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  • 4th Quarter Covers - Week 4
    September 24, 2017


    Glancing at the scoreboard won’t tell you the whole story in most games. Here are some of the games that went down to the wire relative to the spread in the fourth quarter last week in the fourth big college football weekend.

    Each week there are several teams that cover despite not necessarily deserving it, as well as other teams that played much better than the final score shows.

    Utah (-4½) 30, Arizona 24: The Utes grabbed the lead early in this game with a few big plays, taking advantage of a big punt return and an Arizona fumble heading into the end zone to lead 13-3. Arizona got back within three with a late second quarter touchdown and had a chance to tie the game at the half but a 43-yard field goal missed. Both teams added third quarter touchdowns and Utah took command late in the third quarter with an interception return touchdown to lead again by 10. Early in the fourth quarter Arizona failed on 4th-and-1 from the Utah 25 and then on its next possession had a field goal attempt blocked for more missed opportunities. The Arizona defense kept them in the game holding Utah to a field goal and the Wildcats got within six finally completing a touchdown drive with just fewer than three minutes remaining. The Wildcats subsequently got the on-side kick to start at the Utah 35-yard-line but again fumbled following a strong first down gain to the 20-yard-line. Arizona’s defense again held but getting the ball back Arizona promptly threw an interception for their fifth turnover in a game where the host had significant yardage edges, particularly on the ground, despite the road favorite escaping with a very narrow win and cover. Those on the ‘over’ also felt the pain of all the missed scoring chances with the ‘under’ holding on a total that fell to as low as 55 before climbing back up to close at 60½.

    Duke (+2½) 27, North Carolina 17: A big play just before halftime tied the game for North Carolina and through three quarters the Tar Heels led 17-13, just past the very slight home favorite spread, though it was Duke that was a slight road favorite most of the week. Six straight punts followed the third quarter touchdown for North Carolina before the Blue Devils put together a 74-yard touchdown drive to lead by three with about six minutes to play, with some early week spreads hitting as a high Duke -3. The Tar Heels looked like a threat to answer crossing midfield but Chazz Surratt wound up being intercepted and the return went all the way the other direction as Duke went up by 10. It wouldn’t have impacted the spread for most but North Carolina reached the Duke 13-yard-line in the final minute but Duke got the stop to secure the win and cover, now 4-0 both straight up and against the spread on the season after finishing just 4-8 SU last season.

    Michigan (-13½) 28, Purdue 10: The Boilermakers led 10-7 at halftime and still were in position to clearly cover trailing 14-10 through three quarters. Michigan took over in the fourth however with two touchdown drives to go up by 18 with about seven minutes remaining. The young Wolverines defense held Purdue to just 15 net yards on six second half possessions to get the win and cover playing most of the game with backup quarterback John O’Korn.

    Ohio (+1½) 27, Eastern Michigan 20: An interception return touchdown put Ohio up 10-6 just before halftime and the Bobcats led 13-6 through three quarters. Eastern Michigan tied the game early in the fourth quarter and Ohio botched two chances to win in regulation with a fumble at the end of a 29-yard pass play and then a missed field goal in the final two minutes. Eastern Michigan went first in overtime and scored on 1st down but Ohio matched that touchdown and going first in the second session they successfully converted two 3rd downs for the go-ahead touchdown. Eastern Michigan failed on 4th-and-4 as the Bobcats took a big road win in MAC play.

    Nebraska (-13) 27, Rutgers 17: A defensive touchdown right after halftime put Rutgers ahead 17-14 but Nebraska was able to take over with a 97-yard touchdown drive and a field goal to lead by seven early in the fourth quarter. Starting with good field position on an early fourth quarter drive Nebraska reached the Rutgers 10-yard line but had to settle for a short field goal to only go up by 10 when a touchdown would have put Nebraska past the favorite spread that fluctuated at various price in between -11 and -14 during the week. Rutgers closed the game with a punt and another interception but Nebraska didn’t need more points to wrap up its homecoming victory as the Knights narrowly held on for the underdog cover.

    Miami, FL (-13½) 52, Toledo 30: This was a one-point game until Miami scored a touchdown with 20 seconds remaining in the third quarter. The Hurricanes took over in the fourth quarter with the help of a Toledo fumble making for four consecutive touchdowns before Toledo stopped the bleeding, cutting the margin to 38-22 with a touchdown with nine minutes to go. The Rockets picked up an interception a few plays later and were back in the game, finding the end zone after the turnover to trail just 38-30 after a successful two-point conversion. It wound up not mattering as Miami scored two more touchdowns in the final seven minutes to win by a misleading 22 point final margin. After 40 points through three quarters the ‘over’ won with the all the late scoring on a total that closed at 60½.

    Navy (-7½) 42, Cincinnati 32: This game featured a severe line move Saturday afternoon with Navy falling from an -11½-point favorite to closing as a -7½-point favorite. Those numbers mattered as Navy’s 18-point lead into the fourth quarter was cut into with a Cincinnati touchdown with six minutes to go. Down 12 Cincinnati went for two and got it on a play that provided a critical pointspread swing. The Bearcats were a threat to score again but they fumbled on a sack at the Navy 11-yard line with just over two minutes remaining. Navy took the ball to the Cincinnati 8-yard line in the final minute before taking a knee as the margin remained at 10 for mixed results on both sides depending on the timing.

    Ohio State (-41) 54, UNLV 21: The Buckeyes led by 40 through three quarters but still throwing the ball with back-up quarterback Dwayne Haskins in the fourth quarter an interception was returned for a touchdown for UNLV to trim the margin to just 33 points. The Rebels would miss a field goal that could have secured the underdog cover but the Buckeyes fumbled at the UNLV 1-yard line with about four minutes to go as the Rebels hung on for the heavy underdog win.

    Tulane (-3) 21, Army 17: Tulane led 14-10 at halftime and that score held through three quarters with the Wave opening as a -4 favorite before the number slipped to -2½ and settled right a -3. With about five minutes remaining Army completed a 15-play touchdown drive as the slight road underdog went up by three. With 23 seconds remaining Jonathan Banks ran into the end zone and the Merek Glover extra point gave Tulane the win by four for a narrow favorite cover for most.

    Texas A&M (-1½) 50, Arkansas 43:
    The Aggies trailed 28-24 heading into the fourth quarter in Arlington but the scoring was far from over. Texas A&M settled for a field goal with about 12 minutes remaining to trail by one as a slight favorite but a lousy punt from Arkansas handed the Aggies great field position and they took a five-point lead a few plays later, failing going for two. Arkansas answered to lead 36-33 with about five minutes remaining but the ensuing kickoff was returned for a touchdown as the Aggies were back in front and ahead of the spread at 40-36. Arkansas had no problem answering again and led by three once again but the Aggies delivered on the final drive with a big 4th down conversion just past midfield and in range to hit a field goal to force overtime. A pass interference call on 3rd-and-long handed Texas A&M a quick touchdown going first in overtime and Arkansas wound up intercepted in the end zone as the Aggies won again in this series and scored a fortunate overtime cover as well.

    UL-Monroe (+4) 56, UL-Lafayette 50: The underdog Warhawks led by 10 at the half and by 21 early in the fourth quarter. Louisiana-Lafayette made a furious comeback with 21 points in just over seven minutes to close regulation and force overtime, connecting on a 14-yard touchdown pass as time expired. Both teams got touchdowns in the first overtime, the Ragin’ Cajuns missed a field goal to lead off the second session while Louisiana-Monroe was able to deliver a touchdown for the win.

    Western Kentucky (-12) 33, Ball State 21:
    This line on this game jumped around dramatically throughout the week with questionable Ball State personnel and the spread wound up closing right on the final margin. Most of the way that type of margin of victory for Western Kentucky seemed like an impossibility as they led by three through three quarters and wound up out-gained by Ball State for the game. The double-digit underdog Cardinals held a 21-20 lead into the final two minutes of the game but Western Kentucky delivered a touchdown run to go in front and then got a pick-6 a few plays later from Ball State backup quarterback Jack Milas, in an instant going from down one to up 12 and creating mixed results on the spread. That late scoring also pushed the total that settled around 50 after opening at 54½ just ‘over’.

    North Texas (-10) 46, UAB 43: The Mean Green took control with a pair of field goals early in the fourth quarter pushing the margin to 14 points. UAB made a furious late rally, tying the game with back-to-back touchdowns in the final six minutes. A big kickoff return in the final minute sparked North Texas, starting at the UAB 44-yard line with 27 seconds to go. A big run quickly put the Mean Green in field goal range and they hit the 22-yard kick for the win, though the Blazers earned the underdog cover on a line that dipped from -13 to just -10.

