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What are the sports casters thinking

Why inthe world does all the sports casters never really give the SEC their due until they defeat another team in other conferences? What in the world do they think when they are predicting these games, are they blind all year the SEC beats each other up and then have to play a hard faught champion-ship game, all the major guys that do the pics on ESPN always pull for USC, Ohio, or Oklahoma, do you think they to shutup and just let the teams play and quit showing their stuppidity?


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Probably a lack of national tradition; a lack of respect for southern academics; the race card; the idea that many of these schools recruit only idiots, use them for 4 years and send them packing; and an underlying disrespect for the south period.

Posted 2009-07-30T22:29:35Z
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ron
8 helpful answers

Some teams are top 10 every year. They will always get the hype. Does anyone remember Nebraska? For 20 years they were the "how to play football" team. How about Notre Dame? Same thing. Where are those teams now? The SEC is a great conference but sportscasters will always refer to the teams that show a decade of greatness.

Posted 2009-01-02T00:04:20Z
ron was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

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Filed under: Sports Media , Podcast , Backporch Features The FanHouse Podcast : Because bloggers are much sexier on the phone. Ten days later and Tiger Woods is still the story. And in the time it takes me to hit "publish" and for you to read this, tens of women will have come forward announcing that they too slept with the world's best golfer*. Which is why Will and I start off the podcast with ... Woods. What all this means, how he will cope with the hugest distraction of his career, and most importantly: if he loves the ladies, why get married in the first place? We also talk Alabama, Florida and why Baby Jesus would let Tim Tebow lose. And finally, in what has become a weekly therapy session, I whinge about the plight of the Steelers. I don't expect you to sympathize (Pittsburgh won two Super Bowls since 2005, after all), -- if anything you should be gloating. And you know what? I probably deserve it. Also: a special thanks to the geniuses at HalfDayToday -- we played the Tiger Voicemail Slow Jam Remix throughout the podcast and it was a nice distraction from the train wreck that has become the 2009 Steelers. So there's that. Click below to listen. * allegedly And while you're at it, give the gift that keeps on giving: Subscribe via iTunes . Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Patriots' Dynasty Coming Back to Pack

Filed under: NFL Analysis In the NFL , dynasties usually don't crash, they just slide into mediocrity. That may be what we're watching with New England right now. Unless, of course, Bill Belichick really is smarter than everyone else in football combined. It wasn't that New England lost in Miami 22-21 on Sunday, because it still leaves them at 7-5, a game up on the Dolphins and Jets in the AFC East. They'll still probably win the division after improbably missing the playoffs last season despite an 11-5 record with Matt Cassel filling in at quarterback for an injured Tom Brady . But the Patriots ' chances of going very far in the AFC if they do make the postseason are minimal. Because if they win their division, they'll get one home game and if they win that, they'll have to go on the road where they are 0-5 -- assuming you don't count their nominal "home'' win in London over Tampa Bay, where they were designated the "visitor.'' Yes, they were two yards away from handing Indy what would have been its only loss in Indy. But Belichick's gamble to go for a first down on fourth-and-2 in that game demonstrates what they really are: a team in transition, especially on a defense that Belichick didn't trust to keep Peyton Manning out of the end zone from 70 or so yards away and less than two minutes left. If the Patriots were a normal team, not one that has won three Super Bowls this decade and went 18-0 two years ago before losing in the title game, you'd expect days like this. "We certainly had our opportunities today and we didn't make them,'' said Brady, who was rumored to be suffering from a hand injury that had the betting line fluctuating wildly before the game. "We're just not closing the game out when we have an opportunity." Brady's hand didn't seem to be bothering him in any visible way. He was 19 of 29 for 352 yards. But he threw two interceptions, one