Game 641: UTSA overcomes late Middle Tennessee threat to win ConferenceUSA openers for both teams

Murfreesboro, TN – UTSA QB Frank Harris dazzled until three picks killed the Road Runner momentum, and Middle Tennessee threatened to come back trailing 38-30 late in the game.  However, it took a defensive stand and a 45-yard scoring drive with 1:32 left to seal a 45-30 victory for UTSA (3-2, 1-0), 45-30. For Collegefootballfan.com, we saw MTSU play for the fourth time, but first time at home. Regarding UTSA, we witnessed them for only the second time. We saw them visit South Alabama in 2012 when both met in their first FBS clash when they opened against each other. UTSA, then coached by Larry Coker, triumphed, 33-31.

UTSA can’t be stopped

     The UTSA offense scored early and often.  With QB Frank Harris’s prolific day running and scoring (27 for 36 passing, 414 yards, two TD passes, two rushing TDs, three INTs), the Road Runners scored on five of their first six possessions.  All came on very long drives to run out to a 31-20 lead at halftime.   The scoring drives went for 75, 74, 75, 73, and 79 yards respectively.   In the first period, Harris connected with WR Zakhari Franklin for a 43-yard score.  Next, Jarret Sackett booted a 28-yard FG for a 10-0 lead at the end of one.

     Middle Tennessee closed the gap on Chase Cunningham’ 38-yard toss to Yusuf Ali early in the second.  Of course, UTSA retaliated when Franklin came back with a 28-yard TD strike once again to Franklin.  Still, MTSU made a game of it on Darius Bracy’s 53-yard touchdown burst off right tackle.  UTSA put together another long drive capped by Trelon Smith’s two-yard run.  The Blue Raiders rebounded with Zeke Rankin’s 3-yard FG to stay within seven, 24-17. 

It looked like the MTSU defense finally came around forcing UTSA to punt. However, a running into the kicker penalty gave the Road Runners life with a fourth and six at the MTSU 39.  Road Runner HC Jeff Traylor decided to go for it. Harris connected with De’Corian Clark with a pass to the 25 for a first down.  Harris eventually took in in from the five to go up, 31-17.   UTSA’s next possession resulted in its first punt.   The Blue Raiders obliged with a 41-yard drive resulting in Rankins’ 33-yard FG with 0:03 left for a 31-20 halftime score. 

Halftime Honors and Hall of Fame Hospitality

     The halftime festivities at MTSU’s Red Floyd Stadium featured the retirement of jersey #20 in honor of alum S Kevin Byard. Today, collegefootballfan.com added MTSU’s home field as the 77th FBS venue we’ve attended.  Drafted by the Titans in 2016, Byard has twice been named All-Pro. In 2020, he won the Walter Payton Award for community services he proudly led.    John Robinson, GM of the Tennessee Titans, made the presentation.  Kevin enters the MTSU Athletic Hall of Fame.

    Speaking of which, I was invited to the MTSU Athletic Hall of Fame Museum before the game to meet with Duane Hinckley of the Blue Raider Sports Network pre-game show.  Meeting with him and his partner of many years, Dick Palmer, on the air, we discussed my football adventure in my book Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all! Duane kindly touted our website.   Our conversation also focused on best game atmospheres and on games I look forward to on the upcoming schedule.  It was a great interview!  We had a good time meeting Duane and Dick.  Thanks to Chip Walters , play-by-play man of the MTSU broadcasting team on WGNS 1450 AM /100.5 FM for arranging this!

 I visited the MTSU Athletic Hall of Fame with my Guest Game Analyst, Dave Hickman (Fighting Illini alum whose team knocked off Wisconsin Saturday). We reviewed the history of Blue Raider greats in all sports.  MTSU fans have a Hall of Fame to be proud of adjacent to their sports facilities on their beautiful campus.

Second Half: same start, surprise ending

    UTSA received the second half kickoff.  The second half started as if it would be a continuation of the first. Following a touchback, the Road Runners put together a 75-yard TD drive with Harris scoring from the one.  MTSU took their ensuing touchback and punted from their 44.  UTSA proceeded to move efficiently once again, but a funny thing happened on the way to the end zone. DB Decorian Patterson intercepted Frank Harris’s pass on the two-yard line to halt the first UTSA drive of the game. From there, quick-footed, strong-armed Blue Raider QB Chase Cunningham (35 of 56, 368 yards, one TD) put on a show of his own. The drive resulted in Rankin’s 25-yard FG early in the fourth to trail, 38-23.

Lightning strikes

   The Road Runners started to drive once again getting the ball out to their 40.  On first and ten, Harris zipped the ball over the middle.  DT Jordan Palmer snagged it into his chest and motored like lightning down the right sideline the length of the field for about a 42-yard TD return.  MTSU swooped within striking distance, 38-30, with 10:32 left to play. UTSA started typically from the 25 on its next possession and drove deep into Blue Raider territory once again. And for the third straight series, Harris got picked again, and for the second time by Patterson.  MTSU started from their 13.   

     With time running down, on a fourth and two from their 37, Cunningham completed a pass to Franklin at the 49 to sustain hope once again.  On fourth and nine at the Road Runner 45, the result was not the same. The pass attempt fell incomplete.  GGA Dave Hickman advised, “They got to stop the run.  At three yards a carry, UTSA will continue to run it out as the have all day.”  At that, we watched UTSA do just as Dave said. HC Rick Stockstill used his remaining time-out to get the ball back.

    Brenden Brady ran for four yards and then another four.  Harris got a first down on his three-yard run. Smith picked up eight. Brady (19 carries, 98 yards, one TD) gained one more before exploding off left tackle for a 25-yard TD to extend the lead to 45-30 with 1:32 left. The Raiders made a great effort getting to the UTSA 14 on a 24-yard completion to Izaiah Gathings with 41 ticks left. However, after three incompletes and a nine-yard completion followed by an unsportsmanlike call against the Road Runners, time expired at the five.   Our game No. 641 was a hard-fought, offensive, interesting battle down to the end despite the final margin of UTSA’s 45-30 victory.  Both QBs impressed us during this game.

Next two weekends should be fun for all involved

   The Blue Raiders travel to Birmingham, Alabama next Saturday to play UAB in another Conference USA clash.  UTSA will host Western Kentucky next Saturday in a similar conference clash, but tomorrow night (October 1), this being a Friday night game, we will see those same Hilltoppers (4-1) host the Troy Trojans (2-2) in another anticipated, hard-fought battle.  In Week Six, collegefootballfan.com will attend the SEC contest when South Carolina visits Kentucky in Lexington. In two weeks, we’ll be back here at Red Floyd Stadium to see the Blue Raiders take on their arch rival, those same Hilltoppers from WKU!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  Just as Duane Hickey mentioned on the Blue Raider Sports Network.  Click on the book title or cover copied on the upper right hand side bar on this page.  Thanks!   It’s all about our adventures of attending games just like this one played by all 120 FBS teams over time including MTSU at UConn!

Collegefootballfan.com Interview on MTSU pregame Friday night – Live!

Stream us on live to listen to our brief interview before the Middle Tennessee State – UTSA game tomorrow with Duane Hickey and Dick Palmer on the Blue Raider Football Network. Tune in at 6:15 pm EST/ 5:15 pm CT by clicking right here to hear our preview . Listen before our 641st college football game since 1979, but only our first ever at MTSU’s Red Floyd Stadium in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. This game should be fun! The Blue Raiders (3-1) come off their 45-31 victory over No. 25 Miami last week. The Road Runners (2-2) come off a 12-2 record a year ago and are the favorite to win the Conference USA title. The winner will get an early lead in what should be a very competitive race for the championship!

Most importantly though, tune in for our interview before the Middle Tennessee – UTSA game!

Week Five of Steveo’s Salvos: PSU QB strategy; Alabama challenged by Vandy,55-3; Two-game Friday/Saturday weekend – Miami-beater Middle Tennessee hosts UTSA in Conference USA clash; Western Kentucky goes for fourth win against Troy; FCS Austin Peay jumps to No. 16; Week Four-Five notes; Navy wins; What’s going on at Alma Mater dear?

  This Friday night we venture to our first game ever at our new adopted FBS Tennessee team for the first of two games for Week Five.  At Red Floyd Stadium in nearby Murfreesboro, The Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders (3-1) host UT San Antonio (2-2), a pre-season favorite to win ConferenceUSA.  Fresh off their 45-31 victory over No. 25 Miami last week, the Blue Raiders seem to be recovering from their opening day decimation at James Madison.  HC Rick Stockstill’s team seems ready to challenge UTSA for this year’s conference title.  The UTSA Road Runners played Texas tight through three quarters in Austin before a Longhorn pick-six turned things around to lose, 41-20.

Reflections of one another on offense

    Looking at both teams’ starts, this looks to be another very competitive game on our slate. The two teams mirror one another regarding their stats in four games heading into Week Five. MTSU QB Chase Cunningham returned from a season-ending injury in 2021, and has started all four games passing for 1,000 yards, seven TDs, and three INTs.  Between his two favorite targets, WR Jaylin Hall leads in yardage with 231 on 11 catches, but Isaiah Gathings has 24 snags for 175 yards. With only one TD between the two, RB Frank Peasant leads all Raiders in scoring on 292 rushing yards for six TDs.  The Blue Raiders average 33.8 ppg. 

 On defense, S Teldrick Ross leads all tacklers with 34 in total, but DT Marley Cook and DE Jordan Ferguson lead in sacks with 3.5 and 3.0 respectively. MTSU amassed sixteen sacks and tallied six INTs heading into Week Five.

   As for UTSA, QB Frank Harris returned this season to complete 140 passes for 1,310 yards, ten TDs, and only two INTS. Against FCS Texas Southern, he completed 20 passing for 392 yards and four TDs.  With that, he set the record for UTSA with 52 career TD passes. De’Corean Clark, his favorite receiver gathered in a school record of 217 yards in a game and three TDs.  His numbers put him in the team lead for the season with 27 receptions, 417 yards and six TDs. WR Joshua Cephus is pretty effective too with 412 yards and two TDs.   RB Brendan Brady leads the Road Runners with 206 yards and three TDs. Harris runs when necessary to the tune of 162 and two TDs thus far. On offense, they average 37.0 ppg. 

Where we see the edge

   Heading into Week Five, S Cliff Chattam and LB Jamal Ligon both lead UTSA in tackles with 28 each.  However, the Road Runner defense does not matchup to the pressure and coverage the Blue Raiders bring.  Regarding sacks and INTs, their numbers fall short of the Blue Raiders at six and two respectively.  Both teams shellacked their FCS competitors this season. MTSU defeated Eddie George’s Tennessee State Tigers, 49-6.   We look for the Blue Raiders defense at home to keep the pressure up against HC Jeff Traylor’s Road Runners to win by more than a touchdown.  Of course, we expect to see the final score decided as we like to in all our games, in the final period!  

Saturday night’s the night for fighting

   In the second of our two games for Week Five, we expected to see a bit of grudge match in this one.  With less than two weeks before Western Kentucky’s opener versus Austin Peay, first-year transfer, grad student, QB Jarret Doege decided to transfer again. Having started at West Virginia the last two years after leaving Bowling Green, we’re not sure where he stood within WKU’s QB pecking order.  QB Austin Reed, a former D-2 QB for national champ West Florida seems to be in control there with 1,263 passing yards and 14 TDs for the 3-1 Hilltoppers. 

We anticipated Doege went to Troy because there might have been a better opportunity to start awaiting him.  So, we figured the Hilltopper defense would be going after him with their ears pinned back this Saturday.  Well unless Junior QB Gunnar Watson goes down for the Trojans, Doege will spend most of his time on the bench as he’s only thrown 12 passes going into Week Five for Troy. 

