. Miami quarterback D’Eriq King passed for 322 yards.  

Surprisingly, the rest of the ACC was pretty normal – the favorites won. However, every game was a blowout. North Carolina downed NC State, 48-21; Louisville smoked Florida State, 48-16; Notre Dame tarnished Pitt, 45-3, and Boston College toppled Georgia Tech, 48-27.   

Oklahoma State and Kansas State remain the kingpins in the Big 12. The Cowboys struggled, but beat Iowa State, 24-21. Chuba Hubbard had 139 yards rushing. Kansas State demolished Kansas, 55-14.

In the other Big 12 games, Oklahoma put down TCU, 33-14; Texas got by Baylor, 27-16, and Texas Tech out did West Virginia, 34-27.

In the Game of the Season in the AAC, it wasn’t much of a game. The battle of the unbeatens ended with Cincinnati humiliating SMU, 42-13. Cincinnati had 439 total yards. Bearcats’ quarterback Desmond Ridder accounted for 301 of those yards – passing for 126 and rushing for 179.

Elsewhere in the AAC, UCF got back on the winning track, beating Tulane, 51-34. The Knights’ Dillon Gabriel passed for 422 yards and five touchdowns. Memphis bounced Temple, 41-29, and Houston sunk Navy, 37-21.

C-USA’s Marshall and the Sun Belt’s Coastal Carolina both remained undefeated. Marshall downed Florida Atlantic, 20-9, and Coastal Carolina beat Georgia Southern, 28-14.

The Big Ten wasn’t the only conference that began play over the weekend. The Mountain West Conference began its season as well. And it looks like the MWC will be like the Big Ten, ACC and SEC. The MWC is Boise State and the 11 dwarfs.

Boise State opened its season with a 42-13 win over Utah State. The Broncos held the Aggies to 203 total yards. In the other MWC games, Nevada edged Wyoming, 37-34 (OT). Nevada quarterback Carson Long passed for 405 yards. Hawaii downed Fresno State, 34-19; San Diego State smashed UNLV, 34-6, and in the only surprise in the MWC, San Jose State tripped up Air Force, 17-6.

Independent BYU remained unbeaten. The Cougars beat Texas State, 52-14.   

Week 8’s Winners: Cincinnati quarterback Desmond Ridder, along with Indiana coach Tom Allen, Purdue coach Jeff Brohm and Rutgers coach Greg Schiano. Week 8’s Loser: South Carolina coach Will Muschamp.

Six Top 25 teams lost over the weekend: Penn State, SMU, Iowa State, Virginia Tech, Minnesota and NC State. All lost to higher-ranked teams, except for Penn State and Virginia Tech.

Six Group of Five Teams are ranked in the Top 25 this week – Cincinnati, BYU, Marshall, Coastal Carolina, SMU and Boise State. Cincinnati is the highest ranked at 7th.

The Ohio State at Penn State contest this Saturday was supposed to be the marquee game of the week. And I suppose it still is – somewhat. But Indiana’s win over Penn State sure took the spark out of the game.  

If you were listening to music in 1966 and 1967, you’ll remember the songs “Gimme Some Lovin’” and “I Am Man” by the Spencer Davis Group. Spencer Davis died last week. “Gimme Some Lovin’” reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the winter of 1967 and “I’m A Man” reached No. 10 on the charts that spring. The lead singer for the Spencer Davis Group was Steve Winwood, who left the band in 1967 to form the group Traffic. Spencer Davis, a native of Swansea, Wales, was 81.  

Bill Mathis, a running back for Clemson, in college, and the New York Jets, in the pros, died last week. He played his entire American Football League career – (1960-1969) – with the New York Titans/Jets. Mathis was a member of the 1968 Jets team that won the Super Bowl, beating the Baltimore Colts, 16-7. Bill Mathis was 81.

Sadly, on Saturday morning, I learned about the death of folk and country music singer/songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker. He was one of my all-time favorites. Walker wrote the song “Mr. Bojangles” made famous by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in 1971. He emerged from the Greenwich Village folk scene of the 1960s to become a purveyor of the Lukenbach and  Armadillo Music sound and scene of the 1970s in Texas. I first learned about Walker on a trip to Texas in 1974. My favorite Walker song is “Sangria Wine.” Walker was associated with the outlaw country scene that included Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. He later was associated and worked with Jimmy Buffett and Brooks and Dunn, among others. Some called him the Jimmy Buffett of Texas. Jerry Jeff Walker was 78.

In the mail last week my friend Tim Muth wrote, “Go Noles! We are back (at least for one half). I can’t wait until FSU plays COVID U. in Gainesville,” he said. (Something tells me Tim won’t sound so optimistic this week.)

I also had a friendly greeting from Steve Selaga, a faculty member at Georgia. Steve is an East Carolina graduate, with a Masters from Georgia and a PhD from Michigan, all in Sports Management. Swamp Mama and I got to know Steve when he taught at Florida Tech. He then left for Texas A&M and now teaches at Georgia.

