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A Sneak Peek At CFB 2018 News/Views/Highlights !

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  • #76
    MWC Mountain Preview
    July 27, 2018


    West Preview

    MOUNTAIN WEST - MOUNTAIN PREVIEW


    (SU - Straight Up, ATS - Against the Spread, O/U - Over/Under)

    Back where it should be on top of the Mountain West in 2017, Boise State (2017 SU 11-3; ATS 8-5-1, O/U 6-8) is once again aiming higher this fall, with legit designs on a return to the New Year’s Six bowl mix as the rep of the “Group of Six” conferences. It wouldn’t be the first time for the Broncos, who turned a similar trick in 2014 in what was the first season for HC Bryan Harsin, topping Arizona 38-30 in a wild Fiesta Bowl. After subsequently kicking away the Mountain half of the MW in the next two seasons to Air Force and Wyoming, respectively, the Broncos used a 7-game midseason win streak to sew up a return to the conference title game, which Boise used to avenge a regular-season defeat at Fresno State. Real excitement for 2018, however, was generated in a 38-28 cruise past Oregon in the Las Vegas Bowl that wasn’t as close as the final scoreline suggests.

    Along the way, Harsin has become as well-established on the blue carpet as predecessors Dirk Koetter, Dan Hawkins, and Chris Petersen, though they are rightly concerned in the state capital that Harsin could be lured away like the others. Harsin has been in the mix for a couple of Pac-12 jobs in recent years and figures to stay on the radar of Power 5 openings, but for the time being seems content in Boise, which has made several concessions to keep Harsin in the fold, including enhanced compensation for assistants and continuing improvement to what is now called Albertson’s Stadium, which unveiled plans for expansion while campaigning for inclusion in the Big 12 a few years ago.

    By Bronco standards, last year’s 32.5 ppg was a bit pedestrian (indeed, it was Boise’s lowest scoring output since 2012), but the pieces are in place for an even more-explosive mix this fall. Vet QB Brett Rypien is now a senior and the active FBS leader in career passing yards (9876). After sharing snaps with Kansas transfer Montell Cozart early in the season, Rypien was in charge down the stretch and for the long win streak, tossing just one pick in the last right reg.-season games. The latest recruiting class is full of receivers who could make an impact (watch true frosh Khalil Shakir, who was courted by much of the Pac-12), and several returnees are expected to step into the breach, especially soph Octavius Evans, the star of spring work. Boise has now featured a 1000-yard rusher for nine straight seasons, and jr. Alexander Mattison looks to make it ten in a row after motoring for 1086 YR a year ago. Five linemen who made at least one start last fall populate the OL.

    It’s on defense, however, where the Broncos have been constantly underrated for the last decade, and where they made their real mark a year ago, finishing a very respectable 21st overall in national rankings. Best of all, nine starters are back, though one of the vacancies is that of impact LB Leighton Vander Esch, a first-round pick of the Dallas Cowboys in late April. All three starters are back on a DL with a combined 56 starts among them, and one that helped fuel a 17th-ranked rush defense. The secondary is extremely deep, paced by jrs. DeAndre Pierce and Kekoa Nawahine, who combined for 191 tackles last season. The platoon and its many ball-hawks helped fuel an impressive +13 TO margin that ranked 9th nationally.

    Now, for that New Year’s Six candidacy; to be taken seriously, Boise is going to probably have to win September dates at Troy and Oklahoma State. The Mountain half of the MW is tricky, and West heavyweights Fresno and San Diego State are both on the schedule, though each will have to play on the blue carpet. A look at the slate in summer, however, suggests that the only game where Boise might project as an underdog is at Stillwater. The opportunity for a memorable campaign is present.

    Spread-wise, a puzzling and enduring trend has been Boise’s overvalue as home chalk; laying points on the blue carpet, the Broncos are now 13-31-1 since the 2010 season. (Last year it was only 2-4-1.) Harsin, however, was 6-1 vs. the line away last year, and broke a recent slump against bogey team Air Force, which had upset the Broncos three straight years and covered five in a row in the series before Boise won 44-19 in mid-November.

    Talk about some interesting forks-in-the-road. After the 2014 season, Oregon State, looking to fill its coaching job that became vacant when Mike Riley bolted to Nebraska, made a call to Wisconsin HC Gary Andersen to inquire about Utah State (2017 SU 6-7; ATS 6-7; O/U 8-4-1) HC Matt Wells, a former Andersen aide in Logan who had taken his first two Utag teams to bowl wins. Beaver inquiries, however, apparently never reached Wells, as Andersen decided that he was interested in the Corvallis opening and soon took the OSU job instead. (Anderson would leave prematurely from the Beavers last season, but we’ll delve into that a bit further when we get to our Pac-12 previews).

    Fast forward to 2018, and Wells is still at Utah State, and still waiting for another call from a Pac-12 entry. Wells’ star has fallen a bit the past few years, as the Ags haven’t finished above .500 the past three campaigns. No one considers him on the hot seat, however, as Wells did steer USU back to a bowl last December (though not memorable, a bitter OT loss to aroused New Mexico State) and has only missed the postseason once in five seasons at Logan.

    Many MW observers are convinced that Wells is sitting on his best USU team since the 2014 version finished 10-4 and whipped UTEP in the New Mexico Bowl. A slew of starters (16 overall, including 9 on offense) are back in the fold. That would include soph QB Jordan Love, who looked electric at times in his six starts as a RS frosh last fall. The big play is part of the arsenal for Love, who passed for 353 more yards despite completing only 5 more passes than the QB for the first half of last season, sr. Kent Myers. All-name sr. wideout Ron’quavion Tarver (48 catches last season) is already established as a dangerous downfield threat and will benefit from a full spring with Love at QB. A new feature RB must be uncovered after LaJuan Hunt’s graduation, but touted juco Darwin Thompson and former WR Gerold Bright (who moved to RB late last season) should ably handle the overland chores as they run behind a vet OL returning all five starters.

    The Utag “D” made upgrades last fall and returns 7 starters, though d.c. Kendrick Shaver has moved to Washington State. Veteran Keith Patterson comes over from Arizona State to share duties with holdover Frank Maile, and will oversee one of the top pass defenses in the MW and one that ranked 19th nationally a year ago. The Utags lost a pair of All-MW DBs, but RS frosh Andre Grayson wowed ‘em in spring and likely steps into a CB spot opposite returnee Camerion Haney. Touted juco DJ Willaims could also get invovled in the CB mix. Former TCU LB Tipa Galeai arrives as a transfer and potential big-play contributor after recording 5.5 tackles for loss as a Horned Frog in 2016.

    As a year ago, the Ags open their schedule on a Friday night in Big Ten territory (last year Wisconsin, this year Michigan State), but we’ll probably get a better idea of where USU stands when it faces New Mexico State in an Arizona Bowl rematch the following week. The MW schedule is tricky, with trips to Mountain contenders Wyoming, Colorado State, and Boise State, but the Utags miss the expected heavyweights from the West half of the loop, Fresno State and San Diego State. Expect another bowl trip, with the hope that Love stays healthy and progresses enough for the Nov. 24 game on the blue carpet at Boise to be the decider for the the top spot in the Mountain half of the loop.

    Spread-wise, Wells was able to stop the bleeding last season when USU entered the campaign having dropped 14 of its previous 17 vs. the number; the Utags were 6-7 vs. the line last term, not great but also not the extended spread slump that began midway in the 2015 campaign. A negative spread trend endured thru 2017, however, as the Utags have now dropped 7 in a row vs. the line against non-conference foes away from Logan.

    While we have all the respect in the world for HC Craig Bohl, we have to wonder how Wyoming (2017 SU 8-5; ATS 8-5; O/U 2-10-1) is going to fare minus QB Josh Allen, a first-round pick of the Buffalo Bills. We know some of the responses; even with Allen in the fold for most of last year, Wyo finished in triple digits nationally in almost every relevant statistical category, including passing (104th). But without Allen late last season, the Cowboys put only 7 points on the board in a home loss to Fresno State before truly embarrassing themselves when losing at woeful San Jose State. Allen returned for a Potato Bowl romp past Central Michigan..but don’t cite the team stats and try to tell us Allen’s presence wasn’t meaningful.

    The fact is that it was quite a feat for Allen to look good and gain the attention of the NFL running a horse-and-buggy offense more designed for Jerry Tagge and 1970 Nebraska by Husker alum Bohl, who earlier in his decorated career at North Dakota State wooed a QB named Carson Wentz (who didn’t start for the Bison during the Bohl reign). Bohl’s credentials as a coach, however, are not based upon explosive offenses, rather a commitment to fundamentals, running the football, defense, and limiting mistakes. In all of those areas, Bohl’s teams usually excel.

    Last season, that was especially true of a defense that forced an eye-opening 38 giveaways en route to a staggering +24 turnover margin, a clear number one in the nation. That the Cowboys didn’t win more than eight games with that sort of advantage in such an all-important category might be an indictment of the Bohl offense, but we digress. The “D” ranked 9th nationally last year in scoring (17.5 ppg) and returns eight starters for coordinator Scottie Hazelton, who knew the MW from an earlier stint at Nevada. Two first-team All-MW performers (DE Carl Granderson and DT Youhanna Ghaifan) are back to anchor the DL, while the safety due of seniors Andrew Wingard and Marcus Epps combined for nine picks in 2017 and might be one of the MW’s, if not the nation’s, best. No worries, then, about the Wyo defense.

    It’s offense where we have some legit post-Allen concerns. Senior QB Nick Smith has a handful of starts in his career, but also the stain of piloting that inexcusable loss at San Jose late last November. He’ll have to fend off RS frosh Tyler Vander Waal, who looks a better long-term option. All of the top receivers return, though it is hoped that top deep threat jr. CJ Johnson (17.7 yards per catch in 2017) has recovered from a knee injury in the bowl win in time for the opener at New Mexico State. More pop is needed from soph RB Trey Woods, the leading returning rusher who barely gained 3.5 ypc a season ago. The entirety of the OL returns in tact, but won’t be blocking for an NFL first-round QB draftee (Allen) as a year ago.

    Last year, Wyo (with Allen) was outscored a combined 73-16 by Power 5 foes Iowa and Oregon, so there is reason to fret about back-to-back September tests vs. Mike Leach’s Washington State (at Laramie) and a trip to Missouri to face QB Drew Lock, a possible first-round NFL draft pick next April. Bohl will be hoping his QB situation has settled somewhat in time for the MW opener at War Memorial Stadium vs. Mountain favorite Boise State on September 29.

    Spread-wise, Bohl has made a bit of a fortress out of Laramie, standing 11-3-1 vs. the line his last 15 as host. And the Cowboys did run off a 7-game spread win streak last fall in games started by Allen until the late-season Fresno loss. “Totals”-wise, note that Wyo also enters 2018 on a 12-2-1 “under” run.

    We’ve seen Air Force (2017 SU 5-7; ATS 5-7; O/U 8-4) look as if it was about to drop off of the map before. Most recently, after the 2013 season, in which an injury-ravaged Falcon team dipped to a woeful 2-10. But underestimate the Force, and HC Troy Calhoun, at your own risk; Calhoun rallied the subsequent 2014 team to a surprising ten wins. Which reminded a bit of his initial Falcon team back in 2007 that finished a surprising 9-4 on the heels of a 4-8 mark in Fisher DeBerry’s final season. Indeed, last year’s 5-7 was only the second sub-.500 mark in Calhoun’s 11 years as HC at the foot of Pike’s Peak. And the program has not endured back-to-back losing campaigns since the end of the DeBerry era.

    For those reasons, this looks like a potential “Calhoun special” in 2018 at Falcon Stadium. Expectations are tempered. Army and Navy have better cases to make for the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy. And Air Force is truly flying under the radar.

    Just as Calhoun likes it.

    Granted, there are various issues, especially on an offense that returns only four starters and will have a mostly-new OL (though such turnover along the forward wall is not uncommon for a Service Academy team). Tim McVey, one of the most-versatile tailbacks in recent Air Force memory, is one of those who graduated. More consistency is needed from now-sr. QB Arion Worthman, one of the most physically-gifted Force QBs of the option era that began way back in the Kenny Hatfield regime of the early ‘80s. Worthman at times appeared a one-man team last season, though Calhoun option-based offenses rarely function at their bext when the QB does too much; Worthman called his own number too often a year ago, as his whopping 22 carries pg were a Falcon high for QBs in the Calhoun era (no other Calhoun QB avergaed more than 14 carries). Though the pass is still an occasional diversion for the Force, Worthman was too erratic in his limited aerial sorties, too, completing barely 49%. Now-jr. Isaiah Sanders ran the offense as efficiently late in the season after a Worthman injury and threatens to take snaps if Worthman sags. Still, another top-ten rushing attack (ranked 4th a year ago) should hum as usual even with rebuilding up front and new featured backs needing to be identified. But jr. Joseph Saucier looked a dangerous lead back in spring, and sr. WR Reggie Cleveland has flashed big-play potential. We’re trusting Calhoun here to field another quirky attack that will keep foes off balance.

    The offense, however, isn’t a much of a concern as the defense that proceeds without longtime coordinator Steve Russ, adept at squeezing the most out of his troops but promoted to the NFL ranks on Ron Rivera’s Carolina Panthers staff. Even Russ, however, couldn’t plug the leaks up front a year ago as the Falcs allowed a ghastly 6 ypc, the nation’s worst mark. It is hoped that soph DE Jordan Jackson, who looked dominant in spring, can become the sort of playmaker to lead the platoon. Junior NT Mosese Fifita is the rare Air Fiorce 300-pounder. The Falcs did finish 10th nationally vs. the pass a year ago, but that might have been more a byproduct of foes choosing instead to run at will vs. the soft AFA defensive front. Senior Kyle Flood is an important cog from the hybrid “stud” position, but the best Falcon defenses in recent memory has excelled at forcing turnovers; last year’s stop unit didn’t, contributing to a -10 TO margin, ranking a poor 120th.

    With Army now on the ascent, and Navy still feisty, the schedule has one more speed bump than in most recent years. An early-season trip to Lane Kiffin’s Florida Atlantic might prove a better indicator if the Falcs are up for a rebound year and an eventual return to a bowl, which would be Calhoun’s 10th in 12 seasons. We wouldn't bet against it.

    Spread-wise, 2017 was also subpar (just 5-7), but Calhoun continued to be worth a look in the underdog role, covering 3 of 5, improving his mark getting points to 13-6 since 2014. The Force didn’t continue its recent mastery of Boise State a year ago, but had covered five in a row vs. the Broncos into 2017. There is no explanation, however, for the mastery Bob Davie’s New Mexico (won last five SU, covered last six) has held over Calhoun’s Falcs.

    There was a time last season when Colorado State (2017 SU 7-6; ATS 4-9; O/U 7-6) was wondering how long it might be able to hang onto HC Mike Bobo, who was in the process of leading the Rams to their best season on his 3-year watch. There were heady times in Fort Collins in mid-October, with the excitement of a new on-campus stadium and a 6-2 record, with the only losses against Power 5 Colorado and Alabama (the latter a more-than-respectable 41-23 loss in Tuscaloosa). Late in the season, however, the Rams had the look of fading horse in the stretch drive at Santa Anita, dropping four of their last five, including a couple of numbing home losses to Air Force and Boise State (the latter in OT after blowing a big lead). CSU backers at Nevada sports books also took the brunt as the Rams dropped their last 7 vs. the number, including numerous breakdowns in a New Mexico Bowl loss vs. Marshall.

    Those CSU fans looking for a silver lining, however, might note that Bobo, a former Georgia QB and alum and as southern as a Waffle House, was no longer on the in-demand list, especially in his native SEC, which had six coaching openings after last season. And while Bobo stays in Fort Collins, there are questions if last season’s late fade was just a temporary blip on the radar or an indicator of more problems to come.

