Around FCS: Week 2 - Top 25 Predictions
Cfootball Betting Lines
09/03/2008 -
Philadelphia (The Sportsbook Betting Lines) -
SATURDAYS TOP-25 GAMES
Jacksonville (1-0) at No.1 Appalachian State (0-1) 3:30 p.m.
Appalachian State will look to rebound after their trip into the Bayou,
evacuating in time to avoid Hurricane Gustav, but not soon enough against
defending BCS national champion LSU. The Mountaineers couldn't repeat their
magic from Michigan in 2007, falling behind 31-0 in the first half before
losing a 41-13 decision to the Tigers.
Appalachians normally potent spread offense was limited to a mere 58 yards
rushing on 28 carries and a total of 237 yards, while LSU rolled up 266 yards
on the ground en route to 459 yards of total offense.
Walter Payton Award candidate Armanti Edwards was held to his second-lowest
rushing total of his career as a starter. Connecting on just 13-of-31 passes,
Edwards was victimized by constant duress by a ranked vaunted LSU pass-rush
and plenty of dropped passes by his receiving corps.
The only impressive aspect of the Appalachian defense in the opener against
LSU was the play of its linebacking unit of Pierre Banks, Jacque Roman and
D.J. Smith. Roman paced the Mountaineers' defense with 12 tackles and an
interception, while talented sophomore linebacker D.J. Smith added 11 stops.
The Jacksonville Dolphins, who play as members of the Pioneer Football League,
are coming off a season-opening 20-7 win over Savannah State, an opponent that
had won just three times in its past 31 outings.
The Dolphins were just 3-8 last season under new coach Kerwin Bell and the
season-opening win over Savannah State provides a confidence-boost heading
into this weekends contest against three-time defending FCS champion
Appalachian State.
The Dolphins two top offensive weapons entering the 2008 campaign are wide
receiver Geavon Tribble and running back Rudell Small. Tribble caught 41
passes for 701 yards and five touchdowns last fall, while Small rushed for 490
yards and nine TDs last fall.
Against Savannah State last Saturday, Small led the Jacksonville offensive
charge, rushing for 109 yards on 25 attempts, while Tribble caught five passes
for 81 yards. The Dolphins employed two signal-callers in Erik Stapleton (9-
of-15, 93 yards, two interceptions) and Josh McGregor (9-of-15, 159 yards) and
will likely utilize that same duo against the Mountaineers.
Defensively, the Dolphins are led by defensive back Robson Noel, who posted a
team-high 80 tackles last season, to go with five tackles-for-loss and five
pass break-ups last fall.
The encounter with Jacksonville will mark Appalachian's first game against a
team from the Pioneer Football League since the 2003 season, when it opened
its home slate against Morehead State and barely survived for a 24-21 win. But
look for ASU to have an easier time against this PFL opponent.
Appalachian State 55, Jacksonville 7
Central Connecticut State (1-0) at No. 2 North Dakota State (1-0), 7 p.m.
If there were many questions about how well new quarterback Nick Mertens would
perform, those were answered fairly quickly in North Dakota State's 41-6
victory over Austin Peay. Mertens was a brilliant 16-of-18 for 304 yards, with
three touchdowns and one interception in his debut.
Kole Heckendorf took another step to establishing himself as one of the elite
receivers in FCS with eight catches for 179 yards and touchdowns of five, 43
and 69 yards.
Tyler Roehl, the top returning Payton Award vote-getter, only received 15
carries for 74 yards, but will be needed a lot more as the season progresses.
Other weapons include returnman Shamen Washington and tight end Jeremiah
Wurzbacher.
The Bison piled up 453 yards of offense in their opening-game win and were
just as impressive on the defensive side, limiting Austin Peay to 91 yards.
Cyrus Lemon had a 30-yard interception return for a touchdown and NDSU also
received strong play from linebackers Ramon Humber and Mike Maresh, defensive
end Joe Lardinois and safety Nick Schommer.
Central Connecticut State will have an interesting challenge in trying to run
its Georgia Southern-styled option against one of the top rushing defenses in
FCS. The Blue Devils rang up 270 yards on the ground in week one, but that was
against a Bryant team that was playing its first FCS game.
James Mallory ran 29 times for 256 yards and two touchdowns and Aubrey Norris
hit 6-of-13 passes for 113 yards and a TD, but they likely to find the going
tougher against North Dakota State.
CCSU's defense was somewhat porous against Bryant, allowing 216 yards through
the air and 134 yards on the ground.
How ever you look at this game, it's a tougher task for the Blue Devils.
North Dakota State 42, Central Connecticut State 14
No.3 Richmond (1-0) at Virginia (0-1), 3:45 p.m.
These two teams enter this intrastate rivalry at opposite ends of the
spectrum. The Spiders posted an impressive 28-10 win on the road at No. 15
Elon, while Virginia was crushed by USC, 52-7.
There was some concern for Richmond about losing the school's all-time leading
rusher Tim Hightower, but Josh Vaughn led the offensive attack with 119 yards
rushing, including 72 of those yards on one TD romp.
Richmond quarterback Eric Ward also looked calm and composed to begin his
senior campaign leading the Spiders' offense, completing 17-of-22 passes for a
career-best 236 yards, including tossing an 80-yard scoring pass to 2007 CAA
rookie of the year Kevin Grayson. Ward was named co-national offensive player
of the week by The Sportsbook Betting Lines.
