Game 652: Crittendon leads Samford in OT over SE Louisiana to advance to FCS quarterfinal

Homewood, Alabama – In one of the greatest individual performances collegefootballfan.com has ever witnessed, Quincy Crittendon a redshirt freshman subbing for injured starter Michael Hiers after the opening series, led his Stamford Bulldogs (11-1) in a thrilling FCS second round game to win in OT, 48-42.  He threw for 314 yards and four TDs connecting on 26 of 40 passes against the Southeast Louisiana Lions.  He also led the Bulldogs in rushing with 94 yards on 20 carries.  His capper came as he burst up the middle unscathed into the end zone from 10-yards out to win in overtime. His Bulldogs and move into next week’s quarterfinals at No.  3 seeded North Dakota State.

      It was the second straight walk-off, overtime touchdown for Samford’s back-up, walk-on quarterback. Crittendon repeated the last-minute heroics in the final regular season win over Mercer.  Previously, he stepped in for Hiers who left injured in the first OT period in that one.  The freshman scored on a 25-yard run for a touchdown in the second overtime period to win, 50-44, to finish their regular season at 10-1.

Hiers out, Samford calls in back-up

      On the initial Samford drive, Crittendon stepped in for the ailing Hiers (2 of 3, 27 yards) on a third and eight.  On the next play, a run by Jay Stanton kept the drive alive on a fourth down run.  Next, Crittendon connected with Judd Crockett (4 catches for 90 yards, 2 TDs) on a nice over-the-shoulders grab for his first TD pass. The SE Louisiana Lions (9-4) retaliated with a scoring drive of their own.  RB Carlos Washington (9 for 88 yards, 2 TDs) capped a 12-play, 69-yard drive to tie it up on an eight-yard run. 

    On the next Bulldog possession, maybe because the up-tempo caught the coaching staff off-guard, Samford went for a first down on a quick snap on fourth and short from their 34.  SELU stopped Crittendon cold and took over on downs.  QB Cephus Johnson III followed up Washington’s 21-yard run to the one into the end zone.  On the next Bulldog series, Crittendon connected with WR Kendall Watson who made a diving catch for a 46-yard gain to the one.   Jay Stanton took it over for the deadlock of 14-14 at the end of one!

Second frame belongs to defenses

     Two sacks by the Lions forced the Bulldogs to punt from their 22.  SELU started with good field position from their 43 and drove to the Samford 17.  They faked the field goal attempt with holder Nick Kovacs’ run.  The Dogs stopped him short of a first down.  Their ensuing drive started from their 12.  A key conversion came on fourth and three at SELU’s 41.  Crittendon completed a nine-yard pass to Chandler Smith for a first down.  The drive resulted with a 10-yard pass over the middle into the end zone to Kendall Watson (7 snags, 110 yards, 1 TD) to put Samford up, 21-14. 

     With 3:23 remaining in the first half, the Lions looked to even the score.  Like Samford, Lion QB Johnson III fired a pass for a first down to WR Gage Lavardain for nine yards on a fourth and three at the Samford 37.  A 14-yard run by Johnson (19/30 passing, 173 yards, 1 INT; 15 carries for 123 yards, 3 TDs) took SELU to the 13.  For what turned out to be the defensive play of the game, DB Fred Flavors wrestled the ball away from the intended Lion receiver for an INT in the end zone. He negated the scoring opportunity with 44 second left.  The Lions took the long walk back up the hill to their locker room trailing at halftime, 21-14.

Samford turns on the lights

     To start the third, the Seibert Stadium lights came on as the sun was setting on Alabama.  SELU punted after an unusual, quick three and out to start the third.  However, Samford turned up the lights on the turf of Bobby Bowden Field starting the third.   Crittendon lofted a pass bobbled by Crockett who pulled it in for a 48-yard scoring play down the right sideline. Trailing 28-14, SELU drove to the Samford 26.  On third and two, Johnson III broke off left tackle for the first. However, instead he took it all the way for six points.

     The Bulldogs’ subsequent possession ended quickly with a solid shot to Crittendon who fumbled.  DL Tainano Gaulua recovered at Samford’s 22.  On fourth and goal after advancing to the one, Johnson took it over to tie the score at 28-all.  The Bulldogs punted after an unusual three-and-out, but their defense held the Lions to the same.  Heading into the fourth, the Bulldogs proceeded to the Lion 25.

Untied and re-tied

     On the first play of Q4, Jaylan Thomas caught a 25-yard pass from Crittendon to retake the lead, 35-28.  The Bulldog defense stiffened once again.  The offense took over on another punt from their 27.  They fired on all cylinders mixing passes and runs.  Stanton took in it from the two to give the Bulldogs another supposed, comfortable two-touchdown lead, 42-28. 

     No quit in these Lions from Southeast Louisiana.  RB Jessie Britt (12 rushes, 83 yards, TD) provided the big spark with a 47-yard run to the Samford 20.  Washington ran it in from the eight for his second score of the day.  With 5:22 left to play, the Lions stalled to the Bulldog drive with two time-outs before forcing a punt.  An SELU assistant called his offense over to the bench to review plays being drawn up on marker boards before they would take the field again.

Fresh off the board?

     With 2:40 left, the Lions started from the eleven with one time-out left. On a first and ten at their 38, they must’ve called the play drawn up on the sideline. Johnson III hooked up with Lavardain ( 8 catches, 94 yards) for a 44-yard pass down to the Bulldog 18. The next play found Britt for a 17-yard gain to the one.  Two plays later, Britt took in it from the two. With 37 seconds remaining, the score was tied at 42.  Samford started deep in their own territory, and HC Chris Hatcher determined to run out the clock.

OVERTIME!

    SELU got the football first. On a second and one at the 16, Johnson III had open space ahead of him. He headed for the right pylon.  DB Hakeem Johnson jarred his arm. The ball came out and crossed through the end zone out of bounds for a touchback.  No score. The Lion defense had to hold.  Three snaps gave the Bulldogs a first and goal at the ten.  One play later, Crittendon sailed through the defense for the final score to take the win in Round Two of the FCS playoff, 48-42.

It turned out to be a great, exciting down-to-the-wire game that we always hope for.  Glad we took the three-hour drive down to see this game in Homewood. This turned out to be our 23rd playoff game and our 18th overtime game. Seibert Stadium became our 171st college football venue attended, and our 64th non-FBS game decided by seven points or less. Check these out these and all our records on our Milestones page.

NEXT!

     SELU returns home to Hammond to take some time off before getting back together with HC Frank Scelfo to get ready for next season. The Lion roster is full of many talented underclassmen including Soph QB Eli Sawyer.  He didn’t play today, but played much this year to fill in with experience for Senior QB Cephus Johnson III.  Also, we’ll keep an eye out in the future for Soph S Jake Henderson.  He was all over the field, an aggressive hitter who impressed us.

    The Bulldogs face perennial FCS Champs North Dakota State up in Fargo next week.  The FCS Championship always runs through Fargo.  They would have to probably get there at some point in order to win it all.  Might as well go for it now. 

   For collegefootballfam.com, we head to Philly for the greatest rivalry in college football despite what others think – Army vs. Navy.  Looking forward to it.  Go Navy!

Please check out our book!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like our stories, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  Or, start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!

Week Fourteen of Steveo’s Salvos: SE Louisiana at Samford FCS playoff; Championship weekend; Who needs a waiver?; Bowl eligibles; Finally, 12 in 2024!; FCS/D2/D3 playoffs

     In round one of the FCS playoffs, SE Louisiana (9-3, 5-1) “slipped” by the Idaho Vandals last week, 45-42.  UI PK Ricardo Chavez misfired wide left as he slipped attempting a 39-yard FG with six ticks left to tie the score at 45.  In a fight to the finish won by the No. 23 FCS Lions over No. 24, we expect them to battle like this once again against Southern Conference champ Samford.  The sixth-seeded Bulldogs (10-1) host SE LA at Seibert Stadium in Homewood, Alabama for our Week Fourteen.  Despite Samford’s only loss coming to FBS No. 1 Georgia, 33-0, they have not overwhelmed many FCS opponents.  Their last outing resulted in a 50-44 2-OT win over a potent Mercer team.  Expect this game to finish in similar fashion.

How ‘bout these Dawgs?

    These Bulldogs average 33.55 ppg while allowing 23.82.  Samford relies primarily on a passing attack led by QB Michael Heirs who’s passed for 3,290 yards and 35 TDs.  WRs Chandler Smith (892 yards, 10 TDs) and Kendall Watson (851 yards and 10 TDs) perform as equally favored targets.  Jay Slaton leads the running game with 680 yards.  Jaylon Thomas ran for more TDs with seven.  LB Noah Martin leads the defense with 80 tackles including six TFLs.

     However, stats indicate surprisingly low success on pressuring QBs. They totaled 14 sacks, 30 hurries, and 10 INTs. Samford HC Chris Hatcher, 1994 Harlon Hill recipient at Valdosta State, leads this program for his 11th season.  He carries a record of 171-94 as a college HC of 22 years over 23 seasons.

A two QB system that works

    Southland Conference co-champ SE Louisiana uses a diverse offensive scheme.   Two starting QBs have seen similar playing time. QB Eli Sawyer and Cephus Johnson III both have played in 11 and 12 games respectively.  Sawyer has thrown for 1,605 yard and 11 TDS.  Johnson totals 1,354 yards through the air.  He’s also the second leading rusher on the team with 488 yards and five TDs.  Carlos Washington leads all rushers with 627 yards and 13 scores.  The receiving corps includes six targets with 211 yards or more on the season.  WR Gage Lavardain leads in yardage with 637 while TE Ivan Drobocky leads all Lion receivers with six TDs.

   HC Frank Scelfo’s defense features three LBs, Donte’ Daniels, Hermann Christophe, and Anthony Britton, Jr.  along with DB Jack Henderson.   All total over 70 stops this season. Defensively, the unit recorded 21 sacks and 16 picks this season.  They will look to bring pressure on Heirs during Week Fourteen.  Again, this will turn out to be a very close game.  We’re looking for the upset here.  Scelfo has led the Lions to a 34-22 during his five years in Hammond.

Week Fourteen Conference Championship outlooks

    Heading into Week Fourteen, collegefootballfan.com has seen our fair share of conference and division leaders.  No. 1 Georgia (12-0, 8-0) heads into the SEC championship game to hold off LSU (9-3, 6-2).  Georgia’s defense will dominate to win this, but LSU presents one of the better defenses in the SEC UGA has not faced this year.  the score will be similar to what we saw when The Dawgs beat Kentucky, 16-6.

    In the Big Ten, No. 2 Michigan plays unranked Purdue (8-4, 6-3) who we saw open the season versus Penn State in a 35-31 loss. The Boilermakers won the west among a bunch of teams who couldn’t figure out who could win.  We think the Boilers will be coming in fired up for this one behind QB Aidan O’Connell.  O’Connell will be returning from the funeral of his older brother this week.  His teammates expect that he will play.   The emotions could stir the Boilers for a while in this one.  In the end, Michigan will wear Purdue down for the win to move on to the CFP.  They have an axe to grind with Georgia based on last year’s CFP outcome.

