John Gagliardi – Most Wins of Any College Football Coach Ever
November 17, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
John Gagliardi has done something no other human being has ever done. He has coached college football teams to 449 wins in 59 collegiate seasons.
John has only coached at two places in his 59-year college football-coaching career. John’s first assignment was at Carroll College in Helena, Montana during the 1949 to 1952 seasons, winning three conference championships in those four seasons. John Gagliardi’s next venture would bring him east to take on the head coaching position at Saint John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota. The Johnnies had not won a conference title in 15 years when John Gagliardi arrived to take over the program from legendary coach and charter member of the Professional Football Hall of Fame, Johnny “Blood” McNally. John Gagliardi has remained at Saint John’s for the balance of his career. During his time at Saint John’s Gagliardi has coached the Johnnies to 28 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championships and 4 National Championships.
Along the way Gagliardi’s teams have a combined record of 449-120-11 during his 59 seasons. His 1993 Saint John’s squad was know as “The Point a Minute Team” setting a national record by averaging 61.5 points per game that season, establishing a scoring record that may never be equaled in college football.
John Gagliardi and the Saint John’s University Johnnies football team has been the subject of many national publications over the years such as USA Today, The Wall Street Journal and Sports Illustrated. The Today Show and CBS News Sunday Morning have also done featured pieces on Gagliardi and the Johnnies for their television shows.
During the 1999 season, Sports Illustrated feature writer Austin Murphy moved his wife and two young children to Collegeville from the San Francisco Bay Area to spend the season with the Johnnies. The result of his time in Stearns County living with and writing about the team was a book named The Sweet Season published by Harper Collins.
One of the main subjects of interest that visiting reporters have when covering Gagliardi and the Johnnies are the principles of “Winning With Nos”
College Football – A Season of 2 Games, One Becomes Abject Heartache, the Other Extreme Joy
November 15, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
This is a story about the life of a college football team’s season in only two games-one was an abject heartache, and the other an extreme joy. The team was the University of Washington this season.
Charles Dickens penned this famous line in his novel “A Tale of Two Cities”-”It was the best of times, it was the worst of times . . .,” and the Husky football players experienced these two events in reverse order.
The Huskies ended their 2008 season with a winless 0-12 record. They opened their 2009 season at home against the then 11th-ranked Louisiana State University Tigers. Having lost 14 straight games over two seasons, the Husky faithful could be forgiven for expecting the worst.
Washington surprised everyone, and especially LSU, be taking the opening kick-off and marching down the field to score a touchdown. The Huskies were fired up under new head coach Steve Sarkisian, who would quickly become known as “Sark” and gain celebrity status among Western Washington’s sporting community.
At the end of the LSU opener, the Huskies won the statistical battle of ball movement but lost the war, 31-23.
In their next game at home against the Idaho Vandals, the Washington Huskies essentially scored on their first 5 possessions to win going away, 42-23, and break their 15-game losing streak.
In their third game of the season, again on their home turf, something just short of a miracle happened-Washington upset then 3rd-ranked Southern California 16-13 on a 22-yard field goal by Erik Folk with just 3 seconds left in the game.
A 2-1 start made the Huskies the talk of Seattle and even the nation because of Southern Cal’s enormous success (at least 11 wins and BCS bowl appearances for 7 consecutive years) and high ranking in the polls.
The Huskies then hit the road for their first away game of the year and ran smack into a rejuvenated Stanford Cardinal team and its bruising 6-foot-1, 237-pound senior running back Toby Gerhart, who rushed for 200 yards and exposed the Huskies’ inept tackling skills.
Washington’s young, talented but inexperienced players could not stop Gerhart, a battering ram who simply ran through and over the Huskies.
Stanford was a huge letdown for the Huskies following their upset win over Southern Cal, and looming ahead was another road trip to South Bend, Indiana to face the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. It is here that our story of a season of two games really begins.
There is no college program in football more storied than Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish have won 11 national championships, have 12 undefeated seasons and 10 other seasons with at most one loss or tie, have produced more All-Americans than any other school, have produced 7 Heisman Trophy winners, and have the coach with the best record in history-Knute Rockne had 105 wins, 12 losses and 5 ties in 13 years while guiding the Fighting Irish to 6 national championships.
Washington players who Googled “Notre Dame” could quickly become intimidated at its legend, lore and tradition. When lining up at middle linebacker on game day, one could easily imagine seeing ghosts coming out of the backfield in search of another conquest.
But this year’s version of the Washington Huskies stayed grounded in reality. As bad as Washington’s tackling was on defense, Notre Dame’s did not appear much better, and a see-saw battle of wills ensued.
