Some quick links on BYU's win.
Recap and game balls
BYU 24-21 over Tulsa: Rapid React
December 30, 2011
December 29, 2011
PITCH IT! Kickers running the option ends poorly for Air Force
The Military Bowl was as fantastic as anybody familiar with Toledo and Air Force would have expected. When Air Force completed a long pass to pull the score to 42-41 with less than a minute to play. The Falcons lined up for the extra point and faked it. It was beautiful. The holder rolled out, the kicker was wide open, and this happened:
The ball hitting the turf? No, that wasn't a pitch. The holder cut up-field and tried to score himself with the kicker waiting for the pitch, all by himself. He fumbled as soon as he was hit. Ballsy call from Troy Calhoun, and it worked, too, minus the execution. In hindsight, maybe keep your offense on the field and line up with players used to handling the option.
The ball hitting the turf? No, that wasn't a pitch. The holder cut up-field and tried to score himself with the kicker waiting for the pitch, all by himself. He fumbled as soon as he was hit. Ballsy call from Troy Calhoun, and it worked, too, minus the execution. In hindsight, maybe keep your offense on the field and line up with players used to handling the option.
December 28, 2011
Stat Pack: Toledo and Air Force could be a show
In about 2.5 hours (2:30 pm MT) Air Force will square off against Toledo in the Military Bowl. If you have been blessed enough to partake of Toledo MACtion at any time this year, you have seen TONS of points scored. But at least with Tim Jefferson at the helm (and with Toledo's defense), Air Force will certainly have the capability of putting up points. Here's a stat pack to compare the two squads:
Air Force is 7-5. The Falcons have not beat any team with a winning or .500 record, and played two FCS schools this season. AFA's losses were to TCU, at Notre Dame, San Diego State, at Boise State, and Wyoming.
Toledo is 8-4. The Rockets have two wins over winning teams, and two more over teams with a .500 record. It's losses were at Ohio State, Boise State, in OT at Syracuse (where a ref blew a PAT call that cost Toledo the game), and Northern Illinois.
Keep an eye on turnovers. Toledo has been one of the best in turnover margin, while Air Force likes to fumble. It rained yesterday and the field crew had a tarp over the field, and weather is supposed to be decent today. We'll have to see if the field conditions have any effect.
Air Force is 7-5. The Falcons have not beat any team with a winning or .500 record, and played two FCS schools this season. AFA's losses were to TCU, at Notre Dame, San Diego State, at Boise State, and Wyoming.
Toledo is 8-4. The Rockets have two wins over winning teams, and two more over teams with a .500 record. It's losses were at Ohio State, Boise State, in OT at Syracuse (where a ref blew a PAT call that cost Toledo the game), and Northern Illinois.
Keep an eye on turnovers. Toledo has been one of the best in turnover margin, while Air Force likes to fumble. It rained yesterday and the field crew had a tarp over the field, and weather is supposed to be decent today. We'll have to see if the field conditions have any effect.
AIR FORCE | ||||
STAT | # | Rank | # | Rank |
Rushing O | 320 ypg | 2 | 221 ypg | 14 |
Passing O | 139 ypg | 113 | 272 ypg | 29 |
TOTAL O | 459 ypg | 19 | 493 ypg | 8 |
Rushing D | 228 ypg | 113 | 123 ypg | 26 |
Passing D | 163 ypg | 6 | 278 ypg | 109 |
TOTAL D | 391 ypg | 69 | 401 ypg | 76 |
TO Margin | 0 pg | 59 | +1.33 pg | 3 |
Sacks | 1.42 pg | 93 | 1.83 pg | 68 |
Sacks Allowed | 0.75 pg | 6 | 0.75 pg | 6 |
December 23, 2011
Boise State, Moore end an era with a bang
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| Moore led Boise State in a romp over Arizona State (Ethan Miller/Getty Images) |
December 20, 2011
A look at departing, new MWC coaches
Four schools will debut new football coaches next year in the Mountain West Conference. Here is a quick look at the departing coaches from these schools and where the program sits after their tenure.
PAT HILL
FRESNO STATE
Tenure: 15 seasons.