    There is much replenishment to do on an offense that lost one of the program’s all-time QBs, Nick Stevens, who left as CSU’s career TD pass leader (70). Moreover, star WR Michael Gallup moved to the NFL as a draftee of the Dallas Cowboys. Overall, only four starters return, and the QB job now appears in the hands of Washington grad transfer K.J. Carta-Samuels after soph Collin Hill, who redshirted a year ago after making a brief appearance as a starter in 2016, suffered his second ACL tear in 17 months just before spring practice. Another transfer, ex-Tennessee WR Preston Williams, will be counted upon to pick up some of the slack left by Gallup’s departure. There is some experience at the RB spots, and sr. Izzy Matthews is a punishing 220-pounder who has racked up almost 2000 career rush yards. The transfer theme also includes sr. LT TJ Roundtree, over from Louisville. But much pressure rests upon Carta-Samuels, whose mobility will be worked into the new schemes, but whose durability will be crucial as there is no experience behind him as long as Hill remains sidelined, perhaps until midseason, if he is available at all.

    More adjustments are due for a defense that faded as last year progressed and has enlisted a new coordinator, John Jancek, after the retirement of Marty English (who, interestingly, must have gotten tired of fishing and golf as he un-retired a few months later, resurfacing at Northern Colorado). Jancek, formerly at Tennessee, will alter the alignments from the 3-4 preferred by English to a standard 4-3. He inherits some playmakers, including sr. MLB Josh Watson, one of the MW’s best, and an all-upperclass 2ndary anchored by FS Jordan Fogal, a former Utah transfer. Rice grad transfer V.J. Banks is likely to step in at a CB spot.

    Bobo’s potential problems do not end with the many personnel changes that come with losing 13 starters. The schedule is by far the MW’s toughest, with a pair of SEC foes (Arkansas, making a rare trek to the Mountain Ttime Zone, and Florida) in back-to-back September weeks, right after facing Pac-12 Colorado in the annual in-state grudge match at Denver. That battle vs. the nearby Buffs comes on August 31, just six days after an early home opener vs. Hawaii, making CSU the only team we recall with two games in August!

    Spread-wise, we mention again the seven straight spread losses Bobo endured down the stretch last season. All a sharp departure from 2016 when the Rams sported a sparkling 9-3-1 spread mark. The shiny new CSU Stadium also did not prove the pointspread fortress as did old Hughes Stadium in the foothills; after recording a 20-9-1 mark vs. line the last five seasons at Hughes, CSU was just 2-5 vs. the number at home a season ago.

    After the program appeared to finally get back on course a few years ago, there looks to be a dust storm forming at New Mexico (2017 SU 3-9; ATS 4-8; O/U 3-9) in the wake of last fall’s about-face. It’s more ominous, however, than the fact the Lobos didn’t win after Columbus Day; the architect of an apparent revival in Albuquerque, HC Bob Davie, found himself ensnared in controversy late last season and would end up suspended from his job for 30 days in January due to reported administrative interference in reports of abusive behavior by UNM football players. Coaches have been known to recover from such self-inflicted wounds, but it becomes a much more complicated when the team is losing. As the Lobos did often last season.

    All of which has some Mountain West observers justifiably puzzled, as Davie looked to have done a remarkable reclamation job at University Stadium after inheriting a carcass of a program from the disastrous regime of predecessor Mike Locksley (who was dismissed before the 2011 campaign hit the halfway mark). UNM was just 3-33 from 2009-11. Enter Davie, who had such an itch to coach again that he left a cushy job as an ESPN analyst to tackle what looked like a dead-end assignment. After acknowledging acute defensive shortcomings, Davie installed the Pistol offense in hopes of developing a ball-control infantry that could keep the suspect “D” off of the field. It worked enough to get the Lobos competitive from the outset and into the hometown New Mexico Bowl for the 2015 & ‘16 seasons, and prompted many to believe that it would be the perfect time for Davie to exit, stage left, his and the program’s reputations sufficiently healed. Not the worst final chapter for a long career. But Davie stuck around, and then came 3-9, as things went a bit more than pear-shaped a year ago.

    Prospects appear a bit troubling for this coming fall as well. The Pistol look on attack that produced some the nation’s best rush numbers as recently as 2016 has been replaced by a spread option now coordinated by Calvin Magee, formerly on the Rich Rodriguez staff at Arizona and successor to Bob DeBesse, who moved to Georgia Southern in a similar role. Soph QB Tevaka Tuioto, who got a good look last season filling in for the oft-injured Lamar Jordan, will get the first look in the pilot’s chair, though juco Sheriron Jones, a former Tennessee recruit, could emerge as another option. Passing stats, which have been in the Army/Navy range in recent seasons and ranking 123rd nationally a year ago, figure to improve, with previously overlooked receiving targets like soph Jay Griffin V (29 catches LY) now likely to be featured. Junior Elijah Lilly, a returner threat with two career KR TDs, and a former DB, has been moved to offense and could emerge as a deep threat wideout. Senior RB Tyrone Owens (770 YR LY) is not likely to be featured as prominently in the new-look offense, and will be running behind a line with four new starters. Another touted juco, RB Ahmari Davis, should steal some carries from Owens.

    Davie’s defenses have improved from the roadkill versions of his first years on the job, with longtime d.c. Kevin Cosgrove proving adept at mixing and matching different looks and coverages out of his 3-3-5 alignments to compensate for a general lack of playmakers and depth. But the pass “D” suffered a year ago, partly because of a lack of consistent pressure on opposing QBs. Six starters return, including both CBs (srs. D’Angelo Ross & Jalin Burrell), but as usual, the Lobos will be only hoping to contain, not stonewall, most of their opponents.

    Various regional observers believe Davie needs a good start to keep the vultures from circling before midseason, and a manageable non-league slate (save for a Sept. 8 trip to Wisconsin) could help. Already, many Lobo fans believe the MW opener at UNLV on October 6 might be the most-important game of the Davie era; a loss at Sam Boyd Stadium could start another 2017-like tailspin, one that Davie and staff might not survive. Stay tuned.

    Spread-wise, Davie has been formful in a few roles, especially as chalk, was has been a no-go zone lately for the Lobos (they’re 2-11 their last 13 laying points, including 0-5 a year ago). Curiously, the one MW foe that Davie has owned has been Air Force, covering all six since 2012 vs. the Falcons. Davie, however, is 0-6 SU and 1-5 vs. the line against Colorado State.
    Last edited by StarDust Bum; 07-27-2018, 11:59 AM.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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    • #77
      MWC West Preview
      July 27, 2018


      Mountain Preview

      MOUNTAIN WEST - WEST PREVIEW


      (SU - Straight Up, ATS - Against the Spread, O/U - Over/Under)

      In English soccer, think Roy Hodgson, Sam Allardyce, or Tony Pulis, managers whose specialty seems to be pulling teams out of trouble and avoiding the dreaded drop. Their equivalent in college football could be Jeff Tedford, who took over at Fresno State (2017 SU 10-4; ATS 10-2-2; O/U 4-10) just as the Bulldogs looked ready for relegation to the Big Sky when they collapsed to 1-11 in the preceding final season for the regime of Tim DeRuyter, who was humanely relieved before the 2016 campaign concluded. In the process last fall FSU won the West half of the Mountain West, beat Houston in the Hawaii Bowl, and became just the second FBS team to go from double-digit losses to double-digit wins.

      Such turnarounds are nothing new for Tedford, who inherited a 1-win mess from Tom Holmoe at Cal in 2002 and had the Golden Bears in the national top ten within two years. And best of all for the Bulldogs, alum Tedford (a QB for Jim Sweeney’s teams in the early ‘80s) is probably not looking to make another move at this stage of his career.

      Tedford, whose past QB pupils have included Trent Dilfer, Joey Harrington, and Aaron Rodgers, worked some of his magic again a year ago with Oregon State transfer Marcus McMaryion, who solidified what looked to be a precarious position for last season’s Dogs, taking over the starting job for the MW opener vs. Nevada. Though McMaryion experienced a few dips, he ended up passing for 2726 yards and returns most of his key weapons, including sr. WR KeeSean Johnson (77 catches LY) and the three-headed rushing trio of Jordan Mims, Josh Hokit, and Ronnie Rivers (recovering from injury). Tedford and o.c. Kevin DeBoer have juggled some positions on the OL, but three starters return up front, and there is every indication the “O” improves upon its 27 ppg from a year ago.

      Whether the strike force improves as much as last year’s “D” is asking a lot after FSU made a remarkable turnaround on the stop end, shaving almost two TDs off of its ppg allowance (30.9 to 17.9 ppg!) while ascending to national rankings of 11th in total “D” and 10th in scoring. Not too shabby. Much of the credit was due d.c. Orlondo Steinauer, brought down from the CFL by Tedford (who knew him well from his own recent work with the B.C. Lions). Steinhauer has returned to the CFL and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats this season but successor Bert Watts, promoted from LB coach, is well-versed in the Steinauer schemes (featuring multiple fronts and disguised coverages) for the Bulldog 4-3. Watts will be rebuilding along the line where only DT Kevin Atkins returns with starting experience, but the entire back 7 returns in tact, and a vet secondary, led by jr. safeties Juju Hughes and Mike Bell, might be the MW’s best.

      The Fresno schedule is tough, as usual, but it is a little more reasonable this season, swapping out road trips to Washington and Alabama for more palatable treks to Minnesota and UCLA. A trip to Boise on Nov. 10 might preview a rematch (for the second straight year) in the MW title game if the Bulldogs can get past San Diego State, which visits the Central Valley the following week in a likely West showdown.

      Spread-wise, Tedford, who also worked great magic vs. the number in his early years at Cal, was up to his old tricks a year ago, forging a splendid 10-2-2 mark vs. the line. The ‘Dawgs were also unbeaten in eight tries (6-0-2) away from home vs. the points in 2017.

      There’s some stuff going on at San Diego State (2017 SU 10-3; ATS 8-5; O/U 5-7-1) beyond the Aztecs’ eight straight bowl visits, the last seven of those since HC Rocky Long took charge in 2011.More specifically, where does SDSU play its home games after this season? Since the move of the NFL Chargers, the days of SDCCU (nee Qualcomm/Jack Murphy) Stadium are numbered, though it will take a ballot issue in the fall to decide what will actually become of the valuable property in Mission Valley. Among the various possibilities are an expanded campus for SDSU and an eventual new stadium, but about the only certainty is that the current SDCCU/Qualcomm is in its last days. Though the Aztecs might not have to find another venue until 2020 (when, temporarily, the Padres’ Petco Park is likely to be their home), they’re not sure of anything on Montezuma Mesa beyond this season. Stay tuned for further developments.

      While that background noise might seem distracting, we can’t imagine it much bothering Long, who seems immune to such intrusions after propping up SDSU to the sort of sustained success it hasn’t experienced since the long-ago Don Coryell era. At 32-9 over the past three seasons, the Aztecs can make a claim as the boss of the Mountain West, though they relinquished the Western half of the conference to resurgent Fresno State a year ago.

      Another Long special likely awaits this fall, with the same defense-first recipe that has wreaked havoc in the conference in recent years. Long’s pet 3-3-5 returns seven starters from a platoon that ranked an impressive 11th nationally in total defense. As usual, impact performers populate all levels, with soph S Tariq Thompson looking like the next star of the “D” after five picks in his debut season earned him numerous Frosh A-A accolades. Led by Thompson and upperclassmen CB Ron Smith, rover Parker Baldwin (effectively playing the same role Brian Urlacher once did for Long at New Mexico), sr. LB Rodney Lakalaka (off of shoulder surgery) and sr. NT Noble Hall, playmakers abound. Though d.c. Danny Gonzales left for Herm Edwards’ new staff at Arizona State, promoted former LB coach Zach Arnett knows the ropes. And, besides, this is Long’s defense, so not much figures to change.

      The question for the Rocky Aztecs has always revolved around the offense, which bears no resemblance to the Coryell years as it has recently preferred the overland route. After Donnel Pumphrey finished his career as the NCAA’s all-time rushing leader, and Rashaad Penny led the nation with 2248 YR in 2017, the baton passes to jr. Juwan Washington (at 5'7 more physically reminiscent of Pumphrey), who gained nearly 800 YR and 6 ypc while spelling Penny a year ago. Another big OL (average weight 310) should make the power-run game work and take some pressure off of sr. QB Christian Chapman, who has been efficient (35 TDP and just 11 picks) if not explosive in his career as a starter, passing for fewer than 2000 yards each of the last two seasons.

      Like last year, Pac-12 Stanford and Arizona State are featured in the non-MW portion of the schedule; the Aztecs beat them both a year ago, and a repeat sets up a chance at another big season. The West half of the loop is likely decided by a visit to Fresno on November 17 before a ninth straight bowl visit.

      Spread-wise, SDSU is 24-13 the past three seasons, including 20-8 vs. MW foes. Where the Aztecs have underachieved is in non-league play, covering just 4 of their last 14 in reg-season non-MW action, even including the Stanford and ASU wins last September.

      Now that Nevada (2017 SU 3-9; ATS 6-6; O/U 5-7) is back to being a basketball school again, one might think there is a bit less pressure on football coach Jay Norvell. Hardly, as the shadow of Chris Ault still looms large in Reno, and AD Doug Knuth pulled the plug not long ago on Norvell predecessor Brian Polian despite two bowl trips in his last three seasons. Norvell looked on his way to a short tenure last fall, too, with five straight losses out of the chute that included a home setback to 34 ½-point dog Idaho State. There was a break in the cloud layer late in 2017, however, as the Pack began to play better and ended up winning 2 of its last 3, including a satisfying 23-16 Fremont Cannon success vs. blood rival UNLV in the season-ender that kept the Rebs from bowl eligibility.

      Along the way, Norvell made some curious moves, with an early hook straight from the Sparky Anderson book of managing, pulling jr. QB Ty Gangi, who had emerged late in 2016 and fared decently in the opener at Northwestern, for mysterious reasons in favor of true frosh Kaymen Cureton, at the helm for the Idaho State loss. Within a few games, however, Norvell had come to his senses and re-inserted Gangi, who by the end of the season would throw 25 TDP. Not coincidentally, the “O” began to pick up steam at midseason and topped 40 points on three occasions from mid-October, dropping a 59-point bomb on San Jose State in the process.

      On attack, seven starters are back; beyond now-sr. Gangi, soph WR McLane Mannix (57 catches LY and making onto some Frosh A-A teams) and blasting 220-lb. RB Kelton Moore (855 YR) return. There are still elements of the old Ault Pistol, though now mixed with more spread concepts of o.c. Matt Mumme, whose dad Hal was one of the pioneers of air-raid football. Still, the infantry, always a key to the best of the old Nevada offenses, could prove key to any upgrade with Moore joined by touted frosh Toa Tuaua, a four-star recruit.

      Defense, however, has been bad for the Wolf Pack seemingly since Jack Johnson fought Jim Jeffries for the heavywieght title within Reno city limits back in 1910, and last year ranked in triple digits almost across the board in all relevant stats. As was the case with the offense, however, there was improvement on the stop end down the stretch a year ago for d.c. Jeff Casteel, who has added some bigger juco bodies up front in hopes of bolstering his 3-3-5 “stack” alignments. Those newcomers have allowed Casteel to move two-time All-MW DE Malik Reed to an OLB spot. There is experience in the secondary with sr. safeties Dameon Baber and Asauni Rufus, but depth could be an issue, especially with only four CBs on the roster in spring.

      To get back to a bowl, Norvell will have to deal with a schedule that at least features most of the expected heavyweight opposition from the Mountain West (Fresno State, Boise State, San Diego State, and Colorado State) all visiting Mackay Stadium, but Nevada is probably going to have to win at least one of a potentially-tricky three-game non-league stretch in September (at Vanderbilt, home vs. Oregon State, at Toledo) to bring some momentum into league play. The Pack has not missed bowls in three straight years since early in its transition from the old PCAA to the old WAC (2002-04).

      Spread-wise, things improved down the stretch last season, too, covering 5 of the last 7. Norvell also rediscovered the Pack’s former spread prowess in Reno, as Nevada covered its last four at Mackay Stadium after mostly losing its home edge in the Polian years.