My friend Ken Burger, in Alabama, and a Crimson Tide fan, informed me that he watches the Alabama games on TV with his two daughters – each in their own homes, texting back and forth,  during the games. Sometime in the second quarter of the game against Georgia, he texted his daughters that he was so nervous, he needed to eat some bad food. Apparently, Ken is normally a healthy food eater. With Alabama down 24-20 at halftime, Ken made a plate of nachos, with salsa, jalapenos and melted cheese. Along with a beer, that was his diet during the third quarter. He even texted a picture to his daughters. Well, sure enough, Bama started playing great and Ken kept munching. At one point, one of his daughters asked if he was still eating the bad food. Ken said yes and she implored him to keep munching away, claiming he was taking one for the team. Ken kept munching on the nachos and Alabama outscored Georgia 21-0. Ken said it took him all day Sunday to recover, but it was worth it.

I’m posting this morning from a beach house in Seacrest Beach on the Beaches of South Walton in Florida’s panhandle. Rosemary Beach is to our east and Seaside is to our west. Swamp Mama and I are getting in some R&R with Princess Gator, Gator Gabe and Gator Babe.

Interestingly, Wisconsin quarterback Graham Mertz and Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields were both 20-for-21 passing over the weekend….Last week South Carolina coach Will Muschamp was on cloud nine. He’s back in the dumpster this week….After a two-week COVID absence, we think Florida will be back this week. Keep your fingers crossed….Have a fun-filled week!

Touchdown Tom

October 26, 2020


Weekend Recap

GAME OF THE WEEK: Cowboys go Bird hunting – Oklahoma State 24, Iowa State 21 (Touchdown Tom said: Oklahoma State 31, Iowa State 27). Iowa State’s Breece Hall rushed for 185 yards, averaging 9.2 yards per carry. Okie State improved to 4-0.  

RUNNER-UP: No contest – Cincinnati 42, SMU 13 (Touchdown Tom said: Cincinnati 30, SMU 26). Well, it was for the first half. Cincinnati led at the break, 14-10. Then the Bearcats outscored the Mustangs 28-3 in the second half. Cincinnati’s defense held SMU to just 75 yards rushing. Cincinnati improved to 4-0.

REST OF THE BEST: No Pack attack – North Carolina 48, NC State 21 (Touchdown Tom said: North Carolina 34, NC State 29). North Carolina’s Javonte Williams rushed for 160 yards and Michael Carter rushed for 106 yards. The Tar Heels had 585 total yards. North Carolina improved to 4-1.

No oars – Michigan 49, Minnesota 24 (Touchdown Tom said: Minnesota 23, Michigan 20). Minnesota controlled the ball for more than 35 minutes, but the Gophers couldn’t control the score. Michigan just led 21-17 late in the second quarter. Then the Wolverines outscored Minnesota, 28-7. Minnesota’s Mohamed Ibrahim rushed for 140 yards.

Another beer bottle through the window – Alabama 48, Tennessee 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Alabama 38, Tennessee 11). Alabama had 587 total yards to 302 for Tennessee. The Tide had 30 first downs to 16 for the Vols. Bama’s Najee Harris had 96 yards rushing. Alabama improved to 5-0.

Ragin' - Louisiana 24, UAB 20 (Touchdown Tom said: UAB 34, Louisiana 31). Louisiana scored its go ahead touchdown with 6:35 to go in the game and held on to win. UAB’s Spencer Brown rushed for 128 yards.

What a sermon! – Wake Forest 23, Virginia Tech 16 (Touchdown Tom said: Virginia Tech 27, Wake Forest 23). Wake Forest’s Christian Beal-Smith rushed for 129 yards. Both teams are 3-2.

No famine – Notre Dame 45, Pitt 3 (Touchdown Tom said: Notre Dame 30, Pitt 21). Notre Dame had 28 first downs to 11 for Pitt. The Irish had 434 total yards to just 162 for Pitt. The Panthers only had 44 yards rushing. The Irish controlled the ball for 41 minutes. Irish quarterback Ian Book passed for 312 yards and three touchdowns. Notre Dame improved to 5-0.  

Replay that again, please – Indiana 36, Penn State 35 (OT) (Touchdown Tom said: Penn State 34, Indiana 28). Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford passed for 283 yards and rushed for 119 yards. Penn State had 488 total yards to just 211 for Indiana. The Lions held the Hoosiers to 41 yards rushing. Penn State controlled the ball for more than 40 minutes.

Still perfect – Coastal Carolina 28, Georgia Southern 14 (Touchdown Tom said: Coastal Carolina 26, Georgia Southern 22). The score was tied 14-14 entering the fourth quarter. The Chanticleers limited Georgia Southern to 218 total yards – just 99 yards passing. Coastal Carolina improved to 5-0.

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

Raided – Texas Tech 34, West Virginia 27 (Touchdown Tom said: Texas Tech 31, West Virginia 30). West Virginia quarterback Jarret Doege passed for 347 yards. But WVU only had 91 yards rushing. As the fourth quarter began, the score was tied 27-27.

Frostproof – Ohio State 52, Nebraska 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Ohio State 31, Nebraska 18). Like Justin Fields, Nebraska quarterback Adrian Martinez was the leading rusher for his team. Martinez rushed for 85 yards. The Buckeyes had 491 total yards. Ohio State had 28 first downs to 17 for Nebraska.

Bevo was Horny – Texas 27, Baylor 16 (Touchdown Tom said: Texas 27, Baylor 24). Texas limited Baylor to just 64 yards rushing. Baylor scored first with a field goal. Then Texas scored 27 unanswered points.

