Monday, September 30, 2013

Trojans Fire Lane Kiffin

It's become a fact of life at this point for football fans across the country. The Lane Kiffin era never ends well. In Oakland, Kiffin left during a messy feud with the legendary and now late Al Davis. He resurfaced at Tennessee, where he was essentially hated by everyone from day one, but still managed to piss everyone off even more when he left after one season to take over at USC. As a former Pete Carroll assistant, he seemed to be the bright young coach that could return the Trojans to the glory
This face pretty much sums it up
days that Carroll brought to Coliseum, when the USC depth chart had All-American's competing for a place on the third string. Unfortunately, the Lane Kiffin era at USC ended very messy and very abruptly. USC is not on the precipice of greatness. As a matter of fact, they are currently 0-2 in their conference and did not receive a single vote in either the media or coaches polls this week. During the halftime show of what would turn out to be Kiffin's final game as head coach, a studio analyst mentioned that he thought USC could pull off an upset. The problem with that statement was that the apparently upset-minded Trojans were playing Arizona State, an unranked team that less than a decade ago didn't even belong on the same field as USC. Once one of the great dynasties in college sports, the Trojans are just a fiesty group trying to pull off an upset or two. The media hype machine may have done more harm than good to Kiffin's tenure. USC opened up last year as the preseason number one team in the country. They boasted promising skill position players like potential Heisman candidate Matt Barkley and the reputation of being one of the game's traditional juggernauts. However, the 2012 season unraveled, quickly exposing the team for what they were -- a team robbed off its depth by scholarship sanctions relating to Reggie Bush's time on campus [when Carroll was the coach]. USC looked good when you glanced at the starting lineup, but their depth chart was a mess. The Trojans would go from preseason number one to postseason number nothing, an unheard of occurrence in college sports. All of this occurred under the watch of Lane Kiffin. Ultimately, Kiffin's undoing took place on the recruiting trial. Pete Carroll bolted from the program once it became apparent that the school would be punished for improprieties during the golden era of Bush and Leinart. Kiffin took the position and would quickly feel the wrath of the NCAA. Kiffin's first USC team was ineligible for the postseason, and he has never recruited a full class at the university due to sanctions. Despite the drawbacks, excellence was still expected by the likes of athletic director Pat Hayden, and it was not delivered. As Carroll's recruits left campus, the wheels on Kiffin's wagon became more and more likely to one day fall off. Kiffin has always seemed to rub people the wrong way, and apparently this must have been the case on the recruiting couch as well. Kiffin brought in good classes, but nothing near the level of his predecessor. It didn't help that USC's scholarship restrictions coincided with the resurgence of California programs such as UCLA and Stanford [two of the Pac-12 conference's three best teams as of now]. This past Saturday, around the time when Arizona State was tallying their 62nd point of the night, the wagon officially found itself without wheels. Twitter erupted with speculation over whether Kiffin was done. College football writers such as Yahoo's Pat Forde had essentially chalked up his demise. The overwhelming sentiment was that giving up 62 points to Arizona State was the equivocal point of no return. The Twitter-verse was right. Pat Hayden fired Lane Kiffin in the airport terminal after the game. Kiffin reportedly pleaded for his job but to no avail. Another Lane Kiffin era has ended with the sky falling on top of his head. USC will turn to veteran staffer Ed Orgeron to guide the team in the interim, and former Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Jack Del Rio has been mentioned as a possible permanent solution. As for Kiffin, who knows where he will resurface. When he does, we will wait for his seemingly inevitable demise. Nobody leaves a job in a more dramatic and entertaining fashion than Lane Kiffin. 