Grayson's seven receptions for 121 yards came within one yard of his career-
high, set 122 in last season's 55-35 FCS semifinal playoff loss at Appalachian
State.
Virginia lost plenty of talent from a team that won the ACC championship last
fall, including NFL first round selection Chris Long and starting signal-
caller Jameel Sewell to academic troubles.
New Richmond coach Mike London served as defensive coordinator for Virginia
coach Al Groh from for four seasons (2003-2006). Virginia lured former
Marshall head coach Bob Pruett out of retirement to take over its defense.
Richmond draws Virginia at a great time and could shock Virginia football fans
with a big win.
Richmond 38, Virginia 31
No. 4 Massachusetts (1-0) at Holy Cross (0-0), 1 p.m.
After opening the season with a somewhat unimpressive 28-16 win over Albany,
UMass heads to take on the Holy Cross Crusaders in an intriguing non-
conference game.
Holy Cross enters the 2008 campaign as one of the favorites to claim the
Patriot League title and has one of FCS' most-prolific quarterbacks in FCS
with Payton Award candidate Dominic Randolph. Randolph is one of eight
starters returning to a high-powered Crusader offense.
Randolph connected for 3,604 yards, with 30 touchdowns and just eight
interceptions last season. He was also the team's third-leading rusher,
completing the season with 137 yards and four rushing scores.
Holy Cross lost its top two receivers, Ryan Maher (75 receptions, 907 yards,
10 TDs) and Thomas Harrison (56 receptions, 795 yards, six TDs), but Brian
McDermott and Jon Brock return as targets for Randolph this fall. McDermott
hauled in 56 passes for 727 yards and five touchdowns in 2007, while Brock
caught 45 passes for 537 yards and two touchdowns last fall for the Crusaders.
Terrance Gass and Mike Kielt will tag-team to power the rushing attack for
Holy Cross yet again this season. The tandem combined to rush for 930 yards
and 12 touchdowns last season.
Defensively, the Crusaders welcome back six starters from a unit led the
league in turnover margin (1.00) and also return their top two tacklers from a
year ago, in linebackers Marcus Rodriguez (69 tackles in 2007) and Ryan
Stewart (65 tackles, five tackles-for-loss in 2007).
Holy Cross opened the 2007 season on the road with a narrow 40-30 setback to
the Minutemen at McGuirk Stadium, raising some eyebrows around the FCS
landscape against the 2006 national finalist.
UMass can't afford another lackluster performance like the one against Albany
last Saturday. The Minutemen have games on the horizon at James Madison and
Texas Tech, before returning home to face Delaware.
These next three weeks are crucial for Don Brown's Minutemen, and this
particular stretch could determine the season for UMass, starting with today's
contest at Holy Cross. After an unimpressive opener in front of the home
crowd, expect the Minutemen to play with more intensity this afternoon and
escape with another close call against the Crusaders.
UMass 31 Holy Cross 28
No. 7 Eastern Washington (0-1) at Colorado (1-0), 3:30 p.m.
Two years ago, Colorado opened the season and the Dan Hawkins era with a loss
to a Big Sky opponent, falling 19-6 to Montana State.A more talented Colorado
club welcomes a more talented Big Sky club to Folsom Field in Eastern
Washington,
The Eagles certainly aren't dodging anyone with their schedule, having opened
the season at No. 13 FBS and fellow Big 12 member Texas Tech and will follow
that opener against FBS Big 12 foe Colorado this Saturday.
In EWUs season-opening 49-24 loss to the Red Raiders, All-American
quarterback and Payton Award candidate signal-caller Matt Nichols completed
36-of-61 passes for 363 yards and a touchdown, but tossed an uncharacteristic
three interceptions in the contest. Nichols threw one-third of his total of
nine interceptions in 2007 in the 2008 season-opener against Texas Tech.
Tony Rice had a solid night catching the football for the Eagles, hauling in
13 passes for 114 yards and a touchdown, while All-American wide receiver
Aaron Boyce caught just three passes for 12 yards.
Out-gained 536-341 in the contest, the Eagles were held to just 23 yards
rushing on the night, with 2007 leading ground gainer Dale Morris leading the
effort, with a mere 17 yards. The Eagles managed to slow QB Graham Harrell and
the Red Raiders for a while, but couldn't overcome a 21-0 first-quarter
deficit.
Redshirt freshman linebacker Matt Johnson led the Eagles defensive effort,
posting 10 tackles and an interceptions that he returned 37 yards to set up
the Eastern Washington offense in excellent field position.
Colorado beat arch-rival Colorado State 38-17 on Sunday, so the Buffaloes
could be coming off of an emotional letdown. Cody Hawkins passed for 214 yards
and one TD as the CU offense put up 367 yards, while the defense allowed 258.
Colorado 42, Eastern Washington 28
North Carolina Central (0-1) at No. 8 James Madison (0-1), 6 p.m.
After opening the season with a disappointing 31-7 setback at ACC cellar-
dweller Duke, its hard to gauge whether the Duke Blue Devils are that much of
an improved team under first-year head coach David Cutcliffe, or if James
Madison was a bit overrated entering the 2008 season.
Coming off that loss, James Madison takes on a North Carolina Central club in
just the second year of its transition to FCS. The Eagles are an FCS
independent, coming off a 6-4 record in 2007. NCC returns nine starters off
that team that posted a winning season in its first season as an FCS member.