Bad eyes – Purdue 24. Iowa 20 (Touchdown Tom said: Iowa 27, Purdue 23). Purdue scored first and last. Purdue outscored Iowa 10-3 in the fourth quarter.

 

Week 8 Results:   9 winners, 5 fumbles (64.3 percent)

For the Season:  58 winners, 18 fumbles (76.3 percent)

 

ELSEWHERE AROUBND FLORIDA:

Jacksonville State 19, FIU 10

Tulsa 42, South Florida 13

Louisville 48, Florida State 16

UCF 51, Tulane 34

Marshall 20, Florida Atlantic 9

Miami 19, Virginia 14

 

Superlatives

Impressive Passers:

UCF’s Dillon Gabriel – 26-40-0 for 422 yards (5TDs); Nevada’s Carson Strong – 37-50-0-405 (3TDs); Alabama’s Mac Jones – 26-31-0-387; West Virginia’s Jarret Doege – 32-50-0-347 (1TD); Liberty’s Malik Willis – 24-31-0-345 (6TDs); Middle Tennessee’s Asher O’Hara – 24-33-0-333 (2TDs); Oklahoma’s Spencer Rattler – 13-22-0-332 (2TDs); Troy’s Jacob Free – 24-38-2-329, and Miami of Florida’s D’Eriq King – 21-30-0-322 (1TD).

Impressive Rushers:

Iowa State’s Breece Hall – 185 yards (1TD); Cincinnati’s Desmond Ridder – 179 yards (4TDs); Louisville’s Javian Hawkins – 174 yards (3TDs); UCF’s Greg McCrae – 162 yards (1TD); UTSA’s Sincere McCormick – 165 yards (3TDs); North Carolina’s Javonte Williams – 160 yards (3TDs), and Minnesota’s Mohamed Ibrahim – 140 yards (2TDs).

Also, Oklahoma State’s Chuba Hubbard – 139 yards (1TD); Appalachian State’s Daetrich Harrington – 137 yards (1TD); LSU’s Tyrion Davis-Price – 135 yards (1TD); Purdue’s Zander Horvath – 129 yards; Auburn’s Tank Bigsby – 129 yards (2TDs); Wake Forest’s Christian Beal-Smith – 129 yards, and UAB’s Spencer Brown – 128 yards (2TDs).

 

Quotes of the Week

“I thought he had good poise. I thought he saw the field well. You never know quite how someone’s going to react on their first start,” Wisconsin coach Paul Chryst, on the performance of quarterback Graham Mertz against Illinois.

“It used to be that good defense beats good offense. Good defense doesn’t beat good offense anymore. That’s not the way it used to be. It used to be if you had a good defense, other people weren’t going to score. You were always going to be in the game. I’m telling you. It ain’t that way anymore,” Alabama coach Nick Saban,

Tweets of the Week

“Y’all are a disgrace. Your officiating is absolutely atrocious. If y’all want to just keep gifting Auburn wins, just say it,” an Ole Miss fan, on the officiating in the Auburn-Ole Miss game.

 

Touchdown Tom’s Predictions for

This Week’s 10 Biggest and Most Intriguing Games….and then some

GAME OF THE WEEK: 1. Ohio State (1-0) at Penn State (0-1) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – We’re assuming the Penn State loss to Indiana was an anomaly. Regardless, the Ohio State win over Penn State this week won’t be an anomaly. But you have to assume that in the Indiana game, Penn State was looking ahead to Ohio State. Someone once told me, “Never assume anything. It only makes an ass out of you and me” – Ohio State 40, Penn State 20.

RUNNER-UP: 2. Texas (3-2) at Oklahoma State (4-0) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 4 pm ET, Saturday, FOX – Oklahoma State is on a roll. But can the Cowboys keep it going. When you are undefeated, the pressure gets tougher and tougher. The Cowboys handle it – Oklahoma State 29, Texas 23.

REST OF THE BEST: 3. Boston College (4-2) at Clemson (6-0) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ABC – Syracuse gave Clemson a scare, brief as it was. Can Boston College do the same? The Eagles have had some impressive moments this season. But they don’t impress the Tigers – Clemson 38, Boston College 22.

4. Memphis (3-1) at Cincinnati (4-0) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN – SMU was no test for the Bearcats. Now it is time to see what Memphis can do. The Tigers have an offense, but no defense. The Bearcats have both – Cincinnati 42, Memphis 30.

5. Kansas State (4-1) at West Virginia (3-2) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN2 – Talk about an up-and-down team. The Mountaineers can really take you up. Then they let you down. This is an up week in Morgantown – West Virginia 30, Kansas State 27.

6. Arkansas (2-2) at Texas A&M (3-1) – (SEC vs. SEC) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, SECN – Texas A&M is looking like the second-best team in the SEC West. But Arkansas knows how to pull some surprises. Just not in this game – Texas A&M 26, Arkansas 18.

7. LSU (2-2) at Auburn (3-2) – (SEC vs. SEC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, CBS – You really never know how either of these teams are going to play. LSU appears to be heading up. Auburn appears to be going sideways. Either way, the Tigers can’t lose in this one. The Cajun Tigers don’t lose –  LSU 33, Auburn 30.