      Well, we can’t say there’s no progress being made at UNLV (2017 SU 5-7; ATS 7-5; O/U 7-5) under HC Tony Sanchez. It might be incremental, but the Rebs have indeed increased their win total each of the first three seasons on Sanchez’s watch. Now, it’s only been one win per year, and at this rate we might have to wait until into the next decade before UNLV finishes a season above .500. But at Sam Boyd Stadium, where they’ve lost more often than slot players at the MGM Grand, who’s counting?

      The risk Sanchez runs, however, with this sort of tedious progress is that one year of regression can un-do whatever momentum, even incremental, has been generated. It’s also not lost on Sanchez that he now works for an AD (Desiree Reed-Francois) who did not hire him, and there is a faction of Rebel backers (yes, there are some) who have always been skeptical about the jump Sanchez made from local prep power Bishop Gorman High straight to the college ranks. (Some prominent boosters reportedly remain behind Sanchez, but those sorts can be fickle; look what happened to Reb hoops coach Dave Rice a couple of years ago.) Expectations are also being raised with a move into the Raiders’ new stadium in 2020. No time, then, for UNLV to slip back to a 4-8 or 3-9 record this fall. What the Rebels, and Sanchez, really need is a bowl bid, one that was within their grasp before a bitter season-ending loss at rival Nevada in the finale last November.

      Whether they get there will likely rely upon promising RS soph QB Armani Rogers taking the next step. Rogers, who at 6'5 physically reminds of the last QB who took UNLV to a bowl win (in 2000), Jason Thomas, flashed considerable upside a year ago as a long-striding dual-threat who also gained 78 ypg rushing, though he must improve upon his modest 52.4% completions and the paltry 6 TDP he tossed last fall. It might also be a good idea to curb, at least a bit, his reckless running style that resulted in a late-season injury; Rogers is the key element to any Rebel bowl hopes. There was a chop-busting element to the offense that ranked 18th nationally in rushing at better than 240 ypg, and welcomes back big-play RB Lexington Thomas (1336 YR in 2017), plus three starters return up front. But keeping Rogers healthy and developing more consistency in the passing game will be key to any breakthrough.

      Unfortunately for Sanchez, the “D” has remained as bad as it has been since early in the long-ago John Robinson regime, ranking in triple digits in several key categories (including a woeful 114th in total defense last year). After veteran d.c. Kent Baer could not break the code, Tim Skipper arrives from Florida as the next to try and solve a decade-plus defensive riddle off of Boulder Highway. Seven starters do return, and Skipper spent spring implementing more blitzes and exotic looks that will hopefully translate into improved numbers in the fall. But all sorts of schematic tricks have failed to produce results for a succession of UNLV stop units the past 15 or so years.

      There appear to be some opportunities for wins on the schedule; then again, this is the same UNLV that lost as a 44 ½ -point favorite (an ignominious record) in its opener vs. FCS Howard last year. The Mountain West, however, is not the SEC, and the Rebs have a chance at a fast start with UTEP and Prairie View appearing winnable non-conference games at Sam Boyd in September.

      Spread-wise, while the Rebs have embarrassed themselves at times under Sanchez, they have managed spread covers in each of their “payday” road games (at Michigan, UCLA, and Ohio State) the past three seasons, something to think about for the opener at USC. UNLV has also covered 6 of its last 7 on the road.

      They’ve been chasing the June Jones era for more than a decade at Hawaii (2017 SU 3-9; ATS 2-9-1; O/U 5-7), spanning three coaches and a conference move from the WAC to the Mountain West. Indeed, it’s been mostly downhill for the Rainbow Warriors since that magical undefeated regular season, 2007 campaign that finished up in the Sugar Bowl before Jones left the islands for SMU.

      It’s crunch time now, however, for Hawaii to ever recapture the magic of those years. Third-year HC Nick Rolovich was hired as a link to the “Red Gun” era, having served as a QB for Jones, and after two years of gently reintroducing the spread offense he once piloted in Honolulu, has fully committed to resurrecting the old attack whose roots trace to Mouse Davis and Jones from their coach/player days at Portland State in the ‘70s. There is also no more time to waste for Rolovich, whose honeymoon with the nasty fishbowl of a fan base on the islands pretty much ended a year ago when the Rainbows lost 9 of their last 10 after a win in the hometown Hawaii Bowl in his debut season. But Hawaii still hasn’t finished above .500 since 2010, and hired to rekindle the Jones era, Rolovich can wait no longer to retrofit the offense in the old Red Gun image. The volcano eruptions on the big island have calmed and the locals can now get back to their favorite pastime of over-scrutinizing Hawaii football.

      So the old Jones offense it will be this fall, with none other than Rolovich taking over the play-calling duties himself. Unfortunately, QB Dru Brown, who had started 22 consecutive games, transferred to Oklahoma State. Soph Cole McDonald emerged in spring as the likely starter, but enters the fall having thrown all of 9 passes in his college career. Frosh Chevan Cordeiro, who ran a version of the run-and-shoot at local Saint Louis High (where his predecessors included Marcus Mariota and Bama’s Tua Tagovailoa), could be another option. The receiving corps is also mostly new, with John Ursua (47 catches LY) the lone returning starter after Dylan Collie’s transfer to BYU. And while the offensive emphasis has changed for the 'Bows, Rolovich still might miss pinball RB Diocemy Saint Juste, who set a school rush record (1510 yards) a year ago. A near-complete rebuild of the OL is also part of the 2018 equation, and more production from the kicking game is essential after notching just four field goals a year ago.

      It might not matter how much the offense improves if the “D” doesn’t begin to carry a bit more weight after ranking in triple digits nationally in almost all relevant stat categories last year. Hawaii, which notoriously has problems keeping assistant coaches in the fold (partly because of the uncommonly high cost of living in Honolulu), introduces its 8th different d.c. since 2011 this fall in Corey Batoon, mostly recently at FAU, with three new assistants alongside. On the field, only four starters return, and juco imports are going to be counted upon to provide upgrades along the line. Batoon will be looking for ways to unleash sr. Jahlani Tavai, listed as an ILB but also adept as an edge rusher, a stand-up nose in wide splits, and a pass defender a year ago when recording better than 11 tackles pg.

      Working in Rolovich’s favor might be a schedule that for the first time in memory is void of any Power 5 foes, though a trip to West Point in mid-September looms ominous. At least the Warrior “D” will have had a look at the option when facing Navy in Honolulu two weeks earlier.

      Spread-wise, Hawaii slumped badly a year ago, covering in only its first two games. No edge lately at once-intimidating Aloha Stadium, either, where the Rainbows are just 4-15-1 vs. the line dating to the last year of the aborted Norm Chow regime in 2015.What must iconic, retired play-by-play man Jim Leahey be thinking these days?

      At some locales, a 2-11 record might prompt boosters to send moving vans to the home of a head coach. At San Jose State (2017 SU 2-11; ATS 5-7-1; O/U 6-7), however, few seem to notice, partly because the Spartans function in near-anonymity at the bottom of the Bay Area sports pyramid, often pushed off of the pages of local Mercury-News entirely. Those paying attention, however, were not much impressed last fall in the debut season of Brent Brennan, a first-time HC whose main qualification appeared to be that he had previously served on SJSU staffs, and, supposedly, knew of the considerable pitfalls associated with Spartan football. Apparently he learned little of overcoming those obstacles; after predecessor Ron Caragher fell short of a higher bar established by Mike MacIntyre (who wisely escaped to Pac-12 Colorado at the first opportunity in 2013), Brennan undershot expectations like a third-world economy, causing those few who care down the peninsula to wonder if the Spartans badly missed the mark on yet another gridiron hire.

      Brennan will have to go a ways to prove that he’s not the second coming of Caragher or Dr. Fitz Hill, predecessors whose shortcomings had at times caused the school to wonder if it should even continue the football program. Evidence from 2017 suggests that disbanding might prove less painful; after ranking a hideous 126th in scoring (15.8 ppg) and 127th in scoring defense (41.7 ppg), at least there’s nowhere to go but up. The offense can hardly be worse, though we’re not sure what Brennan can do if QB returnee Montel Aaron, who tossed no TDP and 7 picks in the four games after regaining the starting job last November, remains in the pilot's chair. The return of the top six receivers from LY might help, and soph RB Tyler Nevens (670 YR) ran with a bit of flair a year ago. Spring work featured plenty of long balls from Aaron and jr. Josh Love, who split time at QB a year ago. But playing from behind on the scoreboard and in back of a suspect OL remains a recipe for more disaster if things don’t change this fall. At least sr. PK Bryce Crawford (30 of 35 FGs the past two seasons) has been able to salvage points from the many stalled drives.

      Help from the defense would seem wishful thinking, too, though d.c. Derrick Odum dealt with an uncommon spate of injuries a year ago, and much of the platoon sat out spring ball in recuperation mode. Still, even at full strength, this is hardly Alabama; among many horrifying numbers a year ago, the Spartans also ranked next-to-last nationally against the run (285 ypg...whew!), and conceded 50+ points on five different occasions. Thus, the return of most of the front 7 can hardly be considered good news, though it is hoped an infusion of jucos can at least plug some of the many leaks in the secondary.

      Schedule-wise, it would help to add more than one FCS opponent (this season, it’s UC Davis), but that’s not the case, with a couple of Pac-12 road dates at Washington State and Oregon, and an awkward home date vs. Army (which could get very ugly for the Spartans) in addition to the Mountain West slate. Which, though modest, doesn’t seem to feature one game the Spartans ought to win.

      Spread-wise, SJSU wasn’t quite as bad a year ago (5-7-1), but considering the considerable cushions the oddsmakers continued to provide (Brennan’s teams was a double-digit dog in 11 of 13 games), even that mark vs. the number appeared to undershoot.
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #78
        Handicapping Maryland (4.5)
        July 30, 2018


        The Maryland Terrapins could be improved this season, as they have a new offensive coordinator in Matt Canada and they finally have healthy quarterbacks. The Terrapins went 4-8 last season but both Kasim Hill and Tyrrell Pigrome got hurt.

        There is no question that Maryland should be improved on offense, but how well they do this season will probably come down to how much better the defense is. The Terrapins gave up 37.1 points per game last season. Let’s look at the win total for the Terrapins in 2018 and consider their schedule to see if they will go over or under that number.

        2018 Maryland Terrapins Season Win Total
        Over 4.5 (-115)
        Under 4.5 (-115)


        2018 Maryland Terrapins Schedule Analysis

        The Terrapins started the season 3-1 a year ago but then lost seven of their last eight games. The good news for the Terps is that both Pigrome and Hill are back and healthy. The Terps also have all five starters on the offensive line returning and they have a good running attack with Lorenzo Harrison and Ty Johnson. Hill is projected as the starter and he will have a new offensive scheme with Matt Canada as offensive coordinator.

        The defense for Maryland can’t be any worse than it was a year ago. They should be improved with some transfers coming in and pass rusher Jesse Aniebonam returns from injury. The return of Aniebonam is huge, as he had nine sacks and 14 tackles for loss two years ago. He broke his foot in the opener last year and Maryland’s defense missed his presence. The Terps will have to replace All-Big Ten linebacker Jermaine Carter Jr., but they did bring in Illinois grad transfer Tre Watson.

        Sept. 1 Texas (Landover)

        The season opener looks like a loss, as Texas is expected to be improved this season, playing with revenge from last season’s 51-41 loss, and Maryland may need a few games to get accustomed to Canada’s new offensive system.

        Sept. 8 at Bowling Green

        The Terps simply have to win this game on the road if they are to have any chance to finish with six wins. Bowling Green is nothing special, but this is still a road game and the Terps have been road kill in recent seasons.

        Sept. 15 Temple

        This is another game that the Terps have to win, as Temple is not a good team and Maryland is at home.

        Sept. 22 Minnesota

        If you want to circle one game this season that will define the Terps it could be this one. This is their Big Ten opener and it comes against a Minnesota team that Maryland can beat.

        Oct. 6 at Michigan

        The Terps will just want to come out of his one in one piece, as they are not going into Michigan and winning.

        Oct. 13 Rutgers

        The Scarlet Knights are improved, but Maryland is at home and they should find a way to get the home win.

        Oct. 20 at Iowa

        The Hawkeyes are getting a lot of attention from pundits heading into the 2018 season and it is hard to see Maryland going into Iowa City and coming out with a win.

        Oct. 27 Illinois


        This is yet another game that Maryland can win, as it comes at home against an Illinois team that is one of the weaker in the Big Ten.

        Nov. 3 Michigan State

        The Spartans will be road favorites in this contest, but Maryland is capable of hanging with Michigan State, as they lost by just 10 points at MSU last season.

        Nov. 10 at Indiana

        This could be a difficult road test for the Terps, as they will be coming off a huge game against MSU and they travel to Ohio State next week.

        Nov. 17 Ohio State

        The Terps have no real chance to win this game against the Buckeyes, as they simply don’t have enough talent on either side of the ball.

        Nov. 24 at Penn State

        The finale for the Terps looks like another loss, as Penn State is considered a Big Ten title contender.

        2018 Maryland Terrapins Regular Season Win Total Prediction

        There is a lot to like about the direction of Maryland, as they have an enthusiastic head coach in DJ Durkin, a new offensive coordinator in Canada, a new practice facility, and a second straight top 30 recruiting class. Oddsmakers could be underestimating the Terps and the schedule for Maryland is favorable. Going over the total of 4.5 is the way to go with Maryland in 2018.
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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        • #79
          2018 Independents Preview
          July 30, 2018


          2018 INDEPENDENTS PREVIEW

          Declaration Of Independence

          During its first six years of being an independent team BYU won 52 games, with never fewer than 8 victories in any one season. Last year, however, the Cougars’ fortune suffered a major plummet, winning just 4 games behind an offense that ranked that ranked No. 118 in the nation – worse than Kansas, Rice and Ball State. It was BYU’s first losing season since 2004, making them a true “mission team” - in more ways than one - this campaign.

          If QB Tanner Magnum is good enough to fend off true freshman Zach Wilson the Cougars could find themselves bowling by season’s end. If not head coach Kalani Sitake could be issued a declaration of departure. Stay tuned.

          Ups And Downs

          The ranks of football independents have increased and decreased with each passing season since 2011, when BYU left the Mountain West Conference.

          It increased by two teams in 2013 when the Western Athletic Conference dropped football, paving the way for the inclusion of New Mexico and Idaho. Then is 2014 it lost two teams when Idaho and New Mexico State became football only members of the Sun Belt Conference. In 2015 Navy bolted for the American Athletic Conference as a football-only entrant. 2016 saw the addition of UMass, with New Mexico State returning in 2017. The new kids on the block, Liberty, join the Independents in 2018 as the revolving door continues to swing like a turnstile.

          Note: The numbers following each team name represents the amount of returning starters on offense and defense, along with the number of returning linemen, with an asterisk (*) designating a returning quarterback.


          ARMY (Offense – 6/2, Defense – 8/1, 47 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          MARCHING TO A DIFFERENT DRUM

          Thanks to a 10-win effort last year, just the second of all-time, Army celebrated consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1990. Yet they managed it despite going backwards on both sides of the ball. The formula was simple: The Black Knights were the No. 1 team in the nation in Rushing Offense, as well as the No. 3 team in Red Zone Defense. This season they will put a new quarterback behind a rebuilding offensive front line. And while the defense returns a good portion of last year’s starters, it loses its two best playmakers in DE John Voit and LB Alex Aukerman. Having to tackle only 3 bowlers this season is a good thing. Facing only one losing foe away from home is not.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Last year was only the second time that Army defeated Navy and won a bowl game in the same year.

