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Entries in Florida (24)

Wednesday
Dec082010

Urban Meyer: Who Said What On Twitter?

Picture of Urban Meyer

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

Urban Meyer has set a great example as a championship coach. I hope he can stick to his decision to step down and set another great example as a family man who's OK with leaving the limelight. We've seen far too many people in sports hang on a few too many years, their best days long behind them. But here we have a chance to watch an ultra-competitive guy, a proven winner at an elite level, still in the thick of his prime, do the same away from college football.

Anyway, those are my two cents. Here's what others were saying on Twitter Wednesday afternoon about Meyer's decision to walk away from the University of Florida:

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Sep182010

Video: Florida-Tennessee Official Falls Down, Looks Dumb

Enjoy:

Saturday
Sep042010

SEC Preview: Alabama Beats Florida ... Twice

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

Perfect evidence backing the claim that great teams reload — they don't rebuild — can be found in Gainesville and Tuscaloosa, where three of the last four national championship trophies call home.

Florida and Alabama look poised to meet again in the SEC championship game, possibly with yet another BCS title game appearance at stake.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Aug232010

No. 5: Florida Gators

Urban Meyer

The One Great Season College Football Countdown continues Monday. We'll be counting down the preseason Top 25 teams in 2010. Today's No. 5 is Florida.

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

Everyone knows Florida's Urban Meyer can recruit, he can coach and he can win big football games. But he's never been asked to coach a team after a health scare, a leave of absence, a reversal of the leave of absence and then the departures of Tim Tebow and 10 other starters.

Meanwhile, John Brantley might be the nation's best-known quarterback never to have been a regular starter. He fills Tebow's big shoes in 2010, but those in the Gator camp have been high on him since his decorated prep career and they expect him to man the quarterback controls well this year.

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Dec262009

Florida Coach Urban Meyer Says "Later" To Gators

Urban Meyer

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BROOKLYN -- This time of year often has folks expressing gratitude for their health and well-being.

But instead of returning an ill-fitting sweater on Saturday, Urban Meyer spent the day after Christmas exchanging his job as Florida football coach for a renewed "focus on my health and family," according to a report on ESPN.com.

The university issued a statement Saturday afternoon in which Meyer cited his health as the primary reason for his decision to quit after five years as coach of the Gators. He's expected to speak further about his decision at a news conference on Sunday.

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"I have ignored my health for years, but recent developments have forced me to reevaluate my priorities of faith and family," Meyer said in the statement, according to the ESPN report. Meyer didn't specify any particular health issue, but his boss, Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley, said he supports the coach's decision.

"I have never seen anyone more committed to his players, his family and his program," Foley said in the statement cited by ESPN. "Above all, I appreciate our friendship."

(this article continues below)

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+ ARTICLE: Does Daunte Culpepper Hate Hot White Women?
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Meyer, who led the Gators to the 2006 and 2008 national championships, will coach Florida in the Sugar Bowl against Cincinnati on Jan. 1.

Only 45, Meyer is a three-time national coach of the year who also was named the Best Coach In College Football in a One Great Season poll in November. He compiled a 56-10 record at Florida and is 95-18 in nine seasons as a head coach in a career that includes stops at Utah and Bowling Green.


WHO'S SAYING WHAT?

Below is a quick look at what Twitter users were saying in the hour after the news broke about Meyer:

+ @BFeldmanESPN: "Bizarre to think Bobby Bowden and Urban Meyer leaving coaching in the same year. One for health reasons. One still wanting to coach."

+ @CoachJonesUC: "Our collective thoughts and prayers go out to UC alumnus Urban Meyer and his family."

+ @osgators: "Just talked to a Florida staff member -- Urban was in hospital at least twice this month for chest pains, nausea and sickness."

+ @espn4d: "Names in the immediate post-Meyer rumor mill: Stoops, Petrino, Shanahan, Dan Mullen, Charlie Strong."

+ @edsbs: "If Foley has any sense of humor, he'll hire Ron Zook just to fire him again. It's the only thing that could make us smile at this point."

+ @jemelehill: "Another question: Who benefits more from Meyer's departure -- Nick Saban or Lane Kiffin?"

