Monday, November 28, 2022

College Football Week 14 - Deion Sanders to Colorado?

 

College Football Week 14 – Deion Sanders to Colorado?

Nebraska gets a coach, Ohio State gets

a loss; Dabo dims, Jimbo shines;
Caleb poses, Shaw resigns; the Ducks
are out, the Boilers are in….

….the Badgers pout as the Gophers win, and LSU is out while Saban wants in. Warner was amazing and so were the Frogs. Taggart takes a dive. Does Brown survive? Kansas State gets another chance, so does Tulane? Auburn may have a Freeze as Bama wins in a breeze. And how ’bout them Dookies?

Ah Thanksgiving! My favorite holiday of the year. But it does come with mixed emotions. Sadly, it is the last college football week of the season. Happily, Thanksgiving brings together family, food and football. And, most importantly, it’s a time to stop, reflect and be thankful for what we have – even if your team has had a bummer season.

Tuesday night the football began. Ohio secured its spot in the MAC championship game, while Miami (Ohio) became bowl eligible. Without starting quarterback Kurtis Rourke, who is out with a season ending knee injury, Ohio slammed Bowling Green, 38-14. Backup quarterback C.J. Harris stepped in for Rourke, passing for 196 yards (1 touchdown) and rushing for 65 yards (3 touchdowns). Four touchdowns altogether for Harris. The win vaulted Ohio into the MAC championship game this week against Toledo. The Bobcats finished the season at 9-3.

In Oxford, Ohio, both Miami and Ball State entered their game with 5-6 records. Miami became bowl eligible, beating Ball State, 18-17. But the Red Hawks had to come up with a big-time rally to win. Midway through the third quarter, Miami trailed Ball State, 17-3. The Red Hawks scored 15 unanswered points (a field goal and two touchdowns) in the final 20 minutes of the contest. The second touchdown came with 1:42 left in the game. In a losing effort, Ball State’s Carson Steele rushed for 180 yards and the Cardinals only two touchdowns.  

Normally, we can be thankful for good weather in Florida but not this week – at least not through Wednesday. Since Sunday, we have had yucky weather here in east-central Florida. It hasn’t been warm, and it hasn’t been cold. It’s just been muggy, damp and dreary with intermittent rain. It’s been gray for four days. Not exactly Chamber of Commerce weather.

With football underway on Tuesday, we next needed the family. They arrived on Wednesday. Princess Gator, Gator Gabe and Gator Babe drove down from the panhandle with two of their three dogs – Honey (the yellow lab) and Ella (the German shepherd). Bo (the black lab) didn’t make the trip this year. Honey turns six on Thanksgiving and Ella will be one on Christmas Day. Bo is a few years older than Honey.

Before they arrived, I texted Gator Gabe that the Dallas Mavericks were on ESPN at 7:30, Wednesday evening, playing the Boston Celtics. He knew that. But he didn’t know that I had a gallon of Blue Bell Natural Vanilla Bean ice cream waiting for him in the refrigerator. I’m also well-stocked with a couple boxes of microwave popcorn. He can eat his ice cream during the first half of the Mavericks’ game and have popcorn during the second half. I might have some of the ice cream and popcorn too. The Mavericks are Gator Gabe’s favorite NBA team. I also didn’t tell him that I would be cheering for the Celtics because they are coached by former West Virginia player Joe Mazzulla.

Lane Kiffin continues to dominate the college football news. So many reports have Little Kiffy leaving Ole Miss for Auburn. It seems like controversy follows Kiffin wherever he goes – Tennessee, USC, Alabama and Ole Miss. I don’t know that I would want Kiffin for a football coach. He’s like a magnet. He attracts more attention than the football team. Kiffin has a good sense of the offense, but his defenses have never been good. I think he’ll always have a winning team but never a championship level team. But, then again, I’ve been wrong before.

Former Mississippi State and Florida coach Dan Mullen commented that Kiffin should stay where he is. Mullen added that in Mississippi, Ole Miss has more resources than Mississippi State but in Alabama, the Crimson Tide have more resources than Auburn. Mullen said that if Kiffin leaves Ole Miss for Auburn, he would go from the leader of the band to playing second fiddle. However, Paul Finebaum countered that even if Auburn is second fiddle to Alabama it still has more resources than Ole Miss.

Hallelujah, the sun made an appearance. The sun came out at 3 p.m. Wednesday – the first time we had seen it since Saturday. Florida is back to being the Sunshine State.

Meanwhile, the Boston Celtics beat the Dallas Mavericks, 125-112. The Mavericks’ Luka Doncic, Gator Gabe’s favorite player, scored 42 points.

With football and family underway, now it was time for the food. For more than 20 years, Swamp Mama and I have hosted large gatherings for Thanksgiving dinner – anywhere from nine to 20 guests. That ended this year when Stephanie Stein informed us last summer that she was going to host Thanksgiving dinner this year. After more than 20 years, we didn’t have a problem with that.

But we contributed to the dinner. Gator Babe made one of her famous charcuterie boards and I made my cast-iron skillet apple pie. Both were popular at our Thanksgiving gathering at Stephanie’s house. There were 12 of us. It was a splendid afternoon of good food and comradery among friends and family. Stephanie was the perfect host. She outdid herself.

Back home, there was just enough time to take the typical post-Thanksgiving dinner nap, before watching some football and basketball.

In the rain, in Oxford, Mississippi, Mike Leach’s Mississippi State Bulldogs slipped by Lane Kiffin’s Ole Miss Magnolias, 24-22. With 1:25 left in the game, Ole Miss failed on a two-point conversion that would have tied the score and more than likely put the game into overtime. After the game, Kiffin said he expected to be back at Ole Miss next season. I can’t imagine that Auburn would want Kiffin. I can’t imagine anybody wanting him. His play calling against Miss State was atrocious.

Then it was time for basketball – Purdue-West Virginia in PK85, the Phil Knight basketball tournament in Portland, Oregon. The game came on at 10 p.m. Only Gator Gabe and I were still up to watch it. The Mountaineers couldn’t cope with Purdue’s 7-foot-4 Zach Edey. The Boilers’ giant scored 24 points and had 12 rebounds, as Purdue downed West Virginia, 80-68.  

How was your Turkey Day?

The Friday after Thanksgiving was the first of two busy days of football over the Turkey Day weekend. The day included four upsets, three high-scoring thrillers and a first in seven years.

The upsets began with Tulane knocking off Cincinnati, 27-24. The win gave the Green Wave the regular season championship of the AAC. Then NC State upset North Carolina, 30-27 (2OT). It was the Wolfpacks fifth win over the Tar Heels in the last seven years.

Missouri surprised Arkansas, 29-27. Missouri quarterback Brady Cook was a real surprise, passing for 242 yards and one touchdown and rushing for 138 yards and another touchdown. The last of the four upsets took place in Iowa City. Nebraska, losers of five-straight games, knocked off Iowa, 24-17. Huskers quarterback Casey Thompson was 20-30-0, passing for 278 yards and three touchdowns. Before Friday, Nebraska had lost to Iowa for the past seven years.

The first of the three high-scoring thrillers took place in the southwest desert. Arizona scored last and beat Arizona State, 38-35. The Wildcats Michael Wiley rushed for 214 yards and three touchdowns. UCLA scored last to down California, 35-28. In the losing effort, Cal quarterback Jack Plummer was 24-34-0, passing for 294 yards and four touchdowns. And finally, in the last of the high-scoring thrillers, Florida State scored last to subdue Florida, 45-38. The two teams combined for 957 total yards.

In two other games Friday, the two top teams in the Mountain West Conference both won. Boise State defeated Utah State, 42-23, and Fresno State shutout Wyoming, 30-0. Boise State and Fresno State will meet this week in the MWC championship game.

During the day Friday, news broke that Matt Rhule was in final negotiations with Nebraska to become the Huskers new football coach. Stay tuned. Rhule is a former head coach at Temple, Baylor and the Carolina Panthers of the NFL. 

In basketball, West Virginia rebounded from its loss to Purdue, to beat Portland State, 89-71, in the PK85 (Phil Knight) basketball tournament. Gator Gabe and I stayed up to watch Purdue knock off Gonzaga, 84-66 in the tournament. I say stayed up late because the game began at 11:40 p.m.

It was obvious Friday that ABC and ESPN are covering so many football games that the networks can’t find enough quality or qualified broadcasters to call the games. And it was obvious that ABC and ESPN put their worst crews on the Friday games as opposed to the Saturday games.

Evidence in point, the broadcast crews calling the Florida-Florida State (Anish Shroff-Brocks Osweiler), Baylor-Texas (Mark Jones-Robert Griffin) and NC State-North Carolina (Dave Pasch-Dusty Dvoracek) games. They were awful. They stunk. As Gator Gabe said, “They’ll be working at Dollar General tomorrow.” Shroff-Osweiler were the worst of the three broadcast crews. They were pathetic.