    San Diego State (PK) 28, Air Force 24: The Aztecs opened as high as a -4½-point favorite but most of the week sat between -2½ and -3½ before a drop to a pick’em just before game time. Air Force led 9-0 early before a lengthy weather delay and San Diego State took over from there leading 14-9 at through three quarters and 21-17 early in the fourth quarter. Air Force completed a 75-yard touchdown drive with about six minutes to go but San Diego State took less than a minute to go back up by four, just past the common spread while the final drive for Air Force ended with an interception. The total was narrowly eclipsed with 29 fourth quarter points.

    Idaho (+6½) 29, South Alabama 23: The Jaguars led most of the game including sitting just past the closing spread with a 20-13 edge with about five minutes to go in the game with South Alabama favored by just 3½ much of the week before a late rise. Idaho delivered the tying touchdown with 13 seconds remaining to force overtime. In overtime both teams struggled to gain yards in session one, settling for matching field goals. South Alabama went backwards in round two going first and wound up missing a 43-yard field goal. Idaho delivered a touchdown for a minor upset in the Sun Belt.

    USC (-17) 30, California 20:
    The Trojans and Bears were tied 13-13 through three quarters before USC took control with turnover help, adding 17 points in just over three minutes of game clock on drives of 30, 4, and 33 yards. USC opened as around a 15-point favorite before the line held firm at -17 to match the margin heading into the final 10 minutes. California eventually added a touchdown in the final two minutes to earn a deserved underdog cover as the Bears out-gained USC and somehow stayed in the game despite committing six turnovers.

    Wyoming (-5) 28, Hawai’i 21: Hawai’i took a 14-7 lead late in the third quarter but that lead was quickly erased with a 97-yard kickoff return touchdown for Wyoming. The Cowboys struck again early in the fourth quarter leading 21-14 and past the slight home favorite spread that was as high as -7 early in the week. Hawai’i answered with a 50-yard touchdown pass to tie the game however. Wyoming missed a field goal in the final minutes and overtime was needed as those on the Cowboys still had life. Wyoming only needed one play to score an overtime touchdown going first and then delivered the win on defense with an interception as most scored a narrow cover on the Pokes.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • Georgia, TCU jump into AP Top 10
      September 24, 2017


      No. 7 Georgia and No. 9 TCU jumped into the top 10 of The Associated Press college football poll for the first time this season and Florida State dropped all the way out of the rankings for the first time since 2011 after starting 0-2.

      Alabama remained No. 1 and won back some of the support it lost last week to No. 2 Clemson. The Crimson Tide received 52 first-place votes Sunday, up seven from last week, after beating Vanderbilt 59-0 on Saturday.

      Clemson received eight first-place votes, down seven from last week, after taking more than three quarters to pull away from Boston College. No. 3 Oklahoma got the remaining first-place vote.

      Penn State held at No. 4. Southern California was No. 5, followed by Pac-12 rival Washington.

      Georgia followed Michigan, TCU and Wisconsin rounded out the top 10.

      ---

      POLL POINTS

      OUT


      What a strange start to the season for Florida State, which had a streak of 105 straight poll appearances snapped. The Seminoles were No. 3 in the preseason poll, lost to Alabama in a marquee opener and lost quarterback Deondre Francois to a season-ending injury in that game, too.

      Then Florida State's season was put on hold for two weeks because of Hurricane Irma. That cost the `Noles what figured to be a good game against Louisiana-Monroe to break in freshman quarterback James Blackman, and delayed its game against Miami.

      Finally back on the field against North Carolina State, the Seminoles lost 27-21 to drop to 0-2 for the first time since 1989. Florida State also became the first team to start the season ranked in the top three of the AP poll and begin its season with two losses since 1984, when No. 3 Pitt began 0-4 and finished 3-7-1.

      - Oregon dropped out after one week ranked, following a 37-35 loss at Arizona State.

      STREAKS


      The current longest streaks of consecutive poll appearances.

      168 - Alabama. Last time unranked was final poll of 2007 season.

      103 - Ohio State. Last time unranked was final poll of 2011 season.

      55 - Clemson. Last time unranked was Nov. 16, 2014.

      IN

      Welcome back, No. 22 Notre Dame and No. 23 West Virginia. The Fighting Irish had a one-week stint in the poll earlier this month and the Mountaineers are back after being in the preseason poll.

      UP


      - No. 9 TCU jumped seven spots after one of Saturday's most impressive victories, 44-31 at Oklahoma State. The Horned Frogs won 44-31 in Stillwater for the first time since they joined the Big 12 in 2012.

      - No. 7 Georgia moved up four places after routing Mississippi State 31-3.

      DOWN

      - No. 11 Ohio State was nudged out of the top 10 when Georgia and TCU moved in, snapping the Buckeyes streak of 42 straight polls ranked in the top 10.

      - No. 15 Oklahoma State dropped nine places after its first loss of the season

      CONFERENCE CALL

      SEC - 6

      Big 12 - 4

      Pac 12 - 4

      Big Ten - 4

      ACC - 4

      American - 1

      Mountain West - 1

      Independent - 1

      RANKED vs. RANKED

      No. 2 Clemson at No. 12 Virginia Tech. The Tigers make their first trip to Lane Stadium since 2011.

      No. 5 USC at No. 16 Washington State, Friday. Pullman, Washington, for a short-week road game. What could possibly go wrong for the Trojans?

      No. 24 Mississippi State at No. 14 Auburn. Third straight ranked opponent for the Bulldogs. So far, 1-1.
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • CFB Aug/Sept Best Bets: ( All Best Bets Based On 5 Units Per Play )
        BEST BETS & OPINIONS

        DATE W-L-T % UNITS RECORD

        09/24/2017 2-0-0 100.00% +10.00

        09/23/2017 31-33-1 48.44% -26.50

        09/22/2017 4-0-0 100.00% +20.00

        09/21/2017 2-0-0 100.00% +10.00

        09/16/2017 20-26-3 43.48% -43.00

        09/15/2017 3-3-0 50.00% -1.50

        09/14/2017 1-1-0 50.00% -0.50

        09/09/2017 19-21-3 47.50% -20.50

        09/08/2017 4-0-0 100.00% +20.00

        09/07/2017 0-1-0 0.00% -5.50

        09/04/2017 1-1-0 50.00% -0.50

        09/03/2017 3-1-0 75.00% +9.50

        09/02/2017 11-21-0 34.38% -60.50

        09/01/2017 6-3-0 66.67% +13.50

        08/31/2017 9-4-0 69.23% +23.00

        08/26/2017 5-5-0 50.00% -2.50

        Totals:.......121 - 120 - 6.....50.20%....-55.00


        Best Bets:*****
        Best Bets :........................ATS............TOTALS.... .............O/U................TOTALS


        09/24/2017....................1 - 0..............+ 5.00.................1 - 0...............+ 5.00

        09/23/2017....................9 - 16 - 1.......- 35.00.................2 - 7..............- 28.50

        09/22/2017....................2 - 0..............+10.00.................2 - 0..............+10.00

        09/21/2017....................1 - 0..............+ 5.00..................1 - 0..............+ 5.00

        09/16/2017....................7 - 9 - 1.........- 14.50.................3 - 6...............-12.50

        09/15/2017....................2 - 0..............+10.00.................1 - 2...............- 6.00

        Totals:........................22 -25 - 2...........- 20.50...............10 - 15.............- 24.00
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • UGA's Fromm leads freshman QB invasion
          September 24, 2017


          Nothing is more treasured to a college football team than experience at quarterback.

          Well, at least that used to be something people said.

          More true freshman quarterbacks than ever are arriving at the intersection of Readiness and Opportunity, and we're only a season removed from one such player -- Jalen Hurts -- taking mighty Alabama to within a play of the national championship.

          As this season takes shape after four full weeks, true freshman quarterbacks are influencing several major programs, which means their young minds and mettle, arms and legs, will hold sway over Power 5 conference races and, therefore, the College Football Playoff and the national title.

          Which brings us to Georgia.


          True freshman Jake Fromm -- handed the reins after one of last year's crop of true freshman quarterbacks, Jacob Eason, suffered a knee injury in the opener -- helped guide the Bulldogs to a 31-3 rout of No. 17 Mississippi State on Saturday.

          Georgia (4-0) has emerged as the clear favorite in the SEC East and a legit threat to top-ranked Alabama in a potential SEC title game matchup. The Bulldogs have a great rushing attack, a veteran and fearsome defensive front seven ... and Fromm, rated the No. 3 pro-style quarterback recruit in the nation in the 2017 class, according to the 247Sports composite rankings.