in the end zone, when his fade to Randy Moss came up short, something that almost never happens. Then he threw another as he was hit on New England's final possession while the Patriots were trying to get into position for a game-winning field goal. That's the thing about dynasties and superstars -- we expect too much of them. Eli Manning , for example, threw an interception worse than Brady's to Moss. But the Giants beat the Cowboys anyway, and he was throwing to the inexperienced Mario Manningham , not to one of the game's best receivers. And Manning's teammate, the ultra-reliable Steve Smith, who no longer is "the other Steve Smith''' because Joe Buck and Troy Aikman said so during the telecast, dropped an easy TD pass. But the Giants aren't a dynasty, the Giants are only a generally good team that won one title this decade, and Eli is a quarterback who fans (unjustifiably) love to spend their time bashing. It really is an expectations game. Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh, for example, lost 27-24 to Oakland Sunday, and people are noting that they are just 6-6 and blame the absence for most of the year of Troy Polamalu , one of the true defensive impact players in the NFL. But the Steelers haven't had the "dynasty'' tag since the 1970s, when they won four titles in six seasons. Yes, they've won two in the last four years -- 2005 and 2008 -- but they haven't had the consistency, slipping to 8-8 after winning as a wild-card entry the first time. So nobody expects as much. But we really should have known about the Patriots. As they kept winning in 2007, you had to notice that Rodney Harrison and Mike Vrabel and Teddy Bruschi, three of their defensive stars, were well into their 30s. You had to notice that Richard Seymour , their best defensive lineman, was playing hurt much of the time. But Belichick had been so good at plugging in other guys since their run started in 2001, you didn't notice. This year, he traded Seymour, and then he didn't plug as well -- Adalius Thomas , a major free-agent acquisition in '07, has been such a disappointment at times that he was inactive for one game this season. And drafts haven't produced the gems they used to. Yes, they have some good young players like Jerod Mayo , the new leader of their defense. But one who emerged this year, offensive tackle Sebastian Vollmer , has been hurt and the aging offensive line has missed him. With Belichick in charge, the Patriots are not going away the way the 49ers did after winning five titles between 1981-94. When they fell, they fell hard, something that won't happen as long as the Kraft family owns the team -- unlike the 49ers, who changed hands, the Krafts will find someone almost as capable when B.B. hangs it up. They may not even be like the Steelers after their run ended -- in Chuck Noll's last 12 seasons as coach after the final title, he was 91-89 in the regular season, almost perfect mediocrity. But it looks like New England now will be just an ordinary good team -- a contender most years like the Steelers or Giants or Colts, the teams that have won Super Bowls the last three years. But no longer the team that everyone fears. Follow Us on Twitter Friend Us on Facebook Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Warner Tops Favre in Geezer Bowl

Filed under: NFL GLENDALE, Ariz. -- They're ridiculously old and wrinkled to be playing such a brutal, violent game, two quarterbacks who've sacrificed their bodies and health in ways we may never know. Someday Kurt Warner and Brett Favre may regret extending their careers for so long, rather than retiring in their early 30s without permanent limps, or possible damage to their brains. But admit it, football fans. We get tingles up the spine every time Favre or Warner remain standing in the pocket just long enough to avoid raging, hefty linemen nearly half their age. When the gray-bearded quarterbacks do get stuffed to the turf -- and Favre sure did become intimately familiar with it Sunday night in this marquee matchup -- we wonder if they'll get up, how they'll get up, and then somehow, they readjust their bones and blink away the circling stars and jump back into the huddle, ready for one more round of vicious abuse. Warner, at age 38 the spry QB on this chilly night in the desert, limped slowly out of the University of Phoenix locker room following the Arizona Cardinals ' surprisingly easy 30-17 win over the Minnesota Vikings . He looked as if the hitch in his hip had turned his body lopsided, and he couldn't really say how the repercussions from the concussion that kept him from playing last week might affect him long-term, but he did know this: the Cardinals , now 8-4 and nursing a safe three-game lead in the NFC West, needed him more than ever to play like a future Hall of Famer. "My head or the rest of me? My head feels good." Warner responded, when someone wondered how he felt after playing, and surviving, every offensive down. He had been kept safe and sackless behind a terrific offensive line that made sure Warner had plenty of time to throw accurate, precise spirals to receivers who could moonlight as acrobats. Warner connected on 22 of 32 passes for 285 yards and three touchdowns, popping up after every hit like a Jack-in-the-box to watch Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin complete his handiwork. "I took a couple of good shots in there, and I don't feel any symptoms or anything worse or any issues whatsoever as far as that is concerned," added Warner, who was cleared to play by doctors on Friday. "I did get my hip hit on that last play. It's pretty sore right now, so we will monitor that, but as far as the concussion and all that goes, I feel like I got out good." Favre, at age 40 enjoying a renaissance unlike anything we've witnessed at this position, in this sport, shuffled through the tunnel at the stadium's other end, looking like a man who could use a good chiropractor, or perhaps a cane. He had been knocked around badly by a Cardinals defense playing its best game of the season. Favre was sacked three times and intercepted twice, and was rather unremarkable (for him, anyway) in his 283rd consecutive game, an NFL record for longevity that proves again why he is such a marvel. "I kind of let their defense get to me. In a game like this, where it is hard to stop their offense from scoring, I don't need to give them any advantage. I made some decisions that I haven't made up to this point, and I'm disappointed about it," said Favre, who was 30 of 45 for 275 yards with two touchdown passes -- the second, a 31-yarder to Percy Harvin , coming with 1:20 to go and the game out of reach. Nothing rattled Favre as much as the sight of Vikings linebacker E.J. Henderson being taken off the field on a motorized cart after twisting his leg violently and fracturing it while attempting to tackle Tim Hightower in the fourth quarter. Trainers and team doctors spent several tense minutes working on Henderson, and once he was stabilized and laid in the cart on his back, it was a slow, long procession off the field. A rough bump could damage his leg further, and as cameras caught Henderson mouthing a few words, Favre could be seen on the sideline, wincing, praying. That's the sport's precarious nature, its cruel appeal. Henderson, such a key part of the Vikings' 10-1 season entering Sunday night, had his year cut short last year because of a toe injury. Adrian Peterson, Minnesota's terrific running back, was spotted limping to a team bus after being held to a season-low 19 yards in 13 carries as the Cardinals outrushed the Vikings, 113-62 (insert your own joke about speeding here). With a rough schedule ahead, and injuries piling up, Minnesota suddenly looks vulnerable. "I feel bad for E.J. That's awful for him and for our team," Favre said. "We lost Phil [Loadholt ], who came back. Bryant [McKinnie ] played with an injured ankle. We've got to get healthy. This is the time of year where you want to peak. Physically, I'm more concerned about the rest of our guys than me." The game, moved to a coveted prime-time slot because of the pair of aging, remarkable quarterbacks, began auspiciously for Favre and the Vikings, after Hightower fumbled on the second play from scrimmage. Favre did what he has done so spectacularly in this MVP-type season, ripping off a stream of short, exact passes in a drive that ended with Visanthe Shiancoe catching a 3-yard pass for an early 7-0 Minnesota lead. It was vintage Favre, prepping a sold-out stadium for what figured to be a long, perhaps season-defining night. Especially since there were so many questions circling Warner and his health, questions that added heat to the hot debate about concussions in the NFL. Warner missed last Sunday's game against Tennessee, and after the Cardinals suffered the crushing loss to the Titans, Warner wondered aloud if his teammates were angry at him for not suiting up. He had played in 41 straight games before a blow to the head knocked him to the sidelines, but football is a sport where grit and machismo are valued as much as talent. After Warner shredded the Vikings' defense, after he proved courage should never be questioned unless you're wearing his cleats, Warner was far more comfortable talking about Jeremy Bridges, who had moved over to tackle and held his own against the Vikings' Jared