Miss any of Saturday's action? Get the storylines and implications every Sunday morning with a shot of humor, two of vermouth and a pot full of what's suspected to be either coffee or the pureed remnants of Phil Fulmer's season. This was for those who like their baseball games as pitchers' duels, their offenses by Auburn and their movies starring Kirsten Dunst.
This one was for those who like 'em ugly.
Penn State's 13-6 win over Ohio State was artistic only in the way modern sculpture is artistic, which is to say if you squinted while drinking heavily. It was football-in the-snow ugly and teams-constructed-by-Matt Millen difficult to stomach. In the college football landscape of spread offenses and scores that run higher than Iowa's arrest tally, this was smashmouth football at its finest.
Even a Big Ten replay official couldn't mistake it for what it was.
The Nittany Lions punched the clock, put their hard hats on and started slugging -- for three hours. Their vaunted Spread HD offense was reduced to rabbit ears with aluminum foil -- quarterback Darryl Clark finished with 121 yards passing and the Nittany Lions managed a total yardage output that might've been mistaken for Shawn Kemp's cholesterol count. Meanwhile, the unlikely hero, Penn State backup quarterback Pat Devlin came off the bench to lead the Lions to victory and didn't throw a pass, while the likely hero, Ohio State's Terrelle Pryor, fumbled away the lead.
But for whatever shortcomings the offense had, the Penn State defense put on a clinic of high-definition bell-ringing, crushing the Buckeye offense like a sledgehammer hitting an empty beer can.
Sure, Joe Paterno's sock drawer might be more interesting, but now that the borders of the BCS puzzle are put together, Penn State is entrenched in the middle. Even at No. 3, they're so close to the driver's seat that the Nittany Lions are all but moving the gear shift out of their butt pad. You might forgive them if, in political parlance, they're already measuring the drapes in Dolphin Stadium.
But do they deserve it?
That the Nittany Lions are currently third in the pecking order isn't exactly a red-state, blue-state kind of divide. Both No. 1 Texas and No. 2 Alabama have played against schedules that might as well be the NFC East compared to Penn State. If Texas finishes the season undefeated, they will have defeated four teams ranked in the top 11 and possibly five if Missouri takes the Big 12 North, rights its season and loses to the Longhorns again. Alabama's win over then-No. 9 Clemson might be selling for pennies on the dollar with the Tigers' collapse, but if the Tide finishes undefeated, they'll have a win over a likely top-10 team in Georgia and a second over the SEC East champion, plus a win over defending national champion LSU.
And Texas Tech, which faces an upcoming three-game schedule that would make the Washington Generals think the deck is stacked against them, will waltz into the BCS title game should they beat Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas and win the Big 12 to finish undefeated.
But, in language baseball fans on the other side of the Keystone State might understand, aside from those three undefeated scenarios, "Why can't Nittany Lions?"
While the rest of the college football world is giving up golf scores on a weekly basis, Penn State has managed to keep opposing teams to something more like Tiger Woods on a putt-putt course. Defensive coordinator Tom Bradley compared his group to a fourth line in hockey. But with brutal playmakers Aaron Maybin, Navorro Bowman and Maurice Evans, they're a fourth line only if your checkers can shatter glass with their opponents and leave the crowd sore from the beating. Only Illinois has scored more than three touchdowns against Penn State and the Illini hung 42 on Missouri, 55 on Indiana and racked up more yardage in the Big House than any visiting team in the stadium's almost-as-old-as-Paterno existence. (Big Joe is one year older than the Big House and two years older than television.)
Their offense, meanwhile, is averaging just under 42 points a game, a touchdown more per game than either of Ohio State's teams that lost in the BCS title game, the two teams that haunt the Lions like the Bush presidency haunts John McCain.
And are the Nittany Lions so much worse than any other one-loss team? USC has the same marquee win as Penn State, albeit with a bucket load of style points. But the Trojans lost to Oregon State, a team that Penn State picked apart like a Thanksgiving turkey, and are definitely to the rear of the Nittany Lions. Oklahoma is almost certainly a superior team, but they've already proved that without linebacker Ryan Reynolds, they can't beat Texas on a neutral field. The Ole Miss team that knocked off Florida is better than any team Penn State has played outside Ohio State, but the Rebels beat the Gators in the Swamp and, for the moment, at least created a fog of doubt around Urban Meyer's club. The Georgia Bulldogs have been as erratic as any Cincinnati Bengal behind the wheel after midnight, and their best win is over a fading LSU. TCU might be the nation's most underrated team, but after a sound beating by Oklahoma, it's hard to get the Horned Frogs in the championship picture.
But the marks against the Nittany Lions are so big Sarah Palin can probably see them from her house.