In its season opener against Fayetteville State on Sunday afternoon, the
Eagles dropped a 33-22 decision to Fayetteville State in front of a home crowd
of 8,853 at Riddick Stadium. It was the second year in a row that the Eagles
had dropped their opener to a Division II school.
Fayetteville State scored almost all of its touchdowns off NCCU miscues, two
fumbles, a blocked punt, and a botched snap accounting for 28 of FSUs 33
points on the day. In all, the Eagles turned the ball over five times in the
loss, with four fumbles.
NCCU posted a solid 339 yards of total offense, but the Eagles rushing attack
was anemic, churning out just 55 yards. Quarterback Stadford Brown, who passed
for 1,711 yards, with 14 TDs and 13 interceptions last fall, completed 19-
of-43 passes for 284 yards, a touchdown and an interception in the season-
opening loss. Despite posting four sacks and nine tackles-for-loss as a
defense, the Eagles struggle on offense were too much to overcome.
In its season-opening loss to Duke, James Madison also struggled offensively.
JMU couldn't run or throw the ball effectively against the Blue Devils. The
JMU offense was held to a total of just 239 yards of total offense (188
rushing, 55 passing) on the evening, and got out-gained by the Blue Devils
364-239.
Senior signal-caller Rodney Landers accounted for James Madisons lone points
of the evening, with a 47-yard scoring run late in the first quarter to tie
the game at 7-7. However, from there the Blue Devils defense put the clamps
on Landers and the JMU offense, shutting out the Dukes 24-0 the rest of the
way.
You can bet JMU coach Mickey Matthews, a hard-nosed competitor, will have his
team ready to play in the home opener and will likely show no mercy to the
visiting Eagles.
James Madison 60, North Carolina Central 14
South Dakota (1-0) at No. 9 Northern Iowa (0-1), 5:05 p.m.
After opening the season with a 41-17 against Brigham Young in Provo, UT.,
Northern Iowa is eager to get back home to the friendly confines of the UNI
Dome.
It was a tough opener for the Panthers, who were out-rushed 149-77. UNI
tailback All-American Corey Lewis, who for 1,513 yards last season was held to
just 37 yards rushing on 17 attempts against BYU.
New quarterback Pat Grace, who assumed the starting role at the quarterback
from Payton runner-up Eric Sanders, struggled in his first start, completing
11-of-18 passes for 112 yards. Grace managed to lead the Panthers rushing
efforts in the season-opening setback to the Cougars, gaining 72 yards on 11
rush attempts for UNI.
In all, BYU out-gained UNI 563-362, including passing for 486 yards. Darrell
Lloyd led the Panthers in tackles last week with 11 stops and a fumble
recovery.
In its first game as a FCS team, South Dakota won its opener in emphatic
fashion, defeating Division III St. Ambrose 52-0. In front of a crowd of 7,825
fans at the Dakota Dome, the Coyotes scored early and often, displaying a
high- powered attack that could give foes in the Great West headaches this
fall.
Led by talented senior quarterback Noah Shepard (2,547 passing yards, 21 TDs,
nine interceptions in 2007), the Coyotes feature a high-powered offense that
averaged 496.0 yards of total offense and 31.4 points per game in its final
season as a Division II member last fall.
Six of the Coyotes nine returnees for the 2008 campaign are on the defensive
side of the football, and were able to score a shutout in their opener. Last
season, the South Dakota defense yielded 385.0 yards of total offense per game
and surrendered 27.5 points per outing.
Leading tackler Blake Hojer (80 tackles in 2007) is one of the six returning
starters on the defensive side of the ball for the Coyotes, contributing a
solid effort in the season opener with a team-high nine tackles, a fumble
recovery and an interception in the 52-0 route.
This will mark the 40th meeting between the two schools, with the Panthers
holding a narrow 21-17-1 all-time edge. But it will be the first meeting in 26
years.
Northern Iowa 48 South Dakota 20
Delta State (0-0) at No. 10 McNeese State (0-1), 8 p.m.
Delta State is one of the better Division II programs around, but the
Statesmen probably could have picked a better time to travel to McNeese State.
The Cowboys are coming off a 35-27 loss to North Carolina - a game that
McNeese State could have easily won.
The Cowboys led until late in the third quarter and probably would have kept
their advantage without some special teams breakdowns. McNeese State piled up
391 yards, compared to 384 for UNC, but the Cowboys were drilled for 142
return yards.
Derrick Fourroux showed his experience at quarterback with 224 yards of total
offense and Todd Pendland contributed 85 yards to the rushing attack and 60
more on six catches.
Look for receiver and returnman Steven Whitehead to have a bigger role this
week. In his first game back from last year's season-ending knee injury, the
dangerous Whitehead had five receptions for 67 yards. Quinten Lawrence is
another dangerous weapon for the Cowboys. He had grabbed four passes for 73
yards and also had a 70-yard punt return for a touchdown.
McNeese State should continue be tough defensively with the likes of defensive
tackles Vaalyn Jackson and Kenneth Lundy, linebacker Allen Nelson and safety
Jamelle Juneau leading the unit.
Delta State finished with a 10-2 record last year, with both losses coming to
North Alabama - one in the Division II playoffs. The Statesmen also scored an
impressive 27-15 opening-game win over eventual SWAC champion Jackson State.