          Fromm was 9 of 12 for 201 yards and two touchdowns in the team's complete effort against Mississippi State. One of the incomplete passes was a throw-away. The others were drops.

          Fromm's first pass of the game was a 59-yard touchdown strike to receiver Terry Godwin off a flea-flicker.

          "The kid is stepping up," said Georgia coach Kirby Smart. "He's starting to play. He's always had that in him. He's a good leader. He did a good job managing the game."

          With the rise of quarterback summer camps and clinics and coaching "gurus," more recruits than ever come in with a reasonable readiness to make the jump to hyperspace.

          Other true freshman quarterbacks thrust into big-time opportunities in the first month are Florida State's James Blackman (first career start in a loss at North Carolina State); Texas A&M's Kellen Mond (325 total yards in an overtime victory over Arkansas) and Texas' Sam Ehlinger (nearly pulled off the upset at USC two weeks ago.

          And over at Alabama, true freshman backup Tua Tagovailoa is waiting -- and quite possibly ready, given his relief effort in Saturday's rout of Vanderbilt -- should Hurts be hurt.

          Fromm leads the young pack for now, rated 10th nationally in passer efficiency with a rating of 172.0. Eason -- one of the "flavors of the month" last season as a true freshman -- has yet be to medically cleared to return to game action, but he's getting closer.

          He won the job through spring and fall competition, but Fromm always intrigued because of his skill, vocal leadership and decisiveness. Eason might not get his job back.

          "He's a born leader," Georgia senior running back Nick Chubb said of Fromm. "He plays hard. He makes the right call. He does everything we ask him to do. He's a great kid."

          5 thoughts from Week 4


          1. Gary Patterson is at it again. TCU has an occasional down season but always bounces back with a vengeance. The Horned Frogs followed losing records in 2004 and 2013 with one-loss seasons, and Patterson's crew -- 6-7 in 2016 -- stamped itself as legit big-prize contenders with a 44-31 victory at then-No. 6 Oklahoma State.

          2. Florida is living right. The Gators are 2-1, but needed divine help in beating Tennessee on a Hail Mary two weeks ago and got another gift Saturday, when a holding call on Kentucky in the final seconds pushed the Wildcats beyond the edge of field goal range; a last-play 57-yard fell just short. The Gators beat Kentucky for the 31st consecutive time.

          3. UCLA is too soft on defense. QB Josh Rosen always intrigues, but his I-have-to-do-it-all bad habits are only being magnified by a defense that gave up 44 points to Texas A&M, 48 to Memphis and 58 to Stanford. The Bruins are last nationally among power conference teams, allowing 524.8 yards per game.

          4. Michigan's QB battle is one to watch. John O'Korn hasn't been able to wrest the starting job away from Wilton Speight in the past couple of seasons, but there's nothing like game time to change minds. O'Korn was effective Saturday after Speight left in the first quarter due to injury, sparking four touchdown drives in a 28-10 victory over Purdue.

          5. Central Florida enters battle for big bowl.
          Perhaps everyone had the wrong Florida "directional" school as the best from the Group of Five conferences. South Florida is moving along at 4-0, ranked all season, but UCF is surging under second-year coach Scott Frost, whipping Maryland 38-10 on the road Saturday. Central Florida and South Florida meet at the end of the regular season in an East Division showdown in the American Athletic Conference.

          5 top Heisman candidates


          1. RB Saquon Barkley, Penn State
          . He moves quickly and effortlessly along every axis -- including vertically if he has to hurdle a defender -- and he just refused to be bottled up against Iowa, putting up 358 all-purpose yards in the Nittany Lions' 21-19 thriller.

          2. QB Baker Mayfield, Oklahoma. The senior leads the nation in passing efficiency with a rating of 228.3, and his 13-0 touchdown-to-interception ratio is a nifty part of that.

          3. RB Bryce Love, Stanford. He's the nation's leading rusher -- and averaging 10.78 yards per carry -- and he's doing it while playing for a Cardinal team that lacks a complementary passing game. His speed and quick cuts carved up UCLA for 263 rushing yards Saturday night.

          4. RB Rashaad Penny, San Diego State
          . The Aztecs' 28-24 win on a rainy day at Air Force is probably more impressive than you think, and Penny led the way with 128 yards and three touchdowns.

          5. QB Lamar Jackson, Louisville. The 2016 Mr. Heisman is still the most exciting quarterback in college football.

          5 things you might have missed

          1. UCLA defensive back Adarius Pickett was ejected for targeting in the first half for a hit on Stanford tight end Drew Schultz. Although no flag was thrown, officials tossed Pickett from the game after a replay review. While the game was still going on, Pickett tweeted from the locker room: "I get kicked out the game because I'm hitting to hard against a guy that is 6'6 are you kidding me. Tell me how I'm suppose to play please."

          2. Eastern Washington often has one of the most prolific offenses in the Football Championship Subdivision, and the Eagles are at it again as Gage Gubrud passed for a school-record 549 yards Saturday in a 48-41 victory over Montana on Saturday.

          3. Old Dominion true freshman quarterback Steven Williams Jr. became the second-youngest starter in the history of the Football Bowl Subdivision. The 17-year-old completed just 8 of 26 passes in a shutout loss to Virginia Tech.

          4. As expected, the game between rivals St. John's and St. Thomas, played Saturday at the Minnesota Twins' Target Field, set a Division III attendance record of 37,355. The Tommies beat the Johnnies 20-17 in this battle of D-III heavyweights.

          5. North Carolina State defensive end Bradley Chubb apologized for spitting on the Florida State midfield logo after the Wolfpack's upset of the then-No. 12 Seminoles. As far as postgame antics in hostile stadiums, we're ranking them like this: 1. Baker Mayfield planting the Oklahoma flag in the Ohio State turf. 2. Penn State QB Trace McSorley punting the ball after taking a knee at Iowa. 3. Chubb.

          5 games to watch in Week 5

          1. Clemson at Virginia Tech (Saturday, 8 p.m. ET) -- A rematch of last season's ACC Championship Game and a potential preview of the 2017 title tilt. The Hokies have pitched two shutouts this season and found a dynamic quarterback in redshirt freshman Josh Jackson.

          2. USC at Washington State (Friday, 10:30 p.m. ET)
          -- Martin Stadium is going to be insanely rocking on a Friday night in the kind of home spotlight that rarely shines on Pullman. This will be a full-on blast of #Pac12AfterDark.

          3. Georgia at Tennessee (Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET)
          -- Last season's meeting was one of the nuttiest of the season, with dueling touchdowns in the final 10 seconds, including the Vols' final-play 43-yard touchdown pass for a 34-31 shocker.

          4. Miami at Duke (Friday, 7 p.m. ET)
          . A worthy Friday night undercard to USC-Washington State, with the Hurricanes putting their 2-0 record on the line vs. surprising 4-0 Duke, led by sophomore quarterback Daniel Jones.

          5. Ole Miss at Alabama (Saturday, 9 p.m. ET). This probably means nothing for this year, but the Rebels beat Alabama in 2014 and 2015, and lost by just five last season, 48-43. Worth keeping an eye on to see if Ole Miss quarterback Shea Patterson can threaten the Tide's D.
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • Georgia needs big follow-up to MSU rout
            September 24, 2017


            ATHENS, Ga. (AP) The Georgia Bulldogs wanted to make a statement, to demonstrate they're ready to be part of the national championship conversation.

            They're only part of the way there.

            Georgia climbed into The Associated Press Top 10 on Sunday after a 31-3 thrashing of then-No. 17 Mississippi State , a game that showed off a wealth of talent between the hedges.

            Freshman quarterback Jake Fromm came through again on the big stage, throwing a pair of touchdown passes. Nick Chubb scored twice and led a deep running game that surpassed 200 yards on the ground. The defense swarmed all over a team that was averaging more than 47 points a game, keeping Mississippi State out of the end zone.

            ''We know for a fact that we've been on that level,'' said receiver Terry Godwin, who set the tone by hauling in a 59-yard touchdown pass on Georgia's first offensive play. ''It was just time for us to put it out here on the field. Let y'all see it, and let the world see it. I feel like we're doing that this season.''

            Indeed, the Bulldogs (4-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) already have a couple of impressive victories, also winning 20-19 at Notre Dame in Fromm's first career start .

            But, for all those Georgia fans who were barking and whooping it up on the way out of a gleeful Sanford Stadium late Saturday night, it's worth noting that the Bulldogs have been here before.