Brand new world for coaching decisions

     Maybe Doege’s not as good as he thinks he is.  Watson has completed 95 of 143 passes for 1,249 yards and five TDs and five INTs.  Or, maybe first-year HC Jon Sumrail decided to bank on developing his younger QB in hopes he’ll have him at Troy for two years.  Coaches have to think like this now with the transfer portal always looming.  If Sumrail started Doege this year, Watson could decide the heck with Troy, I’ll transfer and take my two years’ someplace else.  It’s the reality of the college football world now, especially with QBs.  QBs may want to realize what a coach’s dilemma might be before they decide to flip teams again.

WKU (4-1) heading into Week Five against Troy (2-2)

      Hilltopper QB Austin Reed looks for Daewood Davis on the receiving end most of the time with 24 receptions for 324 yards and three TDs. Reed spreads the ball around to four other receivers on his team, all with over 100 yards of catches.  Among them, Malachi Corley captured five for scores.  RB Kye Robichaux leads in rushing with 265 yards and a TD.  The offense plays formidably averaging 508.8 ypg. and 47.5 ppg. LB JaQues Evans leads the defense with 28 tackles and 3.5 sacks. DBs Kaleb Oliver and Upton Stout each recorded two picks each heading into Week Five.  WKU whipped Florida International (1-2) in their Conference USA debut last week, 73-0. Ho-hum, FIU finished 1-11 last year.

       For Troy of the Sun Belt, Watson targets WR Jabre Barber and TE Tez Johnson as his prime receivers.  RBs DK Billingsley and Kuman Vidal share rushing duties with 162 and 149 yards respectively.  LB Carlton Marshall leads the Trojans with 33 stops. The Trojans only average 23 ppg.  With their 16-7 win over Marshall last week, their only TD came as a result of a 23-yard fumble return by Buddha Jones along with Brooks Buce’s three field goals. The Trojans average only 66 rushing yards per game.

        Despite the Trojans allowing only 21 ppg, the more formidable teams Ole Miss and Appy State with their last-second score upped that average.  We look for the Hilltoppers to negate the Troy running game and apply the pressure on Watson.  With superior offensive firepower and their only loss on the road to Indiana, 33-31, we look for Western Kentucky to add win number four by more than two TDs.  This game at Houchens Industries-LT Smith Stadium will be decided in the third period as Reed should have a big day.

Penn State long-term QB strategy

     Penn State fans clamor to see more playing time for five-star frosh QB Drew Allar.  The thinking at State College right now is that Sean Clifford’s experience in his sixth year continues to help the Nittany Lions.  However, some plan has to go into the future when Clifford’s gone after graduation, or even if he unexpectedly goes down again to injury this season.  Allar has played in all four games this season, and a fifth game negates any red-shirting.  However, HC James Franklin needs to weigh his options figuring Allar is his QB of the future.

    Playing the 1-3 Northwestern Wildcats this weekend may offer Franklin the opportunity he needs.  If the Nittany Lions can gain a substantial lead at Beaver Stadium, it may be timely to keep Clifford healthy and get Allar some considerable playing time. Again, with the transfer portals, a coach has to be sensitive to players’ options.  Consider Will Levis leaving PSU for Kentucky a couple of years ago when Clifford won the job.  Levis will be one of the top QBs in next year’s NFL draft. 

You never know.  It’s a tough call for many coaches now-a-days.  You need to keep your options open.  You want to win now, but you have to have a QB ready to step in for the unexpected as well as for the longer-term success of your program.  Check out Allar’s stats Sunday if he gets to play more than he usually does this Saturday.  The 6’5” QB possesses a strong arm.

Nick Saban’s definition of a challenge

    With the annihilation Alabama delivered to Vanderbilt last Saturday, 55-3, at Bryant-Denny Stadium, here’s what Christopher Walsh of Bama Central on FanNation reported.  With Bama’s roster of five-star recruits from throughout the US outgaining Vanderbilt (a misleading 3-2) who has totaled four winning seasons in the last 40 years, 628 yards to 123, this is what the “greatest coach of all-time” had to say: “The challenges are greater, as we go, so we have to continue to focus on moving forward and improving.”  Give college football a break!  He calls any game Bama played this year besides the Texas game a “challenge”?  Nick Saban evidently lives in a different world.

     He doesn’t know a challenge until he laments losing in a national championship to a team that can recruit as well as he does.  When rosters play similar levels of talent (like when he coached in the pros), success comes down to coaching capabilities. Losses to Clemson twice (Swinney), Georgia (Smart), LSU (Orgeron), Ohio State (Meyer), Oklahoma (Stoops), and Utah (Meyer) in key games have proven that.  He builds his records beating “challenges” he schedules like Mercer, Southern Miss, New Mexico State, Utah State, and ULM the last two years. 

He must be quaking in his boots anticipating FCS Austin Peay coming to town in November.    Feel bad for him. He’s got to focus on the Govs before Auburn comes to town.  Of all the SEC teams, the Tigers offer him his toughest “challenge” as he’s 10-5 against them.  APSU could be a distraction for Saban this year. Hopefully, he’ll be up for that challenge.

Austin Peay jumps up in FCS, but a major obstacle lies ahead

    With last week’s win we witnessed over No. 20 Eastern Kentucky, the APSU Governors jumped up in the FCS poll from No. 23 to No. 16. Aside from finishing their season at Alabama for a monetary donation on November 19, the Govs most difficult challenge shows up at Fortera Stadium on October 29 when Jacksonville State (4-1) comes calling.  These Gamecocks will be stepping up to Conference USA next season along with Liberty, Sam Houston State (also FCS), and New Mexico State.  Because of their pending move to the FBS, FCS schools such as Jacksonville State and Sam Houston aren’t ranked in the 2022 poll.  However, the Gamecocks can play for the ASUN championship. The best way for APSU to figure into the FCS championship will be to win on October 29. 

Juniata, Alma Mater Dear

     In 1973, Juniata played in the first D-3 national championship Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, but regretfully lost badly to Wittenberg.  Still, our team defeated Bridgeport University in the semi-final and set a standard for future teams to exceed.  The team’s late, great Head Coach Walt Nadzak eventually became Head Coach at UConn and AD at The Citadel.  Our football legacy goes back to having the late, great NFL Coach Chuck Knox graduating from JC. The college’s football stadium now bears his name.  In 1956, the then once-proud Juniata Indians (now Eagles) played in the Tangerine Bowl (now the Citrus Bowl) to a 6-6 tie with Missouri Valley in front of 10,000 fans.  In the 70’s through about 2005, the program competed successfully in the Middle Atlantic Conference.  The Indians even knocked off a couple of D-2 schools, California State of Pennsylvania and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, back in the 70s.

Adapting to standards

       The admin decided around 2005 with academics becoming more competitive, they joined the Centennial Conference to play teams with similar standards. New competitors included Dickinson, Franklin and Marshall, and powerhouse John Hopkins.  Some also came over from the former MAC who Juniata always competed well with: Gettysburg, Moravian, Ursinus, and archrival Susquehanna.  Don’t know if their academic standards changed more than Juniata’s, but it doesn’t make sense that JC cannot compete on the football field with these schools that it used to.

      Despite the hiring of a good assistant coach from a great D-3 program, Josh Carter of Muhlenberg, it seems that the college has de-emphasized the game of football.  They don’t seem to provide the support and enthusiasm needed in finding players that can qualify academically, but who can also play football as well.  As bad as team records have fallen in recent years, the Eagles are really being demolished this season.  Classmates text the final score.  Frankly, it’s become embarrassing. 

Why such a decline?

     JC has a tremendous pre-med program. So does Johns Hopkins. They probably may have much greater financial support than any other Centennial team, but a 70-0 loss to another bunch of pre-med students?  Grove City, a non-conference game, 63-6 in the opener?  Gettysburg floundered to 0-3 into Week Four until they bested (or busted?) Alma Mater, 40-14.  Ahead lies Moravian in Week Five who only beat G-burg so far. Ursinus awaits at 3-1 with its loss to Johns Hopkins by only seven.  Rival Susquehanna rolls along at 4-0.  These were teams the old Juniata never took a back-seat to, but evidently times have changed on College Hill in Huntingdon, PA.

Common business practice: Review models of success 

   Hopefully, the current administration wakes up to the fact that to the general public, having success being competitive on the football field, reflects on how well the rest of the school is performing. It may not be true, but perceptions as a winner against other schools on the playing field with equivalent academic standards bodes well for the overall image of the institution.  For a school population of 1,269 in the 70s, probably about twenty percent of the male students (about 60% of the student M/W ratio) recruited played football for at least one year. It would be nice to see the college look at that model again, but JC should also expand the recruiting footprint now well beyond Pennsylvania.  Check recruiting models of the other successful schools in the conference to start.

Other teams on our 2022 schedule from Week four to Week Five

     The other “Alma Mater” posted its first win as Navy defeated East Carolina in OT, 23-20. Mids vie for Commander-in-Chief Trophy Saturday at 3-1 Air Force.  Army still possesses Trophy having defeated both Navy and Air Force in 2020 before three-way tie last season. No. 1 UGA struggled with Nick Saban’s Alma Mater Kent State 39-22 with the Golden Flashes taking home $1.9M to add to its coffers.  No. 2 Bama didn’t have to spend that much hosting Vandy for a 55-3 win since the “challenge” came from a fellow SEC institution.  However, they bought lop-sided wins from Utah State and ULM for about the same price Georgia shelled out to Kent. Nick Saban will find Bama in a real challenge this week when they visit the wounded, No. 20 Arkansas Razorbacks (3-1).  Arkansas returns from Texas A&M defeated, 23-21. Nothing meaner than a wounded wart hog, we hear.  

Other Top 25s plus

   Ohio State at No. 3 conquered Wisconsin, 52-21.  OSU entertains Rutgers Saturday, and we do mean “entertain”.   No. 5 Clemson needed two OTs to put away No. 22 Wake Forest on the road, 51-45.  The Tigers luck might run out when No. 10 NC State comes calling on Saturday.  Wake visits No.  23 Florida State (4-0) this weekend for a battle to determine who stays in the Top 25.  No. 7 Kentucky did in Northern Illinois, 31-23.  They’re visiting No. 13 Ole Miss next to The Grove this weekend, a tailgate venue with fond memories for many college football fans.

 No. 11 Penn State hosts Northwestern (1-3) as already mentioned after defeating Central Michigan, 33-10.  Miami (O) edged NW last week, 17-14.  Baylor ranked No. 16 defeated Iowa State in Des Moines last week, 31-24.  Oklahoma State (3-0) travels to Waco for their first road game to threaten the Bears Big 12 2022 aspirations.  Kansas (4-0,1-0) lies at No. 26 with 125 votes waiting for 3-1 Iowa State to show up in Lawrence.

Our other 2022 teams in action

      Auburn (3-1, 1-0) fans will at least plan to attend the LSU (3-1, 1-0) game this weekend after getting by Mizzou, 17-14.  James Madison (3-0) continues its winning ways from the FCS as it defeated tough Appalachian State, 32-28, in a Sun Belt East Game. The Dukes host SB West team Texas State (2-2) next who they should handle in their first meeting ever.  The Bobcats come off a 34-0 win over FCS Houston Christian. We see JMU meet Louisville on November 5.  The Cardinals stand at 2-2 entering Week Five heading to 1-3 Boston College. HC Jeff Hafley is not making BC Eagle fans too happy. Just so happens that we see Louisville play on consecutive weekends. After we see them play JMU as an FBS member for the first time, we follow them to Clemson the following week for our first visit ever to Clemson Memorial Stadium. 

   In other action among our 2022 slate of teams, Ohio U. beat FCS Fordham in a high-scoring affair, 59-52. Texas Tech knocked off Texas, 37-34.  Houston (2-2) beat Rice, 34-27. Georgia Southern defeated Ball State, 34-23. Purdue evened out its record to 2-2 with a close win over Florida Atlantic, 28-26, and South Carolina who we will see at Kentucky on October 8, defeated Charlotte, 56-20. 

