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Showing posts with label Final. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Final. Show all posts

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Final: Alabama 37, Tennessee 6


TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Well, the scare lasted all of two quarters, but the Alabama we expected showed up in the second half to dismantle Tennessee for the 37-6 victory.

With two weeks left until the ultimate showdown between Alabama and LSU, it comes as no surprise that Alabama was a little flat out of the gates. It was also no surprise that the Crimson Tide came out and pounded the Vols for the final two quarters.

Tennessee's game plan of smothering running back Trent Richardson up front came back to bite it as Alabama came out throwing in the third quarter. Quarterback AJ McCarron was nearly perfect and Tennessee's secondary could do nothing to stop him.

Once Tennessee had to account for McCarron's right arm, that freed up some space for Richardson, who ran for two scores in the second half.

Tennessee had absolutely no fire in the second half, partly because Alabama stole it from the Vols as soon as they took the field in the second half. All the emotion was on Alabama's sideline and in its wild fans.

The LSU chants didn't begin until 2:36 remaining in the fourth quarter, and, with both teams idle next weekend, the Crimson Tide can now officially put all of their focus on the Tigers.

Nov. 5 has been hyped up like the Super Bowl and it must have been killing Alabama and LSU players alike that they couldn't really talk about it. Now they can, and we might not hear the end of it until that game is over and a victor has been crowned.


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Final: USC 31, Notre Dame 17

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Is it too early to start booking reservations for Disney World?

Notre Dame's BCS bowl hopes went up in flames Saturday night in a 31-17 loss to USC, its ninth loss to the Trojans in the past 10 meetings.

Three second-half turnovers doomed the Irish, who were trying to mount a comeback from an early 17-0 deficit. The Trojans moved the ball efficiently against the Irish defense throughout the evening, hitting star wideout Robert Woods when it needed to and rushing for more than 200 yards.

The Irish's four-game winning streak came to an end, as they fell to 4-3. Five games remain, but the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando, Fla., is looking more and more like a reality for a Notre Dame team that entered the season with BCS-bowl aspirations.

Be sure to keep it here for reaction and postgame analysis.


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Final: Penn State 34, Northwestern 24

Penn State was involved in a very un-Penn State like shootout in the first half. But in the second half, the Nittany Lions turned it into more of their kind of game, and it was good enough for them win 34-24 and to improve to 7-1.

After a wild first half ended with Penn State leading 27-24, there was only one score in the final 30 minutes, and it came early. Gerald Hodges, who had a monster game at linebacker, returned a tipped pass for an interception 60 yards on Northwestern's first drive after intermission, setting up a Silas Redd touchdown run on the next play. (And speaking of monster games, Redd continued his sensational stretch of performances with 164 yards on just 18 carries).

Penn State's defense responded after an uncharacteristic first half. The Lions finished with seven sacks and kept a high-powered Northwestern offense off bay. The Wildcats helped out with a couple of bad dropped passes. Quarterback Dan Persa went out midway through the fourth quarter with what was called a turf toe issue on his left foot, and a promising drive then stalled when Kain Colter was sacked on back-to-back plays.

For Northwestern, this was just a copy-and-paste repeat of the season. Once again, the Wildcats couldn't get nearly enough stops on defense. And once again, they imploded in the second half. If you would have told Pat Fitzgerald at halftime that Penn State would only score seven more points, he might have started celebrating. But then the offense misfired. The Wildcats are now 0-4 in the Big Ten and have lost five-straight games. At 2-5, they will need a huge finish to get back to a bowl game.

Penn State, meanwhile, just continues to win despite the doubters. Matt McGloin played the entire game at quarterback, and while he wasn't nearly as good in the second half as he was in the first, the mere decision of potentially settling on him could help this offense. The Lions have matched their win total from last season, and they have to be considered a threat in the Leaders Division.


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Saturday, October 15, 2011

Final: Washington 52, Colorado 24

Keith Price and Washington are ready for their close-up.

They'll get it next week at Stanford. After Price threw four first-half touchdown passes in a 52-24 rout of Colorado, the Huskies are 5-1 for the first time in a decade and appear headed for the national rankings.

