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ACCESS
PICKS FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2017 |
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NCAAF |
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9/23/2017 |
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FOUND
55
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FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
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+344
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+11 (-110)
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Over 51 (-110)
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-440
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-11 (-110)
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Under 51 (-110)
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- North Carolina State had better be prepared Saturday when it kicks off against No. 12 Florida State. Because the Seminoles are ready to hit somebody. Still fuming from a 24-7 season-opening loss to Alabama on Sept. 2 -- then seeing its next two games get washed out because of Hurricane Irma -- Florida State (0-1) enters Saturday's contest against the Wolfpack (2-1) having not played a game in three weeks. "It's definitely the oddest start to season I've ever had. It's been tough on everyone," Florida State tight end Ryan Izzo said. "We're anxiously waiting to get out there against N. C. State. " The Seminoles were supposed to follow-up their season opener in Atlanta against the Crimson Tide with a home date against Louisiana-Monroe on Sept. 9, but that game was canceled when it became clear Hurricane Irma was a threat to Florida. And because of the ongoing recovery effort in Miami last week due to the storm, last Saturday's game against the Hurricanes was moved to Oct. 7. That left N. C. State as Florida State's next opponent on the schedule, and history -- recent or otherwise -- is on the Seminoles' side. Florida State, which enters the game as a 12-point favorite, has won the last four meetings, including 24-20 last year in Raleigh, N. C. The Seminoles also have a big edge in the all-time series at 26-11. But does all that time off mean the Seminoles could come out rusty -- rather than enraged? Perhaps, said star Wolfpack H-back Jaylen Samuels. "I don't know if it's a good thing or bad thing," Samuels told the Charlotte (N. C. ) News Observer when asked about FSU's long layoff. "I don't know if they're going to come out rusty or if they're going to come out fresh. " Fresh or not, the big question for Florida State is at quarterback. Starter Deondre Francois was lost for the season in the opener because of a knee injury. True freshman James Blackman will make his first start Saturday. "(He's) determined. Very focused. That's about the best way I can (describe it)," Fisher said of Blackman's progression. "He grinds. He pushes. He asks questions. He likes to be coached. I like how he's going; we'll just have to wait and see how he plays and hope things go well. " The Wolfpack dropped their opener to South Carolina 35-28 but have won two games in a row against Marshall and FCS opponent Furman. Samuels already has five touchdowns -- three rushing, two receiving -- and he has drawn the attention of Florida State star defensive back Derwin James. The two are likely to match up all afternoon Saturday. James said he respects Samuels' ability, adding he sees an "offensive version" of himself in Samuels, who had 15 receptions in the season-opener. Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher agreed Monday when asked if that comparison was accurate. "That's a great analogy. It really is. That why you like Derwin so much as a player and why he's so good because he can recognize other people who see the game," Fisher said. "Because to do the things that Samuels does, it's not only great physical skills there, there's great mental skills, great intelligence to be able to play two different positions, understand how to play them and play them so effectively. Samuels . . . the guy's a football player. He can do anything. " North Carolina State quarterback Ryan Finley has thrown 192 consecutive passes without an interception. That's the longest active streak in the nation and the eighth-longest mark in ACC history. The Wolfpack's offense also was boosted last week by the return of starting right tackle Will Richardson after a two-game suspension. Beyond James, there are ample potential high draft picks in this game. James is rated the third-best prospect for 2018 by NFLDraftScout. com, while Wolfpack defensive end Bradley Chubb is 11th and FSU cornerback Tarvarus McFadden is 12th. Florida State's 21-day stretch between games is tied for the third-longest layoff between regular-season games in the same season in program history. In 1980, the Seminoles had 28 days between a Nov. 8 game against Virginia Tech and a Dec. 6 game against Florida. In the program's first season of 1947, the Seminoles played their opener on Oct. 18 against Stetson and the second game of the season 27 days later on Nov. 14 at Cumberland. The 1983 team also had a 21-day break, hosting Miami on Nov. 12 before concluding the regular season at Florida on Dec. 3. "I feel like any time you take the field at home, it's something," James said. "So even though it's been a month, I feel like we're going to get that same feeling like it was that first week or second week. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Ryan Finley threw for 230 yards and two touchdowns as North Carolina State got its first road win over a ranked team since 2008, defeating No. 12 Florida State 27-21 on Saturday. Jaylen Samuels had two touchdowns as the Wolfpack broke a 10-game losing streak to ranked teams. Their last win over a Top 25 team coincidentally was against Florida State in 2012. Their last victory on the road over a ranked team was at North Carolina. Finley, who completed 22 of 32 passes, had a 71-yard touchdown pass late in the second quarter to give the Wolfpack (3-1, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) a 17-7 lead. Nyheim Hines rushed for 94 yards on 24 carries. The Seminoles, who had a 21-day layoff due to Hurricane Irma, have dropped their first two games to open a season for the first time in 28 years. It also marks the first time since 2011 that FSU has dropped back-to-back games. James Blackman was 22 of 38 for 278 yards in his first start. Blackman, the first true freshman to start for FSU since 1985, moved into the starting spot after Deondre Francois suffered a season-ending knee injury in the Sept. 2 loss to Alabama. Auden Tate had nine receptions for 138 yards, including a 4-yard touchdown early in the second quarter that drew the Seminoles within 10-7. The Seminoles struggled to score touchdowns in the red zone, with just one in seven trips. Ricky Aguayo had four field goals, but missed a 30-yarder. Blackman also had a fumble deep in Wolfpack territory. N. C. State took control early, scoring on its first two drives for a 10-0 lead. Carson Wise kicked a 24-yard field goal and Samuels had a 2-yard touchdown on fourth-and-goal. THE TAKEAWAYN. C. State: Samuels made his presence felt after being held in check by Florida State in three previous meetings. The senior H-back had 12 receptions for 64 yards, five carries for 11 yards and had a 25-yard completion to Dylan Parham during the first quarter. Florida State: Blackman struggled early, completing just one of his first four passes, but he started to get comfortable during the third drive and finished the first half by completing 14 of 16. UP NEXTN. C. State: Hosts Syracuse next Saturday. The Wolfpack have won nine of the 10 meetings, including three straight. Florida State: Travels to Wake Forest next Saturday. The Seminoles have a five-game winning streak over the Demon Deacons and have won by an average margin of 33. 4 points. ---More college football: www. collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Joe Reedy on Twitter at www. twitter. com/joereedy
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
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FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
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OFF
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+28 (-110)
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Over 59 (-110)
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OFF
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-28 (-110)
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Under 59 (-110)
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Tennessee coach Butch Jones often follows closer-than-expected victories by saying that he never will apologize for a win. This time, he had a different postgame approach. ''At the end of the day, it's all about getting the victory, but (that was) just flat-out unacceptable,'' Jones said Saturday after Tennessee staggered to a 17-13 victory over 27 1/2-point underdog Massachusetts. ''The performance is unacceptable. We'll get back to work tonight and correct it and correct our deficiencies. '' Tennessee (3-1) was trying to bounce back from a 26-20 loss at No. 20 Florida in which the Vols allowed a tiebreaking 63-yard touchdown pass as time expired. Jones' staff was roasted all week for everything from Tennessee's red-zone play calling to its defensive strategy on the game's final play. The Vols' performance against UMass (0-5) won't quiet that criticism. Tennessee struggled to put away a winless team that played the entire game without star tight end Adam Breneman and most of the second half without starting quarterback Andrew Ford due to injuries. ''There's no excuse to come out here and play the way we did,'' Tennessee offensive tackle Brett Kendrick said. Tennessee was held scoreless for the game's first 25 minutes and final 22 minutes. The sluggish performance amid summer-like conditions resulted in a sterile Neyland Stadium atmosphere. Although the announced attendance was 95,324, there appeared to be approximately 30,000 or so fewer fans than that in the fourth quarter as UMass attempted to rally. The Vols survived thanks to a pass rush that recorded seven sacks, their highest single-game total since 2008. Tennessee's John Kelly rushed for 101 yards and a touchdown. Brandon Johnson added seven catches for 123 yards for career highs in both categories. ''We played better than them,'' UMass linebacker Bryton Barr said. ''They're a heck of a team, obviously, but just eliminate a couple of mistakes and we're winning that game. '' Tennessee overcame two unsportsmanlike conduct penalties, including one on Jones that gave UMass first-and-goal on its lone touchdown drive. ''I'll take full responsibility,'' Jones said of the penalty. ''That's on me. I also think it was a byproduct of huddling our sideline and talking to our team. The official thinks I'm talking to him and then did talk to him and, you know, that's on me. (I was) trying to give our team a spark as well. '' UMass threatened to take the lead with less than 10 minutes left when Andy Isabella's 42-yard run put the Minutemen at the Tennessee 38. But the Minutemen went backward from there - thanks in part to a Jonathan Kongbo sack - and punted on fourth-and-16 at the 44. The Minutemen's next drive stalled after UMass got as far as Tennessee's 45. Tennessee clinched the victory when UMass lost the ball on downs at its own 17 with 22 seconds left. ''I'm proud of the way they played,'' UMass coach Mark Whipple said. ''We wanted to get it to a one-possession game in the fourth quarter, and we did. We just couldn't make the play that we needed to, to get us over the top. '' Both teams used backup quarterbacks for part of the second half. UMass' Ross Comis took over for the injured Ford late in the third quarter. Tennessee's Jarrett Guarantano replaced Quinten Dormady late in the third quarter, but Dormady returned after the Vols failed to move the ball on Guarantano's three series. THE TAKEAWAYUMass: Kicking woes and poor pass protection have hurt UMass all season, and the pattern continued on Saturday. Michael Schreiner missed an extra-point attempt that would have tied the game in the second quarter. Logan Laurent replaced Schreiner and made UMass' second extra-point try. UMass had allowed a Football Bowl Subdivision-high 5. 75 sacks per game before Saturday and has now increased that average to 6. 0. Tennessee: The Vols must sort out their quarterback situation after neither Dormady nor Guarantano could move the ball consistently on Saturday. Dormady was 17 of 27 for 187 yards with a touchdown pass and fumble. Guarantano was 2 of 5 for minus-3 yards and had three carries for 4 yards. STUBBORN AGAINST SECUMass has gone 0-4 against SEC teams over the last two years but has been competitive in each of those games. In three games with SEC schools last season, UMass trailed Florida 10-7 at the start of the fourth quarter before losing 24-7 and also fell 47-35 to Mississippi State and 34-28 to South Carolina. UMass actually led Mississippi State at halftime. MEDICAL REPORTAn ankle injury prevented Breneman from playing. Tennessee center Jashon Robertson and defensive tackle Shy Tuttle were announced as scratches shortly before the opening kickoff due to unspecified injuries. UMass played the second half without injured offensive tackle Jack Driscoll. NEXT UPUMass hosts Ohio. Tennessee hosts No. 11 Georgia. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and http://www. twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Steve Megargee at www. twitter. com/stevemegargee
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
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OFF
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-24.5 (-110)
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Over 71 (-109)
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+1,041
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+24.5 (-110)
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Under 71 (-111)
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 LAWRENCE, Kan. Will Grier threw for 347 yards and accounted for four touchdowns, Justin Crawford ran for 125 yards and another score and West Virginia pulled away late to beat pesky Kansas 56-34 on Saturday. David Sills V had 130 yards and two TDs receiving, and Kennedy McKoy also reached the end zone twice, as the Mountaineers (3-1, 1-0 Big 12) beat Kansas (1-3, 0-1) for the sixth time in seven meetings. They did it by overcoming a career game from sophomore Khalil Herbert, who ran for 291 yards and two TDs. It was the third-most yards by a Kansas player on the ground in school history. Peyton Bender added 197 yards and a TD through the air, but he also threw a pair of picks, while a porous defense that allowed 40-plus points to Central Michigan and Ohio struggled once more. The Mountaineers looked as if they'd cruise past the Jayhawks again when they put together four straight touchdown drives in the first half. Each covered at least 80 yards, none took more than 3:22 off the clock, and the result was a 28-3 lead midway through the second quarter. Herbert finally stopped the onslaught with a 67-yard touchdown run, but the Mountaineers' Mike Daniels picked off a tipped pass a couple minutes later and returned it for another score. But the Mountaineers' seemingly comfortable 35-13 halftime advantage didn't last long. Their offense suddenly hit the skids, punting four times and turning it over once during a five-possession series spanning the break. And a defense that had started to bottle up Herbert again became leaky, allowing short touchdown runs a couple minutes apart to make it 35-27. Suddenly, the sparse crowd that turned out on a hot, sunny afternoon began to think back to 2013, when the Jayhawks stunned the Mountaineers 31-19 on a cool November day. The teams swapped TDs in the fourth quarter, the Mountaineers getting a second chance at the end zone after an offside penalty on a field goal, and it was still 42-34 with 7:35 left in the game. Grier answered with a QB keeper then scored again a few minutes later to put it away. THE TAKEAWAYWest Virginia: Grier had the Mountaineers humming early and late, but the offense sputtered out of rhythm during a long stretch in the middle of the game. Their counterparts on defense didn't help much, getting pushed around by the Kansas offensive line most of the afternoon. Kansas: Miscues doomed the Jayhawks, from the pick-six to penalties when they were going for it in fourth-and-short situations. But while coach David Beaty insists there are no moral victories, the way Kansas responded to adversity was something to build upon. UP NEXTWest Virginia has a week off before visiting No. 16 TCU on Oct. 7. Kansas also gets a week off before Texas Tech visits Oct. 7. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org and www. Twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
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OFF
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+42 (-110)
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Over 58.5 (-110)
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OFF
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-42 (-110)
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Under 58.5 (-110)
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 For No. 19 Louisville, it's pick-up-the-pieces time. For Kent State, it could be a case of wrong place, wrong time. The Golden Flashes' timing for their Saturday trip to Papa John's Cardinal Stadium isn't what one would term ideal. The Cardinals last week, with a chance to score a statement win over defending national champion Clemson and inject themselves into the national championship picture, instead laid a mutant egg. The 47-21 final didn't fully reflect how overmatched Louisville looked at times. Its defense couldn't get a stop when one was needed, and Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Lamar Jackson was overrun by the Tigers' deep, relentless pass-rushing line. All the Cardinals (2-1) can do now is regroup and reload. "We're not where I thought we were as a football team," Louisville coach Bobby Petrino said. "But it's a long season ahead of us, a lot of games ahead of us, and we have a lot of work to do. The most important thing for us is to get better from here on. " While casual fans might focus on Jackson looking harried and harassed last week, the Cardinals' defense isn't holding up its end of the deal very well. A unit that last year seemed to play downhill most of the time and create big plays with aggressive play-calling appears to be having trouble adjusting to the more conservative style of defensive coordinator Peter Sirmon. Louisville is allowing 36. 7 points per game, giving up a spate of big plays in the passing game. Opponents are completing nearly two-thirds of their attempts and rolling up 331 passing yards per game. The Cardinals might get back standout cornerback Jaire Alexander, who has missed the past two games because of a knee injury. He was considered day-to-day early in the week. "We didn't play with a lot of confidence in the secondary the other night," Petrino said. "We gave them free access and let them come off the ball and gave them some easy completions. We've got to tighten up the coverage and challenge them. Make them work harder. " Kent State (1-2) could offer an avenue for a turnaround. The Golden Flashes haven't been prolific passers by any means. They threw for exactly 1 yard in a season-opening 56-3 loss at Clemson, then were blanked last week at Marshall 21-0. In between those games was a 38-31 win over FCS foe Howard, meaning Kent State has scored one field goal in two games against FBS opposition. "We've got to keep our heads up and keep moving forward," Golden Flashes coach Paul Haynes said after the loss to Marshall. "The 21-0 (score) doesn't really reflect this game. We're going to continue to get better. " Kent State has been primarily a running team, throwing on just 21 percent of its plays this year. Reflected in the one-dimensional attack is that quarterback Nick Holley is the team's leading rusher with 207 yards on 35 carries. No running back has even managed 100 yards through three games. One hundred yards is a good half sometimes for Jackson, whose 64 yards against Clemson moved him atop the Atlantic Coast Conference's record book for career rushing yards by a quarterback with 2,834. Joshua Nesbitt held the previous record at 2,806, and he played for Paul Johnson's Georgia Tech, users of an option-based attack. Jackson's heroics aside, the Cardinals need more help for him in the ground game. Seniors Malik Williams and Reggie Bonnafon have combined for 256 yards and a per-carry average of 6. 6 but are averaging only a combined 13 runs per game. The practice field might not be a pleasant place in Louisville this week. Petrino takes pride in having a balanced, explosive offense that piles up the points. Even given the obvious skill of Clemson's front seven, the Cardinals weren't good under the prime-time spotlight. "It may take a while to lift them back up because the first thing we're going to do is work really hard and go back to work -- find out where we're at," Petrino said. "The thing that you need to do is earn the right to win on the practice field. " Jackson's hopes of a repeat Heisman took a major hit, but Louisville's hopes for a big season can still be realized. "My confidence is always high," tight end Charles Standberry said. "I think we just had a bad game. It's football. It happens. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 LOUISVILLE, Ky. Lamar Jackson accounted for three touchdowns to set a Louisville career record and lead the No. 19 Cardinals to a 42-3 victory at Kent State on Saturday. Despite missing Jaylen Smith, the team's top receiver , the reigning Heisman Trophy winner threw for 299 yards and two touchdowns on 18-of-22 passing. His 16-yard touchdown pass to Javonte Bagley in the third quarter ended the scoring and gave him 88 total touchdowns, breaking Chris Redman's career mark. In all, Jackson, who did not play in the fourth quarter, finished with 333 yards total offense. He also helped the Cardinals (3-1) quickly move on from last week's blowout loss to Clemson. On the first play of the game, he connected with tight end Jordan Davis on a 69-yard reception. Four plays later, on 4th-and-goal, Malik Williams' 3-yard run gave the Cardinals a 7-0 lead over the Golden Flashes (1-3) less than two minutes into the game. Louisville racked up 188 yards of offense and used a Trumaine Washington 37-yard interception return to lead 21-0 after a quarter. About the only thing that could match the Cardinals 539-yard offensive performance was a squirrel that made its way on the field in the second quarter and drew cheers from the crowd. Kent State's Paul Haynes, who served as Louisville's secondary coach in 2002 and as Louisville coach Bobby Petrino's defensive coordinator at Arkansas, coached from the press box for the second straight week after returning from prostate cancer surgeryTHE TAKEAWAYKent State: Not much went right for the Golden Flashes on the day. However, freshman quarterback Dustin Crum entered the game late in the first quarter and ran 18 times for a team-high 62 yards. Louisville: After seeing its defense battered against Clemson last week, the Cardinals defense looked much better against the Golden Flashes, who were held to just 150 yards on 59 plays. UP NEXTLouisville: The Cardinals host Football Championship Subdivision foe Murray State next Saturday. Kent State: The Golden Flashes kick off MAC play next Saturday afternoon as they host Buffalo. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org and on Twitter at http://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