Other game of interest to us   

    No. 4 Michigan finally played a team they didn’t have to pay to visit Ann Arbor and only defeated Big Ten East foe Maryland, 34-27. Golly! At Iowa this week. Uh oh! The 3-1 Hawkeyes have only allowed 23 points in four games. The Fighting Irish of Notre Dame got some offense going and beat the UNC Tar Heels, 45-32. Now 2-2, they have bye week before clashing with BYU in Vegas.  Central Florida did Georgia Tech a favor defeating them 27-10 to get Geoff Collins fired. With a 10-28 record at Tech after putting Temple into a tailspin, he never should have been a HC. 

New Mexico State jumped from 131 to 122 with a win over 0-4 Hawaii. However, the Rainbow Warriors didn’t take over the lowest rank. With its loss to FCS Sacramento State, the honor fell to 0-4 Colorado State. Kansas State upended former No. 6 Oklahoma, 41-34, to climb in at No. 25. The Sooners fell to No. 18.  Does that ever make any sense? Same records.  Anyway, with Kansas at 4-0, the state of Kansas in the FBS is 7-1.   The Wildcats and Jayhawks will meet appropriately for their season finales on November 26.  That game may actually have some meaning this year.  We hope so!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: from the fan who’s seen ‘em all!  Please link on the Title or picture of our cover on the top right sidebar on this or any other page you may peruse to buy your copy and submit a review.  Many purchases may help to turn around Alma Mater’s declining football program.  Please help.  Thanks!

Game 640: Diliello and Defense lead Austin Peay in comeback over Eastern Kentucky

Clarksville, TN – FCS No.  23 Austin Peay spotted No. 20 Eastern Kentucky a 20-3 lead at halftime. However in the second half, a tough Governor defense shut out the Colonels. In addition, QB Mike Diliello finished the day with 181 yards rushing and three TDs to win, 31-20.  Despite the first half score, the Governor defense led by LB Josh Rudolph and CB Kory Chapman held EKU in check.  Twice they held the Colonels to two FGs, one after a turnover of downs and another in the red zone.  EKU’s first TD came on a pick-six.  Their one offensive TD came after a Colonel INT put them at the APSU 36 for a short TD drive.  The Govs allowed only 116 yards on the ground and held the EKU scoring well below their 38 ppg average.

Colonels threaten often, but Govs don’t always break

     By the end of the first half, Eastern Kentucky (2-2, 0-1) dominated the scoring. However, their lead could have been larger.  They halted the first APSU drive at their 30 on a fourth and one.  Patrick Nations booted a 46-yard FG to lead, 3-0. On the subsequent Austin Peay possession, DB Joseph Sayles swooped in front of the intended receiver and raced 40 yards. With nothing ahead of him but green, EKU bolted ahead for a quick 10-0 lead.  Austin Peay (4-1, 1-0) finally got on the board with Maddux Trujillo’s 27-yard FG on a bad snap.  The ball basically laid flat on the ground.  An INT by Austin Peay DB Ethan Casselberry turned back another Colonel drive before the second period.

    This Austin Peay turnover went nowhere.  Later in the period, an Eastern Kentucky FG for 39 yards sailed wide left.  A subsequent INT by EKU DB Matthew Ballentine started the Colonels from their 49.  The drive resulted in a 17-yard TD catch and run to WR Jaden Smith for a 17-3 lead.  Austin Peay’s next punt was returned to the 49. However, a 15-yard face-mask penalty tacked on 15 yards to start the Colonels at the 36 of the Govs.  A pass to Smith got EKU to the four, but they got no farther and settled for Nation’s 17-yard FG.  The Govs defensive stop kept the lead to 20-3 at half. Turnovers and key stops in the red zone prevented EKU from scoring more points.

Governor’s coaching staff plans while “Governor’s Own” performs

    Very impressive today was the coaching by 32-year-old HC Scotty Walden and his staff.  As usual, they maintain a lot of energetic enthusiasm along their side line.  However, in this game, they also demonstrated a well-planned strategy.  Their defense held on to keep the score within range during the first half.  Their offense sputtered in the meantime.  By the middle of the third, they seemed to have worn down the tough EKU defense.  To do that, they implemented a churning, deceptive run offense using fresh backs, CJ Evans, Jr. (17 carries for 75 yards) and Jevon Jackson (13 carries for 51) to work for the short, tough gains through the middle.  Their half-time adjustments paid off immensely late in this game. The win here will probably weigh heavily for a bid to the FCS playoffs.

Slugging it out to start the second

    The two Atlantic Sun teams played to a defensive standstill until late into the third period. Austin Peay started a drive from their 20.  Faking a hand-off over tackle, Diliello ran around left end and raced past defenders for a 39-yard TD scamper.  The touchdown cut the lead in half, 20-10.  The Colonels countered with a 44-yard run by QB Parker McKinney (21 for 36, 213 yards, 1 INT, 1 TD, 116 rushing yards) to the Governor 19.  Once again, the APSU defense came up with a big stop to hold and force a 27-yard FG by Nations.  However, no good! Austin Peay took over from its 20. They drove to the Eastern Kentucky 41 for a first and ten as the third period came to a close.

Offensive explosion

     On the first play of the final period, Diliello (17 for 33 passing, 172 yards, two INTs, one TD; 15 carries, 181 yards, three TDs rushing) dropped back. He burst through a hole for 34 yards to the seven. On the next play he slanted left, barreled over a would-be tackler, and dove into the end zone to cut EKU’s lead, 20-17.  The home crowd chanted, “Let’s go Peay!” The players started pushing and shoving more between plays.  The atmosphere became “chippy” on the field. 

Austin Peay forced EKU to punt from their 40 on its next possession.  Kam Thomas returned the punt 46 yards to the Colonel 35.  Like a replay of the previous Governor series, in one play, Diliello ran it down to the EKU 8. Next play, he high-tailed it right through the middle for another seven and a 24-20 Austin Peay lead. Chants of “Let’s go Peay!” continued.

Governors in control

     APSU forced another EKU punt from the 42 and took over on its ten.  Jevon Jackson carried the ball on most downs getting the Govs to the Colonels 30.  This time, Diliello struck from there through the air. He connected with WR Drae McCray in the end zone for the 31-20 lead.  APSU took control.  HC Scotty Walden performed jumping jacks excitedly along the sideline. His team jumped in unison and twirled towels as the kickoff team lined up.  EKU’s drive started from their 18. A completion of 10 yards to Jayden Higgins eventually put EKU at the APSU 33.  A sack set them back before a 4th and three at the 33 once again.  McKinney tried to fire a pass to WR Cornelius Ford near the left pylon. Beautifully, it was knocked down by a diving Demetrius Ford to end the scoring threat.

     Three minutes remained.  Diliello ran for 15 yards for a first. With 1:52 left, HC Walt Wells of EKU had exhausted all his time-outs.  Walden’s team ran the clock out in a well-coached come-from-behind victory.  The win looms well for a bid in the six-team ASUN conference. The Austin Peay Governors could be heading for the post-season in the FCS play-offs. We would definitely plan to see them if they play again in Clarksville.  Their major obstacle before them stands a date with Alabama in Tuscaloosa on November 19. Of course, that won’t have any bearing on their FCS playoff potential.  As for their HC Scotty Walden, success here could propel him to the next level of FBS play eventually.  That would be fun to witness.

Next up in Week Five

   The 4-1, 1-0 Governors travel next week to play the Central Arkansas Bears (1-3) for their next ASUN clash. EKU (2-2,0-1) returns home to Roy Kidd Stadium in Richmond, KY to take on non-conference Southern Utah Thunderbirds (3-1).

   Collegefootballfan.com looks forward to a Friday/Saturday doubleheader next weekend with what looks like two, very competitive games.  On Friday night, we go to our first game at Middle Tennessee State’s Red Floyd Stadium in Murfreesboro.  The Blue Raiders of ConferenceUSA (3-1) come off a major upset over No. 25 Miami on the road, 45-31. They will host UTSA (2-2) in the opening conference battle for both squads. On Saturday, we traipse back to Bowling Green, KY to see MTSU’s archrival, the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers (3-1), take on the Trojans of Troy (2-2). Troy fell to Appy State in Week Three on a last-play Hail Mary for a TD.  On Saturday, they defeated Marshall, 16-7.  So good games coming up.  On October 15, we will be back at Red Floyd to see the Blue Raiders host the Hilltoppers. Their rivalry known as “100 miles of hate.”  Sounds like fun!  Can’t wait.

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: from the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  Check out our first book about our unique adventure to see every FBS team up until Western Kentucky joined play in person.  Stories about travels, great games, fun stories, and historical perspectives tell our story over 30 years of how we did this. Our hobby to follow our favorite sport, college football.  Click on the title or book cover at the top of the right sidebar on this page to purchase our book on Amazon .  Please review it as well. Thanks!

Week Four of Steveo’s Salvos: FCS showdown, “Tales…” update, Week Three-Four notes, Cornhusker Cravings, Ivy League Power, Hail Michigan?

    For Week Four, collegefootballfan.com heads to Clarksville, TN to attend an early FCS showdown for Atlantic Sun (ASUN) superiority.  At Fortera Stadium, home of the FCS No. 23 Austin Peay Governors (3-1), the FCS No. 20 Eastern Kentucky Colonels (2-1) come calling for the conference opener for both.  Expect a hard-hitting game as both teams already aspire to this newly organized conference’s championship bid for the Football Championship Subdivision playoff.

    In Week Zero, we watched Austin Peay lose at FBS Western Kentucky, 38-22.  Since then, HC Scotty Walden’s team has reeled of three straight wins with two shutouts by a total score of 128-3.  The competition beaten holds a combined record of 1-8.  Against Mississippi Valley State, the Governors raced off to a 41-0 lead at the half, and never scored again.  On the other hand, the Colonels score an average 44.3 ppg and opponents challenged their defense totaling 38.7 ppg.  Don’t let the stats fool you. EKU enters Week Four with two contests against FBS foes under its belt.  In week one, they fell by eight points at Eastern Michigan and won in Week Two at Bowling Green, 59-57, in seven OTs. Last Saturday they defeated 0-3 Charleston Southern, an FCS team their own size, 40-17.

Confident Austin Peay vs. tested Eastern Kentucky

    The Governors offense thrives under guidance of QB Mike DiLilleo.  He’s thrown for 860 yards and 13 TDs while rushing for 228 yards and three TDs. His favorite target falls in the hands of WR Drae McCray with 25 snags for 362 yards and four TDs.  RB Jevon Jackson leads the Gov running game with 300 yards on 43 carries and one TD.  A fairly well-balanced offensive attack, but hardly tested these past three weeks. Defensively, the Governors LB Corps of Antoine Williams and Josh Rudolph combined for 65 tackles in four games thus far.  They’ve allowed only 88.5 yards rushing per game, only five TDs (all by WKU), and only 10.5 points per game. Again, all against very suspect competition.

     On the other hand, EKU shows better offensive balance against much better competition averaging 44.3 ppg.  Against better competition as well, they allowed 38.7 ppg on defense, but defeated fellow FCS foe CSU, 40-17.   QB Mark McKinney has passed for 1,027 yards and 10 TDs/three INTs, and has rushed for 129 yards.  TE Dakota Allen looms has his favorite target with 18 catches for 245 yards and three TDs. Jayden Higgins converted 15 grabs for 229 yards and three TDs.  RBs Braedan Sloan and Kyeandre Magloire combined for 288 yards and four TDs in their three games. 

Driving force vs. overconfidence

     EKU HC Walt Wells played his college ball at APU.  Recovering from a seizure in August, please read his story here.  He’s back on the sideline already and drives to bring the Colonels to heights of the past.  EKU played in four consecutive FCS (then 1-AA) championships from 1979-1982 winning the titles in ’79 and ’82.   Desiring to go to the FBS level, the Colonels are on hold until invited by a particular conference.  They are driven.  The results of their current start indicates that.  This desire will propel them past the Governors by at least two TDs.  We predict more.  The feeble challenges the last three weeks leave HC Scotty Walden’s team in a false sense of overconfidence.  For our Week Four FCS Game of the Year, even though its APU’s homecoming, the Colonels will prevail.