Price completed 21 of 28 for 257 yards with no interceptions and wasn't even required to finish the third quarter. He has 21 TD passes this year, which is tied for fourth most in program history just over halfway through the season.

The Huskies also improved to 3-0 in conference play for the first time since 1997. If they can record the upset at Stanford, the Pac-12 North race will transform.

For Colorado (1-6, 0-3), the score might not have been the worst news. The Buffaloes lost RB Rodney Stewart to a knee injury in the first half. At this point, the injury is being called a sprain.

Washington has now scored 30 points or more in its first six games for the first time in school history. The 52 points were the most since 2001.

The Huskies outgained Colorado 562 yards to 269, including a 295 to 62 advantage in rushing yards. Chris Polk had 117 yards rushing on 18 carries.

For the Buffs, who lost their 21st consecutive game away from their home stadium, the schedule doesn't get any easier. They play host to Oregon next weekend.


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Final: BYU 38, Oregon State 28

BYU rolled over Oregon State in the second half, ending the small momentum the Beavers gained from their first win of the season a week ago against Arizona.

Tied 14-14 at the break, the Cougars rolled to a 38-28 victory because the Beavers defense couldn't get a stop (BYU punted just once).

Telling stat: Oregon State was outrushed 282 yards to 59.

It also didn't help the Beavers had four turnovers -- two fumbles, two interceptions -- and missed both field goal attempts.

Quarterback Sean Mannion was 27-of-43 for 306 yards, but is still playing like a redshirt freshman with no help from a running game.

The Beavers fall to 1-5. They visit Washington State on Saturday, which figures to be a critical game for both team.


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Final: UConn 16, USF 10

The UConn offense may not be the most exhilarating. But when you have stifling defensive play, then you can survive. The Huskies got a terrific effort from their defense, winning their first Big East game of the season, 16-10 over UConn.

The difference in the game was a defensive score. Twyon Martin forced Darrell Scott to fumble, and Byron Jones returned it 10 yards for the go-ahead score in the third quarter. UConn forced three more turnovers and held USF without a point in five trips inside the Huskies 35.

That had to have been the most frustrating part for USF and coach Skip Holtz. The Bulls gave themselves plenty of opportunities to win, they just came up short. B.J. Daniels, who played well to start the season, had three of the turnovers. He fumbled on second-and-goal from the UConn 7 early in the game and later threw two interceptions -- both in UConn territory.

USF has now lost two straight in conference play.


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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Week 4 Bills/Bengals: Final Thoughts, Game Balls & What Lies Ahead

On the heels of Buffalo’s first loss of the season to Cincinnati 23-20, as expected there’s plenty of emotions to go around.  Predictably, those emotions are very pretty.  It was a difficult loss to swallow.  The Bills put together two halves, one positive and one negative.  On Sunday the Bills just couldn’t get away with it on the road against the Bengals.

The Bills and 4-0 would’ve sounded so sweet to use them in the same sentence.  But let’s be honest with ourselves: nobody predicted or thought they’d be 3-1 after four games.  I thought after the first four games they’d be 2-2, beating Oakland and Cincinnati.  So right now, I think being 3-1 is a very good bonus.  And let’s not forget they’re tied with New England for the best record in the AFC East.

*  I think this game was probably what many expected.  The Bills put so much into the New England and it took a lot out of them finally ending a 15-game losing streak to the Patriots.  So after that, to go on the road, whether I like it or not there was some room for a letdown. 

*  That being said, this was the game the Bills needed to have because of what awaits them.  The schedule isn’t exactly favorable.  Buffalo plays Philadelphia, New York Giants, Washington, New York Jets and Dallas.  Those teams are a combined 11-9.  That might not sound impressive, but running the NFC East gauntlet will be a difficult task and facing the Jets is no picnic in the park.  We’re about to find out what the Bills are made of over the course of the next six weeks.

