Steve’s Salvos – Syracuse Spring Preview, March 8, 2016

In 2016, we’ve penned in eight teams that will appear on our schedule more than one time. Here are some of the advantages and disadvantages we’re hearing about as these teams prepare for their upcoming spring practice sessions. It’ll give us an idea of what the teams will be focusing on before we get to see them in the fall.

The Orange will be seen at possibly three different venues by Collegefootballfan.com this year including the Carrier Dome.

The Orange will be seen at possibly three different venues by Collegefootballfan.com this year including the Carrier Dome once again.

Syracuse (2, or possibly 3 games) – The Syracuse Orange enter the 2016 season under the new leadership of HC Dino Babers. Babers has not only been a successful HC in his first four years in his first two programs, he’s also proven to be a quick turnaround artist which would be a boost for the Orange coming off a 4-8 season, 2-6 in the ACC. A graduate of Hawaii, like Navy HC Ken Niumatatolo, he has a four-year record of 37-16 including post-season play all four seasons.

At Eastern Illinois, he took the Panthers from last place to first place in the Ohio Valley Conference in his first season. An offensive-minded coach, his second year QB Jimmy Garoppollo won the 2013 Walter Payton Award as the top player in the FCS. He went on to be drafted by the New England Patriots to become Tom Brady’s back-up. After leaving EIU, Babers took over at Bowling Green State University in the Mid-American Conference. The Falcons won the Eastern division of the MAC both seasons under him. BGSU fell to Northern Illinois in the MAC championship game at the end of his first season, but rebounded to defeat South Alabama for the school’s first bowl win since 2004 in the Camellia Bowl. In 2015, the Falcons went on to a 10-4 record including a MAC championship win over NIU before a loss to Georgia Southern in the GoDaddy.com bowl. In his two seasons at Bowling Green, the Falcons posted three wins over Big Ten schools. His offense put up impressive numbers during the 2015 season to be a leader among FBS teams in several significant categories. They finished fourth in total offense with 546.8 yards per game, fifth in passing with 366.8 yards per game, and sixth in scoring averaging 42.2 points per game. His QB Matt Johnson was named the MAC offensive player of the year.

Syracuse should have a lot more to cheer for this year as HC Dino Babers offense should be lighting up the scoreboard more often this year

Syracuse should have a lot more to cheer for this year as HC Dino Babers’ offense should be lighting up the scoreboard more often.

How will all this translate to success for the Orange in year one? SU returns two young, experienced QBs from a year ago who will compete to start this season. Soph Eric Dungey threw for 1,298 yards, 11 TDs, and five INTs in eight games. Junior Zack Mahoney threw for 535 yards, seven TDs, and two INTs. Both had to step in for injured senior QB Terrell Hunt. Whoever starts at QB will have a lot of experienced targets to throw to at WR, TE, and RB as the six top receivers return including WR Steve Ishmael who had 570 receiving yards and five TDs. Top RB Jordan Fredericks returns with 607 rushing yards as does another top RB, George Morris. It seems like Babers has some young experience to build with in addition to what many determine was a very good recruiting class in 2016. He focused on recruiting areas where he needs more size – offensive line, defensive line and linebackers. Of his 20 recruits six come from the state of Florida including the 7th ranked HS QB from that state in Rex Culpepper.

We expect to see the ball in the air much more than on the ground this season under the new head coach.

We expect to see the ball in the air much more than on the ground this season under the new head coach.

This looks to be a very interesting season for Syracuse against a solid ACC schedule (Louisville, at Clemson, and Florida State) and some good non-conference completion including South Florida, UConn, and Notre Dame. Babers has had winning records all four years as head coach and has made some quick turnarounds. He’s had great success in making his quarterbacks successful, and he’s got some young players who have some good experience in their first two years at Syracuse. Under Baber’s tutelage, it seems like his young players have gotten a coach who can teach and get them to the next level quickly. This will be a fun story to track in 2016.

The season can't get here quick enough. maybe we'll go to the SU spring game this year.

The season can’t get here quick enough. We may have to go to the SU spring game to check out what’s going on.

Syracuse games we plan to see this season: Sept. 17 vs. South Florida; October 1, Notre Dame at MetLife Stadium; possibly at Clemson on November 5.

Spring game: April 2 at 1 pm in The Carrier Dome

Next up: Notre Dame

Baber is right! The Orange need to "beef up".

Babers is right! The Orange need to “beef up”.

Steveo’s Salvos – Army Spring preview March 5, 2016

For 2016, we’ve penned in eight teams on our schedule that we will see play more than one game. Here we review some of the advantages and disadvantages we’re hearing about as these teams prepare for their upcoming spring practice sessions. It’ll give us an idea of what these teams will be focusing on before we get to see them play games in the fall.

Though we plan to see the Cadets play three times in 2016 none of the games will regretfully be played up at historic West point.

Though we plan to see the Cadets play three times in 2016, none of the games will regretfully be played up at historic West Point.

 

Army (3 games) – HC Jeff Moncken will be starting his third year at West Point. Despite a 2-10 season a year ago, he seems to be pulling the Cadets up from the doldrums of losing football. Of the 10 losses a year ago, seven deficits were within a touchdown giving West Pointer signs of hope for the future. The former successful HC of Georgia Southern and an assistant at the Naval Academy, where he developed and learned the triple option from among college football’s best coaching staffs, seemed to find his QB of the future in Chris Carter who kept Army in the game we attended against Navy last season, falling 21-17. Army football is truly in a rebuilding mode. With 14 straight losses to the Naval Academy, there is a lot of impetus to get things turned around for the Black Knights of the Hudson.

We saw Army's worst loss of he season in 2015 in a 44-3 loss at home to Duke. Seven other losses were within seven points.

We saw Army’s worst loss of the season in 2015 in a 44-3 loss at home to Duke. Seven other losses were within seven points.

RBs Aaron Kempf, Joe Walker, and John Trainor each  return with a year of experience behind them to make Army’s triple option work even better. Senior WR Edgar Poe had six TD snags among his 16 receptions and will become more effective in the mix if Army QBs Carter and Ahmad Bradshaw can get the ball to him with some good passing schemes mixed into the play calling. Leading tacklers (92 each) on defense return as senior LBs Jeremy Timpf and Andrew King return as the keys to leading the Black Knight defense. They were effective in stopping the run throughout most of the season, but will have to develop some pressure up front to stop opponents’ passing attacks.  A key to turning the corner his season will be seeing how many sophomores will step up in key rolls from Moncken’s first effort at recruiting an entire class at West Point. Some got the call up last year like Carter.

Army's defense will have to get into the opponents' backfield' more often next season like it did on this play against Navy.