Allen. "What a huge performance on a big stage against one of the best players in this league," Warner said of Bridges, the guy who made sure his quarterback remained intact. "Just a tremendous job." Left unsaid was the cold truth that without Warner, the Cardinals were at risk of having to rely on a must-win showdown in San Francisco next Monday. Now they can exhale slightly, having proven they can still get the job done at home, and might even be a better all-around team than the one that skipped to the Super Bowl last season. Fitzgerald sure thinks so. "Like Kurt told you guys, we proved we can play with the big dogs," Fitzgerald said. Fitzgerald, a Minneapolis native who filled what seemed like half the loges with his own personal cheering section, caught eight passes for 143 yards and a TD. There was one play that provided a glimpse of how Fitzgerald works, how the Cardinals feed off his connection with Warner. It came early in the second quarter, on a second-and-10 at the Arizona 25, Warner finding Fitzgerald in the right flank. Besieged by defensive tackle Kevin Williams and then a gang of purple, Fitzgerald hung on to the ball, pushing, huffing, refusing to go down until he gained a few more yards. It's amazing what sheer will can accomplish. The Cardinals failed to score on that drive, but their defense, still stunned and frothing over the Titans' 99 yard-drive in the final minutes last week, stumped the Vikings on a three-and-out (it would be a reoccurring theme). Two plays later, Warner spotted a wormhole in the ozone and hit Boldin with a pinpoint perfect pass. Boldin, wearing cornerback Cedric Griffin like a parka in the desert -- the natives here can't quite adjust to the 50-degree freeze -- curled and wound his way an extra 10 yards to the end zone for a 39-yard scoring play that gave Arizona a 14-7 lead with 7:42 left in the half. "It shows what type of team we are. Everybody in this locker room was upset about what happened last week," said Boldin, the gloss still on his seven catches for 98 yards and two touchdowns. "We wanted nothing more than to get back out on the field and get that taste out of our mouth." Last season, when Favre was still in a groove with the New York Jets, before he hurt his shoulder and seemingly tarnished his legacy to all those Monday morning quarterbacks working the keyboards, he torched the Cardinals for a career-high six touchdowns in a 56-35 victory. This time Arizona flipped around the story line, aggressively stopping Peterson on first and second downs and getting to Favre before he could conjure magic with his pump-fakes. Favre still has a cannon of an arm, his passes dripping with hot sauce, but it didn't do much good with defensive tackle Darnell Dockett dragging down Peterson in the backfield late in the third quarter, the Cardinals up, 24-10. Calais Campbell stuck Favre with a nine-yard loss on the next play, followed by Michael Adams picking off a Favre pass over the middle. With one quarter remaining, this QB showdown clearly belonged to Warner. "I'm pretty sure everybody is going to talk about what Brett Favre did wrong. How Brett did this wrong and that wrong, but not talk about how our defense stood up today. We're going to stay humble though, because we are going to play that team again," Dockett said. Wouldn't that be something if Dockett is correct, if Minnesota and Arizona clash again in the playoffs, if Favre and Warner pick their bodies off the turf and stare each other down one more time? For a couple of geezers, they still have it going on. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Experts: Women in NBA Long Way Off

Filed under: WNBA , NBA Rumors CATONSVILLE, Md. -- Phil Stern had the look. You know the one. It's the one where someone suggests something so patently absurd that you want to scoff, but living in a polite society precludes it. Stern, the coach of Maryland-Baltimore County 's women's basketball, drew that countenance when it was relayed to him that Commissioner David Stern had recently posited that the day would soon come where a woman could play in his league. And Stern, the Retrievers coach for the last eight years, has been in the women's game for over two decades. He's seen where the sport was and has a pretty good handle on where it's headed. And, in his mind, it's not heading towards a woman lacing them up in the NBA . "I got into this 20 years ago, and we're so much further along,' said Stern, who took UMBC to the NCAA tournament in 2008. "But I don't think we're at the point where someone's going to go play against LeBron (James ) and those guys so it's probably a ways off." "It's a great conversation to have. It's