            By moving up four spots to No. 7 in the latest AP poll, Georgia has now been ranked in the Top 10 at some point during each of the last six seasons. But the Bulldogs haven't been a serious championship contender since 2012, when a heartbreaking 32-28 loss to Alabama in the SEC title game cost them a chance to play for the BCS title.

            Since then, Georgia's high hopes have been crushed by a series of big-game setbacks, from a 41-26 home loss to Missouri in 2013 to a 38-35 defeat at South Carolina in 2014 to a 38-10 drubbing by Alabama in 2015 . Even last year, Kirby Smart's first season as coach, Georgia climbed as high as No. 9 before slumping to an 8-5 finish.

            Next up: a trip to Rocky Top for an SEC clash with struggling Tennessee
            .

            ''Every game's different,'' Smart said. ''I thought the kids played real hard. But we've got to do it again next week. We've got a good opponent. That's just the way the SEC is.''

            Smart's assessment of the Volunteers (3-1, 0-1) might be a bit of a stretch - after all, they're coming off a dreary 17-13 victory over winless Massachusetts - but this is definitely the type of game that's tripped up the Bulldogs in recent seasons.

            Georgia is eager to show this group won't fall into the same trap.

            ''This team that we have is a very humble team and we're very disciplined,'' linebacker Davin Bellamy said. ''We can't be too high on this win, because got to go to a tough environment next week and play some football.''

            About the only downside from the Mississippi State rout was offensive lineman Solomon Kindley reinjuring a sprained ankle that had limited him in Georgia's first two games against Appalachian State and Notre Dame.

            While X-rays were negative, it's not known how long he might be out.

            Otherwise, the Bulldogs came out of the game in good shape.

            Now, they've got to show they can handle the hype. The victory over Mississippi State definitely made a statement, but it requires a strong follow-up.

            ''It doesn't matter who we play,'' linebacker Lorenzo Carter insisted. ''We're going to keep playing our brand of football: fast, physical, fly around to the ball. Our offense is going to keep pounding people. It just translates from practice. We practice hard and we do everything the right way. We've just got to keep rolling.''
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • STAT WATCH: Kansas, Stanford backs post top 2 rushing totals
              September 25, 2017

              The top two rushing performances of the season came over the weekend, with Kansas' Khalil Herbert going for 291 yards on 36 carries against West Virginia and Stanford's Bryce Love running for 263 yards on 30 carries against UCLA.

              Herbert had the best rushing day by a Jayhawk since Tony Sands ran for 396 yards against Missouri in 1991. Love's 263 yards were second-most in a game in Stanford history behind Christian McCaffrey's 284 against California last November.

              Penn State's Saquon Barkley had 211 yards rushing and 94 yards receiving against Iowa . His 358 all-purpose yards were a national season high and broke the school record of 341 set by Curt Warner against Syracuse in 1981. Barkley also went over 3,000 career rushing yards.

              Miami's Mark Walton had 204 yards on 11 carries against Toledo. He had 137 yards before leaving the game with an ankle injury in the second quarter. He returned late in the third quarter.

              Washington's Myles Gaskin ran for 202 yards against Colorado.

              There have been 15 200-yard performances this season.

              Other top statistical feats:

              ---

              NAVY GOES BY LAND


              Navy's 569 yards rushing against Cincinnati were the most since Baylor rushed for 645 against North Carolina two seasons ago in the Russell Athletic Bowl. The Midshipmen came within 3 yards of the school record set in 2007 against North Texas.

              Navy's 393 yards rushing per game ranks second to Georgia Tech's 393.7. The Midshipmen have finished no lower than sixth in rushing since 2001.

              99 IS MIGHTY FINE

              Oklahoma's Abdul Adams became the 11th player in NCAA history, and first since Louisiana Tech's Kenneth Dixon in 2014, to break a 99-yard touchdown run.

              Adams busted loose in the first quarter against Baylor for the longest play from scrimmage in program history. The sophomore set a career high with 164 yards, and the 99-yarder was his first touchdown.

              THEY GO ALL THE WAY

              Texas A&M's Christian Kirk and Memphis' Tony Pollard became the sixth and seventh players this season to return kickoffs 100 yards.

              Kirk's 100-yarder against Arkansas was the Aggies' first since Coryell Judie went 84 yards for a TD against Baylor in 2010. Kirk also has five punt returns for TDs in his career, and the six returns for scores are most by a player in program history.

              Pollard's 100-yard return against FCS Southern Illinois came after he ran back a kick 99 yards against Louisiana-Monroe in the season opener. Pollard also had a 100-yard kick return against Navy last season.

              INTERCEPTION 3X


              New Mexico State's Shamad Lomax intercepted UTEP's Ryan Metz three times, all in the first half, to set a national season high for picks in a game. Lomas returned one 19 yards for a touchdown.

              The sophomore was the first NMSU player with three interceptions in a game since 1995, and the Aggies finished with five against UTEP.

              Lomax's two other career interceptions came in one game, last November against Texas State.

              GETTING THE BOOT

              South Florida's Emilio Nadelman tied the national season high with five field goals against Temple. He connected from 44, 28, 25, 37 and 44 yards. He also made four extra points to set a school record with 19 points by a kicker. He's 8 for 9 on field goals this season.
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • Florida benches QB Franks, names Del Rio starter vs Vandy
                September 25, 2017

                GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) No. 21 Florida is turning to a familiar face to fix an all-too-familiar problem.

                Luke Del Rio will get another chance as the team's starting quarterback when the Gators (2-1, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) host Vanderbilt (3-1, 0-1) on Saturday.

                Coach Jim McElwain made the switch Monday, giving Del Rio the nod after he benched redshirt freshman Feleipe Franks for the second time in three games.

                ''It's not to say Feleipe won't start again,'' said McElwain, whose offense ranks 113th in the nation and next-to-last in the SEC. ''It's one of those deals where he continues to get better.''

                Given the way McElwain has shuffled quarterbacks this season, there's no guarantee Del Rio will even finish the game against the Commodores. Following a 28-27 victory at Kentucky, McElwain alluded to former Florida coach and current program ambassador Steve Spurrier for his penchant for changing signal callers.

                ''There was a coach around here for a long time that used to throw quarterbacks in here and there at the drop of a hat,'' McElwain said. ''We may have learned something from him.''

                Del Rio came off the bench against the Wildcats and completed 9 of 14 passes for 74 yards, including a 5-yard touchdown pass to uncovered Freddie Swain with 43 seconds remaining. His TD pass gave Florida its only lead of the game and its 31st consecutive victory in the series.

                McElwain said the offense clicked a little better with Del Rio under center.

                ''We needed a jump-start,'' McElwain said. ''It was like, sometimes, maybe not all cylinders were hitting. And I think he came in and gave us that boost.''

                Franks was 7-of-12 passing for 85 yards and a touchdown in two-plus quarters against the Wildcats. After failing to complete a pass in two possessions to start the third quarter, McElwain turned to Del Rio with the Gators trailing 24-14.

                Del Rio threw an interception to end his first series, but the Gators scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to extend the longest current winning streak against a single opponent in major college football.

                ''He was just telling us that we were going to win the game,'' receiver Brandon Powell said. ''He wasn't afraid of making a mistake. ... He came to the sideline and was still telling us that we were going to win the game. That showed. He was getting the ball to his playmakers and was making plays for them.''

                McElwain also replaced Franks with Malik Zaire in the season opener against Michigan. McElwain said Franks has handled getting benched in stride.

                ''I think he's done a great job of sitting and looking,'' McElwain said. ''I think he played well at times through the previous game. It's never fun, and yet, when you learn from it, this guy is going to be a really good player, and he is now. There are some things he can continue to learn and work on, and he'll do that moving forward.''

                Franks has completed 30 of 49 passes for 372 yards this season, with three touchdowns and an interception. Although he has thrown plenty of decent passes, most notably a 63-yarder on the final play to beat Tennessee, he has yet to command the huddle or make all the right checks and protections adjustments needed.

                Del Rio, the son of Oakland Raiders coach Jack Del Rio, started six games last year before sustaining a season-ending shoulder injury. Del Rio was 5-1 as the starter, playing through a badly sprained throwing shoulder and a partially torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee. He also tore the labrum in his left shoulder against Georgia and tried to play the following week at Arkansas, a disastrous decision that aided a double-digit loss.

                ''It's been a tough road coming back being healthy, competing my butt off in camp,'' Del Rio said. ''Sometimes you just need to shake things up and get a spark.''