ACC plays for Orange Bowl Bid

    With losses to end their seasons, the game between No. 9 Clemson (10-2, 9-0) and No. 24 North Carolina (9-3, 7-2) lost a lot of luster. Before week Twelve, both lost only to Notre Dame. Clemson fell to a red-hot South Carolina offense last Saturday, 31-30.  The Tar Heels lost to Georgia Tech (5-7, 4-4) and NC State (8-4, 4-4) to finish their season in two close losses. Clemson will be ready for a shoot-out with QB Drake May.  This will be high-scoring and close with the Tigers’ pride taking over since not making the CFP this year.

UTSA and Troy featured in finales

   UTSA (10-2, 8-0) faces North Texas (7-5, 6-2) for the Conference USA title as both bid farewell to this conference before moving on to the American Athletic next season.  The Road Runners defeated the Mean Green at home earlier, 31-27.  NTSU will have a revenge factor here playing at The Alamo Dome. A loss to UAB two weeks ago and a close win over Rice could indicate they were looking forward to this one. 

    Troy (10-2, 7-1) should apply the hammer to Coastal Carolina (9-2, 6-2) who lost star QB Grayson McCall a few weeks ago.  Coastal got blasted without him by James Madison last week, 44-7. The shame of it is, however, is that JMU (8-3, 6-2) tied CCU for first in the Sun Belt East. For Week Fourteen, this matchup would draw much more interest to the improving Sun Belt.

Why is this a rule?

   However, because of a “stupid” rule precluding JMU from competing for the conference title because this is their first year in the FBS Sun Belt, the Dukes can’t play in the championship game.  Under the circumstances, JMU playing Troy would be a much better game now.  Troy played well when we saw them defeat Western Kentucky in a comeback this year.  We saw the Dukes fall to Louisville. This demonstrated that they need to build more depth to play more competitively at the Power Five level. We believe that they will get there.

A waiver? Why?

   With all the bowl games now (41), the geniuses that run the NCAA have to figure how to fill all the bowl commitments because not enough teams became bowl eligible with six wins.  Five must be against FBS opponents.  Sorry Army, if you beat Navy, your sixth win is only your fourth FBS because you defeated Villanova and Bucknell.  Like the Midshipman like to sing, “…we just play Holy Cross, ‘cause that’s the fearless Army way!”

   In the meantime, 5-6 New Mexico State added FCS Valparaiso in Week Fourteen to replace a regretful cancellation of a previous game vs San Jose State due to the death of a player.  NMSU already has a win against FCS Lamar. A win over Valpo would still only give them four FBS wins. But they can petition the NCAA for a waiver?

 Waiver? Wait a minute

     NMSU can apply for a waiver? How about someone taking a look at aforementioned 8-3 James Madison.  This deserving team has to sit outside the bowl season looking in only because they exceeded everybody’s expectations in their first season.  Others like Rice at 5-7 will be consider due to APR. That’s an honorable consideration, but why are teams with five or six wins being considered over a very viable eight-win JMU team with a good APR?  Seems like an easy waiver decision here.

      Let the best compete before making exceptions.  5-6 Rutgers replacing Texas A&M last year against 11-2 Wake Forest in the Gator Bowl was not only an embarrassment, but a slap in the face to a competitive team who deserved this bowl last season.  Winning, fairly, should be every team’s goal to get into a bowl game.  TV money should not be the priority for college athletics, but that seems to be what it’s only about now.  

The waiting games

   Aside from the championship games and Army-Navy the following weekend, no other games will be played that impact all the other bowls to be played.  We await word to find out what teams will be fulfilling the bowl games we plan to see this year:  The Ticket Smarter Birmingham Bowl, the Auto Zone Liberty Bowl, and the TransPerfect Music City Bowl (we’re begging that without much offense, that Iowa’s not in it).  In the meantime, we list here all the bowl eligible teams we watched perform this season:

Georgia (12-0) , Ohio State (11-1), Alabama (10-2), Penn State (10-2), Clemson (10-2), UTSA (10-2), Troy (10-2), James Madison (8-3)*, Purdue (8-4), South Carolina (8-4), Texas (8-4), Western Kentucky (8-5), Houston (7-5), Kentucky (7-5), Louisville (7-5), Middle Tennessee (7-5)**, Wake Forest (7-5), Baylor (6-6), Louisiana (6-6), Utah State(6-6).  *JMU (see “waiver” above); ** Middle Tennessee heads to EasyPost Hawai’i Bowl vs. San Diego State (7-5) on December 24. Aloha Blue Raiders!

Bottom Ten

    We are happy to report that Collegefootballfan.com did not see one of the bottom feeders listed play this season.  There have been seasons that we had multiple teams in this category on our slate.  No team we saw this year including two FCS schools had fewer than four wins. Austin Peay finished 7-4 and Eastern Kentucky went 7-5.   Surely that is a record year for us. 

Twelve in 2024

   Seems like the CFP Committee leveraged its TV money position to get the Rose Bowl to rescind its demands to always have a Rose Bowl TV slot at 1 pm PST to show the “Grandaddy of them all.  We hate to see traditions die as they have been falling by the wayside these past five years or so.  However, we like the CFP expansion and that it’s going to happen earlier.  More teams the better!  Hopefully recruits will consider opportunities beyond the traditional handful of participants to play for.  Spread the wealth of talent from a fan’s perspective.

     We hope to see some tightening up of conference schedules eliminating games against FCS schools, less use of transfer portals, and more equality in the NIL opportunities.  Most likely this won’t happen, but hopefully there will be more “rich” teams in the future.  When that happens, the FBS will finally separate into two official bowl subdivisions – one for the Power Five and one for the current Group of Five.   

      We foresee this as minimizing player opt-outs for bowl season by hopefully eliminating some excess non-value-added bowl games. Maybe, they’ll just let every team who wants an extra game play in a ”consolation” game.  Finally, a step hopefully in the right direction regarding the CFP.  Either way, more changes will be made. For the better?  Not sure.

FCS: No. 1-8 seeds enter playoffs in Week Fourteen

  Aside from No. 6 Samford vs SE Louisiana we will be attending, other key FCS games include No. 1 seed South Dakota State (10-1) hosting Delaware (8-4). Weber State (10-2) will visit No. 4 Montana State (10-1). Defending champ and No. 3 seed North Dakota State (9-2) hosts Montana (8-4). The winner of this game will play the winner of our game. Furman (10-2) travels to No. 7 Incarnate Word (10-1).  No. 2 overall Sacramento State (11-0) hosts Richmond (9-3), a 41-0 winner over Pioneer champ Davidson.

D2: Week Fourteen could be “Big Revenge Week”

     Three of this week’s four Super Region quarterfinal games make for a very exciting week. These matchups consist of teams that battled in very competitive regular season games.  This week should be fun! No. 1 East seed Indiana U of Pennsylvania (9-1) hosts Shepherd (WV).  In a Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference game, the Crimson Hawks defeated the Rams (11-1), 24-21. Midwest Regional action sees No. 1 Grand Valley State (11-0) hosting Ferris State (10-1).  In their Great Lakes Intercollegiate game, GVSU defeated Ferris for their only loss which was on the road , 22-21.

   Out in the West, No. 1 Angelo State (11-0) hosts Colorado School of Mines (9-2). In previous, non-conference action, Angelo State hosts the Ore Diggers a second time after defeating them, 30-27.  This is a great playoff weekend in D2.  You have to love that CSM. They lost two tight, non-conference games to two teams also in the playoffs (GVSU the other). Then they beat all foes in their Rocky Mountain Conference to make the playoffs.   In the Southern Super Region game, No. 1 seed Benedict (11-0) of the Southern Intercollegiate hosts Wingate (9-2) of the South Atlantic. For Benedict, they made the D2 playoffs for the first time ever.

 Eight teams square off in D3 Quarter finals in Week Fourteen

     Perennial champ Mount Union (12-0) hosts Delaware Valley, also 12-0.  The Purple Raiders and the Aggies have not met in the playoffs over many years of success. Defense during the regular season marked the forte of both programs.  Del Val allowed 6.5 ppg while MU opponents averaged 7.1 during all 12 games.  Last week, Randolph-Macon scored much higher against DV in their loss, 35-32.  North Central (Ill) and Ithaca also meet with unblemished 12-0 records.

    Defending champ Mary Hardin-Baylor (11-1) should best 10-2 Bethel (MN). Undefeated Wartburg hosts surprising lower seed Aurora (11-1) after two road wins in their two playoff games.  The semis will be played the following weekend and the championship Stagg Bowl will be held in Annapolis, Maryland the following Friday night. Hopefully, FBS playoffs starting in 2-24 will be as competitive as these lower-level, postseason tourney formats.

Please check out our book!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like our stories, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  Or, start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!

Game 651: Louisiana dominates Texas State to become bowl eligible; TSU releases Coach

San Marcos, TX – The Louisiana Ragin Cajuns started slowly. They built their lead gradually over Texas State (4-8, 2-6)  holding the Bobcats’ one-dimensional offense in check. In the end, they win their sixth game to qualify for bowl eligibility, 41-13.  The one-dimensional TSU possessed came in RB Lincoln Pare. The sophomore carried 28 times for 221 yards and one TD. On one carry, he ran right by us as we stood along the sideline for 56 yards.  He also burst later on for a 64-yard jaunt.  On Sunday, Texas State released their HC Jake Spavital after four years with no bowl bids and a 13-35 record.

   As for our Texas Thanksgiving Two-step weekend, thanks very much to Zach Rittle, our future son-in-law. Zach (PSU grad) works as director of Business Development at Texas State. As a family, we enjoyed a tremendous, gameday experience.  Before the game, we met up with many great TSU fans at the Pavilion at Bobcat Stadium for Texas BBQ and beverages.  We got pre-game sideline passes, and we enjoyed seats and food during the game in the club level.  During the game, we ventured along the sideline to capture the action right along the field.  After the game, the was a season-ending celebration in the end zone with dance music by the “Spazmatics.”  We find I definitely worthwhile to support TSU sports for our annual visit to see the Bobcats.

Begins with a Bobcat break

    The Cajuns kickoff to open the game went out of bounds. TSU started from the 35 and paid off as Seth Keller’s 38-yard FG gave the Bobcats a quick 3-0 lead.  Before the period ended, Chandler Fields connected with RB Chris Smith (10 rushes, 69 yards, one TD) for an 18-yard TD pass for a 7-3 lead Louisiana never relinquished. 

  The closest the Bobcats closed the score came early in the first. Keller launched a 40-yard FG thanks mostly to Pare’s 57-yard jaunt.  Alter that, the Ragin Cajuns dominated the scoreboard the entire half. Two Kenneth Almandares FGs of 33 and 27 yards sandwiched a Der’lyn Washington 8-yard TD run (10 rushes, 73 yards, one TD). Louisiana led 20-6 at halftime. 