First, there's guilt by association. The Big Ten has bombed twice in the BCS title game and the nation is as eager for another sequel to the Big Ten-BCS horror flick as it is to White Chicks. And if the Big Ten seemed down in the past two years, it's been positively hide-your-money-in-the-mattress recessionary this year. The league doesn't have a non-conference win against a team currently ranked in the top 25 and its best win is Wisconsin's 13-10 squeaker over Fresno State. The Nittany Lions' own non-conference schedule included Oregon State, Temple, Syracuse, Coastal Carolina, and, reportedly, Joe the Plumber, teams that are 7-14 against Bowl Subdivision competition. And this is where college football should take lessons from its hardwood brother. The NCAA Tournament has become a yearly referendum on strength of schedule and mopey-faced Jim Boeheim interviews. With just two spots to pick instead of 34 at-large bids, the BCS committee should be even more selective than its March Madness counterparts.
Of course, Penn State's scheduling deficiency is largely due to the Big Ten's collapse, but that's all the more reason to step up to the plate in the non-conference schedule as a precautionary measure.
And there's plenty of reason to wonder exactly how good Penn State's team is. They've faced just one top-25 defense, Ohio State, which made their offense like they were trying to back out of a mud pit. (By comparison, eight SEC teams are in the top 25 in total defense). Clark threw for just 121 yards and spent most of the game running like he was trying to catch a cab, pursued by Marcus Freeman and Ohio State's surprisingly effective pass rush. Game-hero Devlin didn't officially throw a pass – his lone chuck resulted in a pass interference call. Evan Royster picked up just 77 yards rushing and his big play was a 10-yard grind. And were it not for a heck of a play by Mark Rubin to force a fumble, Penn State may very well have lost the battle of field goals.
Even Jim Harrick Jr. thinks Penn State's tests have been too easy. The only top-20 offense Penn State has faced is Illinois. The Big 12, by comparison, has five teams in the top nine and eight in the top 27.
Meanwhile, those one-loss SEC teams that the Lions are ahead of now are almost certain to build better resumes than a Penn State team with Iowa, Indiana and Michigan State left on the schedule. Either Georgia or Florida will pick up another top-10 win next weekend and a second if they win the SEC title. And no team in the nation has more momentum than Florida, which has scored more just seven fewer points in its last two wins than Ohio State has scored against Big Ten competition all season. Even Utah might have as good of an argument as Penn State. If the Utes finish undefeated, they'll have wins over Oregon State, TCU's top-ranked defense and a top-25 BYU team.
Of course, it may all be moot. John Daly has a better chance of walking a straight line after a night on the town than any team has of making a straight shot to the BCS title game. Two years ago, Southern Cal was all but a lock for a return to the BCS title game on the final weekend before UCLA stunned the Trojans 12-9 in the Coliseum. Last season it was West Virginia dreaming about crystal footballs when a loser of a Pitt squad popped a final weekend surprise.
Does Penn State deserve to be in the BCS title game? Let's just say the HD in Spread HD should probably stand for Highly Doubtful. But in a year in which only Texas, and a wobbly Alabama have separated themselves, the selection of whichever team gets in will probably have a lot in common with Penn State's win Saturday.
It'll be just plain ugly.
So, "Why can't Nittany Lions?"
The Big 16
Find out who the nation's top teams are each week as we rank the best 16 and set up something heretofore unheard of in college football, a play... wait for it... off. At season's end, the top 16 will compete in two brackets -- the Fairburn, Ga. division, ancestral home of Hangover mancrush Eric Berry, and the erstwhile Fort Myers, Fla. division, ancestral home of the pizza bagel.
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- 1. Texas Longhorns: Colt McCoy actually threw an incomplete pass (seven of them), an occurrence as rare in Texas football as a loss to Rice or a woman in a Vince Young party pic. Next week's game against Texas Tech could be the Longhorns' biggest challenge, as it their young secondaries will have to make a lot of smart on-field decisions against the Red Raiders' switching wide receivers and Swiss Army Knife of a passing game.
- 2. Alabama Crimson Tide: We can get behind the Tide's 29-9 win over Phil Fulmer, but if quarterback John Parker Wilson keeps the Zac Efron hair cut going, Joe Namath may disown him from the Alabama fraternity of quarterbacks ... or possibly mistakenly try and kiss him after having one too many at the Iron Bowl.
- 3. Penn State Nittany Lions: The Nittany Lions' next game against Iowa could set an NCAA record for bail bondsmen in attendance.
- 4. Oklahoma Sooners: The Sooners scored 55 points in the first half, which is more than Auburn has scored in its last three SEC games.
- 5. Florida Gators: The Gators are peaking heading into Saturday's "Cocktail Party" tilt with Georgia, while Kentucky, which managed just five points in the 63-5 romp, is in prime preseason basketball practice form.