New News from our book, Tales from the Tailgate…

     Please note the upper right-hand corner of each of our pages at the top of our sidebar. On either the title or on the copy of our book cover, all can now easily have access by clicking on one or the other.   Several fans have inquired about buying our book to read (and hopefully submit a review), but found it difficult to identify our links to Amazon.com.  We hope you enjoy our unique, fun adventure. An idea for another college football book is in the works for after this season.  We plan to continue with fascinating tales over the years that make college football the greatest sport season of all!

Cornhusker cravings

    Bidding adios to Scott Frost as the underperforming HC at Nebraska. The rumor mill abounds.  Latest word conjures up three names we find very interesting.  Matt Campbell, HC at Iowa State, played collegiately at D-3 Mount Union playing DL for HC Matt Kehres from 1999-2002.  We attended Campbell’s Head coaching debut at Toledo in 2011 in the Military Bowl replacing departed HC Tim Beckman. In an exciting game, his Toledo Rockets defeated Air Force, 42-41.  He coached the Rockets to a 35-15 record before taking over at Iowa State, where he’s now 45-34.  Many pro teams offered him opportunities to join, but he’s stayed with the college game.

      Kansas’ second year HC Lance Leipold’s name is being bandied about for the opening in Lincoln.  At 3-0 already this season, he looks to become Coach of the Year in 2022 as we predicted.  Like Campbell, Leipold’s roots start at D-3.  He coached Wisconsin-Whitewater to six national championships defeating Mount Union if the final in six of eight D-3 title games from 2005-2014.  He turned the Buffalo Bulls program around leading them to a record of 37-33 including two MAC championships in six years. A proven winner, his Warhawks of UW-Whitewater achieved 109 wins in 115 contests

We saw him beat Wesley (DE) in a national D-3 semi-final and watched his Bulls beat Army and lose to Penn State.  Entering Week Four, his Jayhawks host Duke and have a good shot at defeating Duke before entering Big Twelve play.  We’d love to see him stay at KU to see what he can do with that beleaguered program.

     The third prospect comes in Bill O’Brien, OC at Alabama.  Having brought Penn State back after the devastation of the Sandusky scandal for two years, he went back into the pros where he worked prior as Tom Brady’s QB coach to become HC of the Houston Texas.  At Alabama now for his second season, we believe he’s itching to go take over a program someplace else.  Having worked and learning more under Nick Saban, the time at Bama served him well.  We think he’s the most apt of these three to take over the struggling Husker program.

Other teams on our 2022 schedule from Week Three to Week Four

     No. 1 Georgia had no problem wasting South Carolina in their SEC opener for both, 48-7. On October 8, we’ll see the Gamecocks wander into Lexington, KY to see them face No. 8 Kentucky (3-0). We’re doubting that they will fare much better.  In review of future schedules, we feel we’re on track to see two 10-0 SEC East teams collide on November 19. Then, the Bulldogs visit the Wildcats for the right to go the SEC championship.  

In Week Four, the Bulldogs smash the Golden Flashes of Kent State while Kentucky mushes the NIU Huskies.  No. 2 Alabama wasted another weekend practicing against UL Monroe last week to the tune of 63-7. Still? Why bother? And the SEC throws a ferry boat of Commodores from Vanderbilt for The Tide to roll over at Bryant-Denny.  Why bother?  Bama 1-0 in the SEC, Vandy 0-1. Here’s why: Saban covers the points whatever they are (-41) so the denizens of B-D can collect. 

  

Among collegefootballfan.com ranked teams in Week Four

     No. 3 Ohio State who bashed Toledo 77-21 Week Three, hosts unranked Wisconsin (2-1).  Neither has beaten anyone of note. UW took their previous loss out on No. 131 New Mexico State, 66-7, to “flex their muscle”. The No. 5 Clemson Tigers finally have a challenge when they meet No. 21 Wake Forest in Week Four.  The Tigers have dominated the Deacons for many years.  Could this be the Deacs’ year?  They just edged Liberty last week at home, 38-37. Back in Winston-Salem again this week, maybe the Deacs’ focus anticipated the Tigers’ visit.  QB Sam Hartman is healthy.  Clemson has beaten nobody of note.  Wake’s offense is potent and may be able to outscore this year’s Tiger team with some improvement on the defensive side. So, if anybody near the top gets beat this week, it could be the Tigers.   

     No. 14 Penn State as we witnessed over Auburn last week, hosts Central Michigan before heading into Big Ten play.  No. 17 Baylor (2-1) off a 42-7 win over struggling Texas State (1-2), heads north to take on Iowa State (3-0). ISU’s defense looks good and the Bears fell at BYU, 26-20, so there could be an upset alert on this one here.  In late November, we see Baylor face No. 22 Texas.  The Longhorns (2-1) open their Big 12 season, after overcoming an early challenge from UTSA (41-20) last Saturday, at Texas Tech (2-1).  This looks to be a tight one. The Red Raiders fell on the road to No. 16 NC State, 27-16.  Hudson Card remains at QB for the Horns and Heisman candidate RB Bijan Robinson came around with 183 rushing yards and three TD vs the Road Runners.

Week Four Under the Top 25

    Aforementioned UTSA (1-2) appears on our slate after this week on Friday night at nearby Middle Tennessee. The Road Runners look to take their frustrations out at home against Texas Southern in Week Four.  Western Kentucky (2-1) fell in a close one to Indiana last week in similar fashion to a year ago, 33-31.  We will see them host Troy the day after UTSA at MTSU next week. Of course, mostly everyone has seen the Trojans’ last second “Hail Mary” loss to Appalachian State, 32-28.  Troy hosts Marshall (2-1) Saturday. 

Not to leave the SunBelt yet, Louisiana (2-1) suffered its first loss a week ago to Rice, 33-21.  Texas State hosts FCS Houston Baptist (1-1). Bobcats lose, and that’s probably all for HC Jake Spavital.  In a big Sun Belt matchup, 2-0 newcomer James Madison visits the “team of destiny”, Appy State (2-1).  High-scoring, close one again! Georgia Southern (2-1) hosts Ball State (1-2) whom we hope to see host Ohio later this season.

In more WEEK Four action   

    South Carolina (1-2) meets Charlotte (1-3) at home. So much for a Spencer Rattler’s Heisman attempt.  Another Conference USA team, FAU (2-2), visits Purdue who fell to a surprisingly improved Syracuse team at 3-0.  Boilermaker QB Aidan O’Connell still threw for 424 yards and three TDs in a loss with seven second left.  Auburn (2-1) hosts Missouri (2-1). If the Tigers fall here, a lot of Auburn fans we met after last week’s game said they’d be selling remaining tickets for the rest of the season.

 Navy (0-2) gets back in action against 2-1 East Carolina. The Pirates look to be starting to turn the corner under Mike Houston who came over from JMU four years ago.  Hopefully during their bye week, HC Ken Niumatalolo worked on getting that triple option improved, or it’s going to be a very long season in Annapolis.  We plan to see them play the “In-fightingCougars of Houston (1-2) on October 22.  Check out this video of Cougar on Cougar.  Of course, we will see the Mids play archrival Army (1-2) in December.  The Cadets righted their own ship on the banks of the Hudson besting FCS No. 5 Villanova, 49-10, before their bye in Week Four.

Desert Heat, and another one gone.

    The heat in the Desert turned on full blast as HC Herman Edwards was fired by the Arizona State Sun Devils (1-2). The loss to Eastern Michigan in Tempe Saturday and brewing scandal accusations burned too much even for them.  We’ll see who’s interested in heading a team whose conference, the PAC-12, seems to be heading into turmoil…

    Another one bites the dust. Not a coach, but another rivalry. Bedlam Bowl between Oklahoma and Oklahoma State – done!  The move to the SEC by the Sooners and the Longhorns supposedly puts an end to 118 years of tradition because of ensuing non-conference contracts.  Maybe many years from now they’ll find a way.

Not the rivalry we grew up loving

    In the case of Oklahoma and Nebraska, remember back over the Big Eight years when this was a not-miss rivalry back in the 70’s and 80’s?  They finally got back together last week where the Sooners stomped the Huskers, 49-14.  What TV exec in their right mind put this game on as a network noon time game? This isn’t the 70’s.  They make these TV decisions two weeks before the games are played. Scott Frost sat on the hottest seat in college football. OU looks to prime its program to join the SEC in two years.  We don’t know where you hide potential blow-outs on Saturdays any more, but noon time on a major network couldn’t find a matchup more interesting?  Not totally TV’s fault though as every school looks for “automatic wins” during non-conference play.  Beating a dead horse here.  

Who says the Ivy League isn’t competitive?

     Last week, six of eight teams among the Ancient Eight won their opening games against other FCS schools from across the nation.  If all the FBS teams do this, why not the Ivy League members?  Oh, well they play and rank among schools in the FCS. Funny thing though, the epitome of the Ivies, Harvard and Yale, both lost.  Smart thing in addition, to start their ten game seasons, the Ivy League rarely plays an FBS program. Maybe one of the military academies at best.   Princeton was tempted a few years ago to play Rutgers for the 150th anniversary of the first college game ever.  Smartly, they didn’t bite. Why ruin a good thing? Plus, like other tempted FCS schools, they don’t need the money from FBS “donors”.

    Among the openers: Brown beat Bryant of the NEC about 15 miles from their campus in Rhode Island, 44-38.  Revived Columbia traveled to upstate New York to clobber Marist of the Pioneer League, 38-3. Cornell socked VMI of the mighty SoCon, 28-22.  Perennial leader Dartmouth hosted Valparaiso of Indiana for a 35-13 win.  Princeton ventured to Florida to top the Stetson Hatters, 39-14.  Valpo and Stetson both belong to the Pioneer League.  The Penn Quakers defeated Colgate of the Patriot League, 25-14.  All the Ivies play at least one other Patriot team every season. Harvard, the highest among Ivies in preseason polls, suffered a 13-7 upset to Merrimack not far from Cambridge. Yale fell to No. 13 FCS Holy Cross (3-0), 38-14.

Ivy barometers

     Colgate fell to Stanford this season and visits Army on October 15. Bucknell lost to Central Michigan, 41-0, last week. Saturday, the Chippewas travel 45 miles west of Bucknell to play Penn State! A few CCA teams dot Ivy schedules such as New Hampshire and Rhode Island, but that’s about as close as they get to comparing to the FBS.  Harvard, Princeton, and Dartmouth all have Top 25 votes among the FCS after just one week of play.  In a few more weeks, the Ivy cream will show up among the ranked teams.  Fun to watch for teams relegated to play only ten games every season before final exams start.

Hail Michigan? Dominator of Bottom Ten needs a message from pollsters

    Got to get this in.  Weekly, ESPN does an analysis of the Bottom Team FCS teams.  Why is Michigan, aside from their history and fight song, “Hail to the Victors”, ranked No. 4? Their 3-0 record, out of 131 FBS teams, includes No. 130 Hawaii, No. 129 UConn, and No. 123 Colorado State. By the way, 0-4 New Mexico State ranks last at No. 131.  It proves that Alabama’s benevolence beating them at Bryant-Denny the last two seasons for donations to lose games 59-3 and 62-10 didn’t help improve their football fortunes.  Nick Saban must be disappointed in his efforts. Lance Leipold’s former Buffalo Bulls (0-3) rank No. 122.  Underscores the success he achieved there.

    Well, Jim Harbaugh’s team should be penalized in the rankings for this alone.  Pollsters prove it doesn’t matter who these team play among 131 who can’t all recruit the same way.  Like Saban, Harbaugh’s ballyhooed for his recruiting prowess, and then he schedules teams not even mentioned anywhere near the top in recruiting.  Like Saban, he couldn’t win at the pro level where teams compete on a more level playing field. So, he’s back coaching in college picking top players and lowly opponents. 

Solution that will probably never happen

     At this point, it makes sense to have super conferences. Just restrict them to playing amongst themselves. This is killing college football.  They’re seeing it in attendance and in TV ratings.  A once exciting, competitive sport gives in to too many TV commercials shown during boring football games – about 50 each week. Who wants to sit and watch too many fan performances on the video boards?  It’s getting old, or we are.