McNeese State 38, Delta State 17
Hampton (1-0) at No. 12 Southern Illinois (0-0), 7 p.m.
In a memorable non-conference game from the 2007 season, Southern Illinois
went on the road and held off a big challenge from Hampton for a 45-27 win.
This year, Hampton makes a return trip to SIU.
The Pirates opened the season on Sunday in Orlando, FL. with a 17-13 victory
over Jackson State in the MEAC-SWAC Challenge. It was a sloppy game and
Hampton got off to a slow start, but the Pirates held on.
Receiver Jeremy Gilchrist set up one touchdown with a circus catch at the one
and scored on a 12-yard pass from quarterback Herbert Bynes (14-of-23, 151
yards). That helped make up for the fact that the normally strong Pirate
rushing attack was limited to 76 yards.
Hampton's defense struggled against the pass, giving up 248 yards, but came up
with some huge plays with Jackson State driving at the end of the game.
But the Pirates figure to be challenged more on the ground by Southern
Illinois, which will be opening its season with new coach Dale Lennon. One of
the Salukis' biggest strengths should be a veteran offensive line led by guard
Aaron Lockwood. Joe Allaria takes over at quarterback for graduated star Nick
Hill and Richard White looks to become the latest in a line of great Southern
Illinois tailbacks.
But while the Salukis should be strong again on offense, defense will be what
fuels their hopes of another league title, or advancing further that last
year's semifinal playoff run. Defensive end James Cloud and linebackers
Chauncey Mixon and Bradin Jordan should lead a unit that been gradually
getting more athletic in the past few years.
With the Salukis playing at home, expect them to start their season with a
win.
Southern Illinois 38, Hampton 20
Charleston Southern (0-1) at No. 13 Wofford (1-0), 1:30 p.m.
With the potential of a tropical storm or hurricane hitting the Carolina coast
this weekend, officials from the two schools decided on Wednesday to move this
game from North Charleston, S.C. to Spartanburg, S.C.
For the second week in a row, Wofford will take on a Big South opponent at
home.The Terriers got off to a slow start in their opener against
Presbyterian, falling behind 14-0 in the first quarter before rallying for a
win.
Wofford used about every element it could find to pull this one out, scoring
with its option, unleashing its refined passing attack and even putting points
on the board with its defense. Ben Widmyer was 8-of-12 for 138 yards and a 40-
yard touchdown throwing the ball and led the Terriers in rushing with 14
carries for 107 yards. Dane Romero added 100 yards on 15 attempts on a night
where Wofford rushed for 367 yards. .
The Terriers were toasted for 351 yards passing by Presbyterian's Tim Webb,
but Jason Leventis made one big defensive play and turned an interception into
an 80-yard touchdown return. Wofford is young on the defensive side of the
ball, but can rely on Seth Goldwire, one of the top linebackers in the
Southern Conference.
Charleston Southern suffered through a tough opener, losing 52-7 to Miami. New
quarterback Tribble Reese, a transfer from Clemson, had a rough outing,
completing just 10-of-21 passes for 81 yards and a touchdown. The Buccaneers
are not known for their running game and they managed only 49 yards on 30
carries against the Hurricanes.
Like Wofford, the Bucs are young on defense and it showed when they gave up
416 yards against Miami, including 190 yards via the air from Hurricane QB
Jacary Harris. CSU will also be concerned with the Terrier running attack
after allowing 224 rushing yards to Miami.
Wofford 38, Charleston Southern 21
No. 14 Youngstown State (0-1) at No. 21 South Dakota State (0-1)
Two teams that dropped games to FBS schools will be looking to even their
ledgers in a game that opens Missouri Valley Football Conference play.
Youngstown State wasn't competitive in a 43-0 loss to No. 3 Ohio State. The
Penguins fell behind 26-0 at halftime and never could get untracked on
offense. If there was a positive, it was the fact that YSU's defense held the
Buckeyes to four first-half field goals.
But the Penguins were picked apart by Ohio State quarterback Todd Boeckman
(14- of-19 for 187 yards and two TDs) and had minus-11 yards rushing and 74
yards of total offense. New quarterback YSU Todd Rowan was limited to 8-of-13
passing for 46 yards in his first start replacing four-year veteran Tom Zetts.
YSU will hope to get its multi-purpose offensive star Ferlando Williams Jr.
unleashed as it opens MVFC play.
The Penguins should have an easier time against South Dakota State, in its
first year as a MVFC member. The Jackrabbits struggled in their game against
Iowa State. Quarterback Ryan Berry went 23-of-37 for 170 yards, but was
intercepted five times and SDSU finished with six turnovers overall in the
44-17 loss. One of those interceptions was returned for a touchdown.
Receiver JaRon Harris is the biggest weapon for the Jackrabbits. He finished
off a trick play with a 76-yard touchdown and caught seven passes for 64
yards. Kyle Minett looked like a good replacement to Cory Koenig in the
backfield with 22 carries for 111 yards and a touchdown.
SDSU's defense allowed 388 yards, but special teams was a bigger problem, with
the Jackrabbits getting torched for 237 return yards. South Dakota State is a
tough road venue, but the Jackrabbits will have some adjustments to make as
they get used to a new conference. And opening against one of the league's
powers isn't an easy way to get started.