All that glitters is gold

    For halftime, the Texas State Strutters strutted their stuff in a season-ending Christmas celebration.  The golden uniforms lit up the darkening sky.  Great show!

     Ten plays into the period, the Cajuns put together an eight-play TD drive. A 24-yard run by Chris Smith (13 for 69 yards, one TD) set up his next carry from the one for a TD. The Bobcats retaliated with the only offense they could generate the entire game.  Pare burst through a hole for a 64-yard touchdown run to cut the lead, 27-13.   The Cats seemed to breathe new life when S Dejordan Mask picked off a pass at their 12.  However, it fizzled with a punt.  The defense came around again to challenge the Cajuns stopping them on a third and one from the UL 27.  They forced a punt.  The effort went for naught again with the visitors holding the lead going into the final period. 

Louisiana Cajuns close

    Louisiana (6-4, 4-4) continued their drive into the fourth. It finished with a three-yard scoring pass from Fields (16 for 26, 187 yards, one TD, one INT)  to Peter LeBlanc to up their lead, 34-13.  Next time the Cajuns got the ball, they drove 84 yards capped by a 37-yard TD pass from back-up QB Zeon Chriss. He connected with Lance Legendre (four or 81 yards, one TD) to close the scoring. They put the stamp on the Cajun win, 41-13.

    Next up!

   The Cajuns became bowl eligible.  There seems to be openings for all 6-6 teams. Mathematically, it’s been determined to fill 82 bowl slots, at least one 5-7 team will be invited.  When we hear that 82 of 131 programs are going to bowl games. Why not invite every team who wants to play another game?  Call them consolation games.  That’s what most of the bowl “festivals” have become. 

Texas State goes out searching for a new coaching staff.  Located in one of the most football fertile states in the country and being the only Sun Belt program in the Lone Star State, it needs to take advantage quickly.  Supposedly they will look for a coach with head coaching experience.  Whoever they get, we’d like to see him open up the offense. Hopefully, they draw more people to Bobcat Stadium to bring some excitement for the fans in the fast-improving Sun Belt Conference. 

FCS playoffs

     As for Collegefootballfan.com, we look forward to attending an FCS playoff game.  We pinpointed next weekend’s game to be hosted by Southern Conference champion Samford (10-1), sixth-seeded, in Homewood, AL.  The one loss suffered by these Bulldogs came at the paws and jaws of those other Bulldogs of the FBS, No. 1 Georgia, 33-0.  The Dawgs of Samford host 9-4 SE Louisiana, 45-42 winner over Idaho in Round one.  

Seen ‘em all, until…

     This poses a recent rarity for CFF.com.  We attend a game at a place we’ve never been between two teams we’ve never seen play. A three-fer on our account.  FCS, of course! Funny because at Texas State, Bobcat fans Kent and Karen Pope were trying to find an opportunity to have us come back to see their Cats against a team we haven’t seen yet. Frustrated them! Explained it would probably have to be against one of the three joining the FBS in the next two years – Jacksonville State, Sam Houston, or Kennesaw.  This could work out sooner than expected.

Please check out our book!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like our stories, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  Or, start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!

Game 650: Bijan Robinson leads Texas surge past Baylor Bears

Austin, Texas – With the eyes of the Texas Longhorns upon making the Big XII championship game to get a crack at undefeated No. 4 TCU, they overcame a 27-24 deficit in the final period on the running of Bijan Robinson and Roschon Johnson to best Baylor, 38-27.  Having fallen to TCU, 17-10, only two weeks prior, with a win they hoped for Kansas to upend K-State to get the opportunity.  Baylor came in looking to salvage a disappointing 6-5 season after winning the Big XII in 2021.

   The Bears got off to a quick start thanks to an intentional grounding by Texas QB Quinn Ewers from the end zone.  Baylor followed up with a 48-yard scoring strike from Ben Shapen to Jaylen Ellis for a 9-0 BU lead.  Texas refused to lose and responded on a 75-yard drive with Ewers taking it in from the three.  On the subsequent Baylor possession, P Isaac Power shanked the punt out at the BU 29.  Bijan Robinson, took it in from the two to give UT a 14-9 lead at the end of Q1.

Texas Bulls and Bears

    Baylor fought back.  They closed the gap with John Myers 30-yard FG only to be offset by Bert Auburn’s 38-yard FG for the Longhorns.  Later with Texas starting a drive from its 20, two sacks set them back to punt from their nine.  The Bears took over at the UT 45.  The good field position netted BU a 14-yard TD pass over the middle to TE Ben Sims.  Defensively, they stymied the Longhorns with another sack to prevent any further first-half score.  Baylor led 19-17 at the half.  

     The second half started with an exchange of punts.  Baylor recovered a fumble by WR Jordan Whittington to set up on their 44.  A QB sneak by Shapen of fourth and one kept the drive moving, but the Longhorn D stiffened.  Myers attempted a 40-yard FG, but it sailed wide left just outside the upright. UT took over on their 22.  The traveled the length of the field with Roschon Johnson taking it in from the two to put Texas up, 24-19.

Texas stampede

     In the fourth, Power’s punt put the Horns back on their 15.  From UT’s 33, pressure on Ewers forced a fumble.   DL Gabe Hall picked it of the turf and returned it 16 yards for a Baylor TD.  Shapen tossed a pass for two points to WR Hal Presley.  With 13:30 remaining, the Baylor Bears led, 27-24.  From here, Longhorn HC Steve Sarkisian decided to put the ball in the hands of Robinson (29 carries, 198 yards, two TDs).  

    Starting from the 25, the Longhorns went exclusively on the ground.  Robinson picked up 65 yards on nine carries with Johnson ( 13 carries, 77 yards, two TDs) carrying for the balance. A one-yard TD run by Robinson with 8:25 left gave UT the 31-27 lead. The Longhorns turned back the ensuing Baylor possession with an INT by LB Jaylan Ford to start at Baylor’s 42.  Robinson carried twice and Johnson followed up with the next four.  On his final carry, Johnson scored from the 11 to extend the lead, 38-27.  Baylor (6-6, 4-5)  lost four yards on its final, futile possession before Texas went into victory formation to close the door on this one, and wait for Saturday’s outcome between Kansas State and Kansas.

Next!

    No go for Texas (8-4,6-3) at TCU next week.  K-State knocked of Kansas to earn the title game, 47-27. The Wildcats fell to the Horned Frogs back on October 22, 38-28.  Both teams seen here on Friday await bowl bids.  As for Collegefootballfan.com, we head to nearby San Marcos on Saturday for Game 651 where Texas State (4-7) hosts Louisiana (5-6) in a Sun Belt clash.

Please check out our book!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like our stories, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  Or, start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!

Week Thirteen of Steveo’s Salvos – Baylor at No. 24 Texas; Louisiana at Texas State; Put the “Whammer Jammer Yellow Hammer on Alabammer”; Ivy finishes; D2 and D3 selection highlights from Week 12; Our FCS Round Two revealed

 Our first of two games this Thanksgiving weekend

   Baylor (6-5, 4-4) at No. 24 Texas 7-4, 5-3) kicks off our Texas Two-step of Week Thirteen on Friday at 11 am CT.  This showdown marks the 650th game attended by Collegefootballfan.com.   The result of this Big Twelve matchup presents implications for not only the Big 12 Championship game, but also possibly on the final CFP format to be announced on December 11.  Baylor fell to overall No. 4 TCU last Saturday, 29-28, leading by eight in the final period.  A three-yard TD run capping a 90-yard drive with 2:07 and a 40-yard field goal by Griffin Kell ended the Bears upset bid, 29-28.  TCU remains at No. 4 in the latest CFP poll.

   The Texas Longhorns avenged last season’s embarrassing loss, albeit to a vastly improved Kansas Jayhawk squad, 55-12.  The Horns dominated on the running of All American RB Bijan Robinson who carried 25 times for career highs of 243 yards and four TDs.  The two teams statistically play pretty even.  Based on common, conference game results and playing at home, we give the edge to the Horns over the well-coached Bears under Dave Aranda  in this one by a touchdown.  If Texas wins and Kansas State loses to Kansas, Texas will face TCU for the Big XII title. The Longhorns fell to the Horned Frogs two weeks ago, 17-10.  

Sunbelt West Saturday

    Louisiana Ragin Cajuns (5-6, 3-4) at Texas State Bobcats (4-7, 2-5) caps our Week Thirteen Texas Two-step.  Watching two teams that didn’t play up to anticipated expectations this year.  Though Billy Napier left Louisiana after last year’s 13-1 season, the team seemed to have solid nucleus returning under former assistant Michael Desormeaux. The Cajuns didn’t compete as well as expected.  They lost to struggling archrival ULM and suffered a big loss to Improving Florida State last week, 49-17.  Though a sixth win here would make them bowl eligible, six Conference foes have already qualified and they could be on the outside looking in once the Sun Belt’s six contracts are fulfilled.

    Texas State HC/OC Jake Spavital surely entered this season on the hot-seat with a 9-27 record coming back for his fifth season as the Bobcats’ mentor.  Not sure if a win here will help him, but a loss certainly won’t.  A mid-season shocker over Appy State, only the Bobcats’ second win over a team with winning record in five years, followed by three close in-conference losses might be consideration for improvement.  Surely, this game result will mean much for Spavital and the Bobcats’ football futures.      

Hungrier team wins

     A late comeback win over Arkansas State last week combined with a flourish here would possibly be a positive to keep Spavital at San Marcos.  This game will be tight. The Cajuns’ incentive to become bowl eligible against a team they’ve beaten the last four years will be the intangible deciding factor in this game.  Never having gone to a bowl in five years will most likely play in Texas State’s decision to give Spavital another season of move on in a different direction.  For Week Thirteen, the final full weekend of the college football regular season, the Cajuns will come out ragin’ in this one.

Time to put the “Yellow Hammer to Alabammer”

   Tennessee gets clobbered by South Carolina, 63-38, in a dominant win by the Gamecocks, who haven’t beaten any team of note this season until now.  Regretfully, Volunteer QB Hendon Hooker left the game with season-ending injury.  However, this didn’t occur until a suddenly revitalized Gamecock offense led by Spencer Rattler had the game well in hand.  Rightfully, Tennessee (9-2, 5-2) drops in the CFP poll from No. 5 to No. 10 eclipsing their hopes to make the CFP.  No SEC Championship game for the Vols having lost two games to SEC foes No. 1 Georgia and South Carolina (7-4, 4-4).  And Vanderbilt suddenly looks to become bowl eligible in Week Thirteen against the Vols!  Who’d imagine?