Thursday, September 26, 2013

EA Sports Bails on NCAA Football Series Amidst Controversy

Denard Robinson: The Last Cover Athlete
NCAA Football 14 will be the last college football game produced by video game giant EA Sports. Weeks after announcing that they would be ending their relationship with the NCAA, EA is now stepping away from the college sports table all together, announcing earlier today that will no longer produce a college football video game. This news comes in response to a series of court cases involving former college athletes that have accused the NCAA of profiting off of their likeness without compensating them (this is exactly what the NCAA does, but that's a different story). EA Sports was involved in separate lawsuits related to the matter that they have since settled outside of court. Meanwhile, the NCAA is still embroiled in legal battles with former Nebraska quarterback Sam Keller and former UCLA basketball star Ed O'Bannon. The original plan of action from EA was to part ways with the NCAA and produce a game using the license of individual schools. When major athletic conferences balked at the idea of participating in the project, the eventual decision to cease production was inevitable. This effectively ends the genre of college sports video games for the foreseeable future. At one point, college basketball and baseball were also featured in the EA Sports line up, but now EA Sports has made the decision to separate themselves from one of the largest controversies in sports.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Whitehead Commits, Red Storm Lose NYC's Best Player to Seton Hall

Isaiah Whitehead, a product of Brooklyn's famed Lincoln high school, made the shocking decision to attend Seton Hall University today. During an afternoon press conference Whitehead, who is one of the country's top shooting guards and a McDonald's All-America candidate, surprisingly announced his intentions to join the Pirates over the likes of Indiana and the local school that many believed to be the favorite to land him, St. John's. With Whitehead heading to the Hall, coach Kevin Willard now has a formidable 2014 class to bring into the new Big East. The blue chip prospect will team up with his close friend Khadeem Carrington [Brooklyn/Bishop Loughlin] and prep school standout Angel Delgado [Huntington Prep].
Isaiah Whitehead will be a Seton Hall Pirate in 2014

Across the river, the St. John's Red Storm have once again failed to lure a prized New York City recruit to their Queens, NY campus. Even as the Red Storm currently stand as a popular sleeper pick to win the Big East, featuring a roster that is loaded with talent from top to bottom, the program defining local commitment has eluded them once again. For nearly a decade the Red Storm have watched nearly all of New York City's best talent leave the five boroughs. The Johnnies were barely in the running for Lance Stephenson when he was being touted as one of the city's best prospects ever. They were jilted at the altar by Sylven Landesberg, despite Landesberg playing his high school ball minutes away from the St. John's campus. Those recruiting failures came on the watch of former head coach Norm Roberts. Since current coach Steve Lavin took over the program in 2010, he has yet to sign anyone "great" either. A McDonald's All-American hasn't signed with the Red Storm since Omar Cook in 2000. However, some of Lavin's "good" signings have quickly turned into great players [see current NBA contributor Maurice Harkless]. The Red Storm have used superior player development to turn top 100 prospects into All-American contributors. With a growing reputation for skill development that features a very pro-centric coaching staff, it's confusing to see top notch recruits pass over the Johnnies year after year. Isaiah Whitehead is the latest elite prospect to sidestep coach Lavin's overtures. Last year, it was New Jersey prospect Kyle Anderson that chose UCLA over the Red Storm. Even without elite recruits, the Red Storm have built a top tier program that is poised to stand out in the new Big East. Still, we can only imagine what Lavin and his staff would be able to do with Whitehead, an elite level defender with a NBA-body and a deft scoring touch. While it is clear that brighter days are ahead for the Red Storm, ascending to the heights of national title contention will be dependent on securing the signature of players like Isaiah Whitehead