Youngstown State 28, South Dakota State 17
No. 15 New Hampshire (0-0) at Army (0-1)
New Hampshire has been FBS killers with three wins over those bigger schools
in the past four years and going against an Army squad that is breaking in a
new option offense, the Wildcats are poised to win another one.
The Wildcats will play without record-breaking quarterback Ricky Santos after
four years, but are well-armed with R.J. Toman ready to take over. Toman has
plenty of offensive weapons around like receivers Mike Boyle and J.T. Wright,
tight end Scott Sicko and running backs Chad Kackert and Bobby Simpson.
New Hampshire should be able to score points, but defense is again a question
mark after the loss of safety Jeff Pammer. Cornerback John Clements and
linebacker Matt Parent will be among those looking to improve this unit.
Army struggled with consistency on offense and made several key special teams
mistakes in a 35-7 loss last Friday at home against Temple. The Black Knights
gained 210 yards rushing and beat Temple in total offense 284-250, but still
lost.
Army had a fumble returned for a touchdown, gave up a 98-yard kickoff return
and fumbled away a punt return. Those kind of mistakes could prove lethal
against a New Hampshire offense that will be much more talented.
New Hampshire 31, Army 21
Austin Peay (0-1) at No. 16 Georgia Southern (0-1), 6 p.m.
Austin Peay couldn't have found many more difficult road venues to play at in
the first two weeks of the season than at North Dakota State's Fargo Dome and
Georgia Southern's Paulson Stadium, but that is exactly what the Governors are
doing.
APSU, coming off a surprising 7-4 season last year after rejoining the Ohio
Valley Conference, didn't fare very well in round one of that assignment,
losing 41-6 to No. 2 North Dakota State. Going up against NDSU quarterback
Nick Mertens, who was starting his first game, the Governors gave up 304 yards
passing and were burned by several long aerial plays.
Bison receiver Kole Heckendorf ripped the APSU secondary for eight receptions,
179 yards and three touchdowns, on the way to national co-offensive player of
the week honors from The Sportsbook Betting Lines.
On offense, Austin Peay showed how much it missed running back Chris Fletcher
when it managed only 56 yards on the ground and 91 yards of total offense
against one the top defenses in FCS.
Things should be just about as tough against an athletic Georgia Southern team
that is coming off a 45-21 loss to Georgia, the preseason No. 1 ranked squad
in FBS. Despite using 28 new players and working behind a rebuilt offensive
line, the Eagles performed surprising well between the hedges in Athens, GA.
Antonio Henton, GSU's transfer quarterback from Ohio State, hit 10-of-18
passes off the bench for 102 yards, with a touchdown and an interception. Lee
Chapple started at QB and went 9-of-18 for 86 yards.
Defense is likely to be a strength for Georgia Southern, even though it
allowed 535 yards against the powerful Georgia offense.
Georgia Southern 55, Austin Peay 17
No. 17 Elon (0-1) at Stony Brook (1-0), 3 p.m.
It will be a former Big South Conference team traveling to meet a new Big
South team when the Elon Phoenix faces the Stony Brook Seawolves.
Elon suffered through a disappointing opener, losing 28-10 at home to then-No.
4 Richmond. The Phoenix played well at times, but made just enough mistakes
against a tough opponent to get beat.
A pair of critical turnovers by sophomore quarterback Scott Riddle (23-of-39
for 243 yards and one touchdown) were particularly costly. Payton Award
candidate Terrell Hudgins grabbed 10 passes for 78 yards, but juggled what
would have been a TD reception in the end zone.
The Elon defense struggled at times against an athletic Richmond offense,
giving up 124 yards rushing to Josh Vaughan, including a TD burst of 72 yards.
The Phoenix allowed 216 rushing yards and gave up 236 yards and two TDs to
Spider quarterback Eric Ward.
On the positive side of the ledger, Elon looked improved on the ground, with
A.J. Harris gaining 48 yards on 13 carries to compliment the potent passing
attack.
Stony Brook got off to a strong start with an impressive 42-26 victory over
Colgate. The Seawolves jumped out to a 28-6 halftime lead and expanded their
advantage to 42-12 in the third quarter before clearing the bench.
The Seawolves knew they had a solid rushing attack heading into the season,
but they were even better than expected against Colgate with Edwin Gowins
rushing for 147 yards and two TDs and Conte Cuttino adding 104 and a score.
A team with plenty of offensive weapons, Stony Brook was pleased with Dayne
Hoffman's first start at quarterback. Hoffman was 8-of-16 for 174 yards with
one touchdown pass and one interception. Lyndell Suggs grabbed three passes
for 70 yards, including a 49-yard scoring strike from Hoffman.
The Seawolves gave up 363 yards to a Colgate squad that was missing Payton
Award candidate Jordan Scott in the backfield, so the defense will need to
show improvement against a high-powered Elon offense.
This game has the chance to be a barn-burner on offense and will likely be
decided by which team can make the most big plays. Look for Elon to do that to
pull out a tough road win.
Elon 42, Stony Brook 34
Quincy (0-0) at No. 18 Western Illinois (0-1), 7:05 p.m.
Western Illinois is coming off a heartbreaking loss at Arkansas. The
Leathernecks were a play away from one of the most significant FCS over FBS
upsets of the past few years when Arkansas pulled out a 28-24 victory.
The Leathernecks led 24-14 with 10:34 remaining before the Razorbacks rallied
for two late touchdowns, scoring the second one with just 1:49 remaining on a
fourth-down pass play.