Army’s defense will have to get into the opponents’ backfield’ more often next season like it did on this play against Navy.

With experience and more confidence, the Cadets could get four or five wins this season. Their three weeks of preparation prior to December 10 may help them again against Navy this year who will be without the services of QB Keenan Reynolds. We also look forward to two of their September road games against two intriguing teams. The first will be their opener at Temple on Friday night September 2 at The Linc in Philly. The Owls will have to revamp their entire defense.  The other team we will see them play will be up at the University of Buffalo where second-year HC Lance Leipold will be mentoring the Bulls in his second season after coming from D3 Wisconsin-Whitewater where he led the Warhawks to six D-3 national championships. His first edition at UB finished 5-7 with little chance to bring much new talent to the roster.  These two games in September will indicate how much progress Moncken has made with the Cadet football program in his third year at a program that has had one winning season (2010) during the last twenty years.

Army games on our tentative schedule: Sept. 2 (Friday) at Temple; September 24 at Buffalo; December 10 vs. Navy in Baltimore.

Spring game: April 30

Next up: Syracuse

It was a beautiful day at West Point to watch a football game.

The Corps hopes to be smiling a lot more after games in 2016.

Steveo’s Salvos – Navy Spring preview March 2, 2016

In 2016, we’ve penned in eight teams that will appear on our schedule more than one time. Here are some of the advantages and disadvantages we’re hearing about as these teams prepare for their upcoming spring practice sessions. It’ll give us and idea of what the teams will be focusing on before we get to see them in the fall.

2015 was an exciting season for Navy with a record of 11-2 and a bowl win over Pitt.

2015 was an exciting season for Navy with a record of 11-2 and a bowl win over Pitt.

Navy (5 games possible) – The Mids lose the leadership of four-year starter Keenan Reynolds who will be an Intelligence Officer in the Navy after graduation. They’ll definitely miss his athleticism as well as his leadership skills, but we expect the Mids to build on what they’ve got returning. Of course, the key returnee is Head Coach Ken Niumatatolo who gladly decided to stay at USNA when Brigham Young came calling to find a new head coach. Coach Ken has found a home he likes and a program we think he’ll stick with for a long time. He knows the types of players he needs to make this system work, and he’s got the head and heart to make great teams out of the players he recruits to Annapolis.   Most likely the QB position will be taken over by Senior Tago Smith who’s had some inspiring moments when he’s taken over for Keenan Reynolds for a few snaps this past season. Niumatatolo knows the triple option keeps the Mids full speed ahead after a short trial with a pro-type offense before he found Reynolds was ready to take over to re-establish the triple option threat during his plebe year. The Mids also have their biggest FB ever in 6-1 255-lb. Shawn White. FB is key to the option and Myles Swain, brother of last season’s starter Chris Swain, can be ready to give him a necessary spell once in a while. SBs like Toneo Gulley enter their senior seasons. Navy has a boatload of them returning. On D, LBs Dan Gonzalez and Ted Colburn return with a lot of experience. Back-up NG Patrick Forrestal, 6-4 305 lbs., could be the key replacement for Bernard Sarra to clog the middle. A lot depth returns in the secondary. Niumatatolo has a great core of talented returning experience to build around to get ready for the second season in the AAC West. Their big home game this season will be against ranked Houston on Oct.8 with QB Greg Ward, Jr. returning at QB. The Mids will have a fired up home crowd after last year’s loss, the Mids’ second of two last season, in Houston, 52-31. Keenan Reynolds, shoes No. 19 jersey was just retired at the annual navy football banquet, moves on like all Midshipman to serve our county, but I believe what he accomplished with his classmates at the Naval Academy these past four year has put this program on a path of improvement for years to come.

Other Navy games we plan to attend: vs. Fordham ,Sept. 3; vs. Uconn, Sept. 10; vs. Tulsa, Nov. 12; and vs. Army, Dec. 10.

Spring game: April 9

Next up: Army

Navy QB Keenan Reynolds (19) scores one of his record setting TDs versus South Florida.

Navy QB Keenan Reynolds (19) scores one of his record setting TDs versus South Florida.

Big Tailgate 2016 Announced – Notre Dame vs. Syracuse

 

 

Our tailgate party got together for a group photo after our two full busloads arrived at West Point to celebrate Game # 500 last November.

Our tailgate party got together for a group photo after our two full busloads arrived at West Point to celebrate Game # 500 last November.

After such a great time at West Point last season for our 500th Game celebration, attendees are still talking about what great time they had.  One reveler claimed that once he got off the bus at West Point, he felt like he knew everybody even though he knew very few to begin with.  We all had a great time tailgating before the game, enjoying the pregame festivities at Michie Stadium, and enjoying more tailgate cuisine, beverages, and camaraderie after the game where Rutgers defeated Army, 31-21.  Like many others, he said he would definitely go with us again this season.  Well, 21 tickets have already been purchased of the 55 we have for this season’s Notre Dame vs. Syracuse clash to be held on Oct. 1 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ.  The cost is $100 per person that covers your $60 seat in the upper deck , parking (probably about $30 if you came in your own car), and some special tailgate fare to be planned.  Profits go to the Boonton Knights of Columbus as an annual fundraiser to raise money for local and national charities such as Wounded Warriors.

The Irish were on our schedule last season when they visited Temple at the Linc in Philly for a 24-20 win.

The Irish were on our schedule last season when they visited Temple at the Linc in Philly for a 24-20 win.

The game time has not been announced yet, but we’ll be flexible with the bus most likely leaving from the K of C Hall in Boonton, NJ.  So if you’re interested, not many tickets remain for what promises again to be a fun time.  We’re on a record-setting pace to sell most of these tickets so fast for any events the Knights have hosted before including an upcoming Yankees vs. Red Sox game this May ($60/each).  The event should be outstanding once again.   Notre Dame, a preseason Top Ten pick in most early polls,  will be a looking to rebuild its defense with several key players from a year ago moving on the pros.  Syracuse comes in with its first year Head Coach Dino Babers who likes to run a wide-open offense like the ones he created at Bowling Green the last two seasons.  A year ago, Barbers’ Falcons posted a 10-4 record, won the Mid-American Conference Championship , and averaged 44.2 points per game.  The Orange fans will be fired up to see more points up on the scoreboard, and their could give a revitalized Irish defense a run for its money.  And we’ll guarantee that the tailgating in The Meadowlands parking lot will be outstanding! E-mail me at sjk_cff@hotmail.com  if you’re interested in attending this year’s Big Tailgate.

We look forward to seeing the Syracuse cheerleading talent again this upcoming season!

We look forward to seeing the Syracuse cheerleading talent again this upcoming season!