                -----------------------------------

                CFB notebook: Nine Florida players face felony charges
                September 25, 2017


                Wide receiver Antonio Callaway and running back Jordan Scarlett are among nine University of Florida players facing multiple third-degree felony charges on the heels of alleged credit card fraud, multiple outlets reported Monday.

                Callaway and Scarlett join five other suspended players in facing two third-degree felonies: fraud/swindle in obtaining property under $20,000 and use or possession of another person's ID without consent.

                Defensive linemen Keivonnis Davis and Richerd Desir-Jones, linebackers James Houston IV and Ventrell Miller, wide receiver Rick Wells and offensive lineman Kadeem Telfort are also facing the third-degree felony counts, according to Alachua County (Fla.) Circuit Court records, per the Orlando Sentinel.

                Redshirt freshman defensive lineman Jordan Smith is facing three additional felony counts of use or possession of another person's ID without consent.

                --Florida is making a change at quarterback -- inserting junior Luke Del Rio for redshirt freshman Feleipe Franks -- for this week's home game against Vanderbilt.

                Del Rio replaced Franks during the third quarter of Saturday's 28-27 victory over Kentucky, connecting with Freddie Swain on a 5-yard touchdown pass with 43 seconds left for the winning points.

                Franks was the hero a week earlier, when his 63-yard Hail Mary heave into the end zone beat Tennessee. He struggled against the Wildcats, completing 7 of 12 passes for 85 yards as the Gators fell behind by 10 points in the fourth quarter.

                --Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh said starting quarterback Wilton Speight would not be available this week if the Wolverines had a game, adding that the hit that knocked him out last week was "egregious."

                Speight sustained a head injury in the first quarter of a 28-10 win at Purdue on Saturday. Senior John O'Korn came in and completed 18 of 26 passes for 270 yards and a touchdown.

                Speight was taken to a local hospital for tests during the game but did return to Ross-Ade Stadium. Harbaugh didn't express strong feelings after the game about the hit that knocked out Speight, saying he didn't see it, but then he reviewed the game film.

                --Washington junior wide receiver Chico McClatcher will miss the rest of the season because of a broken ankle, Huskies coach Chris Petersen said at his press conference.

                McClatcher is the team's second-leading receiver with 10 catches for 128 yards.

                He suffered the injury in a 37-10 victory at Colorado on Saturday, when a defender rolled into McClatcher's left leg as he was blocking on a run play.
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • Injury list grows at UNC ahead of G-Tech
                  September 25, 2017


                  CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) North Carolina's injury list keeps growing.

                  Senior receiver Austin Proehl, senior defensive tackle Tyler Powell and redshirt freshman receiver Rontavius Groves were hurt during Saturday's loss to Duke.

                  Proehl had his left arm was in a sling on the sideline. Powell crumpled to the turf grabbing his right knee before being helped to the sideline. And Groves' right leg gave out as he turned for a pass in his college debut, prompting trainers to immediately put his knee in a brace and cart him away.

                  None appear on the depth chart for this weekend's trip to Georgia Tech.

                  Nine of 19 players on UNC's pre-Duke injury report are lost for the season. Asked Monday whether UNC has more season-ending injuries, coach Larry Fedora said: ''I don't know yet.''

                  ************************

                  Hogs' WR Jared Cornelius out for season
                  September 25, 2017


                  FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) Arkansas wide receiver Jared Cornelius will undergo surgery following an injury to his left Achilles and is expected to miss the rest of the season.

                  Cornelius was hurt early in the second half of the overtime loss to Texas A&M on Saturday. Arkansas coach Bret Bielema says a redshirt year is possible for the senior - as well as potentially entering the NFL draft.

                  Cornelius entered the season as Arkansas' top leading returning wide receiver, finishing with 32 catches for 515 yards a season ago. The 5-foot-11, 212-pound senior missed much of the preseason with a hamstring injury and was fully healthy for the first time this year during the game against the Aggies.

                  The Razorbacks (1-2, 0-1 Southeastern Conference) host New Mexico State (2-2) on Saturday.

                  *************************

                  Rutgers loses cornerback Austin for season with knee injury
                  September 25, 2017


                  PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) Rutgers has lost top cornerback Blessuan Austin for the season with a knee injury.

                  Coach Chris Ash announced Monday that Austin tore his anterior cruciate ligament in the second half of Saturday's 27-16 loss in Nebraska.

                  Ash called the injury a blow for the Scarlet Knights (1-3, 0-1 Big Ten). The junior had started in each of his three seasons. He earned honorable mention in the conference's awards after last season.

                  Damon Hayes is expected to replace Austin in the lineup.

                  Ash says Hayes needs to improve and develop, but he's excited he'll have the opportunity to start.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • Harbaugh: Hit on QB was 'egregious'
                    September 25, 2017


                    Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh said starting quarterback Wilton Speight would not be available this week if the Wolverines had a game, adding that the hit that knocked him out last week was "egregious."

                    "If I had a stronger word to use, I would use it," Harbaugh said at his Monday press conference.

                    Speight sustained a head injury in the first quarter of a 28-10 win at Purdue on Saturday. Senior John O'Korn came in and completed 18 of 26 passes for 270 yards and a touchdown.

                    Speight was taken to a local hospital for tests during the game but did return to Ross-Ade Stadium. Harbaugh didn't express strong feelings after the game about the hit that knocked out Speight, saying he didn't see it, but then he reviewed the game.

                    "After having seen it now, I thought it was egregious," he said.

                    "With all the emphasis on protecting defenseless players, it appeared that the player knew what he was doing, targeted the head and neck area when the player was on the ground and accelerated into it. Surprised they had two officials standing back there that were both looking at it, plus a review in the press box, that that wasn't targeting, that that wasn't a personal foul."

                    No. 8 Michigan (4-0) is off this week before hosting Michigan State on Oct. 7. As for Speight's status for the rivalry game, Harbaugh said, "We'll assess it as we go."
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • IU gets 2nd chance to upset top 10 team
                      September 25, 2017


                      BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Indiana gets a second chance to knock off a top-10 opponent.

                      Are the Hoosiers (2-1, 0-1 Big Ten) better prepared to do to No. 4 Penn State (4-0, 1-0) what they couldn't do against then-No. 2 Ohio State in the season opener?

                      Coach Tom Allen believes.

                      ''Going into Ohio State and game one, there were a lot of things you think are a certain way, a certain impression you have, and now you know,'' Allen said. ''We had questions about some positions.''

                      One question was answered this past Saturday when freshman tailback Morgan Ellison rushed for 186 yards in a 52-17 victory over Georgia Southern. Ellison has a team-leading 257 rushing yards and averages 5.8 yards a carry.

                      ''We thought Morgan was a good a player and he's proven he can be a very good running back at this level,'' Allen said. ''We are a much better team today because we have a better sense of who we are and what our strengths are. We know what to focus on. That gives you confidence.''

                      That confidence jumped with a win at Virginia, a team that is now 3-1 with a victory at Boise State, and then again by dominating Georgia Southern with a rushing attack that had been missing the first two games.

                      This Saturday's challenge at Penn State is much more formidable. Indiana is 0-9 at Beaver Stadium, and 1-19 against the Nittany Lions. The Hoosiers' only win came in 2013.

                      Allen said this is a tougher-minded Indiana team.

                      ''I look at the way this team has prepared, focused and finished,'' he said. ''That wasn't always the case around here. That's a big step.''

                      The status is unknown for injured starters such as cornerbacks Rashard Fant and A'Shon Riggins and safety Marcelino Ball.

                      Notes: Ellison was named the Big Ten's freshman of the week. Returner J-Shun Harris won his second Big Ten special teams player of the week honors. Harris returned a punt 70 yards for a touchdown against Georgia Southern. It was the second straight game he'd scored on a punt return. Only Rob Turner has done that in school history. Harris leads the Big Ten and ranks third nationally by averaging 26.1 yards per punt return.
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • Washington WR McClatcher out with broken ankle
                        September 25, 2017


                        Washington junior wide receiver Chico McClatcher will miss the rest of the season because of a broken ankle, Huskies coach Chris Petersen said at his Monday press conference.

                        McClatcher is the team's second-leading receiver with 10 catches for 128 yards.

                        He suffered the injury in a 37-10 victory at Colorado on Saturday, when a defender rolled into McClatcher's left leg as he was blocking on a run play.

                        No. 6 Washington (4-0, 1-0 Pac-12) plays at Oregon State on Saturday.

                        "I just feel really bad, like we all do, for Chico," Petersen said. "That's hard for guys who are playing well and work so hard ... but that's part of football.