+ @KanuDawg: "Here's hoping Urban Meyer glares & points at whatever ails him, and it obeys. Get well, motherfucker."

+ @mattminkus: "Biggest winner in Urban Meyer stepping down: PAC 10. SEC will take a hit next yr & Pac 10 will be the strongest conference!"

+ @PeteThamelNYT: "When Urban Meyer told his daughter, Nicki, an 18-year old college freshman the news, she said, 'I get my daddy back.'"

+ @GatorBenPBP: "Urban broke the news to his players after practice tonight. Lots of tears in the room, especially from Tebow."
Wednesday
Dec162009

USC Is The College Football Team Of The Decade

Pete Carroll

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BROOKLYN -- If Texas wins the national championship, are the Longhorns the team of the decade?

My answer is no.

A win in Pasadena will give UT two national championships this decade, a Fiesta Bowl and a Rose Bowl win for a perfect 4-0 mark in BCS games. The Longhorns won two Big 12 championships and regardless of the outcome of the title game, they'll finish the decade with eight Top 10 finishes.

With two great quarterbacks and loads of other NFL-caliber talent, Texas has won 110 games and is 7-2 in bowl games, including five straight wins. Certainly Texas has enjoyed a great run.


RECENT GOODNESS

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+ IMAGES: Gameday Gallery -- Army vs. Navy
+ VIDEO: Did Brian Kelly Know His UC Days Were Over In Pittsburgh?
+ HUMOR: Jilted Cincinnati Fans, Consider This Holiday Gift For Brian Kelly
+ ARTICLE: Does Daunte Culpepper Hate Hot White Women?
+ GALLERY: The Hot Girls Of College Football

As the Tim Tebow era comes to a close in Gainesville, the Gators can boast a pretty strong resume as well. If the category was "The Team Of The Second Half Of The Decade," by all means, the Gators would get it.

Urban Meyer

Florida has won 99 games in the 2000s, two national championships and three SEC championships, all while playing in what has become in the last five years the sport's toughest conference. Florida is 3-0 in BCS games this decade, but 4-5 overall in bowl games.

The Gators have two 13-win seasons under their belt, and are a very impressive 47-7 in the last four years under coach Urban Meyer. Unlike Texas, Florida does have a Heisman Trophy winner in Tebow.

My team of the decade is USC. The Trojans won a national championship, shared one with LSU and almost won a third. They are difficult to beat in January, as evidenced by their 6-1 record in BCS bowl games this decade. Those six wins have come by an average margin of 22 points.

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USC has won 101 games and is 14-4 vs. Top 10 teams. The Trojans won at least a share of seven consecutive PAC 10 championships, a streak that ended this season in what is a considered a terrible year in which they only won eight games.

With three Heisman Trophy winners just this decade, USC finished in the Top 10 seven times, and with Pete Carroll at the helm and Matt Barkley returning for his sophomore season, look for the Trojans to be a national title contender again next year.

Wednesday
Nov042009

Brandon Spikes Won't Half-Ass Vandy Suspension

Brandon Spikes

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Florida's tough-guy linebacker Brandon Spikes demonstrated a sensitive side Wednesday night when he announced he'll sit out the entire Vanderbilt game Saturday, according to published reports.


YOUR THOUGHTS: Does Spikes' Decision Make Meyer Look Bad?

Coach Urban Meyer's decision Monday to suspend Spikes for only the first half of the No. 1 Gators' next game caused quite the backlash in College Football Nation, and after the criticism heated up over the last 48 hours, Spikes decided enough was enough.

"I feel like things were blowing up," Spikes said in a statement cited by ESPN's Joe Schad. "I feel if I would have played it would be a big thing. I'm just trying to stay out of the way. I'm pretty sure (fellow linebacker Ryan) Stamper's got my back and my teammates support me."

Spikes was seen on video replay sticking his fingers inside the facemask of a Georgia player during Saturday's beatdown of the Bulldogs.

GatorSports.com reported that Meyer supports Spikes' decision to sit out against Vanderbilt, whose 93rd-ranked offense has scored just 19 touchdowns in nine games this year.

With or without Spikes playing for the nation's No. 2 defense, the 2-7 Commodores don't seem a likely candidate to pull off the upset in Gainesville.