Steveo’s Salvos – February 15, 2016

RU-tude is back! At least, here in Steveo’s Salvos. The reality is that it’s never gone away. We’ve lain off the Rutgers Scarlet Knights for the last few years because we had a temporary, though disheartening, tie to the team, but that tie is now undone. So the gloves are off once again.   We’ll take it from here.

The inept coaching, the over-hyped and out of control (even more so under Flood) players, the false confidence, the unwarranted bravado, the unsupported self-esteem, the absence of any sense of humility when it’s been called that leads up to the prevailing attitude that every opponent is expected to just roll over and die because for some unknown reason other than – “it’s Rutgers” . All of the RU-tude is still there, but Steveo’s Salvos is back on the case. We let it slide these past few years, begrudgingly.

Hey Big Ten! Don't you know you're supposed to roll over and give up yet? This is the Rutgers Scarlet Knight! Be afraid, very afraid - NOT!

Hey Big Ten! Don’t you know you’re supposed to roll over and give up yet? This is the Rutgers Scarlet Knight! Be afraid, very afraid – NOT!

So Rutgers had to make drastic changes in the wake of the depths that former HC Kyle Flood and clueless Athletic Director Julie Hermann sunk the program to. The solutions? Let the university President Robert Barchi, with no interest or concern for the school’s athletic programs, hire a new AD with no background running a college football program. And then let an AD with two years’ experience running an athletic department with no football program hire a new head coach with no previous head coaching experience at any level.   This all makes perfect sense, doesn’t it? OK, then let these two rookies lead this hurting football program into one of the biggest, most experienced, most historical conferences playing football since 1953 – the Big Ten. Oh sure, the RU program needed an overhaul, but are these the people who can get them to where they want to be eventually, if not in a hurry? New HC Chris Ash comes in with a fine pedigree spending the last two years as defensive coordinator at Ohio State under HC Urban Meyer whose teams went 26-2 over those two seasons including a national championship. His former, most recent program definitely has the credentials, but Ash still hasn’t had the reins in his hands to run any football program. This one is especially hungry with a desperate fan base tired of losing. It also has the world’s biggest, most critical, metropolitan media anticipating things to turn around in a “New York minute.” Ash is from Ottumwa, Iowa for crying out loud. This isn’t even Columbus, Ohio. He graduated from Drake University in 1996, so we know his playing experience in college was top notch having been coached there by former Juniata (The Alma Mater) HC Rob Ash (no relation). So let’s let new AD Patrick Hobbs who was the AD at Seton Hall University from 2009-2011 show him the ropes and have his back of what it’s going to take to get a football program turned around from the administrative point of view. What the heck. Hobb’s got the political backing of former Republican Presidential nominee Chris Christie. Now there’s a real knowledgeable guy who knows what it takes to run a football program. People wouldn’t support Christie because of his hug of Democratic President Barack Obama to gain financial support in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. That bolstered neither his reputation nor the financial support of his constituents’ needs for necessary government funding to rebuild homes and businesses. I thought Christie’s little exhibition on national television hugging Dallas Cowboy owner Jerry Jones while jiggling up and down in the owner’s box was even more reprehensible than the Obama hug. It wasn’t about the dreaded Cowboys as far as I was concerned, but what a suck-up! That must have gotten him some financial support, but not enough evidently. All that attested for Christie’s skills at fundraising, knowledge of football, and his inability to look and act like a leader. Now he’s recommending a political ally to run the Rutgers’ athletic department. Great!

RU fans would never admit it, but the reason they hate Penn State is because they wish their football team was as heralded as the Nittany Lions are.

RU fans would never admit it, but the reason they hate Penn State is because they wish their football team was as heralded as the Nittany Lions are.

RU Head Coach Chris Ash is probably a good guy and a good football coach, but at RU, he’d better have his guard up. He’s got a few packs of wolves to deal with. He’s got no Jersey connections coming in. Building a rapport with the high school coaches in this state will take some time. Do you think people in Missouri like to live by their state motto, “Show me”?   In Jersey, we don’t say it, we think it. Then you’ve got sharks like Jim Harbaugh, Urban Meyer, and supposedly Penn State recruiting extraordinaire James Franklin, at least that’s his rep, among the top recruiters cruising New Jersey. You’ve also got a dangerous guy who’s actually building something good down at Temple with a strong Jersey connection in HC Matt Rhule, a former PSU linebacker who’s been able to pluck the best kids from the programs the other out-of-staters aren’t paying attention to. We like the Jersey talent we’ve seen him garner for the Owls (he can coach, too). The first few years of recruiting are going to yield slim pickings for Chris Ash. His coaching capabilities are going to have to be his strength to get the most out of the players on his roster the next few years. Having witnessed the RU-tude over 30 years, the players will have no problem exuding confidence, but will they have the talent? Can his new, basically young coaching staff make up for the talent gaps that they’re going to have?

It’s funny, new RB coach Zak Kuhr, a 2013 gradaute of Florida with a few years of coaching experience as an assistant,  quickly made the analogy after his hire that this is the Garden State and that the RU staff will need to build a fence around it to keep the circling predators out.  Former AD Robert Mulcahy framed the same message back in 2001. It had a short-term effect back then, will it work now? Now I don’t put a lot of energy into covering the slimy and corrupt world of college football recruiting and the conjectures the ”experts” make regarding what 18-year olds will make sudden impacts and who won’t, but coaches do need to get the best players possible to build the core for their teams and it has to make sense for State U. (which Rutgers is to New Jersey) to make its home turf its most fertile recruiting ground. Despite what the “experts” say, there is talent in New Jersey, but the depth that was once prevalent here is not what it used to be. Demographics have cut down a lot on the multitude of high school talent that was here before the population aged and big companies with good jobs left less opportunity to raise a family in a state with high taxes and a high cost of living. Consolidation of the best kids all going the top 15 or so parochial schools around the state has lowered the competitive levels that used to thrive here. High schools in NJ today generally have half the populations they had here in the ’80s, early 90’s, and before that. New Jersey was always a fertile recruiting ground for major schools around the country because Rutgers was aligned with playing against the “Ivy League” schools. The state used to ”export” a lot more football talent than it does now. Schools from outside the state come in and recruit the easily found “cream” horded by those awarding scholarships to the local home-grown talent identified at early ages. There’s not as much left here after the “cream” has been skimmed off the top. Former Rutgers HC Greg Schiano built a nice recruiting base in Florida as do most schools today. Ash will probably have to do the same. However, it’s hard to envision that his staff of basically former Ohio State and Iowa State (Iowa State!?) assistants are going to be able to implore the vison of playing football for the University of the Garden State.