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the fan who’s seen ‘em all!  See our sidebar to upper right where you can click on our title or book cover to order from Amazon.  Thanks!

Game 639: Nittany Lions Roar past Auburn Tigers with run game and takeaways

Auburn, AL – The Penn State Nittany Lions displayed an improved running game at Auburn averaging 6.3 yards per carry with all five TDs of the rushing variety.  Their bend-but-not-break-defense intercepted two passes and recovered two fumbles on the way to achieving a 41-12 victory over Auburn.  They held AU’s top runner Tank Bigsby to only 39 yards. He ran for 102 yards at two TDs versus the Lions last season. PSU RB Nick Singleton carried ten times for 124 yards and two TDs.  Fellow frosh Kaytron Allen picked up 52 yards and two TDs on nine carries.  In the red zone, Auburn could only convert two FGs in the first half.  Their final series of the game stalled on fourth down against the Nittany Lions second team at the nine. 

First half action

    PSU’s first series of the game stalled at Auburn’s 48 on a QB sneak by Sean Clifford.  HC James Franklin has not yet realized that when it comes to running, Clifford is no Trace McSorely, his predecessor.  Auburn QB TJ Finley (11-19, 152 yards, one INT) completed short passes to open receivers in the first half, or and his receivers made several outstanding catches.   However, once near the red zone, the Nittany Lions defense held firm.   Auburn’s Anders Carlson converted his first of two FGs in the first half from 33 yards to take a 3-0 lead. 

   On the ensuing drive by the Nittany Lions, Clifford (14-19 for 178 yards) connected with WR Mitchell Tinsley for 34 yards to the seven.  Two plays later, with a wide-open hole on his right, Clifford ran through from there to put the Lions ahead for good, 7-3.  S Zakee Wheatly (R-Fr.) picked off a Finley pass to gain possession at Auburn’s 25, but to no avail.  PSU punted it away.  Once again, Auburn made it to the Lions’ five to come away with Carlson’s second FG to cut the lead, 7-6.  Penn State retaliated immediately with a 68-yard drive capped by Allen with a seven-yard run. A fumble by Tiger WR Shedrick Jackson resulted in a Lion recovery by LB Jonathan Sunderland at the 50.  Like the previous Tiger turnover, the Lions couldn’t capitalize.   At the half, PSU went into the locker-room with a 14-6 advantage.

Can’t thank our Auburn Tailgate hosts enough!

   Our tailgate atmosphere was tremendous!  Longtime Auburn friend, grad, and successful business entrepreneur Charlie Murren met us at a very convenient lot hosted by a former classmate Dave Dirk and his fellow organizers, Mike and Billy.  What a great setting! We had a beautiful day.  The sun broiled fans in Jordan-Hare Stadium.  The canopy-covered tables provided a great assortment of foods and beverage brought by many attendees, conveniently in the shade.  The die-hard Auburn fans entertained many Penn State fans as families, friends, and business associates had affiliations with either or both schools. 

    Joe Rogers, formerly of the Bleacher Report, joined me as my Guest Game Analyst (GGA).  Now living in Savannah, Georgia, he brought several friends with him from his native Danville, Pennsylvania area.  Everyone enjoyed a good time sharing “tales around the tailgates”.  Good-natured razzing went on, and primary hosts Billy and Mike gave pregame speeches welcoming and busting PSU fans.  However, they genuinely invited us all back after the game, whoever won, or any other time when we visit “the Loveliest Village on the Plains” again.

Mutual respect

    These guys love doing this, but they and we hope their Tigers will make it more worthwhile coming for the rest of this season.   Except for having to leave with an “L” (28-20), they all consented that they really enjoyed the time and hospitality at State College last year.  Great people! Great time! Tremendous seats for us, too.    Charlie said he’ll let me know what games he’ll be at next year.  Then, we can root for the Tigers against somebody else and hopefully celebrate a win with these great Auburn Tiger fans!

 Third quarter – Nittany Lions roar!

     A sack of Auburn QB by S Keaton Ellis forced a punt to start the second half.  Taking over from the 42, Singleton broke off a 50-yard run to the AU two.  He took it I from the one for a quick, 21-6 lead for the Lions.  Finley fumbled the ball on the next possession, this time putting the visitors at the 30 of Auburn.  GGA Joe Rogers (LSU fan) commented Finley had transferred from LSU.  He could see it was not a significant loss for the Baton Rouge school.  With so many defectors from Auburn since last year, Harsin evidently signed who he could. A 48-yard FG by PSU’s Jake Pinegar, extended the lead further. 

Auburn HC Brian Harsin decided to replace Finley with frosh QB Robby Ashford (we wonder if Zach Calzada, the A&M transfer, will ever get a shot here).  S Ji’Ayar Brown snagged a pass out of mid air to put Penn State at AU’s 48.  Six plays later, Allen took it over from three.  Taking advantage of turnovers now, the Nittany Lions held a dominant 31-6 lead.  The orange-shirted, hometown crowd started a steady flow down steps and out of Jordan-Hare as Q3 ended.   

Finishing touches

     On Auburn’s next series, Ashford (10/19, 144 yards, one TD, one INT) couldn’t put the Tigers in the red zone.  He did better. He tossed a 22-yard TD to RB Jarquez Hunter.  A two-point conversion failed, but cut the Nittany Lion lead, 31-12.  On the fourth play of Penn State’s next possession, Singleton broke off a 54-yard run for a touchdown. PSU showed its improving run game. Auburn went three and out.  HC James Franklin called on frosh QB Drew Allar, a PSU fan favorite, to lead the next drive.  The result came with a Pinegar 22-yard FG to make the final score, 41-12.  The second team defense came in for State, and as the game finally came to a close, it looked as if Jordan-Hare hosted a mini–Penn State “white-out”.  With this the final game of the two-game series, the Penn State Nittany Lions will not return to “the Plains”, but Collegefootballfan.com definitely will! In our history since 1979, Penn State owns a record of 88-25. The Auburn Tigers stand at 5-7-1.

Next and Game 639!

    Penn State returns home to host Central Michigan (1-2) of the MAC. The Chippewas have put points on the scoreboard, but its win on Saturday was a 41-0 drubbing of Patriot League team, Bucknell. The Bison play home about 75 minutes east of State College. The Tigers (2-1) host SEC East foe Missouri Tigers (2-1). Auburn fans say if they lose this one, they’re not sure when they’ll be back this year.  They also wonder how much longer Brian Harsin will be around. 

    Collegefootballfan.com will attend our “FCS Game of the Year” next Saturday since it’s the only one scheduled this season.  The Eastern Kentucky Colonels (2-1) will visit Austin Peay’ Governors (3-1) in an ASUN conference clash.  EKU defeated FBS Bowling Green in seven OTs this season, 59-57.  Also gave FBS Eastern Michigan a tussle.  We watched APU fall to Western Kentucky in our opener, 38-27.  We say their three wins are suspect.  They’ve outscored these opponents with a combined record of 1-8 by a total score of 132-3.   Interesting game?  APU plays at Alabama on November 19.  Is HC Scotty Walden learning something from the Master?

-Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate:  from the fan who’s seen ‘em all!  – All of the first 120 FBS teams that is.  We’ve seen all 130 since publication and will be adding James Madison, Jacksonville State, and Sam Houston State the next few years.  Now you can go to our Amazon page by clicking on the upper right-hand corner of our sidebar above on the title name or book cover. Thanks!

Week Three 2022 Steveo’s Salvos: Penn State at Auburn, Week Two notes, Comfort Zone, The other Independent, On Track

     College footballfan.com travels to Auburn in Week Three for last year’s re-match with No. 22 Penn State (2-0) at Auburn (2-0).  After a shaky start beating Purdue on the road, Penn State vanquished Ohio U. at home, 46-10.  Despite improving against a mid-major, the good news came regarding a sudden improvement in the running game.  Freshman, five-star RB Nick Singleton carried ten times for 179 yards and two TDs on rushes of 70 and 44 yards.  Ohio U.’s defense does not match the speed and quickness of Auburn’s, but adjustments by Penn State to mix the run in with a good passing attack provides more confidence this weekend.

    Last week, the Tigers pulled out a 24-16 win at home against San Jose State.  QB TJ Finley threw for 167 yards and one INT while the running game picked up 210 yards.  In passing situations, Penn State will bring more pressure and will show greater pass coverage than what Auburn has experienced so far.  State’s Linebackers continue work-in progress at Linebacker U.  They’ll look to stop RBs Robby Ashford and Tank Rigsby, who had a big game versus the Lions last year.  With Auburn HC Brian Harsin in the pressure cooker entering Week Three already, it’s a must-win for him. 

With two games under both teams’ belts, the Lions should be more prepared than the Tigers in this one. Auburn may come out in orange jerseys to fire their faithful up for this one.  However, the first Auburn game we attended in Shug-Jordan Stadium in 1978, HC Doug Barfield used the same ploy.   Exciting game, but dull finish as the Tigers tied Vince Dooley’s Georgia Bulldogs, 22-22.

“He goes to his Comfort Zone” to the tune of…

    Kenny Loggins’s, “I went to the Danger Zone!”  The exhilarating theme song of the original Top Gun movie video plays at opening kick-offs at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.  For Nick Saban, college football discovered last week why he avoids leaving his comfort zone.  His song theme is the title above.  For the first time in 11 years, his Alabama Crimson Tide visited a non-conference Power Five School, Texas. He won 20-19, but even after Longhorn QB Quinn Ewers went down to injury, The Tide did not perform up to its standards usually displayed on their home turf. Saban kept hearing “Texas Fight!” instead of “Yeah Alabama!” in front of 105,213 Longhorn fans.

   No wonder why he prefers to play at home or only at “neutral” sites like Atlanta. Forget about home and home series as we published after attending The Tides 55-0 destruction of Utah State in his comfort zone of Bryant-Denny Stadium.  He returns to Tuscaloosa in Week Three to recover.  He scheduled UL Monroe in case things didn’t go as planned in Austin.  The SEC helped him the following week booking a prime-time game against SEC doormat Vanderbilt.  The Commodores displayed true colors after two wins last week falling to No. 19 Wake Forest, 45-25.  

Collegefootballfan.com’s version of Fantasy Football

  For Week Three, Nick Saban and Jim Harbaugh of Michigan get calls from their TV “friends”.  The real people in charge say, “We’ve arranged for you two guys to play each other this weekend. We need the ratings. Your respective opponents this week, ULM and UConn, will flip a coin, and determine who will host the other Saturday. You guys do the same.  We’ll deduct a million dollars from what you make on your game and donate half a million each to these two programs who need the money.  We know you show concern for such programs.  That’s why you schedule them.”

 They continue, “Next year on September 16, whoever visits this weekend will host a rematch.  Your donations will go to the respective opponents you scheduled for that date, South Florida and Bowling Green. They’ll flip a coin where they will play.”  Of course, this won’t happen, but our “fantasy football” offers a great opportunity for fans that two coaches avoiding comparable competition refuse to consider.  Bring it on in Week Three in future seasons!

The Other Independent

    With Notre Dame (0-2) trending outside the CFP looking in with it’s 26-21 loss to Marshall, consider the other Independent that could get in the mix.  Winning their 26-20 victory over highly ranked Baylor last week, Brigham Young could challenge for the spot the Irish tend to pursue.  With Senior QB Jaren Hall back and healthy, the offense seems ready.  Transfer RB Christopher Brook from Cal gets the benefit of solid line play in front of him.  Top Receivers Gunner Romney and Puka Nacua returned.

 BYU’s defense needs to stay healthy as eight experienced starters return for HC Kalani Sitake’s squad.  Looking ahead, games at Oregon and with Notre Dame in Vegas look winnable. Wins against Arkansas, at Liberty, and at Boise could bode well for them among pollsters.  If they run the table with some impressive wins, they could gain consideration as an independent qualifier if any of the current top four teams falter.