Monday, September 16, 2013

Business Just Picked Up: Week Three College Football Recap

Now we've got ourselves a football season! Week three finally gave us a good number of match ups that actually told us something about this young season. Alabama and Texas A&M lived up to the hype, and the Pac-12 and Big Ten met in a series of games that separated some potential contenders from definite pretenders. We're only a few weeks away from conference schedules kicking the season into high gear, but this week gave us enough to talk about to make it finally start feeling like fall.
Johnny F'n Football
  • Alabama won the game, but ALL HAIL JOHNNY F'n FOOTBALL!!!! College football's game of the year lived up to the hype, and saw Johnny Manziel have the type of gritty losing effort that will make America love him again. The Tide won the game, but they didn't stop Johnny Football. It leaves us to wonder if Johnny Manziel can be stopped. To hell with Teddy Bridgewater, Johnny Football is the new Heisman favorite. Also, is there a person on this planet that wouldn't want to see a Bama/A&M rematch in the final BCS title game? Could you complain too much if one-loss Texas A&M leaped over an undefeated Louisville team to play for the national title?
  • I owe AJ McCarron an apology.  I've always given Alabama quarterbacks a hard time, especially AJ McCarron. I always give him his credit as a game manager and a smart player, but I have always contended that he was relatively talentless in the terms of being able to make plays that win games. On Saturday, McCarron out dueled the best gunslinger in the nation, and did so while maintaining his mistake free reputation. AJ McCarron is a really good quarterback. There, I said it. 
  • Texas Tech can beat anyone in the Big 12 with Kliff Kingsbury at the helm. The Red Raiders didn't score a million points against TCU but they scored enough to win, and played solid defense against a team that was supposed to contend for the Big 12 title.
  •  What the hell happened to Michigan? After two very impressive wins to begin the season, the Wolverines laid an egg at home against a bad Akron team in a game that they should have lost. After two weeks I was certain that we would be seeing Michigan vs Ohio State back to back to finish the regular season, but if Michigan plays like this at any point during the Big Ten schedule, they can't be considered the favorite in their division. 
  •  UCLA, not Stanford, may be Oregon's stiffest competition in the Pac-12. The Bruins throttled Nebraska, while Stanford struggled to put away Army. To beat Oregon, it's clear that you're going to have to score at least 30 points [I originally typed 40]. It seems that the only team in the conference that can do that is UCLA. Stanford doesn't seem to have the explosiveness to be able to keep up. 
  • The Belldozer
    Oklahoma found it's quarterback, and now they are a legitimate contender. Even some of the game's best coaches make mistakes sometimes. Clearly Bob Stoops did a bit of over thinking when he questioned whether or not Blake Bell was his QB of the future in Norman. Stoops saw the offense sputter behind freshman Trevor Knight, but with Knight on the shelf, Stoops got a chance to see his second choice prove to be the obvious choice after throwing for 400+ yards and four touchdowns. After being used as a specific package QB for the past two years, Bell finally got a chance to go the full 60 minutes. His success at the position means that OU can make a run at going unbeaten in a weak Big 12 until they meet with Oklahoma State for what could be an epic Bedlam Game. 
  • Ole Miss is in the Top 25 to stay.  The Rebs announced their arrival to college football relevance by thrashing Texas in a game where they were flat out the better team. It was by no means an upset. Ole Miss is recruiting at an elite level, and their talent is starting to develop nicely. This team could possibly settle in very nicely behind Alabama, LSU, Georgia, Texas A&M, and South Carolina in the SEC. 
  • The Pac -12 is loaded -- ask the Big Ten. One of the more interesting subplots of the weekend was the miniseries of games that took place between the Pac-12 and Big Ten. Three games between evenly matched teams from the two conferences yielded three victories for the Pac-12. Washington exposed Illinois, UCLA handled Nebraska easily, and even Arizona State managed to weasel out a win against a favored Wisconsin team [Cal did lose to Ohio State, but would you trust the Buckeyes to take out Oregon or Stanford on a neutral field?] The Pac-12 should give us entertaining football all year as it looks to be a year where everybody can beat anybody...well, except Oregon. No one in that conference can beat Oregon.  

