Tuesday, November 16, 2010

USA TODAY Bowl Projections - Week 12

In a little less than three weeks, all the speculation about bowl destinations will end. There are several changes in this week's projections at the top, but Oregon and Auburn retain their places in the BCS national title game.
Boise State now looks positioned for the Rose Bowl after its improvement in the BCS standings, while TCU will moves to the Orange. Pittsburgh is out as the Big East representative with West Virginia tentatively taking the spot. And there's a lot of shuffling among the other games.

Teams in bold have accepted berths. Teams with asterisk fill spots due to conferences not meeting allotment of teams.

BCS national championship: Oregon vs. Auburn
Rose: Boise State vs. Wisconsin
Sugar:
LSU vs. Ohio State
Orange: Virginia Tech vs. TCU
Fiesta: Nebraska vs. West Virginia
Alamo: Missouri vs. Stanford
Armed Forces: Air Force vs. Southern Mississippi
Beef 'O' Brady's: Louisville vs. East Carolina
BBVA Compass: Connecticut vs. Georgia
Capital One: Michigan State vs. South Carolina
Champs Sports: Pittsburgh vs. North Carolina State
Chick-fil-A: Florida State vs. Arkansas
Cotton: Oklahoma State vs. Alabama
Gator: Penn State vs. Mississippi State
GoDaddy.com: Troy vs. Temple
Hawaii: Tulsa vs. Hawaii
Holiday: Texas A&M vs. Arizona
Humanitarian: Ohio vs. Fresno State
Independence: Clemson vs. Brigham Young
Insight: Oklahoma vs. Michigan
Kraft Fight Hunger: Boston College vs. Nevada
Liberty: Tennessee vs. Central Florida
Little Caesar's Pizza: Northern Illinois vs. Notre Dame*
Maaco Las Vegas: Toledo* vs. Utah
Meineke Car Care: South Florida vs. North Carolina
Military: Georgia Tech vs. UTEP
Music City: Maryland vs. Kentucky
New Mexico: Fresno State vs. Miami (Ohio)*
New Orleans: Florida International vs. SMU
Outback: Iowa vs. Florida
Pinstripe: Kansas State vs. Syracuse
Poinsettia: San Diego State vs. Navy
Sun: Miami (Fla.) vs. California
Texas: Baylor vs. Northwestern
TicketCity: Texas vs. Illinois

Moore Named “Player to Watch” for Walter Camp Award


The Walter Camp Football Foundation announced 15 “Players to Watch” for its 2010 National Player of the Year Award, Tuesday (Nov. 16), which includes Boise State quarterback Kellen Moore as one of 13 offensive players recognized by the Foundation.

Moore, a redshirt junior from Prosser, Wash. (Prosser HS), has played a vital role in Boise State’s 9-0 record (5-0 Western Athletic Conference) and No. 4 BCS ranking heading into this week. He currently leads the nation in pass efficiency rating (191.45 percent), with a completion percentage of 71.9 percent. Moore has completed 174-of-242 passes for 2,588 yards, 24 touchdowns and four interceptions.

 Moore is one of nine quarterbacks selected as a “Player to Watch” for the Walter Camp Player of the Year Award, which is voted on by Football Bowl Subdivision head coaches and sports information directors. The watch list also includes three running backs, one wide receiver and two defensive players. Five finalists for the award will be selected on Dec. 1 (Wednesday). The winner will be announced on Dec. 9 (Thursday) during the 6 p.m. ESPN SportsCenter broadcast.

This marks the second postseason award shortlist for Moore in as many weeks as he was also named one of 16 semifinalists for the Maxwell Award on Nov. 8.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Gophers football targets Chris Petersen (1), Jim Harbaugh (2), Gary Patterson (3)

At least the University of Minnesota is shooting high in its quest for a new football coach.

A little birdie says the Gophers have targeted, in order of priority, Boise State's Chris Petersen, Stanford's Jim Harbaugh and Texas Christian's Gary Patterson to replace the fired Tim Brewster. 

It seems unlikely any of the trio would leave what he has built for a gigantic rebuilding challenge at Minnesota.
Petersen, whose Broncos are 7-0 and ranked No. 4 in the BCS, was considered by Southern California to succeed Pete Carroll and certainly could choose from any number of jobs. He is signed through 2014 and reportedly averages almost $2 million a year.

Harbaugh, a Michigan grad, would seem destined for his alma mater if that job becomes available. And there's no reason to leave Stanford, which is ranked No. 13 at 7-1. Harbaugh is signed through 2014 for a reported base salary of $1.25 million. 

Patterson, who is signed through 2016 for a reported $2.5 million annually and without a buyout penalty, was seriously considered by the Gophers when they hired Brewster and didn't seem much interested then. His No. 3-ranked Horned Frogs are 9-0. 