Record: 112-80 (.583)
Bowls: 11 (4-7)
Best Season: 2001. The 11-3 Bulldogs beat Colorado, #10 Oregon State, and #23 Wisconsin to start the season, only to be derailed by Boise State and Hawaii.
The mustachioed Bulldog of the Valley made famous the phrase "play anyone, anytime, anywhere." Say what you want about Pat Hill -- that he'll "lose to anyone, anytime, anywhere" -- but the bottom line is Hill put Fresno on the map. Sure, in all his success and time, he never had anything like an undefeated season. This fact is magnified by Boise State's meteoric, swift rise within the same conference. But Hill believed in his players, and believed in challenging them with strong matchups and national travel. Unfortunately, Hill's undoing may have been his inability to win the conference separate from Fresno's tough non-conference scheduling. The Bulldogs won just one conference title in his 15 years, a three-way shared title in 1999. He leaves a legacy appreciated at the school of allowing and helping his athletes to succeed academically.
Official Departure: Fired.
Replacement: Tim DeRuyter. This will be the first head coaching gig for the former Air Force linebacker. DeRuyter was the defensive coordinator for Texas A&M for the past two seasons, taking a unit that was ranked 107th in total defense in 2009 and coaching them to 51st (2010) and 66th (2011) rankings in his two seasons there. Previously, he spent time as a defensive coach at Air Force, Ohio, Navy, and Nevada.
Official Fresno State Release
PAT HILL
FRESNO STATE
Tenure: 15 seasons.
Record: 112-80 (.583)
Bowls: 11 (4-7)
Best Season: 2001. The 11-3 Bulldogs beat Colorado, #10 Oregon State, and #23 Wisconsin to start the season, only to be derailed by Boise State and Hawaii.
The mustachioed Bulldog of the Valley made famous the phrase "play anyone, anytime, anywhere." Say what you want about Pat Hill -- that he'll "lose to anyone, anytime, anywhere" -- but the bottom line is Hill put Fresno on the map. Sure, in all his success and time, he never had anything like an undefeated season. This fact is magnified by Boise State's meteoric, swift rise within the same conference. But Hill believed in his players, and believed in challenging them with strong matchups and national travel. Unfortunately, Hill's undoing may have been his inability to win the conference separate from Fresno's tough non-conference scheduling. The Bulldogs won just one conference title in his 15 years, a three-way shared title in 1999. He leaves a legacy appreciated at the school of allowing and helping his athletes to succeed academically.
Official Departure: Fired.
Replacement: Tim DeRuyter. This will be the first head coaching gig for the former Air Force linebacker. DeRuyter was the defensive coordinator for Texas A&M for the past two seasons, taking a unit that was ranked 107th in total defense in 2009 and coaching them to 51st (2010) and 66th (2011) rankings in his two seasons there. Previously, he spent time as a defensive coach at Air Force, Ohio, Navy, and Nevada.
Official Fresno State Release
December 16, 2011
New Orleans Bowl Preview: SDSU vs LA-Lafayette
December 15, 2011
December 12, 2011
Louisiana Tech's Ryan Allen wins Ray Guy Award
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| via LaTechSports.com |
While national writers were flipping their lids about LSU's Brad Wing not being one of the finalists, Allen, Louisiana's other superb punter, had in his pocket the nation's #1 ranking in punts inside the 20-yard line (37) and punts inside the 10-yard line (20). Allen's mastery of the art of the "coffin-corner" kick won him the award, as only 6% of his punts resulted in a touchback.
After the 2010 campaign, Allen spent the off-season in Alabama working with punting coach Mike McCabe, who personally instructed last year's winner, Chas Henry of Florida.
A native of Salem, Oregon, Allen started his college career at nearby Oregon State where he began as a walk-on. "The other kid I walked-on with ended up getting the starting role," Allen recounts. "It was a blessing in disguise [because] I got to keep my redshirt freshman year."
Allen went to a camp in Las Vegas while he searched for a transfer destination. Louisiana Tech's soon-to-be head coach, Sonny Dykes, was at the camp, and Allen found his way to Ruston.
"It’s been a punter’s dream," Allen said of Louisiana Tech's WAC championship season. "I’ve been blessed to be in certain instances where I could switch the field position and pin them inside their 20. I couldn’t ask for a better season and for the opportunities I’ve been given."