First thing Saturday morning, news broke that Hugh Freeze will be the next coach of Auburn. Freeze is currently the coach at Liberty. If all comes to fruition, that’s two coaches locked up in two days – Matt Rhule at Nebraska and Hugh Freeze at Auburn. And just in, Rhule is officially the new head coach of Nebraska.

Saturday had the bulk of the Thanksgiving Weekend games. There were the 12 noon ET viewings, the 3:30 ET viewings and the evening viewings. Each time slot had a handful of good games.

The two hyped games in the 12 noon ET slot were South Carolina-Clemson and Michigan-Ohio State. The South Carolina-Clemson game lived up to its hype. The Michigan-Ohio State game didn’t. Although the Gamecocks never led in the game until the fourth quarter, the contest stayed close. Finally, with 10:54 to go in the game, South Carolina took its first and only lead at 31-30, on a 35-yard field goal. The Gamecocks held on and beat Clemson by one point.

In the battle between the Wolverines and the Buckeyes, Ohio State made a game of it in the first half. But only in the first half. The Buckeyes led at the break 20-17. But the second half was all Michigan. The Wolverines all but shut out Ohio State in the second half, 28-3. The rout was on in the third and fourth quarters as Michigan went on to dump the Buckeyes, 45-23. Ohio State suffered its first loss of the season.

Also, in the 12 noon ET time slot there was a game that had no billing. It had no hype. West Virginia took on Oklahoma State in Stillwater. At 4-7, the Mountaineers were having a dismal season. The Cowboys were 6-point favorites. About 8 minutes into the game, WVU took a 7-0 lead. Okie State scored 10 unanswered points and led 10-7 at halftime. Early in the third quarter, the Mountaineers took a 14-10 lead and never trailed for the rest of the game. In the end, West Virginia beat Oklahoma State, 24-19. Coming into the game, WVU coach Neal Brown was under heavy fire from the fans. Will he keep his job? Will Brown survive?

Reports surfaced Saturday afternoon that Oregon offensive coordinator Kenny Dillingham had been hired by Arizona State to be the Sun Devils new head coach. Dillingham is a 2012 graduate of Arizona State and a native of Arizona. At 32, Dillingham will be the youngest coach among Power Five schools. He replaces Herm Edwards who was fired in September. Arizona State finished this season at 3-9. Dillingham has been an offensive coordinator at Memphis, Auburn and Florida State working for Mike Norvell and Gus Malzahn. This season was his first at Oregon under Dan Lanning. Oregon has a Top 5 scoring offense and Dillingham helped to rejuvenate the career of quarterback Bo Nix. 

The 3:30 ET time slot had a few interesting games. All Oregon had to do was beat Oregon State and the Ducks were in the Pac-12 championship game. But the Beavers had plans to dam Oregon’s path to the title game. And they built a good dam. Oregon State downed Oregon, 38-34. No conference championship game for the Ducks this year.

After Iowa lost to Nebraska on Friday, it was up to Purdue. All the Boilers had to do was beat Indiana and Purdue was in the Big Ten championship game. Unlike Oregon, the Boilers handled their challenge. Purdue downed Indiana, 30-16.

Alabama hosted Auburn in the annual Iron Bowl. The Tide were 22-point favorites. Guess what? I hope you weren’t betting on the game. Alabama won by 22 points. The Crimson Tide beat the Tigers, 49-27. Auburn scored first and led, 7-0. But that was the only time throughout the game that the Tigers led. Alabama scored two minutes later and tied the game at 7-7. The Tide continued to score again and again and again. Auburn scored intermittently. After the game, Alabama coach Nick Saban advocated for the Crimson Tide to be one of the four teams in the CFP.      

Rivals Minnesota and Wisconsin met in Madison. It was the battle for the Ax. Going into the fourth quarter, the Badgers led 16-13. But the Gophers skunked Wisconsin in the final quarter. Minnesota outscored Wisconsin 10-0 and went on to down the Badgers, 23-16.

Wake Forest and Duke battled in Durham. When the battle was over, the Dookies came out on top, 34-31. It has been a great season for Duke who finished 8-4 under first-year coach Mike Elko. How ’bout them Dookies! On the other hand, it was a disappointing year for Wake Forest who began the season at 6-1, but then lost 4 of its last 5 games.

Halfway through the season freshman E.J. Warner became the starting quarterback for Temple. E.J. is the son of former NFL quarterback Kurt Warner. Saturday, Temple lost a cliffhanger to East Carolina, 49-46. Until 1:11 left in the game, the Owls were winning 46-42. In the losing effort, Warner was something else. He was 45-63-1, passing for 527 yards and five touchdowns. Temple finished its season at 3-9. But Warner is only a freshman. Stay tuned!

Early Saturday evening, word broke that Florida Atlantic fired head coach Willie Taggart. FAU had just lost to Western Kentucky, 32-31 (OT). In three seasons at FAU, Taggart was 15-18 – 5-7 this season. Prior to FAU, Taggart had been a head coach at Western Kentucky, South Florida, Oregon and Florida State. He had a losing record at all of those schools except Oregon where he was 7-5 in one season with the Ducks. I never could understand how he kept getting hired as a head coach. 

The evening time slots had a few good games too. Foremost among them was the Notre Dame-USC matchup in the Coliseum. It was a must win for the Trojans to remain in contention for one of four spots in the CFP. USC lived up to its challenge, downing the Irish, 38-27. Trojans quarterback Caleb Williams passed for one touchdown and rushed for three TDs. On his second rushing touchdown, which put USC up 31-14, Williams stopped in the end zone and briefly struck the Heisman pose. Shades of Desmond Howard. 

Kansas State hosted intrastate rival Kansas in Manhattan. K-State needed to win to get in the Big 12 championship game. A loss, and Texas would meet TCU in the conference title game. The Wildcats capitalized on their opportunity, beating Kansas, 47-27. K-State will now play TCU for the Big 12 championship, in a rematch of their meeting during the season.

In a SEC matchup, Texas A&M hosted LSU in College Station. Coming into the game, the Aggies had lost six-consecutive games to SEC opponents. LSU had won four-consecutive games against SEC opponents. It looked grim for A&M. But the Aggies played well, and the Tigers didn’t. A&M running back Devon Achane rushed for 215 yards and two touchdowns. Texas A&M tromped LSU, 38-23.

In Tampa, UCF was in a must win game against South Florida. Win, and the Knights were in the AAC championship game. Lose, and they weren’t. It looked good for UCF early in the game. The Knights led South Florida, 28-0, midway through the second quarter. But the Bulls got hot and outscored UCF 39-10. With less than a minute to go in the game, South Florida led UCF, 39-38. With 0:20 on the clock, the Knights scored a touchdown and converted a two-pointer. UCF escaped South Florida, 46-39.

TCU was going for style points in the CFP rankings. The Horned Frogs blasted Iowa State, 62-14. Winning 55-14 and with only 1:18 left in the game, TCU chose to score instead of taking a knee. Meanwhile in Boulder, Utah, who will play USC in the Pac-12 championship game, bludgeoned Colorado, 63-21. The Utes had 662 total yards.

First-year coach Mario Cristobal and the Miami Hurricanes finished a disappointing season on a dismal note. At home, Miami lost to Pitt, 42-16.

Out West, BYU beat Stanford, 35-26. After the game, Stanford coach David Shaw resigned. It may or may not have been a forced resignation, but it probably was. In 12 seasons at Stanford, Shaw was 96-54 (3-9 this season). Shaw was Stanford’s winningest football coach.

In two West Coast late shows, Washington won the Apple Cup, beating Washington State, 51-33. The Huskies Michael Penix was 25-43-1, passing for 484 yards and three touchdowns. Also, in a defensive battle, Air Force beat San Diego State, 13-3. The Falcons Brad Roberts rushed for 187 yards and one touchdown.     

Gator Gabe and I stayed up till the end of the Notre Dame-USC game, at which time he went to bed. I stayed up a little longer, watching some of the Washington-Washington State game, before hitting the rack.

In the four-annual, season-ending matchup games between the ACC and the SEC, the SEC came out 3-1. Georgia beat Georgia Tech 37-14. South Carolina beat Clemson, 31-30, and Kentucky beat Louisville, 26-13. Florida lost to Florida State, 45-38.

Sunday morning, Princess Gator, Gator Gabe and Gator Gabe bid farewell, as they began their drive back to the panhandle. Swamp Mama and I will see them on December 20, when we go up there for Christmas.

Sunday afternoon, we learned of another hiring and two more firings. It’s that time of the year. ESPN reported the Cincinnati coach Luke Fickell would be named the new coach at Wisconsin. Fickell is considered to be the country’s top Group of Five coach. He has a 57-18 record in six seasons at Cincinnati. It has long been believed that when Fickell left Cincinnati for another head coaching job it would only be for a Big Ten school. That belief came true. At Wisconsin, Fickell replaces Paul Chryst who was fired at the middle of the season. Prior to Cincinnati, Fickell was a defensive coordinator at Ohio State and the Buckeyes’ interim head coach for one season. That’s two good coaches the Big Ten is getting – Fickell and Matt Rhule.