Wednesday
Nov042009

Brandon Spikes "Wired Differently," Florida Asst. Says

Brandon Spikes

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Brandon Spikes is obsessed with being tough.

Those aren't just words inspired by the horrific video replayed over and over on television and YouTube the last few days, showing the menacing Florida linebacker gouging the eyes of a Georgia player.


YOUR THOUGHTS: Does Spikes' Self-Punishment Make Meyer Look Bad?

But those are the words of Gators strength and conditioning coach Mickey Marotti.

I spoke to Marotti on Thursday, two days before Spikes was caught on camera gouging the eyes of a Georgia running back during Saturday's 41-17 thrashing of the Bulldogs.

Coach Urban Meyer had a problem with Spikes' act, so he suspended him. For the first half of the Vandy game this Saturday. That's a pretty weak punishment. If you think there's something wrong, suspend him for a game, not a portion of a game.

Have you ever seen a pitcher accused of throwing at a batter earn a four-inning suspension? Or a basketball player who left the bench during a brawl get docked half a game's pay?

Mickey Marotti

My conversation with Marotti (pictured, right), however, had more to do with who you wouldn't expect to be the weight room demon in Gainesville. Maybe you've heard of this guy.

Tim Tebow is a nice kid and an accomplished young man. Take away his football achievements and his potential to play professionally and earn millions of dollars, and his remains a life worth emulating.

Most college football fans outside Florida hate Tebow, largely because he's so likeable. He's a good kid, he's publicly proclaimed his purity, he's a team leader, gets along with his coaches and teammates, performs the occasional surgery on, yawn, goodwill trips to the Philippines and, ho-hum, pitches his religion to convicted felons when he visits penitentiaries.

I probably don't even know that he donates his time to animal-rescue centers or something like that.

Anyway, such words hardly describe a young athlete who also seems to have a chip on his shoulder and feels the need to prove something every time he competes.

But that's what you get with Tebow, and nothing less, Marotti said.

Tim Tebow

"Tim's probably the most competitive, determined athlete I've ever worked with," said the coach. "He's a guy that always has something to prove."

Marotti is an old friend of mine, and I was hoping to pick his brain about Spikes, figuring the 6-foot-4, 260-pound giant ruled the weight room. Not that Spikes isn't a gym rat -- and we'll get to him and others in a minute -- but Marotti couldn't help but pour the praise on the 2007 Heisman Trophy winner.

"No matter how miniscule a drill might be, everyone will work hard, but Tim takes it to another level," Marotti says. "Like running the stadium steps. Some guys will go hard and try to push the group. Tim just takes off and wants to finish first."

It seems that No. 15 is out to prove that nice guys can finish first, even on game day.

"When he's carrying the ball, getting close to the sideline, why not just go out of bounds?" Marotti asked. "He wants to run people over and prove he's tougher than the other guy. It's almost like he's not real. He's the toughest guy I've been around."

If you were to meet Tebow in a dark alley, or shoot, at the bingo parlor, you better hope he doesn't have Spikes with him. In pads and out on the field, Spikes is a man among Lilliputians. His presence is just as noteworthy in the weight room.

"These days we look at people as energy givers and energy takers," Marotti said. "Brandon's an energy giver. He's very influential. He's got a lot of juice going, a lot of excitement and passion."

Despite Spikes' size, he covers the field with great athleticism. Many expect him to be the first inside linebacker taken in next spring's NFL draft.

"Brandon's a big dude," Marotti said. "He's pretty athletic, and he's got great feet. He's also very confident and passionate about the game of football. He loves practice, he loves the smell of the grass. He loves his cleats. He loves everything about the game."

Marotti worked the same gig at Cincinnati and Notre Dame prior to Florida. He said linebacker Nate Dingle was probably his toughest baller at UC and center Jeff Faine, now with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, would "fight guys in practice every day" when Marotti worked at Notre Dame.

"(Tough guys) are all the same in that they're all different," Marotti said. "They're workout freaks, they're wired differently and they obsess about training and preparing. They're obsessed with getting better. And about being tough."