    The Vols drop. So, LSU, USC, Alabama, and Clemson all step up a notch. Alabama? Why? LSU (9-2) who earlier got drubbed by Tennessee, 40-13, beat 5-6 UAB.  USC (10-1) defeated archrival UCLA in a cliff hanger, 48-45, to advance them into the PAC 12 championship.  Clemson (10-1) derailed Miami (5-6), 41-10 (and they host South Carolina next). After that, Clemson plays UNC (9-2) for the ACC title.  This next discussion within the CFP committed must’ve been intense – NOT!  Alabama beat FCS Austin Peay (7-4), 34-0. 

We speak from our first-hand experience this season

    We watched Alabama murder Utah State earlier this season 55-0. Having seen Austin Peay play twice, surely Nick Saban took it easy on his little pal HC Scotty Walden at APSU.  He tries to follow in Saban’s footsteps.  Walden scheduled three non-conference FCS weaklings ala Saban.  This inflated the Govs record to 7-3.  We saw his Govs lose to FBS Western Kentucky (7-5) and win a good game over FCS Eastern Kentucky (7-4), 31-20.  Saban made it look like he played a fairly good FCS team? He didn’t. Why else would Saban take it so easy on APSU?  Blowing this team out could not and should not make a difference. “Here Scotty, take the money.  I promise not to beat you as bad as I really can.”

    Bama should have been surpassed for playing such a team that can’t beat any of the aforementioned losers of the teams beaten by LSU, USC, nor Clemson.  The committee lets Alabama get away with this.  Why? Seems like they are keeping Alabama, who lost to LSU and Tennessee already, in a position to move up as long as they don’t lose this week to Auburn. An Auburn upset will close this issue.

The point of the matter?

       If Auburn doesn’t pull the upset, every team ranked ahead of Alabama has two games left.  Most are competitive. Each team has at least one determining a conference championship.  Bama already has two losses. The close loss to Tennessee doesn’t look as formidable since the Gamecocks dominated the Vols like The Tide couldn’t.  Again, UT beat up on LSU, too, 40-13.   All these other teams can lose at least one game before the season is over.  Bama just sits back and waits with their two losses.  Just like a win over Austin Peay, Bama will gain ground based on other teams losing.  Most only having one at that. Bad timing? Not right from what we see.  We say, “War Eagle! “

Ivy settles on one true champion

      As reported last week in Salvos, The Ivy League had the possibility of their ten-game season finishing in a four-way tie for first place. Instead, the final week determined a singular, deserving champion determined on the field.  Both games, between the four finalists, did not settle until the final periods.

   In their 138th meeting, Harvard (6-4, 4-3) led Yale at the start of the fourth, 14-13.  Finishing a 75-yard drive, the Yale Bulldogs’ Jackson Hawes caught a five-yard TD pass from QB Nolan Groom.  A two-point conversion failed.  With 6:29 remaining, both teams punted twice. Harvard’s last possession ended with an INT by Yale LB Hamilton Moore, his second of the game. Yale (9-1, 6-1) went into a victory formation to seal the win.

Penn Quakers at Princeton Tigers

   Princeton, a loser for the first time the week before against Yale, led archrival Penn, 19-7, at the end of three.  The Penn Quakers ate up clock. They drove 66 yards culminating in Aidan Sayin’s two-yard TD pass to Julien Stokes to close the gap, 19-14. Princeton’s ensuing drive fizzled at the Penn 28.  The Tigers gave the ball back on downs.  From there with 5:15 left, Penn drove the length of the field.  They converted on a fourth and two from their 36 and on a fourth and nine at Princeton’s 38 to stay alive.  With five seconds left on fourth and goal at the Tiger five, Sayin connected with Trey Flowers for a TD pass to win it for the Quakers, 20-19. 

     With the Quaker win, Yale took sole possession of the Ivy League championship. Penn (8-2, 5-2) takes second in the Ivy ahead of Princeton with the same identical record.  The Ivy Leaguers all go now to take final exams.  The winner does not patriciate in the FCS playoffs. Playing ten straight weeks, the Ivy League settles on a football champion even before Week Thirteen of college football mania!

D3 disparities

     Round one results of the D3 playoffs came in. Of 16 opening round games, seven games resulted in competitive scores.  The other results showed the disparity among 239 teams in 28 different conferences across the country.  Talent, competition, and focus vary at the D3 level.  Nine other opening round games lost among teams with conference titles and one undefeated team. Many of these with only one loss, fell by an average of 45.3 points. 

   The D3 format does a good job of separating the wheat from the chaff as they say, but at least all get a chance to step into fray to give it their best shot.  It beats getting voted out based on subjectivity or computer scores. Here are results of close battles fought in the first round:

Wartburg 14 – UW Lacrosse 6; Aurora 33 – UW Whitewater 28; Utica 17 – Susquehanna 10; Randolph Macon 35 – Cortland State 28; Springfield 17 Endicott (10-0) 14; Trinity, TX  14 – Hardin Simmons 7; Bethel 34 – Wheaton 32. 

    Second round games of interest in Week Thirteen: Randolph Macon (11-0)  at Delaware Valley (11-0) ; 1-seed North Central (11-0) vs Carnegie Mellon (11-0): defending champ Mary Hardin-Baylor (9-1) at 1-see Trinity, TX.

Week Thirteen D-2 second round games of Interest

    Four one-seeds waited in the wings for First round results. Here are the four Super Region matchups in Round Two vs. No. 1’s:

 No. 4 Ashland (10-1) at Indiana U of Pennsylvania (9-1); No. 5 Wingate 10-2) at Benedict (11-0); No. 5 NW Missouri State (10-2) at Grand Valley (11-0); No. 4 Bemidji State (10-2) at Angelo State (11-0).

Other match-ups in the four respective super regions:  No. 6 Slippery Rock (10-2) at No. 2 Shepherd (11-1); No. 3 West Florida (10-1) at No. 2 Delta State (11-1); No. 3 Pittsburg State (Kansas) at defending champ No. 2 Ferris State (10-1); No. 3 Minnesota State (10-2) a No. 2 Colorado School of Mines (10-2).

Our FCS Round Two game determined

     The FCS starts Round one this weekend.  Click here to view the parings.  Collegefootballfan.com announces our Round Two game to be attended on December 3.  Samford (10-1) winners of the Southern Conference located in Homewood, Alabama get a bye in Round one.  The following week we will venture to Homewood to see them host the opening round winner between Idaho (7-4) and SE Louisiana (8-3).  Looking forward to seeing a playoff game this season.

Please check out our book!

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like our stories, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  Or, start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Happy Thanksgiving and enjoy Week Thirteen!

Game 649: No. 1 Georgia defense holds off Kentucky in the cold

Lexington, KY – Georgia rolled into Kroger Field on a cold day to face a Kentucky Wildcat team (6-5,3-5) beaten by lowly Vanderbilt a week ago.  SEC fans on line insist that cold, northern playing conditions don’t affect their players.   Both defenses played well, but both offenses sputtered, cold or no cold.  UK came up short on several key plays throughout the game won by the Bulldogs (11-0, 8-0), 16-6.  The UK defense held Georgia to three first-half FGs. However, the Kentucky offense misfired and dropped passes that could have made a difference in the final outcome. A late spark fizzled for the Wildcats in the final period.  UK had chances for greater rankings implications on a day of college football filled with upsets and close calls, especially in the SEC.

Early game indicators

   On the first possession of the game, Kentucky QB Will Levis (20 for 31 passing, 206 yards, one TD, one INT) missed a wide open WR Barrion Brown on a second and one for a long gain in Georgia territory. Followed by no gain and a loss of one, the Cats turned the ball over on downs at the UGA 32.  Like their offense, the Kentucky defense indicated how they’d play the rest of the game on their first series.  After stuffing QB Stetson Bennet for no gain of third and six at their ten, they held Georgia to a 27-yard FG by Jack Podlesny.

    UK started to drive from the 25 heading into the second quarter.  At the Georgia 48, Levis lofted a pass far short of his receiver in the end zone.  DB Kelee Ringo who was beaten picked it off and returned it 45 yards to the 47.  Once again, the Wildcat defense halted the drive in the red zone at their six.  Podlesny converted for a 24-yard FG. Kentucky’s next drive ended as a three-and out. Levis threw an ill-advised pass to the flat completed for no gain on third down.

      Once again, Georgia drove down field, but Kentucky stopped them at the 20 where Podlesny converted on a 37-yard FG as the first half ended.  Georgia led, 9-0, but several poor passes by Levis, under no pressure, misfired passes to wide-open receivers and found one with no room to run.

Cold climate a factor for Georgia Bulldogs?

      The temperature this day stayed in the 30s.  After the game, we met with several Georgia fans on the downtown shuttle bus.  They claimed the cold caused the QB Bennet Stetson to have his worst game of the year. This conflicted from what SEC fans on line claim.  Collegefootballfan.com touted Bennett (13 for 19, 116 yards, one INT)  as our leading Heisman candidate coming into this game.  However, we thought otherwise as we watched an errant pass down downfield not even close to his receiver.  UK S Jordan Lovett intercepted it on his knees at the 10-yard line.  The turnover went backwards, and the Cats punted from their five.

Blue defense doesn’t melt in red zone

     Georgia drove 58 yards with Kenny McIntosh (19 carries, 143 yards, one TD) finishing the drive with a seven-yard TD run.  Up 16-0 now heading into the fourth period, the Bulldogs seemed to be rolling to put this cold game on ice.  On fourth and goal at the one, HC Kirby Smart’s team avoided another red zone field goal. Once again though, the Kentucky Blue defense stepped up and halted RB Kendall Milton for no gain at the one, and took over on downs.

   The defensive play seemed to light a spark.  Levis scampered for 10 yards on second down for the first of four consecutive plays resulting in first downs.  Included was a pass completion of 42 yards to Brown to the UGA 32.  On fourth and two at the eight, Levis connected with Brown (10 receptions, 145 yards, one TD) on a slant over the middle. Kentucky finally put up six with 9:52 remaining.  A two-point conversion pass fell incomplete. The Wildcats forced Georgia to punt.

Shaky officiating in the cold makes players numb

   Levis connected with Brown for 47 yards to start this drive.  An eventual sack by Georgia and then an incomplete pass that sailed out of bounds started Kentucky to set up for a FG to bring them within seven.  But, hold on!  On a delayed call, the referee threw a yellow marker to call for intentional grounding. They started to walk it off.  Two other officials joined the huddle for a prolonged discussion with the referee.  A Wildcat receiver actually slipped in the direction the pass was headed. Surely the supposed infraction came to the ref, who’s back was turned, from along the Georgia sideline. Thankfully, cooler heads prevailed among the officials in the huddle.

Too much standing around; “jump around!”   

  The officials reset the ball to be snapped from the twenty.  However, during the delay, the special teams’ players remained on the field.  Surely with cold hands, the snap of the ball came up short. Replays show that the holder could not turn the laces away from the kicker, and the attempt went wide left.  With 4:17 left, and no onsides kick, Georgia went nowhere from the 20.  They punted it away, and UK eventually turned the ball over on downs.  Game over. 