On track already in Week Three

    On our podcast with Steve Hiegel, (click here -note: please fast forward four minutes. This is an unedited copy with four minutes of wasted set-up time. Thanks), one question regarding considerations for the upcoming season: “Who will be Coach of the Year?”    Our response, “If he wins six games this season, Lance Leipold of Kansas.” He’s got two now with his Jayhawks’ 55-42 win over West Virginia.  

This weekend, they will take on the Houston Cougars (1-1) with Clayton Tune firing for 472 yards and four TDs against UTSA and Texas Tech (lost 33-30) combined thus far. KU’s QB Jalon Daniels has comparable numbers with 408 and four TDs with wins over FCS Tennessee Tech and WVU. Both QBs threw one INT.  Should be a close call in Houston.  KU entertains Duke the following week.  HC Leipold could be close to our prediction sooner than expected in Week Three.  He is a true developer of talent and teams.  “Rock chalk, Jayhawk!” 

Other teams on our 2022 schedule in week Two

     Bama fell to No. 2 behind Georgia this week as the Bulldogs, Buckeyes, and Clemson Tigers continued to roll over lesser competition in FCS Samford, Arkansas St, and FCS Furman respectively.  Why bother?… Utah State fell to FCS Weber State, 35-7, making Bama’s win the previous week even more unimpressive…Middle Tennessee beat Colorado State, 34-19, after their drubbing to James Madison in their opener.  The Dukes throttled HBCU Norfolk State, 63-7. Louisville rebounded from its loss to Syracuse. They beat Central Florida, 20-14…

     Kentucky with Will Levis defeated Florida in an SEC East clash, 26-16. South Carolina fell to Arkansas in an inter-division SEC game, 44-30.  We’ll see the Wildcats and Gamecocks meet on October 8… Army lost for the second time, both in close calls, this time to UTSA, 41-38. On the other hand, Navy’s (0-2) offense sputtered once again in its loss to Memphis (1-1), 37-13…HC Jake Spavital got a temporary reprieve as his Texas State Bobcats (1-1) whipped up hapless Florida International, 41-12.  They travel north to Waco Saturday to play the wounded No. 17 Baylor Bears.  Watch out!…

Louisiana handled Eastern Michigan, 49-21, to move to 2-0…Our two upcoming FCS teams in the ASUN meeting on September 24 notched wins.  Austin Peay (2-1) raced out to a 41-0 halftime lead over the SWAC’s Mississippi Valley State, and allowed that score to stand.  Eastern Kentucky (1-1) defeated FBS Bowling Green, 59-57, in OT.  The Governors and Colonels meet Alabama A&M and Charleston Southern respectively in Week Three before their clash.  

 Notes of other games in Week Two

    Last week, we said we thought Appalachian State had a good shot to beat Texas A&M, and they did, 17-14!  Too bad Appy lost to UNC the week before, 63-61.  Had they won, they could have been a strong contender for this year’s Group of Five in the CFP. If they run the Sunbelt table the rest of the way, that means wins over Coastal, Marshall, and Georgia Southern. The second two defeated Power Fives Notre Dame and Nebraska last week.  The Mountaineers also have a date with JMU who we will see play Louisville on November 5. Appy collides with Troy (1-1) in Week Three. The SunBelt is rising!

   Washington State defeated Wisconsin, 17-14, in Madison.  That’s probably the PAC-12’s best win of the season…UConn (1-1) and UMass (0-2) run on a collision course to see again who will avoid finishing at No. 131 when it’s all over. They’ll meet in East Hartford on November 5.   Syracuse whipped the Huskies, 48-10, and Toledo zoomed past the Minutemen, 55-10, in Week Two.  Until their fatal date, UConn’s best chances for victory come against FIU and Ball State on the road on October 8 and 15. UMass may catch up with a win this weekend when the host FCS Stony Brook (0-1). After that, New Mexico State at home could be a possibility on October 29.  These two need to go back to the FCS Colonial Athletic where at least they’d have some natural rivalries again – Maine, UNH, URI.

Other 2022 teams on Collegefootballfan.com’s slate in Week Three

    Western Kentucky (2-0) returns from its win in Hawaii two weeks ago to play 11 straight weeks.  Saturday, they will visit Indiana (2-0) for a rematch we attended in Bowling Green last season when the Hoosiers won, 33-31.  As U of I did last year, Vanderbilt visits another Group of Five school, Northern Illinois (1-1) on the road. Expect this one to be a close game in the 30’s. We’ll find out if Clark Lea starts Mike Wright or AJ Swann at QB this week. If the starter doesn’t drive the ‘Dores early, Lea will be quick to make a change…Among other teams we’ve seen play heading into Week Three, Purdue travels to 2-0 Syracuse.

   South Carolina’s mettle gets tested this week at home against No.  1 Georgia.  FCS No. 5 Villanova (2-0) heads up the Hudson to face Army’s triple option.  Toledo leaps from lowly UMass to No. 3 Ohio State (2-0).  Eddie George’s Tennessee State team (0-2) buses over to Murfreesboro to tangle with MTSU. Louisiana Tech (1-1) charges into Death Valley against No. 5 Clemson.  The state of Kentucky feasts on Florida State at Louisville and FCS Youngtown at No. 9 UK in Lexington. No. 19 Wake Forest hosts Liberty.

 

Games we’ll keep an eye on

    2-0 California visits 0-2 Notre Dame.  Losing Tyler Buchner at QB and replacing him with Tyler Pyne with limited experience adds to the Irish woes.  Shades of Gerry Faust becoming the savior for Notre Dame when he had little experience?  At least Faust won his first game for ND vs LSU.  It went downhill after that to finish 5-6 in his first season…Another FCS win over the FBS seems most likely when perennial national champ and No.1 North Dakota State (2-0) takes on Arizona (1-1) in the desert… How fast can A&M recover when they host 2-0 Miami under new head coach Mario Cristobal?  A telling indicator for both programs early in 2022.

Ed. by – Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the fan who’s seen ‘em all!  Read our unique adventure attending games played by all Football Bowl Subdivision Teams over 30 seasons.  It wasn’t easy, but definitely fun and rewarding. That’s why we keep doing this.

Game 638:  Demon Deacons take wind out of Commodores’ sails, 45-25

Nashville, TN – Attempting to build on their unusual, quick, 2-0 start, the Vanderbilt Commodores took a turn for the normal when the Demon Deacons of Wake Forest (2-0) derailed their early season momentum with a 45-25 win in newly-named First Bank Stadium.   To the delight of Deacon fans, QB Sam Hartman returned to start his first game of 2022.   Out of action in Week One, due to a blood clot, the medical staff at WFU cleared the red-shirt Junior to resume play.  He followed up last year’s stats in style completing 18 of 27 passes for 300 yards and four TDs. 

Guest Game Analyst (GGA) Jim “Bug-a-lug” Harton (Wake Forest grad and fan) commented that the Deacons played much better with Hartman back this weekend.  Bug-a-lug attended the Deacon opener against VMI.  Though backup QB Mitch Griffis performed well, he reported the O-line performed inadequately, called for too many holding calls.  HC Dave Clawson most likely addressed this at practice since, and Hartman’s leadership on the field probably affected this as well.

    Neither offense got off to a fast start exchanging punts, but the Commodores started the scoring with Joe Bulova’s 35-yard FG to take the lead.  Wake drove to the Vandy seven, but three consecutive rush attempts by RB Justice Ellison at the goal line forced the Deacons to turn the ball over on downs.  This prompted first-time GGA Dave Hickman (Illinois/NIU alum, 82nd Airbourne vet) to wonder aloud.  “Why go with the same play a third time if the first two didn’t work?”  The only benefit noted came as the result of Vanderbilt starting from their one. That paid off.

Deacon Defense

    Sprinting right under pressure, Commodore QB Mike Wright (8 for 15, 35 yards, one INT, 17 yards rushing) lofted a pass that got tipped and then picked by DB Colby Davis.  Davis sprinted back across the field and toward the end zone for a 31-yard touchdown.  The defensive score seemed to spark the offense on this rainy day from then on.  Coming into this game, Wright had passed for six TDs and ran for four compiling over 700 yards of offense against Hawaii and Elon.  The Deacon defense played much tougher than those two opponents.

New DC Brad Lambert from Purdue may already be making some improvements to make this unit stronger in 2022.  Last year, the Deacon defense allowed over 30 points seven times relying on the offense that scored 41 ppg. Lambert’s Boilermakers held competition to 30 points or less nine times in 12 games for a 22.4 ppg average.

    The Wake defense allowed no yards on the next Commodore possession.  The offense took over from their 32.  Hartman went to work right way throwing the ball down the middle to WR AT Perry (five catches, 142 yards, one TD). In stride, Perry made the over-the-shoulder catch and raced 68 yards for Wake’s 14-3 lead.  Forcing a Wright fumble, the Deacon offense started this time at Vanderbilt’s 32 going into the second quarter.

Playing in the rain

    A thirty-yard pass to Donovan Green set up Hartman’s next TD pass to RB Christian Turner from the two.  Later in the period, another punt by Vandy resulted in a turnover as Wakes’ returner mishandled the punt to set the Dore’s at WFU’s 24.  RB RE’Mahn Davis carried five times for his eventual score on a two-yard run to cut the lead down, 21-10.   We’d seen Davis perform in 2019 for Temple in a Military Bowl loss to North Carolina.  The half came to an end.  Our GGA’s and cohorts went below the stands for halftime to dry off some while the intermittent ran continued. 

Deacons pour it on

    To start the third, Hartman ran his run-pass option skillfully delaying hand-offs to backs while looking for open receivers.  He connected with Perry once again for a 49-yard pickup to the 25.  A nine-yard pass to TE Taylor Morin who snagged a low pass by his ankles resulted in a 28-10 lead for the Deacons.  Davis fumbled the ball away for the Commodores, and Wake looked to capitalize again at the VU 18-yard line.  Hartman’s pass to Cameron Hite from 17 yards out increased the growing margin for the visitors, 35-10.  Vanderbilt HC Clark Lea had experienced enough frustration on offense.  AJ Swann (8 of 11, 146 yards, two TDs) replaced Mike Wright.

 The Wright move?

    Swann made a difference right away.  His 50-yard completion to Jayden McGowan put the Dore’s at the WFU 24.  On a fourth and 18, his pass to Will Sheppard put them at the six.  From there, they connected again for a score.  Swann ran for two points on the conversion to trail heading into the final period, 35-18.

     With the ensuing kickoff, the Deacons didn’t let up.   The offense traveled 75 yards for a score. RB Quinton Cooley (9 carries, 57 yards, one TD) raced it into the end zone from the 24.   The Deacon defense forced another punt.  Using clock, Clawson’s offense ran 14 plays to get into FG position for Matthew Dennis’s 21-yard FG for a commanding lead of 45-18 with 4:48 left to play.  With a Wake Forest second team defense taking over to get some needed reps, Vandy started from their 25.  Swann led another drive culminating in a seven-yard TD pass to TE Gavin Schoenwald.  The Deacons can chalk that drive up to experience under their new defensive coordinator.  Final score:  Wake Forest Demon Deacons 45 – Vanderbilt Commodores 25.

“Oh, here’s to Wake Forest!”

    Bug-a-lug and his wife Courtenay topped off their enjoyable vacation week in Tennessee with the WFU victory.  He confirmed the update of my Wake Forest moniker with me having personally seen his Deacons win 11 of 12 games collegefootballfan.com has attended. With the one blemish on the 11-1 record coming in a 62-59 OT loss to Louisville in 2019, in Wake Forest circles they call me, “11 and almost 0 Koreivo!”  The previous week, having attended Alabama’s 55-0 win over Utah State, Deacon Blue (11-1) leads The Crimson Tide (10-1) with the best winning percentage of all FBS teams we’ve seen in action.  Deacon Blue is the name of a winner in our world.

Next up!

     No. 19 Wake (2-0) heads back to Winston-Salem to host Liberty (2-0), winner over Alabama-Birmingham Saturday, 21-14.  The Commodores (2-1) head to De Kalb, IL to take on Dave Hickman’s alma mater, Northern Illinois (1-1). Give Vanderbilt some credit here. It’s an unusual move for Power Five teams to visit a Group of Five campus.  We’d like to see more of that.  Surely the SEC advised Vanderbilt against this.

