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Posts Tagged ‘Illinois’

Did Illinois “Work Hard Enough” in Search?

Nearly everyone admired Illinois’ decision to hire Tim Beckman away from Toledo, even if some of the positive vibes stemmed from the fact that Beckman was not, in fact, Ron Zook. But the university liked his pedigree, from his time as a defensive coordinator to his successful three-year run as the head coach with the Rockets, and the general consensus was that Illinois could have done much, much worse. Perhaps the Illini could have done better; Beckman’s track record is nice, but he couldn’t win his own division with the Rockets, let alone the MAC as a whole. But again: Illinois could have done much, much worse.

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    L.S.U.’s Boring B.C.S. History, Until 2012

    Until Monday evening, and perhaps for the foreseeable future, L.S.U. is the undisputed king of B.C.S. play. The Tigers are 4-0 all-time in the B.C.S., beginning under Nick Saban and continuing under Les Miles, and with a victory in this year’s national title game can tie U.S.C., Florida and Ohio State for the most wins in B.C.S. history. The Tigers already have as many B.C.S. wins as national powers Alabama, Penn State, Tennessee and Nebraska combined — using the title loosely in the case of the latter threesome. L.S.U. wins B.C.S. bowls with ease and style, rolling past opponents with speed and athleticism, and quite frankly, it’s been boring.

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      My 2011 Defensive All-American Ballot

      Picking all-American teams isn’t easy, believe it or not. You only have so many slots to fill: 11 starters on a defense, 11 players you can pick. So it’s only natural that a player or two — or three, or four — fall by the wayside, and for every 11 players you pick for your team it’s only natural that there are at least another 11 players worthy of heavy consideration. There is no second-team on a voters’ ballot; just 11 guys, and pick ‘em as you see ‘em. I filled out the defensive half of my all-American ballot yesterday — three days late for the deadline, so it may not even count. Here are the picks:

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        As if Picking the Teams Isn’t Hard Enough

        I’ve never tried my hand at projecting the entire F.B.S. bowl slate; I have enough trouble with the five B.C.S. games, in my mind. But it’s worth a shot for one week, even if I mess up the various tie-ins, conference affiliations and so forth. Not to mention choose teams that end up staying home during bowl play. Well, here goes. Remember: those numbers signifying which team slots where in its conference are very arbitrary — to a point. The No. 7 team isn’t vaulting the No. 3 team, but No. 6 could be No. 4, No. 5 could be No. 7 and so on. And not every conference can meet its allotted bowl tie-ins; in that case, a substitute team is selected.

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          The Path to Perfection for the 13 Leaders

          This won’t be the year for a one-loss team. All signs point towards there being at least two undefeated teams atop the B.C.S. at the end of the regular season and conference championship games, so the age of two-loss L.S.U. lifting the crystal ball are dead, at least until next year. There are 13 undefeated teams in the F.B.S., two of which play on the non-B.C.S. conference level – Boise State and Houston. The other 11, those that control their own destiny, for better or for worse, might try to avoid the damning defeat that could send them from the B.C.S. title game to the Fiesta Bowl, if not lower. Let’s take a peek at the lucky baker’s dozen, looking at each team’s road to perfection and the big games to watch.

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            Persa’s Back, Maybe With a New Role

            Dan Persa’s back, and just in time. Northwestern needs a boost of confidence after losing to Army two weeks ago, 17-14, a defeat that evaporated much of the goodwill associated with Kain Colter’s fine two-game debut as Persa’s replacement. Colter was solid against Boston College and Eastern Illinois, completing 27 of 37 attempts for 301 yards with another 180 yards on the ground. Then came the Cadets: Colter did some work on the ground and even threw a touchdown pass, but Army’s ball-control offense prevented the once-and-future-backup — and future starter — from developing any momentum. Based on his regression against Army, Colter would have been a liability against Illinois; good thing Persa’s back.

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              Clemson’s Young Star; B.C.S. Themes

              Sammy Watkins does it again. And again. And again. Clemson’s true freshman wide receiver had his breakout game two weeks ago, setting a new school record for receptions by a freshman in a single game, and he was back at with force at home against Florida Stat. He made two touchdown grabs, the latter covering 62 yards to give Clemson a commanding 35-23 lead in the fourth quarter. This is how Watkins typically scores: Tajh Boyd finds him for about 15 yards, Watkins makes one or two guys miss and then outruns everyone else to the end zone. Watkins is one of several true freshmen making an impact for the Tigers, who are 4-0 for the first time since 2007. Touching on Watkins and other B.C.S. conference themes:

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                Big East Wins, Loses: B.C.S. Themes

                Fittingly, the two programs that left the Big East in the cold — that first left the Big East in the cold — were the conference’s lone losers on Saturday. In a weekend where the Big East fared well, notching two wins over B.C.S. conference competition, the primary development was the league’s impending destruction: Syracuse and Pittsburgh are gone, soon to be joined by at least one, perhaps two conference brethren, and the Orange and the Panthers followed up that disappointment with a pair of disappointing defeats. Thanks for nothing, says the Big East. Touching on that and other themes from Saturday’s B.C.S. conference action:

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                  The Countdown

                  A bottom-to-top assessment of the F.B.S. landscape heading into the 2011 season.