Tuesday, September 3, 2013

College Football Picks: Week 2

It was a respectable 2013 debut as I went 8-2 on winners and 7-3 against the spread. Going out on a limb for Cal cost me, but overall I was content with the effort.

Three quick takeaways from the first weekend (possibly topics to expand on in future blogs):

1. Attack of the FCS - The artists formerly known as I-AA had quite a showing: 8 wins over FBS schools, including Eastern Washington taking down #25 Oregon State, North Dakota State stunning Kansas State in Manhattan, and McNeese State blowing out South Florida. Was this an anomaly or is the gap between FCS and FBS closing?

2. Faking injuries - College football fans may not want to hear this, but faking injuries is becoming as much a part of their game as it is in soccer. Just as soccer players routinely dive and roll around in agony to draw a yellow card, college football players are now being instructed by their coaches to pretend to be hurt to disrupt offensive tempo. It's as troublesome as flopping in the NBA. It's brutal to watch, but it's here and I'm not sure it can be stopped. I wish I had a good solution to this. Maybe I will in a future blog.

3. Ejections - I'm all for player safety, but the NCAA may have gone a step too far with this rule that makes officials eject players for what they deem to be targeting. Some of these calls are so borderline, and it seems extreme to toss a guy out for what MIGHT be targeting. Some of these guys are just hitting the way they have been taught for about 10 years. If it's a blatant attempt to decapitate a player, sure throw that guy out, but I think a hit like the one we saw in the Cal/Northwestern game should not be ejection-worthy. An unfair ejection is going to cost a top 10 team a huge game at some point this season, and there are going to be riots among those fans.

Takes done. On to this week's picks:

#12 Florida (-3) at Miami (FL)
If Mack Brown is productive, Florida is a dangerous team.
While the Gators were a little sluggish against Toledo, Florida has to be happy with Mack Brown. The former blue chip prospect may be finally ready for a breakout season. If he and freshman phenom Kelvin Taylor (son of Gators great Fred Taylor) can help Florida control the clock, that means Jeff Driskel has to do a lot less to help Florida escape Miami with a win. I'll take the SEC talent on a top-12 team, even on the road in a rivalry game.
The pick: Florida 24-20

Houston (-3) at Temple
An overall uninspiring week two slate has me picking a game from this brutal American Athletic Conference. Temple was vulnerable to the big play against Notre Dame, and it had trouble moving the ball. To be fair, I think a lot of teams will have trouble against that ND defense. Houston's offense put up 62 on an overwhelmed Southern team. They'll have a tougher time in Philadelphia, but not significantly tougher. Big plays should lead Houston to a win.
The pick: Houston 42-34

Cincinnati (-8) at Illinois
After blowing out a team in the bottom half of the Big Ten last week, Cincinnati goes on the road this week to take on another one. Illinois barely escaped becoming the ninth FBS team last week to lose to an FCS team as it defeated Southern Illinois 42-34.
Tommy Tuberville has an above average team on his hands, and I'm sure he has Cincy talking BCS since the Bearcats are probably the second best team (behind Louisville) in the otherwise very weak American Athletic Conference. His squad will get it done on the road.
The pick: Cincinnati 31-21

#6 South Carolina at #11 Georgia (-3)
Georgia's brutal first month continues. After an upsetting opener at Clemson, now the Bulldogs come home to try to stop the most feared player in college football, Jadeveon Clowney. Despite the loss, Georgia's offense looked explosive, and I don't see that changing at home. The loss of Malcolm Mitchell hurts, but the offense scored 35 points without him last week. They may not score quite that many this week, but they may not have to. South Carolina did have 406 yards of offense against UNC, but it relied mostly on big plays to score its points. Those may be harder to come by between the hedges. Georgia rebounds from a tough loss.
The pick: Georgia 27-21

Duke (-6) at Memphis
I wish this was a basketball game. Duke, though, is viewed by many as a slowly rising team in the ACC. The Blue Devils are not going to win a championship any time soon, but they could become a regular bowl team for the league. Duke is getting better, and Memphis has quite a bit of work to do. Even on the road, I think Duke wins by more than one possession.
The pick: Duke 38-28