WIU did almost everything right in its opener. Payton Award candidate Herb
Donaldson ran 35 times for 157 yards and a touchdown as the Leathernecks
controlled the clock and Buchanan Award candidate Jason Williams earned
national defensive player of the week honors from The Sportsbook Betting Lines by
forcing two fumbles and recording seven tackles and two sacks to lead the
defense.
About the only negatives were that WIU gave up 318 yards through the air to
Arkansas' Casey Dick and Leatherneck quarterback Matt Barr struggled to a 10-
of-25 passing day with just 105 yards.
This should be a rough day for a Quincy team that will be opening its season.
The Division II Hawks have five starters back on offense and nine on defense
from a team that was 6-5 last season and finished 3-3 in the Mid-States
Football Association.
The Hawks are coached by a former Quincy player, Bill Tersliner and are 2-9
lifetime against the Leathernecks.
Western Illinois 63, Quincy 7
No. 19 Eastern Illinois (0-1) at No. 24 (FCS) Illinois (0-1), 12 p.m.
For the second week in a row, Eastern Illinois challenges itself against an
FBS opponent. The Panthers dropped a 31-12 decision to Central Michigan last
Thursday, but face an even bigger obstacle against a team that played in the
Rose Bowl on New Year's Day.
EIU unveiled an improved passing attack, with Bodie Reeder completing 19-of-28
passes for 201 yards and a touchdown. But the Panthers struggled with only 83
yards on the ground.
The Panthers trailed only 17-3 at the break, but a pair of long drives by
Central Michigan in the second half closed out the win. EIU allowed 389 yards,
217 through the air.
Illinois has some of the best speed of any team in the midwest, due in a large
part to coach Ron Zook's Florida recruiting connections, so it will be
difficult for Eastern Illinois to keep up with the most athletic team it is
likely to see in 2008.
The Illini played one of the most exciting games of the first weekend, losing
to Missouri 52-42 in St. Louis, despite piling up 532 yards of offense. A
large part of the problem was the Illinois defense allowed 549 yards.
Quarterback Isiah "Juice' Williams is the catalyst for the Illinois attack. He
threw for 451 and five TDs against Missouri, hitting seven different receivers
during the game.
This is likely to be a blowout, particularly with the Panthers catching the
Illini after a loss.
Illinois 69, Eastern Illinois 14
No. 20 The Citadel (1-0) at No. 22 (FBS) Clemson (0-1)
For the first time in seven seasons, The Citadel Bulldogs and the Clemson Tigers will renew their intrastate rivalry. Clemson claimed a 38-0 win over
the Bulldogs to commence the 2000 season.
With Clemson getting dominated in emphatic fashion (34-10 loss to Alabama) in
its season-opener, there's a feel around Charleston that the Bulldogs have a
solid chance of knocking off their first FBS foe since the 1992 season, when
the Bulldogs pulled off a 10-3 victory over a Jack Crowe-led Arkansas team.
The Citadel was the SoCon's top defensive unit last fall and returns eight
starters from that unit. Despite graduating its top two tacklers, Andrew
Rowell and Josh Lawson, the Bulldogs have the potential to be even better on
that side of the ball this fall.
In its 54-7 season-opening win over Webber International, the Bulldogs held
the Warriors to just 198 yards of total offense, including a mere 78 yards on
the ground. The Bulldogs have veterans Kevin McCaskill and Terrence Reese
along the defensive line, Jonathan Vest at linebacker and Mel Capers and
Dwight House in the Bulldogs' secondary.
Clemson's offense was stymied by an Alabama defense that held the Tigers to
188 yards of total offense and zero yards rushing. Quarterback Cullen Harper
was sacked three times and took numerous hard hits.
Clemson has also had its share of troubles in recent memory against SoCon
teams, particularly in contests against Appalachian State (23-12 in 1997), and
Furman (24-13 in 2003, 19-3 in 1996). Even its 38-10 win over Furman last year
was much closer than the score.
Bulldog Quarterback Bart Blanchard, now the full-time starter for the
Bulldogs, after the departure of the school's all-time leading passer Duran
Lawson, had another strong showing in his fourth-straight start for the
Bulldogs after taking over for Lawson after his career-ending injury last
season. Blanchard completed 12- of-14 passes for 137 yards and two touchdowns,
without an interception in just over one half.
Wide receiver Andre Roberts caught three passes for 91 yards, including a
career-long 78-yard scoring reception.He also returned his first-career punt
for a 64 yard score to display his blazing speed in another he will be used as
a weapon this fall for the Bulldogs.
The Bulldogs rolled up 385 yards of total offense and recorded 54 first downs
in the week one win over the Warriors.The running game, despite the enormous
loss of Tory Cooper who has graduated, appears to be in solid shape with the
Asheton Jordan turning in an impressive collegiate debut, rushing for 70 yards
and two scores.
The Citadel 35, Clemson 31
UC Davis (0-1) at No. 22 Central Arkansas (1-0), 7 p.m.
UC Davis came within a play of holding off San Jose State, losing 13-10 on a
touchdown pass with eight seconds left. The Aggies got off to a quick 10-0
start behind the play of quarterback Daniel Alfaro (21-of-34 for 193 yards)
and receiver Bakari Grant (eight catches, 108 yards), who hooked up for the
team's only touchdown.
The UCD defense allowed just 42 yards on the ground to San Jose State and
forced three turnovers. But the Aggies did give up 231 yards through the air.