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Unusual Two Sport Star: Nose Tackle Armand Fernandez-Pierre

This should not be physically possible...that's 335lbs in the air
[Information for this post was taken from a Dallas Morning News story written by Brad Townsend]

One of the best stories the recruiting trial has ever produced is the sudden stardom of Dallas-area defensive line prospect Armand Fernandez-Pierre. A massive high school senior [6'3, 335lbs] with quick feet and a noticeable mean streak is sure to get the attention of a lot of college coaches, but Fernandez-Pierre has drawn national acclaim mostly for his off-field exploits. As a nose tackle for the Episcopal School of Dallas [ESD], Armand dominates his often over-matched competition. Luckily for his opponents, he only plays a portion of the game -- that's because he is also a dedicated member of Episcopal's cheerleading team. This isn't a joke or a stunt either. Armand has actually been a high school cheerleader longer than he has been high school football player! The incredibly nimble and athletic big man suffered a serious neck injury while playing football in middle school. At one point, Armand Fernandez-Pierre was partially paralyzed, and it seemed to be a foregone conclusion that he would never play football again. In the absence of the sport, Fernandez-Pierre first dabbled and then excelled in many other non-athletic ventures. He turned out to be a rather talented thespian and singer [he is in the school choir], and is enough of a technology buff to work on the "Geek Squad" at his local Best Buy. It was during his junior year that he decided to get a little bit closer to the football field by joining the ESD cheer squad. The school's newly hired football coach at the time, Clayton Sanders, had to be driven crazy by seeing such an exceptional athlete doing cartwheels along his sidelines each day during practice. The new coach was finally able to recruit Armand to join the football team [pending medical clearance], but it was only under the condition that Armand be able to split his time between the football team and the cheer squad. Figuring that a part time dominant player is better than no dominance at all, Sanders sought to make the arrangement work. Once getting medical clearance, reaching a timeshare agreement with the school's cheer coach, and receiving the blessing from Armand's understandably hesitant mother, Sanders was able to see his prize recruit in pads. The unique talent that Sanders uncovered has the likes of Notre Dame, UCLA, North Carolina and Miami all very curious. While rehabbing his injury, Armand slowly developed into a gifted power lifter. It is reported that he benches 325lbs, squats an incredible 650lbs, and dead lifts up to 560lbs. Armand's herculean strength, combined with his uncanny fitness and agility create a package that makes him one of the country's most intriguing prospects. Fernandez-Pierre is aware that his foray into playing football has become serious business, but he remains dedicated to the commitment that he has made to cheerleading. As interest eventually turns into scholarship offers, it will be be very interesting to see where Armand Fernandez-Pierre takes his many talents next year. Also, is there any chance that he cheers in college?