                        "Nobody feels sorry for us, at all, outside of this building. Everybody else is throwing a party when they see Chico is not going to be out there. So the next guy better step up and that is going to come from multiple guys."

                        McClatcher, a 5-foot-7 slot receiver who never redshirted, has played in three games this season and would fit the criteria for receiving a medical redshirt for 2017, restoring his year of eligibility.

                        He caught 34 passes for 574 yards and five touchdowns last season.

                        ***********************

                        Ozigbo's breakout game puts him back in RB mix for Huskers
                        September 25, 2017


                        LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) Devine Ozigbo's re-emergence at running back has prompted Nebraska to re-think its ground game.

                        The Cornhuskers entered the season planning to have one back get most of the carries, and Tre Bryant had consecutive 100-yard games before injuring his knee and missing the last two games.

                        Ozigbo ran a career-high 24 times for 101 yards as the backup to Mikale Wilbon in the 27-17 win over Rutgers on Saturday. Coach Mike Riley said Monday if Bryant can't play Friday night at Illinois, Wilbon will be the starter again and share equal playing time with Ozigbo and freshman Jaylin Bradley.

                        Ozigbo came out of preseason practice No. 3 on the depth chart behind Bryant and Wilbon even though he was the most experienced back. The junior from Sachse, Texas, didn't appear in the first two games and carried just twice against Northern Illinois.

                        He broke out against Rutgers, gaining 86 of his 101 yards in the second half as the Huskers pounded away at a tiring defense. Afterward, Ozigbo campaigned for the by-committee approach.

                        ''We definitely have the guys in the room who are all worthy of playing, so I feel like to keep them from playing would be a detriment to the team instead of helping it,'' he said.

                        The 6-foot, 230-pound Ozigbo carried on 14 of Nebraska's 17 plays after it took a 24-17 lead in the fourth quarter.

                        ''He has got to be tough to tackle. I'm glad I don't have to,'' quarterback Tanner Lee said. ''He is just so consistent, just a bruising back and it's huge to have that on your team, especially in games where you can kind of milk the clock a little bit and just give the ball to him and pick up first downs and get the tough yards.''

                        Ozigbo, who ran for 412 yards and five touchdowns in 2016 and for 209 yards and a TD as a freshman, appeared to be a top contender to be the starter after the departure of Terrell Newby. It was difficult for Ozigbo to accept not winning the job, and he was confused when he didn't get on the field the first two games.

                        ''I know I wear my emotion on my face,'' he said. ''It didn't really hurt my practice or my play, but you could just tell I wasn't in a good headspace. But, talking to my teammates, talking to my family back home, to my friends back home, it definitely got me right.''

                        Riley said he had told Ozigbo a couple weeks ago that he would get an opportunity and that he needed to be ready for it.

                        ''I was really proud of him for how he approached it because, like I told the team yesterday, he played like he's been practicing,'' Riley said. ''We've seen those situations where a guy gets disappointed and he focuses on the disappointment. If it was my own kid, I would call it pouting. But he never did that. He practiced hard, prepared himself and he played a good football game the other day.''

                        ***************************

                        Lopsided loss to Georgia humbles No. 24 Mississippi State
                        September 25, 2017


                        STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) Mississippi State's last two games have produced dramatically different results.

                        Now the program gets its third opportunity in three weeks to knock off a nationally ranked team to prove whether it's among the Southeastern Conference's best.

                        The Bulldogs looked nearly unstoppable in a dominant 37-7 win over LSU less than two weeks ago , spawning chatter among fans and analysts that they might be the second-best team in the SEC. But the success was short lived - they couldn't do anything right in a sobering 31-3 loss to Georgia last weekend .

                        No. 24 Mississippi State (3-1, 1-1 SEC) is preparing for another difficult challenge when it travels to face No. 13 Auburn (3-1, 1-0) on Saturday. The Tigers are coming off an impressive 51-14 win over Missouri last weekend.

                        For Mississippi State, the LSU and Georgia games are proof that a wide variety of outcomes are possible.

                        ''If we play really, really well, we've got a great chance to win,'' Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said. ''If we play poorly, we've got a great chance to lose. That's kind of the message to the guys - it's not a panic.''

                        Mississippi State's offense sputtered against Georgia, especially in the passing game. Nick Fitzgerald completed just 14 of 29 passes for 83 yards and two interceptions.

                        The Bulldogs aren't a team that needs big passing numbers to win games, but the complete lack of a vertical passing game made the offense one-dimensional and ineffective.

                        In the LSU win, Fitzgerald completed 15 of 23 passes for 180 yards, including two touchdown passes that went for 45 and 20 yards. That was enough passing production to open up space for a running game that earned 285 yards.

                        Fitzgerald said the LSU game is a blueprint for future success.

                        ''We didn't have to get huge chunks at a time, we were consistently moving the ball five or 10 yards,'' Fitzgerald said.

                        Mississippi State has a pretty good idea of its on-field formula for success. Now the Bulldogs are trying to deal with the mental whiplash from the past two weeks.

                        Mullen said it's important for his team to establish some equilibrium and understand that things are never as good or bad as they seem after a big win or loss.

                        ''You're somewhere in the middle and you're honestly just trying to improve and get better from week to week,'' Mullen said. ''You're really as good as your last play or going to be as good as your next play.''

                        Fitzgerald said the team didn't have a great week of practice before the Georgia game and needs to get back to its demeanor before the LSU game, when the team was hungry and feeling disrespected after being picked to finish near the bottom of the league.

                        ''Maybe we thought we were a little bit better than we were,'' Fitzgerald said. ''Maybe we got lackadaisical at times. I felt we weren't really mentally locked in at practice. That's going to change.''
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • No. 16 Okla. St. not panicking, getting ready for next game
                          September 25, 2017


                          STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) Following a disappointing loss that dealt a serious blow to its Big 12 Championship dreams, not to mention the possibility of landing in the College Football Playoff, No. 15 Oklahoma State is not going to panic or make sweeping changes.

                          Oklahoma State (3-1, 0-1 Big 12) plummeted from No. 6 in the rankings after falling 44-31 at home last Saturday to TCU, which moved up to No. 9. The Cowboys are trying to keep their emotions in check as they prepare for their next game, this Saturday at Texas Tech (3-0, 0-0).

                          ''The outside world takes wins and losses different than we do,'' OSU coach Mike Gundy said Monday. ''We try to stay level-headed, even with the wins. People outside of the program celebrate the wins and go crazy, but we know, in our world, we have a body of work that we have to get accomplished every week. I hope that our guys understand that from the history of this program, and I think they do.''

                          Gundy said he will be looking to ensure his players are engaged and determined in practice throughout the week as they prepare for Texas Tech, which is coming off a 27-24 road win over Houston.

                          ''(I look at) their intensity and focus in practice, which last week was excellent,'' Gundy said. ''So I don't know if I'm looking for the right tools. But last week, their focus in practice was awesome. That's the thing that we can hang our hat on. The only thing we can ever ask is preparation and focus, avoid distractions. Before the Pitt game (a 59-21 victory on the road Sept. 16), we had a ton of distractions. Before last week, we didn't have any distractions.''

                          Gundy also addressed some of the issues that contributed to the defeat, such as four turnovers (two in the fourth quarter), allowing TCU to convert 10 of 14 third downs through the first three quarters and losing the time of possession battle, 39:04 to 20:56.

                          He was also disappointed that the Cowboys gained just 101 yards rushing, especially when TCU's defense was deliberately keeping its safeties deep to protect against the pass. He did note that ''we were just a step away five or six times from a 5-yard run being a 15- or 20-yard run.''

                          Oklahoma State's third-down defense is ranked 112th in the nation out of 130 teams after four games.

                          ''It was something different each play, and we have to continue to work at it,'' Gundy said. ''Those are key downs that you've got to get off the field, because time of possession here doesn't mean much in our (high-tempo) offense, but the first three-and-out we had on defense was in the fourth quarter. We let them extend on third-and-medium and third-and-longs, which are generally 33 percent or less - we let them extend multiple times. And we didn't run the ball as effectively this time, so when you tie all that up, we were crushed in the time of possession.''

                          Ultimately, Gundy said his team will make a few adjustments, but no wholesale, dramatic changes.

                          ''You lose a game that you feel like you could have won if you'd played better, but certainly, we didn't give them the game,'' Gundy said. ''We made mistakes, but they played well enough to win. So you don't sell the farm and change what you're doing, like a lot of people would like. You make minor corrections that are actually feasible to manage within a two- or three-day period to get ready to play again. And we played some young players. We try to coach them up and try to get them ready to go play again. That's really what you do. You don't have any other options in that scenario.