The Aggies are strong up front, with Buchanan candidate John Faletoese leading
the way at defensive tackle.
Central Arkansas wasn't challenged in its opener against Division II Henderson
State. The Bears relied on the passing of Payton Award candidate Nathan Brown
(24-of-34 for 367 yards and three TDs) to build a 28-7 halftime lead. Brent
Grimes balanced the attack with 15 carries for 86 yards.
UCA's defense was solid against the run (84 yards allowed), but still are a
work in progress against the pass. The Bears gave up 249 yards through the
air.
Both teams are looking to establish their credentials and this should be an
entertaining game. But the presence of Brown in the pocket and the fact the
game is at UCA should lift the Bears to a close win.
Central Arkansas 28, UC Davis 24
Western Kentucky (0-1) at No. 24 Eastern Kentucky (0-1), 6 p.m.
Eastern Kentucky and Western Kentucky renew the Battle of the Bluegrass, a
game that was one of the top FCS rivalries before WKU bolted for the FBS ranks
last year. This is also one of the rare games where an FCS team gets to host
an FBS opponent.
EKU was overwhelmed by Cincinnati in its opener, going down 40-0 in the third
quarter. The Colonels allowed 557 yards of total offense, including 348
through the air. Allan Holland completed 12-of-17 passes for 141 yards to lead
the Eastern Kentucky attack, but the Colonels struggled with their ground
game, picking up just 48 yards. But this should be a more competitive game for
EKU.
Western Kentucky went 7-5 in its first FBS campaign, but struggled in its
opening-game 31-13 loss at Indiana. The Hilltoppers were out-rushed 297-63 and
fell behind 17-0 in the first half. Indiana's Kellen Lewis scorched WKU for
185 yards and two TDs on the ground in just nine carries.
K.J. Black was a bright light for WKU, hitting 19-of-31 passes for 219 yards
and one touchdowns.
This game has typically gone down to wire and with it being played at Eastern
Kentucky, expect the Colonels to pull one out late.
Eastern Kentucky 24, Western Kentucky 21
THURSDAY NIGHT'S TOP GAME
Florida A&M (1-0) at Delaware State (0-0), 7:30 p.m.
Florida A&M started the Joe Taylor coaching era with a 30-20 win over SWAC
opponent Alabama State, but now the longtime Hampton coach must dive into MEAC
play against the defending league champion.
The Rattlers managed to earn a win despite a 378-201 deficit in total yardage
by taking advantage of three Alabama State turnovers and returning a kickoff
back for a touchdown. FAMU's rebuilding team must have similar success to beat
a tough experienced opponent.
Florida A&M had a particularly tough time on the ground. Star running back
Phillip Sylvester managed just 29 yards on nine carries, but did score a
touchdown. Eddie Battle was an efficient 9-of-15 for 124 yards as the new
Rattler quarterback. And LeRoy Vann went 99 yards with a kickoff return for a
touchdown that gave the Rattlers the lead for good in the second quarter.
But FAMU showed some weaknesses against the pass, allowing 253 yards through
the air.
Delaware State will look to take advantage with veteran quarterback Vashon
Winton, who passed for 1,818 yards and 12 touchdowns last year. Winton must
find a new clutch receiver after losing athletic Shaheer McBride to
graduation. Hard-nosed running back Kareem Jones (700 yards rushing) fits in
well with coach Al Lavan's grind-it out approach on offense.
The Hornets lost five starters from last year's defense, including linebacker
Russell Reaves, but should still be gritty with linebacker John Pope leading a
group that has been fortified by some quality transfers.
Florida A&M might makes some waves later in the season in the MEAC, but
playing the defending champion on the road is probably too tall a challenge in
this one.
Delaware State 24, Florida A&M 14
GAME OF THE WEEK
No.5 Montana (0-0) at No. 11 Cal Poly (1-0), 9:05 p.m.
The Montana Grizzlies open their 2008 season on the road against an upstart
Cal Poly club that is fresh off an impressive 29-27 win over WAC member San
Diego State last Saturday at Aztecs Stadium.
The Grizzlies are coming off a 12-1 campaign, that ended with a 23-22 loss to
SoCon co-champion Wofford at home in the playoffs. But Montana returns just 10
starters. Senior quarterback Cole Bergquist, who passed for 2,623 yards, 20
touchdowns and eight interceptions in 2007, leads the offense. Guard Colin
Dow, tackle Brent Russum and center J.D. Quinn will provide protection for
Bergquist up front.
Montana returns talent at wide receiver in Mike Ferriter, who was Montanas
leading pass-catcher last fall with 49 catches for 733 yards and four
touchdowns.
Defensively, the Grizzlies return only three starters including current
Buchanan candidate safety Colt Anderson.
Cal Poly, faces another daunting schedule, but passed its first test with a
29-27 victory at San Diego State. Andrew Gardner drilled a 21-yard field goal
as time expired to deliver a breathtaking win for the Mustangs.
The Mustangs picked up exactly where they left off last season, flexing their
offensive muscles, out-gaining the Aztecs 483-379 with weapons such as
quarterback Jonathan Dally, running backs James Noble, Ryan Mole and Jon Hall
and Payton Award candidate Ramses Barden on wide receiver.