The lone chance to get any of the three to even consider the Gophers would seem to be cash, lots of it. There's talk that the university could get the ban on alcohol sales removed at its athletic facilities, and that could be worth as much as $3 million annually, enough to pay a top-caliber football coach. 

Meanwhile, another little birdie says Minnesota is seriously interested in Northwestern offensive coordinator Mick McCall. 

Mike Bellotti, who was highly successful at Oregon, is also said to be on Minnesota's radar, as is former Boston College coach Jeff Jagodzinski. 

It's unclear whether former Gophers assistant Kevin Sumlin of the University of Houston is interested. Former South Florida coach Jim Leavitt is considered a candidate. 

Mike Leach, fired as football coach at Texas Tech amid allegations he mistreated a player with a concussion player last season, definitely is interested in the Gophers' football coaching vacancy, but Minnesota hasn't contacted him. 

Former Gophers QB Marc Trestman, who was a candidate for the job Brewster got and is expected to be a serious candidate for Minnesota this time, has his Montreal Alouettes with a 12-5 record. Assistant coaches for Trestman include Andy Bischoff (offensive line) and Tim Tibesar (linebackers), both from St. Paul.

Phil Fulmer, fired by alma mater Tennessee, is said to be interested in Minnesota.

Mountain West Conference Game Locations Set


Locations for Boise State University’s Mountain West Conference football schedule have been set for 2011, Director of Athletics Gene Bleymaier announced Thursday.

Boise State will welcome Air Force, New Mexico, San Diego State and Wyoming to Bronco Stadium in the team’s debut season in the Mountain West. Road games for the Broncos will include games at Colorado State, TCU and UNLV.

Dates and times for the games have not yet been determined.

The Broncos’ five nonconference games in 2011 include:
at Ole Miss, Sept. 3
at Toledo, Sept. 17
Tulsa, Sept. 24
Nevada, Oct. 1
at Fresno State, Oct. 8

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Boise State's value of experience


Here is a really good article from ESPN The Magazine senior writer Tim Keown.  

Wonder why the Broncos are so good? They've been together for years
The 2010 Boise State Broncos might be one of the most experienced teams in college football history.
Austin Pettis remembers nothing. It's tricky to explain, because this kind of nothing was a presence, not an absence. It invaded the Boise State Broncos' huddle as 11 Broncos came together to face the 56 yards that lay ahead with 1:47 remaining and the then-No. 10 Virginia Tech Hokies leading by four in the season-opening game. This nothing meant something.

The huddle felt hermetically sealed. No sounds -- not a thing -- seeped in from a mostly hostile crowd of more than 86,000. Inside, breathing was measured and doubt nonexistent as the world narrowed to 11 guys and 56 yards. To get there -- and they did get there, in all of 38 seconds -- the Broncos relied on feeling nothing. Pettis shrugs. It's hard to explain how those experiencing something extraordinary define it by its ordinariness. It was just another two-minute drill, like the ones he and his teammates had run at practice every Wednesday afternoon for the past three years. 

"It was the big stage, but it didn't feel like it," says the senior wideout. "It just felt like, I don't know, like what we do. Experience leads to confidence."

Nothing came from something. The Broncos, as a team, have the broadest and widest frame of reference in college football. An FBS-best 91.7 percent of lettermen returned from last year (compared to a national average of 70.4 percent), and Boise State returned more of its yards gained (99.3 percent) and tackles made (94.9 percent) than everybody else, too. On the NCAA's list of active career leaders there's a Bronco ranked in the top 10 in passing yards (Kellen Moore), receiving TDs (Pettis), points scored (kicker Kyle Brotzman), interceptions (CB Brandyn Thompson) and sacks (DE Ryan Winterswyk). 

How deep are the Broncos? Second-team All-WAC RB Jeremy Avery had four 100-yard games as a junior last year, and now he backs up rising sophomore Doug Martin. Sophomore receiver Kirby Moore, Kellen's brother, played in 13 games (including two starts) as a true frosh, caught two TD passes -- and found out the week of the Virginia Tech game that he would be redshirting this year. With the team's top eight receivers all returning (tied with UNC for tops among preseason Top 25 teams), including All-WAC WRs Pettis and Titus Young, coaches decided Kirby was a luxury who'd be better served running with the scout team in 2010.
In fact, all but two of the team's 23 listed starters -- the one extra is accounted for by different packages -- are juniors or seniors. Boise's roster is so packed that it signed the fewest 2010 recruits (nine) of any team in the nation.