Monday, September 9, 2013

College Football Recap: Week Two

At this point, the college football season is still in the midst of that awkward opening stage filled with intermingling between FBS powers and FCS minnows. For example, fresh off of nabbing a huge home win against Georgia, Clemson blew off some steam by beating up on a local HBCU [South Carolina State if anyone cares] in week two. Admittedly, the upstart programs from the FCS have done their best to make many of these games interesting, and have even pulled off a decent amount of wins in the past two weeks. Still, the usual outcome is a FBS team playing horribly and still walking away with a win [KUDOS to Nicholls State and Chattanooga, the two FCS teams that actually pulled off wins against FBS competition this weekend]. Week two didn't deliver a riveting schedule from top to bottom, but there was enough meat on the bone for us to come to a few realizations by the end of Saturday night. Here's all you need to know about week two. Feel free to forget anything about week two not mentioned below.   
  • Ladies and gentleman...we have a Heisman race. Teddy Bridgewater is still the unquestioned frontrunner, but the reigning Heisman winner Johnny Manziel took a week off from being a super-villain in order to allow college football fans an opportunity to notice that he is playing better than ever. Bridgewater will edge out Johnny Football statistically at year's end. That's primarily because Louisville has a schedule that would be pretty manageable for some high school football programs. However, Manziel will have the marquee matchups that Heisman campaigns are often built on. Even if Teddy throws for 700 yards against Western Idaho Clown College next week [aka Kentucky], none of it matters if Johnny Manziel can take down mighty Alabama next week. This year's Heisman race is going to be a heavyweight fight between the best two signal callers in college football. Will it be Teddy's stats or Johnny's big wins? The season-long saga begins next week in College Station.
At least this guy [Shilique Calhoun] can score for MSU
  • Michigan State is comically bad on offense. The good news is that they may have one of the best defenses in the country. Sparty improved to 2-0 after knocking off USF in a hideous display of something that was meant to resemble football. Five different Spartans took snaps at QB [three quarterbacks, and two running backs in a sad variation of the Wildcat], and none of them were effective. When any of the QBs did manage to get a decent pass off, it usually  ended up bouncing off the hands of an equally inept wide receiver. The best hands belonging to a Michigan State Spartan on Saturday were those of defensive end Shilique Calhoun. Calhoun scored MSU's first two touchdowns, scooping a fumble for a score and also returning an interception for six more much needed points. State's QB carousel started with Connor Cook, halftime saw Andrew Maxwell make a return, and even true freshman Tyler O'Connor took some snaps. None of them were able to provide any sort of spark for the Spartan offense. The one bullet still in the QB chamber for State is another true freshman, dual-threat Damion Terry. Terry would have likely saw time against USF, but he was recovering from strep throat. The most awkward part about State's QB struggles is the fact that all their quarterbacks seem to be good players, but none of them can force their talents to translate on the scoreboard. Next week, coach Mark Dantonio will try to hash out his QB situation against Youngstown State,  but Notre Dame is waiting in week four. 
  •  The "U" is a major issue. Al Golden has worked wonders in Coral Gables, taking his program from the shame of probation to the precipice of the national title conversation. The Canes took down a hapless Florida team that was nearly as anemic as Michigan State was on offense this past weekend. Now Miami has the college football world thinking, "Why not the Hurricanes?" Wins at Florida State and in Jacksonville for the ACC Championship [likely against Clemson] will be necessary, but it surely isn't impossible to imagine Miami running the table and finding its way to Pasadena. Miami has the speed and the play makers to have a special season. We found that out on Saturday as they locked down the Gators.
The Dawgs hunkered down against South Carolina
  •  Georgia is still a national title contender. The Bulldogs started the season entrenched firmly in the national title conversation, but a combination of ambitious non-conference scheduling [opening at Clemson] and unfavorable conference scheduling [South Carolina and LSU in weeks two and four respectively] made a 1-3 start a very real possibility for one of the best teams in the country. A tailspin was on the horizon after dropping the opener to Clemson last week, but the Dawgs righted the ship by outlasting South Carolina on Saturday. Though a date with LSU is two weeks away, teams such as Alabama and Texas A&M aren't on the schedule this year, meaning that a SEC title and a possible back door route to the BCS title game are still possibilities for the Bulldogs. Georgia has the look of a team that could find themselves playing Alabama in the SEC Championship for the second year in a row -- once again with a trip to the BCS title game on the line.
Devin Gardner has Michigan rolling
  •  Notre Dame isn't that good, but Michigan is. For the second week in a row, the Michigan Wolverines looked great during their dismantling of the Irish. The game wasn't as close as the score indicated. Michigan was dominant for long stretches of the game, as Devin Gardner orchestrated Al Borges' pro style offense to perfection [except for his epically awful interception that was caught in the end zone]. Notre Dame, on the other hand, was exposed as a team that lacks creativity on offense and discipline on defense. Michigan has a favorable schedule until November, so it will be awhile before we know how good Michigan really is. What they have shown us so far is that they will at least be a formidable opponent for Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship game. 
  • The mighty have fallen. USC and Texas were slammed back to earth with shocking losses that caused them to exit the AP Top 25. Now both schools have coaches on the hot seat, and questions on both ends of the ball. USC may have a built in excuse for the lame effort they turned in against Washington State. NCAA sanctions have robbed them of the depth that made them a juggernaut in the 2000s, now the school has just enough talent to have high expectations, but nowhere near enough to meet them. Texas has suffered a steady decline since a freak injury robbed them of a shot to beat Alabama in the 2010 national championship. Inconsistent quarterback play may be the primary culprit of Texas' demise, but as BYU showed us late Saturday night, the defense isn't quite what it used to be either. The Cougars rushed for a mind blowing 550 yards against the Longhorns, leaving many in the state to question whether coach Mack Brown has lost control of his program. It will be interesting to see how these two traditional powers will regroup during a season where expectations have been tempered early on.      

