Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Stanford coach Shaw: BCS system is 'flawed'

Updated: November 22, 2011, 7:34 PM ET

It was a vocal day for Stanford Cardinal coach David Shaw -- who, in his brief tenure leading the Cardinal, has not been known to be overly passionate.

Usually mild-mannered and reserved, Shaw used his Tuesday roundtable meeting with the media as a pulpit for what's wrong with the Bowl Championship Series.

?

Bottom line is, the BCS is flawed. ... They themselves know it, which is why they proposed a lot of changes going forward. All I've heard all year is the computers don't like Stanford. Well, the computers haven't programmed themselves.

? -- Stanford coach David Shaw

"Bottom line is, the BCS is flawed," Shaw said. "They themselves know it, which is why they proposed a lot of changes going forward. All I've heard all year is the computers don't like Stanford. Well, the computers haven't programmed themselves.

"To have a one-loss Pac-12 team behind a one-loss ACC team (Virginia Tech) means that the computer values the ACC more than it values the Pac-12. Which I don't believe is the case. I don't think that's accurate."

Shaw noted that Virginia Tech beat common opponents Duke by four points, (14-10), while the Cardinal beat them by 30 (44-14).

"I keep hearing about quality wins," he said. "Well first off, who decides what the quality wins are and secondly, how does a quality or non-quality loss affect people? Whereas we lost to a very good Oregon team ranked No. 10, (Virginia Tech) lost to a team ranked No. 17 (Clemson). I don't get it."

Stanford moved up from No. 9 to No. 6. in the latest BCS standings. But among the six one-loss teams ranked in the Top 10, Stanford is behind four others.

"Oklahoma State is outstanding, a very good football team," Shaw said. "Once again, we lost to a team that was in the Top 10, they lost to a team that's not ranked. I don't get it. Not saying that where we should be opposed to where other people are, I'm just saying the explanations I get don't make any sense. Now, there is a lot of football to be played a lot of stuff that's going to shake itself out."

"I felt like it was to a point where I had to say something. I don't understand it," he added. "Most of the people I talk to don't understand it. Most of the people that are explaining it don't completely understand it. The experts have their disagreements. I just wanted to lay that out there. Do with it whatever you want."

Shaw said his team has moved on and is focused on Saturday's game against Notre Dame -- that they "laughed about it" when they got together on Monday.

Asked what he thinks the solution should be, Shaw said his opinion is irrelevant.

"It doesn't matter what I'd like, he said. "That's not where we are right now ... I think those are off-season discussions. We are where we are right now. We have to play good football and see where that puts us."

Shaw's statements came just a couple of hours after he made an impassioned speech about why quarterback Andrew Luck should win the Heisman Trophy. Speaking on the Pac-12 coaches' conference call, Shaw said "it's an absolute joke" that Luck's national perception might be slipping.

"There is nobody in college football that is doing what Andrew Luck is doing," Shaw said. "Don't forget, I spent nine years in the NFL. I evaluated every single quarterback that came out in the NFL during that time and have seen all of the good ones since then. There is nobody that I've heard of that does as much at the line of scrimmage in college football. There are not that many guys in the NFL that are doing as much as Andrew is at the line of scrimmage.

"The guy is running the game at the line of scrimmage. He's controlling the protections. He's controlling the running game. We're calling three, four plays in the huddle, which most guys can't even think about handling and he does that."

Kevin Gemmell covers Stanford football for ESPN.com

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Margarito cleared for NY rematch against Cotto

Tue Nov 22, 2011 8:42pm EST

(Reuters) - The eagerly-awaited rematch between Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico and Mexico's Antonio Margarito will go ahead as planned in New York next month after officials finally gave the go ahead for the world title fight to proceed.

The super welterwight bout, scheduled to take place at Madison Square Garden on December 3, was in doubt after the New York State Athletic Commission raised questions about the health of Margarito, who suffered a serious eye injury that required surgery in his loss to Manny Pacquiao last year.

The Commission rejected Margarito's initial application to fight Cotto but agreed to let him undergo further medical examinations by an eye specialist of their choice.

On Tuesday, the Commission reviewed their decision and agreed to grant a boxing license to the Mexican.

Had the Commission refused to let the fight proceed, the promoters were considering moving it to another American state although Cotto caught them by surprise when he told reporters he wasn't going anywhere else.

"I'm not going to present myself in any other state," Cotto, the WBA super welterweight champion, said on a conference call.

"If the people from the New York commission said that Margarito is not able to fight because of his eye, then (everybody) has to respect that and any commission in the U.S. has to respect that."

Margarito, 33, defeated Cotto in their first meeting in 2008 with an 11th round knockout.

(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; Editing by Julian Linden; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

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Stanford coach Shaw: BCS system is 'flawed'

Updated: November 22, 2011, 7:34 PM ET

It was a vocal day for Stanford Cardinal coach David Shaw -- who, in his brief tenure leading the Cardinal, has not been known to be overly passionate.

Usually mild-mannered and reserved, Shaw used his Tuesday roundtable meeting with the media as a pulpit for what's wrong with the Bowl Championship Series.

?

Bottom line is, the BCS is flawed. ... They themselves know it, which is why they proposed a lot of changes going forward. All I've heard all year is the computers don't like Stanford. Well, the computers haven't programmed themselves.

? -- Stanford coach David Shaw

"Bottom line is, the BCS is flawed," Shaw said. "They themselves know it, which is why they proposed a lot of changes going forward. All I've heard all year is the computers don't like Stanford. Well, the computers haven't programmed themselves.

"To have a one-loss Pac-12 team behind a one-loss ACC team (Virginia Tech) means that the computer values the ACC more than it values the Pac-12. Which I don't believe is the case. I don't think that's accurate."

Shaw noted that Virginia Tech beat common opponents Duke by four points, (14-10), while the Cardinal beat them by 30 (44-14).

"I keep hearing about quality wins," he said. "Well first off, who decides what the quality wins are and secondly, how does a quality or non-quality loss affect people? Whereas we lost to a very good Oregon team ranked No. 10, (Virginia Tech) lost to a team ranked No. 17 (Clemson). I don't get it."

Stanford moved up from No. 9 to No. 6. in the latest BCS standings. But among the six one-loss teams ranked in the Top 10, Stanford is behind four others.

"Oklahoma State is outstanding, a very good football team," Shaw said. "Once again, we lost to a team that was in the Top 10, they lost to a team that's not ranked. I don't get it. Not saying that where we should be opposed to where other people are, I'm just saying the explanations I get don't make any sense. Now, there is a lot of football to be played a lot of stuff that's going to shake itself out."

"I felt like it was to a point where I had to say something. I don't understand it," he added. "Most of the people I talk to don't understand it. Most of the people that are explaining it don't completely understand it. The experts have their disagreements. I just wanted to lay that out there. Do with it whatever you want."

Shaw said his team has moved on and is focused on Saturday's game against Notre Dame -- that they "laughed about it" when they got together on Monday.

Asked what he thinks the solution should be, Shaw said his opinion is irrelevant.

"It doesn't matter what I'd like, he said. "That's not where we are right now ... I think those are off-season discussions. We are where we are right now. We have to play good football and see where that puts us."

Shaw's statements came just a couple of hours after he made an impassioned speech about why quarterback Andrew Luck should win the Heisman Trophy. Speaking on the Pac-12 coaches' conference call, Shaw said "it's an absolute joke" that Luck's national perception might be slipping.

"There is nobody in college football that is doing what Andrew Luck is doing," Shaw said. "Don't forget, I spent nine years in the NFL. I evaluated every single quarterback that came out in the NFL during that time and have seen all of the good ones since then. There is nobody that I've heard of that does as much at the line of scrimmage in college football. There are not that many guys in the NFL that are doing as much as Andrew is at the line of scrimmage.

"The guy is running the game at the line of scrimmage. He's controlling the protections. He's controlling the running game. We're calling three, four plays in the huddle, which most guys can't even think about handling and he does that."

Kevin Gemmell covers Stanford football for ESPN.com

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Vikings' Peterson has ankle sprain, Sunday status uncertain

Mon Nov 21, 2011 2:48pm EST

(Reuters) - Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson has an ankle sprain and remains in doubt for next week's NFL clash against the Atlanta Falcons is uncertain, coach Leslie Frazier said on Monday.

Frazier said Peterson, who injured his left ankle in the second quarter of Sunday's loss to the Oakland Raiders, would try to practice on Friday to determine whether he could play against the Falcons on Sunday.

The four-time Pro Bowl player will wear a walking boot the next couple of days, Frazier said.

"It's nothing more serious than that...and he'll recover from it," Frazier told his weekly news conference.

"It's just the matter of the amount of time he'll miss. We'll have a better indication toward the end of the week."

(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; Editing by Julian Linden)

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Bodenheimer, Skipper assume new ESPN roles

Updated: November 22, 2011, 11:47 AM ET

BURBANK, Calif. -- George Bodenheimer has been named executive chairman of ESPN, and John Skipper will replace him as president of the network and co-chair of Disney Media Networks.

?

Bodenheimer I've been with ESPN 31 years -- my entire professional career. Constant change and consistent growth have marked each of those years, and to me those two themes underscore today's news.

? -- ESPN president George Bodenheimer

The announcement was made Tuesday by Bob Iger, the president and chief executive officer of the Walt Disney Company.

"With George's continued presence, John's experience and vision and an executive management team and workforce that are unparalleled in the sports media business, ESPN is extremely well positioned for continued success," Iger said in a statement.

Bodenheimer will relinquish his day-to-day operating responsibilities as president of ESPN, his role for the last 13 years, on Jan. 1. As executive chairman, he will continue to chair ESPN's board of directors, provide strategic direction and support the transition to Skipper, who will assume day-to-day operating responsibilities also on Jan. 1.

"I've been with ESPN 31 years -- my entire professional career. Constant change and consistent growth have marked each of those years, and to me those two themes underscore today's news," Bodenheimer said in a statement. "After 13 years as president, I felt it was a good time to step away from the day to day management of ESPN and let others take the lead. I very much appreciate Bob's support over the years, and look forward to my future role with ESPN."

Skipper, who joined ESPN in June 1997 as senior vice president and general manager of ESPN The Magazine, has served as ESPN's executive vice president of content since October 2005. Previously, he was senior vice president of The Disney Publishing Group, overseeing all of Disney's magazine, book and licensed publishing operations in the United States.