Then we learned that Texas State has fired Jake Spavital. Spavital was 13-35 in four seasons at Texas State – 4-8 this season. Texas State plays in the Sun Belt Conference. Prior to Texas State, Spavital was an offensive coordinator at West Virginia under Dana Holgorsen. I wouldn’t be surprised if Spavital ends up on the staff at Houston.

Next news came early Sunday evening that Tulsa had fired its coach Philip Montgomery. Montgomery has coached Tulsa for eight seasons with a 43-53 record (5-7 this season).

At the same time Sunday, Fox Sports reported that Colorado had offered its head coach opening to Deion Sanders. Sanders is currently the head coach of Jackson State. Reportedly, a Sanders spokesman said that Deion has potential interest in the Colorado job. Stay tuned! 

Sunday night, I watched West Virginia beat Florida, 84-55, in the final round of the PK85 (Phil Knight) basketball tournament. I’m feeling pretty good.

At this stage, 12 schools have fired their coaches and seven of those schools are still looking for a new coach.

If I was on the CFP selection committee, my ballot would look like this: 1. Georgia (12-0), 2. Michigan (12-0), 3. TCU (12-0), 4. USC (11-1), 5. Ohio State (11-1), 6. Penn State (10-2), 7. Washington (10-2), 8. Tennessee (10-2), 9. Alabama (10-2), 10. Clemson (10-2) and 11. Tulane (10-2).  

The 10 conference championship games are all set. They will be played this weekend – two games on Friday night and eight on Saturday.

In the only other FBS game this week, Akron (2-9) meets Buffalo (5-6) on Friday night in Buffalo. This is a regular season game that was postponed a few weeks ago when that big snowstorm hit Buffalo. Obviously, Akron and Buffalo didn’t make the MAC championship game, so they were able to play their makeup game this week. Buffalo needs the win to become bowl eligible.  

The playoffs are going on at the FCS, Division II and Division III levels.

The annual Army-Navy game will be played on December 10 in Philadelphia.

It’s been a busy Thanksgiving Weekend. Speaking of Thanksgiving, I am thankful for my many readers who put up with my meanderings through college football each week. I’m especially thankful to the readers who from time-to-time or frequently respond with info, tidbits and follow up, providing their comments and reaction to the games and my commentary. Readers like Ken Burger, Tim Muth, Scott Greenwood, Sally Adkins, Jan Stowers, Jess Schwartzkopf, Graham Sexton, Monta Burt, Bob Willey, Larry Burger, Bob Spiker, Gary Schwartzkopf, Larry Brewer, Neal Stein, Brian Smith, Chris Burnette, Fred Adkins, Steve Moon, Dave Brolhorst, and others. You give me encouragement and for that I am thankful.  

I hope your Thanksgiving was as good as ours!

Touchdown Tom

November 28, 2022

 

Weekend Recap

GAME OF THE WEEK: That’s two-straight – Michigan 45, Ohio State 23 (Touchdown Tom said: Ohio State 28, Michigan 26). Michigan was a 9-point underdog, but that didn’t bother the Wolverines. After a slow start, Michigan got its act going in the second quarter and took over the game in the second half. Ohio State couldn’t get its running game going and C.J. Stroud threw two interceptions. Stroud can say goodbye to the Heisman. Meanwhile, Michigan running back Donovan Edwards rushed for 216 yards and two touchdowns. Combined, the teams had 1,026 total yards. The Wolverines had 532 of those yards. It was the second consecutive win over the Buckeyes for Michigan. The win sends the Wolverines to the Big Ten title game against Purdue. Attendance in Columbus: 106,787

RUNNER-UP: Heisman pose – USC 38, Notre Dame 27 (Touchdown Tom said: USC 33, Notre Dame 30). USC took charge of this game early on. Notre Dame got a little feisty toward the end, but the Trojans had things in control. Notre Dame was riding a six-game winning streak coming into the contest. USC had won five-straight. Make it six now. Notre Dame passed well, but the Irish couldn’t get a running game going. The Trojans did both well. USC running back Austin Wells rushed for 154 yards. Notre Dame quarterback Drew Pyne completed 88.5% of his passes. USC quarterback Caleb Williams rushed for three touchdowns. USC goes on to play Utah in the Pac-12 title game. Attendance in Los Angeles: 72,613

REST OF THE BEST: Storm surge – Tulane 27, Cincinnati 24 (Touchdown Tom said: Tulane 24, Cincinnati 22). Tulane led throughout and never trailed in the game until 6:27 to go in the fourth quarter when Cincinnati went up 24-20. But Tulane quickly responded. The Green Wave scored on a 30-yard pass from Michael Pratt to Valentino Ambrosio. Tulane went back up 27-24 and held on to win. The teams were pretty closely matched in the stats. Tulane’s Tyjae Spears rushed for 181 yards and two touchdowns. Attendance in Cincinnati: 37,989

Leave it to the Beavers – Oregon State 38, Oregon 34 (Touchdown Tom said: Oregon 30, Oregon State 28). Late in the third quarter, Oregon led, 31-10. Then Oregon State outscored the Beavers, 28-3. Oregon State did it on the ground. The Beavers only completed six passes and only had 90 yards passing. But they had 274 yards rushing. Oregon quarterback Bo Nix was 27-41-0, passing for 327 yards and two touchdowns. Attendance in Corvallis: 28,840

The Gamecocks are for real – South Carolina 31, Clemson 30 (Touchdown Tom said: Clemson 33, South Carolina 32). Clemson took charge early, but South Carolina came on strong in the second half. The Gamecocks were out to prove that the win over Tennessee was no fluke. And they did. South Carolina only had 54 yards rushing, but 360 yards passing. Conversely, Clemson only had 99 yards passing and 336 yards rushing. The Tigers D.J. Uiagalelei only completed 27.6% of his passes. Attendance in Clemson: 81,500

The Roosters never saw it coming – James Madison 44, Coastal Carolina 7 (Touchdown Tom said: Coastal Carolina 30, James Madison 21). I don’t know what got into James Madison, but they really put it to Coastal Carolina, especially in the second and third quarters when the Dukes outscored the Chanticleers, 17-0 and 20-0 respectively. JMU had 502 total yards to only 183 for Coastal Carolina. Ironically, Coastal Carolina maintained time of possession for 40:37. JMU scored quick when they had the ball. Both teams finished at the top of their Division in the Sun Belt with 6-2 conference records. But Coastal Carolina goes to the Sun Belt title game, as this is a transition year from FCS to FBS for JMU. Attendance in Harrisonburg: 19,393

Wolfpack beats the Tar out of the Heels – NC State 30, North Carolina 27 (2OT) (Touchdown Tom said: North Carolina 34, NC State 28). NC State took a 7-0 lead just 1:40 into the game and never trailed for the rest of the contest, until North Carolina took a 30-27 lead in the first of the two overtimes. The score was tied three times at 17-17 midway through the fourth quarter, 24-24 at the end of regulation and 30-30 at the end of the first overtime. The Tar Heels scored a touchdown as time expired in regulation to put the game into overtime. After starting out 9-1, North Carolina has lost its last two games. Pillsbury needs to hire North Carolina coach Mack Brown to be the Doughboy in its commercials. Brown looks and moves like the Pillsbury Doughboy. Attendance in Chapel Hill: 50,500

The Huskies get the apples – Washington 51, Washington State 33 (Touchdown Tom said: Washington 32, Washington State 26). The teams combined for 1,141 total yards. Washington had 705 of those yards (61.8%). And Michael Penix had 485 of those yards passing (68.8%). The lead changed hands seven times – all in the first half. When Washington went up 28-24 just before the half, the Huskies never relinquished the lead again. Washington led 35-33 with 6:30 to go in the third quarter. Then the Huskies scored 16 unanswered points to finish the game. Attendance in Pullman: 33,152

Kiffin had egg on his face – Mississippi State 24, Ole Miss 22 (Touchdown Tom said: Ole Miss 35, Mississippi State 29). In three seasons, Mike Leach won his first game against Ole Miss, while Lane Kiffin lost his first game against Mississippi State in the annual Egg Bowl. When Ole Miss took a 16-7 lead late in the second quarter, it appeared that the Magnolias were going to dominate the game. But with just 0:08 on the clock in the first half, Miss State scored and trailed 16-14. There was no scoring in the third quarter. By midway through the fourth quarter, Miss State had added a field goal and a touchdown to take a 24-16 lead. With just three or four minutes left in the game, it appeared the Bulldogs were about to put the game out of reach. They were on the Ole Miss goal line. However, quarterback Will Rogers fumbled and Ole Miss recovered. In less than two minutes, Ole Miss drove down the field and scored. But the Magnolias came up short on the two-point conversion attempt. Both teams finished the season with 8-4 records. Attendance in Oxford: 62,487