*  Buffalo better start to figure out to how to control the tempo of a game.   Oakland dominated and dictated the tempo throughout the first half.  New England did the exact same thing to them in the first half of their game.  And now, Cincinnati dominated the second half.  If the Bills can’t figure out a way to start to dictate to other teams how the game is going to be played there won’t be a lot of successfull Sundays and happy Mondays in the near future.

*  Let’s get to the defense.  Because the offense never found a rhythm and never got any momentum going throughout the game, the defense was out there bare faced and they got exposed.  It was shocking they gave up 454 yards to Oakland.  It was expected Tom Brady and the Patriots cranked out 495 yards.  But it was very disturbing they gave up 458 yards to the Bengals.  The week prior, Cincinnati scored eight points and converted one third down.  The Bengals more than doubled the Bills in first downs, 25 to 12.  The offense isn’t going to keep scoring at 37-point clip every week.  There will be games in which the defense is going to have to win.  This was one of them and they couldn’t get the job done.

*  For the first time in four weeks, the Bills were finally outscored in the second half of a game.

*  Somehow, as big of a no-show as they were through the entire second half and pretty much the whole first quarter, the game was there for the Bills’ taking.  But this time there was no “Fitzmagic”.  It had the look, the feel that Fitzpatrick and company were going to engineer their third consecutive game-winning drive at the end of the game.  But it just wasn’t meant to be.  They got Buffaloed.  The Bills got a taste of their own come-from-behind medicine and it was almost as worse than Robitussin.

*  For the second time in two weeks, the Bills got destroyed by a rookie wide receiver.  And that means the bad Leodis McKelvin showed up.  He was dominated by Oakland’s Denarius Moore, redeemed himself a week ago with a big interception of Tom Brady and then allowed A.J. Green to go off.  It’s easy to see why he hasn’t been able to lock down a starting job in the secondary.  Despite making a nice pass break up in the end zone against Green, McKelvin struggles when the ball is in the air.  So we’ve had bad Leodis, good Leodis and once again bad Leodis.  Maybe he’s on track to be good Leodis again next Sunday.  Either way, I haven’t seen anything that points to the contrary that would suggest McKelvin will become a consistent corner for the Bills.  I hate to use him as a whipping boy and it doesn’t fall squarely on his shoulders.  But he is making a bad habit of allowing too many big momentum changing plays particularly in the second half.

*  The Bills won the turnover battle, and in fact didn’t turn the ball over.  Plus they got a defensive touchdown off an interception for the second week in a row.  If those things continue to happen, Buffalo won’t be on the wrong side of games like they were on Sunday.

*  For the first time this season, the offensive line didn’t give Fitzpatrick a lot of time in the pocket.  Credit Cincinnati’s defense.  They were able to pressure Fitzpatrick and it wasn’t sporadic like the previous three games.  He never got comfortable and the offensive line never felt comfortable.

*  One of the big reasons the Bills got virtually nothing going on offense?  Cincinnati didn’t give up the big play.  Buffalo used a lot plethora of big play home run type passes that gashed Kansas City, Oakland and New England.  They had 15 pass plays of 20 yards or more, but on Sunday they had just two against the Bengals.  It wasn’t for a lack of trying.  They tried to get Steve Johnson, David Nelson, Donald Jones and even Brad Smith down the field for big gains.  But each attempt fell by the wayside. 

*  The hardest part to swallow about this game was the fact that Buffalo essentially got beat by a rookie quarterback.  Andy Dalton was 7 of 20 with two interceptions in the first half.  But Dalton was able to string together a bunch of completions in the second half and he found his rhythm with A.J. Green and Jermaine Gresham.  In the second half, he completed 11 of 16 passes, threw for 186 yards , and had the game-tying touchdown on a three-yard quarterback draw.

*  So why was Dalton able to be so successful?  Because of the running game.  Cincinnati had 172 rushing yards on 32 carries.  Cedric Benson finished with 104 yards on 19 carries;  84 of those yards came in the second half.  The Bengals averaged 5.3 yards per carry  Buffalo’s run defense still has a long way to go.  Yes, Benson is the first 100-yard rusher the Bills have allowed, but it goes beyond that.  They allowed 108 against Kansas City, but allowed the Chiefs to average 6.0 yards per carry.  Against Oakland, they gave up 131 and 4.4 ypc, and against New England they allowed 108 at a 4.2 ypc clip.  Cincinnati was the best team to really gash the Bills’ run defense.  It’s gotten better, but the Bills’ run defense still has a long way to go to improve.

