1 0 Archive | September, 2009
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Battle scars

By Aditi on 30. Sep, 2009

Connecticut Rutgers Football

Toward the end of last week, as it seemed more likely that Tom Savage’s head injury would sideline him at Maryland, I sat down with Dom Natale to talk about the possible opening – and staying ready. He of course said all the right things about preparing the same way and not getting down, but the QB he stood behind for three years (Mike Teel) always did the same. In fact, most every Greg Schiano player habitually spits out coach-approved quotes and so when Greg Schiano was again praising Natale’s attitude, I asked him why he keeps doing that. Isn’t that team-first selflessness, I asked, what you demand – and get – from all your players?

To his credit, Schiano paused a moment. And then said Dom’s a little different. Dom came in, he said, with an uncommon maturity.

Now we know part of why. Five days ago, the Press of Atlantic City’s Susan Lulgjurag wrote about Dom’s experience with cholesteatoma, a type of skin cyst in the inner ear which left Dom deaf in his right ear at age 12. In this morning’s editions of the Star-Ledger, Brendan Prunty wrote about it too.

Dom went out to Michigan State a highly-touted recruit and then dealt with a coaching change. He transferred, sat out a year, blew out his arm, finally got the starting job and then lost the starting job. People talk about his resilience and yet when he and I were chatting yesterday, I realized that resilience was learned before football.

What neither Susan nor Brendan wrote was that by the time Dom had the surgery to remove that mass of cells in his ear, he’d been operated on nearly a dozen times. His intestines were all twisted when he was little, he needed multiple eye surgeries – the surgery he had at Rutgers three years ago was the 14th of his life. He’s only 23 right now.

“My mom always says she was so scared every time we went to the doctor,” Dom said, smiling a little but mostly being matter-of-fact, like he always is. Dom volunteered that he wasn’t premature (“People always ask that when they find out about all the problems I had early,” he said) and that his teammates’ unmerciless teasing is kind of nice.

“They try to sneak up behind me and whisper in my right ear,” he said.

Tim Brown (who instructed me yesterday to stop calling him Timmy, because “Timmy sounds like a little kid’s name”) admitted yes, the Scarlet Knights will sometimes try to mess with Dom, “but only in fun,” he insisted.

“We always say he can’t hear the crowd noise, that’s why he doesn’t feel any pressure,” Tim said. He said no one’s very good at totally catching Dom off guard (Dom can feel vibrations if not sound) and he said Dom encourages the Scarlet Knights to be at ease with what clearly isn’t an impairment.

I wrote last night of Schiano’s feeling that Dom’s leading a win at Maryland and Savage’s continued sidelining won’t re-open Rutgers’ QB competition, that Savage will return as starter when he’s healthy. Either way, I’m sure we’ll keep seeing some of Natale. And I’m fairly sure Rutgers fans will keep rooting for Natale too.

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Morning Round-up, Wednesday

By Aditi on 30. Sep, 2009

paperA clown’s in space, hospitals are building swine-flu drive-thrus and I have 12 hours until I see Bruce Springsteen tonight…

Computer ratings are out. Cincinnati’s where you’d expect: no. 9. Louisville is to: below I-AA Villanova. (Lousville Courier-Journal)

The first Heisman Pundit poll’s out too. Tony Pike’s fourth. (Baltimore Sun)

Hoops break: UConn and Jim Calhoun are talking extension and a DUI couldn’t keep former UConn star Diana Taurasi from the WNBA’s MVP trophy. (Connecticut Post)

UConn football fans are curious sorts. (Hartford Courant)

Louisville is practicing tackling. Without tackling. (Louisville Courier-Journal)

Louisville QB Justin Burke, meanwhile, is showing he’s more than an egghead. Do people use the word egghead anymore? (Rivals.com)

When it comes to third down conversions… even Temple’s better than Pittsburgh. Here’s a little more on that. But good news on the other side: the defense is getting healthy. (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

And more good news: Pitt got its second QB commit of the 2010 class. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Tom Savage didn’t practice Tuesday, but back-up Dom Natale still doesn’t have a shot at winning the starting position back permanently. But not because Greg Schiano believes positions can’t be lost to injury. (SNY.tv)

Natale doesn’t have hearing in his right ear. Schiano’s “fine” with his four co-coordinators. (Star-Ledger)

Rutgers TE Shamar Graves won’t get down about his demotion. (Home News Tribune)

BJ Daniels, meanwhile, says last week’s debut is so… last week. George Selvie gets the pub, but USF’s Jason Pierre-Paul could be just as good. He’s at the least as tough. (Tampa Tribune)

Then again, USF LB Kion Wilson may be the toughest. He tore soft tissue in his hands, needed 25 stitches and came back in the game. (St. Petersburg Times)

Syracuse has good reason to be wary of Daniels’ visit. Syracuse games are going nearly a half hour longer than the average game in the FBS. Huh? (Syracuse Post-Standard)

Colorado, West Virginia: mutual admiration society. (Charleston Gazette)

There’s a new guard in the Big East. (Times West Virginian)

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Yankee Bowl On

By Aditi on 29. Sep, 2009

Stewart Mandel over at SI.com says the Yankee Bowl will officially seek certification in the spring. I already shared how I feel about this.