Of Allen's 26 punts that were returned, only one was returned for five yards or more (11 were returned for one, zero, or negative yards; 14 more were returned for less than five yards).
December 11, 2011
Lillard drops 31 as Weber State cruises over Southern Utah
OGDEN -- Weber State played its best game since its convincing home victory against Utah State early in the season, downing future Big Sky opponent Southern Utah 84-66 on Saturday night at the Dee Events Center.
After a performance against BYU that resulted in hardly any assists for the team as a whole, the Wildcats assisted 20 of their 30 field goals to cruise to the victory. Damian Lillard put in an impressive first half, reaching 18 points after throwing down a dunk in traffic with a defender contesting, giving Weber a 44-32 halftime lead.
Lillard spent the first ten minutes of the second half facilitating the offense as the Wildcats stretched the lead without Lillard attempting a shot. Kyle Tresnak finished with 15 points in the post, with Byron Fulton and Jordan Richardson each adding 10. Lillard's night was over after dropping in a three-pointer with three minutes remaining, finishing with 31 points on 9-15 shooting, with nine assists and zero turnovers on the night. Interestingly for the Wildcats, Scott Bamforth, one of the best three-point shooters in the country, did not attempt a single shot in 30 minutes of play.
Ray Jones, Jr. led all Southern Utah scorers with 14 points on 6-8 shooting. Jackson Stevenett, hailing from nearby (to Ogden) Kaysville with family looking on, added 12 points and a team-high five assists. The Thunderbirds are now 4-5 and have nine days off before traveling to Troy, then hosting UC-Davis before embarking on its 18-game Summit League schedule.
Weber State moved to 6-2 with the win, and travels to play California next Friday. Lillard's performance moved him past Harold Arceneaux on Weber State's all-time scoring list (8th place).
An additional/alternate recap of this game can be found at The Mid-Majority
After a performance against BYU that resulted in hardly any assists for the team as a whole, the Wildcats assisted 20 of their 30 field goals to cruise to the victory. Damian Lillard put in an impressive first half, reaching 18 points after throwing down a dunk in traffic with a defender contesting, giving Weber a 44-32 halftime lead.
Lillard spent the first ten minutes of the second half facilitating the offense as the Wildcats stretched the lead without Lillard attempting a shot. Kyle Tresnak finished with 15 points in the post, with Byron Fulton and Jordan Richardson each adding 10. Lillard's night was over after dropping in a three-pointer with three minutes remaining, finishing with 31 points on 9-15 shooting, with nine assists and zero turnovers on the night. Interestingly for the Wildcats, Scott Bamforth, one of the best three-point shooters in the country, did not attempt a single shot in 30 minutes of play.
Ray Jones, Jr. led all Southern Utah scorers with 14 points on 6-8 shooting. Jackson Stevenett, hailing from nearby (to Ogden) Kaysville with family looking on, added 12 points and a team-high five assists. The Thunderbirds are now 4-5 and have nine days off before traveling to Troy, then hosting UC-Davis before embarking on its 18-game Summit League schedule.
Weber State moved to 6-2 with the win, and travels to play California next Friday. Lillard's performance moved him past Harold Arceneaux on Weber State's all-time scoring list (8th place).
An additional/alternate recap of this game can be found at The Mid-Majority
December 7, 2011
Boise State, SDSU take football to the Big East; Air Force is staying put; MWC/C-USA headed for merger
The Big East held a teleconference today to officially announce the additions of Central Florida, SMU, and Houston into the Big East in all sports, and Boise State and San Diego State will join the conference as football-only members.
At the same time, Frank Schwab of the Colorado Springs Gazette reported that Air Force is staying in the Mountain West Conference. (Coincidentally, Troy Calhoun also told Schwab he has not interviewed anywhere and is staying at Air Force just hours earlier.)
The WAC officially announced Boise State is housing its non-football sports in its conference. San Diego State is reportedly taking its non-football schools to the Big West.
Also being reported today is that the Mountain West may not consider adding any schools to replace its two departures, and will take the remaining 8-school lineup into an all-sports merger with Conference-USA (which lost the other three teams added to the Big East).