"I am humbled and excited to be given the opportunity by Bob and George to lead this terrific company," Skipper said. "George set a high bar and an impeccable example, and I will dedicate all of my energy to follow George's lead in both empowering and supporting my 7,000 ESPN colleagues who do such great work every day."

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Meyer: 'Decision to make' if Ohio State offers job

Urban Meyer resigned as Florida coach after the 2010 season to spend time with his family and focus on his health.

AP

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Former Florida coach Urban Meyer says he still has concerns about returning to coaching, but "right now there are no decisions to be made."

Media reports have fueled speculation Meyer could be the next Ohio State coach.

In an interview Monday with The Sun in Gainesville, Fla., Meyer reiterated he hasn't been offered the Ohio State job. He also says he didn't interview for the Arizona job.

Meyer resigned after the 2010 season because of health issues and to spend more time with his family.

He told the newspaper concerns about his health and the amount of time he can commit to his family still remain.

He says "if something happens with Ohio State, I'll have a decision to make. There has been no offer to make a decision about."

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Big, bad B.J. Raji pushes way to TD for Packers offense

As if the Green Bay Packers didn't have enough weapons on offense, they unleashed one Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers the size of a refrigerator.

Heavens to William Perry, it's fullback B.J. Raji. Sent in for what was expected to be blocking purposes, Perry took a handoff from Packers QB Aaron Rodgers on second down and scored from a one-yard touchdown.

?NFL Week 11 scoreboard: Get all the action and information here

The Packers' first TD of the game, it came with 3:08 left in the first quarter. Raji, by trade a defensive tackle at 6-2, 337 pounds, pounded the ball up the middle as blockers helped shove Buccaneers defenders into the end zone.

Raji's TD was a surprise, but it paled in comparison to a spectacular 54-yard run by Bucs featured back LeGarrette Blount in the second quarter. Blount took a handoff up the middle and escaped at least six potential tacklers on his way to the end zone.

Raji is more adept at stopping running backs than being one, but his role in Week 11 shows he can have it both ways.

It's not the first career touchdown for Raji. In last season's NFC Championship Game, Raji picked off a pass and returned it 18 yards for a TD. He became the first Packers defensive lineman to score a playoff touchdown.

Perry rose to fame with the Chicago Bears in the 1980s when they used him as a fullback in goal-line offense plays. The same height as Raji, Perry was also a defensive tackle who at times weight 50 pounds more than Raji.

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Arizona announces Rodriguez hire on Twitter

Updated: November 21, 2011, 9:42 PM ET

Arizona has hired former West Virginia and Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez as its next football coach, as athletic director Greg Byrne made the news official with a photo posted on Twitter.

Posted to Byrne's Twitter page on Monday was an entry that read "And the new Arizona football coach and his family is......."

The post included a link that, when clicked, led to a photo of Rodriguez with his family.

Byrne will officially introduce Rodriguez at a news conference Tuesday at the McKale Center, the school said. He replaces interim coach Tim Kish.

Arizona (3-8, 2-7 Pac-12) fired Mike Stoops last month after struggling to a 1-5 start.

Rodriguez coached Michigan from 2008-2010 and West Virginia from 2001-2007. Rodriguez posted a 60-26 record at West Virginia, finishing first in the Big East four times.

Rodriguez was 15-22 at Michigan, including 6-18 in Big Ten play, before being dismissed.

During Rodriguez' tenure, the school acknowledged that it was guilty of four NCAA violations. It was put on three years of probation, though Rodriguez and the school avoided major penalties in part because the NCAA agreed that the coach didn't fail to promote an atmosphere and compliance in his program.

Rodriguez has been working as an analyst for CBS Sports this year, but had made it clear he wanted to get back into coaching as soon as possible.

Byrne fired Stoops on Oct. 10, two days after the Wildcats lost to Oregon State. The team was 1-5 at the time, with the only victory over FCS member Northern Arizona, and 10 straight losses to FBS schools.

Kish, the team's defensive coordinator, took over as interim coach and the team won two Pac-12 games, over UCLA and last Saturday 31-27 over rival Arizona State. The Wildcats conclude their season Saturday at home against Louisiana-Lafayette.

Information from ESPN college football reporter Joe Schad and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Monday, November 21, 2011

SN Power Rankings: LSU, Bama, Arkansas on top

No, you?re not looking at the SEC West Division?it?s this week?s Sporting News Power Rankings. After Oklahoma State lost for the first time this season and Oregon and Oklahoma both suffered their second losses, Alabama and Arkansas moved right behind top-ranked LSU.

The Cowboys were upset at Iowa State in double overtime on Friday and fell to No. 5 in this week?s rankings.

Oregon missed an opportunity to move back into the BCS title game talk with a 38-35 home loss to USC and the Sooners squandered its chance by falling to Baylor 45-38 on a TD pass with 8 seconds left in the game.

All of that allowed Alabama to move up to No. 2?where the Crimson Tide was before losing 9-6 to LSU in overtime just two weeks ago. It also allowed Arkansas to move to its highest point of the season. Arkansas? only loss came against Alabama.

The Razorbacks really have a chance to shake up things this week when they travel to Baton Rouge to play top-ranked LSU. No. 2 Alabama plays at rival Auburn.

And there?s no better time to cast your vote in the Sporting News Valvoline Fan Poll where LSU is holding off Alabama.

1. LSU 11-0 (1)

2. Alabama 10-1 (3)

3. Arkansas 10-1 (6)

4. Stanford 10-1 (7)

5. Oklahoma State 10-1 (2)

6. Virginia Tech 10-1 (9)

7. Oregon 9-2 (4)

8. Boise State 9-1 (10)

9. Southern Cal 9-2 (16)

10. Houston 11-0 (12)

11. Georgia 9-2 (11)

12. Michigan State 9-2 (13)

13. Oklahoma 8-2 (5)

14. Wisconsin 9-2 (13)

15. South Carolina 9-2 (15)

16. Clemson 9-2 (8)

17. Michigan 9-2 (19)

18. Kansas State 9-2 (18)

19. TCU 9-2 (20)

20. Penn State 9-2 (21)

21. Baylor 7-3 (NR)

22. Notre Dame 8-3 (24)

23. Virginia 8-3 (NR)

24. Nebraska 8-3 (16)

25. Georgia Tech 8-3 (25)

Also receiving votes (by votes received): Auburn, Louisville, Rutgers

Fan Poll: Vote for your Top 25!

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Chinese team eyes Mavs free agent center Tyson Chandler

The Chinese Basketball Association?s (CBA) Zhejiang Guangsha Lions have made an offer to free agent center Tyson Chandler, ESPN.com reports. Chandler, of course, was a key part of the Mavericks? championship run last season.

The CBA passed a rule this summer prohibiting its teams from signing NBA players under contract. Chandler?s deal with Dallas expired after last season.

Zhejiang Guangsha has already signed restricted free agent Wilson Chandler, who finished last season with the Nuggets after being traded from the Knicks as part of the Carmelo Anthony deal

A major consideration for Chandler is the CBA?s rule requiring NBA players who sign with Chinese teams to stay in the league for the entire season. That would preclude Chandler from returning to the NBA?and cashing in on what figure to be a lucrative contract as one of the top free agents?until the CBA season is over. The Chinese regular season ends in mid-February, and the playoffs go into March.

Chinese teams are aggressively pursuing NBA players now that the NBA season appears to be in real doubt. Guangdong on Friday signed Suns free agent Aaron Brooks, and the Xinjiang Flying Tigers, who already have Nuggets free agent Kenyon Martin under contract, have made offers to Hawks free agent Jamal Crawford and Mavs free agent J.J. Barea, ESPN notes.

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CFT's Fifth Quarter: Chaos? You want chaos?

As is the case each and every week ? except for the past two; the happenings in Happy Valley kind of got us sidetracked ? any omission below is not on purpose, it?s merely intentional.

WINNERS

Lee (expletive deleted) Corso
My dad has always been a deeply devout and religious man, and I had never heard him swear until I was about 17 or 18 and he accidentally described a pile of dog poop in a non-religious way. �That feeling of utter giddiness I for some reason felt upon hearing my dad utter an expletive? �It was revisited while watching ESPN?s College GameDay show Saturday. �As he was preparing to don the headgear in making his prediction for the Houston-SMU game, and apparently growing weary in his attempts to whip the UH crowd into a frenzy, Lee Corso said, and I quote: ?Aw, f? it? as he donned the head of the Cougars? mascot. �The schoolyard-esque reactions by Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit, particularly the latter as shown in the photo to the right (via), were priceless, and at the extreme opposite end of Corso?s subsequent apology. �It was an unnecessary mea culpa for one of the most epic moments in the show?s history. �For that, Mr. Corso is more than worthy and well-deserving of the top slot in this week?s Winners section. �And, as it turns out, his prescient words were the appropriate attitude for one of the wildest weeks of the season?

SEC Best
(See what I did there?) Prior to the slate of Week 12 games, LSU, Alabama and Arkansas were ranked first, third and sixth, respectively, in the set of BcS rankings released last week. �Thanks to upset losses suffered by Oklahoma State (then-No. 2 in the BcS), Oregon (No. 4) and Oklahoma (No. 5) in this up-is-down weekend, the SEC West is now officially 1-2-3 in the latest BcS rankings revealed Sunday evening. �It?s also officially ridiculous, unprecedented and unheard of in the BcS era for that to happen with three teams from the same division let alone the same conference. �The biggest winner, though, in all of this tumult? �Potentially, the Razorbacks. �If the Hogs can beat LSU in Death Valley next week to make it a three-way tie in the West? and if ? admittedly as big an if as beating LSU on the road ? Arkansas and LSU are rated ahead of Alabama in the final regular season BcS rankings? if those two things were to occur, then it would be Arkansas representing the division in the conference championship game. �After what?s transpired over the past few weeks, that would hardly register as a surprise. �Something else that wouldn?t be surprising? �The Razorbacks making it to and losing the SEC championship game, and two teams from the same conference that didn?t even win their division ? LSU and Alabama ? playing for the BcS title. �Then again, the Tigers doing the expected and taking care of the Razorbacks next Saturday makes all of this a moot point and an exercise in ain?t-gonna-happens.