Off we go – Air Force 13, San Diego State 3 (Touchdown Tom said: Air Force 24, San Diego State 23). Only one touchdown was scored in the game. That was by Air Force in the first 3 minutes of the game. Neither team saw the end zone after that. It was all field goals – three of them in the second half. The Falcons defense held San Diego State to minus 1 yard rushing. Air Force only had 14 yards passing. But Falcons running back Brad Roberts rushed for 187 yards. Air Force finished its season with a 9-3 record. Attendance in San Diego: 25,223

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

Surprise in Stillwater – West Virginia 24, Oklahoma State 19 (Touchdown Tom said: Oklahoma State 31, West Virginia 21). Oklahoma State led 10-7 at halftime. WVU outscored the Cowboys 17-9 in the second half. The Mountaineers only had 77 yards passing, but 250 yards rushing. WVU running back Jaylen Anderson rushed for 155 yards and two touchdowns. This was Oklahoma State’s first loss at home in 14 games. I don’t think the rain stopped during the entire game. Attendance in Stillwater: 52,353

Party in the wigwam – Florida State 45, Florida 38 (Touchdown Tom said: Florida State 33, Florida 27). In a game that was tied five times, Florida State scored with 4:06 to go in the fourth quarter to pull out the victory. Both quarterbacks were failures at passing. Florida’s Anthony Richardson completed 33% of his throws and FSU quarterback Jordan Travis completed 43% of his tosses. Both quarterbacks were bigger threats running the ball. The teams were evenly matched in the stats. The officiating was atrocious, as were the broadcasters. Attendance in Tallahassee: 79,560

Finally – Nebraska 24, Iowa 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Iowa 17, Nebraska 12). Iowa couldn’t find its offense or defense until the second half – mostly in the fourth quarter. Nebraska led 17-0 at halftime and 24-7 at the end of three. Iowa scored 21 unanswered points in the final 23 minutes of the game. The Hawkeyes were plagued with four turnovers. All Iowa needed was a victory to play in the Big Ten championship game. But no title game for the Hawkeyes. Nebraska quarterback Casey Thompson was the star of the game for the Huskers. Nebraska only had 52 yards rushing. The Huskers defense held Iowa to 274 total yards. Nothing like finishing up with a win. Better late than never for Nebraska. Attendance in Iowa City: 69,250

Looking Dooky – Duke 34, Wake Forest 31 (Touchdown Tom said: Wake Forest 27, Duke 24). The lead in the game changed hands four times. Trailing 31-27, Duke scored the winning touchdown with just 2:04 on the clock. Both quarterbacks were amazing. Wake’s Sam Hartman passed for 347 yards. Duke’s Riley Leonard passed for 391 yards. At 8-4, Duke had an amazing season. The Dookies were picked to finish last in the Coastal Division. Instead, they finished second. Attendance in Durham: 17,492

Woof, woof – Georgia 37, Georgia Tech 14 (Touchdown Tom said: Georgia 30, Georgia Tech 11). A tight first half (10-7), Georgia opened it up in the second half, outscoring Tech, 27-7. The Dawgs had 406 total yards to 255 for Tech. The Yellow Jackets only had 40 yards rushing. The Dawgs just seemed to stay in cruise control for the game. Attendance in Athens: 92,746

The Bears couldn’t bare it – Texas 38, Baylor 27 (Touchdown Tom said: Texas 35, Baylor 27). This was a close game throughout. The lead changed hands five times. Baylor last led 27-24 almost midway through the fourth quarter. Then Texas scored 14 unanswered points. Texas had 402 total yards to 280 for Baylor. Horns running back Bijan Robinson rushed for 179 yards and two touchdowns. Attendance in Austin: 94,076

Off to Lucas Oil Stadium – Purdue 30, Indiana 16 (Touchdown Tom said: Purdue 27, Indiana 20). All right! The Boilers are in the Big Ten title game. Who would have thought it in early November when the Boilers were 5-4 (3-3 in the Big Ten). With 11:06 to go in the game, Purdue just led 17-10. Then in the next nine minutes, the Boilers went up 30-10. Indiana scored its final TD as time expired. Purdue quarterback Aidan O’Connell was 18-29-0, passing for 290 yards and two touchdowns. Attendance in Bloomington: 51,148

Week 13 Results:  8 winners, 9 fumbles (47.1 percent)

For the Season:   126 winners, 63 fumbles (66.7 percent)

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Western Kentucky 32, Florida Atlantic 31 – Attendance in Boca Raton: 18,376

Middle Tennessee 33, FIU 28 – Attendance in Miami: 14,768

UCF 46, South Florida 39 – Attendance in Tampa: 32,217

Pitt 42, Miami 16 – Attendance in Miami Gardens: 46,428

West Florida 38, Delta State 27 (Division II Playoff) – Attendance in Cleveland: 1,059

 

Superlatives

Impressive Passers:

Temple’s E.J. Warner – 45-63-1 for 527 yards (5TDs); Washington’s Michael Penix – 25-43-1-484 (3TDs); Oklahoma’s Dillon Gabriel – 28-40-1-449 (6TDs); Texas Tech’s Tyler Shough – 31-50-1-436 (2TDs); Western Kentucky’s Austin Reed – 28-52-1-410 (3TDs), and Duke’s Riley Leonard – 29-41-1-391 (4TDs).

Also, Houston’s Clayton Tune – 26-47-1 for 386 yards (2TDs); Georgia Southern’s Kyle Vantrease – 34-51-1-385 (3TDs); UTSA’s Frank Harris – 16-22-0-382 (3TDs), and Wake Forest’s Sam Hartman – 26-42-1-347 (3TDs).

Impressive Rushers:

UAB’s Dewayne McBride – 272 yards (1TD); Texas State’s Lincoln Pare – 271 yards (1TD); East Carolina’s Keaton Mitchell – 222 yards (3TDs); Michigan’s Donovan Edwards – 216 yards (2TDs), and Texas A&M’s Devon Achane – 215 yards (2TDs).

Also, Arizona’s Michael Wiley – 214 yards (3TDs); Troy’s Kimani Vidal – 208 yards (4TDs); Southern Miss’s Frank Gore – 194 yards (1TD); Air Force’s Brad Roberts – 187 yards (1TD); Tulane’s Tyjae Spears – 181 yards (2TDs); Ball State’s Carson Steele – 180 yards (2TDs), and Texas’ Bijan Robinson 179 yards (2TDs).

Also, Appalachian State’s Nate Noel – 171 yards (3TDs); BYU’s Christopher Brooks – 164 yards; Oklahoma’s Eric Gray – 161 yards; Tennessee’s Jaylen Wright – 160 yards (2TDs), and West Virginia’s Jaylen Anderson – 155 yards (2TDs).

 

Quotes of the Week

“What’s a worse ride than the Gus Bus? The Lane Train,” a caller on The Paul Finebaum Show.

 

Touchdown Tom’s Predictions for

This Week’s 10 Conference Championship Games….and then none

GAME OF THE WEEK: 1. Kansas State (9-3) vs. TCU (12-0) – (Big 12 Championship Game – Arlington, Texas) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ABC – This is a rematch of a game that TCU won 38-28, on October 22. The Frogs had to rally in the fourth quarter to win that contest. Kansas State’s only other loss in the Big 12 was by 3 points to Texas on November 12. Since then, the Wildcats have won three-straight games. K-State relies on the running of Deuce Vaughn. He has rushed for 1,295 yards this season. Both TCU and Kansas State are strong on offense – TCU is stronger. TCU’s Kendre Miller has rushed for 1,260 yards. Frogs quarterback Max Duggan has passed for 3,070 yards. Both TCU and Kansas State are up-and-down on defense – sometimes good, sometimes not so good. The Frogs are hoppy – TCU 27, Kansas State 23.

RUNNER-UP: 2. LSU (9-3) vs. Georgia (12-0) – (SEC Championship Game – Atlanta, Georgia) – 4 pm ET, Saturday, CBS – A lot of teams rely on their running to open up their passing. Sometimes, I think Georgia relies on Stetson Bennett’s passing to open up its running. Regardless, LSU will have its hands full trying to stop Georgia’s offense. And that’s just the offense. The Dawgs play better defense. LSU is capable of putting points on the board. But the Tigers defense is a different story. It’s generally not so strong. And LSU is coming off a bad loss to Texas A&M. The Tigers may not be very healthy. Uga never did like cats – Georgia 34, LSU 23.