Here's a quick recap of the teleconference:
At the same time, Frank Schwab of the Colorado Springs Gazette reported that Air Force is staying in the Mountain West Conference. (Coincidentally, Troy Calhoun also told Schwab he has not interviewed anywhere and is staying at Air Force just hours earlier.)
The WAC officially announced Boise State is housing its non-football sports in its conference. San Diego State is reportedly taking its non-football schools to the Big West.
Also being reported today is that the Mountain West may not consider adding any schools to replace its two departures, and will take the remaining 8-school lineup into an all-sports merger with Conference-USA (which lost the other three teams added to the Big East).
Here's a quick recap of the teleconference:
December 6, 2011
Stat Spotlight: Top 10 rushers by percentage of team's carries
Here are the nation's top 10 rushers with the percentage of their teams' carries included. While not definitive of anything, the backs with the fewest percentage of team carries means that those players could have been given the ball more and rushed for more yards. In other words, had LaMichael James or Robert Turbin been given the rock like Robbie Rouse was, the nation's top-10 rushers list could look a lot different.
PLAYER | SCHOOL | YPG | % OF TEAM CARRIES |
LaMichael James | 149.64 | 37.7% | |
Bobby Rainey | WKU | 141.25 | 67.8% |
Ronnie Hillman | SDSU | 138.00 | 63.1% |
Montee Ball | 135.31 | 48.9% | |
Trent Richardson | 131.92 | 55.6% | |
Bernard Pierce | 125.55 | 42.4% | |
David Wilson | Va Tech | 125.15 | 49.1% |
Zach Line | SMU | 122.40 | 64.2% |
Robbie Rouse | 119.15 | 74.9% | |
Robert Turbin | 118.00 | 39.9% |
Report: Big East expansion happens tomorrow
Brett McMurphy of CBS Sports is reporting that the Big East will make official its expansion plans that include Boise State and San Diego State in football only, and Central Florida, Houston, and SMU in all sports.
What does this do to college sports out West? Quite a bit.
First Boise State and San Diego State must find homes for their other sports. The Big West is reportedly happy with adding SDSU, but does not want to add Boise State. Boise is too far away for the all-Cali bus conference (Hawaii is paying its own way in the Big West). The WAC is said to be open to Boise State, but Boise State is unsure about the WAC.
What does this do to SDSU and Boise basketball? Steve Fisher has turned the Aztec program into a western power -- they are 8-2 this season and went 34-3 last year! Leon Rice is turning Boise State around, too -- his Broncos are 7-1 at the moment.
Why would Boise State be unsure about the WAC? Comrade Craig is lurking, ready to poach the WAC again. Will the Mountain West try to add Utah State? San Jose State? Maybe even UTSA?
Will the rumored MWC/C-USA merger come to fruition? If so, some indications (like from UTEP's athletic director) are that it is in consideration for all sports, not just football. If this is the case, surely a school like Louisiana Tech moves to get into C-USA to replace outgoing teams and get inside the merger.
While this expansion won't ripple up into other BCS conferences, it is almost sure to ripple down throughout non-AQ and non-football land.
What does this do to college sports out West? Quite a bit.
First Boise State and San Diego State must find homes for their other sports. The Big West is reportedly happy with adding SDSU, but does not want to add Boise State. Boise is too far away for the all-Cali bus conference (Hawaii is paying its own way in the Big West). The WAC is said to be open to Boise State, but Boise State is unsure about the WAC.
What does this do to SDSU and Boise basketball? Steve Fisher has turned the Aztec program into a western power -- they are 8-2 this season and went 34-3 last year! Leon Rice is turning Boise State around, too -- his Broncos are 7-1 at the moment.
Why would Boise State be unsure about the WAC? Comrade Craig is lurking, ready to poach the WAC again. Will the Mountain West try to add Utah State? San Jose State? Maybe even UTSA?
Will the rumored MWC/C-USA merger come to fruition? If so, some indications (like from UTEP's athletic director) are that it is in consideration for all sports, not just football. If this is the case, surely a school like Louisiana Tech moves to get into C-USA to replace outgoing teams and get inside the merger.
While this expansion won't ripple up into other BCS conferences, it is almost sure to ripple down throughout non-AQ and non-football land.