With less than a minute left in the 3rd quarter, Notre Dame summoned up its legendary tradition to stop Jake Locker from scoring on two quarterback sneak attempts from the 1-yard line; the Huskies had to give up the ball with the score Washington 24 and Notre Dame 19. Had the Huskies scored, they would have gone up 31-19 and perhaps broken Notre Dame’s back.
It was a bitter pill for Jake Locker-Washington’s most talented and versatile player (Husky coaches have said that Locker could play 7 different positions on the field)-to swallow. He had carried a lousy Washington team virtually on his back for two years, and now his offensive line could not move the Irish even 6 inches back.
Then Chris Polk, the Husky’s surprise redshirt freshman running back, appeared to give the Huskies a 30-22 lead with a 6-yard TD run with 7:07 left, but after a review he was ruled down on the half-yard line. This was a travesty as Polk had scored, but someone forgot to give the replay official a better set of eyes; perhaps he was a closet Notre Dame fan.
On 1st down from the Notre Dame 1-yard line, Polk lost a yard as the Fighting Irish line held. On 2nd down, Locker passed incomplete. On 3rd down and 2, Locker rushed and the Irish line held again. On 4th down, Notre Dame held again but was penalized 1 yard, and Washington had a new set of downs.
On 1st down, Polk rushed again and the Irish held again. On 2nd down, Washington was penalized 5 yards. On the repeat 2nd down, Locker passed for 5 yards to fullback Paul Homer and the Huskies were again 1 yard from scoring. On 3rd down Locker rushed again and again the Irish line held. On 4th down Washington was penalized 5 yards, and on the repeat 4th down, Washington would settle for a field goal, making it 27-22 Huskies.
Incredibly, the Huskies had 6 opportunities to score on the Irish from 2 yards out or less, and the Irish defense, which had not played well all day, held the line. Polk, who was stopped short on two of the attempts, would end the day with 136 yards rushing, a career best for the redshirt freshman.
Notre Dame immediately responded with a touchdown and 2-point conversion to go up 30-27.
With 1:20 left in the game, Locker-the greatest quarterback to put on a jersey at the University of Washington since Marques Tuiasosopo in 2000-calmly marched his Huskies down the field and Erik Folk made a 37-yard field goal to tie the game at 30 and send it into overtime.
Tuiasosopo is the son of former NFL defensive lineman Manu Tuiasosopo, and the older brother of NFL fullback Zach Tuiasosopo and Seattle Mariners’ 3rd baseman Matt Tuiasosopo. Jake Locker is in good company.
Notre Dame quickly scored first in the overtime to go up 37-30, and then the Washington offensive line, which had been 6 plays late in getting it done, allowed Locker to be sacked for 10 yards, and Locker threw three incomplete passes. His last pass, a 33-yarder to the 1-yard line, was pulled in by D’Andre Goodwin, who suffered a concussion when receiving two vicious hits by Notre Dame defenders at the goal line.
The inglorious ending left Locker, Goodwin, the entire team and coaching staff with one big case of an abject heartache. After calmly fighting like the warrior he is, Locker was so crushed and emotional that he could not appear at the post-game press conference.
(Editor’s Note: This is Part 1 of a 2-Part Series.)
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College Football – It is Going to Be a Very Long Season For Washington’s Football Program
November 10, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
If Washington’s football program was Southern California’s football program, it might be right on target to say the Huskies picked up right where they left off last year.
All Southern Cal has done the past two years is go 10-2 twice in the regular season and then beat Michigan 32-18 in the 2006 Rose Bowl and beat Illinois 49-17 in the 2007 Rose Bowl. The Trojans traveled to Virginia for their opener on the road this year and won easily, 52-7.
Unfortunately for the Washington Huskies, they did pick up right where they left off last season, only it was losing big time once again in their opener at Oregon. The Ducks brushed aside all of Washington’s months-long preparation (or lack of preparation) for the game, winning 44-10 while piling up 496 yards of offense.
So what should we have expected? Last year Oregon beat Washington 55-34, and the Ducks won 34-14, 45-21 and 31-6 in the prior three outings, giving Oregon a 5-game win streak over Washington, the longest consecutive butt-kicking in a series that started in 1900.
So what were the major positives for Washington Huskies Saturday night? Well, they found Eugene, the showed up for the game on time, and they had their uniforms on correctly.
Once they hit the Autzen Stadium turf, Washington’s vaunted offensive line was conspicuously absent, affecting their new-look running game as true freshman starter Chris Polk gained 19 yards on 14 carries, and sophomore Brandon Johnson gained 13 yards on 7 carries.