I feel bad for Ash who’s looking to build on a pretty good career path he’s developed so far. Is this the right step up to the top for him? Not only is 1) the support above him questionable to help him make improvements to this decimated football program, 2) his relationship with the local high school coaches a work in progress, and 3) the recruiting ground between the Delaware and Hudson Rivers infested with sharks, but there’s also the media, led by The Newark Star Ledger who has three beat writers who analyze every move made every day who will be hospitable to say the least until there’s a little blood, and then let the feeding frenzy begin! Oh, they are patient right now before spring practice starts. They see all the hard work being done and put the positive spin appreciating everything. Then bang –first loss (opener at Washington), maybe the second (figuring they can’t lose to Howard, it’ll be New Mexico), everything comes crumbling down. The second-guessing begins and it gets worse from there. It’s not like when Schiano (ironically Ohio State’s new defensive coordinator) coached at the Birthplace of College Football. AD Mulcahy had his back and RU wasn’t playing in the Big Ten, it was in the basketball-first Big East. RU kept him after four years with a 17-24 record including losses to FCS schools New Hampshire and Villanova before going into a run of second their bowl games that didn’t exist when he originally started coaching. With the financial incentives in place from Big Ten membership to get RU football and athletics in general out of the red and into the black, how much time will Rutgers give Ash to rebuild? A 17-24 record after four years likely doesn’t get any bowl bids. With escalating ticket prices and reduced parking convenience (another story), these are not going to enhance the locals’ interests when they have football alternatives like the Jets, Giants, and Eagles around these parts. I can see the Star Ledger’s headline after he’s gone: “Arising from the Ash”. Despite the warm welcome extended by the pundits, they will lead the charge come the first loss after the Howard game on September 10. They will start to second-guess everything and focus on reasons why the team has shown no or little improvement under a coach with no previous head coaching experience and under an AD with no football connections. Opposing teams will do everything they can muster on the field to eliminate Rutgers as an option to the next recruiting class by showing that the grass is greener outside the Garden State. This will continue to be ugly. It’s been this way for 35 years since RU stopped playing Princeton and Columbia to go “big time”. Well now they may have bitten off more than they can chew playing in the Big Ten without some experienced leadership to get them closer to the top. The school tuition keeps going up to support athletics for all the other families who pay as much for in-state tuition now as they can for out of state at many other institutions. It’s a mess in New Brunswick.

I tried to convince my cousin and Rutgers Newark alum Frank Scarpa to forget about Rutgers season tickets and go halves with me on a five-game Navy Season package that guarantees us Army-Navy game tickets. I told him he’ll be able to get all the Rutgers tickets he’ll need for every game he’ll want to go to by buying on-line after debacles against Washington and Iowa. “If Rutgers can get the best players in New Jersey to stay…” It’s in my book, page 14. I’ve heard that since I attended the Princeton-Rutgers game in 1980. Even if they did keep the best at home, there are a lot of other obstacles preventing this program to get to the level its fans and alum crave. I mean, this is where it all started, so they deserve some satisfaction after 147 years. But just watch that same old RU-tude continue to loom over the Birthplace of College Football as they struggle to attain the unreachable goal they look to achieve under their new , inexperienced leadership.

I told Frank to enjoy grilling his pizzas and seeing the Knights win against Howard during the 2016 season!

I told Frank to enjoy grilling his pizzas and seeing the Knights win against Howard during the 2016 season! I will miss his great pizza.

 

2016 CFF.com schedule taking shape already

Been busy looking at schedules, making plans, contacting friends, and saving money for next fall.  We’re pretty excited about what we’re putting together here.  To whet your appetite for 2016, here’s our tentative, but very doable, schedule for 2016. We still want to add another Penn State game and possibly our first game at Clemson. We’ll also be filling in some Friday night games with some local D-3 play.   More insights to follow in our next edition of Steveo’s Salvos.

1-Sep South Carolina at Vandy*
3-Sep Fordham at Navy/Army at Temple
10-Sep UConn at Navy
17-Sep South Florida at Syracuse
24-Sep Army at Buffalo
1-Oct Syracuse vs Notre Dame (Met Life Stadium)
8-Oct Houston at Navy
15-Oct Stanford at Notre Dame
22-Oct Ohio St at Penn State
29-Oct San Diego* at Marist*
5-Nov TBD
12-Nov Tulsa at Navy
19-Nov Stanford at Cal*
26-Nov TBD
3-Dec Championship or playoff
10-Dec Army-Navy
17-Dec Playoff or Bowl
24-Dec Christmas Eve 
TBD Military Bowl
TBD Music City Bowl
TBD Belk Bowl
31-Dec Peach Bowl
9-Jan Tampa CFP Championship?

Steveo’s Salvos – January 31, 2016

This is my least favorite time of the year regarding college football, and it’s not because there are no games being played right now – well, not on the playing fields any way. I understand that the game can’t be played without players, and the reality is that the game should be played for deserving, qualified, talented, young men who want to continue playing football beyond their high school years. However, the current recruiting process that comes to a climax this week is where all the bad stuff with college football starts, and it is a broken process which also has no end in sight. Ok, so listen to me gripe here first, but I do offer a unique solution in the end

Grown-ups put 18 year-olds on pedestals, coddling them, feeding on their mostly already inflated, misguided egos, and enticing them with overly-creative and underhanded ways to convince young, gullible teenagers to come to their schools just to play football. They sell the attributes of their respective universities often nowadays focusing on facilities the players will be able to “lounge” in. Should this be a priority? This should be at minimum a minor benefit as recruiters should primarily emphasize the value of the degrees these student-athletes should want to go to college for. Of course, the people these adults are selling their pitches to are high school kids who don’t understand this sale is for many others not entirely looking out for their best interests despite what is said or who says it. Most of it is for the benefit of the job and career security of adults coaching a game these youngsters will play for a few more years, for some into their mid-20s at best.

Also what we hear and read about is that a major part of the sell is demeans other schools whether facts be somewhat twisted or brazenly false. I’ve been a purchasing professional for 35 years in an industry that becomes more condense through mergers and acquisitions, and it’s rare that the sales emphasis is on the negatives of the competition. Hell, without competition, there’s no reason for any of us involved to have a career buying or selling. Of course, an 18-year old kid and even possibly his parents aren’t going to take this into consideration, but coaches should. They put their spin on everything with no other intent other than to steer some growing boy with significant athletic talent in their direction. There are no scruples in this game. Once they got him, they can lie to him later. And there’s not just the talk. There’s the offers beyond the scholarship money, the chance to play, and the education that’s supposed to give an 18-year old a great start in life. He could be part of the small percentage every year that gets drafted into the pros for a short period of time, or more likely be part of that vast majority who have to figure out what they will need to learn for a lifetime to put food on the table the rest of their lives while enhancing their brains and other talents for the good of others. I just watched the movie “Blind Side” on television the other night – the “true” story of how current Carolina Panther offensive lineman Michael Oher, about to play in the Super Bowl, successfully became a top draft choice in the NFL.