REST OF THE TITLE GAMES: 3. Utah (9-3) vs. USC (11-1) (Pac-12 Championship Game – Las Vegas, Nevada) – 8 pm ET, Friday, FOX – This is another rematch, and it should be a classic. The first game was a classic. On October 15, USC lost to Utah, 43-42. The Utes scored with 0:48 left on the clock and went for 2 to win. They were successful. If the Trojans win this game, Caleb Williams wins the Heisman, hands down. If they lose, well, it could be another story. Williams has passed for 3,712 yards this season. Utah is good. The Utes offense is good. Not as good as USC’s offense, but it is good. And Utah actually has a better defense than the Trojans. This could be the most exciting game among the conference title games. The Trojans get revenge – USC 33, Utah 30.

4. Purdue (8-4) vs. Michigan (12-0) (Big Ten Championship Game – Indianapolis, Indiana) – 8 pm ET, Saturday, FOX – Purdue’s only hope is that Michigan is still sky high over its win against Ohio State. Well, that didn’t happen to Michigan last year when the Wolverines were in the same circumstances. Jim Harbaugh does a pretty good job keeping his team in focus. And just when you think the Wolverines are out of running backs, they come up with another one. Michigan has one of the best offenses and defenses in the country. Purdue is just fair to midland on offense and defense. Sometimes the Boilers are good at one, the other or both. Sometimes they are bad at one the other or both. It all depends on which way the steam is blowing. If Purdue quarterback Aidan O’Connell is on, the Boilers can be dangerous. He has passed for 3,115 yards this season. Harbaugh plays hard ball – Michigan 30, Purdue 17.

5. Coastal Carolina (9-2) vs. Troy (10-2) – (Sun Belt Championship Game – Troy, Alabama) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN – I don’t know what happened to Coastal Carolina last week against James Madison. It has to be injuries. The Chanticleers began the season 6-0. They were hot. Since then, they have gone 3-2. I know that Chanticleers quarterback Grayson McCall is out for the season. That hurts. Meanwhile, Troy is riding a 9-game winning streak. The Trojans seem to get better each week. They are not so good on offense. They sneak up on you. But Troy plays outstanding defense. Helen seduces the Chanticleer – Troy 33, Coastal Carolina 24.

6. UCF (9-3) vs. Tulane (10-2) – (AAC Championship Game – New Orleans, Louisiana) – 4 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – Another rematch and this one on the same field as the first game. UCF won that contest 38-31. Tulane got off to a slow start that day. But the Green Wave got their act together and almost came back and won. That game was on November 12. UCF has a good offense and a so-so defense. Tulane has a weaker offense and a better defense. Still, the Green Wave can score when they have too. Tulane quarterback Michael Pratt gets better every week. The Knights’ armor gets tarnished – Tulane 34, UCF 32.

7. North Carolina (9-3) vs. Clemson (10-2) – (ACC Championship Game – Charlotte, North Carolina) – 8 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – This game has lost much of its luster, not that it had a whole lot to begin with. Clemson comes in on a loss. North Carolina comes in on two losses. Clemson’s strength is supposed to be its defense. But the Tigers defense has slipped up from time to time this year. And we all know the Clemson offense has been missing. You just wonder if quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei is going to have a breakout game. You would think he is due for one. North Carolina began the season 9-1 but has lost its last two. The Tar Heels biggest threat is quarterback Drake Maye. He has passed for 3,847 yards. He can run too when he has too. All Clemson has to do is contain Maye. They do – Clemson 33, North Carolina 24.

8. Fresno State (8-4) vs. Boise State (9-3) – (MWC Championship Game – Boise, Idaho) – 4 pm ET, Saturday, FOX – It seems like Boise State is almost always in this game. This year, the Broncos strength is on defense. Usually, Boise State has a strong offense but not this season. But it isn’t bad. It’s just that the defense is better. The Broncos are 7-1 in their last 8 games. Fresno State is no pushover. And now that quarterback Jake Haener is healthy again, the Bulldogs are a bigger threat. Fresno State’s problems were early in the season. The Bulldogs began 1-4. Since then, they are on a 7-game winning streak. This game is a rematch. Boise State won the first encounter, 40-20. That was on October 8. But this is now. Fresno State is better. This game will be closer, but the Broncos still win – Boise State 31, Fresno State 27.

9. North Texas (7-5) vs. UTSA (10-2) – (C-USA Championship Game – San Antonio, Texas) – 7:30 pm ET, Friday, CBSSN – This game is a rematch, and the first game was a close one – very close. UTSA beat North Texas, 31-27. The Roadrunners scored with 0:15 left to win the game. That was on October 22. UTSA has a good offense and a weak defense. Roadrunners quarterback Frank Harris has passed for 3,524 yards this season. North Texas is similar – good offense, bad defense. In fact, these two teams are very much like one another. Beep Beep makes the Mean look Green – UTSA 34, North Texas 25.

10. Toledo (7-5) vs. Ohio (9-3) – (MAC Championship Game – Detroit, Michigan) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN – Ohio is a deceptive team. They don’t impress you with the numbers. The Bobcats generally play better than their numbers. Ohio began the season 2-3. Since then, the Bobcats have won 7-straight games. They lost their quarterback to injury a couple weeks back. But the replacement – C.J. Harris – seems to be capable. Toledo can be deceptive too. Except for the loss to Ohio State, the Rockets other four losses were all by 7 points or less. Toledo could easily be 11-1. But they will become 7-6 – Ohio 30, Toledo 21., 31-27.

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Wingate (11-2) at West Florida (11-1) – (South Atlantic vs. Gulf South) – (Division II Playoff) – 12 noon ET, Saturday….

Touchdown Tom

 

Monday, November 21, 2022

College Football Week 13 - Vols QB Hooker out with torn ACL

 

College Football Week 13 – Vols QB Hooker out with torn ACL

Living on a prayer, needed a prayer,

looking shaky and the Heisman
winner may have surfaced

Those one-liners depict Saturday’s performance by the top five teams in the CFP rankings, and the performance of a player on a sixth team high in the rankings.

What a Saturday! What a day and night of college football! Simply put, Saturday knocked your socks off. Saturday was the most thrilling, the most exciting, the most surprising, the most interesting, the craziest and the strangest day in college football this season. It had every possible thrill, excitement and disappointment that football can provide.

Just when it looked like the playoff hopes and chances of Michigan and TCU had come to an end, a miracle occurred. The Horned Frogs and Wolverines were living on a prayer. They were definitely living on the edge.

The two playoff contenders were facing certain defeat. And certain elimination from making the playoff. But in the closing seconds, both pulled a rabbit out of the hat. No. 3 Michigan and No. 4 TCU kicked game winning field goals.  

Trailing Illinois, 17-16, Michigan kicked its game winner (a 35-yarder) with 0:09 on the clock. The Wolverines beat Illinois, 19-17. Trailing Baylor, 28-26, TCU kicked its game winner (a 40-yarder) as time expired. The Horned Frogs beat Baylor, 29-28. You can’t get any closer than that.

Two more top-ranked teams – the Top 2 – looked perilously shaky on Saturday. No. 1 Georgia struggled to put away Kentucky. Kentucky, a team that lost 44-6 to Tennessee. Kentucky, a team that lost to Vanderbilt last week. The Dawgs could only manage 9 points – 3 field goals –  in the first half. Georgia finally saw the end zone in the 3rd quarter and went up 16-0. But with almost 10 minutes to go in the game, Kentucky scored. The Georgia lead was 16-6. The Dawgs hung on for the 10-point win.

No. 2 Ohio State had a tougher time with Maryland. The Buckeyes trailed the Terps, 13-10, at halftime. Ohio State took the lead in the third quarter, but the game remained close. The Ohio State lead was only 33-30 with about 10 minutes to go in the game. With less than a minute to go, the Buckeye lead was still only 3 points – 33-30. Ohio State added a field goal and a fumble recovery for a touchdown to subdue Maryland, 43-30. The Buckeyes were definitely shaky on Saturday.

Then the unexpected happened. I mean, the really unexpected. No. 5 Tennessee lost to South Carolina. Yes, to unranked South Carolina, a team that lost 38-6 to Florida the previous week. A team that lost to Missouri. A team that lost 48-7 to Georgia. Not only did Tennessee lose to South Carolina, but the Vols lost 63-38 to the Gamecocks. Tennessee’s chances for a spot in the playoff all but went down the drain.

Michigan and TCU were living on a prayer. Tennessee needed a prayer.

And finally, a game for the ages in the Rose Bowl. In a donnybrook, No. 7 USC beat No. 16 UCLA, 48-45. The game was a thriller. The game was exciting. There was never a dull moment. But more exciting than the game itself was the incredible performance by USC quarterback Caleb Williams. It was a Heisman-winning performance. Passing for 470 yards, Williams led the Trojans back from a 14-0 second quarter deficit to win the game. He threw two touchdown passes and he ran for 33 yards and another touchdown. He completed 74.4% of his passes.

Williams still has two tough assignments coming up – a November 26 encounter with Notre Dame (8-3), and a December 2 meeting with either Oregon (9-2) or Washington (9-2) in the Pac-12 championship game. Win both of those games and USC is in the playoff. Win both of those games and Caleb Williams will win the Heisman Trophy.