Polk may be fast, Polk may be shifty, but the Duck defenders had absolutely no problem finding and tackling him. Chris Polk learned a lot about the real experience difference between high school football and Pac 10 football on the road against a quality team in a hostile stadium. At least Duck Nation was not throwing bottles at the Huskies.
Redshirt sophomore quarterback Jake Locker, Washington’s major offensive threat, was held in check by Oregon’s defense. When it became apparent that there would be no Husky passing attack because of a lot of dropped balls and inexperience, Oregon was able to stack the box with more players than chocolates in a See’s candy box. The Duck defensive secondary is so good they can play man-to-man coverage, allowing sometimes 8 defenders near the line of scrimmage.
Poor Jake Locker. He had to be looking around and noticing that he had less support around him than last year when the Huskies went 4-9 and were dead last in the Pac 10.
The Huskies have 24 true or redshirt freshmen on the team, two of them-5-foot-11, 200-pound running back Chris Polk and 6-foot-4, 260-pound defensive lineman Senio Kelemete-started against Oregon.
Polk and Kelemete were among 8 true freshmen who played their first college football game Saturday night. The others were 6-foot, 185-pound wide receiver Devin Aguilar, 6-foot-1, 180-pound wide receiver Jermaine Kearse, 5-foot-8, 161-pound wide receiver Jordan Polk (no apparent relation to Chris Polk), 6-foot-5, 255-pound tight end Kavario Middleton (he caught 4 passes for 35 yards), 6-foot-2, 348-pound defensive lineman Alameda Ta’amu, and 6-foot-6, 255-pound defensive end Everette Thompson.
The bottom line to the game: Oregon’s players were more experienced, much more talented and much, much more faster. As Washington’s former, legendary coach Don James used to say, “Speed kills.”
And don’t you just love coach Ty Willingham’s comment after the debacle, “This was one that we didn’t anticipate.” This, after 4 years of beatings and 9 months to prepare for the Ducks. Willingham has the personality of an ashtray and the emotion to match.
You can always count on Ty to give you a stunner of a quote after a game. Other favorites are “We played really hard” or “We thought we had a chance to win this football game” or “We thought we were in this game.”
Washington’s next opponent? I thought you did not have enough interest to ask. Try hosting No. 16-ranked Brigham Young (BYU), the two-time defending Mountain West Conference champions and owners of the nation’s longest winning streak (11 games after its opening game 41-17 victory over 1-AA Northern Iowa).
Washington should upset Brigham Young, assuming that pigs fly. After the Huskies lose to BYU and Oklahoma, they will be 0-3 when they start their Pac 10 conference play against Stanford.
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College Football – Lessons to be Learned From Playing Football
November 6, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
Many people will watch the college bowl games and criticize the game of football for being violent. However, there are many lessons that can be learned by participating in football.
As a football coach and the father of four boys, I think every young man who is able to play football should play football. Even though my sons have many interest, I believe they need to play football in order to learn the lessons that football teaches about life. Such as:
perseverance commitment responsibility and life isn’t fair
“That’s not fair!”, is one of the most common statements repeated continually by young people today. Well, it’s time our young men learned that life isn’t fair. You will get knocked down, people will cheat and the call will not always go your way. But, you must get up and get back into the game or lose. If you stay down, you can’t win.
Young men need to learn that being the best means preparing, persevering, and practicing whether you want to or not. They need to understand that things will be difficult at times, there will be trials and tribulations. It’s all part of life. But quitting is not an option.
Our young men need to regain a sense of responsibility, loyalty and commitment. The most important of these being commitment. Imagine the change in our world, if young men kept their commitments not because a court told them to do it, but because they believed it was the right thing to do.
The structure and discipline of football allows a coach to model, teach and reinforce all of the above traits. But, the coach must make each and every player accountable to the team.
By: Darrell Causey
About the Author:
I invite you to check out more articles from Coach Causey at http://CoachCausey.com.
Kansas Jayhawks College Football Team History and News
November 6, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
The Kansas Jayhawks started their football tradition in 1890 in Lawrence, Kansas. They represent the University of Kansas in the North Division of the Big 12 and is classified in the NCAA’s Division I. The home stadium is the University of Kansas Memorial Stadium that has a capacity of 50,071. It is the first stadium built on an college campus west of the Mississippi River. Its official mascots are Big Jay and Baby Jay. Two time All American awardee Gale Sayers is a alumni of the football team. Other great players were John Riggins, John Hadl, Mike McCormack and Nolan Cromwell among others. The current head coach is Mark Mangino, who led them to a 2-10 record in the 2002 season.