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OFF
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+41 (-110)
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Over 68 (-110)
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OFF
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-41 (-110)
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Under 68 (-110)
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State continues a stretch of games in which it will be heavily favored when UNLV comes to Ohio Stadium on Saturday. The 10th-ranked Buckeyes (2-1) will meet the Rebels (1-1) for the first time in history (noon ET on BTN). Kickoff is 9 a. m. PT back in Las Vegas for UNLV, which will travel to Columbus on Thursday to get acclimated for the early start. After facing UNLV, Ohio State travels to Rutgers for its Big Ten opener and then returns home to face Maryland. Not exactly a murderer's row for the Buckeyes. The schedule should prove to be advantageous for the Buckeyes, though, as they try to recover from the stinging loss at home to Oklahoma two weeks ago. Last week, Ohio State began the recovery process with a 38-7 victory over Army. The Buckeyes are still figuring out how to best utilize their talent on offense. Senior quarterback J. T. Barrett didn't have a great game against Oklahoma but bounced back last week with an efficient performance against Army, completing 25 of 33 passes for 270 yards and two touchdowns. "Played much better," Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said. "I think the surrounding cast was much better. Obviously, Oklahoma is one of the top couple teams in America. We didn't play as well. He didn't play as well, but all of us did not play as well or coach as well. " Freshman running back J. K. Dobbins continued to amaze last week with 172 yards rushing and two touchdowns on 13 carries against Army, including a 52-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. He is carrying the load while last year's starter, Mike Weber, recovers from a lingering hamstring issue. A gang of receivers led by K. J. Hill (eight catches vs. Army) and Parris Campbell is starting to take shape. The Buckeyes will be looking to break some big plays in the passing game this week. The biggest question on offense involves the choice of a backup quarterback. Redshirt freshman Dwayne Haskins saw action last week as the backup against Army and completed all four of his passes, but previous No. 2 Joe Burrow has returned from a hand injury. "So we've got to make some decisions who is the first one in there," Meyer said. With Ohio State favored by nearly 40 points over UNLV, Meyer might be tempted to experiment with some of his young talent this week, but that's not his primary intention. "We're not at that point," he said. "We're not that experienced. "We've got so many issues to fix that were exposed early in the season. And so what am I trying -- we're trying to get better and better and win games. That's all. " The Buckeyes should have ample opportunity to move the ball against the Rebels' defense, which has given up 416. 5 yards per game against two vastly inferior opponents. Defensively, Meyer is looking for improvement in the secondary, which was burned by Oklahoma but untested by Army's triple-option, run-oriented attack. Meyer, who coaches special teams, also has some concerns about kickoffs and punt returns. Both units aren't productive enough yet in his mind. Asked where he'd like to see progress, Meyer said, "Pass defense and continued growth on offense. Punt team I'm very pleased with. Kickoff coverage is a mess right now. " UNLV is coming off a bye week. The Rebels stumbled out of the gate big time with a 43-40 loss to FCS program Howard and then rebounded with a 44-16 win at Idaho. Playing at Ohio State before 100,000-plus fans will be a daunting challenge for UNLV, which visited Michigan two years ago. "We're going to have to be aggressive, take some shots down the field, think outside the box a little bit to give ourselves an opportunity," said UNLV's Tony Sanchez, in his third year as coach after leaving national high school power Bishop Gorman in Las Vegas, and current Ohio State players Tate Martell and Haskell Garrett were on his team. "The hardest thing about a team like this is the depth they have. " The Rebels so far have shown a ground-oriented offense. They rank fourth nationally with 350. 5 rushing yards per game. Running back Lexington Thomas leads UNLV, averaging 170. 5 yards per game on the ground. UNLV touts wide receiver Devonte Boyd as an All-American candidate. He has 170 career receptions for 2,838 yards and 17 touchdowns. Freshman quarterback Armani Rogers will make his third career start. "You want to go there for a win, but it's a tough task playing against a team like that," Sanchez said. "It's an Urban Meyer-coached team. But at the end of the day it's still football. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 COLUMBUS, Ohio J. T. Barrett threw touchdown passes to five different receivers in the first half, and No. 10 Ohio State cruised to a 54-21 win over Nevada-Las Vegas on Saturday. Barrett, who has taken the brunt of the criticism for Ohio State's inconsistent passing game this season, was barely slowed by an outgunned UNLV defense, completing 12 of 17 passes for 209 yards before handing the game over to backup Dwayne Haskins near the end of the first half. The big half for Barrett moved him into second place behind Art Schlichter for all-time passing yards at Ohio State. The Buckeyes (3-1, 1-0 Big Ten) rolled, but the opponent was no real test in the last tune-up game before Ohio State begins its conference schedule. ''Let's go do that against a team that's equally matched,'' Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said. ''That's my challenge every day. '' Barrett threw scoring passes to Parris Campbell, Johnnie Dixon, Binjimen Victor, Terry McLaurin and K. J. Hill. True freshman running back J. K. Dobbins added to his growing resume by rushing for 95 yards on 14 carries before taking a seat just before halftime. A sixth and seventh receiver - C. J. Saunders and Rashod Berry - caught TD passes from Haskins, marking the first time in history Ohio State had more than five different receivers catch scoring passes in a game. Haskins threw for another 228 yards in mop-up duty. Running back Lexington Thomas provided one of the few highlights for UNLV (1-2), racing through the Ohio State defense for a 55-yard touchdown in the third quarter. Javin White jumped in front of a Haskins pass in the fourth quarter and returned it 65 yards for a score, but the game was already out of reach. ''This is the type of team you come here to play at Ohio State - you make a mistake, they're going to make you pay for it,'' UNLV coach Tony Sanchez said. ''And they made us pay for a bunch of them early on in the game. '' THE TAKEAWAY:UNLV: The Rebels will be happy to take their big check and move on to Mountain West conference play. OHIO STATE: UNLV didn't put up much of a fight, so it's hard to tell if the Buckeyes are really getting better. They just have to keep rolling until the next test, on Oct. 28 against No. 4 Penn State. One thing becomes clearer each week: Dobbins is Ohio State's next big star. POLL IMPLICATIONS: The Buckeyes won last week and dropped two spots, so it's difficult to predict. The level of competition won't do them any favors with voters. UP NEXT:UNLV: Hosts San Jose State next Saturday. Ohio State: Begins a string of eight Big 10 games next Saturday at Rutgers. ---More college football at http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Mitch Stacy at https://twitter. com/mitchstacy
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
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+211
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+7 (-115)
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Over 68 (-110)
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-255
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-7 (-105)
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Under 68 (-110)
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 HOUSTON Nic Shimonek passed for 321 yards and two scores and Texas Tech defeated Houston 27-24 on Saturday, snapping the Cougars' 16-game home winning streak. Shimonek's favorite target was Keke Coutee, who made 11 catches for 161 yards and a score, which came on a 77-yard pass in the third quarter. Houston (2-1) owned the nation's longest active home winning streak entering Saturday. The last home loss for Houston was Nov. 8, 2014, against Tulane, 31-24. This is the first win for the Red Raiders (3-0) against the Cougars in Houston since a 38-26 Southwest Conference game in the Astrodome on Nov. 25, 1995. The loss snaps a seven-game winning streak for the Cougars against teams from Power 5 conferences. The last loss to Vanderbilt 41-24 in the BBVA Compass Bowl on Jan. 4, 2014. Houston quarterback Kyle Allen struggled, finishing 24 of 39 for 217 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. Kyle Postma replaced Allen midway through the fourth quarter. Postma was 8 of 13 for 100 yards and a score. Postma also had four carries for 52 yards, including a nine-yard touchdown run. THE TAKEAWAYTexas Tech: The Red Raiders have started 3-0 for the fifth time in the last seven seasons and are 11-2 against non-conference opponents under Kliff Kingsbury. Houston: The Cougars offense struggled mightily against Texas Tech. Allen has turned the ball over six times in his first three games as the Cougars' starting quarterback. Allen has thrown four interceptions and fumbled twice. UP NEXTTexas Tech: The Red Raiders are home against No. 6 Oklahoma State on Saturday. Houston: The Cougars head to Philadelphia to face Temple on Saturday.
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+101
|
+1.5 (-109)
|
Over 58 (-110)
|
|
-121
|
-1.5 (-111)
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Under 58 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+131
|
+3 (-111)
|
Over 46.5 (-110)
|
|
-151
|
-3 (-109)
|
Under 46.5 (-110)
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 12:20 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+231
|
+7.5 (-115)
|
Over 55.5 (-110)
|
|
-281
|
-7.5 (-105)
|
Under 55.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 ATLANTA KirVonte Benson ran for a career-high 196 yards with two touchdowns, TaQuon Marshall added 112 yards rushing with two scoring runs, and Georgia Tech beat Pittsburgh 35-17 on Saturday in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for each team. With the game tied at 7 in the second quarter, Marshall used a spin move to dodge Pittsburgh safety Damar Hamlin on an 18-yard run to the 1. Marshall scored on a keeper the next play. Georgia Tech (2-1, 1-0) ran for 436 yards with five touchdowns. The Yellow Jackets overcame four lost fumbles, including two by Benson. Georgia Tech's defense allowed no points on the four turnovers. ''If it weren't for the defense, we wouldn't have won this game,'' Marshall said. ''Let's be real. . . . You can't ask for much more. '' Georgia Tech controlled the clock, holding the ball 35 minutes, with its spread-option attack. The Panthers were successful on only 1 of 13 third-down plays. ''When you don't move the ball against Georgia Tech, the way they hold the ball, you're in deep, deep trouble,'' said Pittsburgh coach Pat Narduzzi. Benson wore down the Pittsburgh defense with his 29 carries. ''We expect to run for at least 300 yards every game,'' Benson said. ''That's our goal. '' Benson lost his second fumble inside the Pittsburgh 5 midway through the fourth quarter. He had a 47-yard scoring run about two minutes later. Pittsburgh (1-3, 0-1) made a change at quarterback, starting Ben DiNucci over senior Max Browne. DiNucci completed 12 of 19 passes for 110 yards with one touchdown. Browne took over in the fourth quarter and completed 10 of 15 passes for 89 yards. Narduzzi said he will take a ''status quo'' approach on his quarterbacks ''and find out who has the best week of practice and who gives us the best chance to win a football game. '' The Panthers' weak running game offered no balance. Seven Pittsburgh rushers netted only 37 yards on 20 carries. Georgia Tech held the ball almost 20 minutes in the first half. The Panthers stayed close with a few big plays, including an 80-yard punt return for a touchdown by Quadree Henderson. Henderson found a wall when he changed direction and ran left toward the Pittsburgh sideline. A devastating block by Damar Hamlin on Parker Braun helped Henderson find an open field. Henderson's big play tied the game at 14-all. Benson's first touchdown run, from the 5, gave Georgia Tech the lead. Jordan Whitehead, the strong safety returning from a three-game suspension for a violation of team rules, had a 30-yard gain on an end-around run to set up DiNucci's 28-yard touchdown pass to Quadree Ollison. Alex Kessman made a 55-yard field goal for Pittsburgh to end the first half. Georgia Tech's Quaide Weimerskirch scored on a 19-yard run in the third quarter - the longest run and first touchdown for the sophomore. THE TAKEWAYPittsburgh: DiNucci showed promise on his first drive but for the most part looked like a first-time starter. The Panthers couldn't generate a running attack to help the sophomore. Pittsburgh's only run for 10 or more yards was Whitehead's 30-yard gain on the trick play. Pittsburgh's young defense, with only two seniors, was consistently frustrated by Georgia Tech's option runs. Most of Benson's yards came on power runs straight at the line. ''Our defense was just on the field too long today,'' Narduzzi said. Georgia Tech: The Yellow Jackets' top-ranked running game showed its depth and big-play ability. The Yellow Jackets already had topped their average of 372 yards rushing before the final quarter. Perhaps more encouraging for Georgia Tech's ACC outlook was the play of its defense. The Yellow Jackets allowed no points on four lost fumbles. UP NEXTPittsburgh: The Panthers return home to play Rice on Saturday. Georgia Tech: The Yellow Jackets will have another home ACC game against North Carolina on Saturday at noon. ---For more college football coverage: www. collegefootball. ap. org and www. twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 1:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+263
|
+7.5 (-109)
|
Over 69 (-110)
|
|
-325
|
-7.5 (-111)
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Under 69 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 2:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+100
|
+1.5 (-110)
|
Over 54.5 (-110)
|
|
-120
|
-1.5 (-110)
|
Under 54.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 2:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
+28 (-110)
|
Over 53.5 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
-28 (-110)
|
Under 53.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 BLACKSBURG, Va. -- As excitement builds for a potential battle of unbeatens at the end of the month, No. 13 Virginia Tech is even more conscious of the importance of Saturday's home game against Old Dominion. Of course, everyone wants to talk about the Hokies' home contest against No. 2 Clemson on Sept. 30. ABC has tabbed the contest -- a rematch of last year's ACC championship game that the Tigers narrowly won 42-35 -- for its 8 p. m. ET national telecast. But before Tech can set its sights on that game, there's business to take care of this weekend at Lane Stadium. For the matchup of unbeatens to happen as anticipated, Tech (3-0) must get past ODU (2-1), and Clemson must beat visiting Boston College. The Hokies and Tigers are big favorites this weekend, but they'll both be guarded against the possibility of upsets. "(We're) really focusing on the next step that's in front of us," Virginia Tech coach Justin Fuente said. The Hokies and Monarchs face off for the first time. This is the first of 13 scheduled meetings over the next 16 years. ODU, which began play in the Football Bowl Subdivision in 2014 as a member of Conference USA, has enjoyed much success under head coach Bobby Wilder. Wilder led the Monarchs to six winning seasons between 2009-16, and coached them to their first-ever bowl victory last season at the Bahamas Bowl. While the program has grown significantly under Wilder's tutelage, it still has major ground to gain in its quest to join college football's elite. After losing to visiting North Carolina 53-23 on Saturday at Foreman Field, ODU's record against Power 5 conference teams dropped to 0-8. While ODU has played difficult road games in recent years against North Carolina State and North Carolina, it's anticipating a different kind of road challenge at Virginia Tech. The Hokies are the first ranked team the Monarchs have faced in their four seasons in the FBS. "We've played some really good ones, but I think Virginia Tech is by far the best team we've ever played," Wilder said. "This will be a monumental task on Saturday but one we'll be excited for. " Tech is coming off a resounding 64-17 road win over East Carolina on Saturday. The Hokies trailed 17-7 in the first quarter before unleashing a staggering run of 57 straight points. It was the Hokies' third-highest scoring output in a game since 1987 and the second-most ever against a team from the FBS. Their 675 total yards matched a single-game school record. After yielding 205 yards and 17 points in the first quarter, Tech buckled down and held the Pirates to 77 yards and no points in the final three quarters. The Hokies won despite the absence of starting cornerback Adonis Alexander, who was suspended for not living up to the team's standards, according to Fuente. The coach did not say early this week whether Alexander, who is still practicing with the team, will be available for Saturday's game. "We will continue to evaluate that throughout the week and see kind of how it goes," Fuente said. The Monarchs allowed 511 total yards to North Carolina in Saturday's loss. While their defense had trouble slowing the Tar Heels' multitude of playmakers, their undermanned offense couldn't seem to get anything going either. With his offense struggling, Wilder decided to pull the redshirt off 17-year old freshman quarterback Steven Williams Jr. , who came in and completed 9 of 20 passes for 139 yards and two touchdowns. Wilder said Williams, a 6-foot-4 lefty, won the job moving forward. "I just felt like the energy lifted up on our sideline," Wilder said. "It felt like everybody rallied around him. " Williams will be tasked with leading an ODU offense that is dealing with a multitude of injuries to critical players. For the second straight week, the Monarchs will be without four offensive starters. ODU's top receiver, Jonathan Duhart, is out for the season with a foot injury, and top running back Ray Lawry is expected to miss significant time with a torn hamstring. Tight end Melvin Vaughan and right tackle Chad Hendricks have missed time with knee injuries but could return for the Conference USA opener against Florida Atlantic on Oct. 7. For Virginia Tech, redshirt freshman quarterback Josh Jackson has gone above and beyond expectations through his first three games, with a 64. 7 completion percentage, 829 yards, eight touchdowns on no interceptions. He passed for a career-high 372 yards and tied a school record with five touchdown passes at East Carolina on Saturday. It was the highest single-game yardage output by a Virginia Tech freshman and the fifth-highest output by any Tech quarterback since 1987. Jackson became the first quarterback to win his first three starts since Logan Thomas in 2011.