Other than that Mrs. Lincoln, how was your day?

College football Week12 began, as in recent weeks, with MACtion on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday night Bowling Green jumped out to a 21-0 second quarter lead and then survived a rally to beat Toledo, 42-35. Trailing BG throughout, Toledo took its first and only lead with just 0:51 left in the game. The Rockets scored a touchdown to go up 35-34. But it wasn’t over. With 0:09 to go, BG scored the winning touchdown on a 42-yard pass from Matt McDonald to Ta’Ron Keith.

That same night, Ohio downed Ball State, 32-18. Bobcats running back Sieh Bangura rushed for 148 yards. Ohio dominated time of possession for 36:38. The Bobcats improved to 8-3.

Wednesday night began with a thriller in Kent, Ohio. In a game that was tied 7-7 in the first quarter and 17-17 in the third quarter, Eastern Michigan outlasted Kent State, 31-24. EMU quarterback Taylor Powell was 30-39-0, passing for 315 yards and three touchdowns. Eastern Michigan controlled time of possession for 39:19.

The following game was even more exciting. In a contest where the lead changed hands three times, Miami (Ohio) survived Northern Illinois, 29-23. With 8:24 to go in the third quarter, the Red Hawks went up 19-17 and never trailed again. Miami maintained time of possession for 34:32.

In the nightcap on Wednesday, Western Michigan and Central Michigan gave us another thriller. Trailing CMU 10-7, WMU scored 5 points (a safety and a field goal) in the final 3:57 to beat the Chippewas, 12-10. Western Michigan running back Sean Tyler rushed for 177 yards and one touchdown.

Thursday night, the action moved from the MAC to the AAC. SMU and Tulane met in New Orleans. It was a good meeting for Tulane and a bad meeting for SMU. The Green Wave bludgeoned the Mustangs, 59-24.

The action Friday night began in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In a game between two of college football’s most woeful teams, the offense was abundant, the defense was lacking. Tulsa beat South Florida, 48-42. The teams combined for 1,072 total yards. After trailing South Florida for the first 20 minutes of the game, Tulsa went up 14-13 in the second quarter and never trailed again.

In the only other game on Friday, San Diego State beat New Mexico, 34-10. The Aztecs racked up 459 total yards, while possessing the ball for 34:38. San Diego State improved to 7-4.

In addition to TCU-Baylor, Illinois-Michigan, etc., Saturday was full of thrillers. Oregon kicked a field goal in the fourth quarter to beat Utah, 20-17. Boise State scored a touchdown with 7 minutes left in the game to beat Wyoming, 20-17.

Navy kicked a field goal in the third quarter and held on to upset UCF, 17-14. Trailing Nebraska, 14-9, Wisconsin scored with 0:35 on the clock to survive the Huskers, 15-14. Indiana and Michigan State went two overtimes, before the Hoosiers could prevail over the Spartans, 39-31 (2OT). Trailing Michigan State, 31-14, with 6 minutes to go in the third quarter, Indiana scored 17 unanswered points to put the game into overtime.

Trailing Pitt, 28-14, in the fourth quarter, Duke scored two touchdowns in the final 9 minutes – the second touchdown coming with 0:44 on the clock. But after the second touchdown, the Dookies 2-point conversion attempt failed. Duke lost to Pitt, 28-26. Trailing North Carolina, 17-0, in the second quarter, Georgia Tech scored 21 unanswered points to upset the Tar Heels, 21-17.

With 0:28 left in the game, Iowa kicked a 21-yard field goal to beat Minnesota, 13-10. Trailing Georgia State, 34-14, James Madison scored 28 unanswered points to take 42-34 fourth quarter lead over the Panthers. Georgia State scored a touchdown with 2:30 remaining, but the Panthers failed on their 2-point conversion attempt. James Madison beat Georgia State, 42-40.

Trailing Iowa State, 10-7, Texas Tech scored a touchdown with 6 minutes left on the clock to beat the Hawkeyes, 14-10. And trailing San Jose State, 31-28, Utah State scored a touchdown with 2:49 left in the game to beat the Spartans, 35-31.

In the “Big Game,” Cal beat Stanford, 27-20. As the fourth quarter began Cal trailed Stanford 17-6. But the Golden Bears rallied in the final quarter, outscoring Stanford, 21-3. And in “The Game,” Yale downed Harvard, 19-14. Trailing Harvard, 14-13, in the fourth quarter, Yale scored a touchdown with 6:29 remaining and held on to win.

Yes, Saturday was full of cliff hangers.

So, after all the turmoil, my CFP rankings would look like this: 1. Georgia (11-0), 2. Ohio State (11-0), 3. Michigan (11-0), 4. TCU (11-0), 5. USC (10-1), 6. Clemson (10-1), 7. Tennessee (9-2), 8. LSU (9-2), 9. Washington (9-2), 10. Oregon (9-2). Alabama (9-2) is 11th. Stay tuned until tomorrow evening when the latest CFP rankings will be released.

A week ago today, West Virginia announced that athletics director Shane Lyons had resigned. It was obviously a forced resignation. Lyons became athletics director at WVU in 2015, replacing Oliver Luck. The firing of an athletic director is often a precursor to the firing of the football coach. It’s commonly known that WVU football coach Neal Brown is on the hot seat. Stay tuned!

Charlotte has hired Michigan associate head coach Biff Poggi as its new football coach. Poggi replaces Will Healy who was fired in October. Prior to Michigan, Poggi was a successful high school coach in Maryland.

“Love is like a cloud. Holds a lot of rain. Love hurts.” Dan McCafferty, the front man and lead singer of the Scottish rock band Nazareth, died last week. Nazareth’s biggest hit was their recording of “Love Hurts,” which reached No. 8 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart in 1976, staying on the chart for 23 weeks. “Love Hurts,” written by Boudreaux Bryant, was originally recorded as a country ballad by The Everly Brothers (1960) and later by Roy Orbison (1962). A soulful version of “Love Hurts” by Gram Parsons and Emmy Lou Harris was released in 1974, after Parsons’ death. But Nazareth had the biggest hit with the song, turning “Love Hurts” into a powerful, classic rock ballad, with McCafferty’s rich and distinctive vocals. I first became familiar with Nazareth during the year I lived in Scotland while in the Navy – 1972-73. The band hit No. 9 on the U.K. charts in 1973 with “Broken Down Angel,” another good song. Dan McCafferty, a native of Dunfermline, Scotland, was 76. “Love is like a flame. It burns you when it’s hot. Love hurts. Ooh, ooh, love hurts.”

Touchdown Tom

November 21, 2022

Weekend Recap

GAME OF THE WEEK: Heisman clincher? – USC 48, UCLA 45 (Touchdown Tom said: USC 40, UCLA 34). This was a classic USC-UCLA game, reminiscent of their games in the 1960s and 1970s. UCLA won the first quarter 14-0. USC won the second quarter 20-7. The teams were pretty even in the third and fourth quarters. The two teams combined for 1,172 total yards – 779 yards from passing. Four turnovers hurt UCLA. USC running back Austin Jones rushed for 120 yards. Trojans quarterback Caleb Williams had an amazing game. It was a Heisman-winning performance. Attendance in Pasadena: 70,865

RUNNER-UP: Too close for comfort – Michigan 19, Illinois 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Michigan 26, Illinois 11). Michigan had to have its mind on Ohio State. How else do you explain it? The Wolverines only had 10 points going into the fourth quarter. Illinois does have a good defense. Time of possession favored Michigan – 35:03. Illinois running back Chase Brown rushed for 140 yards and two touchdowns. Attendance in Ann Arbor: 110,433

REST OF THE BEST: Ducky – Oregon 20, Utah 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Oregon 33, Utah 28). Oregon only had 67 yards rushing, but Bo Nix passed for 287 yards. Utah quarterback Cameron Rising threw three interceptions. Oregon kicked a 41-yard fourth quarter field goal to win the game. Both defenses played well. Attendance in Eugene: 57,009

Uga must have been bored – Georgia 16, Kentucky 6 (Touchdown Tom said: Georgia 31, Kentucky 15). The Dawgs defense played well. The Dawgs offense was absent. Likewise, Kentucky played pretty good defense. The Wildcats offense was AWOL. Georgia running back Kenny McIntosh won the game for the Dawgs. He had 143 yards rushing and Georgia’s only touchdown. Stetson Bennett was not sharp. Attendance in Lexington: 61,022

Still alive – TCU 29, Baylor 28 (Touchdown Tom said: TCU 33, Baylor 27). It seems like TCU has frequently been rallying late in the game to win. This rally was really late. Baylor had 501 total yards and possessed the ball for 33:58. TCU quarterback Max Duggan was 24-35-1, passing for 327 yards and one touchdown. Attendance in Waco: 44,393