8. UCF (3-2) at Houston (2-1) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 2 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN+ – UCF has an offense, but the Knights have no defense. That has been their problem this year. It’s a similar situation at Houston – all offense and no defense. The Knights’ offense wins – UCF 36, Houston 30.

9. Missouri (2-2) at Florida (2-1) – (SEC vs. SEC) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, SECN – Missouri is kind of like Arkansas. The Tigers can pull some surprises. Florida is hoping its defense can surprise this week and actually show up. The Gators’ offense keeps them in the game – Florida 34, Missouri 26.

10. Coastal Carolina (5-0) at Georgia State (2-2) – (Sun Belt vs. Sun Belt) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPNU – Coastal Carolina has kind of become America’s team this season. Everybody’s cheering for the Chanticleers. Well, Georgia State isn’t. Fear the Rooster – Coastal Carolina 34, Georgia State 25.

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

Wisconsin (1-0) at Nebraska (0-1) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 3:30 pm Et, Saturday, FS1 – Wisconsin looked good last week. Nebraska looked bad. But Wisconsin was playing Illinois. Nebraska was playing Ohio State. There is a difference. But the Badgers aren’t much different from Ohio State – Wisconsin 38, Nebraska 21.

Charlotte (2-2) at Duke (1-5) – (C-USA vs. ACC) – 7 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN3 – Something tells me the Dookies will be 2-5 after this game. Assuming they can hold on to the ball. The Dookies escape Charlotte’s web – Duke 35, Charlotte 24.

Georgia (3-1) at Kentucky (2-3) – (SEC vs. SEC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, SECN – I thought this might be a good game. Then Kentucky lost to Missouri. And Georgia had the week off to heal from Alabama. The Wildcats can play defense. They simply have no offense. Kind of similar to Georgia. But Uga’s offense is better – Georgia 25, Kentucky 15.

Purdue (1-0) at Illinois (0-1) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, BTN – Now a typical Purdue team, after upsetting Iowa, would lose to Illinois. But this isn’t your typical Purdue team. The Boilers step up the steam – Purdue 32, Illinois 19.

 

ELSEWHERE AROUBND FLORIDA:

UTSA (3-3) at Florida Atlantic (1-1) – (C-USA vs. C-USA) – 12 noon ET, Saturday….

Marshall (5-0) at FIU (0-3) – (C-USA vs. C-USA) – 7 pm ET, Friday, CBSSN….

Touchdown Tom

 

Monday, October 19, 2020

College Football Week 8 -- The Big Ten returns

 

College Football Week 8 – The Big Ten returns

The only thing normal is

Alabama and Clemson

With everyone else, you can expect the unexpected.

The normal: Alabama 41, Georgia 24 and Clemson 73, Georgia Tech 7

The unexpected: South Carolina 30, Auburn 22, Arkansas 33, Ole Miss 21, Kentucky 34, Tennessee7, Wake Forest 40, Virginia 23 and Florida State 31, North Carolina 28.

That appears to be the way it’s going to be during the 2020 season. Of course we have yet to hear from the Big Ten. But that will soon change.

Meanwhile, back to the normal. During the first half, the Georgia-Alabama game was reminiscent of the last two times these teams met. Those two games went down to the wire. Alabama rallied to beat Georgia 26-23 (OT) for the national championship in January 2018. Then in December 2018, Alabama rallied to beat Georgia 35-28 for the SEC championship.

Saturday night, Georgia led Alabama, 24-20 at halftime. It was 2018 all over again. But in the second half, there was nothing reminiscent about those 2018 games. The Tide outscored the Dawgs 21-0. Mac Jones passed for 417 yards, Najee Harris rushed for 152 yards, Devonta Smith caught 11 passes for 167 yards and Jaylen Waddle caught six passes for 161 yards, as Alabama beat Georgia, 41-24.

Saturday afternoon, the other normal – Clemson – made it look like a routine day for the Tigers. Perhaps an exaggerated routine. Clemson demolished Georgia Tech, 73-7. Faced with a double threat, the Yellow Jackets defense stopped one of the threats but they couldn’t stop the other. Tech’s defense held Travis Etienne to just 44 yards rushing. However, the other Clemson threat – Trevor Lawrence – passed for 404 yards and five touchdowns.

Ironically, both Alabama’s Mac Jones and Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence were 24-for-32 passing on Saturday. Both threw one interception.

Yeah, if there is anything normal this season, it’s Alabama and Clemson.

Then there was the unexpected. Granted, Auburn was only a three-point favorite over South Carolina. But it was a strong three points. South Carolina and Auburn fans excluded, most thought Auburn would win the game. The Tigers got the upper hand at first. Auburn led 9-0 at the end of the first quarter. But after that, the Gamecocks outscored the Tigers 30-13. South Carolina won, 30-22.

The outlook for Will Muschamp is looking better. The outlook for Gus Malzahn is looking grimmer. Both teams are 2-2, but Auburn is really 1-3.

Tennessee was favored to beat Kentucky by six points. But the unexpected happened in Knoxville. The Vols not only lost to the Wildcats, they lost 34-7. Tennessee has suffered back-to-back beatings – bad beatings. Last week, the Vols lost to Georgia, 44-21. Against Kentucky, four turnovers didn’t help Tennessee any.