probably great for talk radio one day. It's probably great marketing for David Stern to say that, but it's way down the road." In a conversation with Sports Illustrated writer Ian Thomsen , Stern, when asked if it would be possible to see a woman play in the NBA in the next decade, said "I think we might. I don't want to get into all kinds of arguments with players and coaches about the likelihood. But I really think it's a good possibility." It didn't take long for a number of NBA players, including James himself to cast doubt on the notion. Indeed, Cleveland reserve Anthony Parker , whose sister Candace (above) is considered one of the world's best female players and among a handful of women to dunk in a college game, doesn't see it happening. "I do not think there will ever be a day that a woman would play in the NBA. The only way I could see something like that happening would be for some type of publicity stunt." - Anonymous WNBA Player "First of all, I don't see why, other than to say a woman can do it," Anthony Parker said. "But for long term? No way. My sister is a good player and has great skill, but as far as making an NBA roster? No. She's 6-4, which is the average height of a shooting guard. I'm never going to say never." The topic is apparently radioactive enough that of a group of seven women's coaches, broadcasters and WNBA players contacted by FanHouse for comment on this idea, only one player, who requested anonymity, replied. The player, who has won an NCAA championship and a WNBA award in her career, was adamant that she couldn't envision a woman playing in the NBA. "I do not think there will ever be a day that a woman would play in the NBA," said the player. "The only way I could see something like that happening would be for some type of publicity stunt." From a skill level, the idea isn't so preposterous. Women shoot and handle the ball better now than ever and female players have occasionally won collegiate long distance shootouts over men at equal distances. However, there are a couple of important differences between the two games that appear to make a flood of women to the NBA unlikely in the short term. One is that male basketball players are, on average, taller than women. As Anthony Parker pointed out, his sister, Candace, a power forward or post player in the women's game, would only be a guard in the NBA. And that leads to the second, and most important difference between the games, the physicality. The anonymous WNBA player said she believes Parker, Chicago center Sylvia Fowles and Indiana forward Tamika Catchings, who are all stars in the WNBA, would be "ineffective" in the NBA because of the size and strength of the male players. "Men are just physically stronger, faster, and can jump higher than women," said the WNBA player. "Even though someone like Fowles who is 6-6 is a different breed of player, you have players in the NBA (and not even in the NBA) who are 6-6 guards and can do so much more than Sylvia can." Going forward, Phil Stern said, a woman who could combine the strength of University of Connecticut center Tina Charles , the speed of a smaller guard and the skill set of Delaware redshirt freshman Elena Delle Donne , could have a shot to make it in the NBA, provided she could beat out the thousands of men who don't quite make it in the league. "That's a good way to look at it,' said Phil Stern. "Think of how many guys who don't get a chance to play in the NBA. Delle Donne is incredible ... and she's a great player, but could she play in the NBA? Not now. That's a ways away, I think." Indeed, Delle Donne, who, at 6-foot-5, a height normally reserved for frontcourt players in the women's game, can handle, shoot and pass the ball like a guard, would appear to have the kind of profile suitable for a woman trying to make it in the NBA. Her box score line of 20 points (including two three-pointers), eight rebounds, four assists and four blocks in Delaware's 70-61 win over UMBC Saturday hints at her versatility. Her coach, Tina Martin, however, scoffs at the notion that any woman can handle the physical demands of the NBA. "Coming off the screens and the way that they (the NBA players) do and a lot of one-on-one isolations, it would be hard for female players to turn the corner with guys with guys like Dwyane Wade as strong as he is pushing and shoving you," said Martin. "I just don't see female athletes being able to handle the physicality and just the mere strength of the NBA players." Martin, who would not make Delle Donne available for comment, would just as soon not let David Stern's musings get in the way of her freshman being a freshman. "She's never talked about the NBA or anything like that," said Martin. "People can dream, but I just think it's unrealistic." Follow Us on Twitter Friend Us on Facebook Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Meyer, Gators Looking to Rebound