          PASS


          BYU (Offense – *7/1, Defense – 7/3, 62 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          MISSION TEAM

          A combination of youth and inexperience, with 25 members of the two-deep missing time with injuries, contributed to a rare losing season for the Cougars last year. It marked their first losing campaign since 2004, making them a true “mission team” in every sense of the word this season. And it could well be lights-out for head coach Kalani Sitake should BYU continue to regress on both sides of the ball for a third-straight year under his watch. Worse, only four foes on last year’s itinerary owned winning seasons the previous year. More concerning is that in two seasons under Sitake, the Cougars have forgotten how to pass the football. Fortunately, senior QB Tanner Magnum returns after a ruptured Achilles tendon curtailed his season last year.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: QB Magnum passed for 3,377 yards in 2015 – Bronco Mendenhall’s final season as BYU head coach.

          PLAY ON: vs. Utah State (10/5) - *KEY


          LIBERTY (Offense – *9/3, Defense – 7/2, 44 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK

          Liberty makes its FBS debut in 2018 and if the name sounds familiar, it should. The Flames torched Baylor, 48-45, as 34-point dogs in Waco in their season opener last year. The good news is head coach Turner Gill, the former Nebraska star QB, has had a winning record each of the six years he’s been in Lynchburg. The bad news is he was 25-49 at two other FBS schools (Buffalo and Kansas) before becoming the lead Flame. Gill did mange to win the MAC title in 2008. He also beat Coastal Carolina when the Chanticleers were No. 1 in the FCS at the time. And for what it’s worth, LU returns 81% of its overall production from last season, seventh in the FBS. Bon voyage.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Conference USA and the Sun Belt turned down Liberty, the nations’ largest private university, for admission.

          PASS


          NEW MEXICO STATE (Offense – 6/3, Defense – 9/4, 49 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          WE CAN DO THIS

          Doug Martin was another head coach on the hot seat last season, sporting a 10-38 record in four seasons with NMSU. Last year’s surprising 7-win bowl effort staved off the inevitable, though. It was the first bowl season in 57 years for the Aggies – the longest drought of all FBS teams – and it was capped off with a win over Utah State in the Arizona Bowl. With that, Martin will finally have a chance to rely on a defense that improved over 100 YPG last season as just about everyone’s back for DC Frank Spaziani. So dramatic was the improvement that the Aggies yielded 500 yards in only two games last campaign – after coughing up a nickel or more 26 times in five previous seasons under Martin’s direction. Best of all the Aggies will go up against easiest schedule of all FBS schools in 2018 with foes going 54-91 (.372) last season.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Recently graduated four-year starting RB Larry Rose III rushed for 4,558 yards and 37 TDs in his career at NMSU.

          PLAY ON: vs. Georgia Southern (10/20)


          NOTRE DAME (Offense – *6/3, Defense – 9/3, 46 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          NOTRE LAME

          As expected, the Irish bounced back from a disastrous 4-win effort in 2016 to a 10-win campaign last season. That cleansed a sour taste left from an underachieving November – a pattern that head coach Brian Kelly has recently developed (see Stat You Will Like below). Meanwhile, the Dame was hit extra hard by offseason losses with 3 NFL defections (among 4 players selected in the draft, including two All-American 1st-rounders from the left side of the offensive line), 12 returning starters and 14 players from the 2-deep now gone. In addition, five senior starters from the defense also graduated. Kelly will turn back to QB Brandon Wimbush, who will need to find receivers from a depleted unit. Despite Kelly’s insistence that this could be one of his best squads at Notre Dame, we three Hail Mary’s are in order.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Since 2011, Kelly has won only 10 of 24 games played from Halloween on out.

          PLAY ON: vs. Stanford (9/29)


          UMASS (Offense – *10/4, Defense – 6/1, 47 Lettermen)

          TEAM THEME:
          SOUND THE CHARGES

          Last year’s 0-6 start lowered the Minutemen’s mark to 2-22 SU in the first six games of the season under HC Mark Whipple. The good news, though, is UMass rallied to close 4-2, lending promise to the 2018 season ahead. However, they’ll need to overcome a death-knell-like 3-14 record in one-possession games under Whipple in order to turn the corner. Behind a loaded offense that returns QB Andrew Ford (22 TDs and 4 INTs last season) and nearly his entire front wall, the turn signal has been activated. As our ‘Stat You Will Like’ below indicates, last year’s unit left a mark in school history behind a bevy of youngsters that witnessed 33% of all starts by underclassmen. Sound the alert... here come the Minutemen.

          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: The Minutemen gained more yards than they allowed last year for the first time since becoming an FBS team in 2012.
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #80
            Stanford Breakdown
            July 30, 2018


            Stanford looks poised for an elite season in 2018. David Shaw’s team went 9-5 straight up and 7-7 against the spread last year, but it lost four of its five games by 11 combined points. Furthermore, first-team All-American running back Bryce Love was injured and missed key portions of three-point losses at Washington State and vs. USC in the Pac-12 Championship Game.

            Stanford returns nine starters on offense and six on defense. The offense averaged 32.4 points per game in 2017, and this unit is absolutely stacked with talent and will be one of the nation’s best this year.

            For starters, Love is the country’s premier RB. Despite missing a comeback win at Oregon St. and playing on a sprained ankle in his team’s last six games, he still rushed for 2,118 yards and 19 touchdowns while averaging an eye-popping 8.1 yards per carry. Junior Cameron Scarlett is a solid back-up who ran for 389 yards and eight TDs with a 4.3 YPC average in 2017.

            Phil Steele’s preseason magazine ranks Stanford’s offensive line No. 1 in the Pac-12 and the fourth-best in the nation. The Cardinal has five offensive players who are All-Americans in Steele’s mag. Love and junior offensive guard Nate Herbig are first-teamers, while redshirt sophomore tight end Kaden Smith is a second-team selection. Also, OT Walker Little is a third-team AA and WR JJ Arcega-Whiteside is a fourth-teamer.

            Smith tore his ACL late in his senior year of high school and had to redshirt as a true freshman. The Marcus High School (Flower Mound, TX., in the Dallas area) product was a four-star signee who chose Stanford over Alabama. For whatever reasons, certainly ones that appeared moronic once the calendar got deep into November, Smith wasn’t getting many snaps for most of September and October.

            Nevertheless, after making 10 receptions for 188 yards and four TDs in the last two regular-season contests and the Pac-12 Championship Game, Smith garnered first-team All-Pac-12 honors. He single-handedly kept the Cardinal in the game against USC in Santa Cruz, making a pair of spectacular TD grabs on third-and-long plays in the second half. (see highlights below in embedded tweets)

            Shaw called Smith “the next Zach Ertz” at Pac-12 Media Days last week. Ertz, the Stanford alum, won a Super Bowl with the Philadelphia Eagles last year and earned a trip to the Pro-Bowl thanks to 74 catches for 824 yards and eight TDs.

            QB Keller Chryst took over as Stanford’s starting QB midway through the 2016 campaign and helped his team to six wins in a row after a 4-3 start with Ryan Burns under center. However, Chryst tore his ACL in a 25-23 win over North Carolina at the 2016 Sun Bowl.

            Chryst started seven of the first eight games for the Cardinal last season, but redshirt sophomore QB K.J. Costello was given the starting nod in the last six outings. Costello completed 58.8 percent of his passes for 1,573 yards with a 14/4 touchdown-to-interception ratio. With Costello solidifying his spot as the starter moving forward, Chryst elected to go to Tennessee as a grad transfer this year.

            This makes Costello’s health a top priority for Shaw with no experienced depth behind him. Junior QB Jack Richardson has only appeared briefly in two career games. Stanford did sign a pair of highly-touted QBs in the 2018 class, including Tanner McKee and Jack West, but neither player left high school early to participate in spring practice.

            Arcega-Whiteside, a junior, has 14 TD catches in his first two collegiate seasons. He hauled in 48 receptions for 781 yards and nine TDs last year. Senior WR Trenton Irwin has 28 career starts to his credit. The former four-star signee had 43 catches for 461 yards and two TDs as a junior in ’17.

            Stanford’s defense allowed only 22.7 PPG last season. In what speaks to how outstanding the stop units have been for Shaw in his seven years as HC since replacing Jim Harbaugh, that was the most points a defense of his had ever given up.

            Stanford loses its top two tacklers and four of its top six. In his Pac-12 Unit Rankings, Steele has the Cardinal’s defensive line ranked fifth. The linebackers are tabbed as the conference’s second-best and the secondary is ranked fifth.

            Senior LB Bobby Okereke has started 27 consecutive games and is a first-team All-Pac-12 pick in all preseason publications. He recorded 94 tackles, four sacks, 3.5 tackles for loss, four QB hurries, one pass broken up, one interception for a 52-yard pick-six and one forced fumble in ’17.

            Junior LB Sean Barton had 14 tackles, one sack and one forced fumble before going down with a season-ending injury in Week 3 last year. As a freshman in ’16, he produced 35 tackles, 3.5 TFL’s, two sacks and one forced fumble. Barton is poised for a bounce-back year, as is senior LB Joey Alfieri, who had a career-low 37 tackles last season.

            Alfieri had two sacks, two TFL’s and a pair of QB hurries in ’17. As a junior in ’16, he had 51 tackles, two interceptions, 5.5 TFL’s, five sacks, one forced fumble and one QB hurry. Alfieri had 40 tackles, 3.5 sacks, 3.5 TFL’s and five QB hurries as a freshman in ’15.

            Senior CB Alijah Holder anchors the secondary and is a first-team All-Pac-12 selection in Steele’s preseason mag. In his first three seasons, Holder has recorded 73 tackles, 16 PBU, four forced fumbles, four TFL’s, two interceptions and one pick-six in 21 career starts.

            Special teams are going to be a strength. Steele has punter Jake Bailey ranked No. 1 in the nation in his projections for players who are eligible for the upcoming NFL Draft. Kicker Jet Toner is ranked as the country’s 19th-best. Steele’s National Unit Rankings have Stanford at No. 2 behind only Utah.

            Stanford’s season win total is 8.5 at all betting shops. The Westgate has the ‘under’ at a -130 price, while the South Point Hotel has the ‘under’ at -125.

            Sportsbook.ag has Shaw’s squad listed with 10/1 odds to make the College Football Playoff. The offshore website has Stanford with 5/1 odds to win the Pac-12 Championship Game and at 55/1 to win the CFP.

            Sportsbook has Stanford as a four-point home favorite vs. USC for this Week 2 showdown in its Games of the Year section. Also, the Cardinal is pick ‘em at Oregon, a three-point underdog at Notre Dame, an 11-point road ‘chalk’ at Arizona State, a 9.5-point underdog at Washington and a 10-point favorite at California.

            After losing a 20-17 decision at San Diego State last year, Stanford will be in revenge mode for its season opener against the Aztecs. Most books have the Cardinal listed as a 14.5-point home favorite for this Friday night battle at 9:00 p.m. Eastern on Fox Sports 1. The “Friday Night Lights” spot will give Shaw’s team an extra day of rest and preparation for the Trojans, who lost by a 27-10 count in their last trip to Stanford Stadium in ’16.

            Stanford is probably going to be a double-digit favorite in seven of its 12 games. USC and Utah won’t be easy home wins by any means, but I’m confident the Cardinal will prevail in both contests. With that in mind, I see a minimum of nine wins if its most valuable pieces (particularly Love and Costello) can stay healthy.

            The two swing games are back-to-back road trips at Oregon and at Notre Dame on Sept. 22 and Sept. 29, respectively. I think Stanford earns at least a split in this two-week stretch, which would make for high stakes when it goes to Washington on Nov. 3.

            If Stanford is 7-1 when it faces the Huskies, it will be in the driver’s seat to win the Pac-12 North with a victory at UW. Assuming the winner has one loss or fewer at the time, it will also be right in the mix to earn a CFP berth.

            Prediction: I like Stanford to go ‘over’ 8.5 wins for three units. I’ll also recommend a one-half unit wager on the Cardinal to win the Pac-12. The best price I’ve seen is +660 at 5Dimes (paid $660 on $100 bets).

            **B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**

            -- Love is the 6/1 favorite to win the Heisman Trophy at Sportsbook.ag.

            -- Steele’s National Unit Rankings have Stanford at No. 1 at the RB position, No. 33 at QB, No. 13 at WR, No. 49 on the defensive line, No. 4 at LB and No. 28 in the secondary.

            -- Stanford has won outright in nine of its past 14 games against ranked opponents.

            -- Stanford has been an underdog of 9.5 points or more just three times on Shaw’s watch. The Cardinal has won outright in all three of those instances.

            -- Shaw owns a 13-4 spread record in 17 games as an underdog during his tenure in Palo Alto.

            -- Barring a rash of injuries in August or in the opener against Rocky Long’s team, Stanford isn’t going to be a home underdog this year. We’ll nonetheless note that Shaw has won outright in all four games of his tenure as a home ‘dog, including a 30-22 win over Washington last year and a 38-20 triumph vs. Notre Dame.

            -- Steele ranks Stanford’s schedule as the Pac-12’s fifth-toughest and the nation’s 29th-toughest.

            -- According to Pro Football Focus College, Smith's 2.65 yards per route run in '17 ranked third-highest among returning FBS tight ends.
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #81
              Fresno State Breakdown
              July 31, 2018


              Jeff Tedford finished ninth in last season’s voting for National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press. Truth be told, the job he did at Fresno State was as good any other work done at any school in the country.

              Tedford transferred from Cerritos College to Fresno State as a player in 1981. After a pair of seasons as the starting QB, he held the school’s record for career passing yards (4,872) and touchdown passes (35).

              Tedford returned to his alma mater last year after the Bulldogs went 3-9 in 2015 and 1-11 in 2016. All the new head coach did was guide a nine-win turnaround when Fresno State went 10-4 straight up and cashed tickets at a lucrative 10-2-2 against-the-spread clip. Tedford’s team won the Mountain West Conference’s West Division by going 7-1 in league play.

              Fresno State lost merely 14 lettermen and returns eight starters on offense and seven on defense. Let’s also remember that two of the Bulldogs’ four losses came in back-to-back games at top-ranked Alabama and at sixth-ranked Washington in Weeks 2 and 3. They covered the spread as huge underdogs in both instances.

              After beating Boise State 28-17 as a seven-point home underdog in its regular-season finale, Fresno State had to travel to the smurf turf to face the Broncos again the next week in the MWC Championship Game. Tedford’s team dropped a 17-14 decision to BSU, but it took the cash as a nine-point road underdog.

              Fresno State finished the year on the right note by capturing a 33-27 win over Houston as a two-point underdog at the Hawai’i Bowl. The Bulldogs went 6-0 ATS with three outright wins as ‘dogs last season.

              Marcus McMaryion started seven games at quarterback for Gary Andersen at Oregon State during the 2015 and ’16 campaigns. When Andersen quit on the Beavers, McMaryion decided to transfer. He took over the starting job in Week 4 and never let go of it.

              McMaryion went 9-2 in his 11 starts, throwing for 2,726 yards with a 14/5 touchdown-to-interception ratio. He completed 62.1 percent of his throws and had a QB Rating of 137.7. He also showed mobility by rushing for 302 yards and four TDs with a 5.3 yards-per-carry average.

              McMaryion loses second-leading wide receiver Da’Mari Scott (57 catches for 566 yards and one TD), but eight players who had 11 receptions or more are back. Senior WR KeeSean Johnson was a first-team All-MWC selection last season when he hauled in 77 receptions for 1,013 yards and eight TDs. Phil Steele’s preseason magazine ranks Johnson No. 72 among the nation’s best WRs eligible for the 2019 NFL Draft.

              Senior WR Jamire Jordan has 33 career starts to his credit. Steele has him as a preseason second-team All-MWC pick after making 27 catches for 562 yards and three TDs in ’17. Junior TE Jared Rice is also a preseason second-team All-MWC selection in Steele’s mag. Rice had 22 receptions for 388 yards and two TDs last year. The wideout group also adds WR Michiah Quick, a former four-star recruit for Oklahoma who started four games for the Sooners over three years before electing to leave as a grad transfer.