The outlook for Mark Stoops is looking better. The outlook for Jeremy Pruitt is looking grimmer. Both teams are 2-2. Tennessee is not only not ready for primetime, the Vols aren’t even ready for a 3 a.m. showing on some obscure cable channel.

Things were looking up for Lane Kiffin. Ole Miss looked respectable in losses to Florida and Alabama. The Magnolia Boys beat Kentucky. Ole Miss was just a two-point favorite over Arkansas, but it was a strong two points. Excluding Ole Miss and Arkansas fans, most were certain that Ole Miss would win.

But Arkansas coach Sam Pittman is defying odds this season. Arkansas beat Ole Miss, 33-21. You can’t win a game with seven turnovers. Six of those turnovers were interceptions thrown by Ole Miss quarterback Matt Corral. Doesn’t sound like a Lane Kiffin offense to me. At 21 points, Ole Miss was held to its lowest point total this season. The Landsharks were averaging 41.7 points a game coming into the contest against Arkansas. 

The outlook for Sam Pittman is looking brighter and brighter every week. The outlook for Lane Kiffin is suffering. Arkansas is 2-2, but really 3-1. Ole Miss fell to 1-3.

The really unexpected happened in Tallahassee Saturday night. Fifth-ranked North Carolina was an 11-point favorite coming into the game against Florida State. But in the second quarter, the Seminoles led the tar Heels, 24-0. At halftime, FSU led 31-7.

Then the Noles held on for dear life. North Carolina outscored FSU, 21-0 in the second half. But when the final gun sounded, Florida State had upset North Carolina, 31-28. The Tar Heels suffered their first loss.

And finally, Virginia was a three-point favorite over Wake Forest. Somebody didn’t tell that to the Deacons. At halftime, the score was tied, 20-20. In the second half, Wake Forest outscored the Cavs, 20-3. Instead of losing by three points, the Deacons won by 17 points, beating Virginia, 40-23. The Cavs were crippled by three turnovers. Wake Forest’s Sam Hartman passed for 309 yards and Kenneth Walker rushed for 128 yards.

Except for Alabama and Clemson, the normal this season may be to expect the unexpected.

Week 7 started earlier than previous weeks. The action began on Wednesday night in Lafayette, Louisiana, where Coastal Carolina beat Louisiana, 30-27. The Chanticleers’ Massimo Biscardi kicked a 40-yard field goal with 0:04 on the clock to give Coastal Carolina the win. The Chanticleers improved to 4-0.   

The following night, we had a basketball game. Not really, but the score sounded like one. Arkansas State outlasted Georgia State, 59-52. The teams combined for 1,192 total yards. Arkansas State passed for 551 of those yards.

We had a double header on Friday night – SMU at Tulane and BYU at Houston. In the first game, SMU and Tulane played to a 34-34 tie at the end of regulation. In overtime, the Mustangs beat the Green Wave, 37-34, on a 27-yard field goal by Merek Glover. SMU quarterback Shame Buechele passed for 384 yards and two touchdowns. The Mustangs improved to 5-0.

In the second game, BYU remained unbeaten, as the Cougars beat Houston, 43-26. BYU quarterback Zach Wilson passed for 400 yards and four touchdowns. BYU improved to 5-0.  

All the Big 12 teams were off Saturday, except for West Virginia and Kansas. The Mountaineers got off to a slow start, spotting the Jayhawks 10 points. Then WVU scored 38 unanswered points and went on to beat Kansas, 38-17. West Virginia’s Leddie Brown rushed for 195 yards

In the ACC, Miami bounced back from its first loss last week to beat Pitt, 31-19. The Miami defense held Pitt to just 22 yards rushing.

Still in the ACC, Notre Dame had a close call with Louisville. The Irish beat the Cardinals, 12-7, in a lackluster game. The teams combined for just 557 total yards. Notre Dame’s Kyren Williams did rush for 127 yards. Duke led NC State, 20-14, at halftime. Then the Wolfpack shutout the Dookies 17-0 in the second half. NC State beat Duke, 31-20.  

In the ACC’s nightcap, Virginia Tech bested Boston College 40-14. BC suffered five turnovers. Two Hokie running backs had outstanding games. Hendon Hooker rushed for 164 yards and Khalil Herbert rushed for 143 yards.

Texas A&M added to Mike Leach’s woes. The Aggies beat the Bulldogs, 28-14. Texas A&M held Miss state to -2 yards rushing.

In the featured encounter in C-USA, Louisiana Tech was no match for Marshall. The Herd beat the Bulldogs, 35-17. Marshall held Louisiana Tech to just 7 yards rushing. Marshall improved to 4-0. 

And finally, in what was the most exciting game of the day, Memphis scored on a 4-yard touchdown pass from Brady White to Calvin Austin with 1:08 left in the game to beat UCF 50-49. UCF had a chance to pull it out, but came up short on a 39-yard field goal attempt in the waning seconds. With less than four minutes to go in the game, Memphis trailed UCF, 49-37.

Week 7’s Winners: West Virginia running back Leddie Brown and Coastal Carolina. Week 7’s Losers: Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt, Auburn coach Gus Malzahn and Ole Miss quarterback Matt Corral.  