The Upset Top 20 -- Week 14
Here is the final regular season poll from our voters. It appears our small sample of fans would narrowly put Oklahoma State in the title game against LSU. Make sure to check out the rest of the poll, too, as our voters have different feelings about several teams compared to where they ended up in the AP or Coaches polls.
Wk 14 – 12/3 | |||
TEAM | REC | PTS | |
1 | LSU (13) | 13-0 | 260 |
2 | 11-1 | 241 | |
3 | 11-1 | 238 | |
4 | USC | 10-2 | 199 |
5 | 11-1 | 194 | |
11-2 | 194 | ||
7 | Stanford | 11-1 | 188 |
8 | 11-2 | 156 | |
9 | 10-2 | 152 | |
10 | 10-2 | 127 | |
11 | TCU | 10-2 | 114 |
12 | 10-2 | 101 | |
13 | 10-3 | 92 | |
14 | 10-2 | 90 | |
15 | 12-1 | 71 | |
16 | Baylor | 9-3 | 67 |
17 | Clemson | 10-3 | 61 |
18 | 10-3 | 47 | |
19 | Virginia Tech | 11-2 | 45 |
20 | Southern Miss | 11-2 | 34 |
Also Receiving Votes: | |||
THE UPSET BLOG STAFF
ZACH BLOXHAM | Law Student
BRETT HEIN | Technical Writer
D.J. BECKETT | Business Student
BRADFORD CHRISTENSEN | Insurance Sales
ADDITIONAL POLLSTERS
ANDREW BOLTE | New Mexico
JONATHAN BUNTON | Michigan | English Teacher
JOHN CARY | Florida State | Attorney
JAROD DAILY | TCU | Copy Editor, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
CHRIS ENGER | Utah
WILL HUNTER | Boise State
JEREMY KIDD | BYU | Teacher
DAVID KREUTZ | Washington | Software Tester
BRENDAN LOY | USC & Notre Dame | Attorney
TYLER McADAMS | Alabama | Restaurant Trainer
TYLER RIGGS | Utah State | MBA Student, Radio Host
ZACH BLOXHAM | Law Student
BRETT HEIN | Technical Writer
D.J. BECKETT | Business Student
BRADFORD CHRISTENSEN | Insurance Sales
ADDITIONAL POLLSTERS
ANDREW BOLTE | New Mexico
JONATHAN BUNTON | Michigan | English Teacher
JOHN CARY | Florida State | Attorney
JAROD DAILY | TCU | Copy Editor, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
CHRIS ENGER | Utah
WILL HUNTER | Boise State
JEREMY KIDD | BYU | Teacher
DAVID KREUTZ | Washington | Software Tester
BRENDAN LOY | USC & Notre Dame | Attorney
TYLER McADAMS | Alabama | Restaurant Trainer
TYLER RIGGS | Utah State | MBA Student, Radio Host
December 5, 2011
No bowl tie-ins? No problem: The better bowl slate you would get if conference tie-ins were trashed
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| Thanks to conference tie-ins, the most-winning QB in the history of college football plays a 6-6 team in his final bowl |
Much of the outcry from college football fans this time of year has to do with the BCS. To be sure, the Biased Corrupt Scam is a terrible system. However, it's only part of the problem.
The entire bowl system is bound by rigid conference ties, ugly politics and a sickening attachment to the dollar (cash that, by the way, often eludes the schools that play in the games) that prevent teams from getting the high-caliber matchups that they've earned and that fans crave. For example, Boise State is an extremely good 11-1 team ranked in the top 10. But do the Broncos get a quality opponent in an attractive bowl game? Nope. They're stuck playing 6-6 Arizona State in the pre-Christmas Maaco Bowl in Las Vegas. Southern Miss, 11-2 and champion of Conference USA, got passed over by the Liberty Bowl — which for years has hosted the champion of C-USA — in favor of 6-6 Vanderbilt and 9-3 Cincinnati. And 9-3 Baylor, with Heisman contender Robert Griffin III at the helm, draws 7-5 Washington in the Alamo Bowl.