Chaos? You want chaos?
No. 3 Arkansas has to play No. 1 LSU. �No. 4 Stanford still has No. 22 Notre Dame with which to deal. �No. 2 Alabama still has the Iron Bowl rivalry with Auburn to navigate, while No. 5 Oklahoma State has their annual Bedlam showdown with No. 12 Oklahoma. �And lest we forget No. 6 Virginia Tech?s in-state matchup with No. 24 Virginia. �Given those games involving one-loss teams, and as we noted last night, the following scenario is entirely plausible: LSU and No. 8 Houston finish undefeated; No. 7 Boise State ends with one loss; and every other team in the country has at least two losses. �What happens then? �A playoff is what should happen then, but that?s another story for another day.

Hoos the boss?
It could very well be Virginia at this time next weekend. �Thanks to their nail-biting win over Florida State ? the Seminoles? final drive was kept alive by a fourth-down facemask penalty and a replay reversal, but ended with a game-winning field-goal attempt that sailed wide left ? all the Cavaliers have to do is beat Virginia Tech at home and, unbelievably, they will represent the ACC Coastal and face Clemson in the conference title game. �Regardless of what happens next weekend, however, the job Mike London is doing at Virginia cannot be applauded loudly enough. �With the Hoos currently at 8-3 after many predicted the cellar in the preseason, is it any surprise London?s name is being attached to jobs like Penn State? �Speaking of underrated coaches doing a tremendous job in college football?s version of a back 40 outpost?

All Rhoads lead to an upset
Paul Rhoads has become a YouTube sensation during his two-plus seasons at Iowa State thanks to his exuberant and impassioned postgame locker room speeches. �Of course, big wins are necessary to trigger such joy, and, boy, did Rhoads? Cyclones ever deliver one of those Friday night. �Thanks to their monumental upset of then-No. 2 Oklahoma State, the Cowboys will face a significantly more challenging row to hoe in order to remain in contention for a spot in the BcS title game. �It was hands down the biggest win in Rhoades? brief tenure, and arguably the biggest win in school history. �ISU is far from the most talented team in the Big 12 let alone the country, but, as Ben and I were Skyping ? it?s OK; we?re consenting adults ? during game, he wrings every last bit out of what he has, and his players will run through walls for their head coach. �I don?t know how long Rhoads will stay in Ames, but I would suggest Cyclone fans enjoy him while they can because he will be in demand regardless of what the won-loss record reads.

If Matt Barkley returns?
There have been many impressive single-game performances this season ? LSU thumping Oregon being one of them ? but you could count on one hand and probably have some spare fingers left the number that were more impressive than what No. 10 USC did to the No. 9 Ducks in Eugene Saturday night. �It?s hard to say what was more eye-opening: opening up third-quarter leads of 17 and 24 points in Autzen Stadium, or withstanding a furious fourth-quarter rally by a Ducks team trying to stay in the BcS title mix. �Lane Kiffin gets a lot of grief, and I?ve never been shy about taking any and all shots at the man, but Monte?s son can recruit with the best of them ? Marquise Lee? �Wow ? and is underrated game-day coach, as proven Saturday in outcoaching Chip Kelly on his own turf. �USC currently stands atop the Pac-12 South standings but, because of the NCAA sanctions and the conference?s subsequent decision, the Trojans will not be permitted to play in the inaugural title game. �That won?t be the case next year and, if Matt Barkley decides to return ? slim as that chance may be at the moment ? not only will the Trojans be the prohibitive divisional favorite, but they would have the kind of returning that screams for placement deep inside the Top Ten of the preseason polls.

My limited brain matter
Thanks to wins by No. 11 Michigan State and No. 15 Wisconsin, and a loss by No. 22 Nebraska, the races in the two Big Ten divisions have become very, very simple: Michigan State will represent the Legends division in the inaugural conference championship game the first weekend of December, while the winner of the No. 20 Penn State-Wisconsin game will represent the Legends. �After a couple of weeks attempting to divine what would happen if there were a three-way tie that got down the the 245th tiebreaker, this clarification is a welcome relief.

Illini Nation
Wait, didn?t Illinois just lose their fifth straight game ? 28-17 to No. 15 Wisconsin ? after beginning the season with six consecutive wins? �That they did, but this just means the Illini faithful are one more regular season game plus whatever lower-tier bowl game their team may stumble and stagger into from the official end of the Ron Zook Era. �Unofficially, it?s already over; the new athletic director will move in another direction, although he will wait (probably) until after next weekend before pulling the trigger. �For that, Illini Nation should rejoice, then immediately demand the following: �hire Eastern Michigan?s Ron English. �You?ll thank me later.

Houston, you might still have a problem
Lost amid all of the talk of undefeated Houston getting snubbed for a shot at a BcS title is the fact that the Cougars still have at least one big game remaining. �This weekend, UH will take on Tulsa, which is tied with the Cougars atop the Conference USA West division standings at 7-0. �The game will be played in Tulsa, and marks the first real test of the season for the Cougars ? and, yes, that includes the season opener against Pac-12 South front-runner UCLA. � �Should UH successfully navigate that road trip, they would face Southern Miss in the conference championship game if the Golden Eagles can rebound from an upset loss to UAB and beat lowly Memphis. �A loss by Southern Miss and a win by Marshall would put the Herd into the title game as the East?s representative.

It?s the defense, stupid
To say No. 17 Michigan struggled on defense during the Rich Rodriguez Era would be like saying RichRod?s kind of unpopular in West Virginia. �To say that the Wolverines? have greatly improved on that side of the ball under Brady Hoke would be understating reality as well. �How much has UM?s defense improved? �Let us count the ways, beginning with RichRod?s final season in Ann Arbor:

Rushing, 95th (188.9 ypg); passing, 112th (261.9 ypg); total, 110th (450.8 ypg); scoring, 108th (35.2 ppg)

And now, after ridding themselves of one Greg (Robinson) in favor of another (Mattison), the stats from thus far this year illustrates the stunning transformation in less than on full season:

Rushing, 41st (130.9); passing, 22nd (191.3); total, 17th (322.2); scoring, 7th (16.1)

Those were the stats entering Saturday?s game against Nebraska. �By limiting the Cornhuskers to just 17 points and 260 total yards, the Wolverines did little to hurt themselves statistically. �And, with the win, showed the stench from the previous regime is quickly being washed away, possibly revealing an at-large BcS berth at season?s end.

LOSERS

Shoulda Ducked, Sooner
The upset loss Oklahoma State suffered Friday night simultaneously knocked the Cowboys from the ranks of the unbeaten and pulled both Oregon and Oklahoma right back into the BcS title mix. � So, what do both teams go and do less than 24 hours later? �Slap the gift horse in the mouth. �Hard. �Instead of remaining one of the gaggle of one-loss teams hoping for additional carnage that could land them in New Orleans in January, the Ducks and Sooners now find themselves with two losses and zero chance of even being on the periphery of the title talk. �Probably.

Boise?s state of despair
One stinking missed field goal, a 39-yard attempt that sailed wide right two weeks ago and ended their perfect season. �Make that and, with all of the tumult that?s gone down since, BSU is right in the thick of the title talk. �Instead, the Broncos are kicking themselves for late-game kicking woes that have plagued them for two years running. �Out of all the teams that suffered on-field losses Friday and Saturday, the Broncos may have lost the most based on what happened the week before.

SEC Least
(See what I did there?) �It?s not exactly a state secret that the SEC East is in a down cycle this season. �Never was that on fuller display than this weekend. �At various points throughout the day Saturday, Florida was down 22-7 to Furman in the second quarter; No. 14 South Carolina was ahead of The Citadel 20-13 at the half; and No. 13 Georgia, the winner of the East, had unexpected trouble with Kentucky, trailing the Wildcats 10-6 midway through the second quarter before going on to a 19-10 win between the hedges. �Those are three struggles to varying degrees against two Div. 1-AA schools and another that?s played like one this season. �Yes, we understand that these things run in cycles, but there?s some fair-to-middlin? football being played in that division. �On the other hand, Mark Richt?s backside certainly appreciates the 2011 breather ? and reprieve.

There are no winners here
Well, technically there will be, but c?mon. �When a UCLA team that?s lost by 29 at home to 6-4 Texas? by 36 to 3-8 Arizona? by 25 to Utah, which opened conference play with four straight losses, is in control of its own destiny in the Pac-12 South, well, there?s just something inherently wrong with the situation. �Regardless, that?s where it stands. �If the Bruins beat USC next week in the annual crosstown rivalry game, they will represent the South in the title game and (probably) face Oregon. �However, if the Bruins lose to the Trojans, Arizona State beats Cal and Utah beats Colorado, the Sun Devils would win that three-way tie based on a better record in the division than the Bruins and a head-to-head win over the Utes. �ASU would lose a two-way tie with UCLA due to a loss earlier this month. �In other words, the Sun Devils will be big USC and Utah fans this weekend. �Oh, one more thing: Utah can be the South champs if they win and the other two lose. �Simple, right?

We have a cleanup in aisle three? and four? and five?
OK Clemson, we get it. �You wrapped up the ACC Atlantic title last week and are merely playing out the string and trying to get/stay healthy until you get to the conference championship game in a couple of weeks. �But, a 37-13 loss to North Carolina State? �Really? �Have a little pride, be a man. �Then again, after getting castrated by a team likely playing under the direction of a lame-duck coach, the latter might be hard to accomplish. �Surely Sammy Watkins, who dressed for the game but didn?t play because of a shoulder injury, isn?t that important against a team like the Wolfpack, is he? �And, hell, given all the carnage that took place ahead of them, the Tigers cost themselves any shot, remote as it may have been, of a spot in the BcS title game. �But, hey, they have that divisional crown going for them, which is nice.

One big clusterfudge
Or, as Lee Corso would refer to? ah, never mind. �That clarification I noted earlier when it comes to the Big Ten? �It?s exactly the same in the Big East, only completely opposite and totally different. �Ben deftly broke the situation down right HERE ? two teams at 4-2, three at 3-2 ? but it appears that, if West Virginia wins their final two games, they would probably be in the best position to win the conference ? unless they end up in a three-way tie with Louisville and Rutgers. �In such a scenario, the Cardinals would represent the Big East in the BcS. �I think. �The only thing I know for sure about the Big East is that Ben will be riding this nag down the homestretch and into the barn. �Or the glue factory. �One of the two.