They soon after played in three more bowl games during the last five years. The major rivals of the Jawhawks are the Kansas State Wildcats and the Missouri Tigers. The so-called :”Border War” was played between Kansas Jayhawks and the Missouri Tigers. It started in 1891 and was considered to be the longest uninterrupted rivalry in college football west of Mississippi until 2007 when they retired the current drum.. It was later renamed “Border Showdown”. Winner of the Border Showdown was given the Indian War Drum, which is the award whenever the two has a game. The other rival, the Kansas State Wildcats, fight with the Jayhawks for the Governor’s Cup. The game between these two teams is called the Sunflower Showdown.
Championships and Important Moments:
The Jayhawks played 11 bowl games with a 24-21 win in the 2007 Orange Bowl. They had eight conference championships in 1892, 1893, 1895, 1908, 1930, 1946, 1947 and 1968. In 2007, they won the divisional championship, which they lost however in a tie-breaker. Kansas, having the all-time record for the most number of ties in the NCAA Division I-A, which is 57, gave way to the ruling that allows for a tie-breaker in October 6, 1990. The teams all-time record is 559-540-58 (.508)
Quarterbacks in the current Roster:
– Tyler Lawrence -Kale Pick – Todd Reesing
Kansas Jayhawks Recent News:
The Jayhawks was defeated 35-7 by Texas Tech in their November 15 game at the Kivisto field at Memorial Stadium. With the loss, Kansas fell to 6-5 on the season and 3-4 in the Big 12. It will be a week before they play again, this time with border Showdown rival Missouri Tigers at Arrowhead Stadium. Fox Sports Network will televise the game on November 29 at 11:30 a.m. As always, fans need not watch the games on the couch. The Kansas Athletics Ticket Office is located at the south end of the Booth Family Hall of Athletics. On a lighter note, Jayhawk linebacker Mike Rivera was announced one of the 15 finalist for the 2008 Wuerffel Trophy. He was earlier named semifinalist for the Draddy Award and a nominee for the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. Another good news for Kansas, wide receiver Kerry Meier was named on of the ten finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, which is given every year to the country’s top wide receiver.
By: Gen Wright
About the Author:
Author Signature: When you need tickets for the Kansas State Wildcats you can count on Ticket America to get you the best seats at the best prices. If you need tickets Ticket America is the place to get them. To get Kansas State Wildcats College Football tickets before anyone else visit our website today!
College Football – Michigan State is Out-Coached, Out-Played and Upset 29-27 by Central Michigan
October 22, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
Michigan State blew its chance to run the table this year by letting poor coaching and poor playing open the door for Central Michigan to upset the Spartans 29-27 on their home turf.
The Spartans, a 14.5 point favorite over the Chippewas of the mid-level, Mid American Conference, will not go unbeaten this year despite getting both Michigan and Penn State and home, and not having to face Ohio State at all.
Michigan State’s schedule was a gift from football heaven, but the Spartan coaches and players embarrassed themselves, the university and their followers by proving the old adage that “Everything that belongs to me will come to me when I create the capacity to receive it.”
Heck, it wasn’t a matter of Michigan State not being ready for prime time, the Spartans were not even ready for regular time.
After playing like no one knew what the outcome would be for 52 of 60 minutes, Kirk Cousins connected with B. J. Cunningham on a 7-yard scoring pass to put Michigan State up 27-20 with 7:33 remaining. You can win games scoring only 27 points. The offense did not lose this game, MSU’s defense did.
With 32 seconds left, Chippewa QB Dan LaFevour threw an 11-yard TD strike to Paris Cotton to draw within a point of tying the game, 27-26. But Central Michigan was playing to win and successfully completed a 2-point pass conversion, however, it was caught outside the end zone. By all accounts, MSU had a hard fought, undeserved victory at this point.
There was just one little problem. Central Michigan, still playing to win, got a perfect onside kick from Andrew Aguila, recovered, and would ultimately try a 47-yard field goal to win the game. Aguila’s attempt failed, but an over-anxious offsides penalty brought the ball 5 yards closer and his second, 42-yard attempt did not miss with 3 seconds left. Game over.
So what really happened in this game?
First, the Spartans were not mentally prepared to play and win the game. Second, Central Michigan coach Butch Jones successfully used his spread offense to exploit the Spartans’ weak defensive secondary, the same secondary that played poorly last season and is still not repaired, and neutralize future pro linebacker Greg Jones.
Butch Jones had his quarterback completing passes underneath all game as the Spartan defenders played way too loose, and missed tackles like clockwork. Central Michigan picked up 418 offensive yards on 76 plays, MSU had 316 offensive yards on 56 plays; talk about ball control.
Third, the Spartan coaches, who could have exploited Central Michigan’s weak secondary, decided to run for a miserable 101 yards on 30 attempts (a paltry 3.3 yards per carry) rather than letting Kirk Cousins play pass and catch with his capable receiver corps. End of story.