                          ''Some of it was self-inflicted. TCU was a big factor in some of it, and sometimes we couldn't get the dang ball to bounce where we wanted it to.''

                          ******************************

                          Brohm hoping Boilermakers learn lesson after Michigan loss
                          September 25, 2017


                          INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Jeff Brohm expects the Purdue Boilermakers to be confident, play well and win.

                          The first-year coach also needs his players to understand it's not a good idea to speak that way in public. If they didn't understand that lesson before losing Saturday's Big Ten opener to No. 8 Michigan, he's making it perfectly clear now.

                          ''We were a little too confident after a good SEC win on the road,'' Brohm said after the 28-10 loss. ''We have to earn our stripes. The Big Ten schedule is not going to get any easier.''

                          Brohm was alluding to last week's bold prediction by receiver Gregory Phillips, who told ESPN.com that people would be surprised when Purdue pulled the upset. Had Phillips stopped there, perhaps Brohm could have chalked it up to an overly exuberant guy in a re-energized program who is eager to prove to the rest of the world that the Boilermakers, finally, are back.

                          Instead, Phillips continued.

                          ''I wish we played Ohio State too, because nobody can stop us right now except ourselves,'' he said. ''If we don't beat Purdue and turn the ball over, we win every game.''

                          The Buckeyes are not on Purdue's schedule this season and Phillips' comments came three days after Brohm told reporters he wasn't sure how the Boilermakers (2-2, 0-1) could score a point against Michigan's stingy defense.

                          In fact, the Boilermakers were shut out in a dismal second half when they produced just 10 yards in offense.

                          With a bye week up next, Brohm has some pressing matters to deal with. First, he must sort out the quarterback situation before facing Minnesota on Oct. 7.

                          Elijah Sindelar and David Blough have played a roughly equal amount of snaps through the first third of the season, but Blough left Saturday's game after re-injuring his throwing shoulder. It's unclear how much time - if any - he'll miss.

                          The Boilermakers also will be without two key defensive starters, safety Jacob Thieneman and linebacker Ja'Whaun Bentley, for the first half of next week's game after both were ejected on targeting calls last weekend.

                          So from that standpoint, the timing of the bye couldn't be better.

                          But it's a good bet Brohm will use the extra time to reinforce his principles on speaking out.

                          ''We need to keep our mouths shut and just play football,'' Brohm said. ''I want us to be confident and I want that. I think we need to tone it down a little bit.''
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                          Comment


                          • Florida State looking to get back on track after 0-2 start
                            September 25, 2017


                            TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) The road doesn't get any easier for Florida State after its worst start in 28 years.

                            The 0-2 Seminoles' next four games are against teams with a combined record of 13-1. That stretch starts on Saturday on the road against Wake Forest (4-0). Coach Jimbo Fisher is hoping that history can repeat itself: The last time the Seminoles got off to an 0-2 start, they didn't lose again and finished 10-2 in 1989.

                            Fisher, whose team is unranked for the first time since 2011, said during his Monday news conference that he still likes the makeup of his team. His players, though, were more direct in assessing the upcoming task at hand.

                            ''We need to make a statement in order to show everyone that we're not just some scrub team,'' guard Cole Minshew said.

                            The Seminoles' recent struggles have garnered more attention after last Saturday's 27-21 loss to North Carolina State. Since winning 33 of 34 games from 2013 to 2015, Florida State is 14-8 in its last 22 - with two of those wins against Football Championship Subdivision schools - and 7-6 in Atlantic Coast Conference games.

                            ''I don't think it's anything that Jimbo has done differently,'' Minshew said. ''It's us as players, maybe we're not executing as those other guys were or we don't take to coaching as well or something. I don't know.''

                            If the Seminoles are going to bounce back, they need to quickly make adjustments on both sides of the ball. The offense has scored only two touchdowns and has struggled in the red zone.

                            Fisher was happy with freshman quarterback James Blackman's first start (22 of 39 for 279 yards and a TD).

                            ''He did some things I was really, really happy with,'' Fisher said. ''He did a lot of little detail things, was accurate, and gave us a chance to be successful in the game.''

                            The passing game could face a new challenge with wide receiver Auden Tate questionable this week. Tate injured his shoulder in the second half of last Saturday's game. The running game has also not been able to get in sync as the Seminoles have played mostly from behind.

                            Defensively, the Seminoles haven't been able to generate much of a pass rush, with only three sacks in two games. They also couldn't get off the field against N.C. State as the Wolfpack was 5 of 12 on third-down conversions.

                            ''I think we've got to get started faster on defense a little bit better,'' Fisher said. ''Hopefully, we can shut guys down and not get behind in that area (third downs).''

                            FSU has been challenged the past two times against the Demon Deacons. Two years ago, it needed a late interception to hold on for a 24-16 victory. Last season, the Seminoles won 17-6 in a game in which both defenses played well.

                            FSU's next three games after Wake are against No. 14 Miami (2-0) on Oct. 7, at Duke (4-0) on Oct. 14 and hosting No. 17 Louisville (3-1) on Oct. 21.

                            ''It's seemed like the last couple years we've started off slow, and we just hit our groove by midseason and played lights out,'' Minshew said. ''I think everyone needs to figure out that one thing that separates us from other teams toward the end of the season.''

                            **************************

                            No. 10 Wisconsin rested after bye, focused on Northwestern
                            September 25, 2017


                            MADISON, Wis. (AP) No. 10 Wisconsin is back from a bye week, rested after a nonconference schedule that provided few tests, especially on defense.

                            That should change with the Big Ten opener this weekend against Northwestern.

                            ''We got a lot out of the bye, what we wanted to get out of the bye week. The kids are excited to get going this week,'' coach Paul Chryst said on Monday.

                            Wisconsin (3-0) outscored its opponents 130-30 through its first three games. The average margin of victory of 33.3 points is the best by a Power Five team so far this season, ahead of Washington (32.8), Penn State (32.3) and Alabama (31.3).

                            Wisconsin also ranks in a tie for fourth nationally in scoring defense, allowing 10.0 points per game and has yet to allow a point in the second half of a game this season.

                            ''We do a good job of cleaning things up at halftime and everyone settling down, and we move forward from there,'' linebacker T.J. Edwards said.

                            The Badgers have also limited big plays, having allowed just seven plays of 20-plus yards, which is tied for the fifth-fewest in the FBS.

                            Safety D'Cota Dixon said those statistics won't matter much heading into Big Ten play.

                            ''We haven't played our best game yet and we know it,'' he said. ''We'll see if we can execute going into the Big Ten. It will be a good test for us.''

                            That begins with Northwestern, which has proven to be a formidable foe for the Badgers. The Wildcats have won six of the last 11 games and two of the last three between the teams.

                            ''They're tough and they're physical. They try to match our intensity and physicality. They'll come out and hit you. They're not afraid,'' senior tight end Troy Fumagalli said. ''They always play us tough.''

                            Wisconsin prevailed 21-7 in Evanston last year, but Northwestern escaped with a 13-7 victory in their last appearance at Camp Randall Stadium two years ago.

                            Edwards said the familiarity of conference opponents, though, does make preparation easier compared to non-conference play.

                            ''It's nice to be able to go back and look at the past couple of years' film, especially if a team uses the same type of scheme,'' said Edwards, who has a team-high two interceptions.

                            ''But you have to bring more physicality to practice because it's Big Ten football. Teams are going to be more physical, and we have to match it.''

                            NOTES: DE Chikwe Obasih (left leg), a key member of the defensive line rotation, will miss a third straight game. Starting OG Jon Dietzen (right leg) is also listed as questionable on the injury report.
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • Clemson prepares for next test, V-Tech
                              September 25, 2017


                              CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) The tests just keep coming for No. 2 Clemson. The Tigers will face its third top-15 opponent in four weeks when it heads to 12th-ranked Virginia Tech this weekend.

                              The Tigers (2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) are off to their third straight 4-0 start and are brimming with confidence after defeating Boston College 34-7. Next up are the Hokies (4-0), who open their league season attempting to end a four game losing streak against the Tigers.

                              ''I definitely think our best football is in front of us,'' Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. ''Especially if we'll keep bringing the right mindset and just learning from mistakes.''

                              They made plenty of them the first three quarters against Boston College as Kelly Bryant threw two interceptions and the Eagles kept the Tigers pinned deep in their territory in a game that was tied at seven entering the final period. But Clemson took control in the fourth quarter with four rushing touchdowns .