It’s really two stories. One is the story of how his adoptive family gives him a chance for a better life than what he initially had. He gets a better education and finds his latent talent to earn him a college football scholarship. The good aspects of the story is the love and attention from his adopted family to focus on school work and not just football to get him there though he struggled with the latter. The bad part is seeing the toothy grins from coaches like Nick Saban (then at LSU), Lou Holtz (then at South Carolina) , Houston Nutt (then at Arkansas), Tommy Tuberville (then at Auburn) Phil Fulmer (Tennessee), and Ed Orgeron of Ole Miss who eventually attained Oher’s services in 2005, meeting and observing Michael Oher. Saban promises the little brother “S.J.” to be able run out on the field in front of the LSU team in Death Valley before a game( the film ends with a frozen shot of the little guy leaping as he leads his stepbrother’s Rebel team on to the field at Ole Miss). Cute. In the past though, I’ve heard of siblings or even girlfriends being offered scholarships to schools to gain leverage to get a player to matriculate with them. Really? Instead of some truly deserving student? In the film, Oher’s stepmom, Leigh Anne, mentions that a certain Head Coach not named is out of consideration because her son was entertained at “a titty bar” during a recruiting trip. We’ve heard of things going way beyond that in the past like when Lane Kiffin was recruiting during his only season at Tennessee who went on self-imposed probation for his use of female students to recruit before he ran off to USC. Now Ole Miss, prior to Hugh Freeze becoming HC, is back under investigation for violations of NCAA recruiting policies. Funny, that’s when Orgeron was recruiting Oher. No doubt this player’s incentive was genuine to play at Oxford because as in the movie, the actor states, “That’s where my family went.” Probably the case for him, but what else was going on with others as it only shows him being questioned by an NCAA investigator. What about other recruits? Also, think about who Michael Oher will be blocking for next weekend. There were always rumors about Cam Newton’s Dad being overly involved in a proactive search during his son’s recruiting process before he played at Auburn for his only season in which he won the Heisman Trophy.

Today, there’s an article on ESPN.com about how Michigan’s assistant coach Chris Partridge defends the school’s actions in offering high school players scholarships and then pulling them when they get “better” players ready to commit after the school ‘s scholarship limit is reached. The former Paramus Catholic (NJ) High School HC who’s recruited five top notch recruits out of Jersey to Ann Arbor who is now the Linebacker Coach for Jim Harbaugh’s staff, explained kids decommit from their verbal commitments before the national signing day. So why shouldn’t the schools have that same option? There’s a reason there’s a weak point here. This process as I stated earlier should be for the benefit of the players. Should a school turn a kid away who committed to them early because the school has maxed out on their “quota”, and all of the sudden found that a more desirable recruit fell in their lap the last minute because they were eventually convinced much later in the process? This is wrong. There has to be some kind of rule in placed for this.

It’s a broken, corrupt system, and it stinks. In our free market system with legal limitations in some aspects or absence thereof in others since eventual letters of intent are how these commitments eventually become final, I don’t know if there is anything that can be done to restructure the entire process. The corruption is policed by those involved in the system. Violators just move on to the next school or into the safe haven of pro football depending on the extent of the violations. The self-policing “institutions of higher-learning” should have the resources to figure this out if they want to.

Even after the committal is made by both sides to where a player will matriculate, mistakes are admitted. Scholarship players get booted conveniently for one reason or another if they’re not contributing right away. Kids transfer because the competition for playing time finds them on the sidelines instead. Coaches will continue to recruit the next class of players to replace players on hand whether seniors or not, and they make the same promises to the next class as they did to the ones who they just landed. In addition, some programs offer classes like the one exposed at North Carolina to make sure that those underachieving academically can still get an “A” easily in order to assure playing three years of football once the staff identifies its “keepers”.

I’m still wondering why no school just doesn’t easily terminate these end-around plays with a solution I think needs to be tested. Just make revenue generating sports like football and basketball legitimate majors for the kids who want to apply to their school for these majors. Hell, the careers are so specialized in an industry so lucrative, and the players spend the majority of their time at school dedicated to just playing a sport, why not? It might cure some of the shenanigans that go on once the player who wants to major selects the school he wants to play for. Let the players apply and then let the schools select the 25 most qualified kids who want to come to play at their school and limit the number of offers to those. Let the players sweat it out to be accepted like every other student applying for acceptance at a school with their desired major. If they don’t get in, they wait to hear from the others they have interest in.

Until something is done to make this system more for the benefit of the kids and not the adults, however, this is the worst time of the year to me for college football. May all the players end up where they truly want to be, be part of the team for four years (ok, rules say you can leave after three), get an education that will prepare them for a lifetime, and make the most of it for the rest of their lives. I can only dream though, and I will continue to do so.

Steveo’s Salvos – January 20

Savoring the past season and already thinking about the next.  I see Coastal Carolina will be joining the SunBelt in 2017 to make it 130 FBS teams with Alabama-Birmingham rejoining ConferenceUSA that season. It will be a nice time of the year to take a discount flight direct to Myrtle Beach! Maybe St. Laurie will even go…We just can’t say enough about how happy we are for the Navy football program this year.  To top it all off, HC Ken Niumatalolo decided to stay after being wooed by Brigham Young University. Statistically, USNA finished on top in seven  categories in 2015 after finishing ranked at No. 18. As reported on NavySports.com, the Mids finished number one in the country in fourth down conversions (.923), fewest penalties per game (3.08), fewest penalty yards per game (26.08), fumbles recovered (15), fewest interceptions thrown (two), red zone offense (.948) and total turnovers lost (8).  Also team items of note include 45 percent of Navy’s offensive drives gained 50 or more yards, which was the highest percentage in the FBS.  Navy was one of only four schools in the country that scored points on 50 percent or more of their offensive possessions (joining Stanford, Western Kentucky and North Carolina). Navy finished second behind Western Kentucky in points per possession.  Very impressive.  Senior quarterback Keenan Reynolds finished second in the nation in rushing touchdowns (24) and fifth in the nation in scoring (11.1 points per game).  And he wasn’t invited to the Heisman Award ceremony.  It just seems very un-American to us.  We’re thinking about getting tickets for the full Navy home schedule next year, but we’re waiting on their final schedule to come out so we can see what conflicts there may be. Our wish list keeps growing..

Navy QB Keenan Reynolds (19) scores one of his record setting TDs versus South Florida.