Filed under: Cincinnati , Florida Urban Meyer sounded hoarse and tired. While Florida 's head coach did not elaborate on his health -- he was treated and released at a Gainesville, Fla., hospital for dehydration earlier Sunday, just hours after the Gators lost to Alabama in the SEC Championship game -- Meyer promised his team will be ready to face Cincinnati in the Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl. "Players are somewhat smarter than coaches," Meyer said. "As soon as we get the Bearcat film, you flip it on and it's game on. It would be a different deal if you don't (have) respect. "Our guys talk about Cincinnati, they've watched them play and you see some of the scores and the way they throw the ball around, the Gators will be highly motivated to play in this game." Expect Meyer to be motivated, too. Speaking on a teleconference for the Sugar Bowl Sunday night, Meyer was asked twice about his health. But Sugar Bowl spokesman John Sudsbury refused to let the coach answer, requesting that all questions be related solely to the New Year's Day game against unbeaten and fourth-ranked Cincinnati. Sudsbury referred any questions about Meyer's health to UF spokesperson Steve McClain, who declined to elaborate on Meyer's condition. Meyer was admitted to Shands Hospital early Sunday morning and released around 2 p.m. McClain said the coach was feeling much better. It remains unclear what caused Meyer to be admitted into the hospital and how long he spent there. Several reports said Meyer experienced chest pains after his team returned from Atlanta. Follow Us on Twitter Friend Us on Facebook UF, the defending national champion, tumbled to Alabama 32-13 Saturday night at the Georgia Dome. The loss snapped Florida's 22-game winning streak and left the No. 5 Gators to face Cincinnati, Meyer's alma mater, in New Orleans. "We'll get this team going," Meyer said, pointing out that his seniors, paced by quarterback Tim Tebow , set an SEC record for most wins in a four-year span. "Our legacy is going to be dependent on how we end this season." Meyer said no determination has been made on defensive end Carlos Dunlap , arrested early Tuesday for driving under the influence and suspended for the SEC Championship Game. When asked whether defensive coordinator Charlie Strong would coach the Gators if he accepts the Louisville coaching job, Meyer said he would talk with Strong at the appropriate time. "Until the decision is made at the University of Louisville, then we'll sit down," Meyer said. "I've been very fortunate to have some great coordinators. Every coordinator we've ever had has gone on to be a head football coach. Last year Dan Mullen did." Meyer is confident his team will be able to move on from the Alabama defeat and focus on the Bearcats. "If I'm going with an immature team then I'd have an issue but we don't and it's a BCS bowl game," Meyer said. "The plan is not put in place yet but we'll be ready to go." Meyer's health wasn't the only topic off-limits during the teleconference. The moderator cut in again when a reporter asked Cincinnati coach Brian Kelly , considered a favorite for the Notre Dame job, if his coaching situation at Cincinnati would be resolved quickly so it's not a distraction to his team. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

FanHouse Top 25: A Topsy-Turvy Season

Filed under: Alabama , Texas , Bowl Games Now that Alabama has disposed of Florida and Texas edged Nebraska by the slimmest of margins to set up the Citi BCS national title game between the Crimson Tide and Longhorns, let's take a quick look back and see how unpredictable this college football season really was. Unpredictable or, if you prefer, how clueless the Associated Press voters were (yes, including me). Let's step inside the WABAC machine -- youngsters if you're not Rocky and Bullwinkle fans go ahead and Google, I'll wait -- and go back to Aug. 22 when the AP preseason poll was released. First, the good: ranking Texas No. 2, Penn State No. 9, LSU No. 11, Utah No. 19 and BYU No. 20. Now the bad: ranking Notre Dame No. 23 and Kansas No. 25. And the ugly: not ranking Cincinnati, while ranking Oklahoma No. 3, Ole Miss No. 8, California No. 12 and Georgia No. 13. In all, nearly one-third of the teams that were ranked in the preseason poll are not ranked in this week's final regular season poll: No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 8 Ole Miss, No. 12 California, No. 13 Georgia, No. 18 Florida State, No. 21 North Carolina, No. 23 Notre Dame and No. 25 Kansas. Cincinnati heads the list of nine teams on my AP ballot that I ranked this week that were not ranked in the preseason poll. The others: Oregon State, Miami, Stanford, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Pittsburgh, Arizona and East Carolina. Here is my final regular season AP ballot this week with my ranking last week in parenthesis. 