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Head coaches and testosterone

By Aditi on 29. Sep, 2009

This one has nothing to do with the Big East, but I couldn’t help myself. A lot of years ago, some time after that mess at Colorado with the gang-rape allegation against football players and recruits, I did a story on whether the incidences of violence perpetrated by athletes was really greater than those by regular students. And I asked whether aggression on the field skewed athletes’ sense of acceptable aggression off the field.

Clearly, I should’ve been asking about the coaches.

In August, Raiders coach Tom Cable slugged defensive assistant Randy Hanson and broke his jaw. Hanson spoke to detectives last week and the Napa Valley Police Department is weighing charges against Cable.

Now word’s out that New Mexico coach Mike Locksley punched receivers coach J.B. Gerald last week. Lucky for Locksley, New Mexico AD Paul Krebs said the incident “does not shake my faith in his leadership whatsoever.”

What?! This is a leader of young men, one charged with guiding and molding and teaching them? And he, like Cable before him, says once you become a boss, the regularly accepted rules of decorum and civility don’t apply to you? Once you become a head football coach, the rules of assault are different?

I’m sitting here trying to decide which Big East coach is most likely to lose it like that and honestly, I don’t think any of them are that stupid. What do YOU think – if Greg Schiano slugged somebody, if Dave Wannstedt broke a jaw, would they have their jobs?

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Morning Roundup, Tuesday

By Aditi on 29. Sep, 2009

paperThe Hlist always pulls the most entertaining bits… This sounds like serious control freak-ism. What, does Colorado not get what it means to follow sports?… And on the basketball end, does it say something about your program if you can’t get your own kid to commit?

Alright, on to the regular news…

Of course Tony Pike’s worthy of Heisman talk. Too bad Cincinnati’s not on Texas. (Rivals.com)

An ode to Cincinnati and Boise State, disrespected noise-makers. (ESPN.com)

Only the SEC and the Big 12 are better against non-conference foes than the Big East this year. Bill Stewart doesn’t want to “beat the band and pound the drums.” Fine, that’s what beat writers are for. (Louisville Courier-Journal)

It was just three years ago that Cincinnati couldn’t pull 30,000 for an undefeated Rutgers team. Now Bearcats fans are threatening to sell out away stadiums. (Cincinnati Enquirer)

It’s a bye week for UConn so the Huskies went to visit with kids at the Children’s Medical Center in Hartford. QB Zach Frazer’s still not ready to practice, Scott Lutrus’ replacement Kijuan Dabney’s out for the year and all the Huskies need work on their hands. (Hartford Courant)

The Huskies need time to heal. And find an offense. (Republican-American)

Louisville OT Greg Tomczyk is ready to call this Friday’s kick against Pitt a must-win. After a loss, short turnarounds are good things. (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

Yikes. Pitt’s defense has allowed 500 yards or more in two of the last three games. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Louisville coach Steve Kragthorpe has seen enough of rookie and possibly concussed QB Tom Savage to predict big things for Rutgers. Greg Schiano, meanwhile, is “hopeful” Savage will get to practice this week. (Star-Ledger)

Read this, rub your eyes, read again. It has to help Rutgers that Nate Smith’s big brother was a Scarlet Knight, right? (Home News Tribune)

Is South Florida making it a Big Four in Florida? (Connecticut Post)

Eh, Big Four, Top 25, it’s probably better for South Florida to fly under the radar for a bit. (Tampa Tribune)

Up in Syracuse, they’re thinking South Florida has a glow to sit in. And will for some time, because of that defensive line. (Syracuse Post-Standard)

Can this October be less Halloweenish for the Bulls? (Tampa Tribune)

West Virginia LB J.T. Thomas has some history with Colorado. (Charleston Gazette)

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Minding the mind

By Aditi on 28. Sep, 2009

savage4How’s this for a random bit of history: in 1904, after brain injuries either killed or paralyzed 19 college football players, President Teddy Roosevelt threatened to ban the sport entirely.