Georgia No. 1 now but from our view: wide-open

     College footballfan.com attended games this season played by Georgia, Ohio State, Clemson, Alabama, and Penn State, all within the Top 11.  A play here and play there can make a difference.  We say that with these teams and the possibilities of TCU, Michigan, USC, and LSU still pending, all will not be settled until after the conference championship games. We don’t think the eventual winner is clear-cut by any means.

   Next up – Thanksgiving treats!

    Georgia hosts archrival Georgia Tech who hasn’t beaten the Dawgs since 2016. However, they just pulled off a 21-17 comeback win over 9-2, 7-1 ACC Coastal Division Champ, UNC!  Kentucky hosts 7-4 Louisville coming off a 25-10 win at NC State.  As for Collegefootballfan.com, we have two college conflicts on our menu this Thanksgiving weekend. 

We will attend No. 25 Texas (7-4, 5-3) hosting Baylor (6-5, 4-4) next Friday morning in Austin. The day after for dessert, we head for the Sun Belt.  The Texas State Bobcats (4-7,2-5) host the Ragin Cajuns of Louisiana ( 5-6, 3-4) in San Marcos.  TSU defeated Arkansas State last weekend, 16-13, while the Cajuns fell to Florida State, 49-17.  Happy Thanksgiving to all our fans!

Speaking of holidays, here’s a gift idea

Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  . Start thinking Christmas gifts for your favorite college football fans!   It tells our tales how and when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  We also encourage you and whoever you buy for to submit a review for us. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!

Week Twelve of Steveo’s Salvos – No. 1 Georgia at Kentucky; SEC Week Twelve “analysis”; Our three bowl wishes; UConn be surprised; Ivy interactions; D2 and D3 selection highlights for Week 12; Alma mater Dear on coaching carousel

     Before we preview this week’s game we will attend when No. 1 Georgia goes to Kentucky, we just want to note our sadness regarding the tragedy of the Virginia Cavalier football players who died in the shooting incident at the University last weekend.  WR Lavel Davis and LB D’Sean Perry played last season when we watched UVA defeat Louisville and lose to BYU. WR Devin Chandler also passed during this sad tragedy and two other students, Marlee Morgan and Michael Hollins, suffered wounds.

       It’s so sad that young men with many years of life left ahead of them can die so suddenly in such a senseless act of violence  The fact that it came at the hands of a former teammate, for who knows what reason, makes it even more devastating. Prayers go out to these young men, their families, their team, and their school.  Their game in Week Twelve against Coastal Carolina canceled as expected.  May they all continue to live in the hearts of this who loved them.

Week Twelve of Steveo’s Salvos – No. 1 Georgia at Kentucky; SEC Week Twelve “analysis”; Our three bowl wishes; UConn be surprised; Ivy interactions; D2 and D3 selection highlights for Week 12; Alma mater Dear on coaching carousel

Our Week Twelve:  No. 1 Georgia (9-0, 7-0) at Kentucky (6-4, 3-4)

     Georgia continues to roll with great defense and with steady, reliable QB Stetson Bennett who’s got our vote for the Heisman.  Kentucky results exposed Mel Kiper, Jr. and the Wildcats under Bob Stoops who started off at 4-0.  Kiper exposed himself once again as a poor judge of quarterback talent.  UK QB Will Levis has already faltered unlike some of Kiper’s former prodigies. U. of Washington’s Jake Locker and Liberty’s Malik Wills didn’t get exposed until after being drafted in the early rounds after all his hype. 

      Kentucky suffered losses against Ole Miss, the South Carolina game we attended that Levis missed due to injury, and then a shellacking at the hands of Tennessee, 44-6.  But Vanderbilt?  Come on! Enough said.  When we selected this game prior to the season, we thought this could be competitive.  We will now be pleasantly surprised if it is.  If UK comes in vengeful after this loss, maybe they can keep it close for a while.  What we’ve seen from this UGA defense from a distance (TV), these Dawgs are ferocious.  If we happen to attend an amazing upset, we’d be astounded.  More likely, we’ll be watching to determine how UGA will perform against LSU in the upcoming SEC title game and beyond in the CFP.

SEC Week Twelve: basically, a bye week before rivalry games

    We briefly watched an SEC show Tuesday night where “experts” analyzed SEC games this week.  Week Twelve in the SEC should be called “Cupcake Week”.  We watched two analyses where the experts talked about SEC teams making recoveries from previous week’s victories.  Watching any analyses for these games seemed silly and a waste of time.  It’s obvious the SEC avoids scheduling another conference game to avoid a loss that could make them ineligible for a bowl game.  Instead, they’d prefer to pad their schedules with what should be an “easy” win.

     The SEC and other Power Five teams like to stock their rosters with the best players from around the country and always rise to the top.  So why do they all have to avoid one another and scour to play teams not only among the least of the FBS, but not even in the FBS.  “Our conference is too tough”.  “We like to give the lesser school the benefit of making more money.” Baloney! They want easy wins to avoid a loss of TV bowl revenue. No bowl and the entire conference loses money. They supposedly share bowl revenues within the conferences.

Sharing could pose a positive solution, however

    Now if media revenue-sharing could be disseminated by the NCAA among the Power Five, and a similar solution the Group of Five teams, and even to the FCS level, maybe they could conquer these “easy schedule” policies.  If rankings and bowl revenues maintain their status quo to select national champions among these three categories (put mid-majors in their own subdivision) , revenue sharing could improve the overall competitiveness of college football.

       Of course, as pointed out previously in another Salvo, schools need these revenues to support their entire athletic departments.  Problem is, some schools support more intercollegiate athletes than others do.  This differential should be looked into to prorate the benefits to each school.  Too complicated to get into here, but you’d think the world of “academia” would find a few people smart enough to figure this out.

Back to main point:

Week Twelve in the SEC:  FCS Austin Peay at Alabama – we will say this, APSU HC Scotty Walden is a Nick Saban wannabe. Three non-conference teams the Govs played early on now have combined records of 5-25.  You can look it up right here. FCS Eastern Tennessee (3-7) at Mississippi State: not the same 11-2 ETSU team that beat Vandy last year and lost in FCS semis to champion ND State.  5-5 UAB at LSU: game where analyst stated he hopes to see LSU “recover” from last week’s 13-10 win over Arkansas. Texas A&M hosts No. 131 UMass (1-9), everybody’s favorite patsy who should have one foot back in the FCS right now. Experiment over. Go play and recruit against Maine and New Hampshire.

     Auburn plays one of the more legitimate Group of Fives, 7-4 Western Kentucky.  The Tigers can’t look past the Hilltoppers at archrival Alabama.  WKU likes to throw. This could be a close one.  Missouri (4-6) welcomes New Mexico State (4-5). Until the Tigers got blown out by Tennessee last week, they lost a lot of close ones and they did beat Vanderbilt, 17-14.  The Aggies’ four wins came over teams that totaled only six wins combined. You’d think Mizzou would be honed by playing better competition, but revitalized Aggie HC Jerry Kill could have his team ready to surprise. 

 Surprise, surprise!  UConn’t believe who’s bowl eligible

    Congratulations to first-year HC Jim Mora of UConn.  The Huskies stand 6-5 and have one game remaining at 3-6 Army in Week Twelve.  UConn goes for a fourth straight win after defeating Boston College, UMass, and surprising Liberty for not only their second loss of the year, but a week after defeating Arkansas of the SEC!  Seven wins should warrant a bowl game for the Huskies somewhere, but with contracts already in place with specific conferences, opportunities seem few for UConn.

   Most likely they have to fill in for a conference who does not meet the full quota of bowl eligible teams.  Such bowls await teams from the Group of Five.  However, the Huskies Week Twelve game could loom big for them.  The Independence Bowl targets the AAC and specifically “Army”. With the recent success of the Cadets going to bowls in five of the last six years, the bowl committee made some kind of a commitment.  If UConn defeats Army for win seven, they may be heading for Independence. This would be their first since 2015.   

Collegefootballfan.com bowling wish list

    We pegged three bowls to see for this year.  Again, with an idea that we are trying to keep costs low, we picked three within short distances: the Birmingham Bowl, the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, and the very nearby Music City Bowl.  Looking at conference affiliations, current standings, and wishful thinking, here’s our bowling season wish list. Dear Santa,…

December 27: Ticket Smarter Birmingham Bowl: SEC vs American: 

All with 8-2, 5-1 conference records, the AAC champ will come from among UCF, Tulane, or Cincinnati. UCF has Navy and USF coming up.  The latter two, tied with UCF, meet on the last week of the season. So, the winner between UCF and the winner of the Tulane at Cincinnati game probably goes to a New Year’s Six bowl.  We will take either Tulane or Cincinnati in the Birmingham Bowl as plus!

     Figuring UGA and Tennessee probably going to the CFP, and Alabama filling the SEC New Year’s Six Sugar Bowl slot.  LSU, with three losses matching up against the AAC rep would be fantastic!  We may order tickets now.  However, upon further review, we think it will be Ole Miss. We’ll explain later, but this would be a wonderful contest as well. Can’t see Alabama playing in a stadium for only 47,100 fans!   Of course, as written about earlier, most bowl games look good until opt-outs are announced.

December 28: Auto Zone Liberty Bowl: Big Twelve vs SEC

We’ve rooted for Kansas all season with former D-3 UW-Whitewater HC Lance Leipold selected as our pre-season Coach of the year. The Jayhawks currently 6-4, 3-4, being invited alone makes us excited about this one. They still have Texas and K-State to contend with, and during our history, we’ve only seen the Jayhawks play once.  Last season, 6-6 Texas Tech played in the Liberty and defeated 7-5 Mississippi State. Among possible 6-6 finishers in the SEC, it could come down to South Carolina (where our daughter and money went) or Arkansas.  Not a bad Liberty match either way.

December 31: Trans Perfect Music City Bowl, 11 am: 

The reason we point out the time is because this game precedes the two CFP semi-final games to be played that afternoon and evening. This game on a Saturday will be a great lead-in to the playoffs.  SEC vs. Big Ten.  With our SEC analysis proposed for the Birmingham Bowl, this is where LSU comes into the picture despite three possible losses. With the Ohio State-Michigan winner heading to the CFP and the loser obligated to play in the Rose Bowl, a 10-2 Penn State could meet the Tigers in the Music City. That would be great as far as we’re concerned.  We already have our tickets!  As reported earlier though, the damper on this is who will opt out among the Nittany Lions.  Can’t have everything as they say.

Ivy interactions

As we like to bring up the “simplification” of a clean 10-game season with every Ivy League team playing one another to determine one champion or at least co-champs, this season disproves that.  Last week Yale (7-2, 5-1) knocked off Princeton (8-1, 5-1) from its undefeated pedestal, 24-20. Harvard (6-3, 4-2) whipped up on Penn (7-2, 4-2), 37-13.  In Week Twelve, known as Rivalry Week, Week Ten, the final week of the Ivy league season, or the start of final exams, two deciding games arise.