Navy QB Keenan Reynolds (19) scores one of his record setting TDs versus South Florida.

 

Here’s some of the games on our wish list for next season: Virginia Tech vs. Tennessee at Bristol Speedway – we think it’s only right that collegefootballfan.com should be part of the attempt at the record-setting, all-time attendance record at a college football game even if we do risk going blind with all that Tennessee Orange overwhelming our eyeballs…Syracuse vs. Notre Dame at MetLife Stadium in The Meadowlands is already a bus trip planned with our local Boonton Knights of Columbus on October 1 for the annual Big Tailgate. We already got our tickets.  Let me know if you’re interested…

I'm sorry, but too much Tennessee orange just hurts my eyes.

I’m sorry, but too much Tennessee orange just hurts my eyes.

We want to try to get Stanford at ND tickets so we can see Stanford’s Heisman candidate Christian McCaffrey go up against the Irish.  We haven’t been to South Bend since 2003. It’s time to go back…Ohio State goes back to Penn State on October 22. Let’s see what HC James Franklin will be able to do with a QB (Trace McSorley)  that is better suited for his system, whatever that is.  He will also have new offensive line coach, Matt Limegrover.  Herb Hand who left sure wasn’t brining any improvement to the Lions’ offensive line that’s needed an overhaul and a kick in the ass for a couple of years now…We are fitting FCS Marist on the schedule for the first time and D-3 Kean University once again.  Why?  LB Jimmy Braun of the Red Foxes and NG Matt Hill of the Cougars enter their senior seasons at the collegiate level.  Both played for our local Lenape Valley (NJ) Regional HS. I had the pleasure of coaching 6-2, 310-lb Matt in Little League Baseball and in Rec basketball back in his grade school days…USC at UCLA in the Rose Bowl is on the docket for next November 19.  It’s one of those must-see rivalries on the bucket list, and I should have enough FF miles stored up to get out there for nothing, so the time is right!…Two other teams we want to see next season are Clemson and Buffalo. Clemson to see another Heisman candidate, QB DeShaun Watson, play again after we saw him play against Oklahoma in their 37-17 Orange bowl win.  We’d like to get to experience a Tiger home game, but we’ll see them on the road if that doesn’t work out. Watson is worth the price of admission…    Buffalo because we are excited to see what second-year HC Lance Leipold will do with that program with some more of his recruits on his Bulls’ team.  We think the six-time champion D-3 HC at Wisconsin-Whitewater is going to do great things for SUNY Buffalo and some other program after turning things around there.

We plan to see the  USC Trojans play again next year.

We plan to see the USC Trojans play again next year.

Houston is already touted on some early pre-season polls in the Top Ten.  We will definitely get to Annapolis to see them face the Mids in Navy-Marine Corps for the biggest Navy home game of next year.  Of course, Navy season tickets or not, we will get to Army-Navy which is back in Baltimore this year…For bowls, we’re thinking Military, Belk, Music City, and Peach (CFP) if we can’t get to the championship in Florida (possible work conflict)… I am ready to start jumping all over the RU-tude rising at Rutgers again, but I’m going to hold off.  Reason: I went to see RU basketball play at the RAC for the first time in a few years this past Monday (Go Seton Hall!) with some friends who are grad school alum who try to show their spirit there once in a while.  You might have heard this, and it wasn’t pretty if you’re a Rutgers fan: final score – Purdue 107 RU 57. I criticize Rutgers football all the time, but basketball? It’s really embarrassing. No NCAA bid since 1991.  With all the talent that plays HS B-ball here, the state university can’t get just five top guys to go to that school no less 22 to play football.  Purdue had more rebounds (63)  than RU had points.  Purdue could have won the game if they hadn’t scored in the second half as they tallied 61 by halftime. They cleared their bench of third-string players in the first half.  We couldn’t believe the anemic defense played by these Knights.  Purdue always seemed to have four guys under the basket compared to none for Rutgers. We stayed until the end because we were so amazed how bad this was.  I also wanted to see PU get to the 100 point mark because they were making it look too easy.  The visitors did whatever they wanted to.  The Boilermakers came to the RAC ranked No. 22.  Thursday, No. 9 Iowa visits.  I’ll wait to unload on the football RU-tude a little longer…Stay tuned.

We'll see Notre Dame play another game on the East Coast next season when the play ACC foe Syracuse.

We’ll see Notre Dame play another game on the East Coast next season when they play ACC foe Syracuse.

 

Steveo’s Salvos – January 13, 2016

We don’t have to tell anybody else who watched Monday night, but GREAT GAME!  The line play was a great fight up front between both teams.  Heisman winner Derrick Henry still got his yards and got the big yardage on that first TD run.  But Clemson’s D-line still showed up to play hammering him most times he got the ball. And he took it.  Both teams played tough.  Clemson DE Kevin Dodd showed up to play!  Now he’s heading to the NFL. The Tide’s D-line was impenetrable in the middle  as expected holding Wayne Gallman to 45 yards.  Bama QB Jake Coker had his best day ever, and his TE O.J. Howard scored two long TDs after not scoring any all season long.  What can you say about Clemson’s QB Deshaun Watson?  He didn’t let that Bama Front Four stop him. He ran for 73 yards, but it seemed like most times when he needed the yards he got them, and he was firing that ball.  He never shows signs of being flustered.  Walk-on WR Hunter Renfrow made the early catches in the end zone  to start the scoring for the Tigers ( I don’t know, but I think I had a conversation with him at the Clemson-SC game in 2013 before the game. I was talking to this little guy who swore he was going to play for one of those team in couple of years. I looked at his picture on my Orange Bowl program and it could have been. If it was, I told him to think about D-3, but what do I know?). And give the entire Clemson offense kudos for not quitting!  Despite trailing by 12, they scored a touchdown with 12 seconds left after driving 68 yards in six plays and were ready to give it a great shot if they got the ball back with seconds left.  The onside kick was  a great devastating call on Saban’s part ( I called it right before it happened. I wanted to call Dabo on the phone!), and Bama executed it perfectly. I only have to say that I saw it done better once before.  In my first game toward this eventual goal “to see ’em all” back in 1979, the kicker from Rhode Island put a perfect spiral on the ball as the end caught it right over his left shoulder. Next play, the Rams scored from 41 yards out. Of course, Delaware dominated them, 42-14, on their way to the D2 Championship, but I digress. Fantastic!  The best two teams played their hearts out and played a tremendous game that will be remembered by college football fans for a long time. The only negatives I witnessed  were on O.J.  Howard’s two 50+ yard TDs. Granted, shutdown CB Mackensie Alexander had re-pulled his hammy and was out, and I don’t know if the coverage would have been different, but  I don’t understand why any safety would stand flat-footed (twice)  to watch a receiver speed past him down field. I remember my late high school football coach Joe Molitoris  always preaching to our safeties, “Play deeper than the deepest man!”  Maybe it sounds too simple against today’s complex passing strategies, but it still makes sense to me when you’re the safety. Nobody else is behind you is going to pick him because there’s no one else there! He’s going to get open and quickly once he’s past you.  Pass coverage nowadays drives me nuts.  Physical mistakes are bound to happen, but the mental ones are inexcusable with the amount of time these guys supposedly spend watching film. Common sense (and Joe Mol’s voice) tells me to play deeper than the deepest man if I’m back at safety.