Tuesday
Oct272009

Tuesday Notebook: Eugene, BCS and Sam Bradford

Columbia River

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

EUGENE, Oregon -- I made it.

After waking up Monday in Cincinnati, driving to Dayton, flying to Washington, D.C., flying to Phoenix, flying to Portland and crashing at a hotel there late last night, I drove down picturesque Interstate 5 this afternoon and arrived at my hotel at about 5 p.m. Pacific time.

I can tell the Canon 50D is going to be busier this week than my liver was last week. Great to see old friends in the Queen City, sure, but equally certain is how badly I need a break from all that fun, and signs point to such relief here in this sleepy pocket of the very scenic Pacific Northwest where I know exactly nobody.

Efforts to secure a credential for Saturday's USC at Oregon game have been shut down, but the investigation into a reasonably priced single ticket is pending. Not only will this game likely decide the PAC 10 champion, but it's Halloween and the fans at Autzen Stadium are notorious party people, so keep your eyes open for some good imagery this weekend.

Until then, it looks like I'll get some post-practice interviews Wednesday, but before I get that far, here are some other tidbits to consider this week:

Columbia River

+ Many are talking about how a USC win makes it a serious BCS National Championship game contender, but you know what? I'll say the same about the Trojans' opponent Saturday. Oregon is No. 10 in the BCS rankings, and beating Pete Carroll's highly ranked USC gang would shoot those Ducks squarely into the mix, and very deservedly so.

+ Wouldn't it be funny to see Oregon leapfrog ahead of Boise State in the BCS standings?

+ Iowa, Cincinnati, Boise State and TCU are the second-tier contenders for a spot in the BCS title game. Those entirely in control of their destiny include Florida, Alabama, Texas and most likely LSU and possibly USC. I think Florida or Alabama might actually need to lose twice for one of those second-tier squads to jump ahead. That means that heading into the last month of the season, no fewer than seven and maybe as many as nine losses are needed among the elite names currently among the Top 10 for, say, Iowa or Cincinnati to earn a trip to Pasadena. Such a feat would be just as dramatic than what happened down the stretch in 2007. But don't expect that scenario to materialize. I still think it's going to be Florida and Texas, though I'd prefer to watch Florida and USC.

Columbia River

+ Please stop with the second-guessing of Sam Bradford. Too often we hear the TV pretties talk about the importance of staying in school to get that education, if not to at least enjoy the college experience. Bradford did exactly that, and now Todd McShay, who I typically like, leads the pack of those repeatedly broadcasting the disappointing truths about millions of dollars lost. Tyler Hansbrough came back twice when experts thought he was ready for the next level, and the only reason people don't rip him is because he didn't get hurt. Don't go hindsight and blast a kid barely out of his teens for wanting more school. Bradford knows his decision to stay will cost him in the long run, but he'll still be a good NFL quarterback.

Wednesday
Oct142009

Video: Tailgating Highlights from Florida-LSU

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

ATLANTA -- If you follow One Great Season on Twitter, then you know I was pretty impressed with the tailgating scene in Baton Rouge over the weekend. Here are a couple of video clips from Saturday, the first of which was of an LSU student shot-gunning a beer, and the second video clip shows frenzied Florida fans awaiting the arrival of the Gator bus caravan a few hours before gametime.

Monday
Oct122009

Monday Notebook

Hot Photographer

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

ATLANTA -- It took more than two hours to get out of the parking lot and travel the eight miles up the highway to get back to my hotel after Saturday's Florida-LSU game. After eating and then working for two or three hours, I didn't get to bed until after 4 a.m., and had an 8 a.m. wake-up call. My fatigued state caused me to ignore the alarm at 7 a.m. today, but fortunately, my first commitment isn't until 5:30 p.m., so finally getting out of bed at 10:30 a.m. didn't set me back at all!

Anyway, being in Georgia this week reminds me that I forgot to share a gem from last week when I was in Berkeley for the USC-Cal game.

Surely by now you saw how Georgia lost to LSU nine days ago. The Bulldogs got a late touchdown to take the lead and send their home fans into a frenzy. I got a text message from a gal named Michelle, a Georgia fan I met in Stillwater when UGA visited Oklahoma State. It went something like this: "OMG touchdown! Yay!"