Some of these matchups can't be helped: There are only so many 10-win and/or ranked teams. And it is worth noting that very rarely, the bowl system gets something right: This year's Cotton Bowl Classic matches up two top 10 teams in Arkansas and Kansas State. Kudos to the committee of that game for getting a premier matchup and giving two teams the game they've earned. But that particular matchup seems to be the exception that proves the rule.
How, then, could we fix these games, which used to be such an important part of the sports landscape?
Report: Jake Heaps transferring from BYU
News broke this morning from Mason Kelly, the high school sports recruiting coordinator at the Seattle Times, that Jake Heaps is transferring from Brigham Young. BYU has now confirmed this with an official release.
Kelly is said to be close with Heaps and his family, who hail from the greater Seattle area. Kelly places likely transfer destinations for Heaps as Cal, Washington, Washington State, and maybe USC. Early speculation leans toward Cal and Jeff Tedford's pro-style system, as Zach Maynard will be a senior next year while Heaps must sit. Washington was the final competition for BYU in Heaps's initial recruitment. Washington State may also come into play with Mike Leach--a BYU grad--taking over in Pullman.
After growing pains in his freshman year, Heaps finished 2010 with a bang. With cracked ribs, Heaps led his team on two impressive drives on the road against heated rival Utah (only to have a BYU field goal blocked to deny a victory). In the bowl game, Heaps torched UTEP and led BYU to 50+ points. But this season, with new offensive coordinator Brandon Doman, Heaps regressed. Seeming to lack confidence both in himself and from many of his teammates, Heaps was benched after the stagnating BYU offense put the Cougars in a hole at home against in-state rival Utah State. Heaps saw action in two recent games against Idaho and New Mexico State with Riley Nelson injured, leading BYU to 42-7 victories in both games, but was put back on the bench last week at Hawaii.
Much of the problems surrounding Heaps seemed to be off the field, as speculation (which we have confirmed with sources) abounds regarding a split between upper- and lower-classmen regarding Heaps's work ethic.
For BYU, this would seem to leave Riley Nelson in sole possession of the starting job for 2012 in his senior year, along with fellow senior James Lark serving as the backup. Taysom Hill, originally committed to Stanford, is set to return from his church mission and join the team next year as well.
Update: Here is Mason Kelly's piece on the transfer, including quotes from Heaps
Kelly is said to be close with Heaps and his family, who hail from the greater Seattle area. Kelly places likely transfer destinations for Heaps as Cal, Washington, Washington State, and maybe USC. Early speculation leans toward Cal and Jeff Tedford's pro-style system, as Zach Maynard will be a senior next year while Heaps must sit. Washington was the final competition for BYU in Heaps's initial recruitment. Washington State may also come into play with Mike Leach--a BYU grad--taking over in Pullman.
After growing pains in his freshman year, Heaps finished 2010 with a bang. With cracked ribs, Heaps led his team on two impressive drives on the road against heated rival Utah (only to have a BYU field goal blocked to deny a victory). In the bowl game, Heaps torched UTEP and led BYU to 50+ points. But this season, with new offensive coordinator Brandon Doman, Heaps regressed. Seeming to lack confidence both in himself and from many of his teammates, Heaps was benched after the stagnating BYU offense put the Cougars in a hole at home against in-state rival Utah State. Heaps saw action in two recent games against Idaho and New Mexico State with Riley Nelson injured, leading BYU to 42-7 victories in both games, but was put back on the bench last week at Hawaii.
Much of the problems surrounding Heaps seemed to be off the field, as speculation (which we have confirmed with sources) abounds regarding a split between upper- and lower-classmen regarding Heaps's work ethic.
For BYU, this would seem to leave Riley Nelson in sole possession of the starting job for 2012 in his senior year, along with fellow senior James Lark serving as the backup. Taysom Hill, originally committed to Stanford, is set to return from his church mission and join the team next year as well.
Update: Here is Mason Kelly's piece on the transfer, including quotes from Heaps
2011 MWC Bowl Schedule
All five bowl-eligible teams in the Mountain West are bowl bound, as Air Force slides nicely into voids left by Army and Navy both being ineligible for bowl berths.
2011 WAC Bowl Schedule
Here's the slate of bowl teams from the WAC, which is a short list this year -- you can thank Hawaii's loss to UNLV and San Jose State's loss to Idaho for that.