I saw Clemson beat Oklahoma and I was impressed, but now I want to see if I can get down to Clemson for a first time trip to their “Death Valley” next season and see Watson and the Tigers play again.  Both teams are already favored to return to the CFP next year, but so was Ohio State the unanimous pick for this year. That didn’t happen, of course.   Though both teams will be re-focused, you just never know what may happen between injuries and stunning upsets. Otherwise, why play all these games?  Too bad the season seems to end so soon as usual, but what a great way to end a great season!  Wish I could have gone. Maybe next year.  This was a great season for all the fans, and it was special one for me having seen many great, memorable games and celebrating my 500th back on November 21st with so many good friends made over the years.   Look for more post-season notes and plans for next year here regularly. They’re already in the works. Add collegefootballfan.com to your Favorite’s list.   Can’t wait for next season already. How about you?

Steveo’s Salvos – January 10, 2016, FBS Championship insight

Clemson vs. Alabama: This will be a battle up front between big, gifted, experienced lines. We saw Clemson defeat Oklahoma, 37-17, in the CapitalOne Orange Bowl. QB DeShaun Watson and RB Wayne Gallman took care of the ground game against the Sooners, and the defense kept OU’s high-scoring, balanced offense away from the end zone and allowed only 121 yards in the second half. Good play calling got receivers open in critical situations, and Watson got the ball to his targets who got loose one on one. Afterwards on TV, we saw Alabama ‘s defense manhandle Michigan State in the second half, but we were suspect of a Spartan team we saw get by 4-8 Rutgers with a decimated secondary earlier in the season, 31-24. We still question the validity of their record with a huge break against Michigan in their last minute win, and their win over Ohio State came into question based on the suspect Buckeye game plan. Right places at the right times.  Alabama shut down Sparty no doubt, but like previous high draft picks selected by Mel Kiper, Jr., we question Conner Cook’s premium draft value as well. He’s good amongst a lacking senior class of QBs at the FBS level. Bama is big up front defensively. So is Clemson, and when Shaque Lawson left with a leg injury, the front four for the Tigers were just as strong. Lawson will play, but if he’s limited, there shouldn’t be a significant drop-off as witnessed at the Orange Bowl last week. They can give Derrick Henry some fits running into the line, and if they can shut down that running game, which I think that they can neutralize the game in the trenches, it will put the pressure on Bama QB Jake Coker to pass against a gifted secondary led by Mackensie Alexander. This game will feature a slugfest in the trenches, but we’ll look for Watson’s capability to get free for some big plays once in a while to get Clemson some key gains.   This will give the Tigers an edge over the more one-dimensional Coker as the Tiger D will not get pushed around by Bama’s O-line. We look for this game to be close going into the final period with a couple of big plays by Clemson in the fourth to finally pull away and give the Tigers their first championship since 1981. No doubt, this should be a great game between two teams pretty evenly matched…

The Tigers walked the walk before defeating Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Will they be able to do the same against Alabama?

The Tigers walked the walk before defeating Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Will they be able to do the same against Alabama on Monday?

Finally, a message came from someone this past week about the values of football beyond the focus of everyone affiliated with the sport on the almighty dollar. And it came from someone whose career has been entrenched in the NFL for many years, though we saw Syracuse play when he was an assistant their early in his coaching career. His message about football is as profound today as when it was when we grew up loving this sport for the great game that it is. “In professional football, the goal is to win. We all know that. My contention is there’s a higher ground. There’s a greater purpose. That purpose is team. It is the team concept. Winning, losing, playing hard, playing well, doing it for each other, winning the right way is a very important thing to me and all our coaches…We try to develop the character of each man who walked through these doors. Character is what endures.” These are the words of former NY Giant Head Coach Tom Coughlin as he stepped down last Monday. Aside from the recent actions of his wide receiver Odell Beckham, Jr (must’ve been a brain fart on Coughlin’s part at the age of 69), we believe he meant what he said. It’s a shame though that the main message we hear about today is about the money from the owners of NFL teams like Jerry Jones, about individual stats now touted in fantasy football leagues, to the excessive asset building of colleges to attract the top recruits (read about Clemson’s new facilities and even Rutgers’ plans), to the “elite” high school players propped up on pedestals to be catapulted into the world of big bucks and the promise of future financial rewards. It’s even starting to happen at the grade school level! The game goes beyond that for the vast majority of young , male athletes who join football teams and step on to a gridiron to primarily beat the other guys across the field. Well said Coach Coughlin. We’d like to see more of the focus on the sport turn that way, but it’s a lesson that falls on many deaf ears when side-swiped by the materialistic rewards that offer false promise and reward to a very small percentage of those who make it to the top of the football world for personal gains. The game of football always meant more than that to most that play…On our way back home after a pretty good bowl tour in 2015 (three out of four good games isn’t bad at all), we listened to the radio to hear Georgia beat Penn State in the Taxslayer Bowl, 24-17. What does it say when a team with a Head Coach with five years’ experience hired for his supposed superior head coaching capabilities gets beaten by a team being run by some remaining lame duck coordinators because the former HC was terminated and moved on?  James Franklin at Penn State espouses a great reputation for recruiting supposedly, but more Penn State fans are starting to question how well he can take that talent and form it into a team that can perform as one on the field. It didn’t sound like Franklin had a good game plan going into this game with four weeks to prep. And even when QB Christian Hackenberg left the game with a shoulder injury, we had always heard it would be different story when he got his wish to use his recruit Trace McSorley. They fashioned a comeback late thanks to a very good defense, but fell short. Their slow start was indicative that not a lot was done on offense to improve upon going into the TaxSlayer.  You can talk about recruiting capabilities all you want, but if you can’t come up with an effective game plan around the guys you have once you’ve got them, what difference does it make to recruit the best players? The games aren’t won because you won somebody’s poll saying you recruited a better class of players than the other guys did. That doesn’t mean you can rest on your perceived recruiting laurels. You’re supposed to build that talent into a team, train it, inspire it, and put it on the field with a better game plan than the other team. Recruiting is about one-third of what college coaching is about no matter how much time is dedicated to that aspect. With a full complement of scholarships available to him next year, the expectations for the Nittany Lions’ success are going to be much higher for Coach Franklin. And does he have to make it so evident that he doesn’t want to bolster the school’s non-conference schedule? Georgia happened to be a possibility and the agreement fell through. Let’s hope James Franklin will live up to his goal to get his players and to challenge for the Big Ten and beyond. With the recent loss of Defensive Coordinator Bob Shoop to Tennessee, the anticipated goals could be even tougher. We hope the future game plans will align with the talent they’ll be recruiting so the program will move back into contention for Big Ten titles, but with what we’ve seen on the field of play thus far, we’re not impressed. That doesn’t rest totally on the players…

Penn State will be looking to improve next season despite the departure of QB Christian Hackenberg (14) who will be leaving after having started for the Lions the past three seasons.