I received that message as I was on the field at Cal's Memorial Stadium, watching USC in pregame warm-ups somewhere between 3 and 4 p.m. PT. I hadn't seen a scoreboard in hours, and had no idea where the LSU-Georgia game stood. I texted Michelle back for a score update, but one never came. Despite Georgia's late score, LSU still had enough time to mount a drive of its own.

So when I checked my voice mail a couple hours later during halftime of the USC-Cal game, Michelle had left a message. It went something like this: "Mother ... Fucker." Click.

Yep, Georgia's got some passionate fans alright.

Here are some other tidbits from the last few days:

+ As I was making my way out of Tiger Stadium Saturday night, I saw a Florida fan sitting by himself near one of the exits. He had a cut on his forehead and a small bandage on his leg. I asked him what happened, and he said he got beat up by some LSU fans before the game. He said this was the third time he came to Baton Rouge, after two previous Florida losses in Death Valley. "I guess that's the price you pay to see your team finally get a win here." Poor guy.

+ I've shot games that require photographers to kneel if they're behind the end zone, but LSU was the first game I've ever worked where you had to be down regardless of where you were. Needless to say, my quads are a little sore today.

+ The atmosphere at Tiger Stadium definitely was electric. I'd heard all week how insane it was going to be, and I will certainly confirm that it was, but I don't know if it was any louder than the USC-Ohio State game in Columbus last month.

+ During my week in Baton Rouge, it took me until Thursday before I realized the host of one of the sports talk radio shows I listened to each day in the car was actually named Buddy. I just thought his callers were very friendly or that addressing one as "Buddy" was merely a casual Southern-ism or something.

+ While it wasn't surprising to hear many LSU players say during the week that they'd hoped Tebow would play -- to be the best you need to beat the best ... at its best -- it was pretty neat the way they said it. In the same breath, many of them made comments like, "He's a great guy" or "He deserves to play in a game like this." Pretty classy.

Saturday
Oct102009

Gameday Gallery: Florida at LSU

Hot LSU fans

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BATON ROUGE, La. -- I'd say I've now been to the two biggest games of the college football season so far. In Week Two, the One Great Season tour was in Columbus for the huge USC-Ohio State tilt, and just last night, I took in the biggest game on the SEC schedule to date this year.

No. 1 Florida brought its groggy quarterback and a nasty defense to Tiger Stadium for what promised to be a hard-hitting heavyweight bout with fourth-ranked LSU.

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The forecast called for heavy rain, but other than a couple of brief drizzly periods, the weather was perfect for an old-fashioned SEC donnybrook. The visitors came away with the 13-3 win, leaving folks wondering who will be able to beat the Gators, and leaving me wondering that while Tim Tebow may go down as the best college football player ever, could Florida also boast the best defense of all time?

Not only was the atmosphere electric inside the stadium, but hours before kickoff, the tailgate scene was pretty intense as well. Click here to take a look at some of what I saw in my first-ever gameday experience at Death Valley.

Saturday
Oct102009

Florida at LSU: Gameday Tidbits

Les Miles and Urban Meyer

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BATON ROUGE, La. -- You know those weekly media luncheons I go to every Monday or Tuesday where the coach of the home team speaks and takes questions?

Well, the hard-working folks in the Sports Information Departments at each of these schools publish a notebook that has every fact or statistic you could ever need. Below are some of the more interesting tidbits gleaned from those documents as we await Saturday's kickoff between Florida and LSU:

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+ LSU has won 32 straight home games played on Saturday nights. Coach Les Miles is 20-0 in prime-time games at Death Valley.
+ Florida leads the SEC and is among the top three nationally in total offense and total defense.
+ Saturday's game will mark the 11th time that the previous two national champs (Florida last year, LSU in 2007) have met. The defending champ is 4-5-1 in such games and has lost four in a row.
+ The winner of this game has gone on to win the last three national championships (Florida also won the 2006 title).
+ Florida coach Urban Meyer is 6-1, while at Florida, against top-five teams. Meyer, whose Gators were idle last week, also is 28-3 overall when he has more than a week to prepare for a game.
+ LSU also welcomed a No. 1 team to Tiger Stadium last year, when Alabama squeaked by with a 27-21 OT victory.
+ LSU beat Florida the last time the Gators visited while ranked No. 1, in 1997.