A kneel to the groin
What type of new, all-time low did the Rebels football program reach Saturday? �With a little over five minutes remaining, they were trailing LSU 52-3 ? and the Tigers, out of mercy and/or pity, began taking a knee on offense instead of running plays inside Ole Miss? five-yard line. �Personally, if it were my team, I would rather have the opposition throwing every down or pounding it down my throat trying to run up the score than throwing a kneeling pity party on my home turf. �Honestly, it doesn?t get much worse than that. �If you don?t believe me, just ask the Rebels. ?A lot of guys felt like it was embarrassing,? quarterback Barry Brunetti said. ?? It made a lot of us mad, just furious, that you could kneel it with five minutes left.? �Ladies and gentlemen, your 2011 Ole Miss Rebels?

ODDS & ENDS

? Just thinking out loud here: who the hell does Bob Stoops think he is calling timeout with 51 seconds left, Bret Bielema? �In and of itself that decision didn?t cost the Sooners the win, but it did allow Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III to run for 30 yards on consecutive plays and put himself in position to throw the game-winning touchdown seconds later. �At minimum, though, that decision cost OU a shot at overtime as the No. 21 Bears were content to run out the clock prior to the TO.

? USC and Oregon are both 9-2. �Saturday night, the Trojans beat the Ducks in Eugene, and yet the Associated Press has the loser of that game one spot ahead of the winner in their latest rankings. �Excellent logic and solid work fellas. �Excellent. �Solid.

? UMass played its final game as a Div. 1-AA (FCS) member Saturday, losing to James Madison 34-17 and finishing the year at 5-6. �The Minutemen will join the MAC beginning in 2012.

? There are rumblings emanating from the southern part of the country which suggest the Gator Bowl is looking to secure a postseason matchup between Ohio State and Florida. �Imagine the storylines heading into that one, especially if Urban Meyer takes the Buckeyes job as has been heavily rumored.

? After a tumultuous offseason, Jordan Jefferson made his first start of the 2011 season for LSU against Ole Miss. �And, based on the fact that it was the Rebels, it wouldn?t have mattered if it were George Jefferson making his first start of the season as the No. 1 Tigers scored 28 seconds into the game and ended up on the right side of a 49-point win.

? ?One more year! �One more year!? South Carolina fans chanted following an Alshon Jeffery catch. ?Nah, I don?t have no thoughts on that,? the wide receiver said when asked after the win over The Citadel if Gamecock fans will get their wish and he?ll return for another season, eschewing a shot at the April NFL draft.

? You want to make the case, so to speak, for Houston as this year?s Boise State and are deserving of consideration for the BcS title game if they go undefeated? �Note that the Cougars have beaten their last six opponents by an average of 42.6 points. �You want to counterattack and show there?s no way they deserve it? �Note that those six teams have a combined record of 23-41, including just a 3-11 mark against teams from BcS conferences.

? Oklahoma defensive end Ronnell Lewis will likely miss the regular-season finale due to a sprained MCL. �He should be able to return for the Sooners? bowl game.

? Texas A&M lost leading rusher Christine Michael to a season-ending knee injury earlier this month, and now his running mate has some injury question marks as well. �After topping 1,000 yards for the second straight season, Cyrus Gray was sidelined for the remainder of a 61-7 throttling of Kansas with a shoulder injury. �The severity of the injury is not known at this time, with head coach Mike Sherman saying only that Gray would be evaluated further in the coming days.

? In attendance for the USC-Oregon game and sporting Trojans colors, LeBron James was told to take his talents somewhere other than the Autzen Stadium field by security prior to kickoff. �Unfortunately, no gun play was involved in getting Benedict LeArnold off the playing surface.

? A U-haul truck carrying kegs of beer struck and killed a 30-year-old woman who was tailgating prior to the annual Harvard-Yale game. �Two other women were injured, and the driver of the van is currently in police custody. �As if it matters after such a tragedy, Harvard beat Yale 45-7. �It was the Crimson?s 10th win in 11 games in the third-longest rivalry in the country.

? Jon Woods, who has spent the past 28 years as the director of The Best Damn Band in the Land, was given the honor of dotting the ?i? in Script Ohio as he?s stepping down after the end of this season. �Woods joins other honorary dotters that includes�Bob Hope, Woody Hayes, Jack Nicklaus and John Glenn.

? Out of some of the most horrendous allegations imaginable, some good has come: Penn State alumni have raised more than $430,000 that will be donated to The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN), a national organization charged with helping the victims of sexual abuse.

HEISMAN RACE, BY THE NUMBERS

A statistical look at how some ? and I simply can?t stress the word ?some? enough ? of the top contenders for this year?s stiff-arm trophy fared over the weekend, listed in alphabetical order so as not to offend any of the delicate sensibilities readers in the audience may possess or get their unmentionables all wadded up over ?their? player being excluded and/or snubbed:

Montee Ball, RB, Wisconsin (9-2, No. 15)
Saturday: 338 carries for 224 yards (5.9 yards per carry), two touchdowns; two receptions for (-1) yards, one touchdown
Season: 223 carries for 1,466 yards (6.6 yards per carry), 25 touchdowns; 16 receptions for 233 yards, five touchdowns

Matt Barkley, QB, USC (9-2, No. 10)
Saturday: 26-of-34 (76.5 percent), 323 yards, four touchdowns, one interception; three carries for (-2) yards, zero rushing touchdowns
Season: 273-of-404 (67.6 percent), 3,105 yards, 33 touchdowns, seven interceptions; 27 carries for 20 yards, two touchdowns

Robert Griffin III, QB, Baylor (7-3, No. 21)
Saturday: 21-of-34 (61.8 percent), 479 yards, four touchdowns, zero interceptions; 18 carries for 72 yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 245-of-336 (72.9 percent), 3,572 yards, 33 touchdowns, five interceptions; 135 carries for 550 yards, five touchdowns

Case Keenum, QB, Houston (11-0, No. 18)
Saturday: 30-of-45 (66.7 percent), 318 yards, one touchdown, zero interceptions; four carries for 19 yards, one touchdown
Season: 309-of-421 (73.4 percent), 4,269 yards, 38 touchdowns, three interceptions; 41 carries for 54 yards, three touchdowns

Collin Klein, QB, Kansas State (9-2, No. 16)
Saturday: 9-of-17 (52.9 percent), 83 yards, one touchdown, zero interceptions; 26 carries for four yards, one touchdown
Season: 138-of-236 (58.5 percent), 11 touchdowns, five interceptions; 241 carries for 1,009 yards, 24 touchdowns

Andrew Luck, QB, Stanford (10-1, No. 4)
Saturday: 20-of-30 (66.7 percent), 257 yards, two touchdowns, one interception; five carries for (-1) yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 241-of-343 (70.3 percent), 2,937 yards, 31 touchdowns, eight interceptions; 39 carries for 133 yards, two touchdowns

Kellen Moore, QB, Boise State (9-1, No. 7)
Saturday: 28-of-40 (70 percent), four touchdowns, one interception; two carries for (-10) yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 248-of-337 (73.6 percent), 2,915 yards, 35 touchdowns, six interceptions; 16 carries for (-50 yards), zero touchdowns

Trent Richardson, RB, Alabama (10-1, No. 2)
Saturday: bye weekend�32 carries for 175 yards (5.5 yards per carry), two touchdowns; one reception for four yards, one touchdown
Season: 236 carries for 1,380 yards (5.8 yards per carry), 20 touchdowns; 26 receptions for 322 yards, two touchdowns

Brandon Weeden, QB, Oklahoma State (10-1, No. 5)
Friday: 42-of-58 (72.4 percent), 476 yards, three touchdowns, three interceptions; no rushing statistics
Season:�355of-486 (73 percent), 34 touchdowns, 12 interceptions; 15 carries for (-95) yards, zero touchdowns

FOR STATISTICAL PURPOSES ONLY

? With 14 tackles in a loss to Notre Dame, Boston College linebacker Luke Kuechly set the ACC record for most career tackles. �Kuechly broke the old mark of 515 set by Clemson?s�Bubba Brown�(1976-79). �Kuechly also extended his streak of games with double-digit tackles to 33.

? Baylor quarterback�Robert Griffin III�accounted for 551 yards of total offense ? 479 passing, 72 rushing ? and four touchdown passes in the Bears? 45-38 win over Oklahoma.

? Michigan State?s 20 wins in 2010 and 2011 �the highest two-season total in school history. �It?s the first time the Spartans have won�at least nine games in back-to-back seasons since 1965-66.

? South Carolina also reached the nine-win mark for the second-straight season, marking the first time in school history they?ve accomplished that feat.

? This note is straight from the school?s media relations department: TCU?s seniors won their 45th game over the last four years, making them the winningest class in school history. They break the mark of 44 victories set by last year?s senior class. It?s the fourth straight season TCU?s seniors have set an all-time win record.

? With a 22-yard completion just past the midway point of the first quarter, Houston?s Case Keenum set a Div. 1-A record for career completions, breaking the old mark of 1,403 set by former Texas Tech quarterback Graham Harrell. �Earlier this year, Keenum broke Harrell?s record for career touchdown passes. �The sixth-year senior also tied Timmy Chang?s record for most career 300-yard passing games with 36. �All told, Keenum has broken or tied six major career passing marks this season. �Here they are:

Passing Yards: 17,855
Total Offense: 18,771
Touchdown Passes: 145
Career Touchdowns: 168
Career Completions: 1,527
Career 300-Yard Games: 36
Career 4,000-Yard Seasons: 3

? Prior to a two-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter from Tyler Bray to Da?Rick Rogers, Tennessee had not scored a second-half point since Oct. 8 against Georgia. �That?s a span of 175 minutes, 18 seconds over 11 quarters and six games.

? Alabama came into the Georgia Southern game having allowed 29 total points in their past four games; the 1-AA Eagles scored 21 points in what was a rather lackluster effort for the Tide.

? Alabama running back Trent Richardson now has 20 rushing touchdowns on the season, breaking the single-season school record of 19 set by Shaun Alexander in 1999.

? With three more Saturday, Wisconsin?s Montee Ball now has 30 touchdowns ? 25 rushing, 5 receiving ? in 11 games this season.

? Georgia linebacker Jarvis Jones had another 2.5 sacks in the East-clinching win over Kentucky, pushing his total on the season to 12.5. �Not only does he lead the SEC in that country, but he?s tied for second in the country behind Illinois? Whitney Mercilus�(13.5).

? In their 20-3 win over Cincinnati, Rutgers had a 23-play drive ? that ended in a field goal. �?Big East football: it?s offensive!?