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 BLACKSBURG, Va. Josh Jackson threw for three touchdowns and Steven Peoples scored three Saturday, leading No. 13 Virginia Tech past Old Dominion 38-0. Peoples scored on receptions of 17 and 43 yards, the latter when Jackson threw for a well-covered Cam Phillips in the end zone and the ball was tipped into Peoples' arms. Peoples also scored on a 1-yard run, and Jackson hit C. J. Carroll with a 5-yard scoring pass for the Hokies (4-0). Virginia Tech started slowly for the second consecutive game, but has scored 95 consecutive points since it last allowed any. The Monarchs (2-2), playing an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent for the second week in a row, fell to 0-9 against Power Five schools. The game was the first meeting between the schools and featured the first career start for 17-year-old Old Dominion quarterback Steven Williams Jr. He showed a nifty ability to escape the Hokies' pass rush, getting sacked just once, but completed just 8 of 26 for 85 yards. Monarchs receivers didn't help by dropping several balls, including one that Travis Fulgham could have taken 75 yards for a touchdown. By then, Jackson and the Hokies had removed all suspense. Jackson was 20 for 30 for 298 yards and has now thrown for 11 touchdowns. He did throw his first interception of the season against the Monarchs, but Virginia Tech took the ball away three players later, leading to their first touchdown midway through the second quarter. THE TAKEAWAYOld Dominion: The Monarchs didn't get pushed around as much up front as they had a week earlier against North Carolina, and they got some good penetration that disrupted Jackson early, but they eventually wore down. They will fare much better against similarly sized competition in Conference USA. Virginia Tech: The Hokies started slowly for the second week in a row, and while the results suggest they are just fine once they get untracked offensively, they might do well to try to find their rhythm more quickly going forward when they are playing ACC competition. UP NEXT:Old Dominion opens Conference USA play at home against Florida Atlantic. Virginia Tech remains at home and plays defending national champion and No. 2-ranked Clemson on Saturday night. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Hank on Twitter at https://twitter. com/hankkurzjr
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 2:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+215
|
+6.5 (-105)
|
Over 53 (-110)
|
|
-260
|
-6.5 (-115)
|
Under 53 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+170
|
+4.5 (-110)
|
Over 62.5 (-110)
|
|
-200
|
-4.5 (-110)
|
Under 62.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 COLLEGE PARK, Md. Taj McGowan scored two touchdowns, quarterback McKenzie Milton ran for 94 yards and Central Florida capitalized on an early injury to Maryland quarterback Kasim Hill in a 38-10 upset Saturday. Coming off a three-week layoff because of Hurricane Irma, the Knights (2-0) used a 21-point run over the second and third quarters to take control against a team trying to adjust to its third different quarterback in three games. Maryland (2-1) lost starter Tyrrell Pigrome in its season-opening win over Texas before turning to Hill, a true freshman with seemingly enough poise and talent to sufficiently fill the void. Hill finished off the Longhorns and helped beat Towson 63-17 before leaving this game in the first quarter with an apparent leg injury. He was replaced by sophomore Max Bortenschlager, who went 15 for 26 for 132 yards and two interceptions, one of which was returned for a 57-yard touchdown by Mike Hughes with 5:11 left. Bortenschlager was also sacked five times. Hill was scrambling on a third-down play when hit by Jamiyus Pittman and Chequan Burkett. The quarterback remained on the ground for several minutes before being helped off the field. Maryland did not give an immediate report on his condition. The Terrapins kicked a field goal on the next play but went nearly 32 minutes before scoring again late in the third quarter. By that time, UCF was well on its way to victory and the majority of fans had already made their way to the exits. It was the second victory for the Knights against a Big Ten school. The previous win - against nine defeats - came at Penn State in 2013. McGowan finished with 33 yards on 12 carries, including touchdown runs of 1 and 3 yards. The junior saw extensive action after starter Jawon Hamilton was injured on the Knights' opening possession. It was 14-3 in the third quarter when Miller ran 55 yards to the Maryland 20. Not long after that, the sophomore tossed a 6-yard touchdown pass to Jordan Akins. Milton went 18 for 30 for 178 yards. Maryland's DJ Moore caught a 20-yard touchdown throw from Bortenschlager to make it 21-10, but the Terps simply didn't have the firepower to complete the comeback. TAKEAWAYSUCF: The Knights have enough talent to win games like this, even if Hill didn't get hurt. UCF appears vastly improved in coach Scott Frost's second season. The evidence: Last year, the Knights lost in overtime at home to Maryland. Maryland: The Terrapins appeared on their way to a big season, but now they're using their third-string quarterback. Judging by his uneven performance, it's painfully obvious why Bortenschlager started the season as third on the depth chart. UP NEXTUCF hosts Memphis on Saturday, a game that was postponed earlier this month by Hurricane Irma. Maryland opens Big Ten play at Minnesota on Saturday, a team that defeated the Terrapins in College Park last year. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-215
|
-5.5 (-110)
|
Over 48.5 (-110)
|
|
+180
|
+5.5 (-110)
|
Under 48.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+115
|
+2.5 (-110)
|
Over 61 (-110)
|
|
-135
|
-2.5 (-110)
|
Under 61 (-110)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 CHEL HILL, N. C. Shaun Wilson ran 1 yard for the go-ahead touchdown midway through the fourth quarter, Bryon Fields returned an interception 61 yards for the game-sealing score and Duke beat North Carolina 27-17 on Saturday. The Blue Devils (4-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) matched their victory total from last year, prolonged their best start since 2014 and kept possession of the Victory Bell traveling trophy by beating the rival Tar Heels (1-3, 0-2) for the second straight year - just the second time that's happened since 1989. ''My final days here, I'm going to be able to ring that bell any morning I want,'' senior center Austin Davis said. Daniel Jones was 18 of 32 for 202 yards with a 28-yard touchdown pass to Davis Koppenhaver and a key 45-yard pass to T. J. Rahming to start the drive that ended with Wilson's TD. Chazz Surratt ran 56 yards for a touchdown and threw a 45-yard TD pass to Anthony Ratliff for North Carolina, but followed Wilson's short scoring run with the play of the game - his odd-looking two-handed throw that was picked off by Fields, who returned it down the left sideline for his school-record fourth career pick-six with 4:01 remaining. Austin Parker kicked field goals of 27 and 24 yards for Duke. Freeman Jones kicked a 34-yard field goal for the Tar Heels, who fell to 0-3 at home this season but led all three in the fourth quarter. ''It sucks, man,'' linebacker Cole Holcomb said. ''It's just, it stinks. Nothing else I can say about it. '' THE TAKEAWAYDuke: The Blue Devils' defense, which entered as the nation's best against the run, once again got away with giving up big plays. Duke allowed passes covering 35, 45 and 47 yards in addition to the 56-yard rush by Surratt. A week ago, Baylor had scoring plays that covered 44, 73 and 79 yards. North Carolina: The Tar Heels will bemoan both the interception and the run of injuries that continue to plague the team. They ruled three starters out with season-ending injuries in the days leading up to this game - then lost top receiver Austin Proehl after his early 47-yard catch. WR Rontavius Groves was hurt early in the fourth quarter of his first college game, clutching his right knee after he planted it while trying to make a catch. UP NEXTDuke: The Blue Devils have a quick turnaround with a Friday night home game against No. 14 Miami - the Hurricanes' first appearance in Durham since the infamous eight-lateral loss in 2015. North Carolina: The Tar Heels travel to Atlanta for another Coastal Division matchup with Georgia Tech on Saturday. ---More college football: collegefootball. ap. org and twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
+33 (-110)
|
Over 53 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
-33 (-110)
|
Under 53 (-110)
|
|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 20, 2017 CLEMSON -- Kelly Bryant continues to prove that Clemson coach Dabo Swinney made the right decision when he tabbed the junior to be the Tigers' starting quarterback this season. Bryant is coming off a strong performance in the first road start of his career -- a career-high 342 yards of total offense in Clemson's 47-21 victory at Louisville. "It was another opportunity for him to mature and grow," Swinney said. "He's growing up right before our eyes. " Bryant's fast start has the Tigers (3-0, 1-0 ACC) off to a fast start as well. The defending national champions are ranked No. 2 and are the only team in the nation with victories against two Top 15 teams this season. Bryant and Clemson will attempt to keep that perfect record intact Saturday when the Tigers host Boston College (1-2, 0-1) in an Atlantic Division clash at Memorial Stadium. Clemson has won 18 consecutive games against division opponents and owns a six-game winning streak against Boston College. "They've got playmakers all over the field," Boston College coach Steve Addazio said. Clemson's early success this season had hinged on the play of Bryant, who played sparingly in the past two seasons as Deshaun Watson's understudy. But given his chance to shine, the 6-foot-4, 220-pounder has embraced the challenge. "He has put in the work, so it's awesome to see him having the success that he's having," Swinney said. "He's put the time in, he's learned, he has complete ownership in what we're doing. " While Bryant's running ability has never been in question, his passing ability has. So, it's no surprise that he has rushed for 162 yards and five touchdowns in Clemson's first three games. But he also has exhibited a nice touch in the passing game, completing 68. 7 percent of his passes for 733 yards and two scores. "I think the quarterback, Kelly Bryant, is a very athletic guy," Addazio said. "He runs the ball. He reminds me of how (Boston College quarterback) Tyler Murphy used to run the ball. Throws the ball well. " Clemson also showed a strong running game at Louisville, amassing 297 yards on the ground, which is likely to concern a Boston College team that ranks last in the ACC in rushing defense, surrendering 279 yards per game. The Tigers continue to get yardage from multiple backs. Freshman Travis Etienne showed his potential by rushing for 98 yards, including an 81-yard touchdown, last week. Sophomore Tavien Feaster chipped in with a career-high 92 yards on only 10 carries. C. J. Fuller, the most experienced of Clemson's backs, is the likely starter for a fourth straight game. "Being able to run the football is really what makes us go," Swinney said. To add to the Eagles' concerns, Clemson's defense leads the nation in sacks (16) and is ranked eighth in total defense. Linebacker Dorian O'Daniel has emerged as the Tigers' leading tackler behind an all-star line. He had five tackles at Louisville last week and returned an interception 44 yards for a touchdown. "On defense they've always been outstanding, and they continue to be," Addazio said. "Their front is big and athletic. Their linebackers run well. Their secondary is one of the better secondaries I've seen. They rally to the ball as good as any defense I have ever seen. " Despite a seemingly overwhelming advantage in Clemson's favor, Swinney expects nothing to come easy. "They're 1-2, but you've got to look beyond that," Swinney said. "They beat a Northern Illinois team that just beat Nebraska, lost to a really good Wake Forest team that is sitting there at 3-0 right now and then played Notre Dame and in the third quarter it was really tight before it got away from them in the fourth quarter. "Boston College is a tough, hard-nosed physical team. . . . You're going to have to win the physical matchup because they're going to force the issue. " Anthony Brown, a freshman, will get his fourth straight start at quarterback for the Eagles and is coming off his best passing performance of the season -- a 24-for-40 effort for 215 yards and two touchdowns against Notre Dame. "They're playing really fast, a lot of tempo, and I'm impressed with their quarterback," Swinney said. "He's a young player, but he has a good feel for what they're doing. " Junior Jon Hilliman, one of the top running backs in the ACC, and has rushed for 203 yards in three games, while the Eagles' defense is led by consensus preseason All-American Harold Landry, a defensive end who led the nation in sacks last year with 16. 5.
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 CLEMSON, S. C. Adam Choice had a 6-yard tiebreaking touchdown in the fourth quarter and Travis Etienne had two scoring runs in the final six minutes as No. 2 Clemson wore down Boston College in a 34-7 victory Saturday. The Tigers, who came in off top-15 wins over Auburn and Louisville the last two weeks, were five-touchdown favorites over the Eagles (1-3, 0-2 Atlantic Coast Conference). But Boston College quieted the large Death Valley crowd on AJ Dillon's 1-yard TD late in the third quarter to tie the game at 7-all. Clemson finally got going in the fourth quarter. Quarterback Kelly Bryant led the Tigers on a 76-yard drive, capped by Choice's go-ahead score. The next series, they were at it once more on a 90-yard series and the speedy freshman Etienne burst through the weary Eagles to finally give the Tigers some breathing room. Bryant added a 4-yard TD before Etienne closed the scoring with a 10-yard run. Clemson (4-0, 2-0) won its seventh straight over the Eagles and opened 4-0 for a third consecutive season. Bryant ended with 106 yards rushing and two touchdowns on the ground. It was the second straight game Etienne, a Louisiana recruited wooed heavily by LSU, broke off a long touchdown run after his 81-yard score against Louisville last week. Boston College's defense and punter Mike Knoll kept it in the game longer than most figured. Clemson had only 38 yards in the third quarter and Knoll had pinned the Tigers inside the 10 five times. The effort clearly wore down the Eagles, who were outgained in the final period 213-37. THE TAKEAWAYBoston College: The Eagles looked in for another struggle through the ACC after opening league play with a 34-10 loss at home to Wake Forest, then surrendering 515 rushing yards to fall to Notre Dame 49-20 last week. Boston College looked like it had plenty to grow on from its defensive effort against the powerhouse Tigers. Clemson: Hold off on awarding the Tigers another ACC trophy and playoff spot. Clemson had averaged nearly 44 points in its seven home contests a year ago, but has managed just seven touchdowns combined in its past two games at Death Valley. Clemson's offense struggled to get the ball down field and once BC stopped biting on Bryant's quarterback runs, the Tigers' attack bogged down until the end- something that must be corrected if they hope for another big postseason. INJURY BUG: Both Boston College and Clemson played without significant players. The Eagles were minus last year's leading tackler in linebacker Conner Strachan, who is out indefinitely with a knee injury. They also lost receiver Charlie Callinan with a foot injury. The Tigers were down their national championship kicker in Greg Huegel, who tore a knee ligament at practice this week while Clemson was practicing a two-minute drill. Huegel will have season-ending surgery and backup Alex Spence will take over the Tigers' kicking chores. UP NEXTBoston College returns home to face Central Michigan next Saturday. Clemson goes on the road to play No. 13 Virginia Tech, the Tigers' third top-15 opponent in four weeks. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org and www. Twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+274
|
+9.5 (-110)
|
Over 50 (-110)
|
|
-340
|
-9.5 (-110)
|
Under 50 (-110)
|
|
|
|
|
VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 COLUMBIA, S. C. Parker White kicked a 31-yard field goal with four seconds left to give South Carolina a 17-16 win over Louisiana Tech on Saturday. White danced around the field after his winning kick, waving to the crowd, eventually celebrating in the student section. It made sense for the freshman because it was the first field goal he has made in five tries. And even after missing two kicks in last week's loss to Kentucky and two more in the first half Saturday, going oh-for-his career, South Carolina coach Will Muschamp told White in the locker room at halftime he had a feeling the game would come down to him. ''He shot me a big smile right before it. He didn't say too much, but gave me a high-five,'' White said. White saved South Carolina from an embarrassing loss. The Gamecocks (3-1) trailed 13-0 before a wild fourth quarter that saw South Carolina take a 14-13 lead and Louisiana Tech (2-2) answer with a 10-play, 84-yard drive that ended with what appeared to be the game winning 25-yard field goal by Jonathan Barnes with 55 seconds left. But Gamecocks quarterback Jake Bentley scrambled for 21 yards on third-and-10 and instead of spiking the ball, with no timeouts, threw a 31-yard pass into three Bulldogs defenders that Bryan Edwards somehow caught with 7 seconds to go. Bentley was 22-of-34 for 295 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Ty'Son Williams ran 13 times for 95 yards after getting no carries for South Carolina in last week's loss to Kentucky. A win is a win, South Carolina coach Will Muschamp said. But he said there is a lot to work on as the meat of the Southeastern Conference season looms. ''We all take the blame together - starting with me,'' Muschamp said. J'Mar Smith was 23-of-33 for 281 yards, a touchdown and an interception for Louisiana Tech. Teddy Veal caught 10 passes for 110 yards. For Louisiana Tech coach Skip Holtz, it was another shot at a big win that slipped away. The Bulldogs led Arkansas midway through the fourth quarter last year before losing 21-20 and lost to Kansas State 39-33 in triple overtime in 2015. ''We've been close,'' Holtz said. ''There's no moral victory in close. '' THE TAKEAWAY:Louisiana Tech: Holtz is now 0-8 coaching against Southeastern Conference teams. Holtz was an assistant for his father, Lou, at South Carolina for six seasons and was initially promised the Gamecocks job when his dad retired. But South Carolina hired Steve Spurrier instead. South Carolina: Edwards had six catches for 122 yards. This was the first game for South Carolina since Deebo Samuel broke his leg. Samuels had six touchdowns in three games, including two on kick returns. UP NEXT:Louisiana Tech: The Bulldogs host South Alabama on Saturday in their final non-conference game of the year. South Carolina: The Gamecocks head to Texas A&M as they play six SEC games in a row. ---More college football at http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-103
|
OFF
|
Over 51 (-110)
|
|
-118
|
OFF
|
Under 51 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
+21.5 (-110)
|
Over 50.5 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
-21.5 (-110)
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Under 50.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+384
|
+13 (-110)
|
Over 48 (-110)
|
|
-500
|
-13 (-110)
|
Under 48 (-110)
|
|
|
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|
VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+400
|
+13.5 (-110)
|
Over 60.5 (-110)
|
|
-525
|
-13.5 (-110)
|