     Speaking of the SEC, Collegefootballfan.com travels “the Plains” of Auburn (2-0) in a rematch there for its home-and-home series with No. 22 Penn State (2-0).  Last season, the Nittany Lions defeated the Tigers in State College, 28-20. We’ll be meeting up with our long-time Auburn friend and alum, Charlie Murren, for that one.

– ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of “Tales from the Tailgate:  From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!”  Click on the title to read about the first of 11 Demon Deacon wins when they visited the University of Richmond in 1981.  Our first encounter with Vanderbilt football didn’t occur until 1995 at South Carolina.  Warning: It isn’t pretty. However, we note that we later attended a bowl victory by the Commodores in 2008.  These are only two of the 120 teams in the FBS we saw play in person for our first time.  Lots of other college football adventures tell when “we saw ‘em all”.

Week Two 2022 Steveo’s Salvos:  Wake at Vandy, Week One notes, Microsoft Guidelines, Nos. 2-3-4, Who’s done?

 Week Two: Wake Forest at Vanderbilt

    Good news in Week Two for No. 23 Wake Forest (1-0). Collegefootballfan.com will see them play when they visit 2-0 Vanderbilt Saturday.  Starting QB Sam Hartman, sidelined by a non-football medical issue, returns to action this weekend.   Hartman led the Demon Deacons last season with 4,228 passing yards and 39 TD passes.  Sitting out last week versus VMI, Brett Griffis stepped in to run the run/pass option (RPO) effectively for HC Dave Clawson’s team.  With Hartman back to throw to a flock of receivers and with RB Christian Turner who galloped for 100 yards last week, all cylinders should be firing Saturday.  The Wake question remains on defense under new DC Brad Lambert in from Purdue a year ago. 

    Vandy, off a 2-10 2021 season, won it first two games with a lot of points on the board led by QB Mike Wright.  With wins at Hawaii (0-2), 63-10, and over FCS Elon 42-31, he leads the team in passing with 391 yards and in rushing with 247. Six TDs came on his passes and four on runs.  How tested he will be by Wake will be seen on Saturday.  If Lambert brings improvement, this may be a good test for him.  If he hasn’t, this could be an unanticipated tight, high-scoring shoot-out between Vandy and Wake.

A few choice words for Microsoft Guidelines

   In the wake of last weekend’s results, stories ran on line about new ratings.  Of course, the comments came raging in.  We don’t add much commentary to these waste-of-time articles.  Primarily, we observe for entertainment purposes. If anything, we’ll attempt a short, hard-hitting zinger. We avoid offensive words/language knowing they prevent publication.  A reader named “Bo Sai” commented basically to the effect, “Your writer glossed over the fact that Miami defeated BCU of the ACC, 70-13. No mention of that… Four others responded with likes. Had to laugh and provide this response: “Hahaha!  BCU is Bethune Cookman, a HBCU school, not Boston College” (I figured BC losing to Rutgers, 22-21, was embarrassing enough).   “Does not follow guidelines” message popped up right away.  Why?  Because I wrote, “Hahaha!”? 

    I deleted that phrase. Still no good. I simplified it further using no off-color language, etc. though I felt like it.   Still not following guidelines.  Steamed, because Microsoft blocked a simple response for a correction, eventually popped up a drop-down.   Only having generic choices that didn’t make sense to say, “this comment is not correct” regarding the original submittal. I eventually chose “Wrong topic”.  I only typed in “Bethune-Cookman”.  The point is, if Microsoft enforces guidelines for comment fields, they should be monitored by people who know about the topics being discussed.  This is what I want to say directly to Microsoft now. “Don’t let your computer geeks monitor comments made by idiots who don’t know what they’re talking about. If you can’t, stuff it!” Anybody offended?  Political comments are minimized overwhelmingly for sure, but comments about college football like this? They can just “stick it, too!” Offended?  “Tough.”

Preseason’s Nos. two, three, and four

    Ohio State, Georgia, and Clemson – three teams on our slate – already changed to Georgia, Ohio State, and Michigan. The Buckeyes had a tougher than expected time with Notre Dame. The Irish led 10-7, but OSU overcame, 21-10. Georgia wailed on Oregon under their former DC Dan Lanning, 49-3, basically signaling to all the world the PAC-12 falls out of CFP contention already (Utah, USC?).  Michigan wrecked Colorado State, 51-7, to edge ahead of Clemson.  More importantly, this reinforces our point pertaining to our Alabama 55 – Utah State 0 game review.

     Jim Harbaugh’s U of M squad has the most pathetic slate of three opening non-conference games all at home. Colorado State, already decimated 0-2 Hawaii in Week Two, and then preseason No. 131 UConn!  Question to pollsters: Michigan deserves to jump past Clemson, who whipped horribly coached Georgia Tech, 41-10, based on this alone?  At least Tech is a weak Power Five, not a Bottom Five school! Even upcoming Clemson foes FCS Furman and LA Tech can probably beat all three. 

Get it together coaches

 If Nick Saban had the guts to call Harbaugh (or vice versa) and negotiate a home-and-home series to open on consecutive years to play one another, fans wouldn’t have to watch or pay to attend these horrific games.  Play now and see who makes the playoffs. That would be tremendous to open the season with these two egomaniacs competing. Why not? Both teams have full seasons ahead to recover from a loss by winning their conferences. No guts, no glory – Bama and U Of M only pick on teams that don’t recruit on the same level!  Please go back and read to our last game review.

Georgia Tech’s Geoff Collins is done

    We saw his debut season as HC at Temple. We respected the positive developments of that program prior under Matt Rhule (no pun intended).  The Owls headed in the wrong direction under the former defensive coordinator of Urban Meyer’s Florida teams. Temple football played with no discipline.  Mistakes and penalties pervaded under him with thug tactics.  Collins stayed two years, and then he headed to replace Paul Johnson’s triple option offense at Georgia Tech.  After Monday night’s loss to Clemson, his record at Tech stands at 9-26.  He’s done nothing to improve this program. Johnson left behind an 82-61 record over 11 years despite supporters not taking a liking to his run-oriented offense. Collins’ forte sides on defense. Last season, opponents averaged 33.5 ppg against the Rambling Wrecks.   In Week Two, this program is already done under Collins. Stick a fork in them and look for him to become a DC again elsewhere, maybe.

Other teams on our 2022 schedule heading into Week Two

       Spence Rattler passed for 227 yard and one TD in his South Carolina debut against Georgia State last week in a 35-14 victory.  He faces No. 16 Arkansas and No. 2 Georgia the next two weeks. We see him Week 6 at No. 20 Kentucky (1-0) winner over Miami (O.)James Madison smashed Middle Tennessee at home in their FBS debut, 44-7. The Dukes passed for 287 yards and rushed for 261.  The Blue Raiders returning QB Chase Cunningham threw for a meager 107 yards and the rushing game accumulated only 12 yards. JMU will visit Louisville (0-1, lost at Syracuse 31-7) on November 5 to become our 131st FBS team. LU’s Scott Satterfield sits on another hot seat… MTSU will be seen in action at home against UTSA (0-1) on September 30 and home against WKU (2-0, winners over Hawaii 49-17).

Texas round-up

      The UT San Antonio Roadrunners fell at the Alamo Dome to the No. 25 Houston Cougars who we will see play at Navy. The Cougars overcame a 14-point deficit in the final period to snap UTSA’s 10-game home winning streak in three OTs, 37-35. Houston QB Clayton Tune completed 22 of 32 for 206 yards and three TDs while rushing 15 times for 51 yards and a score.  The Roadrunners’ QB Frank Smith completed 28 of 43 for 337 yards and three TDS while rushing 63 yards and one TD.  These two will provide severe firepower against defenses when we see them face Navy and MTSU respectively.

Roll call

Navy was one of two FBS squads that fell to the FCS in their opener. Delaware won 14-7 under new HC Ryan Carty who led the Blue Hens as QB to their 2003 FCS national championship.  Bad sign: first time in years Navy’s leading receiver outgained their leading rusher in yardage, 77 to 47. The Mids also fumbled three times in the first half. The first on their initial drive resulting in a Blue Hen score… Army (0-1) who we don’t see until Navy in Philly, lost to Coastal Carolina, 38-28. CCU QB Grayson McCall threw three TDs and ran for the clincher with 3:01 left.

     For Week Two, in the best matchup among teams we’ll see this season, the No. 9 Baylor Bears (1-0) visit No. 21 BYU Cougars (1-0).  We’ll see Bears at Texas in November.  We saw the Cougars at Lavelle Edwards Stadium last season when they defeated UVA, 66-49.  Without starting QB Jaren Hall in the Independence Bowl, we watched them lose to UAB, 31-28.   With Hall returning healthy, BYU going against the tough Bear defense will be interesting. Baylor counters with their Soph QB Blake Shapen who keyed the defeat of Oklahoma State in last year’s Big Twelve championship.  These two teams will be meeting for the first of many times as BYU joins the Big Twelve conference next year.  Both programs should be fired up to learn more about one another in this one. 

Other Week Two games of interest

We’ll see Texas State (0-1) host Louisiana Thanksgiving weekend. State fell to Nevada 38-14 to lower HC Jake Spavital’s record to 9-28. The future in San Marcos does not look good for him unless he starts to win early and often. Louisiana defeated SE LA 24-7 in HC Michael Desormeaux’s first game… Texas clobbered UL Monroe, 52-10, before facing Alabama this weekend.  The following week, ULM travels to Bryant Denny to be “entertained” by Alabama. Good plan Nick Saban…Austin Peay recovered from last week’s loss to WKU by slamming the Presbyterian Blue Hose, 63-0. The foe we will see them play next comes September 24 as Eastern Kentucky. EKU came up short versus FBS eastern Michigan, 42-34…Auburn showed no mercy to FCS Mercer 42-16. San Jose is next before we see them host PSU.

Appalachian State kept coming back at home against North Carolina until time expired, 63-61.  The Mountaineers travel to Kyle Field this week. Can HC Shawn Clark roust his defense and QB Chase Brice keep the wheels turning on offense to upend the Aggies in Week Two?  Based on ASU history, we think they have a good shot…Troy (0-1) with recent WKU transfer QB Jarret Doege lost at Ole Miss, 28-10. The Trojans visit Appy State and host Marshall before heading to face his short-term WKU teammates (2-0) on October 1.  We look forward to that one.  Good move, Jarrett?… The other FCS win over an FBS program last Saturday: William & Mary 41 – Charlotte 24.  Wonder if William made the difference in this game?  Leaving this in my wake, can I say that without offending anybody?

Look for our book

ed. by – Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate; from the Fan who’s seen ’em all! If you enjoy the articles on our blog, please click on the book title to above enjoy our unique story of attending games over 30 years to reach the goal of seeing every FBS team play at least once. Follow us through time on this fun journey!

Game 637: Bama blasts Utah State, why bother?

Tuscaloosa – Nick Saban recruits the highest rated high school players in the nation for Bama.  They blasted Utah State last Saturday, 55-0, and it could have been a lot worse.  Why does Saban insist on finding the best players in the nation and then seek teams for his schedule not even close to his level of talent? In our case, the only thing we got out of this “game” was checking the box for finally seeing Bama play a home game at Bryant-Denny Stadium, our 76th venue among all in the Football Bowl (eventually “B” will be supplemented with a “P” for “Professional”) Subdivision.  We witnessed the pregame excitement and all pageantry before kickoff, but everyone in attendance and the many Crimson Tide no-shows knew already what was going to happen.  The bookies set the line at 41.5 points.  Oh, the excitement – Not!  Why bother?

Why we announce our “tentative” schedule every season

    When planning our schedule earlier this year, the price of a ticket for Texas A&M at Bama started at over $300/seat in the upper level.  Probably sky-rocketed after Saban made his remarks about Jimbo Fisher “buying” recruits Bama wanted.  Reviewing our selection of games for September 3, the best regarding an affordable, competitive game for us looked like Elon (FCS) at nearby Vanderbilt.  The Commodores appear on our slate again the following week as we have a close contingent of Wake Forest friends coming into town to see the Deacs play.  We needed to see someone different.