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Country's Top Lineman Commits to Bama

The University of Alabama has done more with less at the quarterback position than anyone else in recent college football history. Winning national championships with the likes of Greg McElroy and AJ McCarron [brilliant game managers, but otherwise underwhelming talents at the game's most important position] takes a special blueprint. The Crimson Tide's latest dynasty has been dependent on recruiting elite talent to execute a simple [as in straight-forward], yet devastating, game plan. It's a scheme that values decision making over play making at the quarterback position, and nothing breeds good decision making for a QB like having the time to figure it all out. That's why a commitment from top ranked offensive line recruit Cameron Robinson is a huge get for Nick Saban and the rest of Tide Nation. Robinson [6'5, 330lbs] is the type of prospect that allows the AJ McCarrons of the world to win national championships. Maybe more important than putting Robinson in a maroon uniform, is keeping him out of purple and gold one. Robinson, a Louisiana native, was a top recruiting priority for the rival LSU Tigers. However, Alabama got the job done in the living room, and now Robinson will be getting the the job done next year in Tuscaloosa. No one knows who will be quarterbacking the Tide this time next year, but we now know one of the men who will be protecting him. Cameron Robinson is Alabama's newest bookend.



College Football Recap: Week One

The opening weekend of the 2013 college football season was so big that it actually started on Thursday evening and ended late Monday night, but now that the festivities have finally concluded, here's a few things that we learned during week one.
  • Jadeveon Clowney is going to have a tough time pleasing the prognosticators that pegged him as a Heisman frontrunner. The reason why defensive ends don't get Heisman nods was on full display Thursday night when South Carolina opened the season against North Carolina. The media microscope that was fixated on Clowney revealed a dirty secret to the world -- defensive ends take plays off. Now this may not come as shocking news to anyone who has ever played football before, but criticism and scrutiny hit the junior phenom like an anvil as pundits began critiquing his work ethic on running plays that were heading in the opposite direction of his pursuit or pass plays where he was triple teamed. It would make sense to run the ball away from Clowney, especially when you consider that he nearly killed Michigan running back Vincent Smith during last year's bowl game [Watch the video. I seriously thought he was dead when I saw it live. I still have no idea how he got up from that hit]. Just as shut down corners struggle to intercept passes because quarterbacks don't throw to their side, Jadeveon Clowney won't when the Heisman because opposing teams will spend more time running away from him, rather than running up the field. It seems that his Heisman run has ended before it even started. 
Fresno State QB Derek Carr
  • No one is beating the Fresno State Bulldogs. I didn't think much of Fresno State's win against Rutgers when it happened. The unfortunate thing about being a good team in the Mountain West is that Boise State is always better than you. However, after watching the Broncos get crushed by Washington Saturday night, it's obvious that this year is providing an exception to the rule. The Dogs, led by Derek Carr [brother of David] and a ridiculously talented group of skill position players, are clearly a better team than Boise this year. Fresno can score with any team in the country, and Boise has finally graduated too much talent to replenish in one year. Never count out Chris Peterson, but it looks like Fresno is this year's best candidate to be a BCS-buster.
  •  I could throw for at least 300 yards and two touchdowns if I suited up at quarterback for Texas Tech. New head coach Kliff Kingsbury started a true freshman walk-on quarterback against a half decent team from Southern Methodist last Friday. What would surely be a recipe for disaster at most schools turned into a record breaking performance from little known Baker Mayfield [he even has a walk-on sounding name]. Mayfield threw 4 TD passes and rushed for another score on his way to 413 yards passing in relief of another unknown Texas Tech quarterback who will probably through for 500 yards next week since he's on scholarship. It doesn't matter who is taking the snaps for Coach Kliff, the Red Raiders are going to put points on the board. 