Rutgers freshman QB Tom Savage suffered some sort of head injury the Saturday before this last one, against Florida International. He was taken out of the game in the third quarter, he never left the sideline and even though he told us Monday that he was “knocked out cold,” he also insisted he could’ve gone back in the game.

He practiced all week, all week Rutgers coach Greg Schiano said Tom was a tough kid, but he was unsure if he’d go against Maryland and Thursday he said it was 50-50. Then, Saturday and Maryland came and Tom didn’t play.

Now, Tom never used the word concussion. Schiano pointedly never used the word concussion either. Just as a quick primer, there are three grades of concussions. Grade 1 usually features transient confusion, poor concentration and generally clears up in 15 minutes. Football players who suffer a Grade 1 concussion can go back in a game – which Tom said he could have.

Grade 2 concussions feature the same symptoms, but take a lot longer to clear up. Doctors generally recommend that players should not return to the field until they’ve had two symptom-free weeks.

Then there are Grade 3 concussions. This is any loss of consciousness. A football player who suffers this should be taken straight to the ER (which Tom wasn’t). If the loss of consciousness was seconds, a player can come back after one symptom-free week. If the loss of conscious was minutes, the generally recommended layoff is two symptom-free weeks.

Regardless, I don’t know if Tom had a concussion. I also don’t know if anything more serious showed up in Tom since I last saw him last Thursday. On this morning’s coaches’ teleconference, Schiano only said he was “hopeful” Tom could practice this bye week.

“When you’re dealing with head injuries you’re not really sure how things are going to respond and certainly it’s not something you mess around with,” Schiano said. “I’m hoping that he feels better and that he can practice this week. And if he can’t, he can’t.”

Like I said, I don’t know if something took a turn and Tom’s doing much worse. But if not, and Schiano’s just being hyper-cautious, you have to commend him for that. And commend him for taking lessons from the past. Remember, it was Kordell Young who came off of total reconstructive knee surgery and then was handed the ball 26 times in last year’s opener. Kordell hasn’t been the same since. Maybe that workload had something to do with it, maybe not. Either way, Schiano’s talked a lot this season about erring on the side of caution with hurt guys and for a football coach who clearly values toughness, that says something.

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Louisville-Southern Miss game time

By Aditi on 28. Sep, 2009

Game time’s set for the Oct. 10 meeting between the two one-time C-USA mates. Kickoff will be 7:30 p.m. and aired on ESPNU.

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Weekly Honors

By Aditi on 28. Sep, 2009

gilyardCincinnati’s 4-0 mark is pushing Tony Pike into the Heisman conversation and that’s definitely a helluva story - the kid was fifth string and considering quitting football a year ago. But how about an even bigger national introduction and even better story? Try Pike’s favorite target, Mardy Gilyard. He got kicked out of school, he lived out of his car and now, for the second time in this four-week season, he’s a finalist for the AT&T All-America Player of the Week. He had nine catches for 177 yards and two TDs and he’s competing against Iowa end Adrian Clayborn, Oregon tight end Ed Dickson and NC State Quarterback Russell Wilson. You can help Mardy out by texting VOTE to 345345 from your cell.

Okay, for the rest of the Big East’s honorees, straight from the league office, read on…

BIG EAST OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Mardy Gilyard • Sr. • WR • Cincinnati • Bunnell, Fla. Gilyard had nine receptions for a career-high 177 yards and two touchdowns, making the most of Cincinnati’s limited time of possession in the Bearcats’ 28-20 win against Fresno State. Gilyard, who finished with 226 all-purpose yards, had touchdown receptions of 11 and 23 yards to lead a Bearcat offense that was on the field for just 16:18.

BIG EAST DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Jason Pierre-Paul • Jr. • DE • USF • Deerfield Beach, Fla. Pierre-Paul had four tackles, three tackles for loss and a pivotal fourth-quarter strip sack that helped USF secure a 17-7 win at No. 18/25 Florida State. He led a USF defense that limited the Seminoles to 19 rushing yards and just 288 total yards to help the Bulls remain unbeaten.

BIG EAST SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Teddy Dellaganna • Jr. • P • Rutgers • Templeton, Calif. Dellaganna helped Rutgers win the field position battle in the Scarlet Knights’ 34-13 win at Maryland. He averaged 40.6 yards on five punts, forcing three Terrapin drives to start inside the 12-yard line and hitting a 51-yard punt from deep inside Rutgers territory to help protect a fourth-quarter lead.

WEEKLY HONOR ROLL

Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut — Had 12 tackles, two sacks, three tackles for loss and a forced fumble in a 52-10 win against Rhode Island. Helped hold the Rams to five first downs and 148 yards.

Antonio Lowery, LB, Rutgers — Had eight tackles, one tackle for loss and a 36-yard interception return for a touchdown on Maryland’s first offensive play in a 34-13 road win.