? Iowa State came into Friday night?s game against Oklahoma State giving up an average 203.1 yards per game on the ground. �The Cyclones left the game with a stunning upset of the second-ranked Cowboys having given up just 60 yards rushing, the second-lowest total of the season for OSU ? 46 in a one-point win over Texas A&M.

? One more ISU note: the Cyclones lost their first four Big 12 games by an average of 24 points. �They?ve now won their last three and are bowl eligible for the second time in three years under Paul Rhoads.

? OK, I lied; one more: Since 1936, ISU had been 0-56-2 against teams ranked in the sixth or higher before their monumental upset.

? Houston had scored at least 49 points in their last seven games, but failed to reach that mark in their 37-7 win over SMU. �That means Harvard?s streak of eight straight games scoring at least that 49 points back ?set back in 1887 ? will remain the all-level record. �(Tip O? the Cap: Chris Fowler)

? Colorado has lost 23 straight games on the road. �Their last win away from Folsom Field? �Oct. 27, 2007, against Texas Tech in Lubbock.

? From the fine folks at WKU?s media relations department:�For the first time since becoming a full-fledged Football Bowl Subdivision member in 2009, the Western Kentucky University football team is bowl eligible after a 31-21 win at North Texas on Saturday night.

HE SAID IT

?This is a screwed up night,? Texas Tech head coach Tommy Tuberville, technically describing a 31-27 loss to Missouri but serve as more-than-appropriate summation of what was a gloriously upsetting weekend in the wild and wonderful world of college football.

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Injured Murray slumps to defeat against Ferrer

LONDON | Mon Nov 21, 2011 2:13pm EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Andy Murray's hopes of winning the ATP World Tour Finals were dealt a double blow when he lost his opening group match to Spain's David Ferrer and then warned he could have to withdraw from the tournament with a groin injury.

The 24-year-old Scot produced an error-strewn display in a 6-4 7-5 defeat, his first to Ferrer on any surface other than the Spaniard's preferred clay, slumping to defeat in their opening Group A clash in exactly two hours at the O2.

Murray often looked leaden-footed and lacked any spark despite leading in both sets.

The world number three needed treatment at the end of the first set and although he was able to carry on without calling for the physio again, he could find no way through the formidable defenses of the 29-year-old from Valencia.

"Yeah, I mean, I had a problem with my groin. I have to see how it goes for tomorrow," Murray, who arrived in great form after a recent 17-match winning streak that included three consecutive titles in Asia, told reporters.

"I'll decide tomorrow whether or not I keep playing. If it wasn't slams or this event, I wouldn't have played."

Group A action continues later when Novak Djokovic, the world number one and winner of three of the year's four majors, faces hard-hitting Czech Tomas Berdych.

Murray, if he does recover, could have to beat both in his remaining matches to qualify for the semi-finals of a tournament that ranks just below the grand slams in terms of prestige and importance.

Ferrer, who was runner-up at the season-ender in 2007, is exactly the kind of player Murray would have least liked to have faced given his physical condition.

One of the game's most durable players, Ferrer scampered all over the court to frustrate Murray's attempts to take charge of the contest.

The Scot made 44 unforced errors as he attempted to break down Ferrer. He achieved early breaks in both sets but on each occasion he tamely surrendered his own serve immediately with some elementary mistakes.

Ferrer saved a break point at 4-4 in the first set and then sealed the opener in the following game when Murray hooked tired-looking forehand wide of the sideline.

Murray tried to fire himself up at the start of the second set despite the muted atmosphere in the less than full 17,500-capacity arena, and briefly appeared to have got back on track when he broke to lead 2-0.

However, it proved to be a false dawn as the errors returned and Ferrer began to dictate the points with his forehand in particular testing Murray's suspect groin.

Ferrer broke back and then failed to convert two points for a 4-2 lead as Murray hung on.

Murray then broke to lead 4-3 when Ferrer missed a forehand but again he failed to build on it, double-faulting on game point to allow the Spaniard to level at 4-4.

At 5-6, Ferrer reached match point with a nervy forehand volley which clipped the line and he converted at the first attempt, punishing his opponent for an ill-advised drop shot.

"I think it was important to start with a win," Ferrer told reporters. "I think he had some little problems, but not too many strong problems because he played the whole match."

Rafa Nadal and Roger Federer both won their opening Group B matches on Sunday, although they were pushed to three sets against Mardy Fish and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga respectively.

Nadal and Federer face each other for the 26th time in their careers on Tuesday, although it will be the first time they have met in a round-robin scenario.

(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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Eagles top Giants with 18-play TD drive

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) -- The Eagles destroyed the Giants' season a year ago at the Meadowlands with a 28-point onslaught in the final seven minutes.

This time, Andy Reid's undermanned team used the slow and excruciating method to hurt the Giants once again and tighten the NFC East race.

Using a quarterback whose only pass this season had been intercepted to replace Michael Vick and a receiver who did not have a catch all season, Philadelphia marched 80 yards in a roughly 9 minutes and defeated the Giants 17-10 Sunday night on an 8-yard go-ahead touchdown pass from Vince Young to Riley Cooper with 2:45 to play.

"We knew we had to dig deep," said Cooper who had his first five catches of the season for 75 yards, with the final 8 being the difference in breathing life into the Eagles (4-6).

"Everybody contributed," Cooper said. "It was not just one player, not just one long play. We pieced that last drive together piece by piece."

What was so surprising was that the "Dream Team" did it in the fourth quarter, a period that had seen them lose five games earlier this season.

The Eagles found the solution this time with an 18-play march over 8:51 that sent the Giants (6-4) to their second straight loss.

"It's definitely a big win," said Young, who was 23 of 36 for 258 yards, two touchdown and three interceptions. "You see the excitement and the smiles on the guys and that's what we need, what we have to have."

Philadelphia converted six third-down plays with DeSean Jackson setting up the first-and-goal with a 10-yard catch to the 10, and Young capping it with his second touchdown pass of the game to a wide-open Cooper.

"We were taking our time, making plays and the guys came up with big plays on third down," Young said.

Jackson, who was benched for last week's game for missing a team meeting, finished with six catches for 88 yards and set up a touchdown pass to former Giant Steve Smith with a 51-yard punt return. LeSean McCoy added 113 yards rushing, with 60 coming on a late run that iced the game.

"Vince, stepping in for the great Michael Vick , that's a tough thing to do and he did it and the guys rallied around him," Reid said. "The offensive line and defensive line played well, the offensive line had a huge challenge when it counted and they were able to put some things together."

The Eagles, of course, made Reid sweat out the final minutes.

Eli Manning , who tied it with a 24-yard TD pass to Victor Cruz earlier in the quarter, drove the Giants from their own 10 to the Eagles 21 with the final 47 yards coming on a catch-and-run by Cruz with 1:25 to play.

However, Manning stepped out of the pocket on the next play and was hit from behind by Jason Babin and fumbled. Derek Landi recovered at the 26, sending the Giants to their second straight tough loss, coming on the heels of a 7-point loss to San Francisco, a game that ended with New York at the Niners 2.

"It was important because it keeps us alive," linebacker Jamar Chaney said. "We had faith coming in. We really did. We might have been banged up, but we had faith. I feel good about our defensive effort. We came up big. It was time for the defense to make a play and we have a lot of playmakers out there. Jason got the sack and Landri got the ball."

It dropped New York into a tie for first place with Dallas in the NFC East with six games to play and left the Eagles two games behind. The Cowboys beat the Redskins in overtime after Washington missed a game-winning field-goal attempt.

"This is as big a disappointment as we have had around here in a long time," Giants coach Tom Coughlin said in ripping his team for a no-show effort.

It also marked the second straight year the Eagles rallied late to beat New York at the Meadowlands with last year's 38-31 decision coming in a game that Philadelphia rallied from 21 points down late.

While Young made several big plays to spark the Eagles' offense, he also threw three interceptions, the most costly being one that Aaron Ross picked off in the end zone on a second-and-9 from the New York 16 with Philadelphia ahead 10-3 with 5 minutes left in the third quarter.

New York eventually tied it early in the fourth quarter on a 24-yard TD pass from Manning to Cruz. It was set up two plays earlier when Manning rolled out of the pocket and found Hakeem Nicks for a 47-yard gain on third down to the Eagles 24.

Manning was 18 of 35 for 264 yards, and Cruz had six catches for 128 yards. The Giants' running game failed to get going, rushing for just 29 yards.

"We can't always afford to be in those positions," Manning said of the recent late rallies. "I think we still feel confident when we get in there that we're going to move the ball and we're going to give ourselves a chance to win. It is just a matter of you don't always want to be in that position."

The first half was typical of an Eagles-Giants meeting: chippy, intense, hard-fought and, not surprisingly, ugly.

If there was a surprise, it was that the defenses dominated. The norm was Jackson taunting the Giants in more ways than one, including one that cost the Eagles a 50-yard pass completion.

Jackson set up both of the Eagles' scores in the first half. He caught a 32-yard pass early in the second quarter to set up a 33-yard field goal by Alex Henery and then brought back excruciating memories from last season with a 51-yard punt return that was a carbon copy of his winning 65-yard punt return on the final play of the Eagles' 38-31 Meadowlands Miracle, a game Philadelphia rallied from a 21-point deficit in the final seven-plus minutes.

What made the return so eerie was that Jackson fielded Steve Weatherford 's punt at his own 35, circled right and then ran down the sideline in front of the Giants' bench - the same thing he did last season. The only difference was Weatherford pushed him out of bounds at the 14; Matt Dodge was the Giants' punter last season.

It didn't matter. One play later, Young found former Giants receiver Steve Smith cutting under the zone and he easily outran linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka into the end zone with 1:22 left in the half.

It was enough time for Manning to get the Giants on the board. A 21-yard pass to Cruz on the first play got the ball the 41 and a late 10-catch by running back D.J. Ware on a play in which he suffered a concussion set up Lawrence Tynes ' 48-yard field goal.

Notes: The game was Coughlin's 250th regular-season game, making him the 19th head coach in NFL history to reach the mark. He is 139-111, including 71-51 with the Giants. ... Reid said the Eagles had no major injuries. ... Giants rookie LB Mark Herzlich started his first game and the cancer survivor had four tackles. ... The Eagles sacked Manning three times. The Giants only got Young once. ... Giants Pro Bowl G Chris Snee played sick and said he threw up several times during the game. ... Philadelphia was 9 of 17 on third down.