Feelin’ Cocky – South Carolina 63, Tennessee 38 (Touchdown Tom said: Tennessee 30, South Carolina 16). South Carolina quarterback Spencer Rattler finally had the game Gamecocks fans have been waiting for. Oklahoma fans were waiting for it too. Rattler had a sensational game. He was 30-37-0, passing for 438 yards and six touchdowns. South Carolina racked up 608 total yards. The teams combined for 1,115 yards. Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker was 25-42-0, passing for 247 yards and three touchdowns. Hooker suffered a non-contact injury to his left knee late in the game. The injury turned out to be a torn ACL. If there had been any doubts about the coaching ability of Shane Beamer, there shouldn’t be now. Beamer is a first-class coach. The Gamecocks have a winner. Tennessee has a winner too in Josh Heupel, but this game belonged to Beamer. Attendance in Columbia: 79,041

Cowboys can’t pass – Boise State 20, Wyoming 17 (Touchdown Tom said: Boise State 25, Wyoming 22). Wyoming led for most of the game. Boise State briefly led in the third quarter for about four minutes, and then for seven minutes at the end. Wyoming only had 11 first downs and only 30 yards passing. The Broncos dominated ball possession for 36:29. The Cowboys Titus Swen rushed for 212 yards. Attendance in Laramie: 17,345

Mustangs caught in a tidal wave – Tulane 59, SMU 24 (Touchdown Tom said: Tulane 34, SMU 32). With five turnovers, SMU was never in the game. Tulane led 49-7 in the third quarter. Ironically, Tulane had 141 passing yards and SMU had 141 rushing yards. Tulane running back Tyjae Spears rushed for 121 yards. Tulane quarterback Michael Pratt was responsible for six touchdowns: three passing and three rushing. Pratt was 9-14-09, passing for 141 yards and he rushed for 70 yards. The Green Wave improved to 9-2. Attendance in New Orleans: 20,894

Not a Dookie day – Pitt 28, Duke 26 (Touchdown Tom said: Pitt 31, Duke 29). Neither team had much on offense. Duke only had 63 yards rushing. Duke led for most of the first half. Pitt led in the second half. Both teams are 7-4 overall and 4-3 in ACC play. Attendance in Pittsburgh: 45,362

Defense rules – Iowa 13, Minnesota 10 (Touchdown Tom said: Iowa 23, Minnesota 20). Iowa scored the first 10 points of the game – all in the first quarter. Then the Hawkeyes never scored again until a field goal at the end of the game. Ball possession favored Minnesota – 35:13. Minnesota only had 87 yards passing, but 312 rushing. Gophers running back Mohamed Ibrahim rushed for 263 yards. Iowa is one win away from the Big Ten West Division title. Attendance in Minneapolis: 45,816

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

Dismal Eers – Kansas State 48, West Virginia 31 (Touchdown Tom said: Kansas State 35, West Virginia 27). This was a first half game. Kansas State led at the break, 41-25. Both teams had trouble finding the end zone in the second half. Of course, K-State didn’t need to find it. WVU started quarterback Garrett Greene. J.T. Daniels never played. Greene threw three TD passes, but he also threw two interceptions. With athletic director Shane Lyons fired, WVU fans just sit around waiting for coach Neal Brown to be fired. Brown’s firing will be a day of celebration. It can’t come soon enough. Attendance in Morgantown: 37,055

No music for the Gators – Vanderbilt 31, Florida 24 (Touchdown Tom said: Florida 27, Vanderbilt 19). I have to say, Florida was not only an undisciplined football team, but also the Gators were an unprepared football team. This was the most disappointed I have been with Billy Napier all season. To be honest, Florida played like it didn’t care. And maybe they didn’t. The Gators had 80 yards of mostly foolish penalties. Florida only had 45 yards rushing. Quarterback Anthony Richardson did pass for 400 yards and three touchdowns. He also tossed an interception. Maybe their minds were on FSU. Attendance in Nashville: 30,136

Another one – Wisconsin 15, Nebraska 14 (Touchdown Tom said: Wisconsin 22, Nebraska 18). Nebraska’s story line just gets weirder and weirder each week. Just when you think the Huskers are going to win, they lose it with 0:35 to go in the game. In fact, Nebraska never trailed until the final 0:35. The Huskers only had 12 first downs and only 172 total yards. Good defense and pathetic offense. Wisconsin did hold ball possession for 36:57. No running backs for either team rushed for more than 98 yards. No quarterbacks from either team passed for more than 106 yards. Attendance in Lincoln: 86,068

Sluggish – Purdue 17, Northwestern 9 (Touchdown Tom said: Purdue 33, Northwestern 17). To say the least. The teams only combined for 541 yards of offense. Northwestern had three turnovers and only 78 yards passing. You have to wonder if Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald will be fired. Attendance in West Lafayette: 54,016

Bevo was horny – Texas 55, Kansas 14 (Touchdown Tom said: Texas 30, Kansas 27). Texas took charge early and led 31-0 at halftime. The Horns didn’t let up in the second half. Texas racked up 539 total yards, primarily on the running of Bijan Robinson. Robinson rushed for 243 yards and four touchdowns. He averaged 9.7 yards per carry. Texas contained Kansas quarterback Jalon Daniels and running back Devin Neal, Attendance in Lawrence: 38,246

Week 12 Results:  13 winners, 2 fumbles (86.7 percent)

For the Season:   118 winners, 54 fumbles (68.6 percent)

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Tulsa 48, South Florida 42 – Attendance in Tulsa: 13,819

Navy 17, UCF 14 – Attendance in Orlando: 44,813
Florida State 49, Louisiana 17 – Attendance in Tallahassee: 58,597

Stetson 42, Presbyterian 21 – Attendance in Deland: 1,076

Florida A&M 41, Bethune-Cookman 20 – Attendance in Orlando: N/A
Clemson 40, Miami 10 – Attendance in Clemson: 81,340

Middle Tennessee 49, Florida Atlantic 21 – Attendance in Murphysboro: 9,958

UTEP 40, FIU 6 – Attendance in El Paso: 10,758
West Florida 45, Limestone 19 (Div. II Playoff) – Attendance in Pensacola: 2,147

 

Superlatives

Impressive Passers:

USC’s Caleb Williams – 32-43-1 for 470 yards (2TDs); BYU’s Jarred Hall – 23-35-1-456 (5TDs); Middle Tennessee’s Chase Cunningham – 40-54-1-448 (5TDs), and South Carolina’s Spencer Rattler – 30-37-0-438 (6TDs).

Also, Houston’s Clayton Tune – 32-44-1 for 435 yards (4TDs); Florida’s Anthony Richardson – 25-42-1-400 (3TDs); Bowling Green’s Matt McDonald – 20-36-1-395 (4TDs), and Fresno State’s Jake Haener – 29-42-0-361 (2TDs).

Impressive Rushers:

Minnesota’s Mohamed Ibrahim – 263 yards (1TD); Texas’ Bijan Robinson – 243 yards (4TDs); Arkansas’ Raheim Sanders – 232 yards (3TDs); Tulsa’s Deneric Prince – 220 yards (2TDs); Wyoming’s Titus Swen – 212 yards (1TD), and Air Force’s Brad Roberts – 184 yards (1TD).

Also, Western Michigan’s Sean Tyler – 177 yards(1TD); South Florida’s Brian Battie – 169 yards (1TD); Alabama’s Jase McClellan – 156 yards (2TDs), and Fresno State’s Jordan Mims – 156 yards (1TD).

 

Quotes of the Week

“Obviously disappointed in the performance and the result tonight. We didn’t coach or play well enough tonight. We didn’t do anything well enough. We have to evaluate everything,” Tennessee coach Josh Heupel, after the loss to South Carolina.

“For us to grow as a program, you have to look at this opportunity and understand what happened. Let it hurt and remember it as you move forward,” Tennessee coach Josh Heupel, after the loss to South Carolina.

“That was one of the best wins ever in college football history,” South Carolina quarterback Spencer Rattler, after the win over Tennessee.

 

Touchdown Tom’s Predictions for

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

GAME OF THE WEEK:  1. Michigan (11-0) at Ohio State (11-0) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, FOX – If Ohio State loses, some think the Buckeyes may just fall from 2 to 4 in the CFP rankings. If Michigan loses, most believe the Wolverines would fall out of the Top 4. Neither team looked good in their game last week. There was probably a reason for that. It appears that Ohio State has the better offense and Michigan has the better defense. The winner goes to the Big Ten title game. Harbaugh gets hit by a Buckeye – Ohio State 28, Michigan 26.

RUNNER-UP: 2. Notre Dame (8-3) at USC (10-1) – (Ind. vs. Pac-12) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, ABC – Notre Dame is a vastly different team than the Irish were at the beginning of the season, especially on offense. ND has found an offense. They always had a defense. It’s just gotten better. That could spell trouble for the Trojans, who need the win to keep their playoff hopes alive. If Caleb Williams has another good game, he is one step closer to the Heisman. The Irish don’t have a horse – USC 33, Notre Dame 30.