      As in traditional Ivy fashion, Harvard hosts Yale. Also, a sensible change was implemented a few years ago. Princeton now hosts Penn, a natural rivalry based on close proximity, on his final weekend of Ivy League football.  If Harvard and Penn both win, all four teams finish 5-2 in League play.  All tie for first?   If both Yale and Princeton win, supposedly the Bulldogs win because they defeated the Tigers in head-on competition despite common 6-1 League records.  If either just Princeton or just Yale wins, the team with the final 6-1 Ivy record is the last team standing.  Fun to see what happens!

D-2 openers in Week Twelve

    First of all, we point out a mistake on our part. D-2 starts with 28 teams among the four super regions, not 24.  The top seed in each super region gets a bye and will host the winner of the four vs. five seed in the second round.  Indiana U. of Pennsylvania (9-1), Benedict of SC (11-0), Grand Valley State (11-0), and Angelo State of Texas (11-0) are the Top Seeds in each region.  We generally pay attention to the east super region where IUP is at the top.  We’ve attended games played by most in that region over the years of course – Ashland, Notre Dame College of Ohio, Shepherd, Assumption, and Slippery Rock.  However, a team from that region has not won the D-2 national championship since Delaware in 1979. We saw them that year, too! UD defeated Rhode Island as our first game on this quest.

  Among the other regions, No. 3 West Florida in Benedict’s South region won it all in 2019.  The QB for WF that season was Austin Reed.  We watched him in action this year for 7-4 Western Kentucky.  Grand Valley State’s greatest challenge will come from No. 2 Ferris State. They are a fellow Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference foe who GVSU defeated this season, 22-21.  Ferris is the defending 2021 national champion.  Angelo State’s greatest challenge will come from Rocky Mountain AC Champ Colorado School of Mines (9-2). The Orediggers two losses came on the first two weeks of the season by three points each to GVSU and Angelo State.  The Diggers must have revenge on their minds!

D-3: 32 teams open tourney play in Week Twelve

    The “Mount Union Invitational” as we’ve referred to this in the past includes thirteen undefeated teams among 240 in pure college football competition. Mount Union, winner of 13 national championships is one of them as usual. At this level, all student-athletes with financial aid packages, at most, for the opportunity to play football before graduation. No major television revenue. “Let’s just go out and play football!”   Eleven squads have only one loss. Most teams get in by winning their respective conference.

Teams of note in the Midwest

   Northwestern of Minnesota (6-4) enters as the only school with four losses.  It went 6-0 in the upper Midwest Conference and faces tough St. John’s (9-1) of Minnesota. The Johnnie’s get a bid just about annually. In that same eight-team bracket play 9-1 UW Lacrosse at Wartburg (10-0) and six-time D-3 champ UW-Whitewater (8-2). They host 9-1 Aurora.  Whitewater defeated Lacrosse this season, but fell to aforementioned St. John’s in its opener and to UW-Platteville.  These two UW’s finished tied for first in their WIAC conference.

Teams battling in the Mid-Atlantic region

  In Mount Unions’ bracket, three other teams enter at 10-0 – Susquehanna, Randolph-Macon, and Delaware Valley. What we find interesting though is 7-2 Gallaudet opening against DelVal here.  Winners of the Eastern Collegiate Football Conference and located in Washington, D.C., it’s the only school for the deaf and hard of hearing that plays football. Congratulations to them.  We saw them play once at Kings Point. They impressed us regarding how disciplined they could play despite their handicap. Never went offsides on either side of the football. That alone was impressive.

North across the Great Lakes to New England

  North Central of Illinois, ranked first in their eight-team bracket, finished as runner up last season to Mary Hardin-Baylor and won it all in 2019.  They also challenge three undefeated competitors in their bracket – Carnegie Mellon, Endicott, and Ithaca.  Last week, we reported Ithaca faced off against nearby archrival Cortland State both located in upstate New York, and both finished undefeated heading into the final game of the season.  The Bombers defeated the Red Dragons, 34-17, to win the fabled Cortaca Jug in front of 40,232 fans at Yankee Stadium.  Ithaca hosts UMass-Dartmouth (9-1) while Cortland heads to 10-0 Randolph-Macon of Virginia in the Mount Union bracket.   They will only meet again if they both get to the finals. That’s a long shot.

From the Gulf coast to the Pacific to the far North

  In the basically Southern/Western Bracket, Trinity College in Texas (10-0) comes in at No. 1 facing Hardin-Simmons at 9-1. Next in line for the winner is Mary Hardin-Baylor (9-1) defending champ of 2021 and of 2018. Besides Huntingdon in Montgomery , Alabama, the other three in that half of the bracket thrive in Texas. Bethel of Minnesota meets Wheaton in Illinois, and Pomona-Pitzer of California meets Linfield in Oregon.  A low-seeded team can see the country if they win in this bracket. Don’t forget, this year’s Stagg Bowl championship game will be held at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland on Friday, December 16.

Final note on D-3: Alma mater dear needs to make a big comeback

    Enough here already. We’ll forgo the Week Eleven review and Week Twelve preview. We’ve covered a lot heading into rivalry week, playoffs, and potential bowl games as upcoming games will impact all of these.

     I’ll end on this note tonight. As reported previously, Alma mater dear Juniata College fell on rougher times than ever imaginable there in football.  The Eagles not only finished 0-10, they lost weekly by an average score of 58-8. They allowed over 50 points six times.  After his second year as HC, Josh Carter, an assistant coach and coordinator in previous years at a very successful D-3 Muhlenberg program, was released.  Surely, he’ll land back in a similar position to be successful in another program.

    The search is on for a new Juniata HC that can hopefully bring some success back to what had been a very proud football tradition in central Pennsylvania.  Among Juniata’s legacies are a 1956 Tangerine Bowl tie, the alma mater of great NFL Head Coach Chuck Knox, a bid into the first ever D-3 Stagg Bowl championship game in 1973, and some great years under former late and great HC Walter Nadzak.  He went on to coach at UCONN and eventually went on to become AD at The Citadel.   During his years, Juniata played at level where wins were common against the likes of Susquehanna, Delaware Valley, Ursinus, Gettysburg, and even against D-2 teams like IUP and Westminster who won an NAIA national championship back in those days.

Time to play catch-up

Well, many of those schools to their credit have surpassed JC on the playing field now.  The college ranks highly among many of them based on independent reports on the academic front.  However, like these competing schools, the admin at JC has to realize that athletic programs like football, which is probably over 12% of the male population on campus, has to supplement the value of classroom education with values learned on the playing field.  We hope that these goals of a small college (1,200-1,400 undergrads) strong in liberal arts and sciences can set its sights on improving football to be great again as teaching lesson for life on the playing field to supplement the classroom.  With that, the school offers even more to potential students than what it can now.  Go Juniata! 

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Game 648: Clemson shakes off lone loss with decisive win over streaking Louisville

Clemson, SC – No. 9 Clemson shook off their first loss of 2022 to Notre Dame a week later as a well-balanced offense and stingy defense halted Louisville’s four-game winning streak, 31-16.  Leading at halftime, 17-7, the replacement of LU QB Malik Cunningham (10 for 13, 75 yards) injured on the final play of the first half gave the Tigers a distinct advantage.  Cunningham’s loss took away the Cardinal option to run the ball effectively from QB if needed (20 yards for Cunningham; -7 for Domann).  Back-up Brock Domann came in with minimal experience to be effective immediately (13 for 23 passing, 175 yards, one TD, one INT).   Clemson (9-1, 7-0) forced two turnovers in the second half and stopped two late drives on fourth downs. 

Historical highlights

     Tiger RB Will Shipley (19 for 97 yards, one TD, one fumble) recorded ESPN’s No. 2 of Top Ten plays of the day with a 25-yard TD run hurdling a would-be tackler standing basically upright.  It extended the lead early in the second half.   For collegefootballfan.com, we attended our 648th game since 1979 for the first time at Clemson’s Memorial Stadium.  We recorded it as our 78th FBS Stadium.  Overall, we’ve now attended collegiate football games at 170 different stadiums among all divisions and neutral venues.

Pouncing Tigers

     Clemson QB DJ Uiagalelei (19 for 27 passing, 185 yards, one TD) took control to start the game guiding his team to a score on a 75-yard drive on 12 plays.  He ran the ball in from the 11 to take an early lead.  Later in Q1, the Clemson Tigers added to the lead with a 19-yard FG by BT Potter.  

    After Clemson forced Louisville (6-4, 3-4) to punt after two three-and-outs in the first, the Cardinals moved the football heading into the second.  Tiyvon Evans put Louisville on the board with a 16-yard run to put the visitors to within three, 10-7. Exchanges of punts and a sack of Uiagalelei resulting in a fumble left the score intact late into the second.

Costly effort

      Finally, Clemson got the ball rolling. While eating almost four minutes off the clock, their 80-yard drive got them down to the four.  With 32 seconds left in the half, Uiagalelei connected with Antonio Williams on a slant pass to take a 17-7 lead before the half.  However, the remaining time proved costly to the Cardinals.  Cunningham got his team all the way to the Tiger 14 on the final play of the period with a 26-yard run.  He went into the locker room injured and did not play in the second half.

Great trip, great time at Clemson with great friends

    Our first trip to Clemson became a memorable one as my fellow Juniata friends and Alum, Dave Bender and Roger Arnold, both class of 80, and Dave’s son, AJ (Mt Aloysius alum), joined collegefootballfan.com as this week’s Guest Game Analysts (GGAs).  Dave basically arranged our festivities through the entire weekend.  Of course, he couldn’t have done it without his brother, Dick, who is Clemson assistant men’s basketball coach. 

We were his guests not only at the football game, but also the evening before at the Clemson vs. South Carolina basketball game in Columbia, SC.  In a tooth-and-nail battle down to the wire, the Tigers tied it 58-all on two free throws by Brevin Galloway with 7.8 ticks remaining.   However, with 0.9 seconds, Gamecock Chico Carter, Jr, responded with a turnaround catch and shot to lift Carolina to a 60-58 win.  A last-second, long, Tiger attempt caromed off the backboard as time expired.

     We enjoyed tailgating in the shadows Clemson’s Memorial Stadium on our first trip there. While reminiscing about our days at Juniata, we took in the atmosphere at Clemson.  We shared stores over the many years since we last saw each other.  Sorry though, but we had to lament over our Alma mater’s 0-10 football season ending this day against 10-0 and D-3 play-off bound, rival, Susquehanna.

Dead-eye Dick!

    Of course, Dave is an avid Clemson Tiger basketball fan, and he filled us in on a lot of hoop stories. One included his brother Dick’s career starting with his playing days at Western Maryland University (now McDaniel) before coaching at DePauw University.  His free throw prowess at the D-3 school launched him into his coaching career.  He hit on 123 of 136 FTs his senior year landing him at No. 3 in the nation in free-throw percentage.  The leader requirement needs a minimum of only 50 attempts for top recognition. That year, the eventual FT champ shot only 52 that season to edge Dick despite more than double the attempts! 