- 6. Texas Tech: The Red Raiders handed out the worst beating Lawrence, Kan., has seen since its Civil War-era border raids by Missouri ... possibly led by Joe Paterno.
- 7. USC: Just when it seemed Georgia had the market cornered on winning ugly, the Trojans offer up another narrow escape.
- 8. Georgia Bulldogs: Knowshon Moreno racked up 210 yards of offense in this game last year. Can Florida win if it doesn't control Moreno again? Can anyone replace Trinton Sturdivant's phenomenal dance skills if they don't?
- 9. Oklahoma State: The Cowboys forced Texas' Colt McCoy to throw seven incompletions, commit two second-half turnovers; they survived a terrible play-call on fourth-down on their next to last possession and still came within a 50-yard pass of beating the top-ranked Longhorns. Mike Gundy is 41. He's a man. And he's a heckuva coach.
- 10. TCU Horned Frogs: Watching TCU's defense dismantle Wyoming was a fair approximation of what a python might look like squeezing a guinea pig.
- 11. Utah Utes: If Utah makes it through to a BCS game, they'll have earned it with two of their final three games against TCU and BYU, and with a come-from-behind win over Oregon State earlier in the year.
- 12. Ohio State Buckeyes: The pollsters will probably punish Ohio State for its loss to Penn State, not to mention its failure to score a touchdown, but credit Jim Tressel for sticking with Terrelle Pryor, a move that will pay off next year.
- 13. Boise State Broncos: Kellen Moore threw two passes against San Jose State and Ian Johnson ran for two passes while crocheting three hats, hat manufacturing being a little-known BCS component.
- 14. Missouri Tigers: Finally a standout defensive performance from the Tigers to match their high-scoring offense.
- 15. Tulsa Golden Hurricane: This ranking all but insures Todd Graham's team is going down against Central Florida.
- 16. Ball State Cardinals: If the BCS title was awarded for most inspiring stories, Ball State's continuing dominance after Dante Love's career-ending injury would earn Nate Davis and company their own crystal football.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-26-2008 @ 1:23PM
calculus said...
hmmmm seems like Ray Holloman may have a man crush on quarterback John Parker Wilson
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10-26-2008 @ 1:29PM
Glenn said...
Let me get this straight...Alabama beating Kentucky by three points was impressive? Or, beating Mississippi by four points was also impressive? I will give them credit, they beat Georgia, but they were the underdog. Whenever you are highly ranked, other teams usually come with their A game. You know that. We will see at the end of the season. But if all three top teams go undefeated and Penn State gets cut out of the big dance, you will see more of a riot at State College than we saw last night.
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12-06-2008 @ 12:30AM
NBAWinner said...
You better call in the National Guard! It's gonna happen.
10-26-2008 @ 1:47PM
dino said...
Penn State plays solid, gut/bone-shattering football. Sorry, if it is not "entertaining"! I guess they go out to win every time and not to "entertain". Your anlaysis (es) is/are sheer bs! Alabama is over-over-rated. Texas Tech may continue to surprise the entire world. It is still too early, but I will bet on the upstarts!
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10-27-2008 @ 11:59PM
NBAWinner said...
Talking about overrated! Who has Penn State played? A washed up Ohio St. that could not finish middle of the pack in the SEC or the Big 12. I'm sorry but the the Small 10 has to regain some respect by actually winning a big game aganist some team in the south before they can talk about teams being over- rated. Sorry that is just the way it is! Who wants to see another Small 10 team blown out in another NC game? I don't and you should'nt either.
10-26-2008 @ 2:14PM
SJB said...
Penn State beat Ohio State with a second string QB. I am tired of all the negatives. Why can't Penn State get their props? The beat writer's just love to write negatives to rile everyone up.
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10-26-2008 @ 2:24PM
Josh said...
Penn State has as many out-of-conference wins against BCS Top 50 teams as the entire SEC put together. (PSU over Oregon St, Florida over Miami)
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10-26-2008 @ 3:32PM
rooster said...
Untill there is a bonnafide playoff system to determine the nationa; championship in big time college football, there will always be article like this one questioning a teams record, their opponents and the quality of their wins. Penn state just won a major game , over a highly ranked opponent. you'd think that would ad a bit of credibilty to their ranking and possible BCS championship aspirations.. Apparently, you the wroter doesn't think so. I think the writers would rather crown the champion... but then there would be the opportuinyt for the big dollars as there is now with the current format.
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10-26-2008 @ 8:19PM
billb said...