REST OF THE BEST: 3. Tulane (9-2) at Cincinnati (9-2) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 12 noon ET, Friday, ABC – Tough game to pick. Either team could win. Cincinnati is better on paper. Tulane is better at heart. Green Wave quarterback Michael Pratt could make the difference for Tulane. Tulane has been the Cinderella team all season. The winner goes to the AAC Tile game to play UCF. Both lost to UCF by a touchdown during the season. The Green Wave still have more time of the clock – Tulane 24, Cincinnati 22.

4. Oregon (9-2) at Oregon State (8-3) – (Pac-12 vs. Pac-12) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ABC –  Big rivalry game. Upsets aren’t uncommon. Oregon State has been the darlings of the Pac-12 this season. Oregon quarterback Bo Nix may be back to full strength. He has been hampered by an injured ankle. Oregon will be playing for a spot in the Pac-12 title game. Benny the Beaver gets a toothache – Oregon 30, Oregon State 28.

5. South Carolina (7-4) at Clemson (10-1) – (SEC vs. ACC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ABC – Big question? Can South Carolina maintain their momentum from the Tennessee game? Or will the Gamecocks be pooped? If they can keep it going, the Tigers are in trouble. But that is a big if. Regardless, it should be a hell of a ballgame – Uiagalelei vs. Rattler. Or will it be Klubnik vs. Rattler? The Tigers roast a Chicken – Clemson 33, South Carolina 32.

6. Coastal Carolina (9-1) at James Madison (7-3) – (Sun Belt vs. Sun Belt) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPNU – Win or lose, Coastal Carolina is in the Sun Belt title game, most likely playing Troy. But the Chanticleers will still be out to win this game. If there is a question, it is the status of Coastal Carolina coach Jamey Chadwell at the end of the season. He is always rumored as a candidate at a bigger school. The Chanticleers roost on James – Coastal Carolina 30, James Madison 21.

7. NC State (7-4) at North Carolina (9-2) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 3:30 pm ET, Friday, ABC – NC State is not the same team it was at the beginning of the season. The Wolfpack are weaker. They have dropped two-straight. The Tar Heels weren’t so good last week either. Both may have been focused on this contest. It won’t be easy for either team. But it will be harder for the Wolfpack – North Carolina 34, NC State 28.

8. Washington (9-2) at Washington State (7-4) – (Pac-12 vs. Pac-12) – 10:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN – Another big rivalry game in the Pac-12. Both teams have had good seasons. Both have been a bit of a surprise. A win sends the Huskies to the Pac-12 title game if Oregon loses to Oregon State. Washington quarterback Michael Penix could make the difference. He’s had a great season. Huskies get the apples – Washington 32, Washington State 26.

9. Mississippi State (7-4) at Ole Miss (8-3)  – (SEC vs. SEC) – 7 pm ET, Thursday, ESPN – Oh, the good old Egg Bowl. There is usually a lot of extracurricular activity in this game. Lane Kiffin needs a win. His luck hasn’t been so good lately with losses to Alabama and Arkansas. We all know Mike Leach likes a good fight. Should be a fun game. More fun for the Magnolias – Ole Miss 35, Mississippi State 29.

10. Air Force (8-3) at San Diego State (7-4) – (MWC vs. MWC) – 9 pm ET, Saturday, CBSSN – Troy Calhoun has put together another good team at Air Force. He does a good job there. San Diego State is a formidable team too. But the Aztecs have to stop AF running back Brad Roberts. The Falcons fly circles around the Aztecs – Air Force 24, San Diego State 23.

Keep an eye on these eight games during Week 13: Bowling Green (6-5) at Ohio (8-3) – (MAC vs. MAC) – 7 pm ET, Tuesday, ESPNU…..Utah State (6-5) at Boise State (8-3) – (MWC vs. MWC) – 12 noon ET, Friday, CBS…..Wyoming (7-4) at Fresno State (7-4) – (MWC vs. MWC) – 10 pm ET, Friday, FS1…..and Louisville (7-4) at Kentucky (6-5) – (ACC vs. SEC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, SECN.

Also, Minnesota (7-4) at Wisconsin (6-5) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN…..Memphis (6-5) at SMU (6-5) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ESPNU…..Oklahoma (6-5) at Texas Tech (6-5) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 7:30 pm ET, Saturday, FS1…..and Kansas (6-5) at Kansas State (8-3) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 8 pm ET, Saturday, FOX. 

 

YE OLDE STOMPING GROUNDS:

West Virginia (4-7) at Oklahoma State (7-4) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN2 – This may be Neal Brown’s last game coaching West Virginia. Then again, it may not. I can’t imagine it will make a difference in how the Mounties play. They haven’t played well on the road this year. Okie State was hot for a while. But the Cowboys have cooled off lately. But they are still too hot for the Mounties – Oklahoma State 31, West Virginia 21.

Florida (6-5) at Florida State (8-3) – (SEC vs. ACC) – 7:30 pm ET, Friday, ABC – Florida better find out what went wrong in Nashville. They better find out pretty quick. Florida State is on a roll. The Noles may be unstoppable. They are rolling up big numbers. If Anthony Richardson is having a good day, then the Gators may be able to score. It’s the Gators defense that worries me. They rarely show up. Defenseless in Tallahassee – Florida State 33, Florida 27.

Nebraska (3-8) at Iowa (7-4) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 4 pm ET, Friday, BTN – It’s been a tough year in a lot of places, but it has really been a tough year in Lincoln. The Huskers would love nothing more than winning their last game. The pressure is on Iowa. The Hawkeyes are playing for a spot in the Big Ten Title game. But they need to win. They do, but barely – Iowa 17, Nebraska 12.

Wake Forest (7-4) at Duke (7-4) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, ACCN – Both teams have had good seasons. Wake is a little disappointed in their season. It could have been better. Duke is ecstatic about its season. Seven wins under a first-year coach. That wasn’t expected. The Demons don’t allow the Dookies to get eight wins – Wake Forest 27, Duke 24.

Georgia Tech (5-6) at Georgia (11-0) – (ACC vs. SEC) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, ESPN – This should be an easy contest for the Dawgs. They can use it as a practice game for the SEC Title game. The Jackets may have surprised North Carolina, but they won’t surprise the Dawgs. Dawgie biscuits – Georgia 30, Georgia Tech 11.

Baylor (6-5) at Texas (7-4) – (Big 12 vs. Big 12) – 12 noon ET, Friday, ESPN – Both teams were expected to do better this season. Both have been up and down. But the Longhorns have been more up lately. Running back Bijan Robinson has been up too. Bevo eyes a Bear – Texas 35, Baylor 27.

Purdue (7-4) at Indiana (4-7) – (Big Ten vs. Big Ten) – 3:30 pm ET, Saturday, BTN – Now, if Iowa loses and Purdue wins, the Boilers go to the Big Ten Title game. So the Boilers have an incentive. The Hoosiers may be inspired after the win over Michigan State last week. But the Boilers douse that inspiration – Purdue 27, Indiana 20.

 

ELSEWHERE AROUND FLORIDA:

Western Kentucky (7-5) at Florida Atlantic (5-6) – (C-USA vs. C-USA) – 12 noon ET, Saturday, CBSSN….

Middle Tennessee (6-5) at FIU (4-7) – (C-USA vs. C-USA) – 6 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN3….

UCF (8-3) at South Florida (1-10) – (AAC vs. AAC) – 7 pm ET, Saturday, ESPN2….

Pitt (7-4) at Miami (Florida) (5-6) – (ACC vs. ACC) – 8 pm ET, Saturday, ACCN…. 
West Florida (10-1) at Delta State (11-1) – (Division II Playoff) – 2 pm ET, Saturday….

Touchdown Tom

P.S.

Not exactly college football related, but as the regular season was coming to an end and Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin pies were almost in the oven, the number one song in the country…

…80 years ago, this week in 1942, was “White Christmas” by Bing Crosby

…75 years ago, this week in 1947, was “Near You” by Francis Craig and His Orchestra

…70 years ago, this week in 1952, was “It’s In The Book (Parts 1 & 2)” by Johnny Standley

…65 years ago, this week in 1957, was “Jailhouse Rock”/“Treat Me Nice” by Elvis Presley

…60 years ago, this week in 1962, was “Big Girls Don’t Cry” by The Four Seasons

…55 years ago, this week in 1967, was “To Sir With Love” by Lulu, and “Incense And Peppermints” by Strawberry Alarm Clock

…50 years ago, this week in 1972, was “I Can See Clearly Now” by Johnny Nash

…45 years ago, this week in 1977, was “You Light Up My Life” by Debby Boone

…40 years ago, this week in 1982, was “Up Where We Belong” by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes

…35 years ago, this week in 1987, was “Mony Mony” by Billy Idol

…30 years ago, this week in 1992, was “How Do You Talk To An Angel” by The Heights