There were six games postponed Saturday due to COVID-19 issues. One of the games was LSU at Florida. The Gators have so many players with COVID their game with Missouri this week has been postponed. Florida not only has players with COVID, but Gators coach Dan Mullen has it too. Sounds like there is a lack of respect for the COVID guidelines and protocols at Florida.

Yes, the Big Ten returns to action this week. The best encounter of the seven games should be Michigan at Minnesota. Two of the most intriguing games are Nebraska at Ohio State and Penn State at Indiana.

The Mountain West Conference also begins play this week. We still have a couple weeks before the Pac-12 and the MAC join the party.

Yet another former Major League Baseball player died last week – Joe Morgan. Morgan played second base for five MLB teams from 1963 to 1984 – most notably for the Cincinnati Reds. He played for the Reds from 1972 to 1979 where he won two World Series championships in 1975 and 1976. Morgan was also named the National League Most Valuable Player those two years. He is considered one of the greatest second basemen of all time. Following baseball, Morgan was a broadcaster for ESPN, ABC and NBC from 1985 to 2006. Joe Leonard Morgan was 77.

One of my all-time favorite movies as a young boy was “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.” The film had a tremendous cast – Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming, Jo Van Fleet, John Ireland, Earl Holliman, Dennis Hopper, Whit Bissel, DeForest Kelley, Martin Milner, Lee Van Cleef and Jack Elam. Just think of all the movies and TV shows that group has been in. Rhonda Fleming died last week. She was 97. Rhonda Fleming was known as the “Queen of Technicolor.”

My friend, Tim Muth, has bruises all over his body. He was watching the North Carolina-Florida State game Saturday night and he kept pinching himself to make sure he wasn’t dreaming. 

So the Big Ten is back this week….Unfortunately, Florida isn’t….Lane Kiffin, Jeremy Pruitt and Gus Malzahn are doing some serious head scratching this week….Five Group of Five teams are ranked in both the AP and Coaches Polls – Cincinnati, BYU, SMU, Marshall and Coastal Carolina. Cincinnati is the highest ranked at 9th. The Bearcats and SMU meet this week in Dallas….Latest rumor: Arkansas coach Sam Pittman to Texas….Have a great week.

Touchdown Tom

October 19, 2020

 

Weekend Recap

GAME OF THE WEEK: Uga takes a bath – Alabama 41, Georgia 24 (Touchdown Tom said: Alabama 28, Georgia 20). The teams were equal in rushing yards – 145 for Georgia, 150 for Alabama. The difference was in passing yards. Of Alabama’s 567 total yards, 417 were through the air. Bama placekicker Will Reichard kicked a 52-yard field goal. Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett threw three interceptions. He also completed less than 50% of his passes. Nick Saban is 22-0 against his former assistant coaches.

RUNNER-UP: Cock-A-Doodle-Doo – Coastal Carolina 30, Louisiana 27 (Touchdown Tom said: Coastal Carolina 30, Louisiana 29). At the end of the first quarter, the score was 7-7. At halftime it was 13-13. At the end of the third quarter, the score was 20-20. Early in the fourth quarter, it was 27-27. Then the teams went 12 minutes without scoring a single point, before Coastal Carolina kicked a 40-yard field goal with 4 seconds to go in the game. The stats were fairly even, except that Coastal Carolina controlled time of possession for more than 38 minutes.

REST OF THE BEST: Ho-hum – Miami (Florida) 31, Pitt 19 (Touchdown Tom said: Miami 30, Pitt 19). Neither team displayed much offense – only 636 total yards between them.

Ground attack – Virginia Tech 40, Boston College 14 (Touchdown Tom said: Virginia Tech 29, Boston College 20). Virginia Tech held Boston College to only 90 yards rushing. BC quarterback Phil Jurkovec passed for 345 yards and two touchdowns.

PostponedOklahoma State at Baylor (Touchdown Tom said: Oklahoma State 29, Baylor 24). The Oklahoma State at Baylor game was postponed due to COVID-19. The game will be played in December.

Cougars beat Cougars – BYU 43, Houston 26 (Touchdown Tom said: BYU 30, Houston 27). When the fourth quarter began, Houston led BYU, 26-21. BYU outscored Houston 22-0 in the fourth quarter. BYU had 478 total yards – 400 passing and 78 rushing.

Postponed – Cincinnati at Tulsa (Touchdown Tom said: Cincinnati 22, Tulsa 17). The Cincinnati at Tulsa game was postponed due to COVID-19 issues at Cincinnati. The game will be played on December 5.

Still cruising – Marshall 35, Louisiana Tech 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Marshall 24, Louisiana Tech 19). Marshall running back Brenden Knox rushed for 125 yards. The Herd had two turnovers. Marshall held Louisiana Tech for 267 total yards.

Never a dull moment – Memphis 50, UCF 49 (Touchdown Tom said: Memphis 32, UCF 26). The teams combined for an amazing 1,577 total yards. The quarterbacks combined for 1,087 of those yards. UCF quarterback Dillon Gabriel had 601 yards passing. The teams combined for 75 first downs. 

Postponed – LSU at Florida (Touchdown Tom said: Florida 37, LSU 33). The LSU at Florida game was postponed due to a COVID-19 problem at Florida. The gale will be played on December 12.