Joe Martinek, RB, Rutgers — Had 19 carries for a career-high 147 yards and two fourth-quarter touchdowns in a 34-13 win at Maryland. Had 130 rushing yards in the fourth quarter.

B.J. Daniels, QB, USF — Had 341 yards of total offense and two touchdown passes in a 17-7 win at No. 18/25 Florida State. Had 23 carries for 126 yards in his first career start.

Delone Carter, RB, Syracuse — Scored four touchdowns in a 41-24 win against Maine. Ran for three TDs and 72 yards on 19 carries and had his first career touchdown reception.

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Morning Roundup, Monday

By Aditi on 28. Sep, 2009

paperHere in New Jersey, it’s a bye week for Rutgers. (And Bruce week and moving week for Aditi. If you’re going to be at Giants Stadium Wednesday or interested in carrying boxes Saturday, let me know.) Fortunately, it’s a very short week till the football “weekend” for Big East fans: West Virginia hosts Colorado Thursday and Pitt’s at Louisville Friday before USF and Syracuse and Louisville and Southern Miss do the regular Saturday thing. Alright, let’s get the week started…

Brian Bennett’s reviewed this past weekend. (ESPN.com)

Tony Pike’s getting a Heisman mention. (NY Times)

Pike’s Cincinnati team is in the top 10 for the first time. (Cincinnati Enquirer)

The way Cody Endres is playing, UConn may just have a QB controversy. (Hartford Courant)

There’s reason for hope in Louisville. If you can get past the reasons for hair-pulling. One of them might be Steve Kragthorpe having to use his back-up QB as a lead blocker. (Louisville Courier-Journal)

Didn’t Paul mention Pitt’s second half offensive woes last week. Before this second half collapse? (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Pitt may also have some discipline issues. (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

So much for a bye week being relaxing. Greg Schiano has a list of goals. (Star-Ledger)

Then again, at least Schiano should get more than three hours of sleep a night. (Home News Tribune)

Matt Grothe? Who’s Matt Grothe? Oh, and B.J. Daniels wasn’t the only superstar frosh for the Bulls. (Tampa Tribune)

Of course, before we get too excited, this is the third September USF closes undefeated. And this October isn’t promising to be any prettier than the previous two. (St. Petersburg Times) 

Greg Paulus hasn’t played football in four years. He’s averaging more passing yards than anyone at Syracuse but the all-time record holder. The record-holder isn’t Donovan McNabb. Doug Marrone also picked up a NJ wideout, one who said the Rutgers staff wrote him every day, but never offered a scholarship. (Syracuse Post-Standard)

What does West Virginia have against the Wildcat? (Charleston Gazette)

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Morning Roundup, Friday

By Aditi on 25. Sep, 2009

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Ohio State’s Buckeyes can’t shake hands… Steve Kragthorpe’s brother is writing about keeping objectivity… Could Mike Slive be the next head of the NCAA?

Cincinnati’s attention-grabber was on the road. This weekend the Bearcats face the ultimate road warriors. (Cincinnati Enquirer)

Former Rutgers QB Chris Paul-Etienne brings his new team, Rhode Island, to Rentschler Field tomorrow. At least his team will have the better return games. (Connecticut Post)

Louisville lost safety Terrence Simien to a lacerated kidney. It’ll take two seniors to replace him. (Louisville Courier-Journal)

Is there any way Pittsburgh can contain N.C. State’s Russell Wilson? Here’s what can happen if one gets out of Dave Wannstedt’s doghouse. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Pitt has some old scores to settle with the state of North Carolina. (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

It’s the unofficial Big East-ACC challenge weekend and someone thinks Rutgers-Maryland is the game of consequence. The photo alone is worth the click (Wiz of Odds)

Rutgers back-up QB Dom Natale is staying ready. With potentially good reason. Here too. (SNY.tv, Star-Ledger, Home News Tribune)

Bobby Bowden sees some of FSU of yore in USF. Meanwhile, B.J. Daniels is keeping cool. (Tampa Tribune)

FSU gives the Bulls’ o-line its first real test. Only two freshmen in the last 40 games have done what BJ Daniels does tomorrow, start at Doak Walker. (St. Petersburg Times)

Sure Syracuse is a new Syracuse. But the Orange could still have its hands full with Maine. Of course, the Orange also have a pretty darn impressive run defense. (Syracuse Post-Standard)

And an unlikely hero at kicker. (ESPN.com)

Trippe Hale is Bill Stewart’s “homeboy.” (Times West Virginian)

West Virginia’s next game could take out a coach. (Charleston Gazette)