On another note, I seem to be telling this story a lot this week: Legendary broadcaster Verne Lundquist, who's been around for a while and has called seemingly every great sporting event under the sun, didn't call his first Saturday night game at Tiger Stadium until 2007. You guessed it, it was the Florida-LSU game.

Anyway, Tony Barnhart told spartyandfriends in the preseason that Lundquist called him up afterward and said of that game in Death Valley: "Tony, that was the most incredible atmosphere that I’ve ever seen."

If Verne Lundquist was moved by that game, I think I'm in for a real treat tonight.

Monday
Oct052009

LSU's Les Miles Wishes Tebow Well

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BATON ROUGE, La. -- In most cases, a coach of one team heaping praise on the backup quarterback of another team is merely an exercise in gamesmanship.

But at the LSU football weekly media luncheon Monday, you knew coach Les Miles was sincere in his flattery of No. 1 Florida's John Brantley, who would start in Saturday's heavyweight bout at No. 4 LSU if Tim Tebow can't answer the bell.

Below is a quick soundbite from Miles about how comfortable he thinks Florida is at the quarterback position, and in the video clip below that, the coach says he hopes Tiger Stadium will prove to be Death Valley for Florida, as it did the last time the Gators visited in 2007.

Monday
Oct052009

Monday Notebook

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

BATON ROUGE, La. -- Here are some notes as I begin a new week in Baton Rouge, five days away from Saturday's heavyweight bout between visiting No. 1 Florida and No. 4 LSU:

+ Cal is not a good football team. I strongly doubt that in the history of college football polls, a team has never followed up a No. 6 ranking by going out and losing two games by a combined score of 72-6.

+ From the sideline, I've watched USC in a Friday walkthrough and twice during pregame warmups, and Florida once during pregame warmups, and in each case you can't help but just feel that you're in the presence of an elite football team. Swagger isn't necessarily something a team has; to me it's more like what that team stirs inside of you when you watch it.

+ I get that powerhouses like to load up on a creampuff or two before playing someone tough or getting into conference play. But we're into October and I'm still really curious about what Texas can do. Beating a mediocre Texas Tech team by just 10 points at home tells me more about the Longhorns than do lopsided wins over Louisiana-Monroe and the like. I really think Alabama is more of a No. 2 team than Texas right now. The Tide don't appear to have any weaknesses.

+ The same goes for Penn State. Easy wins over Akron, Syracuse and Temple -- and presumably another one against Eastern Illinois this Saturday -- are unimpressive. I don't really remember the last time Joe Paterno had a strong team that played a marquee game in September.

+ Boise State won Saturday, but played poorly enough to drop from No. 5 to No. 6 in this week's poll. But despite the listless showing against Cal-Davis Saturday, the Broncos gain street cred when the Oregon team it manhandled five weeks ago won by huge margins its last two times out.

+ My Cincinnati friends are a little nervous about our No. 8 Bearcats' Thursday night tilt at South Florida on Oct. 15. UC is off this week, and then will face a USF team, though now ranked, that's without veteran quarterback Matt Grothe for the rest of the season. I think it could be like the season-opener at Rutgers all over again. Easy win for Cincinnati, which will take a 9-0 record into its home date against West Virginia on Friday, Nov. 13.

+ Seven of the AP's top 15 teams have a loss, and we still have more than two months of regular-season football left to play. Please stop describing the Armageddon when USC or Virginia Tech or Ohio State lose in September.

+ Iowa has more trouble with non-BCS teams than it does with the Penn States of the world. The Hawkeyes, 5-0, pulled off a stunner two weeks ago on the road when they beat the Nittany Lions, 21-10, but their two  closest calls have come at home, where they defeated Northern Iowa and Arkansas State by one and three points, respectively. By that logic, look for Iowa to rout visiting Michigan this weekend. Actually, I believe the opposite to be true. The No. 12 Hawkeyes will bolster the argument that the Big Ten is weak when they lose to no-longer-ranked Michigan on Saturday.