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

Less Miles – West Virginia 38, Kansas 17 (Touchdown Tom said: West Virginia 34, Kansas 15). West Virginia racked up 544 total yards, while holding Kansas to 157 yards – only 62 yards rushing and 95 passing. The Mountaineers had 29 first downs to 7 for Kansas. WVU quarterback Jarret Doege was 26-for-44, passing for 318 yards and three touchdowns. Down with COVID-19, Kansas coach Les Miles didn’t make the trip to Morgantown.

Packed – NC State 31, Duke 20 (Touchdown Tom said: NC State 28, Duke 25). Both teams had three turnovers. Neither quarterback passed for more than 194 yards and no running back rushed for more than 86 yards. Entering the fourth quarter, NC State led, 21-20. NC State quarterback Devin Leary left the game with a broken fibula. The Wolfpack improved to 4-1.

 

Week 7 Results:  9 winners, 0 fumbles (100 percent)

For the Season:  49 winners, 13 fumbles (79 percent)

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Temple 39, South Florida 37

Florida State 31, North Carolina 28
Charlotte at FIU -- Postponed

 

Superlatives

Impressive Passers:

UCF’s Dillon Gabriel – 35-49-0 for 601 yards (5TDs); Memphis’ Brady White – 34-50-0-486 (6TDs); Alabama’s Mac Jones – 24-32-1-417 (4TDs); Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence – 24-32-1-404 (5TDs); SMU’s Shane Buechele – 23-37-0-384 (2TDs), and North Carolina’s Sam Howell – 20-36-1-374 (3TDs).

Also, Boston College’s Phil Jurkovec – 28-51-2 for 345 yards (2TDs); Troy’s Gunnar Watson – 26-38-2-333 (3TDs); Arkansas State’s Layne Hatcher – 21-28-0-332 (4TDs); West Virginia’s Jarret Doege – 26-44-1-318 (3TDs); Georgia State’s Cornelious Brown – 18-35-0-314 (3TDs), and Wake Forest’s Sam Hartman – 16-27-0-309 (1TD).

Impressive Rushers:

West Virginia’s Leddie Brown – 195 yards (1TD); East Carolina’s Rahjai Harris – 172 yards (1TD); Liberty’s Shedro Louis – 170 yards (2TDs); North Texas’ Jason Bean – 169 yards (3TDs); Virginia Tech’s Hendon Hooker – 164 yards (3TDs); Navy’s Nelson Smith – 157 yards (2TDs); Middle Tennessee’s Chaton Mobley – 156 yards (1TD), and Alabama’s Najee Harris – 152 yards (1TD).

Also, Virginia Tech’s Khalil Herbert – 143 yards; Troy’s Kimani Vidal – 143 yards (1TD); North Texas’ Deandre Torrey – 143 yards (2TDs); Georgia State’s Tucker Gregg – 142 yards (1TD); UTSA’s Sincere McCormick – 133 yards; UAB;s DeWayne McBride – 131 yards (1TD); Tulane’s Stephon Henderson – 130 yards (1TD); Wake Forest’s Kenneth  Walker – 128 yards (3TDs); Tennessee’s Eric Gray – 128 yards, and Notre Dame’s Kyren Williams – 127 yards.

 

Quotes of the Week

“I did something today that I’ve never done. I messed up, threw a beer bottle through my window and my wife left me. Yeah, and I don’t even drink. I had two beers. I wasn’t even drunk. I just can’t stand to watch this team anymore. I can’t do it. My blood pressure is up, and I’m cool and I’m calm. I don’t get this way. Tennessee football has done that. I didn’t do it. Blame it on Jarrett Guarantano. I can’t watch this team anymore. I can’t watch them next week. I can’t watch them the rest of the season. I can’t watch them anymore,” a Tennessee football fan, calling into a Knoxville talk radio show after the Vols lost to Kentucky.

Tweets of the Week

“I’m not an epidemiologist, but Nick Saban on the sidelines is irresponsible and moronic.”

Nick Saban was diagnosed with COVID-19 days ago. He has his mask down, yelling in the face of an official. That is inexcusable.”

Nick Saban pulls his mask down. If I’m the ref, he’s getting a personal foul.”

“Ref made sure to put his mask on in front of Saban.”

Nick Saban, who confirmed had COVID-19 earlier this week, has his mask off yelling at the referee.”

Nick Saban pulls off mask to yell at ref. Wouldn’t be noteworthy, well….”

“There should be a 15-yard penalty for every time Nick Saban pulls his mask down.”

“The ref isn’t buying Saban’s negative tests.”

Sign of the Day

They Have Ugly Uniforms And Kirby Has A Terrible Haircut

 

Touchdown Tom’s Predictions for

This week’s 10 Biggest and Most Intriguing Games….and then some

 GAME OF THE WEEK: 1. Iowa State (3-1) at Oklahoma State (3-0) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, FOX – After a rough start on opening weekend against Louisiana, Iowa State has been playing well. Oklahoma State is the only undefeated team in the Big 12. Okie State has the better defense. The Cowboys have the better team. But not by much – Oklahoma State 31, Iowa State 27.

RUNNER-UP: 2. Cincinnati (3-0) at SMU (5-0) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 9 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN2 – Big matchup in the AAC. These are the only two unbeaten teams in the conference. Cincinnati has the better defense. Bearcats know how to ride – Cincinnati 30, SMU 26.