Ask players why all that depth and experience matters and many have an example ready. Pettis compares the Virginia Tech comeback in 2010 with his second game as a Bronco, a 24-10 loss at the Washington Huskies in 2007. He remembers the amplification of every sound from the 70,000 at Husky Stadium. His mind was going a million different directions, with no focus. It was like trying to concentrate while trapped inside a barrel, with someone banging from the outside. The loss was one of just four his class has experienced -- they're a remarkable 44-4 through eight games of Pettis' senior season -- and set the table for what happened inside that final huddle against the Hokies. 

Safety Winston Venable starts to talk about a Sunday team workout in the pool after a 48-0 win over San Jose State. A few words into it, he stops. "Nah, people will think it's corny," he says. "Nobody will get it unless they were there."

Encouraged to try, Venable forges forward. As it turns out, one of the linemen started a rhythmic clap-clap-splash routine that spread from him to the rest of the linemen, then to the linebackers, then to the backs, and before long 105 college football players were laughing and goofing around and slapping the water like kids following a counselor's orders at summer camp. "I was looking around thinking, Who else is having this much fun?" Venable says. "I don't think anybody is. It's the kind of chemistry you get only from being around each other for a few years and understanding the difference between having fun and being funny."

Chris Petersen might not look like a big-time college football coach -- more like a good-natured dentist -- but he's typical in one respect: He can detect the grim side of a Pacific sunset. Sitting in his decidedly coach-class office (ground floor, no view, none of the survey-my-domain aesthetic of the Mack Browns of the world), he says, "There's always an issue. If you've got young guys, you worry about what they don't know. If you've got older guys, you worry that they'll take things for granted and details will slide."

Asked if the experience of Kellen Moore, Young and Pettis gives his offense more freedom to improvise, Petersen laughs and says, "Freedom? No. They have the freedom to do it exactly as it's supposed to be done."

Eventually, Petersen relents. Yes, he says, experience helps. It helps during the week, when guys like Kirby Moore and fifth-year senior running back Jarvis Hodge (a redshirt on the sideline during the Game That Changed Everything, the 2007 Fiesta Bowl win over Oklahoma) have the savvy and the talent to give the Broncos the kinds of scout-team looks that few teams get. 

Says Moore: "During games I'll watch other teams run a play we ran in scout team and I'll say, 'We ran that better in practice.'" Hodge, a fourth-string running back and special-teamer who has a 54-yard touchdown on his résumé this year, says, "The Oklahoma game is where it started. From there everybody knew we could do anything. No challenge too big."

Petersen's got a third-year starting QB whose idea of a hobby is to order old college playbooks off the Internet. He's got one four-year receiver (Pettis) who he says is "light years ahead of most guys when it comes to understanding the game." He's got another four-year receiver (Young) whose speed and route-running precision have allowed Moore the leeway to throw certain routes -- comeback passes, for instance -- away from his body so he can catch the ball in his hands and be in better position to run after the catch. His defense returned 18 of its top 19 tacklers from last year's 14th-best unit, which allowed 17.1 PPG. 

"That's where the experience shows," Petersen says. "They have a great feel for it, and most years you don't have that. Most years it's like, I hope you're on the same page. These guys are at their best when the coverage is tight or we get into some gray-area situations. With their experience and knowledge, the gray area becomes a little more black and white."

Petersen might lament the roster-balancing of the next two years. But if he was going to choose a year to load up, this might be the right one. They're once again at the forefront of the BCS argument of big versus little, automatic versus nonautomatic, SEC versus WAC.

Petersen tries not to sound exasperated when he says, "You could argue either side. It's like debate class."
The permutations and computations are somebody else's business, but if the Broncos keep winning they know there's hope for one final outcome: The chance to make nothing become everything.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Coach Petersen reacts to national "experts"

Boise State to play Non-Conference Games against Nevada and Fresno State in 2011

Boise State University has completed its non-conference football schedule for the 2011 season with the announcement the Broncos will play the University of Nevada and Fresno State.
The Broncos will host the Wolf Pack on Oct. 1 (Saturday), and the following week travel to play the Bulldogs on Oct. 8 (Saturday).
Nevada and Fresno State will play league games in the Western Athletic Conference next season before moving to the Mountain West Conference in 2012.
Boise State joins the MWC next year.
We are excited to continue the rivalry Boise State has with both Nevada and Fresno State next season, and look forward to both schools joining us in the Mountain West Conference beginning in 2012, Boise State Director of Athletics Gene Bleymaier stated.
Boise States non-conference schedule for next season includes games at Ole Miss on (Saturday; Sept. 3), at Toledo (Saturday; Sept. 17), at home against Tulsa (Saturday; Sept. 24), at home against Nevada (Saturday; Oct. 1) and at Fresno State (Saturday; Oct. 8).
The Broncos MWC schedule in 2011 will include games against Air Force, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, TCU, UNLV and Wyoming. Dates and locations for all Mountain West Conference games in 2011 will be announced by the league office early next year.