  • Johnny Manziel has officially turned heel. Similar to Hulk Hogan's turn to the dark side that saw him become "Hollywood" Hogan and join the NWO, Johnny Manziel's transformation into Johnny Football has turned him into college football's favorite villain [The video of Hogan betraying the good guys pretty much parallels Manziel's day against Rice. We thought Johnny Football would run out and make everything OK...instead he took the field and delivered three leg drops to Randy Savage]. Manziel's taunting and other antics against Rice on Saturday weren't that big of a deal. What could be a big deal is Manziel's apparent revelry in his new found role as the bad boy of college football. Manziel, much like Tim Tebow in college and in the NFL, is a competitive force of nature more than anything else. The more angry Johnny Football gets, the more his negativity may be channeled towards his competition. Two weeks from now, we could see Johnny Football holding a can of spray paint as he stands triumphantly over an unconscious AJ McCarron, writing "A&M" across the back of his jersey to cap off a second straight upset of the Crimson Tide. Johnny's angry, and I don't think his opponents will like him when he's angry. Rice sure didn't. 
  • A quick note on Alabama. AJ McCarron is an awful quarterback -- and it just doesn't matter. He's still good enough [mostly smart enough] to lead Bama to big wins. The Crimson Tide are well on their way to another national championship. 
  • The Clemson Tigers had every opportunity to "pull a Clemson" and give away their marquee game against Georgia, but the Tigers showed a trait that hasn't been seen on campus in a long time. These Clemson Tigers showed a killer instinct against the Bulldogs, refusing to loosen their grip on the game and their national title hopes. After holding it together against Georgia, the Tigers essentially play a three game season that includes Florida State, South Carolina, and the ACC Championship game. Clemson has never been in better early season position to play for a national title.   
Brock Jensen
Who was the idiot who put these guys on the schedule?
  • The FCS ain't nothing to f--- with.  This weekend, several FBS programs found out the hard way that the lower rung of Division I plays some pretty decent football. Fresh off a banner year behind quarterback Colin Klein, Kansas State welcomed two-time defending FCS champion North Dakota State to the Family Stadium in the Little Apple. K-State is still trying to figure out what hit them, as the Bisons stunned them on their home field. Eastern Washington won the 2011 FCS National Championship preceding NDSU's two titles. They showed off their championship pedigree by beating a ranked Oregon State squad in Corvallis. Northern Iowa, a ranked FCS outfit, knocked off Iowa State. McNeese State, who is unranked even in the FCS, blew the doors off of USF in the debut of their new head coach. The most ironic part of this FCS uprising is the fact that the losing teams from the FBS are dishing out six figure payouts to these FCS programs. This money, in most cases, is being used to help further the development of the already rapidly growing athletic programs at these FCS powerhouses. The more cash unsuspecting FBS programs throw towards the likes of NDSU and EWU, the harder it will become to beat them.

  •  The Heisman trophy is Teddy Bridgewater's to lose...and so is a spot in the BCS National Championship. Watching Bridgewater dismantle Ohio this weekend was a joy to watch, but what's truly scary is that the Bobcats were actually one of the better teams on Louisville's ridiculously soft "power conference" schedule. Excluding a complete and total meltdown, the Cardinals' only chance of losing a game is on December 5th in the season finale
    Teddy Heisman?
    against Cincinnati [Seriously, Ohio is the second best team Louisville will play this year, check the schedule]. With double digit wins almost a certainty, Bridgewater should have two main goals for 2013 -- throw as many touchdowns as possible, and look good enough doing it to be the second player picked in the 2014 NFL Draft [behind Jadeveon Clowney of course]. If Louisville can run the table with Bridgewater tossing 4-5 touchdowns each weekend, a trip to New York's Downtown Athletic Club is a definite, but it may also prelude a trip to Pasedena for the BCS title game. Louisville will never have an easier road to gridiron glory, and they may never have a more talented quarterback to get them there.