    Realizing we plan to see Ohio State, Georgia, and Clemson ranked 2-3-4 on our schedule already this season, why not get No. 1 Bama?  Wow!  $33/seat for Utah State game this weekend.  Gas prices have fallen from Tennessee to Alabama into the low $3’s. For a tank and a half, that’s much better than close to $5+/ gallon when checking on the A&M opportunity months ago.  And even better, we had enough points to get a free night at a Microtel right in Tuscaloosa. Usually, rentals that close to game day are not available. Our first hint on what to expect, evidently. My wife, St. Laurie, had no interest in going.  We had just gotten back from Penn State at Purdue.  She figures she’s already hit one of three games she will possibly attend this season.  Cheap trip for one!

Plans with budgets in mind

    For collegefootballfan.com, this looked like a bargain basement sale.  Only the gas would cost more than a 20-minute drive to Vanderbilt!  On top of that, the hotel manager suggested the bus shuttle at the nearby mall within walking distance for $15 round trip.  Much cheaper than a stadium parking space. Bama even offers an honest-to-goodness printed football program (121 pages plus ads). Few schools do that anymore.  “Scan the barcode on the video board”  for your virtual program, most announce.  Yeah, right!  My wife rejoices my game program collection no longer grows so she won’t have to recycle more if I’m gone before she is.  And, “Alabama Game Day” only costs $5!  Well as they say, “You get what you pay for.”  The game started.

As they exclaimed in Ancient Rome, “Let the games begin!”

    Utah State received the opening kick-off. QB Logan Bonner completed a 23-yard pass on first down from scrimmage.  Everyone in attendance had just witnessed the Utah State offensive highlight of the game.  The Aggie defense held Bama to Will Reichard’s field goal of 45 yards on their first possession.  That turned out to be State’s defensive highlight for the game, at least for their first team.   Every subsequent Bama score preceded a touchback on every kickoff beyond through the second series of the third quarter.  All but one of those forthcoming Bama possessions resulted in a touchdown.  The other ended in a field goal.  At halftime, Bama led 41-0. 

Saban kept Heisman candidate Bryce Young in for the first series in Q3.  On that drive and before the subsequent 48-0 score, he summoned Young’s back-up Jalen Milroe along the sideline to get ready for the next series.  Even hard-hitting LB Will Anderson Jr. played into the third on defense.  I guess Saban needed to assure the Crimson Tide fans that he would cover the 41.5 line.  For all the bloody details of the 55-0 Bama decimation, we don’t need to record the bloodshed here, just click here to read about the decimation we witnessed for yourself.

    This “contest” was like watching the Atlanta Braves play a Little League team.  Probably like watching lions gore Christians in the Roman Coliseum.  Like me playing Tiger Woods, at any age, in golf.  You call this competition?   Nick Saban and a few other coaches monopolize the top talent for college football.  The kids that want to go pro go to those few, and the few happily take the best of what’s available (before they opt out now for the portal when they don’t start).  All the other schools get everybody else to mix and match to fill in their needs.  In the end, why can’t the few “pick on somebody their own size” as the saying goes?  You recruit the best, so play the best.  Why bother with playing significantly less talented opponents? The “best” all come out on top of the polls eventually any way.

Consideration for upcoming games at Bama

   Funny, the hotel desk clerk told me I was “lucky” coming his weekend.  Usually, people have to book a minimum of two or three nights for a Bama home game.  Since Utah State visited, just one night needed.  Initially, I thought this was because Utah State was not considered a good game.  Then I thought, well maybe the hotel management assumed not may fans from Utah would make it to the Alabama campus.  Even more Bama fans didn’t based on the supply and prices offered on line.

    Looking at future home games at Bryant-Denny this season: UL Monroe visits in two weeks, Vanderbilt comes the week after, Mississippi State buses in on October 22, and middle of the road, FCS Austin Peay arrives the week before the big Auburn rivalry on Thanksgiving weekend.  Does the hotel think that fans of ULM, Vandy, and APU will drive in droves to spend a few nights in Tuscaloosa to come see their teams play Bama for big paychecks and a result similarly suffered by USU this evening?  

Rather than see their teams get rocked like the Aggies, ULM fans will probably prefer to watch Mississippi State beat LSU on TV. Vandy fans can hold their money to buy season baseball tickets before spring.  Austin Peay fans will find other things to do as usual.  Not many showed up in nearby Bowling Green, KY last week.  It would have been nice Saturday night if someone at B-D could have changed the channel on the videoboard to the Ohio State -ND game, especially with the Irish leading 10-7.

Hey Nick, pick on someone your own size

    The Texas A&M game with Fisher highlights the Bama home excitement in 2022.  The Auburn rivalry remains the no-brainer rivalry.   Mississippi State always wants a shot at The Tide no matter what.  However, at least Saban should disregard the temptations of showing off his superior talent over the likes of ULM and Austin Peay every season.  Everybody criticizes ND for playing a “weak” schedule (despite Ohio State, Clemson, BYU, and USC this year).  Fans rightfully bust Michigan this year for playing three non-Power Five teams.  Oklahoma’s non-conference slate has been pretty shoddy over the past few years.   Bama has played SEC east rival Georgia only twice in the regular season in the last 13 years.  The point here is these are among programs Bama competes with for the similar talent in the off-season.

   Saban can probably call any of these programs to schedule home and home series they could agree to.  Last time Bama did such was booked before he coached here.  Penn State got pushed back though a year when they had no returning QB experience.  However, past history indicates to be Saban wants to play only one and done with Power 5 teams.  Usually at a “neutral” site, like Atlanta. Right!  Surely Notre Dame, Jim Harbaugh, and OU are not dumb enough to bite on that.  When Saban insists because he needs an additional home game to subsidize other Bama athletic teams, look closer.

All about whose money?

    Rough counts indicate The Tide competes in only seven men’s NCAA sports programs and eight in women’s sports. Do you know how many other schools compete in?  By rough count: Michigan – 13 for men, 14 for women; ND – 12 and 12; Ohio State – 18 and 19; Penn State- 15 and 14; Stanford – 16 and 20; USNA 20 and 14 (only 4,000 students, but federally funded to some extent along with donations to NAAA); Ivies Princeton and Harvard – 18-18 and 20-20 respectively (of course, alumni endowments could probably fund every student’s tuition every year). 

Two other points here.  Are other Alabama students relegated more to waving shakers at football games than being encouraged to participate in other sports while matriculating at Alabama?  Young men can’t participate in wrestling, gymnastics, lacrosse, volleyball, or shooting sports like at other schools.  And women at Alabama can’t pursue field hockey, water polo, lacrosse, or fencing.  The other point is that with fewer sports, Bama football gets to retain more funds than other Power Five participants do for football.

Good Saint Nick

   As for another supposed reason the SEC schedules FCS teams – benevolence. Really?  They want to give less financially sound programs the benefit of funding in exchange for a win if necessary to get a bowl bid – not that Bama or UGA need this.  What’s Saban making?  $9.3 million annually?  If he’s so caring of other programs, why doesn’t he take the $300,000 of the $9.3M and donate it each year to an FCS program of his choice?  With the player’s NIL money, why don’t they take up a collection?  They may have to someday if nobody wants to play them under such overwhelming odds in the future.  If Kirby Smart and UGA did the same with their cash, why can’t The Tide and ‘Dawgs schedule a non-conference game between each other every year when they don’t play an SEC game? 

Proceeds can go to FCS programs of their choices.  The draw surely sells out, gets their fans truly fired up, creates a great natural rivalry played annually, and doesn’t impact their capability for either to knock themselves out of the SEC championship those seasons. This would probably give both even more recruiting advantages, not that either needs more right now.  But why not?  They basically dominate most of the other teams in the SEC when it comes to recruiting already. Win, win, win, win, win for Bama, UGA, SEC, FCS, and all the fans.

Nick The GOAT?

     Caught some of the retort between two “experts” on TV we catch on the fly at the gym.  Stephen A. Smith refers to Nick Saban as the greatest college coach of all time.  Chris “Mad Dog” Russo countered with Notre Dame’s Ara Parseghian.  We say this, it’s difficult to compare the two based on what coaching is mostly about today.  Coaching can be broken down into three main parts: executing game plans, player development, and RECRUITING. The third is entirely the major emphasis in today’s game than it was twenty, thirty, or more years ago.  If it wasn’t, Saban’s bellyaching on national news about Fisher’s recruiting tactics wouldn’t cause the consternation residing today between the two.  Trouble is, this will get worse before it gets better.

     We can say that for college football, Nick Saban is probably he best recruiter out there because every talented player wants to play for him.  He starts head and shoulders among all coaches because he attracts and selects the best talent to play for him every year.  How do we judge him in the other two aspects? As far as player development, we counted about thirty guys along the sideline with red-striped Alabama golf shirts on against Utah State. Many with clipboards. So there’s evidently analysis and development going on.  He pays his coaches a lot to coordinate games for him. Many eventually leave to take on head coaching jobs elsewhere.

Football GOAT at being smart

     However, let’s consider leveling the talent field when it comes to coaching football.  After two seasons with the Miami Dolphins, as head coach in 2005-2006 with a 15-17 record, Nick Saban high-tailed it back to the college. He knew his forte was recruiting.  In the NFL, a team can’t hoard significantly more or better talent than all the other opponents. Teams also don’t get to load schedules with teams much weaker. The NFL shares revenues and levels the playing field every year based on records of teams the previous year.  Strength of records and schedules are calculated to level the competition. Some organizations still struggle despite this every year.   This comes down primarily to managing game execution. 

     Nick Saban was smart enough to know his weaknesses and strengths when it comes to coaching. He made the most of it in college football.  He knows better than anyone how to tilt the playing field and under today’s standards, he’s the best at what he does.  Look at his record.   

Enough vented here about the non-competitive nature of college football today.  Bring on the “FPS” and get it over with.  Saban’s players will always be in demand by the pros.

Next up!

    Bama heads for their one Power Five non-conference at Texas next Saturday.  Former Bama OC Steve Sarkasian faces his former boss. Until recently, only Jimbo Fisher and Kirby Smart have been able to finally knock off their former mentor.  Both happened last year.  Others including them failed previously. What chance does Sark have two years removed from Tuscaloosa?

    Utah State gets to play their FCS game hosting Weber State next week. The Wildcats finished at No. 20 in the FCS poll last year and expect to rank again this year in the pre-season polls. They defeated Western Oregon in their opener Saturday, 41-5.  How will the loss to Bama affect the Aggies against the Wildcats?

   As related earlier, collegefootballfan.com stays in Nashville to see 2-0 Vanderbilt host 1-0 Wake Forest.  Breakfast – Bloody Mary Tailgate party!  According to our WFU aficionado, Jim “Bug “ Harton who will be our prime Guest Game Analyst, the sub QB for Heisman candidate Sam Hartman, Mitch Griffis (288 passing yards, three TD passes) looked good against VMI. However, holding by the offensive line last Thursday proved setbacks despite the 44-10 win over VMI.  HC Dave Clawson will be doing some fine-tuning this week against a Commodore team feeling good about being 2-0, already equaling last season’s victory total.  Looks to be a more competitive game than initially anticipated.  Definitely better as we recover from watching an Alabama practice and a Utah State try-out staged simultaneously Saturday night. How boring.

Ed. by – Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan whose seen ‘em all!   Click on the title to buy and submit a review. In it, Bama fans can read stories about games attended when The Tide defeated the likes of Auburn in the Iron Bowl and against Ohio State in the Kickoff Classic.  There are references to Penn State games in other chapters.  Alabama is now 10-1 in the annals of our history, but we saw them compete in these and CFP games among some of the best (ND, OU, Washington, and Clemson).  They should play these teams more often?  Why not offer home and home series? Such games against comparable talent have to be better than what transpired in Bryant-Denny Saturday night.