When Central Michigan went ahead 13-10, Michigan State regained the lead with its passing game, not its running game. This approach was not good enough for State, the coaches wanted to run the ball; all that proved was how they could lose the game.
At the outset of the game, senior wide receiver Blair White ran past the Chippewa cover backs like they were standing still, and hauled in a 39-yard pass to set up a 1-yard TD run by Caulton Ray, and State was up 7-zip. White continued to run past Chippewa defenders, and ended the day with 7 catches for 105 yards. White could have caught twice as many passes because the defenders could not keep up with him.
Cousins would end the day completing 13 of 18 for 164 yards and the 7-yard TD pass to Cunningham. Keith Nichol also played QB, ending the day at 3 for 8 for 51 yards and a 16-yard TD pass to Charlie Gantt. Name me one Top 25 team that is rotating two quarterbacks in and out like musical chairs?
Unless Cousins is calling the plays (and he is not), he should have been allowed to carry on with the passing game when it was clear that Michigan State was not ready to defend and in for a dog fight. State could have outscored Central Michigan, even if the Spartan defense was giving up too many points.
Why didn’t coach Mark Dantonio and offensive coordinator Don Treadwell use the strength of their passing game more? Maybe because they are stubborn, and concerned about having to placate too many hot shot running backs. Dantonio is a defensive, not offensive-minded, coach.
Dantonio needs to remember than establishing a running game and controlling the clock only works if you can stop the other team’s offense. Playing conservatively never really wins football games, it only preserves them, and even then, you had better dominate and build up a big lead to protect.
This week the Spartans travel to South Bend, Indiana to face the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, not exactly a national championship caliber team (they were upset by a rebuilding Michigan team last week)) whose players are not thriving so much on past glory as faded past glory.
One thing is for sure-the would-be Spartans had better beat the Irish on their home turf or Michigan State’s stock will take a major hit for the worse.
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College Football – Week 14 – Florida and Oklahoma Have a Shot at the National Title, Texas’ Bid Ends
October 22, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
With everything on the line for a shot at the BCS National Championship, 3 of the nation’s top 4 college teams-Florida, Texas and Oklahoma-made their case in College Football’s Week 14 action.
The two big questions were: 1) Would Florida win big and protect its No. 4 BCS ranking? and 2) Would a statement victory by No. 3-ranked Oklahoma lift the Sooners over No. 2-ranked Texas and into a Big 12 Championship game with Missouri?
Texas, which had beaten Oklahoma 45-35 earlier in the season at a neutral site, polished off the unranked 4-8 Texas A&M Aggies 49-9 at home to set the table. Unbeaten Alabama then registered its 12th straight victory at home by shutting out unranked Auburn 36-0 to retain its No. 1-ranking and possible date in the National Championship game. Florida followed suit on the road by taking apart No. 23-ranked (by AP) Florida 45-15.
Finally it was show time Saturday night and Oklahoma hit the road and performed on cue, turning back No. 11-ranked Oklahoma State 61-41. Last week Oklahoma routed then-No. 2 Texas Tech 65-21. Saturday’s victory over its in-state rival was its 4th consecutive 60-point-plus win. The Sooners’ Sam Bradford completed 30-of-44 passes for 370 yards and 4 touchdowns and then added another score on a 1-yard run.
Oklahoma needed to make up a minuscule eight-thousandths of a point to Texas in the BCS Standings to earn a spot against Missouri. When the new BCS Standings were released Sunday afternoon, Oklahoma was ecstatic, leapfrogging over Texas to claim the No. 2 spot with Texas No. 3 and Florida No. 4.
And now the final drama in Week 15 begins. No. 1 Alabama travels to Gainesville to face the No. 2 Florida Gators for the SEC Championship (AP Top 25 Poll rankings), and No. 19 Missouri travels to Norman to challenge No. 4 Oklahoma for the Big 12 Championship.
The Oklahoma-Missouri contest was damaged big time as Missouri suffered a pathetic loss to unranked Kansas, 40-37, over the weekend, leaving the Tigers with a 9-3 record and looking really woeful next to the South Division’s 11-1 Texas, 11-1 Texas Tech and 9-3 Oklahoma State, all better teams that wanted to be in the Big 12 showdown.
Should Florida beat Alabama and Oklahoma beat Missouri, as most pundits think will happen, then Florida would meet Oklahoma in the BCS National Championship Game. Should Alabama beat Florida and Oklahoma beat Missouri, then it would be Alabama and Oklahoma. Should either Florida or Alabama win and Missouri upset Oklahoma, then Texas would face Florida or Alabama.