              Fresno State brings back its top three RBs, including last season’s leading rusher. That would be sophomore Jordan Mims, who ran for 627 yards and six TDs with a 4.2 YPC average as a freshman. Junior Josh Hokit produced 583 rushing yards and seven TDs with a 4.6 YPC average, while sophomore Ronnie Rivers ran for 480 yards and five TDs with a 4.8 YPC average. This trio of RBs in joined by Romello Harris, a transfer from Washington St. who sat out last season.

              Steele’s Unit Rankings for the MWC has the Bulldogs ranked No. 2 at the QB position, No. 6 at RB, No. 1 at WR and No. 6 on the offensive line. As for the defense, it’s ranked No. 8 on the defensive line, No. 2 at the LB position and No. 3 in the secondary. They’re tabbed eighth on special teams and fourth in team chemistry.

              Tedford’s defensive coordinator from last year, Orlondo Steinauer, went back to coach in the CFL where he was prior to coming to Fresno. His replacement is Bert Watts, who was the LBs coach here in ’17 and was the DC at UC Davis from 2013-16 after serving as a Denver Broncos assistant in ’12.

              Watts inherits a defense that returns its top seven tacklers from a unit that allowed only 17.9 points per game. Junior Jeffrey Allison garnered first-team All-MWC honors by recording 126 tackles, the third-most in the league. Allison also contributed 3.5 tackles for loss, three passes broken up, two sacks, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.

              Five other Fresno State defensive players made Steele’s preseason All-MWC squads. LB George Helmuth and DB Jaron Bryant are second-team picks, DB Juju Hughes and Mike Bell are third-team selections and LB James Bailey is a fourth-teamer. Punter Blake Cusick is a fourth-team All-MWC selection as well.

              Helmuth, a senior, had 89 tackles, four sacks, four TFL’s, five QB hurries, one PBU and one forced fumble last year. Bryant produced 67 tackles, seven PBU, four interceptions, two pick-sixes, 2.5 TFL’s and one forced fumble.

              Fresno State’s season win total is eight flat (-110 either way) at both The Westgate SuperBook and the South Point Hotel in Las Vegas. 5Dimes.eu has Tedford’s bunch with the second-shortest odds (+595, risk $100 to win $595) to win the MWC Championship Game behind only Boise State, the -173 ‘chalk.’ The Bulldogs are 2,000/1 longshots to win the College Football Playoff at the offshore website.

              5Dimes.eu has Fresno State listed as a 12.5-point road underdog in its Friday night trip to Bronco Stadium to face BSU on Nov. 9. Not only will the Bulldogs be playing on the road on a short week, they’ll also be in a back-to-back road spot and on the road for the third time in four weeks. 5Dimes.eu has Fresno State installed as a two-point home favorite vs. San Diego State on Nov. 17 in a game that’ll almost certainly decide the MWC’s West Division.

              Fresno State will most likely be favored in nine of its 12 regular-season games. In addition to the road assignment in Boise, the Bulldogs will probably be underdogs in consecutive road tilts at Minnesota and at UCLA in Weeks 2 and 3. However, it won’t be a shocker if they win either of these contests. Both Power Five schools are off losing seasons and will be breaking in new starting QBs.

              There’s another tough non-conference game on the slate at home vs. Toledo on Sept. 29. Fresno State will have the benefit of two weeks to prepare for the Rockets, who throttled the 1-11 Bulldogs by a 52-17 count at The Glass Bowl in 2016.

              Toledo is one of the MAC’s top programs and has one of the country’s top group of WRs, but it must replace the school’s all-time leading passer in Logan Woodside (10,514 yards). The Rockets, who finished 11-3 last season, will have a new starting QB who will be making his first career road start at Fresno State.

              There are three additional spots that could present danger for Tedford’s squad. Fresno State play at Nevada on Oct. 6 and hosts Wyoming on Oct. 13. The Bulldogs will be favored in both instances, but those aren’t layups. A Nov. 3 trip to Sam Boyd Stadium to play at UNLV is a vintage look-ahead situation, and Tony Sanchez will have his best team since getting hired by the Rebels. They have the league’s best RB in Lexington Thomas and one of the conference’s top signal callers in Armani Rogers.

              Nevertheless, I think Fresno State will prevail against the Wolf Pack, Cowboys and Rebels. Again, the Bulldogs can certainly pull an upset out of their three toughest road games at Minnesota, at UCLA and at BSU, and I think they win their other nine games.

              Prediction: I like to have a 1.5-game cushion between my prediction for a team and its season win total. I’m only calling for Fresno State to go 9-3, but I’ll still suggest a 1.5-unit play on the Bulldogs to go ‘over’ eight victories.

              **B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**

              -- Steele has Fresno State at No. 24 in the nation in his Experience Rankings.

              -- Steele has Fresno State at No. 57 in the country in his Preseason Power Rankings. He predicts the Bulldogs to finish the year at No. 41 in the nation. They’ll face Colorado in the Las Vegas Bowl at Sam Boyd Stadium, according to Steele’s Bowl Projections.

              -- After limping to a 2-10 spread record as a road underdog in 2015 and ’16, Fresno State went 4-0 ATS as a road underdog last season.

              -- Steele has the Bulldogs’ schedule ranked as the eighth-toughest among MWC teams and No. 98 out of 130 FBS schools.

              -- In Steele’s National Unit Rankings, Fresno State is No. 55 at the QB position, No. 26 at WR, No. 32 at LB and No. 47 in the secondary.

              -- Fresno State finished 2017 at +1,013 in total yards against its 14 opponents and was plus eight in turnover margin.

              -- Fresno State had lost six straight bowl games before knocking off Houston in Honolulu last year. The Bulldogs hadn’t won a postseason game since defeating Ga. Tech at the 2007 Humanitarian Bowl on the smurf turf in Boise.

              -- In 2019, Fresno State plays at USC and Minnesota comes to Bulldog Stadium. The Bulldogs play at Colorado and at Texas A&M in 2020 and then in ’21, they play at Oregon and at UCLA. They’re at USC again in ’22 and ’25 and get to host Oregon State in ’22 before travelling to Corvallis in ’24.
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #82
                Clemson controls ACC, are national elite
                July 31, 2018


                CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Dabo Swinney has built Clemson into an every-year power with regular College Football Playoff appearances and a recent national championship. None of that could've happened without first asserting unquestioned control of the Atlantic Coast Conference.

                The Tigers open practice this week as the overwhelming favorite to become the first team to win four straight ACC titles since Florida State's romp through the 1990s. They also could become only the second power-conference team to win four straight league championship games.

                ''I didn't sit back and say, `Well we're Clemson and we're going to go out there and everybody's going to try to catch us,''' Swinney said during the ACC Kickoff preseason media days. ''But I definitely envisioned Clemson being one of the best programs in the country, and I envisioned this league growing and becoming one of the most dominant leagues in the country.''

                Indeed, the Tigers' rise helped the ACC climb onto level footing with its touted Southeastern Conference neighbor.

                It wasn't long ago that Clemson was chasing Florida State in the ACC's power-heavy Atlantic Division . The Seminoles won three straight ACC titles from 2012-14 while going 26-1 against league teams - 3-0 against Clemson - and winning a national championship in the final BCS season of 2013. But the Tigers followed that with their own impressive run, giving the league a sustained stretch of top-flight success while putting the ACC alongside the SEC as the only leagues to reach all four playoffs.

                Clemson is 25-2 against ACC teams in the past three seasons, with 18 wins by double-digit margins. The losses at home against Pittsburgh in 2016 and at Syracuse last year came by a combined four points. And last year's 38-3 rout of then-No. 7 Miami made Clemson only the fifth team to win at least three straight power-conference championship games since the SEC held the first in 1992, a group featuring FSU, Alabama in the SEC (2014-16) and Oklahoma in the Big 12 (2006-08).

                Another December crown in Charlotte would allow Clemson to join Steve Spurrier's Florida teams in the SEC (1993-96) as the only power-conference schools to win four straight league title games.

                ''It all goes together: their budgets are elite, their facilities are elite and they're able to recruit and attract the elite players,'' said Boston College coach Steve Addazio, whose Eagles face the Tigers annually in the Atlantic. ''So they're a `Have' - that's the best way I can say it.''

                Clemson is on the verge of the ACC's longest reign since Bobby Bowden's Seminoles arrived in 1992 and won at least a share of the title for nine straight seasons, going 70-2 in the nine-team league.

                John Swofford got a close look at those Seminoles, first as a competitor as North Carolina's athletics director before becoming ACC commissioner in 1997. He told The Associated Press that Clemson's run ''does compare favorably'' because today's 14-team league ''is considerably better.''

                ''I don't think there's anything wrong with a league having a dominant team when that dominant team is without question a premier team nationally,'' Swofford said. ''And that's exactly what we have in Clemson.''

                Yet offensive lineman Mitch Hyatt and defensive lineman Clelin Ferrell dismissed questions about a gap between Clemson and everyone else.

                ''I wouldn't say that,'' Ferrell said. ''You can talk about that as far as the past years, it might be a big gap. ... This 2018 team hasn't done anything. There's not really a gap as far as what we've done.''

                Besides, Hyatt noted, there have been close calls. There was a hang-on-for-dear-life home win against Louisville and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson in 2016. There were one-possession margins in ACC title games against North Carolina in 2015 and Virginia Tech in 2016. And North Carolina State played Clemson within a touchdown the past two years, including a 2016 overtime road loss after missing a short winning field goal at regulation's end.

                ''It's just executing in the final 2 minutes of the game,'' Wolfpack coach Dave Doeren said. ''We missed a kick two years ago and had a couple of penalties (last year), and that's us, that's not them. So we've got to execute under pressure better - period.''

                But Doeren's observation underlines another way the Tigers are equipped to fend off challengers. There's a big-game-tested core from playoff routs of Oklahoma and Ohio State along with unforgettable title-game thrillers against Alabama, with the Crimson Tide winning in 2015 and the Tigers claiming the rematch before Alabama won Round 3 in last year's semifinals.

                Swinney isn't changing his ''you get what you earn'' approach, either, even as the Tigers keep bringing trophies home to Death Valley.

                ''A big thing is Coach Swinney told us not to beat ourselves,'' Hyatt said. ''We have the talent to win. We have the players, we have the coaches - we have everything we need to win.''

                ---
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #83
                  Handicapping Rutgers (4)
                  August 1, 2018


                  The Rutgers Scarlet Knights have not won more than four games in a season since 2014, so it makes sense that oddsmakers have the win total for Rutgers for 2018 listed at four. The good news for Rutgers is that they have three winnable non-conference games. The bad news is that they may do well to win just one game in the Big Ten. Let’s look at the schedule for Rutgers for this season to see if they will go over or under their win total of four.

                  2018 Rutgers Scarlet Knights Season Win Total
                  Over 4 (-130)
                  Under 4 (+100)


                  2018 Rutgers Scarlet Knights Schedule Analysis

                  Sept. 1 Texas State

                  It doesn’t get any easier for Rutgers than the season opener. Texas State is ranked 127th out of 130 college teams in ESPN’s rankings. Texas State has not beaten a team from a Power 5 conference since becoming an FBS team, losing all seven games by an average score of 46-12.

                  Sept. 8 at Ohio State

                  Forget about Rutgers winning this game, as the Buckeyes have won all four previous meetings and Ohio State is considered a national title contender.

                  Sept. 15 at Kansas

                  This is a key game for Rutgers if they are to have a successful season. Rutgers won 27-14 at home in 2015, but Kansas is expected to be improved this season and the Jayhawks will believe they can win this one.

                  Sept. 22 Buffalo

                  The Scarlet Knights have won five of the six previous meetings. Buffalo is not a bad team, as they went 6-6 last season, but this is still a game that Rutgers should win at home.

                  Sept. 29 Indiana

                  The all-time series is tied 2-2. Indiana has a new starting quarterback this season in Brandon Dawkins and they are very capable of going into Rutgers and getting the win.

                  Oct. 6 Illinois

                  This is another series that is tied 2-2. The Scarlet Knights won 35-24 at Illinois last season. This is simply a must-win game for Rutgers at home. If the Scarlet Knights are to finish with at least four wins they need to already be at that number after this contest, because they may not win another game the rest of the season.

                  Oct. 13 at Maryland

                  This series is tied 4-4 and it was Rutgers winning 31-24 at home last season. Three of the four games against Maryland in Big Ten play have been decided by a TD or less.

                  Oct. 20 Northwestern

                  Rutgers has actually won all three previous meetings against Northwestern, but all of those wins were many years ago. This will be the first-ever meeting between the teams in Big Ten play.

                  Nov. 3 at Wisconsin

                  The Badgers are going to win this one at home, so it is just a matter of Rutgers getting out of this one without getting too beat up.

                  Nov. 10 Michigan

                  The Wolverines lead the all-time series 3-1. Michigan is considered a national title contender and they should have far too much for Rutgers in this one.

                  Nov. 17 Penn State


                  This is another likely loss for Rutgers. Penn State leads the all-time series 26-2. It is hard to see Rutgers being competitive in this one.

                  Nov. 24 at Michigan State

                  The losing streak at the end of the season will likely continue here, as the Spartans return 21 starters from last season.

                  2018 Rutger Scarlet Knights Regular Season Win Total Prediction

                  Rutgers is not likely to win six games and make a bowl, but they could get to four or five wins. The question is will they go over or under their win total of four games. Looking at the schedule there are three games they should win against Texas State, Buffalo and Illinois. There are two games that they could win against Kansas and Indiana. The only other game in which they might have a chance is at Maryland.

                  The most likely scenario for Rutgers this season has them winning exactly four games. If we were going to play the win total one way or another, we would probably lean to the under simply because there is very little margin for error for Rutgers to get to five wins.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Pac-12 Season Outlook
                    August 1, 2018


                    August has officially arrived and that means we will have college football games to wager on by the end of the month. It also means that my preseason look at conferences has to speed up a bit as this week it's onto the Pac-12. You can find my previous previews on the other conferences I've already discussed:

                    The story of the Pac-12 in 2018 is about a lot of turnover up and down the conference. Top level QB talent in the country like Sam Darnold (USC) and Josh Rosen (UCLA) have moved onto the next level, and we've even got some old coaching faces in new places with Herm Edwards the new boss at Arizona State, and Chip Kelly the main man at UCLA.

                    Yet, the more things change in the Pac-12, the chances are we will see plenty of the old classics from teams in this conference once again. That means a shocking 'upset' loss in the first month by one of the higher ranked teams from this conference, a season filled with conference games where everyone beats up on everyone else and then nobody from the conference makes an appearance in the CFB Playoff, and just general parity throughout the entire conference.

                    Most Intriguing Pac-12 Future Bet

                    Anyone from the South Division not named USC to win Pac-12


                    If parity ends up being the name of the game in the Pac-12, a couple of things led me to the idea of backing a couple of South teams not named USC to win the Pac-12 title:

                    One, the Pac-12 title game is still contested between the winners of the North and South divisions, and when three of the top four teams in the odds chart – Washington -120, Stanford +700, and Oregon +900 – all exist in the North Division, there is already a situation where much more value exists on South programs.

                    USC leads the way for all the South schools at +400, but in the post Sam-Darnold era where a freshman is going to likely start for the Trojans, can you trust this program not to be a favored candidate for that shocking early season loss that kills many Pac-12 teams every year? Not only is Darnold gone, but so are the Trojans leading rusher (Ronald Jones) and #1 WR (Deontay Burnett), so USC probably has a bumpier road ahead of them then many might expect.

                    Secondly, let's assume USC doesn't win the Pac-12 South with all the youth they've got. Then you get a situation where you have one of Utah (+1600), Arizona (+2000), UCLA (+2500), Arizona State (+4000) or Colorado (+5000) in a one-game, winner-take-all shot against whomever comes out of the North. That opens up plenty of hedging opportunities (if wanted) or you've got basically a +1600 ML or better ticket on a one-game scenario where the point spread is likely going to end up in single-digits. That's a highly intriguing scenario for me.