REST OF THE BEST: 3. NC State (4-1) at North Carolina (3-1) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN – North Carolina was eatin’ high on the hog until the Tar Heels ran into Chief Osceola last week. They better get that loss out of their system. It doesn’t get any easier this week. Although State lost its quarterback. Still, a good game should be expected. Wolves get stuck in the Tar – North Carolina 34, NC State 29.

4. Michigan (0-0) at Minnesota (0-0) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – Bout time the Big Ten got playin’. This should be a good one. Time for Jim Harbaugh to put up or shut up. The Gophers make him shut up – Minnesota 23, Michigan 20.

5. Alabama (4-0) at Tennessee (2-2) – (SEC vs. SEC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, CBS – I think Tennessee is about to get its third-straight smack down. After all, Alabama is tougher than Georgia and Kentucky. Vols fans didn’t expect a start like this. The Tide ride – Alabama 38, Tennessee 11.

6. Louisiana (3-1) at UAB (4-1) – (Sun Belt at C-USA) – 8 pm ET, Friday, CBSSN – This is a good interconference affair between the Sun Belt and C-USA. Two of the better teams from each conference. No gumbo in Birmingham – UAB 34, Louisiana 31.

7. Virginia Tech (3-1) at Wake Forest (2-2) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday – ESPN3 – Wake Forest surprised Virginia last week. Can they surprise Virginia Tech this week. Not likely, but they will give the Hokies a battle. The Hokies knock the Deacon out of his pulpit – Virginia Tech 27, Wake Forest 23.

8. Notre Dame (4-0) at Pitt (3-3) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – Louisville gave Notre Dame a scare. Pitt is capable of doing the same. There is an advantage to playing at home. But the Panthers can’t take advantage of it – Notre Dame 30, Pitt 21.

9. Penn State (0-0) at Indiana (0-0) – (Big Ten vs, Big Ten) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, FS1 – By all factors this should be a win for Penn State. But some think Indiana is loaded this year. They say the Hoosiers can finish third in the Big Ten East. Can they knock off the Lions? Close, but no Banana for the Hoosiers – Penn State 34, Indiana 28.

10. Georgia Southern (3-1) at Coastal Carolina (4-0) – (Sun Belt vs. Sun Belt) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPNU – Coastal Carolina is having quite a year. And there may be no stopping the Chanticleers. But Georgia Southern will give it a try. The Eagles are no pushovers. The Chicken roosts – Coastal Carolina 26, Georgia Southern 22.

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

West Virginia (3-1) at Texas Tech (1-3) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 5:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN2 – Sometimes it is tough playing out in Lubbock. This may be one of those times. But Neal Brown owes Texas Tech paybacks. Could be a lot of touchdowns and field goals. The Red Raiders eke one out – Texas Tech 31, West Virginia 30.

Nebraska (0-0) at Ohio State (0-0) – (Big Ten vs, Big Ten) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, FOX – Scott Frost says Nebraska will play anybody. He’s getting his wish right out of the starting blocks. Either the Huskers will give the Buckeyes a fight. Or they will get blown out. Very interesting game. Fields melts the Frost – Ohio State 31, Nebraska 18.

Baylor (1-1) at Texas (2-2) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN – Texas coach Tom Herman is a hurtin’ Horn. Some say the decision is already made to replace him. He needs to turn things around – and soon. Herman’s no hermit in the game – Texas 27, Baylor 24.

Iowa (0-0) at Purdue (0-0) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, BTN – Iowa is favored. But you never know. Purdue could pull a shocker. The pundits don’t give the Boilers much credence. The Hawkeyes don’t either – Iowa 27, Purdue 23.

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Florida State (2-3) at Louisville (1-4) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN3….

Tulane (2-3) at UCF (2-2) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 2 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN2….

Florida Atlantic (1-0) at Marshall(4-0) – (C-USA vs. C-USA) – 2:30 pm ET, Saturday….

Jacksonville State (2-1) at FIU (0-2) – (Ohio Valley vs. C-USA) – 7 pm ET, Friday, ESPN3….

Tulsa (1-1) at South Florida (1-4) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 7:30 pm ET, Friday, ESPN….

Virginia (1-3) at Miami (4-1) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 8 pm ET, Saturday, ACCN….

Touchdown Tom

 

P.S.

Not exactly college football related, but in the autumn of October, as the college football season approached its halfway point, the number one song in the country…

…75 years ago this week in 1945 was “Till The End Of Time” by Perry Como

…70 years ago this week in 1950 was “Good Night Irene” by Gordon Jenkins and The Weavers

…65 years ago this week in 1955 was “The Yellow Rose Of Texas” by Mitch Miller, and “Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing” by The Four Aces

…60 years ago this week in 1960 was “Save The Last Dance For Me” by The Drifters, and “I Want To Be Wanted” by Brenda Lee

…55 years ago this week in 1965 was “Yesterday” by The Beatles

…50 years ago this week in 1970 was “I’ll Be There” by The Jackson 5

…45 years ago this week in 1975 was “Bad Blood” by Neil Sedaka

…40 years ago this week in 1980 was “Another One Bites The Dust” by Queen

…35 years ago this week in 1985 was “Take On Me” by A-Ha

…30 years ago this week in 1990 was “Praying For Time” by George Michael, and “I Don’t Have The Heart” by George Ingram