1. Alabama (2) The Crimson Tide (13-0) will play Texas in the Citi BCS national title in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 7. AP preseason rank: No. 5. 2. Texas (3) The Longhorns (13-0) will play Alabama in the Citi BCS national title in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 7. AP preseason rank: No. 2. 3. TCU (4) The Horned Frogs (12-0) will play Boise State in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Ariz., on Jan. 4. AP preseason rank: No. 17. 4. Cincinnati (5) The Bearcats (12-0) will play Florida in the Allstate Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 5. Boise State (6) The Broncos (12-0) will play TCU in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Ariz., on Jan. 4. AP preseason rank: No. 14. 6. Florida (1) The Gators (12-1) will play Cincinnati in the Allstate Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: No. 1. 7. Oregon (8) The Ducks (10-2) will play Ohio State in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: No. 16. 8. Ohio State (9) The Buckeyes (10-2) will play Oregon in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: No. 6. 9. Virginia Tech (9) The Hokies (9-3) will play Tennessee in the Chick-Fil-A Bowl in Atlanta on Dec. 31. AP preseason rank: No. 7. 10. LSU (11) The Tigers (9-3) will play Penn State in the Capital One Bowl in Orlando on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: No. 11. 11. Penn State (12) The Nittany Lions (10-2) will play LSU in the Capital One Bowl in Orlando on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: No. 9. 12. Oregon State (9) The Beavers (8-4) will play BYU in the MAACO Las Vegas Bowl in Las Vegas on Dec. 22. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 13. Miami (17) The Hurricanes (9-3) will play Wisconsin in the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando on Dec. 29. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 14. Georgia Tech (7) The Yellow Jackets (11-2) will play Iowa in the FedEx Orange Bowl in Miami on Jan. 5. AP preseason rank: No. 15. 15. Iowa (18) The Hawkeyes (10-2) will play Georgia Tech in FedEx Orange Bowl in Miami on Jan. 5. AP preseason rank: No. 22. 16. Stanford (18) The Cardinal (8-4) will play Oklahoma in the Brut Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas, on Dec. 31. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 17. Oklahoma State (19) The Cowboys (9-3) will play Ole Miss in the AT&T Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas, on Jan. 2. AP preseason rank: No. 9. 18. Wisconsin (23) The Badgers (9-3) will play Miami in the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando on Dec. 29. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 19. Nebraska (21) The Cornhuskers (9-4) will play Arizona in the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl in San Diego on Dec. 30. AP preseason rank: No. 24. 20. West Virginia (NR) The Mountaineers (9-3) will play Florida State in the Konica Minolta Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla., on Jan. 1. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 21. Pittsburgh (16) The Panthers (9-3) will play North Carolina in the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte, N.C., on Dec. 26. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 22. Arizona (NR) The Wildcats (8-4) will play Nebraska in the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl in San Diego on Dec. 30. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 23. East Carolina (23) The Pirates (9-4) will play Arkansas in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tenn., on Jan. 2. AP preseason rank: Not ranked. 24. BYU (24) The Cougars (10-2) will play Oregon State in the MAACO Las Vegas Bowl in Las Vegas on Dec. 22. AP preseason rank: No. 20. 25. Utah (NR) The Utes (9-3) will play California in the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl in San Diego on Dec. 23. AP preseason rank No. 19. Teams that are close to making my Top 25 (in alphabetical order): Northwestern, Texas Tech. See you later (teams that fell out of my Top 25 this week): California, Clemson, USC, Houston. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
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