                    Now, obviously you don't want to be betting all of them, but if you're already high on the 2018 prospects for one of these two teams, I say go ahead and fire. USC might be charging more juice (-220) for going 'over' their season win total of 7.5 compared to Utah at (+100) to go over the same number, and then you've got the season win totals for Arizona sitting at 7.5 too (-140 for 'over'). It's between those two schools – Utah and Arizona – for me now as for which one to fire on, but it also never hurts to wait a few weeks to see which Pac-12 South teams look like real contenders.

                    Best Future Bet

                    Washington Under 10 wins (+100)


                    If the Pac-12 is going to be littered with parity in 2018 like I firmly believe, it would be a mistake not to take the “projected” best team 'under' their win total, especially when they play in the deeper of the two divisions. I can already see the bulk of the Pac-12 being bunched up wit 6-6 and 7-5 records for a handful of teams and Washington's probably going to be on the bad side of a few of those losses.

                    Looking at the Huskies schedule, it's not hard to find three possible losses (that would be enough to at least push this bet should they win the Pac-12 title) considering they begin the year in Atlanta against the Auburn Tigers, have road trips to Utah, UCLA and Oregon during a five-week stretch that begins in mid-September, and probably get minimal home field advantage against a team like Stanford that can use their tremendous running game to take any crowd out of a contest. There could easily be three losses for Washington in those five games alone, and that's without talking about them being on the road at Washington State for the Apple Cup in the regular season finale. Things aren't going to come easy for this team this year and asking them to get to 11 wins is just too much.

                    Best Season Win Total Over Bet

                    UCLA Over 5.5 wins (+115)

                    Although picking an 'over' bet in the Pac-12 was similar to trying to pick a Pac-12 South not named USC earlier, I've settled on UCLA being the best candidate for a number of reasons. For one, the +115 odds is a nice return on asking a storied program like the Bruins to play .500 football, a goal that should feel like the floor in terms of the heights boosters want Chip Kelly to restore this Bruins program too. Kelly was a splash hire meant to turn this thing around in a hurry after they had to feel like they wasted Josh Rosen's years, and we should see some instant results for UCLA.

                    Secondly, for all of the flaws and mistakes we saw from Chip Kelly at the NFL level, the thing is, he's always had success at the college level and there are probably multiple reasons for that. One, Kelly can go out and handpick/recruit the type of player that has the attributes needed to success in his zone blocking, ultra-fast, run-style offense. The current Bruins aren't really going to be any of “Kelly's guys” but that doesn't mean he hasn't been molding them into shape/believers like he did at his first year in Philadelphia with the Eagles.

                    Secondly, Kelly's zone blocking, ultra-fast, option-style offense works it's best when there is always some sort of physical mismatch either at the point of attack or on the line somewhere. That is always more prevalent in college football where it's 18-22 year olds, some of whom are still growing/filling out/maturing. It's a lot easier to find and exploit those mismatches at the college level and Kelly is a master at finding them from his time at Oregon. That shouldn't change now that he's at UCLA and while there are still defensive concerns UCLA has this year, this should end up being a .500 football team in Year 1 under Chip Kelly.

                    Who plays in the Big 12 Championship Game?

                    Stanford vs Utah


                    Your guess is probably as good as mine here given all I've discussed already in this piece, but I settled on Stanford vs Utah because I believe their commitment (and talent) to both the running game and being strong defensive football teams will prove to be the difference in the chaos that this Pac-12 Conference should end up being.

                    Both Stanford and Utah are projected to finish 2nd in their respective divisions based on many pronositcations out there and the actual odds themselves, so it's not like I'm taking a huge leap of faith here. Stanford's got arguably the most continuity on their roster this year compared to the bulk of their peers, and Utah is a team that's got a bigger home-field advantage than most think and they get to host both Washington and USC this year in games that might determine quite a bit in terms of this prediction coming true.

                    But really, I wouldn't be surprised to see any sort of combination in the Pac-12 title game this year because that's how close I see it breaking overall. One bad bounce in a game, one bad injury, or one freshman star shining through the clouds through the first 4-8 weeks of the season could have this entire conference flipped on it's head. What I do know though is this; Pac-12 underdogs in conference play are probably going to end up being a really good bet in 2018 with all the parity this conference should have.
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      BC-FBC--College Football Preview Package,ADVISORY
                      August 3, 2018


                      To help you with planning ahead of the college football season, some of our plans in coming weeks. This ****** will be updated through August. For questions, please contact Dave Zelio (dzelio(at)ap.org). All times Eastern.

                      Adds FBC--SUMMER JOBS package for Aug. 8, FBC--ALLEN'S LAST CHANCE for Aug. 20.

                      TOP 25 POLL


                      The 2018 preseason Top 25 will be released on Monday, Aug. 20, at noon. The weekly poll will begin on Tuesday, Sept. 4, and will then be sent every Sunday at 2 p.m. through the rest of the regular season. The final poll will be sent roughly an hour after the national championship game the evening of Monday, Jan. 7. This is the 83rd year of the Top 25 poll.

                      PRESEASON ALL-AMERICA

                      The AP will release its preseason All-America team on Tuesday, Aug. 21 at noon. The first AP All-America team was selected in 1925, a decade before the first Heisman Trophy. The same expert panel of 61 sports writers and broadcasters from AP-affiliated media around the country who decide the Top 25 will select preseason All-America players for each position for first and second teams.

                      TEAM PREVIEWS

                      All team previews, written in a things-to-know style, will move on Thursday, Aug. 16. Each preview will be approximately 700 words, with photos.

                      CONFERENCE PREVIEWS (each approximately 800 words, with photos.

                      Aug. 13: SEC, Pac 12

                      Aug. 14: Big Ten, Atlantic Coast

                      Aug. 15 Big 12, Mountain West

                      Aug. 17: Remaining Group of Five conference previews


                      MAIN EVENTS

                      FBC--REDSHIRT RULE


                      Under a new NCAA rule change, football players will be able get into four games and still take a redshirt season. The shift is a boon for coaches, who are taking a whole new look at roster management. By College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo. SENT: 800 words, photos Aug. 1.

                      FBC--SLOWING DOWN

                      College football's offensive revolution is literally slowing down. For the third straight season possessions per game dropped and 2017 saw a significant drop in plays per game, which led to less scoring. The ''fast football'' craze sparked by the likes of Oregon appears to be fading. By College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 800 words, photos by noon Aug. 6.

                      FBC--YEAR OF THE DEFENSIVE LINEMAN

                      CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. - In college football's year of the defensive lineman, Boston College's Zach Allen is not getting the publicity of Clemson's four potential first-round draft picks, the latest Bosa harassing quarterbacks at Ohio State or Houston's Ed Oliver. But the NFL scouts are well aware of Allen, too. With an obsessive dedication to an early-to-bed-early-too-rise routine and strict diet of George Foreman Grill meals, Allen has put himself on the same level as all those former five-star prospects. By College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 750 words, photos by noon Aug. 9. With FBC--PICK SIX-DEFENSIVE LINEMEN.

                      FBC--HOW TO MAKE A SCHEDULE


                      Touting the strength of a schedule has become all the rage in the College Football Playoff era. Schools and conferences want to schedule to impress the selection committee, but the driving factor in most scheduling decisions is the budget. By College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 700 words, photos by noon Aug. 22.

                      SUMMER JOBS

                      FBC--SUMMER JOBS

                      College football players do not have a much of an offseason, and summer tends to be no break. Still, Arizona State's Kyle Williams has managed to take steps toward his long-term goal of becoming an orthopedic surgeon over the last two summers. Williams has been shadowing ASU's team doctor at the Mayo Clinic. By Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 700 words, photos, video by 5 a.m. Aug. 8.

                      FBC--SUMMER JOBS-FARMER'S WORK


                      STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - Penn State linebacker Koa Farmer loves crime-solving television shows like ''CSI,'' ''Law & Order'' and ''Bones.'' Last summer, he got a taste of what it's like to solve real crimes. His internship involved ride-a-longs with federal agents and Maryland police and work with forensics experts. By Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 500 words, with photos, video by 5 a.m. Aug. 8.

                      FBC--SUMMER JOBS-IT'S A ZOO

                      ST. PAUL, Minn. - Minnesota defensive linemen Winston DeLattiboudere, a junior, and Jerry Gibson, a senior, worked this summer as security guards at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory for the city of St. Paul, a few miles from campus. One of the Gophers coaches made the connection, and they both jumped at the opportunity to feed the giraffes, high-five the kids and help keep the zoo grounds safe. By Dave Campbell. UPCOMING: 600 words, photos and video by 5 a.m. Aug. 8.

                      Also:

                      - FBC--SUMMER JOBS-DALTON'S BLOG, K-State standout lineman Dalton Risner runs a popular blog. By Dave Skretta. UPCOMING: 700 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 8.

                      FEATURES

                      FBC--ALABAMA-QB SAGA


                      TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Alabama has Tua Tagovailoa, hero of the national championship game, and Jalen Hurts, who has done little but win in two seasons as starter. The defending national champion Crimson Tide's quarterback competition figures to be one of the preseason's hottest topics. Coach Nick Saban wants it to play out on the field, not in the media. By John Zenor. UPCOMING: 700 words, photos by 5 p.m. on Aug. 7.

                      FBC--OKLAHOMA-MILLIONAIRE MURRAY

                      NORMAN, Okla. - It takes a special kind of swagger to follow Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield at quarterback, and Oklahoma's Kyler Murray definitely has it. For starters, the first-round Major League Baseball draft pick has signed for nearly $5 million to play for the Oakland A's. He's fully committed to football for one year, and if he can beat out Austin Kendall for the starting job, the speedster could be one of college football's most electrifying players. By Cliff Brunt. UPCOMING: 750 words, with photos by noon Aug. 11.

                      FBC--MISSISSIPPI ST-MOORHEAD AND FITZ

                      STARKVILLE, Miss. - Joe Moorhead earned his reputation as an offensive savant after rebuilding Penn State's attack over two seasons. Now the new Mississippi State coach will try to mesh his philosophy with veteran Nick Fitzgerald, who has been one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks in the country over the past two seasons but is coming off a gruesome leg injury in last year's Egg Bowl. By David Brandt. UPCOMING: 750 words, photos by 5 p.m. on Aug. 12.

                      FBC--PENN STATE-RAHNE'S CHANCE

                      STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - No pressure, Ricky Rahne. Penn State's new offensive coordinator takes over a unit missing star running back Saquon Barkley and the man who made it hum, Joe Moorhead. But if he can keep things rolling in State College, he could be the next hot coordinator in college football. By College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 750 words, photos by 5 p.m. on Aug. 13. With FBC--PICK SIX-RISING COORDINATORS.

                      FBC--ALLEN'S LAST CHANCE

                      Dakota Allen still feels this is his last chance, even after a successful return to Texas Tech following a well-documented season at an East Mississippi junior college. After being Tech's second-leading tackler as a freshman in 2015, the linebacker was involved in an off-field incident which led to him being kicked off the team and out of school. He thought his football career was over. But he spent the 2016 season with the first team featured in Netflix's ''Last Chance U'' series, then got the opportunity to return to Texas Tech. He was a team captain last season and now goes into his senior year as a preseason All-Big 12 pick. By Stephen Hawkins. UPCOMING: 800 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 20.

                      SENT:

                      FBC--NEBRASKA-BUILD IT LIKE TOM


                      LINCOLN, Neb. - Scott Frost's job is to return Nebraska to the place it held in the college football hierarchy two decades ago. Frost is driven by his profound respect for his mentor Tom Osborne. Frost has said repeatedly Nebraska made a mistake moving away from the methods Osborne used on and off the field to make the Cornhuskers great. His plan is to bring back that identity. By College Football Writer Eric Olson. SENT: 800 words, photos on Aug. 2.

                      FBC--ACC-CLEMSON'S LEAGUE

                      CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Dabo Swinney has built Clemson into an every-year power with regular College Football Playoff appearances and a recent national championship. None of that could've happened without first asserting unquestioned control of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tigers open practice this week with two league losses in three seasons and as the overwhelming favorite to become the first team to win four straight ACC titles since Florida State's romp through the 1990s. By Aaron Beard. SENT: 790 words and photos on July 31.

                      SHAREABLES

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-GROUP OF FIVE, the top teams from the so-called Group of Five conferences. By Steve Megargee. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 6

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-IMPACT TRANSFERS, the top non-quarterback transfers who are ready to play. By Genaro C. Armas. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 7.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-AWARD HOPEFULS, our way-too-early predictions for the top player awards. By Steve Megargee. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 8.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-BACK FROM INJURY, top players back in the mix this season after injuries. By Steve Megargee. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 9.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-HOT SEAT COACHES, which coaches may have the most to lose this season. By Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 10.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-HEISMAN DARKHORSES, the top off-the-radar possibilities for the Heisman this season. By Joe Reedy. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 13.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-GOOD PLAYERS ON BAD TEAMS, the best of the crop stuck on teams expected to struggle. By Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 14.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-IMPACT FRESHMAN, the top freshman to watch this season. By Steve Megargee. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 15.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-PLAYOFF PREDICTIONS, the four teams we think will make the College Football Playoff. By Ralph D. Russo. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 16.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-CRITICAL GAMES, the race to the national championship includes a bunch of tantalizing matchups. By Noah Trister. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 17.

                      - FBC--PICK SIX-REDSHIRT FRESHMAN, the top youngsters to watch this season. By Steve Megargee. UPCOMING: 650 words, photos by 5 a.m. Aug. 18.


                      AP TOP 25 PODCAST

                      The AP Top 25 podcast is published weekly on Tuesday evenings. It can be found on APNews.com and iTunes .

                      AP SPORTS EXTRA: PRESEASON POLL PAGE

                      A paginated look at the preseason Top 25 poll will be available shortly after the poll is released on Aug. 20. The AP Sports Extra pages are available in full broadsheet, half broadsheet and tabloid size (perfect for preseason football tabs). They will include space for local advertising or content. The pages will focus on the 25 teams selected by AP poll voters with emphasis on those at the very top. The pages are available at no charge to all AP Sports subscribers. Contact Barry Bedlan at bbedlan(at)ap.org for more information.

                      DIGITAL NEWS EXPERIENCE


                      All the content in this advisory will be available through the College Football Digital News Experience, an all-digital presentation focused entirely on AP's college football coverage and anchored around the marquee Top 25 poll. The site, which is responsive to all devices, is available for free and pays a revenue share to participating sites. The DNE allows for local customization of the site logo, navigation bar, highlighted teams and other features, including embeddable widgets around the poll and Latest News. Some examples: http://collegefootball.ap.org/tampabay and http://collegefootball.ap.org/newsday . Contact your local sales representative or Barry Bedlan at bbedlan(at)ap.org to take advantage of this free digital offering.
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Handicapping Illinois (3.5)
                        August 6, 2018


                        The Illinois Fighting Illini have been a major bust under head coach Lovie Smith, as they are 5-19 overall and just 2-16 in the Big Ten in the last two seasons. The administration is being patient with Smith and hoping that the third year is when his team starts to turn the corner.

                        Illinois will have a new offensive coordinator in Rod Smith, but the team is still very young and they don’t have a proven quarterback. Let’s look at the schedule for Illinois to see if they will go over or under their win total of 3.5 for the 2018 season.

                        2018 Illinois Fighting Illini Season Win Total
                        Over 3.5 (+100)
                        Under 3.5 (-130)


                        2018 Illinois Fighting Illini Schedule Analysis

                        Sept. 1 Kent State


                        If Illinois is to have any chance to get to four wins then they simply have to win their opener. The Fighting Illini are 7-2 against the MAC since 2004, including a win over Kent in 2015.

                        Sept. 8 Western Illinois

                        This should be a win for Illinois against Western Illinois. It has been all Fighting Illini against weak teams, as they are 15-0 all-time against FCS teams since 2002. It should be noted, however, that Western Illinois is expected to be vastly improved this season.

                        Sept. 15 USF (Soldier Field)

                        If the Fighting Illini are going to show improvement then this is a game they need to win. They were routed last season by the Bulls in Tampa, so this is a revenge game for the Illini.

                        Sept. 21 Penn State

                        The Big Ten opener for the Illini is at home, but Penn State is considered an elite team and this will likely be a home loss for Illinois.