Under 60.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 Miami will be virtually starting the season over when the No. 14 Hurricanes host Toledo on Saturday. With Hurricane Irma causing the cancelation of Miami's Sept. 9 game at Arkansas State and the postponement of the trip to Florida State from Sept. 16 to Oct. 7, the Hurricanes will be three weeks between games when they take the field against the Rockets. That will be the longest stretch ever between regular-season games in program history, a span of 21 days that goes back to the season-opening win over Bethune-Cookman on Sept. 2. "From a football aspect, it's very frustrating," senior wide receiver Braxton Berrios said. "Never in my life, since I started playing football at 7 or 8, have I had a period of time where we do nothing and are just sitting around on Thursday, on Friday and on Saturday, and we are just watching all those games and knowing that could be you. "It's frustrating, to say the least. " After the storm passed through the state, the Miami players were reunited in Orlando to conduct practices at the Disney athletic complex. One of the games they watched last weekend was Toledo's 54-51 comeback win over Tulsa, the unbeaten Rockets' third victory of the season. "We streamed it in the team room," coach Mark Richt said. "It was actually our dining area. We had some snacks, so it wasn't like everybody had to sit in a chair and watch, but everybody was watching the game as we were grabbing some snacks. We watched a good bit of the first half together. " His first impression? "Obviously, offensively they're very, very good at what they do," he said. "They can put a lot of points on the board. " Senior quarterback Logan Woodside has completed 65. 9 percent of his passes for nearly 335 yards a game while running backs Terry Swanson (276 rushing yards), Art Thompkins (236) and Shakif Seymour (150) share the workload in Toledo's running game. "This is a very fast-paced offense," said Miami defensive coordinator Manny Diaz, who hopes depth will give Miami's an edge. "They're going to come after us. We have the ability to play multiple people at every position, which is going to help us regardless of if we have played or have not played over the last couple weeks. " Toledo coach Jason Candle is concerned about Miami's speed. "I see a team that's built on players from South Florida," he said. "Lot of speed. They play fast on defense. They're running to the football and getting to you with bad intentions when they do get to the ball. "And on offense there's a multitude of guys that can score from anywhere. They've got a tremendous back in Mark Walton and some good receivers on the perimeter that can score it. "I think the quarterback is going to continually get better as the year goes on. " That would be junior Malik Rosier, who won the starting job for Miami after going through a four-way competition in fall camp. Rosier was 17-of-28 passing for 217 yards and three touchdowns in the opener. "I'm really a fan of how he handles the game and what it looks like," Candle said. "I think he's going to be a good one. " In addition to win over Tulsa, Toledo has beaten Elon and won at Nevada. Defensively, the Rockets held Elon to just 175 yards of total offense and Nevada to just 109 yards rushing before giving up 548 yards in total offense -- 423 on the ground -- to Tulsa. Walton, who rushed for 148 yards against Bethune-Cookman, has to like the looks of that number. "I think the biggest challenge for us is trying to figure out who they're going to be," Miami offensive coordinator Thomas Brown said. "They've played three games, and in the three games they've been somebody different. "I think they're more of a 'flavor of the week'-type team. They kind of base what they do blitz-wise and some stuff coverage-wise based on who they're playing. We kind of have to prepare for everything they showed last year, everything they've shown this year, which kind of makes it tough when you're getting a certain amount reps in versus all your looks, run-game and protection-wise. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. Mark Walton was in tears on the sideline, fearing that his season might be over because of whatever was causing the intense pain in his left ankle. Vinny Scavo came to the rescue. Turns out, a creative tape job from Miami's head athletic trainer was all Walton needed. Walton turned 11 carries into a career-high 204 yards, quarterback Malik Rosier threw for 333 yards and three touchdowns to remain unbeaten as a starter and the 14th-ranked Hurricanes shook off a putrid second quarter to beat Toledo 52-30 on Saturday. ''I think it was a great performance,'' Walton said. At times, it was. Travis Homer ran for two touchdowns and Braxton Berrios, Dayall Harris and Christopher Herndon each caught TD throws for the Hurricanes (2-0), who hadn't played in 21 days because of the effects of Hurricane Irma. Miami had six players cramp during the game, one needing intravenous fluids, and trailed 16-10 at the half before taking control. ''We've been through a lot,'' Miami coach Mark Richt said, talking about returning from the long storm layoff. ''It has been an emotional roller-coaster for a lot of us. So many things that you've got to be thinking through and planning and making decisions on and just figuring out a way . . . and then to try to regroup and start thinking about football again. '' Walton missed about half the game with his ankle problem and was taken out with 199 yards, then successfully lobbied Richt to get one more carry - after promising to not get hurt. He now has 28 touchdowns, 26 of them rushing, in 28 collegiate games. Logan Woodside completed 28 of 48 passes for 342 yards and three touchdowns for Toledo (3-1), which cut a 22-point deficit down to eight midway through the fourth quarter. Terry Swanson rushed 20 times for 79 yards for the Rockets, who outgained Miami 186-32 in the second quarter and outscored the Hurricanes 16-0 in that period. Rosier then had three touchdown passes in a four-minute stretch of the second half to open a 38-16 lead, before Toledo got within 38-30 on a pair of TD passes from Woodside in less than two minutes. ''I definitely think that you can never count this team out,'' Woodside said. ''That's one thing that I love about these guys. They never quit. We showed a lot of fight in us tonight. We could very easily lay down, but we didn't do that and I don't think we ever will. '' The Hurricanes punted the ball away on their first possession of the second half, then got touchdowns each of the next four times they touched the ball. An eight-play, 91-yard drive got the Hurricanes going, with Rosier connecting with Mike Harley for 19 yards on 3rd-and-18 one play before Homer - then playing because Walton was out - scored on a 12-yard carry to put Miami back on top. Rosier ran in from 23 yards out on the next Miami possession to help finally put away the game. ''Composure, that was the biggest thing,'' said Rosier, now 3-0 as a starter. ''We took the lead at first and they wound up taking it back. The first half, they really had us. . . . Second half, as you can tell, the offense really started clicking. '' THE TAKEAWAYToledo: The Rockets don't like making things easy for themselves. A week after rallying from a 28-7 deficit to beat Tulsa 54-51, the Rockets quickly got into a 10-0 hole against Miami - then held the Hurricanes scoreless for the next 28 minutes, before things went awry. . . . It could be a costly loss for Toledo. Rockets LG Yazeed Atariwa was taken off on a cart in the fourth quarter with a leg injury. Miami: The Hurricanes got two replay reviews to go their way on successive plays in the fourth. First, DB Sheldrick Redwine's flag for targeting was overturned, and then a two-point conversion by the Rockets that was called good on the field was also erased by video. . . . Berrios had a career-best 105 receiving yards. His previous best was 64. ''I'd be lying to you if I didn't say it felt incredible,'' Berrios said. WALTON'S DAYWalton became the sixth FBS player in the last decade to rush for 200 yards on no more than 11 carries. He had an 82-yard run in the first half, tying for the sixth-longest in Miami history. He's also the fifth Hurricane to run for at least 200, joining Edgerrin James, Duke Johnson, Lorenzo Roan and Willis McGahee. UP NEXTToledo: The Rockets get next week off, then open their Mid-American Conference schedule at home against Eastern Michigan on Oct. 7. Miami: The Hurricanes open Atlantic Coast Conference play Friday night at Duke. --More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+237
|
+7.5 (-110)
|
Over 52 (-110)
|
|
-290
|
-7.5 (-110)
|
Under 52 (-110)
|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 ANNOLIS, Md. Quarterback Zach Abey ran for 128 of Navy's 569 rushing yards in a 42-32 victory over Cincinnati in an American Athletic Conference game Saturday. Navy (3-0, 2-0) amassed the second most rushing yards in program history, just three yards shy of the record of 572 set in 2007 against North Texas. Bearcats quarterback Hayden Moore had a 3-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Cogswell on 4th down that pulled them to within 10 points with 6:06 left in the game. Cincinnati (2-2, 0-1) advanced to the Midshipmen's 11-yard line with just over two minutes remaining, but Tyris Wooten stripped the ball while sacking Moore and D. J. Palmore recovered it to seal the win. Abey ran for a pair of scores in the second half that helped keep Navy in control. He also had a 19-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Carmona in the first quarter. Navy sophomore Malcolm Perry had 100 yards on 10 carries and scored the game's first touchdown on a 23-yard run. Fellow slotback and senior Josh Brown also got his first career touchdown in the opening quarter with a 24-yard run, which was also his first carry of the season. Brown's second touchdown on the opening drive of the second half gave Navy a 28-17 lead. Moore was effective attacking Navy's secondary and went 28 for 46 for 381 yards with three touchdowns. His favorite target was Devin Gray, who caught six passes for 112 yards with a touchdown. It was the first game between the two schools since Oct. 20, 1956, when Navy beat Cincinnati, 13-7, in Annapolis. TOP RUNNERS OUTThe Midshipmen were playing without versatile starting slotback Darryl Bonner, who injured his ankle in the previous game against Tulane. His backup, Tre Walker, also suffered a leg injury in the second quarter and did not return. Cincinnati's starting running back Mike Boone also was out with an ankle injury. THE TAKEAWAYCincinnati: The Bearcats went 1-7 in the East division of the AAC last season. They will need to play better defensively to improve this year, especially in a league with so many high-powered attacks. Navy, however, did have two weeks to prepare and was able to wear down Cincinnati in the second half. Navy: The Midshipmen are traditionally among the best teams nationally with protecting the football. However, they've struggled this season. Through three games, the Midshipmen have committed five turnovers and created only three. Navy's running game has more than compensated for those mistakes so far. UP NEXTCincinnati: The Bearcats host Marshall in another non-conference game Saturday. Cincinnati won the past three meetings from 2004-08. Navy: The Midshipmen travel to Tulsa for their third consecutive AAC game Saturday. Navy leads the all-time series 3-1, including a 42-40 victory last year in Annapolis. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and http://www. twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
-19.5 (-110)
|
Over 43.5 (-110)
|
|
+859
|
+19.5 (-110)
|
Under 43.5 (-110)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Back at SEC Media Days in July, Vanderbilt coach Derek Mason said he and his team would be ready when Alabama came to town. Mason made it clear that he respected Alabama coach Nick Saban and what he's built in Tuscaloosa. He praised Saban for "the way he handles himself" and "the way he coaches his football team. " But Mason wanted everyone to know that he wouldn't be afraid. "But here's what I tell you. I don't fear anybody, and our team as well," Mason said in the summer. "So when we line up to play Alabama, we got to line up to play Alabama. . . . When we face Alabama, we're going to be ready to play. " Now, Mason and the Commodores (3-0) must do more than talk. They have to show no fear when No. 1 Alabama (3-0) travels to Vanderbilt Stadium on Saturday. Kickoff is scheduled for 3:30 p. m. ET. This is Alabama's first trip to Vanderbilt since 2007, and the first meeting between the teams since 2011. While the coaches have never faced each other, Saban can see the growth Vanderbilt has made during Mason's tenure. "They do a great job of executing on both sides of the ball," Saban said. "I think the results that they've gotten so far this season certainly bear that out. The quarterback's a really good player and he's very efficient in what he does with the offense, run and pass. They make some explosive plays. They run the ball effectively. They're physical. Same way on defense. "There's no question about the buy-in to the program and the job that he's (Mason) done there. " Commodores quarterback Kyle Shurmur has completed 49 of 69 passes for 703 yards, with eight touchdowns and no interceptions. He leads the SEC and is sixth nationally in passing efficiency (194. 9 rating). The Commodores are riding high off a 14-7 upset over then-No. 18 Kansas State on Saturday. Vanderbilt fields a stifling defense powered by Mason's play-calling. Vanderbilt leads the SEC in scoring defense (4. 3 points per game), passing defense (95. 3 yards per game) and total defense (198. 3 yards per game). The Commodores allow only 3. 44 yards per play. Alabama quarterback Jalen Hurts has struggled with his accuracy in the past, but this season he has thrown four touchdowns with no interceptions in 53 attempts, which have gone for 472 yards. He has rushed for 100 yards in each of the past two games and accounted for seven touchdowns this season, with no turnovers. Vanderbilt safety LaDarius Wiley is one of the key players on the defense. He earned SEC Defensive Player of the Week honors against Kansas State after he contributed 11 tackles, intercepted a pass and knocked down two other pass attempts. Vanderbilt's front seven lines up in a lot of odd fronts to give opposing offenses different looks. "Most of the stuff that they do that is exotic is on loose play downs," Saban said. "But I think what they're trying to do is create issues in the offensive line. All offensive linemen want to know who the four down linemen and the Mike (linebacker) are; that's who we have to block. When they're doing these kinds of things, it makes it much more difficult for them to ID the front and know who to block. "So it's creating confusion to some degree but also they do a good job from a schematic standpoint of being able to attack you out of those things and get pressure and they've got some really good players to do it. " On the other side, Alabama is coming off a 41-23 win over Colorado State in which it surrendered 391 yards of offense. Colorado State also converted 10 of 17 third-down attempts. While Saban didn't like the way the team finished, he doesn't want anyone to panic about Alabama's defensive struggles. It will help if linebackers Rashaan Evans (groin), Anfernee Jennings (ankle) are Dylan Moses are able to play this week after missing game time. They each returned to practice, even if in a limited basis, early in the week. "I think sometimes you lose sight of the fact that we are 3-0," Saban said. "We have improved in a lot of areas of our team and will continue to focus on the technical aspects of what we need to do to improve in some other areas. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 NASHVILLE, Tenn. Damien Harris ran for a career-high 151 yards and three touchdowns, Bo Scarbrough added two TDs and top-ranked Alabama routed Vanderbilt 59-0 Saturday in the Southeastern Conference opener for both teams. Alabama (4-0) now has won 19 straight over the SEC East. Better yet, the Crimson Tide hasn't lost to Vanderbilt since 1984 or in Nashville since 1969. Both streaks were assured at the end of the first quarter with Alabama up 21-0 after the second of Harris' TDs. Better yet, coach Nick Saban thinks his Crimson Tide finally responded to his challenge to do more than just win by dominating an opponent for a full 60 minutes. ''Until we learn how to do that, which I think we did today, I don't think you'll ever get the respect you deserve,'' Saban said. ''I think they earned a lot of respect today. '' Vanderbilt (3-1) came in as one of the five remaining undefeated teams in the SEC with the nation's stingiest defense in points, total yards and against the pass. The Commodores had allowed just 13 points combined through three games, yet they proved no match against Alabama's dominating ground game. Harris topped his season's best by the end of the first quarter and needed only 12 carries for his big day, thanks to a 61-yarder in the first quarter . Scarbrough ran 11 times for 79 yards more with TD runs of 6 and 2 yards. Brian Robinson added a 17-yard TD run in the fourth quarter for a 59-0 lead. The Crimson Tide simply smothered Vanderbilt, allowing just 49 yards in the first half to Alabama's 48 offensive plays. Alabama finished with a 677-78 edge in total offense. ''We ran into a buzz saw,'' Vanderbilt coach Derek Mason said. Alabama got linebackers Rashaan Evans and Anfernee Jennings back after they missed the last two games with injuries. Jennings forced a fumble recovered by Da'Shawn Hand for the second takeaway by the Tide defense in the first quarter. Ronnie Harrison intercepted a tipped pass that ended Vanderbilt's opening drive. Kyle Shurmur came in completing 71 percent of his passes for Vanderbilt. With Alabama pressuring the quarterback, Shurmur was just 4 of 15 for 18 yards. ''We have a lot of respect on Kyle Shurmur and put enough pressure on him I think it affected him a little bit and probably helped us in the game,'' Saban said. THE TAKEAWAYAlabama: The Tide showed the defensive woes against Colorado State were a mere blip, forcing two turnovers within the first 12 minutes. Vanderbilt: As disheartening as this loss was, Alabama has been doing this to everybody in the Eastern Division and most of the conference. The Commodores now have to regroup quickly with the SEC schedule only getting started, but this was their worst loss since a 66-3 loss to then-No. 2 Alabama in 1979. It was the third-worst loss in school history. POLL IMPLICATIONSAlabama looked much more crisp, playing well enough to maybe lure back a few more first-place votes. BAMA HOME GAMEThe stands were filled with lots of red with Alabama fans filling approximately three-quarters of the stadium. Asked about the support at a home game, Vanderbilt wide receiver Trent Sherfield had a short answer: ''We play for each other. '' UP NEXTAlabama: Hosts Mississippi. Vanderbilt: Visits No. 20 Florida. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Teresa M. Walker at https://twitter. com/teresamwalker
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+272
|
+9.5 (-105)
|
Over 66 (-110)
|
|
-338
|
-9.5 (-115)
|
Under 66 (-110)
|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 STILLWATER, Okla. -- Oklahoma State faced no resistance in romping to a 3-0 start and rising up the rankings. TCU also stands 3-0, yet has arrived at the mark much differently, more strenuously, with a tough win at Arkansas and a rally past SMU last week. So, which Big 12 team's start is more impressive? No need to wonder long, with the teams set for a Saturday meeting at Boone Pickens Stadium for one of just two weekend matchups pairing Top 25 teams: the No. 6 Cowboys against the No. 16 Horned Frogs in the conference opener for both squads. "I think it's the best group we will have played up to this point," said Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy. "And they're always going to challenge you. "TCU is going to hold its defensive call until the last second and they're going to run with you. They recruit well. Their guys can tackle and move well, so it'll be a challenge for all of us. It'll be a good game. " The Cowboys haven't been in a good game yet, outscoring their opponents 162-52 while emptying the bench each weekend. Quarterback Mason Rudolph hasn't played in a fourth quarter, yet he ranks fourth nationally in passing yards per game (387. 3) and second in touchdown passes (11). Overall, Oklahoma State ranks third nationally in total offense, averaging 607 yards per game, and fourth in scoring with a 54. 0 average. "They've been at a high level," said TCU coach Gary Patterson. "For me, it's how do I stop it and how do I slow it down? But (Rudolph's) doing a great job and that's what you get with a senior quarterback. " Patterson recognizes Rudolph's weaponry, too. In last week's 59-21 rout at Pitt -- a game the Cowboys had in hand at the half -- four receivers topped the 100-yard mark. "They've got great guys on the outside, they've got good guys on the inside who can work the middle," Patterson said. "They can run by you vertically. They throw the jump ball. And they've got good running backs. " TCU comes off a 56-36 win over SMU at just the right time, heading confidently into a matchup with the explosive Cowboys that may require a shootout for the Frogs to win. "You're going to have to score some points against Oklahoma State to be able to win the ball game," Patterson said. "We know that. " So, can the Horned Frogs keep up? Quarterback Kenny Hill has played well in TCU's fast start, yet may need to do even more to outduel Rudolph. Hill's career has seen a range of ups and downs. He tossed a Big 12-worst 13 interceptions a year ago, with 17 touchdowns, as the Frogs finished a disappointing 6-7. In a 31-6 loss to Oklahoma State in Fort Worth, he was picked off twice as the offense's only score came after the Cowboys gave the ball away with a fumble at their own 6. Through three games this season, however, Hill is completing 75 percent of his passes and has eight touchdowns against two interceptions. "I see a way different Kenny Hill," said Cowboys safety Tre Flowers. "He's making throws and it seems like he's leading them right now. They've rallied together and they're making plays. " Hill is benefitting from a better supporting cast, too. Wide receiver KaVontae Turpin, hampered by injuries a year ago, looks more like the explosive playmaker he was in 2015. Other receivers are producing as well, while steady running back Kyle Hicks continues to churn out yards and touchdowns behind an improved offensive line. And still, the Horned Frogs are a decided underdog. "That's the Big 12," Patterson said. "They're a very good offense right now. They play well in Stillwater and we have to get ourselves ready to go. " TCU doesn't have history on its side, either, having never won a Big 12 game in the state of Oklahoma. "TCU's a good team," Gundy said. They're a legit, top-20 team. So you'll have two good football teams playing Saturday. "They're better on offense, they've got more skill. They're better on defense; they're better tacklers. And they have skill on special teams. In all phases, this will be the best team we've played up to this point. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 STILLWATER, Okla. Darius Anderson ran for a career-high 160 yards and three touchdowns, and No. 16 TCU upset No. 6 Oklahoma State 44-31 on Saturday to stamp the Horned Frogs as a Big 12 contender. ''We want to be relevant, you want to win enough to get noticed,'' TCU coach Gary Patterson said. ''It was also an advantage that no one was giving us a chance. We play better that way. '' Kenny Hill passed for 228 yards for the Horned Frogs (4-0, 1-0 Big 12), who put themselves in a great position to start league play. The Frogs ran 52 times for 238 yards. TCU gave Oklahoma State's Mason Rudolph plenty of time to throw, but he often couldn't find enough open receivers. He completed 22 of 41 passes for 398 yards and two touchdowns, but he threw two interceptions. James Washington caught six passes for 153 yards and a touchdown and Marcell Ateman caught six passes for 100 yards for the Cowboys (3-1, 0-1). The Horned Frogs led 37-17 in the fourth quarter before the Cowboys rallied and cut the deficit to six points. ''We knew they were going to make a surge,'' Patterson said. ''You aren't going to stop them, just contain them. '' Anderson's 42-yard touchdown run with 2:37 remaining closed the deal. Oklahoma State committed four turnovers to one for TCU. ''We didn't play very smart and very disciplined, and really, we got outcoached,'' Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy said. ''I thought that they had better plans, and their players executed their plans better than we did. '' THE TAKEAWAYTCU: The Horned Frogs controlled the clock against Oklahoma State's previously stingy defense for much of the game. TCU ran 85 plays and kept the ball for just over 39 minutes. ''To come here and beat them is hard to do,'' Patterson said. Oklahoma State: The Cowboys, who had been averaging nearly 200 yards rushing per game, were held to 101 yards on 31 carries. Rudolph, who had emerged as one of the favorites in the Heisman race, took a step back with the loss. ''You figure it out, you grow up, you come back tomorrow,'' Gundy said. UP NEXTTCU: The Horned Frogs have a bye before hosting West Virginia on Oct. 7. The Mountaineers rolled past Kansas 56-34 on Saturday. OKLAHOMA STATE: The Cowboys play at Texas Tech on Saturday. The Red Raiders are undefeated and just beat Houston 27-24 on the road on Saturday. ---Follow Cliff Brunt on Twitter: www. twitter. com/CliffBrunt---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25 .