Syracuse at #19 Northwestern (-12)
Pat Fitzgerald and the Wildcats should
comfortably win the "Prose Bowl."
Cleverly dubbed the Prose Bowl, it features two schools known for producing quality journalists, particularly sports journalists... although there's another school out there that I think is just as good. Maybe I'm biased.
Northwestern pulled out a 42-41 thriller last year as Ryan Nassib led Syracuse on a furious late-game rally to take the lead before the Wildcats scored in the final minute. Nassib is now a New York Giant, and Syracuse does not have an NFL QB on its roster now.
Northwestern, on the other hand is building and looked pretty good in a tricky west coast opener against Cal. The Wildcats should be quite comfortable at home, and all of its journalist alumni should have a comfortable win to write about.
The pick: Northwestern 42-24

#15 Texas (-7) at BYU
Texas has struggled in recent years, but people sure are quick to pile on when things don't go perfectly. Twitter was ready to fire Mack Brown at halftime when UT got off to a slow start and trailed New Mexico State 7-0. Then Texas won 56-7 like it was supposed to.
BYU, on the other hand, started slowly and finished slowly at Virginia in a 19-16 loss. While I'm not ready to jump on the "Texas is back" bandwagon until after the Oklahoma game, the 'Horns should have way too much for BYU.
The pick: Texas 35-17

Colorado State (+10) at Tulsa
Ten points seems to be a big number for a team that looked as sluggish as Tulsa did last week. It's hard to judge Colorado State after just one game, a two-touchdown defeat to rival Colorado (another rebuilding program). The Tulsa offense was expected to be a lot more explosive, and I don't think it will be quiet two weeks in a row. However, the problems from last week might not be completely fixed in a week. The Rams might hang around, but TU will get a win.
The pick: Tulsa 27-20

Western Kentucky (+14) at Tennessee
Could Bobby Petrino make it back-to-back wins in the state of Tennessee over SEC teams? WKU defeated Kentucky in Nashville last week. This should be a step up in competition certainly, and I'd be stunned if the Hilltoppers won in Knoxville. Petrino intrigues me, though. While, he may make some poor decisions off the field, he can coach. He'll put together a game plan that will make Vols fans sweat, but Tennessee won't lose at home.
The pick: Tennessee 34-21

#14 Notre Dame (+3.5) at #17 Michigan
Tommy Rees made some nice throws against Temple.
Those won't be as easy to come by in the Big House.
Notre Dame's win over Temple was about what I expected: convincing but not spectacular. Tommy Rees looked great, but he had all day to throw. He won't have all day in the Big House. Amir Carlisle, though, could be a big factor in this game if he can get enough touches. He had 68 yards rushing on just seven carries and looked very explosive.
Michigan crushed a clearly overmatched Central Michigan team. Notre Dame's defense will be a much stiffer test for Devin Gardner and company. Despite the 59-9 blowout, Michigan's passing game was not outstanding: 14-of-21 for 221 yards, 1 TD and 3 picks between Gardner and freshman Shane Morris. The running game will have to control the game if Michigan wants to win this one. Freshman Derrick Green could shine.
Debate about whether or not this is a "historic" rivalry if you want, I think it's a good one. It's two of the winningest programs in the sport. They first met in 1887, and I know there are huge gaps in the rivalry (they only played twice between 1910 and 1978). I've been on this earth for 33 football seasons, and these two teams have met in 27 of them. From the Rocket to Desmond Howard to Shoelace, there have been some great games that I remember. To me, it's a traditional rivalry that I look forward to each year, and I hate that it's going away soon.
These two played a wild shootout under the lights in Ann Arbor two years ago that Michigan won in the final seconds. I think this time around will be a little different: a low-scoring rock fight that goes to the home team. It will be close, but I think the road atmosphere and Michigan's defense will be too much for the Irish.
The pick: Michigan 14-13

Finally, the curious line of the week to me: Kansas is a 23-point favorite over FCS opponent South Dakota, a team that was 1-11 last year. Yes, that's a bad team visiting Lawrence, but Kansas hasn't beaten anyone by that many points in three years. I'm not rooting against Charlie Weis and I think he has a promising QB in Jake Heaps, but that just seems like a big number next to Kansas for any opponent.

Enjoy week two, and watch out for that top step.

1 comment:

  1. Temple will surprise before and of the season. AAC is not as brutal as you think.

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