*  Right along with the team of their rush defense woes, the tight end continues to be an ongoing problem.  The Bills had no answer for Rob Gronkowski and Jermaine Gresham was a beast with 70 receiving yards and a touchdown.  Way too much room for Gresham to roam in the secondary.  Way too many yards after the catch.  The Bills were a step behind Gresham all afternoon. 

*  Hey, Shawne Merriman welcome to the Bills.  It wasn’t your traditional sack, but nonetheless it goes down as a sack.  Something to build on moving forward.

*  Marcell Dareus I thought was a real factor.  He got his first career NFL sack and just narrowly missed out on a two-sack performance.  The Bengals opted to play Dareus one-on-one and he made it a habit of winning those matchups.  When he becomes that dominant force we all think he can be, he and Kyle Williams along with Dwan Edwards will form a great defensive line.

*  Speaking of Edwards, I thought he was the best defensive player for the Bills.  He finished with eight tackles and his motor was working in overdrive all afternoon.

GAME BALLS

Dwan Edwards -  had eight tackles, was extremely active and closed off a lot of gaps that negated running room on his side of the line. Bryan Scott – 43 yard INT returned for a touchdown got the Bills going in the second quarter.  Scott’s INT for a TD was the second week in a row Bills returned INT for a score.Marcell Dareus -  recorded first NFL sack, finished with four tackles

What’s Next? -  Buffalo returns home this Sunday for a pivotal out-of-conference matchup against the Philadelphia Eagles.  I’m sure many envisioned the Bills would be the 1-3 team coming into this game, but it’s the Eagles who have dropped three in a row and they’re a desperate 1-3 team that is going to be prepared at all costs to avoid falling into what would be a possible season ending 1-4 hole.


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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Final pregame thoughts: USF-Pitt

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

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Final: Pitt 44, No. 16 USF 17

PITTSBURGH -- It was the Ray Graham show on Thursday night, as the standout Panthers running back helped his team dominate previously unbeaten USF 44-17.

Simply put, the Bulls had no answer for Graham, who notched his second 200-yard rushing game of the season with 226 yards and two touchdowns. He spun out of tackles. He ran through gashes in the middle of the defense. He stutter-stepped. He caught passes out of the backfield. Graham basically did what he wanted.

But he was not the only one who had a nice game. Tino Sunseri should have silenced his critics tonight with his play -- the best of the season. Sunseri made no major mistakes, and was hardly touched behind a much-improved offensive line. The Panthers have now won four straight over USF.

As for the No. 16 Bulls, they have come back to reality with a thud. Feasting on three straight overmatched opponents masked some issues. For all that has been said about B.J. Daniels' improvement, he did not have his best game of the season. The Bulls were able to keep pace in the first half, but once the game got out of reach, the Bulls had to abandon the run and Daniels couldn't shoulder the load. The defense was completely overmatched by an offense that struggled to gain any consistency all season.

And now, for the second straight season, the Big East is without an undefeated team headed into October.


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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Final pregame thoughts: LSU-WVU

MORGANTOWN, W.V. -- There certainly is something special about night games at West Virginia. The big question is how much of an impact the crowd can have in this game.

The Tigers are used to playing night games in venues bigger in the SEC. Their own home stadium at night is a sight to see. LSU is 47-4 in night games under Les Miles, compared to 18-13 during the day. The Tigers already have won two night games away from home -- against Oregon in Texas, and at Mississippi State last week.

One other note: LSU has won 35 straight nonconference regular season games. So a daunting task awaits. But the West Virginia crowd is beyond fired up. A sea of gold will greet the Tigers tonight, with fans furiously waving gold towels. In fact, the stadium was mostly full 45 minutes before kickoff. West Virginia observers say this is the loudest the stadium has been in years.