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 3:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-900
|
-17 (-110)
|
Over 61 (-110)
|
|
+614
|
+17 (-110)
|
Under 61 (-110)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 Fifth-ranked USC plays its first road game of the season against California in Berkeley on Saturday night in a game between 3-0 teams that don't yet know how good they are. The Trojans were impressive in their 42-24 victory over Stanford, but their other two games against unranked foes were less awe-inspiring. They were tied with Western Michigan midway through the fourth quarter before pulling that one out, and they trailed Texas with just 45 seconds left in the fourth quarter before winning in double overtime. "That's the best two-minute drive I've ever been associated with," USC coach Clay Helton said after the game. The game-tying drive might have been a thing of beauty, but Helton later added: "Ugly wins count too. " Another issue is the rash of injuries on the Trojans' defense. Defensive end Rasheem Green (high ankle sprain), outside linebacker Porter Gustin (toe, shoulder), defensive tackle Marlon Tuipulotu (knee) and linebacker John Houston Jr. (neck stinger) missed all or part of the Texas game and are questionable for this week. Although quarterback Sam Darnold demonstrated his ability to make big plays when USC needed them most, the Trojans have not been nearly as dominant as expected. And all three games were at home at the Los Angeles Coliseum. This week the Trojans have to travel to Berkeley to take on a Cal team that has exceeded expectations so far and will be excited to face one of its chief rivals in its conference opener. The Bears pulled off a road win against a pretty good North Carolina team in their opener, then, after struggling more than they should against Weber State, made a statement with a 27-16 home win over Mississippi on Saturday. First-year head coach Justin Wilcox, who was the defensive coordinator at Wisconsin last year, seems to have transformed a Cal team that had little defensive initiative under previous head coach Sonny Dykes into a defensive force. Inside linebacker Devante Downs, who leads the Pac-12 in tackles, had 14 tackles, two sacks and an interception as the Bears shut out Ole Miss in the second half and held the Rebels to fewer than 100 yards after halftime. "Justin is a brilliant defensive-minded coach," Helton said. "You see a team that is playing with great confidence. " The Bears are 3-0 for the first time in six years. "We set pretty high standards," Wilcox said. "We feel we can play a lot better and need to play a lot better. " There is certainly familiarity among the coaches as Wilcox was USC's defensive coordinator in 2014 and 2015. Helton was the Trojans' offensive coordinator those two seasons and was interim head coach for much of the 2015 season. It may not mean much during Saturday's game, though. "I don't think there's any intimate knowledge that gives you an edge," Wilcox said. Questions regarding Cal's defense remain. Although Cal has significantly reduced the points it has allowed from 42. 6 last season to 22. 0 through three games this season, Cal still ranks 114th of 129 FBS schools in total defense this week and has not faced a ranked team. "Seeing how we're not ranked, we need to get respect," Downs said. Although there may be questions about how good these teams are this season, there is no uncertainty about which team has had the upper hand in this series. USC has beaten Cal 13 times in a row. The last time Cal beat the Trojans, in 2003, Aaron Rodgers was Cal's starting quarterback, and it still took three overtimes to finish it off. Cal does not have someone like Rodgers on its roster this year. Bears quarterback Ross Bowers has been good, not great, completing 60. 2 percent of his passes with five touchdowns and four interceptions. Darnold, meanwhile, has completed 66. 7 percent of his passes with seven touchdowns, although his six picks are a bit troubling. USC running back Ronald Jones II is averaging 107. 3 yards per game, and his sidekick, freshman Stephen Carr, has rushed for 72. 0 yards per game. But they combined for just 75 yards against Texas. Patrick Laird leads Cal in rushing, averaging 92. 7 yards per game and 7. 5 yards per attempt. USC's big-play man is wide receiver Deontay Burnett, who has 24 catches for 386 yards and four TDs. Meanwhile, Cal's top receiving threat, Demetris Robertson, is a mystery. He sat out the Mississippi game with an unspecified injury, and the Bears do not plan to update his status until Saturday. Robertson had seven catches for 70 yards and two carries for 40 yards and a touchdown in Cal's first two games. He had 57 receptions for 837 yards and seven touchdowns last season as a freshman.
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 BERKELEY, Calif. Stephen Carr ran for a fourth-quarter touchdown two plays after Southern California's defense forced one of its six turnovers, and the fifth-ranked Trojans won their 13th straight game by pulling away late for a 30-20 victory over California on Saturday. ''We came in at halftime, took a deep breath, made some changes and said, `Hey, let's elevate our level of play,''' coach Clay Helton said. ''I thought everybody, the whole team, elevated our play in the second half. '' USC (4-0, 2-0 Pac-12) has dominated the series with its in-state rival by winning 14 straight against the Golden Bears (3-1, 0-1), but this was one of the tightest matchups in years as the game was tied early in the fourth quarter. Sam Darnold threw for 223 yards and two touchdowns for the Trojans but also had an interception as Cal's defense forced him out of the pocket numerous times. ''I felt a little bit of pressure,'' Darnold said. ''I think it's mostly our fault for not connecting on some of those deep balls and taking advantage of those opportunities when they come our way. '' It was the defense that stepped up for USC, intercepting a pass from Ross Bowers in the first quarter to set up a field goal and then delivering the big play early in the fourth after Chase McGrath gave the Trojans a 16-13 lead with his third field goal of the game. Josh Fatu knocked the ball out of Bowers' hand and Uchenna Nwosu recovered the fumble at the 3. Carr ran it in two plays later from the 2 to make it 23-13. Ykili Ross then intercepted Bowers' pass on the next possession, setting up Darnold's 4-yard TD pass to Deontay Burnett that put away the game. Bowers finished 22 for 50 for 303 yards with one touchdown, four interceptions and two lost fumbles. He turned the ball over on four straight drives in the fourth quarter. ''It was a tough second half for him,'' coach Justin Wilcox said. ''Ross will bounce back. Ross is a tough guy, plays with guts. He'll learn from that and grow from it. I'm not worried about Ross. '' THE TAKEAWAYSOUTHERN CALIFORNIA: The Trojans struggled for much of the game without starting RB Ronald Jones (ankle) and WR Steven Mitchell (groin) but managed to pull away late in their first road game of the season. But there were some issues with two first-half turnovers in Cal territory and a failed fourth-down run in the third quarter that prevented USC from pulling away earlier. CALIFORNIA: The Bears used an improved defense to start 3-0 under Wilcox but this was supposed to be the test of how far they had come. Cal showed plenty by sticking with a national title contender for three quarters. A sequence on the opening drive of the second will haunt the Bears. Patrick Laird dropped a potential TD in the end zone and Matt Anderson then missed a 29-yard field goal that kept the game tied at 13. POLL IMPLICATIONSA win against an unranked team should do little to alter USC's poll position. UP NEXTSOUTHERN CALIFORNIA: Visits No. 18 Washington State on Friday. CALIFORNIA: Visits No. 24 Oregon on Saturday. ---More college football: collegefootball. ap. org and twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 4:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-500
|
-13.5 (-110)
|
Over 52.5 (-110)
|
|
+384
|
+13.5 (-110)
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Under 52.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh sang the praises of first-year Purdue coach Jeff Brohm at his weekly press conference Monday, calling Brohm a "favorite for coach of the year. " Saturday's Big Ten opener between the Boilermakers and Harbaugh's eighth-ranked Wolverines could be Brohm's best opportunity all season to stake that claim. It's the Boilermakers' homecoming and Brohm's first glimpse of Big Ten competition. Purdue (2-1) has already gained national attention by winning back-to-back games for the first time since 2012, including a dominant 35-3 road victory against Missouri last Saturday. It was Boilermakers' largest road win since Sept. 4, 1999, when they defeated Central Florida 47-13. Michigan (3-0) seeks its second 4-0 start in three seasons under Harbaugh, and will rely heavily on its defense and special teams to get there. Purdue leads the Big Ten in red zone efficiency, having scored on all 13 of its trips, 10 of which ended in touchdowns. The Boilermakers rank third in the conference in passing, averaging 298. 7 yards per game, and fourth in scoring at 35. 7 points per game. Redshirt freshman wide receiver Jackson Anthrop is one to watch. He has scored a touchdown in each of his first three games, emerging as quarterback David Blough's favorite target. The Wolverines defeated Air Force 29-16 last Saturday but only had to defend nine passes from the Falcons' run-heavy offense, which rushed 49 times for 168 yards. Still, Michigan boasts the second-best passing defense and total defense in the conference, making Saturday's matchup a intriguing clash of football ideologies. "You just change the channel," Harbaugh said of the difference in game plans. "One scheme to another. Change our scheme to adapt. Improvise. Adjust. " Brohm knows what he's up against in facing Harbaugh's gritty, NFL-style defense, and stressed a balanced offensive attack as the key to victory. "Coach Harbaugh is as good as it gets when it comes to knowing football and how to coach," Brohm said. "Right now, in order to succeed and win, we've got to have balance. "They're very good," Brohm added about the Wolverines. "Those defenses, you're probably not going to be able to work the ball down the field. You're going to have to find a way to make a big play here and there to spark you, get something going, otherwise you're going to be punting real fast. " Despite its record and top-10 ranking, Michigan has been a strange and somewhat stagnant team offensively, particularly in the red zone. Although the Wolverines rank fifth in the conference in overall red zone efficiency at 90 percent, they have managed just one touchdown in 10 trips, converting on 8-of-9 red zone field-goal attempts. Against Air Force, kicker Quinn Nordin tied a school record with five field goals, four of which came from inside the red zone. "(Air Force) was doing a really good job of disguising coverages," Michigan quarterback Wilton Speight said. "Often in the red zone, they would show one thing, and at the last second, they would bring another look or bring the house. They fooled us. We just have to push forward in the red zone. " Speight has yet to find a groove and the Michigan offense has scored only five of the team's nine total touchdowns. The junior is completing just 54. 6 percent of his passes with three touchdowns against two interceptions, and the threat of being replaced by senior backup John O'Korn still looms. It doesn't help that true freshman wideout Tarik Black (team-best 11 grabs for 149 yards) is potentially lost for the season with a foot injury. Michigan running back Ty Isaac has 336 rushing yards through three games, the best start by a Wolverines back since Mike Hart totaled 502 at the start of the 2007 campaign. While Purdue's defense in recent years has arguably been the weakest link -- the Boilermakers ranked 126th nationally in rushing yards allowed in 2016 -- Brohm's impact on the program appears to be felt on both sides of the ball. "This is one of the best defenses I've been around," Purdue defensive end Gelen Robinson said. "I think that's clear to a lot of fans. They're seeing a defense that plays hard, runs to the ball, and really wants to compete to win, not just to stay in the game. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Chris Evans ran for two touchdowns in the second half and backup quarterback John O'Korn rallied No. 8 Michigan from a halftime deficit Saturday to a 28-10 victory at Purdue. Evans finished with 14 carries for 97 yards for the Wolverines (4-0, 1-0 Big Ten). O'Korn was forced into action when starting quarterback Wilton Speight left late in the first quarter with an undisclosed injury, and the former Houston starter came up every bit as big as the Wolverines' defense in the second half. He finished 18 of 26 for 270 yards with one touchdown and one interception after throwing only one pass in Michigan's first three games. ''I thought John really played great,'' coach Jim Harbaugh said. ''He was seeing things really good right from the time he came into the ball game. He ran the offense well and made big plays. '' Harbaugh said only that he thought Speight's injury was ''soft tissue'' and ''not structural. '' Purdue (2-2, 0-1) rewarded its first home sellout crowd in almost nine years by jumping to a 10-7 halftime lead. But the Boilermakers managed only 10 yards of offense and one first down in the second half. ''The second half, I think Michigan wore us down and beat us like they beat everyone. They were able to pound the football,'' Purdue coach Jeff Brohm said. ''The better football team won today. '' O'Korn, meanwhile, led Michigan on back-to-back, time-consuming drives in the third and fourth quarters. Evans capped the first with a 10-yard TD run with 2:42 left in the third to make it 14-10 before sealing the win with a 49-yard scoring run with 6:46 left in the fourth. Ty Isaac scored on a 1-yard plunge in between Evans' touchdown runs. The Boilermakers also lost two key defensive starters on targeting calls in the second half. Safety John Thieneman and linebacker Ja'Whaun Bentley will now miss the first half of the Minnesota game, too. THE TAKEAWAYSMichigan: The Wolverines' defense is every bit as good as advertised. Despite forcing only one turnover, the Wolverines finished with five sacks and shut out Purdue for the final 36 minutes. If Michigan keeps playing this way, it won't matter who starts at quarterback. Purdue: This is the first real stumble of Brohm's tenure. The fact that it happened in front of a national television audience and in front of the Boilermakers' largest home crowd for a Big Ten game in four years wasn't good. But the Boilermakers were competitive long enough to build on the momentum from a surprisingly strong start. UP NEXTMichigan: Hosts in-state rival Michigan State on Oct. 7 following a bye. Purdue: Returns to action Oct. 7 by hosting surprising Minnesota. ---For more college football coverage: www. collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25 .
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 5:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+163
|
+4 (-110)
|
Over 59 (-110)
|
|
-190
|
-4 (-110)
|
Under 59 (-110)
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|
|
|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-115
|
-1 (-110)
|
Over 49.5 (-110)
|
|
-105
|
+1 (-110)
|
Under 49.5 (-110)
|
|
|
|
|
VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+588
|
+17 (-110)
|
Over 55.5 (-121)
|
|
-850
|
-17 (-110)
|
Under 55.5 (+100)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
+28.5 (-110)
|
Over 65.5 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
-28.5 (-110)
|
Under 65.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 Washington State coach Mike Leach, trying to lead his team to its first 4-0 start in 16 years, is looking mostly for consistency when the Cougars finish nonconference play Saturday. No. 18 Washington State (3-0, 1-0 Pac-12) will play Nevada (0-3) at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Wash. Washington State is a four-touchdown favorite against a team that has true freshman quarterback Kaymen Cureton starting his first road game. "I think we've been pretty resilient, but we haven't been as consistent as I would have liked," Leach said. "We did some good things, but I think we're still battling consistency on every side of the ball. " The defense must find its identity and become consistent without senior leader Peyton Pelluer at middle linebacker. Pelluer reportedly is out for the remainder of the season because of a broken bone in his left foot suffered in last week's win over Oregon State. He was coming off a 14-tackle performance against Boise State that earned him Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week honors. Leach did not want to comment about Pelluer's status in his Monday press conference, although the linebacker's family acknowledged to reporters -- and the linebacker himself took to social media -- to say that he won't be able to play the rest of the season. Leach's potent "Air Raid" passing game is among those "consistency" concerns, although senior quarterback Luke Falk has the Cougars No. 6 nationally at 408. 3 passing yards per game. Leach noted that outside receivers Tavares Martin Jr. , Isaiah Johnson-Mack and Dezmon Patmon finally produced as a whole against Oregon State, combining for five receiving touchdowns, 25 receptions and 341 receiving yards. "I figured it would happen eventually," Leach said. "Now we've got to consistently keep it happening. I guess my thought is that it's about time. With young guys, there's always an 'about time' quality to it. It'll eventually happen, but you see it in practice weeks before it happens. " Although Pullman and Reno are about 700 miles apart -- and the Cougars are in the Pac-12 while Nevada is in the Mountain West -- the program share several bonds. "We're pretty inbred with Nevada. . . . You can't throw a dead cat without hitting somebody from Nevada here," Leach said. Leach coached with Nevada offensive coordinator Matt Mumme's father, Hal Mumme. Back in the 1990s, they conceived the "Air Raid" offense that both programs run. Washington State running backs coach Jim Mastro spent 11 years at Nevada from 2000 to 2010 during Chris Ault's tenure as head coach. Mastro was one of Ault's top assistant coaches, until the architect of the pistol offense retired in 2012. Cougars' inside linebackers coach Ken Wilson also worked under Ault at Nevada from 1989 to 2012 and was the associate head coach by the time Ault retired. WSU outside receivers coach Derek Sage got his start in coaching as a graduate assistant at Nevada in 2003. Nevada receiver Kaleb Fossum transferred from Washington State, where he started his career as a walk-on. Fossum, a junior, has a knee injury and is questionable to return to Pullman to play. Cureton will start for Nevada in place of struggling junior Ty Gangi for the second consecutive game. Cureton started in last week's 30-28 home loss to FCS Idaho State, a game in which he completed 19 of 33 passes for 205 yards, with three touchdowns and one interception. He also fumbled four times, losing none. Nevada coach Jay Norvell, a former Arizona State assistant, was most pleased with Cureton's performance on third down against Idaho State. Nevada converted 8-of-17 third-down opportunities. Cureton completed 8 of 10 passes for 105 yards and two touchdowns in the fourth quarter as he nearly rallied the Wolf Pack to victory after trailing by 23 points. "KC's going to start," Norvell was quoted as saying in the Reno Gazette-Journal after Monday's practice. "He's a wild horse back there running around. He should learn a lot from his first start. He really did a good job on third down. "He made some plays with his feet and he scrambled, pulled up and threw and hit open receivers. That's by far the best we've been on third downs. That was a real improvement. He threw for a high percentage and we had a couple of drops. We feel like he will continue to improve and handle his opportunity well. " Nevada has experienced its share of difficult injury news of late with starting nose tackle Jarius McDade out of the season after sustaining a knee injury in practice and starting running back Jaxson Kincaide out indefinitely after suffering a concussion in the loss to Idaho State.