     We look forward to following both the Tiger and Gamecock basketball programs during the 2022-23 season.  Great time getting together with good friends once again.  Dave, Roger, and AJ will look to join us at other football venues in the future.

Second-half surprises 

   Brock Domann unexpectedly started at QB for Louisville in the second half. The Cards gained only seven yards on three plays before punting.  Clemson started deep from its own 15.  They drove to the U of L 25 to set RB Will Shipley up for his ESPN Top Ten Moment.  He raced up the middle and hurdled UL Safety MJ Griffin like a track star on his way to a 25-yard TD run.  It was picture perfect!  GGA Roger Arnold exclaimed, “That will be the play of the week!” It was picture perfect!   Wish we had taken one. 

     Clemson now led, 24-7.  With Domann warming up a little as QB, Louisville offense showed signs of life.  They got as far as the CU three, but there, Wade Woodaz sacked Domann for ten yards.  The Cardinals settled for James Turner’s 22-yard FG to trail, 24-10.  The two teams exchanged fumbles before the final period.

     With time running out, Louisville needed touchdowns, not field goals.  One drive ended with an incomplete at the Tigers’ 25. Their next series halted with an INT by LB Barret Carter.  Carter played an outstanding game for the Tigers defensively. The Sophomore had eight stops including two sacks, 3.5 tackles for loss, and a pass knocked down.  The ensuing possession resulted with Shipley fumbling.  Once again, however, Louisville surrendered the ball on downs as Clemson held Louisville to four yards on four plays and took over at the UL 39.

Never give up

    On one play, Phil Mafah (10 rushes for 106 yards and one TD) raced the length of the field to cap the Clemson scoring to lead 31-10 with 2:13 remaining.  Give Louisville some credit. With Domann still under center, they fought to the end.  After a sack by Carter, Domann fired a 31-yard scoring pass to Braden Smith as time expired. No extra point was tried.  The purple and orange crowd on Military Appreciation Day celebrated the start of their one-game winning streak, 31-16. 

ACC title: Clemson vs. North Carolina?   

      With two more games to go for Clemson, one left in the ACC, it looks like a good showdown looming for the ACC title in Charlotte with North Carolina (9-1, 6-0).  No. 13 UNC hosts Georgia Tech and NC State to finish this season. If both schools win their remaining games, their lone losses would both only be against Notre Dame.

  Next in Week Twelve! 

    Clemson entertains Miami (5-5, 3-3) next week in their ACC Atlantic Division finale. They remain here the week after for their traditional intrastate rivalry against the South Carolina Gamecocks (6-4, 3-4).  Louisville hosts NC State (7-3,3-3) to battle for the best bowls available among the ACC contracts.

     As for collegefootballfan.com, the luster is off the game we slated for next week.  We get to see No.  1 Georgia. However, their opponent Kentucky (6-4,3-4) fell to Vanderbilt (4-6, 1-5) this past Saturday, 24-21.  Unless the Wildcats were really looking past the Commodores to take on the Bulldogs, we don’t see much of a contest here.   That Dawg defense plays awesome to say the least.  We’ll go anyway hoping for a surprise effort, but not expecting an unexpected result.

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Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like this story, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  We also encourage you to submit a review when you do. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Think about the college football fans in your life who will enjoy reading about our unique adventure.   Check out this chapter from Tales here.  Thanks!

Week Eleven of Steveo’s Salvos: Game 648: Louisville at Clemson; “Opt-out season approaches”; UGA defense, QB; “Play-offs?”; Week Ten reviews; Week Eleven previews

Our Week Eleven contest features two bowl-bound ACC teams who took different directions last week, but both may show up a little hot under the collar.  If Louisville (6-3, 3-3), off a 34-10 victory over James Madison we attended last Saturday, can carry over a little of the anger from that game, they can possibly negate the anger Clemson (8-1, 6-0) brings back from its loss at Notre Dame. Tiger HC Dabo Swinney will stir that pot all week.  The No. 10 Tigers come home for the first of three final home games as seven-point favorites.  Prior to their first loss last week, they struggled to win prior games against Florida State and Syracuse. 

Momentum in Louisville’s favor?

     The Cardinals have ripped off four straight wins. Aside from their opening loss to Syracuse, they’ve been in every game since.  They have a well-balance passing attack and running game with Malik Cunningham at QB.  Their defense shut down a very proficient JMU attack last week.  They have allowed 14.4 ppg in their last four.  HC Scott Satterfield started the season in a hot seat hand has remedied his team back to bowl eligibility. 

With Clemson followed by NC State and archrival Kentucky, his team seems ready to make a statement here.  It could start with the Tigers who seem off-balance at times.  The crowd will be behind the Tigers, but they had issues before with NC State and Syracuse at Clemson Memorial.  If the Cards can get a lead into the second half, they may be able to fend off Clemson in an upset.  Collegefootballfan.com looks forward to our first game ever at Clemson.

Is anyone excited about “opt-out” (formerly known as Bowl) season?

    An on-line heading on PSU’s “Nittany Lions Wire this week read, ”Win over Indiana boosts NFL draft stock for Penn State prospects.”  Should Nittany Lion fans, or any other college football fans actually be excited about this?  We at collegefootballfan.com dread this.  No fan of any college football team supplanting “Penn State” in the title should find favor with this.  What we read here is that the half dozen players feature in the article will be on hand to play in the final three regular season games.  A 10-2 record would be great here, but if achieved, most likely, these players won’t stick around for a game they consider “meaningless”.

There should be no “I” in team, but there is in “tennis

   To fellow teammates who played to get to this level and the fans who cheered them on (and paid for tickets, parking, travel, concessions, etc.)  to get to a great bowl, this comes as the reward to the entire school community.  Instead, all these guys will be looking into their future and only seeing this game as a potential risk to their health.  After all the hard work and team work, all of a sudden, these guys won’t be there.  The coaching staff will sub with generally inexperienced players.  The team they field in a bowl game does not represent the talent they relied on all season to get to this goal.  Solution? Besides taking up tennis instead, a true individual sport.

Answer: Expand CFP invitations

    Like the FCS, expand the playoffs to 24 teams. All others can play in bowl games if they want to continue those traditions, but let’s get a system where players aren’t going to opt-out.  Now, most of these bowls are now totally meaningless to them.   With expansion which should happen sooner rather than later, at least all these players have chance to play for the national championship.  Will there still be op-outs?  Probably, but if these players came to this school just to play pro ball, well? Another solution we suggest here is let the pros pick the best out of high school and let the pros develop them at their expense.

Answer No. 3: Grow up – fast!

     If they are that good, skip college.  It’s coming down to that.  The NFL puts all the risk on the colleges to develop their future product.  Let them draft the best right after high school graduation among the kids who have played college ball for three years. Scholarships should become contracts, especially with the NIL money now.  You don’t play, you don’t get paid. That contract should state a player gets paid, but he has to remain a member of the team.  It’s more complicated that this of course, but they’ve got to negate the sole draw of money somewhere in this entire scenario. Individuals need to be accountable to others throughout life.

    You want to earn a living? A player has to play.  We’re not talking lunch money any more.  These student-athletes are making more while supposedly going to college which most of their families never envisioned.  If they want to be paid like adults, start making commitments as adults.

Georgia defense dominates, QB stays steadfast and true

   Watching Georgia’s defense last week on TV impressed us, especially against explosive Volunteer QB Herndon Hooker.  We look forward to seeing the Dawgs in person when we see them play Kentucky and QB Will Levis in Lexington on November 19.  They’re second in the nation in ppg allowing only 10.8.  Equally impressive is QB Stetson Bennet’s game management.  He does what he needs to do to assure his Bulldogs win.  However, since his defense can hold just about anybody down, he doesn’t get challenged too often to turn things up when needed to display skills of urgency.

    Last season, he showed his worth in the CFP final in the 33-18 victory over Alabama.  His stats don’t compare numerically to Heisman candidates CJ Stroud of Ohio State and Hendon Hooker of Tennessee.  However, he’s 13th overall in yards per pass and has only thrown three INTs and been sacked seven times.  These past two season, the UGA offense averages 39.5 ppg under him.  He does what it takes to get the win.

     Too bad the Heisman selection comes before all the bowl results.  If Georgia repeats as champs, we would envision the former walk-on’s game management skills along with his 29-1 record in consideration for the Heisman.  Granted, his team counters with a great defense to keep his opponents in check. However, he’s accomplished much including performances that allowed him to beat out other top QBs thought to be better than him.  He didn’t transfer. He shows great inspiration as a leader, as a competitor, and as a teammate for college football to display what college football should be all about.

D-3 playoff selection show this Sunday

    Thirty-two D-3 schools will be selected this Sunday for the 49th annual tournament with the final game, The Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, to be played on Friday, December 16 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland.  In the past, we’ve referred to this as the “Mount Union Invitational Tournament” as the Purple Raiders won 13 titles since 1993.  Not to take anything away from Wisconsin-Whitewater who also took the title six times under current Kansas HC Lance Leipold, but all six Warhawk wins came over Mount Union. 

    Week Eleven is the final week of Division III play with some interesting games.  Ithaca and Cortland will both be 9-0 coming into their season finale known traditionally as the Cortaca Bowl in upstate NY.  In the last six years, finals were played among Mount Union, current No. 1 North Central (ILL) who took the title in 2019 over Whitewater, and Mary Hardin-Baylor of Texas. MH-B took the title in 2021 and 2018 respectively over North Central and Mount Union.  No championship took place in 2020 due to Covid.

  All games will start on Week Twelve and the full tournament will be played weekly until the championship game on December 16th.  Heading into Week Eleven, the six top rated D-3 programs in the six designated regions include:  Delaware Valley (8-0) of Doylestown, PA; Carnegie Mellon (9-0) of Pittsburgh; Belhaven (7-1) in Jackson, MS; Albion (8-0) of Michigan; Aurora (7-1) of Illinois; and Bethel (7-1) of Minnesota.  Too bad the FBS can’t opt out of their bowl structure and determine a playoff format like this one. 

D-2 Playoff selections this Sunday, too!

   Week Eleven also closes the final Week of the D-2 regular season.  Recent upsets have started the wheels churning to determine the final 24 teams.  The D-2 playoffs like the D-3 series, are all held at the home of the higher seed until the Final which will be hosted at McKinney ISD Stadium in McKinney, Texas on Saturday, December 17.  With 24 seeds, unlike D-3, the four top seeds receive byes.  The Division is divided into four Super Regions.  Each super region consists of four conferences making this rating system very pragmatic.  Going into Week 11, these four teams rank first in their respective Super regions: Shepherd (9-0) of West Virginia though in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference now; Benedict of Columbia, SC; Grand Valley State (10-0) of Michigan where Brian Kelly of LSU got his head coaching start; and Angelo State (10-0) of Texas. 

  The FCS plays its final regular season in Week 12. Its playoff schedule will be announced on November 20.  The FCS Championship is held in Frisco, Texas.  More information on this next week.  