Fans put on a great show for College GameDay this morning. Some camped out as early as Thursday in anticipation of the game. Now it is finally here. That sea of gold in the stands will be matched with a sea of gold on the field -- West Virginia will wear all gold tonight.


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Final: Oklahoma State 30, Texas A&M 29

Down 20-3 at halftime, No. 7 Oklahoma State scored 27 consecutive points in the third and fourth quarters to beat No. 8 Texas A&M 30-29 in College Station, Texas, on Saturday.

Oklahoma state quarterback Brandon Weeden completed 47 of 60 passes for 437 yards and two touchdowns. The Aggies turned the ball over three times during the third quarter when the Cowboys outscored them 21-0. They also turned it over on their final drive of the game.

More to come later.


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Final: Ohio State 37, Colorado 17

Colorado's road losing streak is now at 20 games after getting dominated 37-17 at Ohio State.

Two fumbles (Colorado's first turnovers of the season) and poor special teams play -- including yielding a 90-yard kickoff return -- didn't help the Buffaloes' cause, but Ohio State dominated both lines of scrimamge and won with a true freshman Braxton Miller making his first start at QB.

Miller tossed two touchdown passes but only needed to complete 7 of 16 passes for 110 yards. The Buckeyes outrushed the Buffs 221-75.

Colorado, which falls to 1-3, will play host to Washington State on Saturday, in a game that is critical for both team's longshot bowl hopes.


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Final: Washington 31, California 23

Last year, Washington won at California with a clutch touchdown on the final play of the game. This year, Cal had an opportunity to return the favor. It couldn't.

The Bears had a first and goal on the Huskies 2 in the waning moments, trailing 31-23. They needed a touchdown and a 2-point play to force overtime.

But the maligned Huskies defense made a stated. Two incompletions and two runs netted zero yards and Cal turned the ball over on downs.

While the Washington defense surrendered 457 yards, it pitched a shutout in the fourth quarter.

Washington improves to 3-1 and 1-0 in Pac-12 play. Cal falls to 3-1 and 0-1. The win pushes the Huskies up in the Pac-12 North Division. And, of course, does the opposite for Cal.

Huskies quarterback Keith Price, playing on two sprained knees, was again brilliant, completing 19 of 25 for 292 yards with three touchdowns, including a 70-yard scoring toss to Chris Polk that provided the winning margin with 12:13 left.

Price entered the game leading the nation with 11 touchdown passes. According to this calculator, the sophomore first-year starter now has 14, with just three interceptions.

His counterpart, Zach Maynard, had good numbers -- 23 of 43 for 349 yards with a TD and no interceptions -- but he struggled in the redzone.

The Huskies visit Utah on Saturday. Cal has a bye before visiting Oregon.


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Final: UCLA 27, Oregon State 19

At least for a week, UCLA can smile. Oregon State? Not so much.

The Bruins triumphed 27-19 in the Desperation Bowl at Oregon State, as the Bruins evened their record at 2-2 and at least briefly boosted coach Rick Neuheisel's chances of surviving the 2011 season.

And the Beavers, who closed the gap to 21-19 to start the fourth after a 2-point conversion failed, fell to 0-3 for the first time since 1996.

UCLA QB Richard Brehaut threw for a touchdown and ran for another. The Bruins outrushed the Beavers 211 yards to 88.

Making his first career start at QB, Oregon State redshirt freshman Sean Mannion completed 24 of 40 for 287 yards with a TD, an interception and a fumble on the Beavers 4-yard line.

Receiver James Rodgers had a solid return, catching five passes for 76 yards.

UCLA faces a tough task on Saturday at Stanford. Oregon State visits Arizona State.