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 PULLMAN, Wash. Luke Falk threw five touchdown passes, and No. 18 Washington State beat Nevada 45-7 on Saturday for the team's best start in 16 years. Washington State (4-0), which opened the 2001 season by winning its first seven games, piled up 560 yards of offense and five sacks. Nevada was held to just 151 total yards as the Wolf Pack (0-4) fell to 0-17 on the road against opponents in the Top 25. Nevada came in as a 28-point underdog. Falk completed 36 of 47 passes for 478 yards and was not intercepted. Washington State led 35-0 at halftime. ''I thought it was a really good first half,'' said coach Mike Leach, who improved to 33-34 in his sixth season at Washington State. ''There were too many loose ends in the second half. '' ''It was a good overall game,'' Leach added. ''We improved on yards after the catch and making people miss. '' Nevada coach Jay Norvell felt his team was overmatched by the Cougars of the Pac-12. ''This is the first game where I felt that we didn't handle the physical matchup on the defensive line,'' he said. A 52-yard pass from Falk to Tavares Martin Jr. set up Falk's 12-yard touchdown pass to Jamal Morrow in the first quarter as Washington State took a 7-0 lead. Falk's shovel pass to James Williams went for 13 yards and a touchdown to put the Cougars ahead 14-0. It was the 100th touchdown pass of Falk's career, passing Matt Leinart of Southern Cal for third in Pac-12 history. Nevada went three-and-out on its first three possessions and produced only seven yards of offense in the first quarter. Starting quarterback Kaymen Cureton was replaced by David Cornwell, but it didn't help much. Martin caught a short pass from Falk and turned it into a 40-yard touchdown early in the second quarter for a 21-0 lead. Williams ran for a touchdown and Jamire Calvin added a 6-yard touchdown reception before halftime. Falk hit Martin for a 19-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter. Maliek Broady ran 3 yards for Nevada's first touchdown with 1:56 left in the game. THE TAKEAWAYThe rebuilding project at Nevada under new coach Jay Norvell is starting slowly, with previous losses to Northwestern, Toledo and Idaho State. Washington State has finished the easiest part of its schedule, and the competition gets much tougher now. UP NEXTNevada opens Mountain West play at Fresno State next Saturday. Washington State hosts No. 5 Southern California next Friday night in their biggest challenge of the young season. It will be the fifth straight home game for the Cougars, who have yet to play on the road. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
-28 (-110)
|
Over 62 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
+28 (-110)
|
Under 62 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 WACO, Texas -- It's hard to imagine a game between two more divergent programs than the one between Baylor and Oklahoma on Saturday evening at the Bears' McLane Stadium. On the visiting sideline, there's the No. 3-ranked Oklahoma Sooners, winners of their first three by an average margin of 35 points. Included in that is a game in which Oklahoma went to Ohio State and handed the then-No. 2 Buckeyes a 31-16 defeat. Oklahoma has an experienced and proven quarterback in Baker Mayfield, who has plenty of quality offensive weapons at his disposal. On the home sideline, things have developed much differently for Baylor. After wandering through the wilderness in 2016 while the school sorted out its sexual assault scandal, Baylor has a new coach in Matt Rhule this season. And Rhule has a new set of problems as leader of the Bears. In two years, Baylor has gone from a Big 12 championship contender with cultural problems within the program to a thin team struggling to find its footing in an 0-3 start. The alarms sounded when FCS opponent Liberty handed the Bears a 48-45 defeat in the season opener. Then came a home loss to Texas-San Antonio. One small similarity is that Oklahoma also has a first-year coach in former Sooners offensive coordinator Lincoln Riley. He did a good job of talking up Baylor during the Big 12 teleconference on Monday. "I know they've had certainly some tough things that they've been through," Riley said. "I think that's clear for everybody to see. I know the quality of coach that Matt Rhule is. That's been a good program and they've still got a lot of good players. We've got a lot of respect for them. " During the Art Briles era at Baylor, the Bears notched their first three wins against Oklahoma in program history. Baylor defeated the Sooners in 2011, 2013 and 2014. The last time Oklahoma visited Baylor, Riley was Bob Stoops' offensive coordinator. The Bears entered the 2015 game with a No. 6 national ranking, an 8-0 record and College Football Playoff hopes. But No. 12 Oklahoma left with a 44-34 victory on its way to the CFP. "It came right down to the end and it was certainly a big win for our program," Riley said. "I'm not saying it was the win that kind of got this latest run started here, but it was certainly one of the more important games we've played here over the last couple of years. " This game lacks a huge portion of the hype and intrigue that was present just two years ago. But it's still both teams' Big 12 opener. "I know our kids are competitive. They want to play against good teams," Rhule said. "We've got to continue to try to get them to get better. That's all we can do. " For Baylor, just raising its third-down conversion rate above 20 percent against Oklahoma would be a significant mark. Last week, the Bears moved the chains on third down just once in 12 chances in a loss at Duke as quarterback Zach Smith took over as the starter from Arizona graduate transfer Anu Solomon. Smith did hit touchdown throws of 73, 79 and 44 yards, but those plays weren't enough. "Unfortunately, we're in third-and-long way too much," Rhule said. "We haven't really made a contested catch yet. We haven't jumped up over top of someone and caught the football. We haven't made a catch where we got hit and come down with the ball. I think the third thing is too much pressure. That's more so when you're in (third-and-long) because we're not really running the football the way we need to. " Meanwhile, Oklahoma has the luxury of simply tinkering with its running back lineup. No Sooner running back has more than 31 rushes on the season. Abdul Adams has the most yards with 166 on 21 totes, while Trey Sermon has rushed 31 times for 135 yards. Two other more backs, Marcelias Sutton and Rodney Anderson, have figured in the running game. "We're still learning more about those guys," Riley said. "They're all performing well. They've all got some roles on special teams and they've all done a nice job for us there. I think it will depend on our health. I don't know that we've got a preconceived notion of we have to whittle it down or we want to keep playing all four. We appreciate the fact that we've got four that we think can play. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 WACO, Texas Baker Mayfield threw three touchdowns, including the go-ahead score the next snap after his unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, and third-ranked Oklahoma overcame a feisty Baylor team 49-41 Saturday night to stretch the nation's longest winning streak to 14 games. Abdul Adams had a 99-yard touchdown for the Sooners (4-0, 1-0 Big 12), his school-record run coming after a botched kickoff return. Baylor (0-4, 0-1) led 31-28 after Connor Martin's 46-yard field goal late in the third quarter. Adams, who finished with 11 carries for 164 yards, picked up 33 yards on three consecutive runs on the ensuing drive before the penalty was announced against Mayfield. It wasn't clear what the quarterback did, but on the next play he found Jeff Badet along the left sideline for a 48-yard touchdown. Trey Sermon ran 13 times for 157 yards and two touchdowns, the freshman getting all of that in the fourth quarter. Sermon's first carries came after the Bears' first three-and-out to start the fourth quarter. He scored on a 34-yard run when he was hit near the 20 and kept his balance. He had a 60-yard run on the next Sooners possession before his 9-yard TD made it 49-31. Denzel Mims' third TD catch, an acrobatic grab in the back of the end zone, got Baylor within 49-41 with 1:41 left. The Bears then recovered an onside kick but Zach Smith was sacked and fumbled after two incompletions. Mayfield completed 13 of 19 passes for 283 yards, including TDs on his first two drives, as the Sooners piled up 634 total yards. Smith threw for 463 yards with four TDs, and Mims had 11 catches for 192 yards. THE TAKEAWAYOklahoma: The Sooners may have struggled, but they again found a way to win - now 371 days since their last loss, and 714 days since they last lost a conference game. Their 17 consecutive Big 12 wins matches the longest in school history. They have also won 13 consecutive true road games, the nation's longest active streak. Baylor: While this game turned into a disappointing loss, the growth by the Bears in four games under new coach Matt Rhule is evident. There are still mistakes, such as having 12 men on the field or having to use timeouts at inopportune times. But hanging in with the Big 12's powerhouse team, and even leading after halftime, is a boost after earlier home losses to two teams that had never before beaten a Power Five opponent. UP NEXTOklahoma: The Sooners have an open date next weekend before their Big 12 home opener Oct. 7 against Iowa State. Baylor: The Bears, 0-4 for the first time since 1999, play at Kansas State next Saturday. --More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and http://www. twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+310
|
+10.5 (-110)
|
Over 60 (-110)
|
|
-390
|
-10.5 (-110)
|
Under 60 (-110)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 6:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
-3.5 (-105)
|
OFF
|
|
OFF
|
+3.5 (-115)
|
OFF
|
|
|
|
|
NO PICKS AVAILABLE |
|
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+119
|
+2.5 (-105)
|
Over 49.5 (-110)
|
|
-139
|
-2.5 (-115)
|
Under 49.5 (-110)
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 ATHENS, Ga. -- When the season began, not many saw Saturday night's matchup between Mississippi State and Georgia as a red-letter game in the SEC. Yet, that's exactly what it is. Both sets of Bulldogs enter play at Sanford Stadium with 3-0 marks, with Mississippi State ranked 17th and 1-0 in the SEC after last week's 37-7 rout of LSU. No. 11 Georgia will be playing its SEC opener. "I think they're a very physical team. They always are," Georgia head coach Kirby Smart said. "(Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen) seems to always find really good quarterbacks, especially dual-threat guys. He's known for developing those type of guys. He's done a good job with their overall program. " Mullen's Bulldogs are first in scoring (47. 7 points) and scoring defense (9. 3 points per game) in the SEC. Junior quarterback Nick Fitzgerald leads an offense that has outscored its opponents 143-28, completing 43 of 70 passes for 543 yards and seven touchdowns while rushing for 240 yards and five scores. "He's very smart, very knowledgeable, knows how to attack protections. He's a guy that's constantly working on getting better. He's got these guys believing and playing really hard, really physical," Smart said. "They've got some good players. Got some big guys up front. They're playing hard. He's got some fast guys. They just seem like they have a lot of guys they play. They use them well. They use them to their strengths. " Aeris Williams paces the Mississippi State ground game with 336 yards on 48 carries and one touchdown, but the focus is on Fitzgerald, a Georgia native who will have to be able to handle his emotions playing in his home state for the first time. "We'll see. I'll see if he looks weird or gives me silly looks," Mullen said. "He better get his emotions in check because we're playing a very athletic defense. Watching the film will straighten out those emotions pretty quickly. " Defense has certainly been Georgia's calling card. The Bulldogs are allowing 14. 3 points per game and an average of just 71 yards on the ground. No team has rushed for more than 100 yards against Georgia through three games. Defensive tackle Trenton Thompson is a force in the middle of the line, with outside linebacker Lorenzo Carter (three sacks) and middle linebacker Roquan Smith (team-high 19 tackles) being key playmakers. "They've got big, athletic guys on defense. They can play in multiple fronts on the defensive line and play you with personnel that fits each of those fronts," Mullen said. "They can play in 3-4 with 3-4 personnel, 4-3 with 4-3 personnel or nickel with nickel personnel with a five-star player at each of those positions. They're pretty darn good. " Offensively for Georgia, true freshman quarterback Jake Fromm is expected to start for the third straight week, although Game 1 starter Jacob Eason is back practicing after returning to workouts on Monday. Fromm has completed 34 of 57 passes for 449 yards, with five touchdowns and one interception. More good news for the Bulldogs: Smart is expected to welcome back running back Sony Michel, who was held out of Saturday's game against Samford after tweaking his ankle late in the contest at Notre Dame. He'll team with fellow senior Nick Chubb, who is coming off a 131-yard effort against Samford and leads Georgia in rushing with 44 carries for 290 yards and four touchdowns. Although Saturday's game marks just the second meeting between the schools since 2011, Georgia and Mississippi State are relatively familiar with each other. Mississippi State defensive coordinator Todd Grantham served in the same capacity at Georgia from 2010-2013. Former Bulldog letterman Christian Robinson is a graduate assistant inside linebackers coach at MSU, while offensive line coach D. J. Looney worked as a grad assistant at Georgia last year. Adding to the intrigue, Mississippi State safety Jonathan Abram played with Georgia in 2015 before transferring and ultimately joining MSU before this season. Advantage Mississippi State? Mullen doesn't necessarily believe so. "You watch the film and say they're running this defense, and he says, 'Yeah, they're running that defense. ' You say, 'Thanks, I saw that on film already,'" Mullen said. "I don't think it gives us a big advantage. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 ATHENS, Ga. Freshman Jake Fromm threw a pair of touchdown passes in another poised showing on the big stage, the defense stifled Nick Fitzgerald and No. 11 Georgia broke out plenty of trickery in a 31-3 rout of No. 17 Mississippi State on Saturday night. Georgia established itself as the clear favorite in the Southeastern Conference East with a dominating performance from its very first snap and the most impressive victory of Kirby Smart's two-year coaching tenure. After the defense forced a three-and-out from Mississippi State on the opening possession - a sign of things to come - Fromm handed off to Nick Chubb for what looked to be a routine run up the middle. Instead, Chubb wheeled around and tossed the ball back to the quarterback on a flea flicker. Terry Godwin broke into the clear downfield, the Mississippi State secondary having totally bought the ruse. Fromm delivered the pass in stride for a 59-yard touchdown less than 2 1/2 minutes into the game . It was pretty much all Georgia (4-0, 1-0) from there. Fromm threw for 201 yards on just 9-of-12 passing, further solidifying his hold on the quarterback job he inherited when Jacob Eason went down with a knee injury in the first quarter of the season opener. Chubb rushed for 81 yards and a pair of TDs, leading a parade of Georgia runners who pounded Mississippi State. The home team burned Mississippi State (3-1, 1-1) again early in the third quarter on a third and 2. Fromm went in motion to the right, Chubb took a direct snap and took off around left end on a 28-yard TD without being touched. Georgia's final touchdown came when Fromm faked a pitch to the right, again freezing the secondary, before delivering a 41-yard touchdown pass to Isaac Nauta that made it 28-3 late in the third quarter. The way Georgia's defense was playing, that was plenty. Coming off a 37-7 blowout of LSU that vaulted Mississippi State into the Top 25 , Fitzgerald faced the home-state team that didn't even recruit him out of high school. He threw for two touchdowns and ran for two more against the Tigers, but he couldn't duplicate that performance against a swarming Georgia defense that is starting to look a bit like the one Smart oversaw in his previous tenure as Alabama's coordinator. Fitzgerald passed for just 83 yards and was picked off twice, while rushing for 47 yards on 10 carries. THE TAKEAWAYMississippi State: After the impressive showing against LSU, coach Dan Mullen's team showed it's still a long way from making a run at top-ranked Alabama in the SEC West. Georgia: An inventive performance on offense and a strong showing from the defense leaves the Bulldogs looking like the class of the SEC East. Eason is on the mend from his knee injury , but it's hard to see how he's going to reclaim the starting job from Fromm, who has now led victories over Notre Dame and Mississippi State. POLL IMPLICATIONSGeorgia should climb solidly into the Top 10 off this performance. The Bulldogs got as high as No. 9 early in Smart's debut season, but wound up struggling to an 8-5 finish. Mississippi State will surely drop a few spots but should maintain its place in the Top 25. UP NEXTMississippi State: Another tough SEC road test at No. 15 Auburn, the Bulldogs' third straight game against a ranked SEC opponent. The Tigers romped to a 38-14 victory last season in Starkville. Georgia: Heads to Rocky Top for its first SEC road game against Tennessee (3-1), which can't afford another conference loss after falling to Florida and faced intense criticism for a lackluster 17-13 victory over winless Massachusetts. The Vols have won two straight against the Bulldogs, including last year's 34-31 triumph on a Hail Mary pass as time ran out. ---Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www. twitter. com/pnewberry1963 . His work can be found at https://apnews. com/search/paul%20newberry---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+105
|
+2 (-110)
|
Over 57 (-110)
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-125
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-2 (-110)
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Under 57 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+1,041
|
+21.5 (-110)
|
Over 56 (-110)
|
|
OFF
|
-21.5 (-110)