� 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

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PSU names ex-football player, current board member its active AD

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Penn State said Wednesday it was turning to a physician and member of its board of trustees, who played football and wrestled for the school, to serve as acting athletic director in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal.

The school issued a news release announcing that Dr. David M. Joyner, an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in sports medicine and a business consultant, had taken over the job being performed until last week by Tim Curley.

Curley is on leave as he defends himself against criminal charges that he failed to properly alert authorities when told of an alleged sexual assault in 2002 by Sandusky against a child, and that he lied to a grand jury.

Joyner's position on the board, where he has been a trustee since 2000, is being suspended as he takes on the new duties.

Joyner received a bachelor's degree and a medical degree in the 1970s from Penn State. His work with the U.S. Olympic Committee includes being head physician to U.S. teams at the 1992 Winter Olympics, chairman of the sports medicine committee and vice chair of the anti-doping committee.

He was named the school's outstanding football alumnus in 1985 and was inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 1994.

Mark Sherburne, who performed the job after Curley went on leave, has returned to his prior position as associate athletic director.

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Ravens stump Bengals, lead AFC North

BALTIMORE (AP) -- An uncharacteristic performance by the Baltimore Ravens defense was offset by an uncommonly effective outing by Joe Flacco and the team's oft-criticized offense.

Flacco threw for 270 yards and two touchdowns, rookie Torrey Smith had six catches for 165 yards, and Baltimore moved into first place in the AFC North with a nerve-racking 31-24 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.

Playing without middle linebacker Ray Lewis for the first time in 58 games, the Ravens (7-3) nearly blew a 17-point lead in the final 14 minutes, yielded 483 yards and let rookie quarterback Andy Dalton throw for 373.

But Baltimore got 104 yards rushing and two touchdowns from Ray Rice , and the defense made big plays when it counted most. After Rice was stuffed on a third-and-1 with just over two minutes left, he remained confident.

"I just looked at the clock and I said, `Our defense will get it done,"' he recalled. "That's the faith I have in our guys."

Even without Lewis, who watched from the sideline after being placed on the inactive list with a toe injury. The Ravens' spiritual leader and leading tackler saw his unit pick off three passes and turn in a game-saving goal-line stand in the final minute.

Down 31-24, Cincinnati reached the Baltimore 7 before Terrell Suggs collared Dalton, who was called for intentional grounding. On fourth-and-goal, Dalton was sacked by Pernell McPhee .

The Bengals (6-4) needed seven points because on the previous series, an apparent 9-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Jermaine Gresham was overturned by a replay that determined the receiver didn't hold onto the ball at the end of a juggling catch. The Bengals settled for a field goal with 5:32 remaining.

"When the receiver went to the ground, he had the ball in his right hand," referee Ron Winter said. "The ball touched the ground and his hand came off the ball."

Baltimore is locked in a first-place tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC North, but the Ravens own the tiebreaker by virtue of their two wins over the Steelers.

"No. 1 in the division, that's huge," Suggs said. "Now we're the master of our destiny."

The Ravens won in part because of Smith, whose 165 yards were third-most by a receiver in Ravens history. He might have had more if Adam Jones didn't grab hold of Smith's long dreadlocks at the end of a 28-yard completion in the second quarter.

Jones was initially flagged for a horse-collar tackle, but officials corrected themselves and did not mark off any yardage because it's legal to tackle a runner by pulling his hair.

Even though it wasn't a banner day for the Baltimore defense, its three interceptions set up two touchdowns.

"Whenever we can get turnovers, it definitely makes everybody's job easier," cornerback Cary Williams said. "It's just being able to capitalize on opportunities, and we did that today."

Dalton went 24 for 45 with a touchdown. Cincinnati was without standout rookie wide receiver A.J. Green, who hurt his right knee a week earlier in a loss to Pittsburgh.

But the Bengals gave Baltimore all it could handle.

"We've won six games to this point and we'll win some more," coach Marvin Lewis said. "We've just got to circle the wagons, lick our wounds and go."

One week earlier, the Bengals came up short in rallying from a 14-0 deficit against Pittsburgh. It was more of the same against the Ravens.

"It comes down to the fourth quarter. That's how every game's been for us," Dalton said. "We've got to start faster. We can't wait around until the end of the game to pick it up, come out and get back in it. It's definitely going to be a focus for us."

Baltimore took a 24-14 lead on a 2-yard run by Rice late in the third quarter. The score came after Ravens rookie cornerback Jimmy Smith picked off a pass and returned it 16 yards before fumbling. The loose ball was recovered at the Cincinnati 2 by teammate Brendon Ayanbadejo in a pile that included Winter.

The Bengals' following possession ended with an interception by Lardarius Webb . On the next play, Torrey Smith split the Bengals' two-deep zone and caught a 38-yard touchdown pass in the back of the end zone to make it 31-14.

The Bengals responded with a five-play, 80-yard drive capped by a 49-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Andre Caldwell , who slipped behind Jimmy Smith down the right sideline.

But the Ravens held on, rebounding after a 22-17 loss at Seattle last week. Baltimore has won 12 straight following a defeat.

"It's good to bounce back," Suggs said, "but let's not take any more steps back."

The Bengals punted six times in the first half, two short of their season high for an entire game. Cincinnati's offense managed only 143 yards before halftime, 47 of those on one play.

On the Bengals' second possession, wide receiver Jerome Simpson made a juggling catch for a 47-yard gain to set up a 7-yard touchdown run by Cedric Benson .

The Ravens didn't get past midfield until early in the second quarter, following a 15-yard punt by Kevin Huber . Starting at its 45, Baltimore picked up a first down before Flacco tossed a short pass to Anquan Boldin , who ran the final 20 yards for a 35-yard touchdown.

NOTES: Former Ravens kicker Matt Stover was inducted into the team's Ring of Honor during a halftime ceremony. ... Ravens LB Jarret Johnson made his 74th consecutive start, breaking the franchise record previously held by Michael McCrary and Jamie Sharper. ... Baltimore has won seven straight at home and 15 of 16.

� 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

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CFT: SEC rules BCS standings

As is the case each and every week ? except for the past two; the happenings in Happy Valley kind of got us sidetracked ? any omission below is not on purpose, it?s merely intentional.

WINNERS

Lee (expletive deleted) Corso
My dad has always been a deeply devout and religious man, and I had never heard him swear until I was about 17 or 18 and he accidentally described a pile of dog poop in a non-religious way. �That feeling of utter giddiness I for some reason felt upon hearing my dad utter an expletive? �It was revisited while watching ESPN?s College GameDay show Saturday. �As he was preparing to don the headgear in making his prediction for the Houston-SMU game, and apparently growing weary in his attempts to whip the UH crowd into a frenzy, Lee Corso said, and I quote: ?Aw, f? it? as he donned the head of the Cougars? mascot. �The schoolyard-esque reactions by Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit, particularly the latter as shown in the photo to the right (via), were priceless, and at the extreme opposite end of Corso?s subsequent apology. �It was an unnecessary mea culpa for one of the most epic moments in the show?s history. �For that, Mr. Corso is more than worthy and well-deserving of the top slot in this week?s Winners section. �And, as it turns out, his prescient words were the appropriate attitude for one of the wildest weeks of the season?

SEC Best
(See what I did there?) Prior to the slate of Week 12 games, LSU, Alabama and Arkansas were ranked first, third and sixth, respectively, in the set of BcS rankings released last week. �Thanks to upset losses suffered by Oklahoma State (then-No. 2 in the BcS), Oregon (No. 4) and Oklahoma (No. 5) in this up-is-down weekend, the SEC West is now officially 1-2-3 in the latest BcS rankings revealed Sunday evening. �It?s also officially ridiculous, unprecedented and unheard of in the BcS era for that to happen with three teams from the same division let alone the same conference. �The biggest winner, though, in all of this tumult? �Potentially, the Razorbacks. �If the Hogs can beat LSU in Death Valley next week to make it a three-way tie in the West? and if ? admittedly as big an if as beating LSU on the road ? Arkansas and LSU are rated ahead of Alabama in the final regular season BcS rankings? if those two things were to occur, then it would be Arkansas representing the division in the conference championship game. �After what?s transpired over the past few weeks, that would hardly register as a surprise. �Something else that wouldn?t be surprising? �The Razorbacks making it to and losing the SEC championship game, and two teams from the same conference that didn?t even win their division ? LSU and Alabama ? playing for the BcS title. �Then again, the Tigers doing the expected and taking care of the Razorbacks next Saturday makes all of this a moot point and an exercise in ain?t-gonna-happens.

Chaos? You want chaos?
No. 3 Arkansas has to play No. 1 LSU. �No. 4 Stanford still has No. 22 Notre Dame with which to deal. �No. 2 Alabama still has the Iron Bowl rivalry with Auburn to navigate, while No. 5 Oklahoma State has their annual Bedlam showdown with No. 12 Oklahoma. �And lest we forget No. 6 Virginia Tech?s in-state matchup with No. 24 Virginia. �Given those games involving one-loss teams, and as we noted last night, the following scenario is entirely plausible: LSU and No. 8 Houston finish undefeated; No. 7 Boise State ends with one loss; and every other team in the country has at least two losses. �What happens then? �A playoff is what should happen then, but that?s another story for another day.

Hoos the boss?
It could very well be Virginia at this time next weekend. �Thanks to their nail-biting win over Florida State ? the Seminoles? final drive was kept alive by a fourth-down facemask penalty and a replay reversal, but ended with a game-winning field-goal attempt that sailed wide left ? all the Cavaliers have to do is beat Virginia Tech at home and, unbelievably, they will represent the ACC Coastal and face Clemson in the conference title game. �Regardless of what happens next weekend, however, the job Mike London is doing at Virginia cannot be applauded loudly enough. �With the Hoos currently at 8-3 after many predicted the cellar in the preseason, is it any surprise London?s name is being attached to jobs like Penn State? �Speaking of underrated coaches doing a tremendous job in college football?s version of a back 40 outpost?