Same old raggin' on P.S.U. So what if they did'nt score 40 pts against Ohio State. They went into a hostile environment w/a stoked-up stadium record crowd of 105,000+ & proceeded to hold one of the best offensive duo's in the country to a grand total of 62 yds. rushing. Its only speculation how many points Texas, Texas Tech, Florida or Oklahoma, all great football teams, would have scored but anyone who knows football knows this Ohio State defense is one of the best in the country & points, especially on this night, would be hard to come by for anybody. I'm sure most of the ESPN know-it-alls, including Todd McShay, would say 30 or more but, in the end, it should be obvious that the reason(s) Penn State wins is that they are well coached and they play as a TEAM. (Was'nt it Todd who called the PSU offensive line "over-rated".....of course he knows. I'm not sure but I think I saw him in the band picture of his yearbook) What I would like to know is how some of these guys @ ESPN get their positions. I guess Daddy has alot of friends in Bristol Ct...
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10-26-2008 @ 4:32PM
Tom DiPaulo said...
Of course the Big 12 put up alot of points, the defenses are terrible. You never see a Big 10 or a SEC teams win and still get 40 points hung on them. It's like the old AFL vs NFL. Good offense will win a lot of games but good defenses win championships.
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10-26-2008 @ 4:46PM
GrapevineSooner said...
Perhaps if the Big 10 played a conference championship game...
Penn State's a nice team. But I can't shake this feeling that if Texas, Texas Tech, OU, or Oklahoma State played them, the Lions would get rolled.
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10-26-2008 @ 10:33PM
Don said...
I'd rethink that if I were you - Who has the better Bowl Wins? - Go - Lions!!!!
10-26-2008 @ 9:00PM
Greg Grehawick said...
So Penn State won by 7 points 13-6 and the writers declare it ugly. Had they won by 7 47-40 it would have been a major victory. Go figure. I still feel that if there are two undefeated teams from the SEC and Big 12 they deserve to be in the national championship game. However if one has a defeat and PSU runs the table they deserve to be there.
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10-27-2008 @ 7:11AM
Ron717B643 said...
I agree with all of those PSU fans out there. The last two weeks Texas has won by I believe only 8 points, and who has Alabama really played. I think that all of the negative talk about PSU is because everyone knows that we are one of the most winning bowl teams out there to date, and that scares all of the writers out there that favor the BCS way of determining the national champs. We need a play off like the pro's have to truly determane the champ.
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10-27-2008 @ 10:47AM
Jesse W said...
I am not a huge believer in Penn State as the Big 10 has gotten rocked in the national championship two years in a row. It seems anytime a Big 10 team plays a team from the south with both speed and power its not even close. I see the same thing happening this year if it is Penn State in the national championship.
Jesse W.
http://www.churchofcowherd.com
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10-27-2008 @ 12:19PM
GN said...
This writer is definetly anti-Big 10 & PSU. He forgets that we dismantled Wisconsin (#9 at the time), and that we beat Oregon State who beat USC, and Illinois (top 20 at the time) who came close to beating Missouri. PSU will also have to beat MSU (another top 20). PSU deserves a shot at that title before any 1 loss team. If the NCAA would adopt a playoff system like Joe has advocated for years we wouldn't even need to have this discussion. GO LIONS!!!!
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10-27-2008 @ 2:10PM
Bob said...
author,,,,,Ray Holloman,,,,Your An Ass... Were did You go to Collage,,We dont need your Opinion ,We know who's number
one,and it aint you,find somthing your good at, And do it !!!!
Go>>>>>>>Lions.
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10-28-2008 @ 12:31AM
John said...
Has everyone forgotten that Penn State ( going into the Ohio State game) was the only team ranked (top 25 coaches, AP and Harris) that had a top 10 offense and a top 10 defense. Everyone laughed when Penn State went to the Fiesta bowl against a Jimmy Johnson coached Miami and beat them with Defense. Defense wins championships. The Big 12 has zero defense. Penn State could outscore any of those teams by scoring 20 points. SEC fans your league is down also so don't say the Big 10 is weak. Ranked teams - Big 12 - 5 , SEC and Big 10 - 4 each. I hope that Texas loses and Penn State gets to play BAMA just to quiet all you SEC loving fans!!!!!
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11-14-2008 @ 10:36AM
Bill said...
Still another reason for a playoff system.
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10-31-2008 @ 12:26AM
Eugene Walter said...
There is some Penn State bashing that is not deserved. However, the basic argument still holds true-they haven't really played anybody yet. You can't point to Wisconsin because the Badgers start the season ranked in the top 10 but lose some a coule games that they shouldn't. Ohio State isn't a true test either because they build up a nice record beating up cupcakes then get their behinds handed to them as soon as they play a real team. Texas deserves their top billing based on who they've played, Alabama to a slightly lesser degree does as well.Penn State might be the 3rd best team in the country, we just haven't really seen any indication of it yet.
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