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Under 56 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 BATON ROUGE, La. -- Reality hit LSU like a downhill freight train last week in a 37-7 wipeout loss at Mississippi State, dropping the Tigers to No. 25 in the national rankings and shaking the swagger they had developed in two relaxed wins over BYU and Tennessee-Chattanooga. That heaping dose of SEC humility may be exactly what a flag-happy and inconsistent LSU team needs to rebound against Syracuse on Saturday night in Tiger Stadium. "Mississippi State played as good as they can play, and we played as bad as we can play," LSU coach Ed Orgeron said in assessing the Tigers' 30-point upset loss last week. "We didn't prepare (the players) as well as we should. I think this is going to be a turning point. It better be. " LSU (2-1) is more than a three-touchdown favorite over the Orange (2-1), who have played three "directional" schools -- Central Connecticut State (50-7 victory), Middle Tennessee (30-23 loss) and Central Michigan (a 41-17 victory) -- before entering the meat of their schedule. Over the next eight weeks, in addition to LSU, the Orange will play five nationally ranked teams -- No. 2 Clemson (Oct. 13), No. 14 Miami (Oct. 21), No. 12 Florida State (Nov. 4) and No. 19 Louisville (Nov. 19) -- and three of those will be on the road. Syracuse coach Dino Babers said his team isn't shrinking from that challenge. "I'm looking forward to going down there and hitting that tiger with that microphone," Babers said, referring to the practice of LSU cheerleaders getting the caged Mike the Tiger to roar on cue. "I think everyone else is too. This team is ready. We understand what the schedule is, and we're ready to play it. " Babers said his team won't be able to line up against LSU and beat the Tigers physically at the point of attack as Mississippi State did on both sides of the ball last week. "We're not Mississippi State," Babers said. "Our left tackle can't do (what they did). Our tailback can't do (what they did). It's two different teams, so we have to attack them a different way. We've got to do what we do, and hopefully things will work out. " LSU probably will get back to basics. Running back Derrius Guice, considered a Heisman Trophy candidate before the season, has battled several nagging injuries. He has rushed for 300 yards on 57 carries (5. 3-yard average) with four touchdowns, but he has yet to break off the long gainers that were his signature last season. Guice did not practice Tuesday, but Orgeron expects him to play after leaving the Mississippi State game with what he called "a minor injury. " "It's just a thing about them not wanting me to exceed 30 carries a game," Guice said Monday. "That's why we have five running backs, got to get them going and get them in the game, get them playing and just kind of limit how many carries I get a game. . . . Big runs will come. It will happen, got to stick with it, get the 4-5 yards. Ain't nothing wrong with getting the dirty, tough yards. " LSU continued a worrisome trend against the Bulldogs as two touchdowns were nullified by penalty. Through three games, the Tigers have committed 30 penalties for 272 yards, and several more penalties were declined. Linebacker Donnie Alexander and defensive end Neil Farrell were ejected for targeting calls against Mississippi State and will have to sit out the first half of the Syracuse game. "It starts with the penalties," quarterback Danny Etling said. "When it's second-and-28, there's not much on the play sheet for that situation," Tiger center Will Clapp said. Orgeron gave extra laps to the players who committed the penalties this week. LSU may get a boost on the offensive line with the possible return of defensive end Rashard Lawrence, who has been battling an ankle injury. Lawrence was in full pads in Tuesday's practice. Babers said he believes his team can stick with LSU. "They're a good football team," he said. "They're different than us, their home field advantage is real. All of their players are five-star guys. . . . It's football; you always have a chance. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 BATON ROUGE, La. Danny Etling responded to a barrage of bruising blitzes with touchdown passes of 87 and 43 yards, and No. 25 LSU overcame bouts of inconsistency in a 35-26 victory over a relentless Syracuse squad on Saturday night. Darrel Williams rushed for 92 yards, including a 20-yard touchdown in the third quarter. Backup quarterback Myles Brennan entered the game in the middle of the third quarter with LSU (3-1) leading 21-10. It was unclear if Etling, who was sacked twice and leveled as he released several passes, was in pain. He remained standing on the sideline wearing a headset for three series, returning in the fourth quarter after Brennan threw an interception which helped Syracuse (2-2) pull as close as 28-26 with 5:40 left. Taking advantage of a failed onside kick, the Tigers marched 56 yards for a game-clinching score with Etling back under center. Receiver D. J. Chark finished it off with a 20-yard run on an end-around with 1:52 left. Etling finished 10 of 17 for 188 yards and two touchdowns, the longer one to Drake Davis early in the third quarter and the other to Stephen Sullivan in the second. Syracuse gave LSU's offensive line fits throughout the game, once penetrating into the backfield to bring down Williams for a safety on the first play of a drive that began at the Tigers 1. Orange quarterback Eric Dungey's night got off to a rough start. He was intercepted on the first play of the game by Andraez ''Greedy'' Williams, who returned the ball to the 1, setting up Derrius Guice's touchdown. Dungey completed 32 of 53 passes for 265 yards. His 22-yard touchdown pass to Steve Ishmael in the fourth quarter pulled Syracuse within a field goal and had Orange fans in one corner of Tiger Stadium making themselves heard among seemingly stunned Tigers fans. Dungey also rushed for 24 yards, including a 14-yard score that made it 28-19 late in the third quarter. Syracuse, which trailed 21-3 early in the third quarter, scored its first TD came on a gadget play that also required some improvisation. Receiver Devin Butler was prevented by penetrating LSU defenders from passing back to Dungey as apparently planned. He scrambled instead before throwing 30 yards over the middle to Ervin Phillips, who had slipped behind the defense during the scramble. The play gave Syracuse life, just not enough to complete the comeback. THE TAKEAWAYSyracuse: Whether or not they emerge as an ACC contender, the Orange could be a compelling team to watch this season. Syracuse made its share of plays on both sides of the ball, giving LSU fits at times. The Orange offense nearly matched LSU statistically, while Syracuse's defensive front punished Etling and pressured Brennan into a turnover. LSU: The Tigers' latest outing might not have done much to boost their confidence or impress Poll voters. The offense was hampered by inconsistent blocking and was stifled on several drives, including four that stalled short of the Tigers 40 in the first half. LSU entered the game favored by about three touchdowns, and if not for Williams' interception and a pair of long TD passes, Syracuse might have become the first non-Southeastern Conference team in 49 years to beat LSU in Death Valley. UP NEXTSyracuse visits North Carolina State to open ACC play. LSU hosts Troy. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org and www. Twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+125
|
+3 (-115)
|
Over 72 (-110)
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-145
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-3 (-105)
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Under 72 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
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+384
|
+12 (-110)
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Over 50 (-110)
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-500
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-12 (-110)
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Under 50 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-135
|
-2.5 (-110)
|
Over 47.5 (-110)
|
|
+115
|
+2.5 (-110)
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Under 47.5 (-110)
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 SAN DIEGO, Calif. -- Once the celebration subsided following San Diego State's 20-17 defeat of Stanford last Saturday night, the Aztecs were left with no time to reflect on the accomplishment. The Mountain West opener awaits two-time defending conference champion San Diego State, which is eager to move forward after a pair of wins against Pac-12 opponents. The Aztecs play Air Force in Colorado Springs, Colo. , on Saturday. "We're playing an Air Force team that is more aggressive on defense as far as blitzing and stunting than either (Stanford or Arizona State) were," said Aztecs coach Rocky Long, whose team jumped into the rankings this week at No. 22. "And we're playing against a triple-option team, which neither of those teams were. So it's a short week preparing for both things. " The option attack Falcons head coach Troy Calhoun carried over from Hall of Fame predecessor Fisher DeBerry places Air Force near the top of rushing production every year. This season is no exception, with the Falcons seventh in the Football Bowl Subdivision at 320. 5 yards per game. "It's tricky," said cornerback Kameron Kelly of defending the option. "If you try to make a play that's not your assignment, they can pop a touchdown on you. They played with Michigan, so it proves the triple option's tricky, and that they're a good team. " A hard-fought loss at Michigan last Saturday isn't the only evidence of Air Force's solid play under Calhoun. The Falcons won a combined 28 games from 2014 through 2016, and they reached the Mountain West Championship Game in 2015. That was the last time these two programs faced. Air Force's approach is unique, both in terms of execution and the manner in which a defense must prepare. "We like to blitz a lot, stunt a lot, and most of the time when you blitz, you're reacting to the blocker," Long said. "Against a triple option when you blitz, you have to react to the action of their backfield. You're not reacting to the blockers; you're looking at the quarterback, fullback and pitch man. "You don't get the same look in practice as you're going to get in the game," he added. "In practice, you don't get near the speed they do in it, so you have to have solid principles. Then, it takes your players a while to get used to the speed. " Michigan limited Air Force (1-1) to 3. 43 yards per carry, primarily on the Wolverines' ability to deny quarterback Arion Worthman opportunities to pitch to leading rusher Tim McVey (168 yards). The Air Force rush defense also faces a huge task Saturday. The Falcons are tasked with trying to do what three previous defenses this season were unable to achieve: stop Rashaad Penny. The running back leads the FBS in rushing and all-purpose yardage, producing 196 and 258 per game, respectively. He combined for 175 yards rushing and 31 receiving in the win over Stanford, following up on a 216-yard rushing performance in Week 2 at Arizona State. Penny's nation-leading pace headlines San Diego State's return to the Top 25, a spot in which the Aztecs resided after finishing last season 11-3. They also earned a ranking at this juncture in the 2016 regular season, but a loss at South Alabama in their next game kept the Aztecs out until November. Upon their return, they lost at home to Wyoming and fell out once more. "It's great to be in it, be recognized, but honestly, I don't like it because of past experiences," Penny said. "But we don't focus on it as much now as we did last year. Last year, we were excited because we really never had the chance of being in the Top 25. " Last season's final Top 25 ranking was the program's first time finishing in the polls since 1986. Now that it's no longer new territory, Penny said San Diego State has the capacity to "keep it going. " How the Aztecs establish their rushing game while limiting Air Force's should determine if they keep their place in the Top 25 beyond Week 4.
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 24, 2017 AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. Rashaad Penny scored three times, including a 53-yard scamper with 5:39 remaining, and No. 22 San Diego State held off Air Force 28-24 on Saturday night in a game that was delayed 88 minutes by lightning. Penny, the nation's leading rusher entering the game, struggled early in the soggy conditions. But he finally found some running room as the Aztecs (4-0, 1-0 Mountain West) began their quest to capture a third straight conference title. Penny finished with 128 yards rushing, which was 68 below his season average. ''You can't always have a great day. I didn't have a great day,'' Penny said. ''You have games like this where it's all adversity. ''The rain played a starring role early. It started steady at kickoff and grew more intense with every wind gust. The conditions led to a botched extra point by Air Force, a punt from San Diego State that traveled only 17 yards and conservative play calling. The Falcons led 9-0 with 7:56 remaining in the second quarter when the game was halted and the teams sent to their locker rooms. It was the first weather delay at Falcon Stadium since 1993 against the Aztecs. Given the lengthy delay, both teams agreed to skip intermission and headed straight into the third quarter. ''After the delay, we said we can't put ourselves in the hole anymore,'' Penny explained. ''Just stick with each other and we came out and played great. '' Penny's go-ahead run came moments after Air Force (1-2, 0-1) took the lead when Tim McVey took a pitch, jumped over a San Diego State defender on the ground, landed backward and twirled into the end zone for a 12-yard score. Air Force got the ball back with just over 2 minutes left, but Trey Lomax intercepted Arion Worthman's fourth-down pass to help the Aztecs extend their winning streak to seven straight over the Falcons. ''We thought we came out pretty hot. We had a lot of momentum,'' McVey said. ''Give them credit - they came back after the delay ready to play. They're competitors. '' It was by no means a thing of beauty for San Diego State, which had a punt blocked, missed a field goal and fumbled deep in Air Force territory. ''The weather played to their strengths and didn't play to ours,'' San Diego State coach Rocky Long said. THE TAKEAWAYSan Diego State: Big exhale. The Aztecs couldn't get anything going the first half, but Penny saved the night with his big run. Air Force: The Falcons fell to 19-77-3 all-time against ranked teams, including a 5-16 record under coach Troy Calhoun. PUNT BLOCKAir Force's Garrett Kauppila blocked a punt in the fourth quarter, with Lesley Dalger scooping it up and heading toward the end zone. But Dalger lost control of the ball around the 4. No matter, Worthman scored on a 1-yard dive with 12:35 remaining. FULLBACK DIVEAir Force fullback Parker Wilson had 11 carries on the season before Saturday. He had his number called 20 times against the Aztecs in large part because of the weather. Meanwhile, McVey, the team's leading rusher, didn't have his first carry until the fourth quarter. ''It's hard to run the triple option when it's raining like that,'' McVey explained. ''You don't want to pitch the ball because you don't know if it's going to slip out of your hands or something. . . . We were hitting them hard with the fullback and the fullback was running really well. '' EMPTY SEATSAir Force announced the attendance at 27,575, but there was hardly anyone in the seats once the teams returned to the field. UP NEXTSan Diego State: Hosts Northern Illinois on Saturday. The Aztecs lead the series 5-0. Air Force: Travels to New Mexico. The Falcons lost 45-40 in a game that was played in Dallas last October. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and http://www. twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+207
|
+7 (-115)
|
Over 54 (-110)
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-250
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-7 (-105)
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Under 54 (-110)
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FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
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OFF
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+37.5 (-110)
|
OFF
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OFF
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-37.5 (-110)
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OFF
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NO PICKS AVAILABLE |
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FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-500
|
-12.5 (-110)
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Over 52 (-110)
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+384
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+12.5 (-110)
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Under 52 (-110)
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- With all the focus on Penn State's prolific offense and Heisman candidates, it might be easy to overlook the Nittany Lions' defense. That could be a mistake as No. 4 Penn State (3-0) opens Big Ten play Saturday at Iowa. For all the stats for him to ponder, one is most important to Penn State safety Marcus Allen: Takeaways. "Get the ball back for our offense," Allen said. "However we get it done, that's how we're gonna get it done. " Penn State has generated nine takeaways, is plus-seven in turnover margin and has scored 49 points off turnovers, boosting its already-dangerous offense. The Nittany Lions picked off three passes last week in a shutout of Georgia State, and Allen, in his 42nd game, snagged the first interception of his career. Now, Allen will look for another at Kinnick Stadium against a quarterback who has thrown just one this season -- Nate Stanley, who helped guide Iowa to a 3-0 in nonconference play. Iowa will be trying to avenge last season's 41-14 loss at Penn State. "We realize we have to play at our best and our highest possible level if we're going to be competitive in this football game," Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. "That's where we're focused right now. " With Heisman Trophy candidates in quarterback Trace McSorley and running back Saquon Barkley, Penn State also has seen big contributions from tight end Mike Gesicki and receivers DaeSean Hamilton and DeAndre Thompkins. Barkley is second nationally with 218. 3 all-purpose yards per game. McSorley was 18 of 23 with five touchdowns last week. Wide receiver Brandon Polk and backup quarterback Tommy Stevens, who has been used as a runner/receiver at times, each caught touchdown passes last week and should play bigger roles moving forward. "Offensively, one of our issues last year was starting out slow," Penn State coach James Franklin said. "We've been able to be better in that area. " The Hawkeyes avoided a major injury to their top back but lost another on Saturday in a win over North Texas. Starter Akrum Wadley will play this week after leaving that game early, but his counterpart, James Butler, will be out until at least mid-October. Wadley will be joined by Ivory Kelly-Martin and Toren Young as the Hawkeyes try to crack Penn State's defense. The Nittany Lions have only given up one touchdown all season. "We overworked Akrum a little bit in that (Iowa State) game," Ferentz said. "Our plan will be to use all three guys. And the good news is the other two guys did a good job Saturday. It was a good chance for them to get their feet wet and do some good things. " Although Penn State has handfuls of big plays under its belt already, its running game sputtered against Georgia State as Barkley managed just 47 yards on the ground in limited action. Ferentz is preparing for the dynamic back to have a bounce-back game. "We're talking about Barkley being one of the guys that's going to be I would imagine a top five (NFL draft) pick," Ferentz said. "I don't know all the seniors in the country, but my guess is he would have been pretty high last year. Akrum is a really good football player, too. But you look at their surrounding cast, their entire offense, man for man, 11 guys, there's a reason why they won the championship last year and why they had such a good year. "There's a reason why they're in the top five right now. They're a team that's really loaded right now. They're playing well. " This will be Franklin's first visit to Iowa State, and the coach was asked several questions this week about getting his team ready in Kinnick Stadium's famous visiting locker room, slathered in a shade called "innocence pink. " Penn State's last visit was in 2012, when the Nittany Lions won 38-14. "I think it's awesome," Franklin said. "I'm not going to make a big deal out of it with our guys. I'm actually going to talk to our guys about it being a really, really nice gesture by the University of Iowa to welcome Penn State, since our original school colors are pink and black, and what a wonderful gesture it is that they painted their locker room pink for us. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 24, 2017 IOWA CITY, Iowa It was happening like it had so often in the past. A once-sluggish Iowa team had come to life in the fourth quarter at home under the lights, and another top-five opponent was set to go down. Trace McSorley, Juwan Johnson and the resilient Nittany Lions flipped the script, scoring on the game's final play to survive a wild Big Ten opener. Johnson caught a seven-yard TD pass as time expired and fourth-ranked Penn State rallied to stun Iowa 21-19 Saturday night. Saquon Barkley had 211 yards rushing and 94 yards receiving for the Nittany Lions (4-0, 1-0), who outgained Iowa 579-273 but nearly blew a game that could've been crippling to their postseason hopes. ''Felt like with (Johnson) we had a height advantage and we could slip him through the middle of the field,'' Penn State coach James Franklin said of the winning play. Akrum Wadley had a 70-yard TD reception midway through the fourth quarter and a 35-yard touchdown run with 1:42 left to put the Hawkeyes (3-1, 0-1) ahead 19-15. Penn State went 80 yards on 12 plays and just 1:42 to close out the game, and McSorley found Johnson in a crowded end zone on fourth down. McSorley finished with 284 yards passing on 48 tries. Wadley had 80 yards rushing and 75 yards receiving and Nate Stanley threw for 191 yards and two TDs for Iowa. ''It's a tough loss for all of us,'' Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. ''You can see first-hand why they were the Big Ten champs last year. '' THE TAKEAWAYPenn State: Michigan came into Iowa City in a similar spot a year ago and lost 14-13, so the Nittany Lions should be happy they avoided a loss that would've erased their margin of error for the playoffs. Barkley was unstoppable and Penn State's defense was brilliant. But the Nittany Lions didn't do a ton in the passing game until the final drive - when McSorley's final pass was right on the money. Iowa: The Hawkeyes' defense, led by preseason All-American linebacker Josey Jewell, played its heart out. Wadley then put Iowa in position to make a major statement nationally, but the Nittany Lions simply made one more play than they did. ''This game sucks. But you've got to move on,'' said Jewell, who finished with 16 tackles. POLL IMPLICATIONSThird-ranked Oklahoma struggled with a winless Baylor on the road, and Iowa is clearly better than the Bears. But it's unclear if Penn State did enough to leapfrog the Sooners - who have a win over Ohio State to their credit. SAQUON'S BRILLIANCEPenn State faced a 3rd-down-and-6 up just 15-13 midway through the fourth quarter. McSorley threw a swing pass to Barkley, who was pinned to the sideline. But Barkley charged up the field, leapt over a Hawkeyes defender and got the first down - keeping alive a drive that burned the clock. ''The big difference in the game was that running back. He's a phenomenal player,'' Ferentz said. Barkley also caught 12 passes. THE NUMBERSPenn State ran 99 plays. Iowa had just 45. . . . Stanley has thrown for 12 touchdowns against just one interception in his first four starts. . . . Johnson finished with 92 yards on seven catches. . . . Penn State gained 29 first downs, while Iowa had just 11. HE SAID IT''I cannot imagine there is a better player in all of college football. The guy is special,'' Franklin said of Barkley. UP NEXTPenn State hosts Indiana on Saturday. Iowa plays at Michigan State next weekend. ---More college football: http://collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-155