The regular season has now ended for the AP’s No. 3 Texas, No. 6 Penn State, No. 7 Utah, No. 10 Ohio State, No. 14 TCU, No. 19 Brigham Young (BYU), No. 20 Northwestern and No. 21 Michigan State. All of these teams will play in a bowl game somewhere.
Other AP Top 25 teams that won this weekend included No. 5 Southern California at home over Notre Dame 38-3, No. 7 Texas Tech at home over Baylor 35-28, No. 9 Boise State at home over Fresno State 61-10, No. 15 Ball State at home over Western Michigan 45-22, and No. 16 Cincinnati at home over Syracuse 30-10.
No. 18 Georgia Tech on the road upsetting in-state rival No. 13 Georgia 45-42 in a barn burner, No. 19 Oregon on the road over No. 17 Oregon State, 65-38, knocking the Beavers out of a possible Rose Bowl appearance, No. 20 Boston College at home over Maryland 28-21, and No. 25 Mississippi at home shutting out in-state rival Mississippi State, 45-0.
Other games that caught my attention were Pittsburgh sneaking by West Virginia 19-15 to give the Panthers their 8th win of the season, Buffalo dropping an unnecessary loss to Kent State 24-21, Eastern Michigan (3-9) upsetting Central Michigan (8-4), 56-52 in a sad display of defense, Arkansas slipping by LSU 31-30, Rice working hard to outlast Houston 56-42 in another shameful display of little defense on either side, and 6-6 Florida Atlantic beating 4-7 Florida International in overtime, 57-50, in a game where no defense was played.
Other huge games this Saturday include No. 18 Boston College traveling to unranked Virginia Tech with the Atlantic Coast winner earning the title an automatic bid to a BCS game. No. 8 Penn State, the Big Ten champion, appears headed to the BCS Rose Bowl.
East Carolina and Tulsa will face off for the Conference USA title. Unbeaten No. 12 Ball State (12-0) tangles with Buffalo for the Mid-American Championship. No. 7 Utah won the Mountain West Championship and will probably get a BCS bowl spot. No. 5 Southern Cal needs to beat UCLA to wrap up a Pac 10 title and automatic BCS bowl bid for the 7th consecutive year.
Elsewhere, Arkansas State and Troy battle it out for the Sun Belt title, and unbeaten No. 9 Boise State (12-0) has already won the Western Athletic Championship but will likely not get a BCS bowl bid.
Following Saturday’s action, bowl officials will move in like a hot knife through butter to determine bowl bids and set the stage for Bowl Mania during the holidays to cap this year’s college football season.
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Revitalizing College Football Coaching Strengths
October 16, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
Running Drills: A Way of Life
Running drills are one of the most basic ways that you can enhance your endurance. Though dull and sometimes boring, these running drills will help you play your hardest until the end of the game. Even with all of these benefits you will notice that most of the complaints in practice come from running drills. Because in the end, the team or players that are the fastest are the ones that win the championships. Another benefit that you will not see at first, is the ability to push yourself past your limits.
Strip Tackling
There is a golden rule in football defense, get the ball to the offensive team as quickly as possible. Forcing a fumble is one of the quickest ways that you can turn the tides and retain possession of the football. A great way to practice is have two players line up, one as the defense, the other with the football as the offense. The point is to have the defensive player throw the fist into the football causing the offensive player to fumble the football. Practice these movements slowly to start muscle memory and to correct bad habits.
Conditioning: Five dot jump
Strength and reaction time is what makes a great football athlete. The intent of this drill is to increase accuracy, timing, and speed. Setting up this drill is very simple, you will need five markers placed about a foot apart in an x formation with one of the dots being in the center surrounded by four other dots in a square formation.
The athlete starts at the edge of the mat placing their feet on two of the outer dots and proceeds to jump with feet together on the center spot and then out again quickly to the outer dots similar to a simple hop scotch motion. Next proceed around the dots one at a time jumping with one leg only, and then change to the other leg. After this, the player will touch all of the dots with both feet together. The last step is the same as the first hop scotch method but this time when the player reaches the other side they will turn around on the two dots. Because this drill is intended for accuracy and speed, it is recommended that players start out slow and deliberate and then speed up to their maximum time.
Building your muscles and endurance through Weightlifting
No practice regime would be complete without lifting weights. The effects of weight lifting will add muscle to your body and increase strength, this straighten will add to your maximum power. Maximum power is different from strength because it is the power that you exert on the field during a play. It is the quickness and exertion that will enable a football player to accomplish their plays with skill on the field. We highly recommend working with a personal trainer when weightlifting to insure that you are doing it properly, and to help you design a program that will fit your position.