                        Oct. 6 at Rutgers

                        The Scarlet Knights are just 5-22 in the Big Ten since 2014 but one of those wins was against Illinois. This game looks like a toss-up.

                        Oct. 13 Purdue


                        The Boilermakers are 5-2 in their last seven games against Illinois. It is hard to see how Illinois keeps up with the high scoring offense of Purdue, even at home.

                        Oct. 20 at Wisconsin

                        The Illini are likely to get blown out in Madison. They have not won at Wisconsin since 2002.

                        Oct. 27 at Maryland

                        This will be the first meeting between the teams in Big Ten play. The Terps are expected to be improved this season and it is hard to see Illinois going on the road and winning this one.

                        Nov. 3 Minnesota

                        The Fighting Illini are 1-5 in the last six meetings against Minnesota. The Illini are at home and the Golden Gophers are not that good, so perhaps Illinois can get a conference win.

                        Nov. 10 at Nebraska

                        The Cornhuskers have a new head coach in Scott Frost and they have a much better offense than Illinois. This looks like a road loss for the Illini.

                        Nov. 17 Iowa

                        The Hawkeyes have dominated the Illini in recent seasons, winning the last four meetings. This is a letdown spot for Iowa, but they still have a lot more talent than Illinois.

                        Nov. 24 at Northwestern

                        The Illini have lost four of the last five in this series to Northwestern. It is hard to see Illinois going on the road and winning this one against a Northwestern team that won 10 games last season.

                        2018 Illinois Fighting Illini Season Win Total Prediction

                        The third season is oftentimes when a team shows the most improvement under a new head coach. Will that be the case for Illinois under Lovie Smith? The Fighting Illini are still a very young team, but there are some games on their schedule that are winnable in 2018. Illinois should be Kent and Western Illinois, but can they win another two games to get to four wins? The best chances look to be the home games against South Florida and Minnesota and the road contest at Rutgers.

                        Assuming Illinois lose all of the other games on their schedule they would have to win two of those three games to get to four wins. That seems a lot to ask from a young team with a freshman quarterback, so we’ll go under the win total for Illinois in 2018.
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          2018 Pac-12 Preview
                          August 6, 2018


                          We’re Back

                          According to the Pac-12, a total of 178 starters, who started at least half of his team’s games or a majority of games at a specific position, return to Pac-12 football squads in 2018. That’s out of a possible 288 (including placekickers and punters) for an average of 14.8 starters returning per team.

                          Among those 178 returning starters are a number of key players, including 10 first-team and 12 second-team All-Pac-12 performers. Arizona, California, and Washington each return the most with 18 starters, followed by Oregon State with 16. Washington State returns the fewest starters with 10.

                          Newbies

                          Five new coaches enter the league this season. It’s the highest number of new coaches on the sidelines in one season for the Pac-12.

                          UCLA’s Chip Kelly returns for his second stint in the Pac-12. Kelly posted a 46-7 record in four seasons at Oregon (2009-12) and led the Ducks to the 2010 BCS title game. Other new coaches include Arizona’s Kevin Sumlin (averaged 8.7 wins over 10 seasons), Arizona State’s Herm Edwards (last coached in the NFL from 2001-08), Oregon’s Mario Cristobal (won three national titles as a player and an assistant coach), Oregon State’s Jonathan Smith (returns to his alma mater making his head coaching debut).

                          Note: The numbers following each team name represents the amount of returning starters on offense and defense, along with the number of returning linemen, with an asterisk (*) designating a returning quarterback.


                          ARIZONA (Offense – *7/2, Defense – 9/1, 51 Lettermen)

                          TEAM THEME: A NEW TATE OF MIND

                          As is the undoing of many a successful man, it appears Rich’s rod likely sealed his fate. Such was the case when Arizona canned Rich Rodriguez, and his ghastly $6M salary, for sexual misconduct. Enter Kevin Sumlin and his in-your-face spread playbook, custom-designed for new phenom QB Khalil Tate, who burst on the scene in October last season. After being inserted into the starting lineup, Tate recorded a run of 70 more yards in each of his first four starts while earning an unprecedented four straight Pac-12 Player of the Week awards. Safe to say, Sumlin figures to utilize Tate to the max – much like he did with dual-threat QB Johnny Manziel at Texas A&M – to operate the Cats’ potent 3rd ranked rushing attack. “He’s moving from being an athlete that is a quarterback, to being a quarterback that's an athlete,” said Kevin Sumlin.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Freshmen started 25.2% of all Wildcats’ games last season, the 3rd most in the nation.

                          PLAY AGAINST: at Washington State (11/17)

                          ARIZONA STATE (Offense – *8/3, Defense – 4/1, 42 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: IN-AND-OUT BURGER

                          The release of contentious head coach Todd Graham was considered a stunner. However, it was surpassed in magnitude when ASU brought in long-retired and longtime NFL head coach Herm Edwards, who hasn’t coached in college in 30 years – and owned a 54-74 record as an NFL mentor. Yeah, head scratching, to say the least. So as we see it, a 46-game winner over the past six years was replaced with a zero-game coach over the last nine years. Smells like a lobbyist struck that deal. Meanwhile, heavy attrition hit a soft front seven. Against the backdrop of a new staff, new schemes and revamped lines of scrimmage, is a schedule laced with nine bowlers. Sorry, but we don’t see this experiment lasting long.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Arizona State ranked No. 120 in passing yards allowed in 2017 after ranking dead last (No. 128) the previous two seasons.

                          PLAY AGAINST: at Arizona (11/24)

                          CALIFORNIA (Offense – *10/3, Defense – 7/1, 56 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: GOOD NEWS BEARS

                          New coach Justin Wilcox’s defense lived up to its hype as the former DC guru improved the Bears’ stop-unit by 88 YPG, its best overall effort since 2011. The offense, though, slipped mightily. Through it all, Cal came up one game shy of bowl eligibility despite the fact that freshmen accounted for 20.2% of all starts last season (only six teams started more). QB Ross Bowers is the Pac-12’s leading returner in passing yardage after throwing for 3,039 yards in 2017 (flash: he’s being pushed by South Carolina transfer QB Brandon McIlwain), and the running backs are deep and talented. Operating behind all five starters returning to the offensive line should help them blossom. Two other positives: Cal finished 37th nationally in turnover margin behind all the young talent, and the Bears will take on the 5th easiest schedule of all Power 5 schools in 2018 with foes going 76-77 (.497) last season.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Cal held Stanford, USC, Washington and Washington State below its season average in points and total yards last season.

                          PLAY ON: at USC (11/10)

                          COLORADO (Offense – *5/3, Defense – 7/2, 47 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: THIRSTING FOR MORE

                          Like a mirage to a water-starved victim crossing the desert, the Buffaloes’ 8-2 conference effort in 2016 surely looked like the real deal. After all, they had gone a measly 3-33 in conference play the previous four seasons. And then lo and behold, a 2-7 record in Pac-12 frays last year found them free falling again, ending the season with a losing record for the 11th time in the last 12 years. Things went so sideways that Colorado had forced a turnover in each of its previous 30 home games – the longest skein in the nation – until they hosted USC in their final game at Boulder last year. QB Steven Montez is one of only fours starters back on offense. Pass the canteen.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Colorado is 10-2 ATS in Last Home Games, including 7-0 ATS versus sub .700 opponents.

                          PLAY AGAINST: vs. Oregon St (10/27) – *KEY as a favorite

                          OREGON (Offense – *7/3, Defense – 7/2, 43 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: CRYSTAL BALL DIGS CRISTOBAL

                          Now with its third coach in as many seasons, the Ducks will soldier on under another new head coach in Mario Cristobal, an Oregon assistant last year and former boss at Florida International. The good news is that Oregon is 37-14 since 1995 the first season under a new head coach, including 24-3 at home. Better news is the Ducks will face the easiest Power 5 schedule in 2018 according to the NCAA, as foes this season were just 65-87 (.428) last year. Aside from a strong initial recruiting class, Cristobal welcomes back junior QB Justin Herbert. The 6’ 6” 225-lb future NFL signal-caller went 6-2 last season before being shut down with a shoulder injury. It’s no coincidence OU led the nation in scoring (49 PPG) when Herbert was in the lineup. It’s important to note that Cristobal is extremely well liked by the players, who campaigned for his hire after Willie Taggart bolted for Florida State.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: The straight-up winner ‘in the stats’ is 24-1 in Oregon games the last two years, including 13-0 last season.

                          PASS

                          OREGON STATE (Offense – 7/4, Defense – 8/1, 45 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: MAPPING OUT A NEW PLAN

                          After two-and-a-half years the Gary Andersen experiment is over following a 7-23 record, including a paltry 3-18 mark in Pac-12 games. Mike Riley is returning to Oregon State – only he will be joining Jonathan Smith’s staff as assistant head coach. Riley previously was the Oregon State head coach from 2003 to 2014, and also 1997 to ’98. Riley was fired Nov. 25 as head coach at Nebraska after going 19-19 over three seasons. Smith, a former Beavers quarterback, was a graduate assistant at Oregon State under Riley in 2003. If it sounds like a well-knit Beaver connection, it is. The key to getting back on the map will be finding a way to win conference games as OSU has dropped 26 of its last 29 Pac-12 performances.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: The Beavers have been out-yarded in each of their last 19 away games.

                          PASS

                          STANFORD (Offense – *9/5, Defense – 6/1, 63 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: DOWN ON THE FARM

                          While Stanford returns 9 starters on offense, the fact of the matter is they lost players to 4 NFL defections, plus 16 players from the 2-deep are gone. Only seven FBS schools lost more starters from last year’s depth charts, and only four schools saw more players leave early for the NFL. Nonetheless, the Cardinal have captured four Pac-12 championship games since 2012 under David Shaw. The big story is star RB Bryce Love’s decision to return to Stanford rather than leaving early for the NFL. The Heisman Trophy hopeful fuels a resurgence of offensive starters back for the Cardinal – sans OC Mike Bloomgren, who leaves to take over the head coaching duties at Rice. QB K.J. Costello also returns after a strong second half last year.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: The 405 YPG allowed by Stanford last season was the most ever under HC David Shaw.

                          PLAY ON: vs. USC (9/8)

                          UCLA (Offense – 5/2, Defense – 7/2, 38 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: NEXT MAN UP

                          On the 20th anniversary of its last Pac-12 conference championship, the UCLA brass has turned its football fortunes over to Chip Kelly, the former NFL and Oregon head coach, where he went 46-7 with three conference titles and an appearance in the BCS championship game with the Ducks. The biggest task at hand is filling the shoes set by record-setting QB Josh Rosen. Rest assured, Kelly will find his man. The other concern is patching a rush defense that was the worst for a Power 5 program in nearly 20 years. Remember this on your way out: since 1965 UCLA has had six consecutive non-winning seasons. They are 50-22-1 SU the following year while producing a winning record every season. Just sayin’.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Chip Kelly is 28-1 SU against sub .800 college football opponents.

                          PLAY AGAINST: at Arizona State (11/10)

                          USC (Offense – 7/4, Defense – 7/1, 52 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: GREEN EGGS AND SAM

                          True freshman QB J.T. Daniels is expected to be behind center for the defending Pac-12 champion Trojans this season, replacing redshirt sophomore Sam Darnold, who left for the NFL. The only other true freshman signal-caller to start for USC was Matt Barkley who, like Daniels, hailed from Mater Dei High School in California. Note: Daniels carried a 4.16 Grade Average and graduated after only three years in high school. Last year’s 11-win campaign was especially impressive considering USC did not have a bye week. The Trojans can thank a Red Zone Defense that ranked No. 4 in the nation, but they were also the 5th worst team the nation in Most Penalties last season. It’s a good thing that head coach Clay Helton has out-recruited every team in the conference. He loses a 4,000-yard passer, a 1,500-yard rusher and a 1,100-yard receiver. Ouch.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: USC is 16-0 SU in the Coliseum under head coach Clay Helton.

                          PLAY AGAINST: at UCLA (11/17)

                          UTAH (Offense – *8/4, Defense – 6/1, 55 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: WINNINGHAM U

                          After appearing in every College Football Playoff ranking since its inception in 2014, the Utes extended the streak through the first three weeks in 2017 before finally bowing out. It’s a testament to head coach Kyle Whittingham, the holder of the highest bowl winning percentage (.917, 11-1) of any coach in NCAA history. It was confirmed in the NFL draft this season when Utah led the Pac-12 with eight selections, tying for the third-most in the country. QB Tyler Huntley and a handful of receiving targets are back in 2018, as well as four of last year’s five starting offensive linemen. They make up 18 full-or-part time starters from last season’s bowl-winning squad. Finally, former head coach Gary Andersen is also back as a DL coach.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Head coach Kyle Whittingham is 17-4 SU against the other four Power Five conferences.

                          PLAY AGAINST: vs. Arizona (10/12)

                          WASHINGTON (Offense – *8/4, Defense – 9/1, 55 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: LOCKED AND LOADED

                          Chris Petersen planted the seeds for what may the most talented squad he’ll have in his tenure at Washington. It all started in 2015 when his “young as hell” Huskies were force-fed with plenty of playing time. All of those underclassmen are now upper classmen and as a result, U-Dub welcomes a bevy of returning starters for the 2018 season. At the helm is 4th-year senior starting QB Jake Browning, who has tossed for a school record 9,104 yards while completing over 64% of his pass attempts and accounting for 90 touchdowns. In addition, 3-years starting RB Myles Gaskin is back with 4,055 rushing yards and 49 TDs. Add a fearsome front seven on defense and the Huskies appear headed to the playoffs once again this season – especially going up against the 4th easiest schedule of all Power 5 schools in 2018 with foes going 73-80 (.477) last season.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: Chris Petersen’s .816 winning percentage is the 2nd highest among all active head coaches with at least 13 years of experience.

                          PLAY ON: vs. Arizona State (9/22)

                          WASHINGTON STATE (Offense – 4/2, Defense – 6/1, 41 Lettermen)


                          TEAM THEME: MAKING THE BEST OF A LOUSY SITUATION

                          The tragic suicide of heir-apparent backup QB Tyler Hilinski in January left fractured hearts and souls in the Washington State program. He was scheduled to fill the shoes of 4-year starting QB Luke Falk, who left with a jaw-dropping 14,881 passing yards on 68.3% completions and 119 TDs. In addition WSU’s top two WRs have transferred out of the program. On the defensive side of the ball, the Cougars lose Hercules Mata’afa, who led the Pac-12 in sacks and tackles for a loss last season. Making matters worse, the OL ranked No. 126 in sacks allowed last season. Meanwhile, former Minnesota head coach Tracy Claeys is the new defensive coordinator. He reunites with Cougar defensive line coach Jeff Phelps, who coached alongside Claeys at Minnesota from 2011-16.

                          STAT YOU WILL LIKE: The Cougars are 10-1 ATS as conference road dogs under Mike Leach vs. winning foes off a SUATS win.

                          PLAY ON: vs. California (11/3)
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            COLLEGE FOOTBALL '18: Key transfers from Big House to Bayou
                            August 7, 2018


                            Coach Jim Harbaugh couldn't pass up a chance to deliver a coy response when asked about the quarterback situation at Michigan.

                            Going by numbers alone, there may not be much of a contest. Mississippi transfer Shea Patterson could be the new starter behind center this season.

                            Out of the SEC and into the Big House - the pressure won't let up.

                            Patterson could be the most pivotal transfer in FBS this season. Michigan is coming off an 8-5 season in which its offense floundered under Harbaugh, a former quarterback who had a reputation for developing QBs. But the Wolverines finished 109th in the country in yards per pass attempt in 2017.

                            ''Quarterback position, don't have any announcements to make today about that,'' Harbaugh said at Big Ten media days.

                            Michigan opens the season Sept. 1 at Notre Dame and if Patterson is not the quarterback that will be even bigger news than his transfer to Michigan.

