Thursday, October 21, 2010

UTES TO PLAY IN PAC-12 SOUTHERN CONFERENCE

The Pac-10 Conference made it official after a unanimous vote by league presidents on Thursday, assigning the Utah Utes to its new South Division for football and announcing an unprecedented plan for equal revenue distribution.

The Utes, however, still will not receive a full share under that agreement until 2014-15, league commissioner Larry Scott confirmed.

“Nothing has changed in terms of our agreement with Utah,” Scott said.

While the rest of the schools will equally share the league’s revenue starting in 2012, the Utes will receive only an increasingly partial share for the first three years of the agreement. If league revenue dips below $170 million in any year, both USC and UCLA will receive an extra $2 million payout, officials 
said.

The league also announced that its football title game will be played at the site of the division champion with the best conference record, and that teams will play a nine-game schedule that includes five games against divisional opponents and four games against teams from the other division.

However, in an effort to maintain longtime rivalries between the four California schools, USC and UCLA will be assured of playing Cal and Stanford each year. That means Cal and Stanford will play only two opponents from the Pac-12 South each year, reducing the frequency with which they will play the Utes.

Scott also said the league continues to examine starting its own television network, and that men’s and women’s basketball teams will play an 18-game schedule with no divisions.

Each team’s schedule will include a home-and-home series with its traditional rival - the Utes and Colorado will be considered rivals and travel partners, for scheduling purposes - a rotating home-and-home series with six teams and a rotating single-game with the remaining four teams.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

'COLLEGE GAMEDAY' IN UTAH ONCE AGAIN??


So, what are the odds that ESPN will bring “College GameDay” to Salt Lake City on Nov. 6 for the Utah-TCU game?
 
Well, it’s not a sure thing. But it’s not a bad bet, either.

 According to a spokesman for ESPN, the Utes-Horned Frogs showdown is one of several games under consideration to host the Nov. 6 edition of “College GameDay.”

Clearly, we’re getting a little ahead of ourselves. ESPN won’t decide where to take its traveling roadshow until Sunday, Oct. 31.

And, clearly, whether Kirk Herbstreit, Lee Corso and Chris Fowler make the trek to Utah all depends on how the Utes and the Horned Frogs fare in the next few weeks. Both teams will be favored in their games between now and then, although both will have to beat No. 23 Air Force.

It’s a virtual certainty that if neither Mountain West Conference team loses, they will both be in the top 10 by Nov. 6. And that day there’s only one other possible matchup that could be anywhere near as attractive — current No. 12 Arkansas at No. 10 South Carolina.

(And Arkansas could lose at No. 7 Auburn this week.)

The only other game on Nov. 6 that features two teams currently in the rankings is No. 17 Arizona at No. 14 Stanford. On that date, no other team ranked by the AP this week is scheduled to face an opponent with fewer than two losses already.

There’s some precedent here. “GameDay” made it's first appearance in the state of Utah for the BYU-at-Utah game in November 2004. The popular saturday college football host show was in Provo a year ago for the TCU-at-BYU game. And then in Fort Worth three weeks later for the Utah-at-TCU game.

SI ARTICLE HAS TIES TO UTAH

The Utes were mentioned in the recent Sports Illustrated article about an agent, Josh Luchs, who admits he paid dozens of college football players. He mentions in the section 'Raising the Stakes' he could recruit the west coast well but didn't go after Utah players because the agent he was working with, Gary Wichard, who had an 'in' at Utah.

Wichard represented brothers Kevin Dyson, the 16th pick in the 1998 draft, and Andre Dyson, the 60th pick in the 2001 draft.

According to the article, Wichard told Luchs he didn't recruit players by partying with them or paying them and there are no mentions of the Dyson brothers being paid, but there are plenty of other big names mentioned in the article who were supposedly paid by Luchs.
It's going to be interesting to see how this story plays out and what the ramifications are at both the pro and college level.

For what it is worth, Utah coach Kyle Whittingham is about as paranoid when it comes to agents as he is to the media. Agents aren't even allowed at pro day anymore. I know some agents see the ban as a huge inconvenience, but when stories like this break, I'm sure fans are grateful for Whittingham's strict stance.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

A GRAND ENTRANCE


Halladay retired Brandon Phillips on a tapper in front of the plate to end it. Catcher Carlos Ruiz pounced on the ball, getting down on his knee as the ball rolled near Phillips' bat, and made a strong throw for the final out.
Tip your cap to Roy Halladay of the Philadelphia Phillies ... only the second pitcher in MLB post season history to throw a no hitter. And by the way, it was the first post season game he ever pitched in.

SAN FRANCISCO: PRETENDERS NOT CONTENDERS

49ers head coach Mike Singletary could potentially be jobless if his underachieving team continues to struggle entering divisional play. Singletary fired his offensive coordinator last week and is already looking to let go of other coaches.
The last place people expected to find the San Francisco 49ers in the first four weeks of the NFL season was last place.

That's exactly where the National Football Conference West preseason favorites reside, even behind rookie quarterback Sam Bradford and his St. Louis Rams. Keeping company with such doghouse NFL teams as the Browns, Bills, Lions and Panthers seems disappointing for a franchise that was supposedly resurrecting itself into a championship contender.

Maybe the Niners will turn it around and surge to the top of a division where the champion just might finish with eight victories-after all, the rest of the division is historically weak enough to pull off such an enormous turnaround. Or maybe they will continue to underachieve, because there are some deeply rooted problems in San Francisco.

After the Niners' third loss of the season, head coach Mike Singletary remained optimistic, with it still being early in the season, that the team could still turn it around before it was too late. But San Francisco again shot itself in the foot in week four with too many turnovers, bringing the Niners to 0-4 in 2010.
All four of the 0-4 teams in the NFL have major issues, but none had the expectations placed on them that the 49ers did. Not even close.

If 49ers fans are confused by this pitiful start, then they are clueless as to what has unfolded before them. There's confusion on the sideline, in the huddle and in the locker room. The chaos is everywhere and it's obvious to anyone who has watched one quarter of any given San Francisco game. On second thought, all they have to do is watch how their head coach conducts himself leaving the field. After the heart breaking loss to the Falcons, Singletary skipped the traditional post game handshake with Falcons head man Mike Smith. The '9ers have had communication problems, whether in play-calling, getting defenders lined up properly or even when making coaching decisions. Something as basic as having the correct number of players on the field has been an issue at times for Singletary's team.

San Francisco is No. 27 running the ball, which might be understandable if Frank Gore was sidelined, but he's fine. There's been little running room because of inconsistent blocking and too much emphasis on the pass, where the line also has struggled. Former Ute quarterback Alex Smith has a 66.1 quarterback rating with eight sacks, seven interceptions and only three touchdowns. The Niners rank second to last in the entire league in scoring.

Defensively, the Niners have a beast in All-Pro linebacker Patrick Willis. But they've forced only three turnovers, given up an average of 26 points per game and allowed nearly 336 yards of total offense. 

To complicate the problems, Singletary fired offensive coordinator Jimmy Raye last week, paving the way for an unprecedented seventh offensive coordinator the first six years of Smith's young career. Firing coaches will not make a difference-besides, Singletary's own job could be on the line if the 49ers don't right the ship next week when they host the Mike Vick-less Philadelphia Eagles.

At this point, firing staff and readjusting your entire offensive scheme is like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic-there's no point.