All Rhoads lead to an upset
Paul Rhoads has become a YouTube sensation during his two-plus seasons at Iowa State thanks to his exuberant and impassioned postgame locker room speeches. �Of course, big wins are necessary to trigger such joy, and, boy, did Rhoads? Cyclones ever deliver one of those Friday night. �Thanks to their monumental upset of then-No. 2 Oklahoma State, the Cowboys will face a significantly more challenging row to hoe in order to remain in contention for a spot in the BcS title game. �It was hands down the biggest win in Rhoades? brief tenure, and arguably the biggest win in school history. �ISU is far from the most talented team in the Big 12 let alone the country, but, as Ben and I were Skyping ? it?s OK; we?re consenting adults ? during game, he wrings every last bit out of what he has, and his players will run through walls for their head coach. �I don?t know how long Rhoads will stay in Ames, but I would suggest Cyclone fans enjoy him while they can because he will be in demand regardless of what the won-loss record reads.

If Matt Barkley returns?
There have been many impressive single-game performances this season ? LSU thumping Oregon being one of them ? but you could count on one hand and probably have some spare fingers left the number that were more impressive than what No. 10 USC did to the No. 9 Ducks in Eugene Saturday night. �It?s hard to say what was more eye-opening: opening up third-quarter leads of 17 and 24 points in Autzen Stadium, or withstanding a furious fourth-quarter rally by a Ducks team trying to stay in the BcS title mix. �Lane Kiffin gets a lot of grief, and I?ve never been shy about taking any and all shots at the man, but Monte?s son can recruit with the best of them ? Marquise Lee? �Wow ? and is underrated game-day coach, as proven Saturday in outcoaching Chip Kelly on his own turf. �USC currently stands atop the Pac-12 South standings but, because of the NCAA sanctions and the conference?s subsequent decision, the Trojans will not be permitted to play in the inaugural title game. �That won?t be the case next year and, if Matt Barkley decides to return ? slim as that chance may be at the moment ? not only will the Trojans be the prohibitive divisional favorite, but they would have the kind of returning that screams for placement deep inside the Top Ten of the preseason polls.

My limited brain matter
Thanks to wins by No. 11 Michigan State and No. 15 Wisconsin, and a loss by No. 22 Nebraska, the races in the two Big Ten divisions have become very, very simple: Michigan State will represent the Legends division in the inaugural conference championship game the first weekend of December, while the winner of the No. 20 Penn State-Wisconsin game will represent the Legends. �After a couple of weeks attempting to divine what would happen if there were a three-way tie that got down the the 245th tiebreaker, this clarification is a welcome relief.

Illini Nation
Wait, didn?t Illinois just lose their fifth straight game ? 28-17 to No. 15 Wisconsin ? after beginning the season with six consecutive wins? �That they did, but this just means the Illini faithful are one more regular season game plus whatever lower-tier bowl game their team may stumble and stagger into from the official end of the Ron Zook Era. �Unofficially, it?s already over; the new athletic director will move in another direction, although he will wait (probably) until after next weekend before pulling the trigger. �For that, Illini Nation should rejoice, then immediately demand the following: �hire Eastern Michigan?s Ron English. �You?ll thank me later.

Houston, you might still have a problem
Lost amid all of the talk of undefeated Houston getting snubbed for a shot at a BcS title is the fact that the Cougars still have at least one big game remaining. �This weekend, UH will take on Tulsa, which is tied with the Cougars atop the Conference USA West division standings at 7-0. �The game will be played in Tulsa, and marks the first real test of the season for the Cougars ? and, yes, that includes the season opener against Pac-12 South front-runner UCLA. � �Should UH successfully navigate that road trip, they would face Southern Miss in the conference championship game if the Golden Eagles can rebound from an upset loss to UAB and beat lowly Memphis. �A loss by Southern Miss and a win by Marshall would put the Herd into the title game as the East?s representative.

It?s the defense, stupid
To say No. 17 Michigan struggled on defense during the Rich Rodriguez Era would be like saying RichRod?s kind of unpopular in West Virginia. �To say that the Wolverines? have greatly improved on that side of the ball under Brady Hoke would be understating reality as well. �How much has UM?s defense improved? �Let us count the ways, beginning with RichRod?s final season in Ann Arbor:

Rushing, 95th (188.9 ypg); passing, 112th (261.9 ypg); total, 110th (450.8 ypg); scoring, 108th (35.2 ppg)

And now, after ridding themselves of one Greg (Robinson) in favor of another (Mattison), the stats from thus far this year illustrates the stunning transformation in less than on full season:

Rushing, 41st (130.9); passing, 22nd (191.3); total, 17th (322.2); scoring, 7th (16.1)

Those were the stats entering Saturday?s game against Nebraska. �By limiting the Cornhuskers to just 17 points and 260 total yards, the Wolverines did little to hurt themselves statistically. �And, with the win, showed the stench from the previous regime is quickly being washed away, possibly revealing an at-large BcS berth at season?s end.

LOSERS

Shoulda Ducked, Sooner
The upset loss Oklahoma State suffered Friday night simultaneously knocked the Cowboys from the ranks of the unbeaten and pulled both Oregon and Oklahoma right back into the BcS title mix. � So, what do both teams go and do less than 24 hours later? �Slap the gift horse in the mouth. �Hard. �Instead of remaining one of the gaggle of one-loss teams hoping for additional carnage that could land them in New Orleans in January, the Ducks and Sooners now find themselves with two losses and zero chance of even being on the periphery of the title talk. �Probably.

Boise?s state of despair
One stinking missed field goal, a 39-yard attempt that sailed wide right two weeks ago and ended their perfect season. �Make that and, with all of the tumult that?s gone down since, BSU is right in the thick of the title talk. �Instead, the Broncos are kicking themselves for late-game kicking woes that have plagued them for two years running. �Out of all the teams that suffered on-field losses Friday and Saturday, the Broncos may have lost the most based on what happened the week before.

SEC Least
(See what I did there?) �It?s not exactly a state secret that the SEC East is in a down cycle this season. �Never was that on fuller display than this weekend. �At various points throughout the day Saturday, Florida was down 22-7 to Furman in the second quarter; No. 14 South Carolina was ahead of The Citadel 20-13 at the half; and No. 13 Georgia, the winner of the East, had unexpected trouble with Kentucky, trailing the Wildcats 10-6 midway through the second quarter before going on to a 19-10 win between the hedges. �Those are three struggles to varying degrees against two Div. 1-AA schools and another that?s played like one this season. �Yes, we understand that these things run in cycles, but there?s some fair-to-middlin? football being played in that division. �On the other hand, Mark Richt?s backside certainly appreciates the 2011 breather ? and reprieve.

There are no winners here
Well, technically there will be, but c?mon. �When a UCLA team that?s lost by 29 at home to 6-4 Texas? by 36 to 3-8 Arizona? by 25 to Utah, which opened conference play with four straight losses, is in control of its own destiny in the Pac-12 South, well, there?s just something inherently wrong with the situation. �Regardless, that?s where it stands. �If the Bruins beat USC next week in the annual crosstown rivalry game, they will represent the South in the title game and (probably) face Oregon. �However, if the Bruins lose to the Trojans, Arizona State beats Cal and Utah beats Colorado, the Sun Devils would win that three-way tie based on a better record in the division than the Bruins and a head-to-head win over the Utes. �ASU would lose a two-way tie with UCLA due to a loss earlier this month. �In other words, the Sun Devils will be big USC and Utah fans this weekend. �Oh, one more thing: Utah can be the South champs if they win and the other two lose. �Simple, right?

We have a cleanup in aisle three? and four? and five?
OK Clemson, we get it. �You wrapped up the ACC Atlantic title last week and are merely playing out the string and trying to get/stay healthy until you get to the conference championship game in a couple of weeks. �But, a 37-13 loss to North Carolina State? �Really? �Have a little pride, be a man. �Then again, after getting castrated by a team likely playing under the direction of a lame-duck coach, the latter might be hard to accomplish. �Surely Sammy Watkins, who dressed for the game but didn?t play because of a shoulder injury, isn?t that important against a team like the Wolfpack, is he? �And, hell, given all the carnage that took place ahead of them, the Tigers cost themselves any shot, remote as it may have been, of a spot in the BcS title game. �But, hey, they have that divisional crown going for them, which is nice.

One big clusterfudge
Or, as Lee Corso would refer to? ah, never mind. �That clarification I noted earlier when it comes to the Big Ten? �It?s exactly the same in the Big East, only completely opposite and totally different. �Ben deftly broke the situation down right HERE ? two teams at 4-2, three at 3-2 ? but it appears that, if West Virginia wins their final two games, they would probably be in the best position to win the conference ? unless they end up in a three-way tie with Louisville and Rutgers. �In such a scenario, the Cardinals would represent the Big East in the BcS. �I think. �The only thing I know for sure about the Big East is that Ben will be riding this nag down the homestretch and into the barn. �Or the glue factory. �One of the two.

A kneel to the groin
What type of new, all-time low did the Rebels football program reach Saturday? �With a little over five minutes remaining, they were trailing LSU 52-3 ? and the Tigers, out of mercy and/or pity, began taking a knee on offense instead of running plays inside Ole Miss? five-yard line. �Personally, if it were my team, I would rather have the opposition throwing every down or pounding it down my throat trying to run up the score than throwing a kneeling pity party on my home turf. �Honestly, it doesn?t get much worse than that. �If you don?t believe me, just ask the Rebels. ?A lot of guys felt like it was embarrassing,? quarterback Barry Brunetti said. ?? It made a lot of us mad, just furious, that you could kneel it with five minutes left.? �Ladies and gentlemen, your 2011 Ole Miss Rebels?

ODDS & ENDS

? Just thinking out loud here: who the hell does Bob Stoops think he is calling timeout with 51 seconds left, Bret Bielema? �In and of itself that decision didn?t cost the Sooners the win, but it did allow Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III to run for 30 yards on consecutive plays and put himself in position to throw the game-winning touchdown seconds later. �At minimum, though, that decision cost OU a shot at overtime as the No. 21 Bears were content to run out the clock prior to the TO.

? USC and Oregon are both 9-2. �Saturday night, the Trojans beat the Ducks in Eugene, and yet the Associated Press has the loser of that game one spot ahead of the winner in their latest rankings. �Excellent logic and solid work fellas. �Excellent. �Solid.

? UMass played its final game as a Div. 1-AA (FCS) member Saturday, losing to James Madison 34-17 and finishing the year at 5-6. �The Minutemen will join the MAC beginning in 2012.