                              Swinney said there were several things to improve on offense, a task that he expects his players to quickly lock into given the stakes of Saturday night's game.

                              ''It presents a challenge,'' said Adam Choice, a junior tailback who's scored touchdowns in the past two games. ''It seems in my mind, it tests us mentally to see if we can stick together. We pride ourselves in staying calm and cool and not getting frustrated. If we can figure that out and stick to our game plan, I know we'll have a chance.''

                              Clemson's excelled in its early prime-time showdowns, holding then No. 13 Auburn to two field goals in a 14-6 victory on Sept. 9. Clemson followed that up the next week with its 47-21 dismantling of then No. 14 Louisville and reigning Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson.

                              Clemson safety Tanner Muse said the team is accustomed to the spotlight after playing the national title game the past two seasons.

                              ''Being in these big games, it's what we come here for,'' he said. ''You enjoy them. You don't take anything for granted and come with the same mentality as any week's game.''

                              Clemson has had much experience playing and excelling in big moments. It started in earnest under Swinney in 2011 when the Tigers topped defending national champ Auburn, defending ACC Atlantic Division champion Florida State and league champ Virginia Tech in three straight weeks.

                              The Tigers have gone 20-9 against ranked opponents the past seven seasons - and an eye-popping 12-1 in their last 13. The lone loss was the 45-40 defeat to Alabama in the national title game two seasons ago.

                              ''We knew when the schedule came out this was going to be a challenging start,'' Clemson co-offensive coordinator Jeff Scott said. ''I think we're in a good position.''

                              Clemson has somewhat switched its offensive identity behind first-year starter in quarterback Kelly Bryant. Instead of dazzling opponents through the air, the Tigers are grinding them down on the ground. They've gained 297 yards or more in three of their four games so far and have scored 17 of 20 touchdowns on the ground.

                              No matter what Clemson has done on offense, it's rock-solid defense - third nationally in overall and scoring defense - has kept opponents in check. Virginia Tech coach Justin Fuente knows the Hokies will have their hands full attempting to keep Clemson out of its backfield.

                              ''It's not a read and react situation,'' Fuente said. ''It's a pin your ears back and try to create havoc.''

                              Bryant believes Clemson's winning experience against ranked opponents, both this season and over the past few years, serves them well in preparation and attitude.

                              ''We know what we have to do and we're ready to do it,'' he said.
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                              • Opening Line Report - Week 5
                                September 25, 2017


                                A pair of unbeaten Pac-12 teams meet Friday night at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington as USC visits Washington State (10:30 p.m. ET, ESPN). The Trojans opened -5.5 on Sunday at the Wynn Las Vegas, a number that drew immediate action on the home underdog. By Monday, the Wynn was dealing USC -4, and other shops, including the Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook and CG Technology, hung -3.5 as their original numbers.

                                Westgate oddsmaker Ed Salmons understands the early move on the Cougars, a team he was high on coming into the season.

                                “This game seems to be set up for Washington State,” Salmons said. “For USC, it’s back-to-back road games (the Trojans won at Cal on Saturday, 30-20), and it’s a short week, and USC is very banged up on the defensive side of the ball. It’s a game Washington State has to win, and I’d be shocked if they didn’t win.

                                “It’s really a good spot (for Washington State), and they’re a solid team and USC was really fortunate last week and they were really fortunate against Texas (in a 27-24 win two weeks ago).”

                                Jason Simbal, vice president of risk at CG Technology, agrees USC hasn’t been all that impressive, but victories over Western Michigan, Stanford, Texas and Cal make for a solid early-season resume.

                                “Every team that they’ve faced is probably going to a bowl game,” Simbal said.

                                He added that while the wiseguys are on Washington State early, the public will come late with money on the chalk.

                                ”I think we’ll still see the majority of the action on USC in this game, because considering the proximities, they’re kind of the hometown college team here,” Simbal said. ‘We’ll probably need the underdog in this one.”

                                Here’s a quick look at three key Saturday games:

                                Georgia (-7.5) at Tennessee - (CBS, 3:30 p.m. ET)


                                The Wynn opened Georgia -6.5, a price gamblers found to their liking, as the book adjusted to -8 in one flash in a matter of minutes. On Monday, 24 hours after the Wynn posted Vegas’ first college football lines, there was an even mix of 7.5s and 8s being dealt around town.

                                The road team laying more touchdown in this SEC rivalry game feels like a tall order, as five straight games in this series have been decided by one score.

                                Salmons’ personal ratings make Georgia, which is coming off a 31-3 whitewashing of Mississippi State, a touchdown favorite in this spot.

                                “Tennessee struggled to beat a crappy UMass team, but you don’t know if they were looking ahead or whatever,” he said. “I’m not quite understanding Tennessee anymore. Go back to that Georgia Tech game (a 42-41 win in overtime by the Vols in Week 1). Georgia Tech really deserved to win that game. They were winning the whole way and Tennessee wound up coming back at the end. Tennessee was fortunate against Florida to come back (two weeks ago). They were down a bunch of points and came back before they gave up the Hail Mary at the end.”

                                Both Salmons and Simbal believe the public will back Georgia on the road this week.

                                “I imagine Tennessee is going to be one of the bigger decisions for us based on the way Georgia has looked,” Simbal said.

                                “I think 7’s a solid number,” Salmons said, “but I wouldn’t be surprised if the public bet it up.”

                                Mississippi State at Auburn (-9.5) - (ESPN, 6:00 p.m. ET)


                                For the third straight week, Mississippi State is priced as a substantial underdog against a conference opponent. And their Jekyll-and-Hyde act over the past two weeks doesn’t give bettors much help in deciding whether to take those points or lay them. The Bulldogs followed their 37-7 win at LSU two weeks ago with the aforementioned dud in Athens.

                                Early sharp money, though, did back Miss State at the Wynn’s opening line of +10.5, as the spread sits at 9.5 across town Monday night.

                                Miss State was the rare underdog backed by casual bettors on Saturday, according to Simbal, which helped Vegas books to their hugely profitable weekend that we’re sure you’ve heard about by now.

                                “This weekend was such a good one that even the favorites that covered were the favorites we needed, and the biggest example of that was Georgia because everybody was in love with Mississippi State coming off the big LSU game,” Simbal said.

                                As for Auburn, Miss State provides the Tigers’ biggest test since their 14-6 loss to Clemson in Week 2.

                                “It will be interesting to see how Auburn does against the first real team they’ve played since the Clemson loss, when they weren’t able to do anything on offense,” said Simbal. “The one thing you can gather is their defense is legit because Clemson’s been able to go up and down the field against pretty much everybody except them.”

                                Still, Simbal said, “I’m not sold on Auburn, but you know what you get with Mississippi State, which is a steady team, and as long as they don’t have any turnovers, they’re at least going to hang around. I would lean toward the underdog in this one, but thankfully, I don’t have to bet to make money.”

                                Clemson (-7) at Virginia Tech - (ABC, 8:00 p.m. ET)


                                Clemson was bet from -6.5 to as high as -8 at the Wynn, but the line settled back to -7.5 at that joint and to -7 at most others.

                                CG opened -7.5, the high end of the market, but didn’t draw any wiseguy money with that number.

                                “It hasn’t come yet,” Simbal said when we spoke Monday evening, about five hours after his book opened wagering. “You figure with a lot of 7s out there and a few 7.5s, if the sharper players wanted to take 7.5, they’d do it. So it tells us one of two things: Either Virginia Tech is not the side, but more so, they think this number is going to go only one way, so why take it at 7.5 when they can take it later at 8.”

                                Salmons, meanwhile, agreed with the notion that a road game at Virginia Tech may be Clemson’s stiffest test of the season so far and said that if he was on our side of the counter, he’d be leaning toward the dog.

                                “At 7, I’d bet Virginia Tech. I’d definitely take 7,” Salmons said. “I was thinking this game would be anywhere between 3.5 and 6.5. …

                                “Virginia Tech has a young quarterback, but so does Clemson. Everything went right for Clemson against Louisville. I give Virginia Tech a good chance in this game. I think they’ll keep it close and have a shot to win.”

                                Who the sharps are on early

                                According to Simbal, early sharp money at CG came in on:

                                Navy -5 vs. Tulsa, moving the line to -6…

                                East Carolina +24 vs. South Florida, with a move to 23.5…

                                Akron -3 vs. Bowling Green, prompting an adjustment to -3 (-120)…

                                Kentucky -13.5 and -14 vs. East Michigan, the line moving north to -14.5...
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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