Penn State will be looking to improve on their 7-6 record next season despite the departure of QB Christian Hackenberg (14) who will be leaving after having started for the Lions the past three seasons.

This is a CFF.com record for sure. After our bowl trip to attend the Military, Russell Athletic, Orange, and Outback Bowls where we saw games played among seven Top 25 teams, we’ve seen 14 Top 25 schools this year according to pre-bowl rankings including No. 1 Clemson heading into Monday night’s championship. As of today, along with the Tigers, we saw 3 Michigan State, 4 Oklahoma, 7 Ohio State, 8 Notre Dame, 9 Florida State, 10 North Carolina, 13 Northwestern, 14 Michigan, 17 Baylor, 21 Navy, 23 Tennessee, 24 Temple, and 25 USC. We expect to see a lot of these schools drop down a notch or more as only Ohio State, Michigan, Baylor, Navy, and Tennessee among the winners. Of course, Clemson will be No. 2 at worst after Monday night. USC and Temple will be gone. Toledo who defeated Temple in the Boca Raton Bowl will step up to take their spot in the Top 25. We’re interested to see if Navy will move up more than two spots with their 44-28 win over Pitt and Houston’s win over Florida State. The rest of the American Athletic, however, lost all six of their bowl games. Will 17 Baylor who beat 10 UNC, 49-38, at the RAB move past the Heels from that far down? They should. Tennessee will move up a few notches and Northwestern will probably show at No. 25 if they’re lucky, but maybe they will be out altogether after getting smoked by Tennessee, 45-6 at the Outback. With Iowa’s far fall from grace after being decimated by Stanford, 45-16, in their Rose Bowl loss, and seven other SEC schools who won bowls primed to step in, the Wildcats do not look as good as their 10-3 record now looks. Of course, they did beat Stanford in their season opener.   Over all, bowl teams that we saw play during the regular season went 6-9 during bowl season…Other bowl notes: We see that WR Seth Ryan of Summit (NJ) HS is on the Clemson roster. He’s Buffalo Bill HC Rex Ryan’s son. Must have been the player to be named later in the Sammy Watkins deal…Oklahoma had one Garden Stater on the roster as well, Soph DE Isaac Ijalana of Mt. Holly, NJ. We saw his brother Ben play OT for Villanova a few years ago before being drafted by the Baltimore Colts. He’s now with the New York Jets. Have a relative in the NFL? Ask Seth and Isaac, “You can go anywhere”…

For the second year in a row our season ended with Tennessee dominating a Big Ten team in a one-sided bowl game.

For the second year in a row our season ended with Tennessee dominating a Big Ten team in a one-sided bowl game. Iowa last season and Northwestern this season.

Is Appalachian State getting ready for some significant moves in the FBS? They defeated Ohio U. 31-29, in the Raycom Camellia Bowl to finish 11-2. We saw them defeat Georgia State last season for their second straight win among six victories in their final six games. A perennial 1AA title challenger under HC Jerry Moore which included the famous upset over Michigan at Ann Arbor. Under third-year HC Scott Satterfield, they only lost to No. 1 Clemson and Sun Belt Conference champ Arkansas State this season…Akron won their first bowl game in the FBS ever defeating Utah State, 23-21. Their futility in post-season play preceded them. In 1985, we saw them lose in the opening round of the 1AA playoff on a Thanksgiving weekend to Rhode Island, 38-28. It was right before they joined the FBS as a member of the Mid-American conference. They released their HC and replaced him with Jerry Faust, recently released from Notre Dame after an average, to say the least, record. It seemed to be a step down with the beleaguered Faust, and the Zips struggled to start winning games. Thirty years later, they finally won their first bowl game under HC Terry Bowden…Georgia Southern, another former FCS power, also won their first bowl game defeating Bowling Green in the GoDAddy.com Bowl, 58-27, in only their second season of FBS play in the SunBelt. Despite a 9-3 record a year ago, they were not allowed a bowl bid for some reason even though they went 8-0 to win the conference. That made no sense. Congrats to the Eagles…A lot of early bowl games were sparsely attended, but the worst had to be the Hawaii Bowl. Cincinnati went all the way out there to play San Diego State on Christmas Eve in front of a handful of fans and locals. How many are watching on Christmas Eve? They lost to San Diego State, 42-7. How depressing that looked. It must have been a long flight out and an even longer flight back. Merry Christmas! Hawaii must sound great as a bowl venue, but the more you think about it and when it’s played, it’s got to be tough on team coming from so far away. With such sparse interest, it’s a bowl game that can be replaced stateside…Washington State beat Miami, 20-14, in the Sun Bowl in El Paso. Only game we saw played in the snow!…How come SEC teams and PAC 12 teams don’t have any contracts to play one another in a bowl game? I guess they don’t like giving up their venues close to their fan base…Let’s hope the NCAA figures a way to schedule the two CFP games every year on New Year’s Day in the future. We all used to live for the big games to be played that day after a night of partying. They need to bring the excitement back to New Year’s Day instead of playing a bunch of meaningless games like they did this year. It was hard football to watch. The average score for the five games was 44.6 to 15.4. They were easy to turn off. None had any influence on the national championship like they used to. Regretfully, I saw TCU trailing Oregon, 28-0, in the second, and I said I’m not watching another one of “those” games. Darn!…North Dakota State won their fifth consecutive FCS Championship last Saturday over Jacksonville State, 37-10. QB Carson Wentz may be one of the best QBs available in this year’s draft. Wonder if Mel Kiper, Jr. is paying attention?

It was great to attend the Military Bowl wherE we saw Navy QB Keenan Reynolds tie and break several NCAA career scoring and rushing marks in the same game.

It was great to attend the Military Bowl where we saw Navy QB Keenan Reynolds (5) tie and break several NCAA career scoring and rushing marks in the same game.