December 3, 2011
Piercing the Veil of Cynicism
| Photo via MySanAntonio |
Friday afternoon in College Station, Mike Sherman provided one of those experiences at a most unlikely moment. Sherman, who had just been relieved of his head coaching duties at Texas A&M, held a press conference, where he described his time on campus, the joys of mentoring young men, and the pain of falling short of his own expectations. What would cause a man to face a press conference just hours after being informed of his dismissal? Sherman said he needed closure. What he supplied was a dialogue that belongs in the etched memory of sports lore.
Class is creation of the soul and it cannot be faked. Class is an outgrowth of humility. It is the ability to see beyond our own supremacy and turn the other cheek when we are offended, hurt, or betrayed. Betrayal may be the bitterest of feelings. While listening to Sherman on Friday, you could see the sting of disloyalty fresh upon his countenance. But that's what made his recital so breathtaking. He refused to let his disappointment cloud his true character.
This becomes more apparent when you compare his kind words of thanksgiving on Friday afternoon with the treatment he received from the A&M brass. Decency. Graciousness. Respectability. Nobility. Sometimes those nouns aren't reciprocated. They certainly weren't for Mike Sherman. It is hard to describe how things in college athletics, let alone life should be. Words, while strong, sometimes do not do experience justice. Words, however, when delivered with emotion can enlighten us to our very core. Sherman's meek walk into the sunset wasn't a fit of weakness. Far from it. It was an answer, in its own way, to how things should be.
Maybe that is why it affected me so much. If faced with similar circumstances, would I have be able to demonstrate that amount of personal courage and vigor? Perhaps its impact stems from a guilty conscience on my part. As a pundit of the game of college football I sit in the friendly and comfortable confines of my living room and tweet to my sarcastic heart's content. Too often I forget that there are good men in difficult situations doing the best they can under the brightest of lights. A fresh breath of humanity is a good remedy for becoming too fixated on the things that do not really matter.
"If you're only a football player and I am only a football coach, that's a sad testimony," Sherman recounted in the middle of his presser. A press conference where he would describe in detail the benefits of the A&M code of conduct, his love for the University and those who aided him. This despite the glaring reality that maybe all that he had believed in was merely a show. His treatment by those who carried the banner of the University would certainly cast a shadow on the truth of those principles.
Leon Trotsky once said that you cannot live through life "without falling into frustration and cynicism unless you have before you a great idea which raises you above personal misery." Mike Sherman's 41 minute press conference was the embodiment of what Trotsky was trying to get at, at least in the football sense. As he closed, Sherman said the following: "I love coaching and I love football and think it brings out the best in people." It surely brought the best out of you, sir.
Full Video and Transcript of Mike Sherman Presser
December 2, 2011
Week 14 Predictions
A few teams are wrapping up their regular seasons, plus the slate of conference championship games. It's our last Saturday full of football, friends.
FRIDAY
UCLA (6-6) @ #9 OREGON (10-2)
Pac-12 Championship | 6:00 pm MT | FOX
ZACH: UCLA has asked and received a waiver to compete in a bowl game despite its 6-7 record. Wait, it's just 6-6 and hasn't played its 13th game yet... I guess that tells you all you need to know about this one. The NCAA should have given USC a waiver to play in this game instead. OREGON 52 UCLA 13
BRETT: Oregon will have a full month before it plays again. I say the Ducks should go all out. OREGON 60 UCLA 13
DJ: OREGON 45 UCLA 10
BRADFORD: OREGON 45 UCLA 17
FRIDAY
UCLA (6-6) @ #9 OREGON (10-2)
Pac-12 Championship | 6:00 pm MT | FOX
ZACH: UCLA has asked and received a waiver to compete in a bowl game despite its 6-7 record. Wait, it's just 6-6 and hasn't played its 13th game yet... I guess that tells you all you need to know about this one. The NCAA should have given USC a waiver to play in this game instead. OREGON 52 UCLA 13
BRETT: Oregon will have a full month before it plays again. I say the Ducks should go all out. OREGON 60 UCLA 13
DJ: OREGON 45 UCLA 10
BRADFORD: OREGON 45 UCLA 17
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