Review of Week Ten and Preview of Week Eleven among our top teams

    Of course, heading into Week Eleven, the Top 25 upsets changed the rankings.  More to come for sure.  No. 1 Georgia looked solid defeating Tennessee last week, of course, 27-13. They’re at Mississippi State (6-3) this week.  No. 2 Ohio State (9-0) got by Northwestern, 21-7. No concern though.  In high winds and on a sloppy field, the 1-8 Wildcats are “mudders”.  Penn State beat them in similar conditions, 17-7.  Speaking of the No. 14 Nittany Lions (7-2), they beat Indiana, 45-14, and return home to take on Maryland (6-3) in a Big Ten East clash.

    Bama (7-2) dropped to No. 10 after losing in OT to LSU, 32-31. This week Nick Saban visits his former OC Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss (8-1) ranked at No. 11.  Another nail-biter in the SEC West?   Clemson’s at No. 12 with Louisville and us for this “mad” weekend. Texas at No. 18 comes home off a 34-27 win over Kansas State, 34-27, to host now No. 4 TCU (9-0). Longhorns face Baylor (6-3) when we see them collide on Friday after Thanksgiving.  The Bears host K-State and TCU before Austin. Things could be either interesting or all finished in the Big Twelve when we see them meet.

Other teams in Week Eleven action on our 2022 slate

    Air Force defeated Army (3-5), 13-7, to win the 2022 Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy.  Navy (3-6) lost to Cincinnati, 20-10.  With Notre Dame and UCF up next for the Mids, they will bring in a lot of pent-up energy when they meet Army in Philly on December 10.  Houston (5-4) of the American Athletic put up 63 points vs. SMU, but the Ponies put up 77 combining for the most points ever in a non-OT FBS, final score.  Purdue could not generate enough offense, but Iowa did in their 24-3 victory over the Boilers.  No. 21 Illinois (7-2) awaits the Boilermakers’ visit for Week Eleven.

SEC fodder

   Kentucky (6-3) eked out against Mizzou, 21-17, with doormat SEC Vandy (3-6) looming next before their visit from No. 1 GeorgiaSouth Carolina (6-3) did the Dores in, 38-27.  So much for VU HC Clark Lea’s brash talk about a national championship soon.   Auburn (3-6) put points on the board once again in their 39-33 loss to Mississippi State (6-3). They might match up well this week with disappointing Texas A&M, also 3-6.  Aggies seem to be considering time to look for Jimbo Fisher’s replacement soon. 

   Wake Forest (6-3) fell to NC State, 30-21, a week after a 48-21 loss at LouisvilleDemon Deac alum/fan, “Bugalug” Harton, reports that QB Sam Hartman has to start throwing the ball to his own receivers.  He’s thrown three INTs in each of those last two games.  Week Eleven gets no easier when No. 15 North Carolina (8-1) comes calling. Like Clemson, their lone loss is to ACC “killer of dreams”, Notre Dame.

Belt it out!

  Troy, now attracting votes at 7-2, defeated Louisiana in a Sun belt contest 23-17.  They welcome Army at home this Saturday. The Trojans two losses came against at No. 11 Ole Miss and in a last second, “Hail Mary” pass at Appalachian State.  In other Sun Belt action, Texas State 3-6 fell to UL Monroe (3-6). 31-30. The loss may have sealed the fate of Bobcat HC Jake Spavital.  Next, the Bobcats head to South Alabama (7-2).  We see them host Louisiana in their final game on Saturday, November 26.

C-USA follies

    Regretfully, maybe popular HC Rick Stockstill at Middle Tennessee has concerns as the Blue Raiders (4-5) fell to Louisiana Tech (3-6), 40-24.  He can possibly get his team to .500 starting with 2-7 Charlotte in Week Eleven followed by two 4-5 teams, FAU and FIU, all in Conference-USA play.  MTSU’s rival, Western Kentucky (6-4) plastered Charlotte last Saturday, 59-7.  They look to fry Rice (5-4) this weekend in their final home game of 2022.

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Game 647: Cunningham passes and Evans rushes lead riled-up Louisville past James Madison

Louisville, Kentucky – The weather cooperated this evening, and the return of James Madison QB Todd Centeio from injury indicated what had been hoped for, a competitive game, but several penalties against Louisville late in the game, though correctly called, riled-up the Louisville crowd.  The energy behind the team to spurred the Cardinals past James Madison, 34-10. 

      The teams, playing for the first time fought to a well-played 10-10 halftime struggle. However, somewhat controversial penalties in the final period fired up the Cardinals.  Their defense played stingier and big plays overcame a very strong, hard-hitting JMU defense to earn their sixth victory to make the Louisville Cards (6-3) bowl eligible.  For collegefootballfan.com, the James Madison Dukes (5-3) became our 131st FBS teams seen in action in our 657th game attended.   They joined the Sun Belt Conference this year after many successful seasons at the top of the FCS level.

 Defense, Defense!

   The return of QB Todd Centeio to JMU bode well after having lost in an upset to Marshall last week, 26-12.  However, the Louisville defense held Centeio far below his passing stats holding him to only four completions for 15 attempts and only 45 passing yards.  The Dukes, a nickname derived from their President from 1919-1949, Samuel Page Duke, scored on their first possession to take a 3-0 lead on Camden Wise’s 34-yard FG.  Louisville overcame the lead on the next series with Cunningham hitting TE Isaac Martin on a one-yard sprint out pattern to finalize a 75-yard drive.  Fourth down stops by both defenses took back possession on downs.

     Not until 1:49 remained in the second period, did JMU score with Percy Agyei-Obese (24/102 yards, one TD) running it in from the nine. Malik Cunningham (14/20 passes, 253 yards, three TDs) tossed a 44-yard pass to Tyler Hudson (6 catches for 142 yards) to get to the JMU four on the next Louisville possession. The Duke’s defense sacked Cunningham for six yards and dropped him back a yard on two subsequent runs.  Louisville settled for a 28-yard FG by James Turner to even the score as the first half ended, 10-10.  The JMU lived up to its reputation in the first half standing up to a Power Five school for the first time ever.

A Full Salute to the US Military

     U of L celebrated Military Appreciation Day honoring veterans and local bases from nearby.  The US Army band performed at the half with the LU Marching band and Alumni as well as local high school marching bands.  Commanders of Units from nearby Fort Knox were introduce as well as a flight crew of Air Force reservists who flew over prior to the game.  It was fitting celebration nearing Veterans’ Day this Friday, November 11 when the team travels for its next game.

Louisville takes charge

     Louisville drove from its 25 on the first series of the second half resulting with another FG by Turner, this time for 37 yards.  After a three and out, the Cardinals started the next drive taking a punt from their 29.  Suddenly, Louisville overcame the very tough JMU defense on one nap of the football.   RB Tiyvon Evans ( 10 runs for 126 yards, one TD) took the ball over left tackled, broke past the line and sped 71 yards down the left side for a TD burst to put the Cards up, 20-10.

Tempers flare

    Momentum started to build for Louisville.  However, a controversial call came about turning this basically well-played, hard-fought games into one heated contest.  Louisville forced the beleaguered James Madison offense to a punt following another three-and-out.  Fielding the punt on a fair catch, a Duke defender got blocked and pushed running into the returner.  He touched the ball and JMU recovered.  The officials initially threw the flag for interference, but upon their review, they reversed the call noting the defender had been blocked into the receive on the play. 

    The call fell on deaf ears among most the 42,157 in attendance clad in Cardinal garb.  They saw the tackle as a cheap, illegal shot and either didn’t want to know or hear what the referees (and collegefooballfan.com) saw.  The booing, jeering, and name calling continued as JMU tool possession back at the Louisville 30. The intensity mounted. It made the game fun to be honest. To the vindication of the Cardinal faithful, the subsequent 52-yard FG attempt by the purple and white visitors fell short. The Dukes got what they deserved from their perspective.

Heat turns up in Louisville

    Leading 20-10 going into the final period, the Cardinals started a drive from the 30 once again.  Cunningham, who carried 15 times for “0” yards (JMU totaled ten TFLs), reared back and fired a pass 44 yards to WR Tyler Hudson (10 catches, 126 yards, one TD) for a TD and an expanding 27-10 lead.  JMU gained two yards on its next possession and punted putting the Cardinals’ start from their 35.  Five plays moved Louisville to the James Madison 12. They next play was even more physical and controversial than the previous punt interference call.

    Cunningham ran five yards where he got shoved and eventually pushed into the stadium wall by LB Taurus Jones.  The two attracted a crowd from the JMU sideline and Louisville players who came to Cunningham’s aid.  Security officers and coaches along the sideline intertwined with players. Right below our seats in section 203, we could not see the entire melee.  The refs sorted the teams out and huddled in between both sidelines to figure things out.  JMU HC Curt Cignetti seemed adamant that the officials check the replay.  Initially, they called for a late hit out of bounds and ejected Jones from the game to the favor of the home patrons. 

Upon further review…

      After many minutes, the Referee stated the next controversial call. One local Card fan said they were intentionally looking for one.  Don’t know that it was intentional, but when they finally showed the replay on the video board, Cunningham was seen grabbing Jones’s face mask and pulling him along as the went farther out of bounds. Offsetting penalties. Do over!  Of course, the Louisville fans could not agree.

      The boos came down as did some thrown objects (no golf balls, however).  Jones, No. 44, came back on the field to play.  That didn’t sit well with Louisville fans. He was ejected, they thought.  JMU held Louisville to a fourth and four at the 11.  HC Scott Satterfield, possibly off the proverbial hot-seat now, decided to forgo a field goal.  From there, Cunningham fired a TD pass to Ahman Huggins-Bruce for the score to make it 34-10 with 6:28 left.

Next up!

   For the first time in the second half, the Dukes picked up two first downs before punting. The Cardinals proceeded to run out the clock.  Conferring with several Louisville fans nearby regarding the out-of-town scoreboard showing the Notre Dame win over Clemson, they chagrined.  Next week, the Cardinals and collegefootballfan.com will be visiting Clemson Memorial Stadium.  Collegefooballfan.com attends a game there for the first time.  Louisville fans fear going there against the now, once-beaten Tigers having lost to the Fighting Irish this week, 35-14.  Maybe Satterfield should just show his players the films from this week to get them heated up.  Maybe that will charge his Cardinals up to face the charged-up Tigers.

  JMU, loser of three straight after starting 5-0, heads to Old Dominion in Norfolk, VA next week.  The Monarchs are 3-6 and also riding a three-game losing streak.  Dukes beware though, they’ve beaten Power Five Virginia Tech (2-7 though), but even more so, 8-1 Coastal Carolina.

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Ed. by Steve Koreivo, Author of Tales from the Tailgate: From the Fan who’s seen ‘em all!  If you like this story, read all our tales when we saw all 120 FBS teams (at the time of publication) play for the first time.  We also encourage you to submit a review when you do. Please click on the title or copy of the cover on our right sidebar to go to our Amazon page to buy and review.  Thanks!