? There are rumblings emanating from the southern part of the country which suggest the Gator Bowl is looking to secure a postseason matchup between Ohio State and Florida. �Imagine the storylines heading into that one, especially if Urban Meyer takes the Buckeyes job as has been heavily rumored.

? After a tumultuous offseason, Jordan Jefferson made his first start of the 2011 season for LSU against Ole Miss. �And, based on the fact that it was the Rebels, it wouldn?t have mattered if it were George Jefferson making his first start of the season as the No. 1 Tigers scored 28 seconds into the game and ended up on the right side of a 49-point win.

? ?One more year! �One more year!? South Carolina fans chanted following an Alshon Jeffery catch. ?Nah, I don?t have no thoughts on that,? the wide receiver said when asked after the win over The Citadel if Gamecock fans will get their wish and he?ll return for another season, eschewing a shot at the April NFL draft.

? You want to make the case, so to speak, for Houston as this year?s Boise State and are deserving of consideration for the BcS title game if they go undefeated? �Note that the Cougars have beaten their last six opponents by an average of 42.6 points. �You want to counterattack and show there?s no way they deserve it? �Note that those six teams have a combined record of 23-41, including just a 3-11 mark against teams from BcS conferences.

? Oklahoma defensive end Ronnell Lewis will likely miss the regular-season finale due to a sprained MCL. �He should be able to return for the Sooners? bowl game.

? Texas A&M lost leading rusher Christine Michael to a season-ending knee injury earlier this month, and now his running mate has some injury question marks as well. �After topping 1,000 yards for the second straight season, Cyrus Gray was sidelined for the remainder of a 61-7 throttling of Kansas with a shoulder injury. �The severity of the injury is not known at this time, with head coach Mike Sherman saying only that Gray would be evaluated further in the coming days.

? In attendance for the USC-Oregon game and sporting Trojans colors, LeBron James was told to take his talents somewhere other than the Autzen Stadium field by security prior to kickoff. �Unfortunately, no gun play was involved in getting Benedict LeArnold off the playing surface.

? A U-haul truck carrying kegs of beer struck and killed a 30-year-old woman who was tailgating prior to the annual Harvard-Yale game. �Two other women were injured, and the driver of the van is currently in police custody. �As if it matters after such a tragedy, Harvard beat Yale 45-7. �It was the Crimson?s 10th win in 11 games in the third-longest rivalry in the country.

? Jon Woods, who has spent the past 28 years as the director of The Best Damn Band in the Land, was given the honor of dotting the ?i? in Script Ohio as he?s stepping down after the end of this season. �Woods joins other honorary dotters that includes�Bob Hope, Woody Hayes, Jack Nicklaus and John Glenn.

? Out of some of the most horrendous allegations imaginable, some good has come: Penn State alumni have raised more than $430,000 that will be donated to The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN), a national organization charged with helping the victims of sexual abuse.

HEISMAN RACE, BY THE NUMBERS

A statistical look at how some ? and I simply can?t stress the word ?some? enough ? of the top contenders for this year?s stiff-arm trophy fared over the weekend, listed in alphabetical order so as not to offend any of the delicate sensibilities readers in the audience may possess or get their unmentionables all wadded up over ?their? player being excluded and/or snubbed:

Montee Ball, RB, Wisconsin (9-2, No. 15)
Saturday: 338 carries for 224 yards (5.9 yards per carry), two touchdowns; two receptions for (-1) yards, one touchdown
Season: 223 carries for 1,466 yards (6.6 yards per carry), 25 touchdowns; 16 receptions for 233 yards, five touchdowns

Matt Barkley, QB, USC (9-2, No. 10)
Saturday: 26-of-34 (76.5 percent), 323 yards, four touchdowns, one interception; three carries for (-2) yards, zero rushing touchdowns
Season: 273-of-404 (67.6 percent), 3,105 yards, 33 touchdowns, seven interceptions; 27 carries for 20 yards, two touchdowns

Robert Griffin III, QB, Baylor (7-3, No. 21)
Saturday: 21-of-34 (61.8 percent), 479 yards, four touchdowns, zero interceptions; 18 carries for 72 yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 245-of-336 (72.9 percent), 3,572 yards, 33 touchdowns, five interceptions; 135 carries for 550 yards, five touchdowns

Case Keenum, QB, Houston (11-0, No. 18)
Saturday: 30-of-45 (66.7 percent), 318 yards, one touchdown, zero interceptions; four carries for 19 yards, one touchdown
Season: 309-of-421 (73.4 percent), 4,269 yards, 38 touchdowns, three interceptions; 41 carries for 54 yards, three touchdowns

Collin Klein, QB, Kansas State (9-2, No. 16)
Saturday: 9-of-17 (52.9 percent), 83 yards, one touchdown, zero interceptions; 26 carries for four yards, one touchdown
Season: 138-of-236 (58.5 percent), 11 touchdowns, five interceptions; 241 carries for 1,009 yards, 24 touchdowns

Andrew Luck, QB, Stanford (10-1, No. 4)
Saturday: 20-of-30 (66.7 percent), 257 yards, two touchdowns, one interception; five carries for (-1) yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 241-of-343 (70.3 percent), 2,937 yards, 31 touchdowns, eight interceptions; 39 carries for 133 yards, two touchdowns

Kellen Moore, QB, Boise State (9-1, No. 7)
Saturday: 28-of-40 (70 percent), four touchdowns, one interception; two carries for (-10) yards, zero touchdowns
Season: 248-of-337 (73.6 percent), 2,915 yards, 35 touchdowns, six interceptions; 16 carries for (-50 yards), zero touchdowns

Trent Richardson, RB, Alabama (10-1, No. 2)
Saturday: bye weekend�32 carries for 175 yards (5.5 yards per carry), two touchdowns; one reception for four yards, one touchdown
Season: 236 carries for 1,380 yards (5.8 yards per carry), 20 touchdowns; 26 receptions for 322 yards, two touchdowns

Brandon Weeden, QB, Oklahoma State (10-1, No. 5)
Friday: 42-of-58 (72.4 percent), 476 yards, three touchdowns, three interceptions; no rushing statistics
Season:�355of-486 (73 percent), 34 touchdowns, 12 interceptions; 15 carries for (-95) yards, zero touchdowns

FOR STATISTICAL PURPOSES ONLY

? With 14 tackles in a loss to Notre Dame, Boston College linebacker Luke Kuechly set the ACC record for most career tackles. �Kuechly broke the old mark of 515 set by Clemson?s�Bubba Brown�(1976-79). �Kuechly also extended his streak of games with double-digit tackles to 33.

? Baylor quarterback�Robert Griffin III�accounted for 551 yards of total offense ? 479 passing, 72 rushing ? and four touchdown passes in the Bears? 45-38 win over Oklahoma.

? Michigan State?s 20 wins in 2010 and 2011 �the highest two-season total in school history. �It?s the first time the Spartans have won�at least nine games in back-to-back seasons since 1965-66.

? South Carolina also reached the nine-win mark for the second-straight season, marking the first time in school history they?ve accomplished that feat.

? This note is straight from the school?s media relations department: TCU?s seniors won their 45th game over the last four years, making them the winningest class in school history. They break the mark of 44 victories set by last year?s senior class. It?s the fourth straight season TCU?s seniors have set an all-time win record.

? With a 22-yard completion just past the midway point of the first quarter, Houston?s Case Keenum set a Div. 1-A record for career completions, breaking the old mark of 1,403 set by former Texas Tech quarterback Graham Harrell. �Earlier this year, Keenum broke Harrell?s record for career touchdown passes. �The sixth-year senior also tied Timmy Chang?s record for most career 300-yard passing games with 36. �All told, Keenum has broken or tied six major career passing marks this season. �Here they are:

Passing Yards: 17,855
Total Offense: 18,771
Touchdown Passes: 145
Career Touchdowns: 168
Career Completions: 1,527
Career 300-Yard Games: 36
Career 4,000-Yard Seasons: 3

? Prior to a two-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter from Tyler Bray to Da?Rick Rogers, Tennessee had not scored a second-half point since Oct. 8 against Georgia. �That?s a span of 175 minutes, 18 seconds over 11 quarters and six games.

? Alabama came into the Georgia Southern game having allowed 29 total points in their past four games; the 1-AA Eagles scored 21 points in what was a rather lackluster effort for the Tide.

? Alabama running back Trent Richardson now has 20 rushing touchdowns on the season, breaking the single-season school record of 19 set by Shaun Alexander in 1999.

? With three more Saturday, Wisconsin?s Montee Ball now has 30 touchdowns ? 25 rushing, 5 receiving ? in 11 games this season.

? Georgia linebacker Jarvis Jones had another 2.5 sacks in the East-clinching win over Kentucky, pushing his total on the season to 12.5. �Not only does he lead the SEC in that country, but he?s tied for second in the country behind Illinois? Whitney Mercilus�(13.5).

? In their 20-3 win over Cincinnati, Rutgers had a 23-play drive ? that ended in a field goal. �?Big East football: it?s offensive!?

? Iowa State came into Friday night?s game against Oklahoma State giving up an average 203.1 yards per game on the ground. �The Cyclones left the game with a stunning upset of the second-ranked Cowboys having given up just 60 yards rushing, the second-lowest total of the season for OSU ? 46 in a one-point win over Texas A&M.

? One more ISU note: the Cyclones lost their first four Big 12 games by an average of 24 points. �They?ve now won their last three and are bowl eligible for the second time in three years under Paul Rhoads.

? OK, I lied; one more: Since 1936, ISU had been 0-56-2 against teams ranked in the sixth or higher before their monumental upset.

? Houston had scored at least 49 points in their last seven games, but failed to reach that mark in their 37-7 win over SMU. �That means Harvard?s streak of eight straight games scoring at least that 49 points back ?set back in 1887 ? will remain the all-level record. �(Tip O? the Cap: Chris Fowler)

? Colorado has lost 23 straight games on the road. �Their last win away from Folsom Field? �Oct. 27, 2007, against Texas Tech in Lubbock.

? From the fine folks at WKU?s media relations department:�For the first time since becoming a full-fledged Football Bowl Subdivision member in 2009, the Western Kentucky University football team is bowl eligible after a 31-21 win at North Texas on Saturday night.

HE SAID IT

?This is a screwed up night,? Texas Tech head coach Tommy Tuberville, technically describing a 31-27 loss to Missouri but serve as more-than-appropriate summation of what was a gloriously upsetting weekend in the wild and wonderful world of college football.

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