                            Patterson played three games as a freshman in 2016 at Mississippi, passing for 880 yards and six touchdowns. Last season, Patterson played the first seven games, throwing for 2,259 yards, 17 touchdowns and nine interceptions before tearing a ligament in his right knee.

                            He completed about 64 percent of passes.

                            In April, the NCAA granted Patterson's request to waive the usually required redshirt season at his new school, making him eligible to play this year at Michigan.

                            ''Shea Patterson went through all of spring practice with our team and got great work in there. Played really well,'' Harbaugh said.

                            Some other notable names at new places:

                            SAIVION SMITH, DB, Alabama

                            It's a reloading year in the secondary for the defending national champions, who must replace all four starters. Smith, a junior college transfer and former five-star LSU signee, is among the talented reinforcements. He could have an immediate impact in a defensive backfield short on experience.

                            JOE BURROW, QB, LSU

                            The former Ohio State quarterback played behind J.T. Barrett for two seasons. Burrow will compete for a starting job with the Tigers, who are installing a new offense under new coordinator Steve Ensminger and have been searching for high-level quarterback play for a while.

                            ANTONIO WILLIAMS, RB North Carolina

                            Another former Buckeye , Williams was lined up behind two stars in Columbus. The former highly touted recruit cited opportunity and family in returning to his home state. Williams played one game with six carries as a freshman, then 12 more as a reserve last year.

                            ALOHI GILMAN, S, Notre Dame

                            Gilman sat out last year after transferring from Navy, where he made 76 tackles as a freshman. A versatile defender, Gilman could provide stability at a position where the Irish struggled in 2017.

                            WILTON SPEIGHT, QB, UCLA

                            While Patterson arrived, Wilton Speight left Michigan and headed to UCLA , where he could play for new coach Chip Kelly as a graduate transfer. Speight passed for 2,538 yards and 18 touchdowns in 2016 but was sidelined after four games last fall with three broken vertebrae. He'll be in the mix to replace three-year starter Josh Rosen, who was a first-round NFL draft choice of the Arizona Cardinals.

                            ''So you're getting a guy that's got some maturity to him and has been there, done that. He's there for a reason,'' Kelly said about Speight.

                            JALEN HURD, WR, Baylor

                            The former Tennessee Volunteer running back's transition to receiver is as notable as his school switch. Hurd was 440 yards shy of Tennessee's career rushing record when he left midway through his junior season in 2016. He's eligible for the Bears this season, when he'll play wideout.

                            ---

                            EXTRA POINT

                            Six more transfers that could have an impact on their new teams, with former schools in parentheses.

                            K.J. Carta-Samuels, QB, Colorado State (Washington)

                            Keller Chryst, QB, Tennessee (Stanford)

                            Jordan Cronkrite, RB, USF (Florida)

                            Jonathan Hilliman, RB, Rutgers (Boston College)

                            J.T. Ibe, S, South Carolina (Rice)

                            Tre Watson, RB, Texas (California)
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • #89
                              Ole Miss Breakdown
                              August 8, 2018


                              Ole Miss enters its second season under head coach Matt Luke looking to improve on last year’s 6-6 straight-up record and 5-7 against-the-spread mark. This will be last year of probation for the Rebels, who can’t go to the SEC Championship Game or a bowl for a third straight year.

                              Therefore, many view Ole Miss as a non-factor for one more campaign. However, it says here that the Rebels have enough talent to play spoilers in the race to win both SEC divisions. They return eight starters on offense and seven on defense.

                              Most of that talent is on offense. This unit has at least a pair of future first-round picks in offensive tackle Greg Little and wide receiver A.J. Brown. Mel Kiper Jr.’s first Big Board for the 2019 Draft had Brown listed as the No. 4 overall pick with Little at No. 6.

                              Brown is the leader of a WR group that’s ranked No. 1 in the nation by most preseason publications, including Phil Steele’s. The junior was a second-team All-American as a true sophomore in 2017, hauling in 75 receptions for 1,252 yards and 11 touchdowns.

                              There are two more elite wideouts in D.K. Metcalf and DaMarkus Lodge, who had 41 catches for 698 yards and seven TDs last year. Metcalf started all 12 games in 2017, making 39 receptions for 646 yards and seven TDs, including the game-winner in the final seconds of a 37-34 victory at Kentucky.

                              Former QB Shea Patterson transferred to Michigan. The former five-star recruit from Texas went down with a torn ACL in a 40-24 home loss to LSU last October. Jordan Ta’amu started the last five games and distinguished himself extremely well. The senior who came to Oxford via the juco route completed 66.5 percent of his throws for 1,682 yards with an 11/4 touchdown-to-interception ratio.

                              Luke also has found the QB of the future in 5-star recruit Matt Corral, a California native that arrived on campus in January and took part in spring practice. Corral was originally a Florida commit before Jim McElwain was fired and replaced by Dan Mullen.

                              In Steele’s preseason mag, junior tight end Dawson Knox is listed as a third-team All-SEC pick. Knox had had 24 catches for 321 yards in ’17. Brown and Little are first-team All-SEC selections, while Metcalf is a second-teamer and OG Javon Patterson joins Knox as a third-teamer.

                              Ole Miss averaged 32.8 points per game under first-year offensive coordinator Phil Longo, who was hired by former HC Hugh Freeze before his dismissal last summer. Longo had previously been OC in ’16 at Sam Houston State running an ‘Air Raid’ attack.

                              Steele ranks the Rebels’ offensive line as the fourth-best in the SEC and the nation’s 17th-best. However, the RBs are 13th in the conference. Juco transfer RB Scottie Phillips was in for the spring and may end up as the starter. Jordan Wilkins has departed after rushing for 1,039 yards and nine TDs with a 6.5 yards-per-carry average.

                              D’Vaughn Pennamon ran for 227 yards and four TDs with a 4.1 YPC average last year, while Eric Swinney ran for 209 yards and three TDs with a 4.8 YPC average. However, Pennamon is currently out indefinitely with a knee injury.

                              As bullish as I am on the Ole Miss offense, I’m equally down on the defense, if not more so. This unit allowed 34.6 PPP in ’17. The Rebels lost their two leading tacklers and one of the SEC’s best pass rushers in Marquis Haynes, who had 7.5 sacks and five QB hurries last season. (Of course, Haynes is the stud that blindsided Alabama QB Jalen Hurts in Oxford two years ago with as perfect a hit on a QB as you’ll ever see, resulting in a scoop-and-score TD that gave Ole Miss a 24-3 lead. Alas, the Crimson Tide rallied for a 48-43 win to avoid a third straight loss to the Rebels.)

                              Steele’s SEC Unit Rankings reflect the challenges that second-year DC Wesley McGriff (co-DC at Auburn in ’16) faces. The defensive line is ranked 12th in the league, the LBs are 14th and the secondary is seventh.

                              Three Ole Miss defenders are on Steele’s preseason All-SEC teams. Junior DT Benito Jones is a second-teamer, senior CB Ken Webster is a third-team selection and junior free safety Jaylon Jones is a fourth-teamer. Benito Jones has started 14 career games in his first two seasons, recording 68 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, two sacks, seven QB hurries and one forced fumble.

                              Luke hit the juco trail with hopes of adding immediate help on this side of the ball. Two defensive linemen were added in Noah Jefferson and Hal Northern. Jefferson and juco LB Vernon Dasher arrived early for spring practice and Dasher is probably going to start right away.

                              Sportsbook.ag currently has Ole Miss with a season win total of six (‘under’ -150, ‘over’ +120).

                              Before looking at this year’s schedule, let’s rewind what went down in ’17. Remember, Luke replaced Freeze on an interim basis. Ole Miss started 2-0 with lopsided home victories over South Alabama (47-27) and UT-Martin (45-23), only to lose three straight road games by double-digit margins. The Rebels stopped the bleeding with a 57-35 home win over Vanderbilt to get back to .500.

                              Then Patterson went down in the home loss to 24th-ranked LSU. From there, Ole Miss finished 3-2 in Ta’amu’s five starts, including a 31-28 win at Mississippi State as a 15-point underdog in the Egg Bowl. This victory convinced AD Ross Bjork to give Luke the HC gig on a permanent basis.

                              Both defeats down the stretch were one-possession games, as the Rebels lost home games to Arkansas (38-37) and Texas A&M (31-24). They averaged 35.8 PPG with Ta’amu under center.

                              Luke’s squad opens the year with a tone-setting showdown with Texas Tech in Houston. As of Aug. 8, most books had the Red Raiders installed as 1.5 or two-point favorites. The other non-conference games are at home vs. Southern Illinois, Kent State and ULM.

                              Ole Miss draws South Carolina and Vanderbilt as its games against the SEC East. The Rebels will be in a favorable spot for a Nov. 3 home game vs. the Gamecocks, who will come to Oxford in a potential look-ahead situation (depending on the SEC East standings at the time, obviously) with a game at Florida on deck. Most important, Ole Miss has two weeks to prepare for Will Muschamp’s squad, which hosts Tennessee the prior weekend.

                              The spoiler role I noted earlier in both divisions is clearly referencing South Carolina in how Ole Miss can impact the race in the East. Although we don’t give the Rebels a shot against Alabama, they could give Auburn and Mississippi State trouble, especially with both of those contests at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

                              In its Games of the Year section, Sportsbook.ag has Ole Miss as a 10.5-point home underdog vs. Mississippi State. Some other shops have the Rebels as 22.5-point home underdogs vs. Alabama on Sept. 15.

                              I’m going to pass on Ole Miss’s season win total due to my lack of faith in its defense. With that said, I do believe the Rebels will win at least six games. They might wreak havoc on South Carolina’s season in early November. If Luke’s squad can win the turnover battle in home games vs. Auburn and Mississippi State, it could pull upsets in those home outings as well.

                              **B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**

                              -- Ole Miss is ranked 60th in Steele’s preseason Power Rankings.

                              -- Ole Miss finished 2017 minus five in turnover margin. The Rebels were +34 on their 12 foes in total offense.

                              -- Steele ranks the Rebels’ schedule as the 46th-toughest nationally, which is the SEC’s eighth-toughest slate.

                              -- Ole Miss went 3-1 ATS as a road underdog on Luke’s watch last year and is 17-8 in 25 such spots dating back to 2008.

                              -- Steele’s National Unit Rankings has the Rebels at No. 27 in the secondary.

                              -- Not one team on Ole Miss’s schedule has an open date beforehand. The regular-season finale vs. MSU falls on Thanksgiving Day.

                              -- Ole Miss returns 57 lettermen and lost 28.
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                              • #90
                                SEC Season Outlook
                                August 8, 2018


                                It's on to my final preview of the Power Five conferences for the upcoming football season and that means it's time to talk SEC. This has been the dominant conference in collegiate football for the better part of a decade now and there is a good chance nothing really changes in that regard this year.

                                They've got the defending champs from Alabama who are favored to repeat, a 2017 runner-up in Georgia who can't wait to get another crack at the Crimson Tide (can only be in SEC Title game), and will be in the national scene as well, along with all the usual suspects like Florida, Auburn, Mississippi State, Ole Miss, South Carolina, and Missouri all looking to dethrone them.

                                Yet, for as elite as this conference is in terms of it's teams at the top, depth throughout the conference has taken a hit in the last year or two. Sure, Alabama and Georgia are expected to dominate much of the year and possibly get back to a National Title game, but when nearly half of your conference (six of 14 teams) have season win totals of 6.5 or lower – basically a .500 season or not – the likes of 'Bama and Georgia do get a few cupcakes to beat up on in conference play as well.

                                And while the end result may be rather predictable in the SEC (Alabama vs Georgia in SEC Title game) the path to us getting there is probably anything but predictable. But let's take a crack at it anyways.

                                SEC Outlook

                                Most Intriguing SEC Future Bet

                                Ole Miss Over 6.5 wins (+150)


                                There are plenty of heavily juiced season win total options in the SEC, but many of them are shaded towards the way you'd expect. Alabama is heavily shaded 'over' 10.5 wins, same story with Auburn at 8.5 and LSU at 6.5 wins. But the most hevaily shaded 'under' option in this conference is on the Ole Miss Rebels, and I don't necessarily agree with it.

                                Ole Miss takes a bit hit this year with the transfer of QB Shea Patterson, but that means Senior Jordan Ta'amu gets the job from the beginning and he did an admiral role in filling in for Patterson a year ago after he went down with injury. Ta'amu at the helm changes little in terms of offensive possibilities for this team as they could be one of the best scoring units in the conference. The numbers may not show it by year's end given all the tough defenses they'll see in this league, but when you can score points you've always got a chance to win.

                                Ole Miss could end up eclipsing this number thanks to some solid opportunities in the schedule. They get to host Alabama (not that they'd win that anyways), but home games against Auburn, South Carolina, and Mississippi State will likely be the ones that decide the fate of this wager. If the Rebels can squeak out a 2-1 SU mark in those contests, chances are this 'over' 6.5 wins will be a winner. That's still an awfully big 'IF' though.

                                Best Future Bet

                                Tennessee Over 5.5 wins (-130)


                                The Volunteers are another one of those SEC teams with win totals for 2018 hovering around the .500 mark and it's a mark I believe this team will get to this year. Settling on a QB would be the first step to achieving that goal and while it looks like the Stanford-transfer Keller Chryst will at least be the guy out of the gate – and not a bad option at all – I doubt HC Jeremy Pruitt has anything locked in stone at that position for the year.

                                Turnover in terms of the starters will be large this year for Tennessee but that may be a good thing as well. This program has sunk under the weight of lofty expectations the last few years and became a laughing stock of a program for awhile there. Pruitt and his staff are trying to rebuild this thing and a great way to get guys to believe your “culture change methods” is to come out of the gate and produce.

                                Tennessee will be in tough against West Virginia for opening week, and outside of a tough three-week stretch at Georgia, at Auburn, vs Alabama) at the end of September, there are quite a few winnable games for the Volunteers. Obviously many will be quick to point out that the Vols still have to deal with Florida and that massive losing streak against the Gators, but that Florida matchup is quite winnable this year, as are the final five games of the year against South Carolina, Charlotte, Kentucky, Missouri, and Vanderbilt. That could be the six wins right there, never mind the two they should get early on against East Tennessee State and UTEP.

                                If this number was sitting at 6.5 it would probably be a hard pass for me, but at 5.5 and Pruitt coming over looking to instill a winning culture at Tennessee again as a former Alabama assistant is something I can believe in. It's not like we haven't seen a similar scenario play out recently right with Kirby Smart taking Georgia back to prominence as a former 'Bama assistant. Pruitt is the next guy to follow that path and it starts with a Bowl game this year.

                                Best Season Win Total 'Under' Bet

                                South Carolina Under 7.5 (-130)


                                If the likes of Tennessee and Ole Miss are going to rise up in the chase group of the SEC, someone's got to fall back and I'm banking it being the Gamecocks in 2018.

                                This is a program that finished 9-4 SU last year in a year that they probably overperformed thanks to going 6-1 SU in one-possession games (decided by 8 or less) and that's a trend that probably regresses quite a bit this year. Simply put they were probably the luckiest team in the SEC in terms of their results a year ago, and when you consider that won five of their nine games when they were point spread underdogs, including three being those one-possession contests, I don't think South Carolina gets the ball to bounce their way that much this year.

                                Looking at their schedule, I'm not sure where a win may come for them the final five weeks of the year outside of their non-SEC game against FCS school Chattanooga. The Gamecocks have to deal with Tennessee, Ole Miss (two programs I've already discussed), and then have Florida and Clemson to end the year too. Only the Tennessee game of those four is a home contest for South Carolina, so really where are these eight wins going to come? They've only got seven games prior to that stretch and one is against Georgia (definitely a loss).

                                Who plays in the SEC Championship Game?

                                Alabama vs Georgia


                                No-brainer here and really no reason to try and overthink a play like this. Last year's top two teams will be on a collision course all year long for the SEC crown barring some unforeseen circumstances (significant injuries etc) and even if neither of them lives up to the lofty national expectations both may have this year, the conference will still be theirs to play for at year's end.
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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