By: Wellington Wetwater
About the Author:
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College Football – Ed Donatell, NFL Veteran, Becomes Defensive Coordinator for Washington
October 13, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
Washington Husky head coach Ty Willingham has hopefully improved his defense next season by recently hiring Ed Donatell, a veteran NFL defensive coordinator with both the Green Bay Packers and Atlanta Falcons.
Washington’s inept, pathetic excuse for a defense last year needed to be cleaned up and clicked up about 20 notches.
The Huskies ranked 94th nationally last year in scoring defense (giving up 31+ points per game), 99th in pass defense (261+ yards per game and 27 touchdowns) and pass efficiency defense, and 102nd in total defense. These rankings were among the NCAA’s 119 Division 1A teams. In other words, the Huskies did not have a defense. They lacked speed, talent and experience. I said last year that the Washington defensive secondary could not cover my grandmother on their best day. I was not kidding.
Donatell should be congratulated for being willing to try and clean up this sorry mess. He just might be able to turn it around based on his experience and performance. To wit:
1) As the defensive backs coach for Denver’s Mike Shanahan, he helped the Broncos win back-to-back Super Bowls in 1997 and 1998 by taking over a secondary that ranked last in the NFL and led them to a Top 10 ranking for 5 consecutive years.
2) As the defensive coordinator for Green Bay’s Mike Sherman for 4 years, Donatell’s leadership helped the Packer defense lead the NFL with 144 takeaways, averaging 36 a season, and lead the league with 2.25 forced turnovers per game.
3) As the defensive coordinator for 3 years for Atlanta’s Jim Mora (a University of Washington grad and new designated coach of the Seattle Seahawks when Mike Holmgren retires after the 2008 season), Donatell piled up more success.
His 2004 Falcon unit led the NFL by holding its opponents to a league-low 30% on 3rd-down conversions. His Falcons also led the league in sacks for the first time in team history, and in 2005 his defense ranked 3rd in the NFL with only 28 passes allowed of 20-or-more yards. In addition, Atlanta won the club’s 3rd division title and advanced to the NFC championship game.
Donatell also had ties to Washington before arriving. In addition to coaching for Jim Mora, he was a graduate assistant for Don James, the legendary Dawgfather and Washington’s greatest coach. Donatell also was the defensive backs coach for 3 years at Idaho under former Washington coach Keith Gilbertson.
Donatell said his style of defense will be “based on speed and explosion, high energy, enthusiasm, (an) attacking style.” Heck, I already like the guy. So Donatell can not only talk a good game, he can back it up.
I remember another guy named Jim Lambright whose legendary defenses were fast, furious and swarming; he experienced quite a bit of success as well, like a 1991 national championship as a defensive coordinator. The 1991 Huskies were 2nd in the nation in rushing defense (67.1), total defense (237.1), scoring defense (9.2) and turnover margin (+1.73); they led the Pac-10 in virtually every defensive category.
Let us hope that Ty Willingham and Ed Donatell go on to great success next year and in the following years. What Willingham and Donatell will have to do is start winning, and keep winning. When they do, they will have to get in line behind a couple of other guys with really great success records as Huskies-Don James and Jim Lambright.
For the record, Don James won a national title, went to 6 Rose Bowls (4-2 mark), won an Orange Bowl title and went to 15 bowl games (10-5 record) in 18 years. Oh yeah, James was 153-57-2 (72%), including a then-record 99 wins in Pac-10 conference play, and Washington won 22 consecutive games from 1990 to 1992.
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College Football Week 3 – Dream Season Ends For Southern Cal, Brigham Young, Utah and Georgia Tech
October 13, 2009 by admin · Comments Off
(Editor’s Note: The rankings in this article are from the AP Top 25 Poll of sportswriters and sportscasters, and the ratings are from Jeff Sagarin. Ed Bagley’s Top 25 Poll is just as subjective as the AP Poll or the Coaches’ Poll, but my poll is just so much more fun to read.)
The great difference why watching college football games is so much more enjoyable than watching pro football is not because it is exciting-heck, pro football can be exciting too-it’s because college football is much more unpredictable. College football’s third week of action is an excellent example.
The fortunes of four teams-Southern California, Brigham Young, Utah and Georgia Tech-changed dramatically after losing this week.
Third-ranked USC, which beat San Jose State 56-3 at home and Ohio State 18-15 away in its first two games, flew north to Seattle and lost 16-13 to a Washington Husky team that was 0-12 last season. The Trojans lost because Steve Sarkisian, Washington’s energetic new head coach, and Nick Holt, Washington’s excitable new defensive coordinator, played key roles for USC last season; Sarkisian was offensive coordinator for the Trojans and Holt was the defensive coordinator.