The Grizzlies and the Mustangs have quite a history facing each other,
especially in recent history. Although the Grizzlies have dominated the
overall series, holding an 11-1 lead in 12 previous meetings, the Mustangs
nearly knocked off the Grizzlies two years ago, dropping a 10-9 decision in
Missoula two seasons ago.
Cal Polys only win over the Grizzlies came back in the FCS quarterfinals in
the 2005 postseason, as the Mustangs claimed a 31-17 victory over the
Grizzlies in Washington-Grizzly Stadium during the 2005 season.
This one has the makings of another classic, with Cal Poly's home field
advantage being the probable difference.
Cal Poly 28, Montana 21
<< Nats win slugfest against Phils
Washington, DC (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Ronnie Belliard had the go-ahead RBI
single in the eighth and Cristian Guzman hit a bases-clearing, three-run
double to put the game out of reach as the Nationals notched a 9-7 victory
over t
<< Cubs' Zambrano to miss next start
Chicago, IL (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Chicago Cubs pitcher Carlos Zambrano will miss
his next scheduled start Sunday against Cincinnati after meeting with the
team's orthopedic specialist Wednesday.
Manager Lou Piniella announced the decis
<< "Thunder" in Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City, OK (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Oklahoma City's NBA team will be called
the Thunder.
The franchise formally revealed the nickname and logo at an afternoon press
conference on Wednesday.
"The bold, traditional lettering and shiel
<< NCAA denies final appeal of Cincinnati QB Ben Mauk
Cincinnati, OH (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - University of Cincinnati quarterback Ben
Mauk had his request for reconsideration on his original waiver for a sixth
year of eligibility denied for the final time by the NCAA on Wednesday.
The NCAA re
<< A's reinstate Sweeney, transfer DH Thomas to 60-day DL
Kansas City, MO (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - The Oakland Athletics reinstated designated
hitter Mike Sweeney from the 60-day disabled list Wednesday and transferred DH
Frank Thomas to the 60-day DL with a right quadriceps injury, effectively
ending
ChiSox grind out win against Tribe >>
Cleveland, OH (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Alexei Ramirez hit a two-run home run as the
Chicago White Sox avoided a three-game sweep at the hands of the Cleveland
Indians with a 4-2 win at Progressive Field.
Orlando Cabrera drove in a run while
BoSox rally late to edge O's >>
Boston, MA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Alex Cora scored the game-winning run in the
ninth to help the Boston Red Sox to a 5-4 win over the Baltimore Orioles to
complete a three-game sweep at Fenway Park.
In the ninth, Cora led off with a si
The brothers LaRoche lead the Bucs past the Reds >>
Cincinnati, OH (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Brothers Adam and Andy LaRoche each had RBI
singles in the eighth inning to boost Pittsburgh to a 6-5 victory over the
Cincinnati Reds.
Adam LaRoche, who ended an 0-for-16 slump, drove in two runs,
Blue Jays edge Twins in extras >>
Toronto, ON (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - John McDonald's hit in the bottom of the 11th
inning sent Toronto past Minnesota, 5-4, in the middle contest of a three-game
set from Rogers Centre.
Eddie Guardado (3-4) allowed a leadoff double to Scott Role
Wolf leads 'Stros to eighth straight and sweep of Cubs >>
Chicago, IL (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Randy Wolf threw his eighth career shutout,
guiding Houston to its eighth straight win and a three-game sweep of the
Chicago Cubs with a 4-0 triumph Wednesday night.
Wolf (9-11) scattered six hits and
MySportsbook.com week 1 NFL lines
Now that the 2007 NFL schedule is finally out, it is only matter-of-course for lines on “Week 1” to follow. Of course MySportsbook.com is the first to churn out odds for the NFL’s inaugural week for the upcoming season. Expect a lot of fireworks the first Thursday night of the season as the defending champion Indianapolis Colts face off against the surprise of the 2007 season, the New Orleans Saints. These teams were ranked #1 and #3 in the NFL respectively a season ago so a high scoring affair could be in order. As of now, the Colts will be giving 6 points to the Saints; keep in mind the Saints were one of the better road teams last season going 6-3 SU and 7-2 ATS. The first Monday night of the season will again provide a “double feature”. Coming off a disappointing season, the Cincinnati Bengals will look to get back to playoffs and improve their public image as they take on the AFC North favorite Baltimore Ravens. The second game features a couple of teams that haven’t had too much success recently but each could make some noise if the NFC is as weak as it was last year as the San Francisco 49ers host the Arizona Cardinals. The most interesting game of the opening week will feature the NFC champion Bears as they hit the road to take on the NFL’s top team during last year’s regular season, the San Diego Chargers.
MySportsbook.com Week 1 odds:
Saints +6 @ Colts -6
Falcons @ Vikings (pick ‘em)
Panthers @ Rams (pick ‘em)
Broncos -3.5 @ Bills +3.5
Chiefs -1 @ Texans +1
Dolphins +3 @ Redskins -3
Patriots -5 @ Jets +5
Eagles -3.5 @ Packers +3.5
Steelers -4 @ Browns +4
Titans +6 @ Jaguars -6
Bears +6 @ Chargers -6
Lions +3 @ Raiders -3
Bucs +6.5 @ Seahawks -6.5
Giants +4 @ Cowboys -4
Ravens +3 @ Bengals -3
Cardinals +3 @ 49ers -3
Super Bowl line (2008)
NFC +6.5 vs. AFC -6.5
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