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Monday, September 12, 2011

Final New England-Miami Injury Report For Monday Night

A revised last look at the Patriots-Dolphins injury report for Monday night in Miami:

New England

Out: LB Jermaine Cunningham (groin), WR Taylor Price (hamstring), LB Jeff Tarpinian (knee), OT Sebastian Vollmer (back), OL Ryan Wendell (calf)

Questionable: DE Mark Anderson (knee), CB Kyle Arrington (hip), G Dan Connolly (foot), LB Dane Fletcher (thumb), DT Albert Haynesworth (illness), DL Myron Pryor (groin), RB Stevan Ridley (ankle), RB Shane Vereen (hamstring)

Probable: CB Leigh Bodden (hand), WR Julian Edelman (hand)

Miami

Out: FB Charles Clay (hamstring)

Questionable: RB Daniel Thomas (hamstring)


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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Trust Factor a Big Key in Steelers Final Drive to Victory


The crowd at Heinz Field was on pins and needles with 2:56 remaining in the AFC Title game. The Steelers had built a 24-0 lead with what seemed like ease, but now were hanging on for dear life leading just 24-19.

All the momentum was with the Jets. Not only had they outscored the Steelers 19-0 in the last minute of the first half and to that point in the second half, but they had made enough adjustments to that point to shut down the Steelers offense.

It was an offense that had been red hot in the first half, putting up 231 yards to just 50 for the Jets, but also they had held the ball for 21:04 of the first 30 minutes.

So when Ben Roethlisberger and company took the field, even the most biggest optimist had to be nervous. Fail to get a first down, and your kicking the ball back to New York. Get a couple first downs – the game and conference title belongs to the Steelers.

The drive started with a good kick return by rookie Antonio Brown, who weaved his way to the 41 after taking the short kick at his own 14-yard line.

The first play was a harmless run to Rashard Mendenhall, who had been a beast all day. The run, with the Jets loading the box, was for just a yard.

Then came surprise number one. Instead of running and having the Jets use another critical timeout, the Steelers went to throw. Roethlisberger fired a pass for tight end Heath Miller, who came up with the grab after a 14-yard gain to the Jets 44.

Two minute warning.

The Jets were down to one timeout, and another first down and the title would belong to the Steelers. The next play was another run, this time it netted two yards for Mendenhall. 2nd and 8, and another run to try and eat up clock. Again, a two-yard game, setting up 3rd-and-6 from Jets 40 at the two-minute warning.

It was time for Mike Tomlin and the team to make a decision. Do you go for the win, trying to break the hearts of the Jets all at once, or do you do the safe thing, which is to run the ball, and likely have to punt with about 1:10 left?

The Steelers decided to go for the win, and boy did it ever pay off. Roethlisberger scrambled, and eventually found young rookie Antonio Brown streaking from the other side of the field for a 14-yard gain that in the end, was the clincher.

Brown was part of a three WR set to Ben’s left, while Heath Miller and Hines Ward were on his right. Brown was matched up on a linebacker, and broke free after getting stopped to make the play and clinch the win.

“I always feel blessed to have my number called,” Brown said. “But Ben made the play.”

And he’s right. Roethlisberger right away after seeing Miller and Ward covered decided to run, but instead of doing the safe thing and either running or just going down to keep the clock running, he chucked it to Brown, who made another memorable play.

Tomlin said it best when he said the team simply wasn’t playing the safe mode on the final series, or on the 3rd and 6 that in the end decided the game.

“We weren’t going to play not to lose,” Tomlin said. “That’s pretty funny isn’t it? A third-and-6 to win the game for a rookie from Central Michigan.”

And the trust that has become so evident between the coaches, the players, and a QB who had to sit and watch the first four games grows ever stronger. One more win, and that bond will be super glued forever with another piece of hardware.


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Thursday, December 9, 2010

A Final Shot for Alex Smith at QB for the Niners

So, yesterday Mike Singletary announced that Alex Smith would be the starting quarterback against the Seattle Seahawks this coming Sunday. My first thought: Freakin’ BS, Are you kidding me? Even now, I don’t understand the logic behind the move. Then again, Singletary is the head coach of the team and he is supposed to do what he thinks is best for the team and that is why he gets paid millions to do this. However, I completely disagree with this decision and firmly believe that Troy gives us as good a shot-if not better-as Alex does to win our games down the stretch.

This is what Singletary about Alex getting the starting nod:

We felt at this time, Alex with his experience and all of the other things, he would give us the best chance to win at this particular time, at this time of the year. Still very confident in what Troy has been able to do and would not rule out at any point in time him playing again. Right now it’s just a matter of looking where we are in the season and the opportunity we have before us.