Washington started its season by playing hard and losing to 9th-ranked Louisiana State, 31-24, before knocking off Idaho 42-23 to record its first win in 16 games. The Huskies now believe they can win and, believe you me, USC now knows they can get embarrassed by a team that believes they can win.
Washington’s Huskies were rewarded for their effort by jumping into the AP Top 25 Poll at No. 24. USC dropped from 3rd to 12th in the same AP Poll. Washington’s Sagarin rating also jumped 39 places in 7 days-from 63 to 24.
Seventh-ranked Brigham Young started its season by upsetting Oklahoma 14-13, and then trashed Tulane, 54-3. Unfortunately, unranked Florida State, which managed to get beaten by Miami (FL) 38-34 in its opener at home, and then slip by lowly Jacksonville State 19-9 at home, traveled to BYU and stung the Cougars, 54-28. BYU dropped to 19th the AP Poll.
Eighteenth-ranked Utah, which was the only undefeated major college football team last year at 13-0, slipped by Utah State 35-17 and San Jose State 24-14 before traveling to unranked Oregon and getting upset, 31-24.
Fourteenth-ranked Georgia Tech opened its season by looking unimpressive with a win over lowly Jacksonville State 37-17, and barely getting past Clemson 30-27, but found the going much tougher against No. 20 Miami (FL), losing 33-17. The Yellow Jackets dropped right out of the AP Poll, and Miami rocketed up from 20th to 9th.
Unpredictable? You bet. The chances of USC, BYU, Utah or Georgia Tech playing in the National Championship Game this year are probably nil; all of them were undefeated last week.
Here are 11 ranked teams that won and are now 3-0 and moving on:
No. 1 Florida at home over SEC opponent Tennessee 23-13. No. 2 Texas at home over Texas Tech 34-24; Texas Tech was the only team to beat Texas last year. No. 4 Alabama at home over lowly, 124th-ranked North Texas, 53-7. No. 5 Penn State at home over lowly, 125th-ranked Temple, 31-6. No. 8 California on-the-road over Minnesota, 35-21. No. 9 LSU at home over in-state rival LA-Lafayette, 31-3. No. 10 Boise State on-the-road over Fresno State, 51-34.
No. 17 Cincinnati on-the-road over Oregon State, 28-18. No. 22 Kansas at home over Duke, 44-16. No. 24 North Carolina at home over in-state rival East Carolina, 31-17. No. 25 Michigan at home over in-state rival Eastern Michigan, 45-17.
Six other ranked teams won. No. 5 Mississippi (now 2-0 and tied with Penn State at No. 5) at home beat lowly, 167th-ranked, 1-AA Southeastern Louisiana, 52-6; and TCU (now 2-0) at home beat lowly, 137th-ranked, 1-AA Texas State San Marcos, 56-21. No. 11 Ohio State on-the-road over No. 105-ranked Toledo, 38-0.
No. 12 Oklahoma, after being upset by BYU 14-13 in its opener, is trying to win back votes with shutouts over #178th-ranked Idaho State 64-0, and now Tulsa, 45-0. No. 16 Oklahoma State (now 2-1) at home over winless, 155th-ranked Rice, 41-24. No. 23 Georgia (now 2-1) on-the-road over Arkansas in a really ugly win, 52-41.
The Georgia-Arkansas game was almost as bad as Notre Dame’s home victory over Michigan State, 33-30. All four of these teams are not that good, and you can tell that by the scores-none of them have a defense worth talking about at the moment. They could all get better in future weeks, but right now none of them are nearly as good as advertised.
Nine other unranked teams quietly went to 3-0 this week, any or all of them could keep winning and move into the AP Top 25 Poll soon. They include:
Southern Mississippi at home barely over Virginia, 37-34. Colorado State at home over Nevada, 35-20. Pittsburgh at home over Navy, 27-14. Iowa at home over Arizona, 27-17. Auburn at home over West Virginia, 41-30. UCLA at home over Kansas State, 23-9. Wisconsin at home over 102nd-ranked, 1-AA Wofford, 44-14. Missouri at home over 120th-ranked, 1-AA Furman, 52-12. South Florida at home over lowly, 162nd-ranked, 1-AA Charleston Southern, 59-0.
Seven teams should not have been on the same field with their opponent this week because absolutely none of them had any real chance of winning. They included North Texas, Temple, Eastern Michigan, Southeastern Louisiana, Texas State San Marcos, Rice, and Charleston Southern.
The biggest winner of the week? It’s the Washington Huskies, hands down. Their 16-13 victory over USA ranks as the greatest upset by Washington’s football program in school history. Washington just may become the biggest surprise of the season.
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