While Troy Smith has not played lights out in his time as a starter, I don’

t think that Alex is so far ahead of him in his knowledge of the playbook and gives the Niners that much a greater chance of winning games this time of the year. In my eyes, Troy has had greater command of the offense, and the guys have rallied around him and I think that that is something to be valued in the last quarter of the season. Clearly, Singletary doesn’t think so. Anyways, Singletary has left the door open and made it known that he reserves the right to change his mind and possibly go back to Troy at some point.

Alex has played seven games against the Seattle Seahawks, and his numbers in those games have not been spectacular by any means.  He won two of his games against the Seahawks and below are his numbers against the team:

*Alex also has 2 rushing TD’s against the Seahawks.

Now, let’s take a look on how Alex has fared in December:

*Alex’s record in December is 5-8, and has run for a TD in said month.

Those numbers do not impress me by any means. But, it would not be fair to frown upon Alex’s numbers without looking at Troy’s numbers, both against the Seahawks, and in the month of December. So, here we go:

Against Seahawks

*Troy won his only game against Seattle.

In December

*Troy is 4-4 in December. He also has two rushing TDs in that month.

For you fans who support Singletary’s decision to go with Alex, you will point out that Alex has played in more games, and therefore Troy’s sample size is not large enough to measure his success against Alex’s down the stretch. You guys can also point out that Troy benefited from playing with a superb defense in his time with the Baltimore Ravens. I say, true and true, but when the numbers are adjusted, you will quickly realize that Troy would fit better not only this weekend against the Seahawks, but also in this last month of the season. Again, that is by no means scientific, but you have to give him the benefit of the doubt. And, I will not cease to say that the guys rally around Troy more that they do around Alex. That cannot be ignored in this crucial stretch for Singletary and the Niners.

I hope that Singletary proves me wrong and Alex surprises us all and takes us to the playoffs. I am no prognosticator but I do not see this working out. In my opinion, this stretch, however long it is, will be a farewell to Alex as the starting quarterback of the once-proud San Francisco 49ers.


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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Final: Fresno State 25, Illinois 23

Illinois didn't have to put the game in the hands of a WAC officiating crew.

The Illini could have shown up in the first quarter rather than fall behind 16-0. They could have displayed grit on defense before the halftime break. They could have finished drives and avoided dumb penalties.

But Illinois didn't do those things, and Friday night's game turned into a nail-biter that Fresno State won 25-23.

Make no mistake: Illinois has an extremely legitimate gripe with the WAC officials at Bulldog Stadium.

With 3:17 remaining, Fresno State faced fourth-and-1 from just outside its own 45-yard line. The Bulldogs had received an unfavorable spot on a third-down pass, putting the ball about a yard and a half shy of the marker. Based on that bad third-down spot, however, there's no way A.J. Ellis reached the marker on his fourth-down run up the middle.

Illinois coach Ron Zook challenged the spot, but the officials upheld the call. I don't know what more indisputable video evidence was needed. The ball should have been moved back at least two feet.

It wouldn't have taken much for Illinois to get itself into range for a Derek Dimke field-goal try. Instead, the botched call allowed Fresno State to run out the clock.

Not to be forgotten in all this was the personal foul penalty on Illinois' Tavon Wilson for hitting a defenseless player after the Illini had stopped Fresno State near its goal line. Can't argue with that call. Wilson's got to know better in that situation.

Despite strong second-half performances from quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase, running back Mikel Leshoure and defensive tackle Corey Liuget, Illinois couldn't finish off the regular season on the right note.

Big Ten teams might want to avoid playing at WAC stadiums in the final game of the season. Remember Michigan State at Hawaii in 2004? Or Northwestern at Hawaii that same year?

At least Illinois, unlike Michigan State or Northwestern in 2004, still can look forward to a bowl appearance, although it won't be in Florida. Tonight's loss pretty much eliminates Illinois from consideration for the Outback, Gator or Insight bowls.

Expect to see Illinois in the Texas Bowl against Baylor.

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