|
-3 (-106)
|
Over 45.5 (-110)
|
|
+135
|
+3 (-113)
|
Under 45.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 The last time Kentucky beat Florida on the football field, Ronald Reagan was approaching the halfway mark of his second term. Gas was 89 cents a gallon, and you could buy a new Ford Mustang for less than $7,500. The year was 1986, and the Wildcats, then coached by Jerry Claiborne, scored the only touchdown on running back Mark Higgs' short plunge for a 10-3 victory over the Gators. The next year Florida beat Kentucky 27-14 in Gainesville to start what has become a stretch of 30 consecutive victories for the Gators in the series, the longest active winning streak over a major college opponent and the fifth-longest such streak of all-time. The 20th-ranked Gators (1-1, 0-1 SEC) will be looking to extend their dominance, while the Wildcats (3-0, 1-0 SEC) seek to end their frustrations Saturday night in Lexington, Ky. Though on decidedly opposite sides of the issue, both coaches seem to be taking a similar approach to the impact of the streak. "Every year it's different," Florida coach Jim McElwain said. "You've got two different teams playing, so right now, it's 0-0. " Kentucky's Mark Stoops certainly isn't going to dwell on it either. "I haven't addressed that before," he said. "It's never been my approach. These kids haven't been here for 30 years. " Still, it can be useful. "If it gives somebody a little bit of motivation, I hope it gives them motivation on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday," Stoops said. "I want them getting motivation to prepare. If that does something for you, then good. " Both teams are coming off significant victories, but few in college football -- and we're talking history here -- could be considered more dramatic than Florida's 26-20 win over Tennessee. It came on a 63-yard Hail Mary pass from quarterback Feleipe Franks, who scrambled to his right to avoid a pass rush before launching a prayer to wide receiver Tyrie Cleveland, who slipped behind a defender. As Cleveland cradled the ball as he skidded on the end zone turf, the home crowd of more than 87,000 went into a wild frenzy. The play came shortly after the Gators had surrendered a 10-point lead in the closing minutes. "Victories are hard to come by," McElwain said. "You celebrate them and learn from them, just like you do defeats. " The Gators have plenty to clean up. They had three turnovers against the Vols, missed several tackles in the fourth quarter and didn't record an offensive touchdown until there was 5:13 remaining, when Franks found senior receiver Brandon Powell for a 5-yard touchdown pass. "There's a couple throws here and there I should have completed, should have been easy throws," Franks said. "But I try not to dwell on the past. You know, our team got the win which is obviously the most important thing. Defensively, the missed tackles irked McElwain. The Gators allowed Tennessee to gain 231 yards in the fourth quarter after allowing 211 yards in the first three periods. Florida is likely to be without standout cornerback Duke Dawson, who suffered a head injury last week. "Late in the game we didn't tackle worth a hill of beans," McElwain said. "What bothered me was the secondary tackling, especially from some of our, quote, good guys, veterans. That's been pointed out and will continue to be pointed out. " Kentucky is looking to go 4-0 for the first time since 2008. The Wildcats won last week's league opener, 23-13 at South Carolina, showing grit early when the Gamecocks scored on a 68-yard pass on the first play of the game, and quarterback Stephen Johnson threw an interception on the Wildcats' second play. Johnson made up for his early gaffe by ripping off a 54-yard run that put the Wildcats in position for Austin MacGinnis' clinching field goal with just over two minutes left. Kentucky running back Benny Snell, who can take handoffs or direct snaps in the wildcat formation, rushed for 102 yards against South Carolina. The sophomore has seven career games with 100-plus yards rushing. Even if he is ignoring the three decades of frustrations against Florida, Stoops acknowledges he will show tape of last year's 45-7 loss to the Gators. It was one of the most discouraging performances of their season. "We do watch that because it's very recent and we can't make the same mistakes," Stoops said. "The game film should be no problem motivating us because we didn't play very good. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 24, 2017 LEXINGTON, Ky. Freddie Swain caught a 5-yard touchdown pass from backup quarterback Luke Del Rio with 43 seconds remaining to cap No. 20 Florida's rally from a 13-point, fourth-quarter deficit that beat Kentucky 28-27 on Saturday night. The Gators extended their winning streak over the Wildcats to 31 games, the nation's longest streak in FBS, and took early control of the Southeastern Conference's Eastern Division. It came a week after a last-second, 63-yard Hail Mary TD pass earned a 26-20 victory over Tennessee, and this comeback required everything they had after trailing most of the night. ''Well, that was fun,'' Florida coach Jim McElwain said of his team's straight escape. ''You could feel it on the sideline that they didn't have any quit in them. '' Down 27-14 in the fourth quarter, Florida (2-1, 2-0) got within a touchdown on Brandon Powell's 6-yard TD run with 7:58 left. Del Rio then marched the Gators 58 yards for the winning score to stun a blue-clad sellout crowd of 61,000 hungry to see Kentucky end a generation of frustration against the Gators. Kentucky's last chance to win ended when Austin MacGinnis' 57-yard field goal fell short as time expired. Del Rio, who relieved Feleipe Franks in the second half, completed 9 of 14 passes for 74 yards. Kadarius Toney rushed for a 36-yard TD and Tyrie Cleveland caught a 45-yard TD pass from Franks for a 14-all tie at halftime. THE TAKEAWAYFlorida: The Gators played catch-up all night and their perseverance once again paid off in the end thanks to Del Rio, who was the QB in last year's 45-7 rout of Kentucky in Gainesville. Del Rio threw an interception but had the resolve to lead a fourth-quarter rally and find receivers. They ended up outgaining the Wildcats 395-340 and dealt another painful loss to Kentucky. Kentucky: In control most of the game and holding what they thought was a comfortable lead, the Wildcats couldn't close the deal again. With the loss went a chance to prove they could win a marquee game and reach a lofty status in the SEC. Kentucky also wasted a three-touchdown performance from quarterback Stephen Johnson and field goals of 42 and 50 yards from Austin MacGinnis. A late penalty after the Wildcats neared field goal range left MacGinnis with a long attempt that fell in the end zone. POLL IMPLICATIONSFlorida could move up a spot with the road win. Kentucky: The Wildcats received 11 votes last week but let a great chance to re-enter the Top 25 for the first time since November 2007 slip away. UP NEXTFlorida: Hosts Vanderbilt on Sept. 30. Kentucky: Hosts Eastern Michigan on Sept. 30. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org and on Twitter at http://twitter. com/Top25
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
-18.5 (-110)
|
Over 61 (-110)
|
|
+688
|
+18.5 (-110)
|
Under 61 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 No. 15 Auburn travels to Columbia, Mo. , on Saturday to take on struggling Missouri in a battle of SEC Tigers looking to jump-start their seasons after uneven starts. Missouri (1-2) is surrendering 442. 7 yards per game, worst in the SEC and 102nd in the nation. Coach Barry Odom fired defensive coordinator DeMontie Cross after the Tigers gave up 31 points to South Carolina two weeks ago. It didn't solve Missouri's defensive woes, and now the offense is coming off back-to-back subpar performances. Purdue marched up and down the field, running and throwing for 477 yards in a 31-3 rout of Missouri last week. The Tigers' offense wasn't any better. Quarterback Drew Lock completed 12 of 28 passes for 133 yards, with two interceptions. Missouri managed just 70 rushing yards on 24 carries. Running back Damarea Crockett was limited to 19 yards on 10 carries, not starting because of a bruised tailbone, but he is expected to see regular time Saturday. "We know that three games in, there's plenty of negativity," Odom said"We haven't played well enough to win the ones we've wanted to, and you look at the things that they're probably hearing outside of our walls here -- I told them last night, it's the same thing if we're sitting here 3-0. I would be hearing how great we were, and really we're not. We're 1-2 and we're hearing probably how terrible we are. "It's always a little bit of life in between there on never being as good or as bad as it seems. " Auburn (2-1) has its own issues. One week after failing to do much of anything offensively in a loss at No. 2 Clemson, the Tigers committed five turnovers in last week's 24-10 win over homecoming opponent Mercer. Auburn led by only seven in the fourth quarter, and Mercer had the ball. The Tigers, thanks to stalwart defense, were able to finish off Mercer, an FCS program, but the victory did little to reduce the concern over coach Gus Malzahn's offense. Four of Auburn's five turnovers were fumbles, and they marred what was sophomore quarterback Jarrett Stidham's best performance in his three-game War Eagle career. Stidham completed 32 of 37 passes for 364 yards but failed to throw a touchdown pass and also tossed one interception. Stidham's 86. 5 completion percentage was second-best by an SEC quarterback with a minimum of 30 attempts in a game. Stidham, a sophomore transfer from Baylor, will be making his SEC debut on Saturday, when Auburn makes its first ever trip to Columbia. "We're excited," Stidham told reporters Tuesday. "Obviously, we're about to go on a long run with all the SEC teams, so it's going to be a challenge each week. Our defense, they're playing lights out. Hats off to them. They're truly a great defense. I know offensively, we just want to help a little bit more -- obviously with turnovers and whatnot. "But I know offensively, defensively, special teams, we're really excited for this stretch we're about to get into. " Having running back Kerryon Johnson, a versatile sparkplug, back in the lineup will help. Johnson missed the last two games with a hamstring injury but is expected to play Saturday. "I'm not going to say he's 100 percent, but he practiced some last week," Malzahn said of Johnson in a Tuesday press conference. "He practiced Sunday, and he's ready to play. " Johnson will add an element to Auburn's running game, alongside All-SEC back Kamryn Pettway, who has a modest 202 yards on 56 carries this season. Missouri has allowed 172. 0 yards on the ground per game to this point. Odom says despite that early struggles, his team remains confident and ready to turn things around starting with Saturday's game. Missouri is an 18. 5-point underdog. "We need to focus on what we can control, prepare, stay tight as a team and enjoy the opportunity to go compete," Odom said. "You worry about a lot of things. The only thing we can really do about that is stay close together as a team, which, I like the way our team has responded in the last couple weeks as far as practicing, the way it feels around the climate of the locker room. "
Game
Preview from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
GAME RECAP
Sep 23, 2017 COLUMBIA, Mo. Kerryon Johnson rushed for a career-high five touchdowns and No. 15 Auburn ended its recent offensive struggles in a 51-14 victory over Missouri on Saturday night. Johnson, who had missed the previous two games with a hamstring injury, finished with 48 yards rushing on 18 carries and fell one short of Carnell Williams' school record of six rushing touchdowns in a game. Jarrett Stidham added 218 yards passing and a touchdown while completing 13 of 17 passes for Auburn (3-1, 1-0 Southeastern Conference). Auburn's Carlton Davis also had an interception, one of four Missouri (1-3, 0-2) turnovers in the game. ''First of all, I'm very pleased with the win on the road in the SEC,'' Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said. ''We were pretty balanced. I thought our defense played outstanding again. '' Drew Lock finished 23-of-39 passing for 216 yards and a pair of touchdowns for Missouri, which allowed its most points since a 63-37 loss to Tennessee last season. THE TAKEAWAYAUBURN: The Tigers' offense entered the game looking like anything but a Malzahn-coached team, having allowed 11 sacks in a loss to Clemson and committing five turnovers in last week's win over Mercer. Aided by Johnson's return, Auburn returned to its high-scoring form from the start - highlighted by completions of 58 and 46 yards by Stidham in the first half. MISSOURI: Missouri's season-long struggles with defense continued on Saturday night, with the Tigers allowing 482 yards of total offense by Auburn. Missouri entered the game 103rd in the country and last in the SEC in total defense, and its problems showed in particular in the first half - when Auburn scored 31 points and scored on all four of its red zone chances. ''It's unfortunate that we again get into a situation where we were minus four in the turnover margin, gave up explosive plays on defense and didn't sustain drives offensively,'' Missouri coach Barry Odom said. ''For us, right now that's who we are. '' UP NEXTAUBURN: The Tigers play their first game against an SEC West Division opponent when they host No. 17 Mississippi State next week. MISSOURI: After four straight home games to open the season, Missouri is off next week before traveling to Kentucky on Oct. 7. ---More college football coverage: http://collegefootball. ap. org/ and www. Twitter. com/-Top25---Follow Kurt Voigt on Twitter at (at)Kurt-Voigt-
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-494
|
-13.5 (-110)
|
Over 45 (-110)
|
|
+380
|
+13.5 (-110)
|
Under 45 (-110)
|
|
|
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|
VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+100
|
+1.5 (-110)
|
Over 52 (-110)
|
|
-120
|
-1.5 (-110)
|
Under 52 (-110)
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 7:30 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-121
|
-1.5 (-110)
|
Over 55.5 (-110)
|
|
+101
|
+1.5 (-110)
|
Under 55.5 (-110)
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 8:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
+534
|
+17 (-110)
|
Over 59 (-110)
|
|
-750
|
-17 (-110)
|
Under 59 (-110)
|
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|
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|
VIEW ALL PICKS |
|
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 8:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-170
|
-3.5 (-110)
|
Over 54.5 (-110)
|
|
+150
|
+3.5 (-110)
|
Under 54.5 (-110)
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GAME RECAP
Sep 24, 2017 EAST LANSING, Mich. Brandon Wimbush threw for a touchdown and ran for one, and Notre Dame routed turnover-prone Michigan State 38-18 on Saturday night. The Spartans outgained the Irish but fell well behind thanks to three first-half turnovers. Julian Love returned an interception 59 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter to put Notre Dame up 14-0, and Michigan State's LJ Scott fumbled near the goal line, taking a likely touchdown away from the Spartans. It was the first time Michigan State (2-1) went an entire regular-season game without leading in over five years. Notre Dame's Dexter Williams caught a touchdown pass and ran for a TD, and Deon McIntosh added a scoring run for the Irish (3-1). Michigan State hadn't allowed an offensive touchdown through its first two games, but Notre Dame put an end to that run by driving 78 yards in 1:55 on the game's first possession. Wimbush opened the scoring with a 16-yard run, and then Love picked off Brian Lewerke's pass and had open field in front of him, giving the Irish an early 14-point advantage. ''We got the pick-six and got up 14-0, then we were able to control the football a little bit,'' Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said. ''Then when you get a lead on the road, I thought that Brandon Wimbush did a really good job of controlling the offense. And then again I think like everything else, if you take care of the football, which we did today, good things happen. '' Lewerke broke free for a 52-yard run on what looked like a simple quarterback sneak on third-and-1. That set up his 4-yard touchdown pass to Darrell Stewart. But in the second quarter, Lewerke fumbled while trying to scramble out of trouble on third down, giving Notre Dame the ball at the Michigan State 24. Wimbush threw an 8-yard TD pass to Williams to make it 21-7. The Spartans were still very much in the game at that point, but they couldn't overcome what happened on the next drive. Scott was about to score when Notre Dame defensive back Shaun Crawford forced a fumble and recovered the ball in the end zone for a touchback. Williams scored on a 14-yard run to give Notre Dame a 28-7 halftime lead. Crawford intercepted two passes and recovered a fumble in a win at Boston College last weekend. The last time Michigan State went an entire regular-season game without leading was Sept. 15, 2012, in a 20-3 loss to Notre Dame. THE TAKEAWAYNotre Dame: The Irish rushed for 515 yards in that win over Boston College. Michigan State provided more resistance, but Notre Dame still showcased a balanced running game and avoided mistakes. It was a poised performance on the road in a tough environment. Michigan State: The Spartans didn't look overmatched in this game, but they made crucial mistakes. The turnovers obviously hurt, and Michigan State was also penalized nine times for 97 yards. ''We had nine penalties. We had six in our first two games,'' coach Mark Dantonio said. ''But ultimately the turnovers are what crush you. '' UP NEXTNotre Dame: The Irish host Miami of Ohio next Saturday. Michigan State: The Spartans open their conference schedule at home against Iowa. It will be the teams' first meeting since Michigan State edged the Hawkeyes 16-13 in the 2015 Big Ten title game, securing a berth in college football's playoff. ---More college football: www. collegefootball. ap. org and https://twitter. com/-Top25. ---Follow Noah Trister at www. Twitter. com/noahtrister
Game
Recap from The Associated
Press (AP).
Copyright
© 2018 The Associated
Press, All Rights Reserved.
|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 8:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
OFF
|
+29.5 (-110)
|
OFF
|
|
OFF
|
-29.5 (-110)
|
OFF
|
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|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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|
FINAL |
9/23/2017 10:00 PM EST (212 DAYS AGO) |
MONEYLINE |
SPREAD |
TOTAL |
 |
|
-415
|
-11 (-110)
|
Over 54 (-110)
|
|
+327
|
+11 (-110)
|
Under 54 (-110)
|
|
|
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VIEW ALL PICKS |
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GAME PREVIEW
Sep 19, 2017 Washington might experience a test for the first time this season when it opens Pac-12 play at Colorado on Saturday. The No. 7 Huskies (3-0) played three overmatched opponents, so it is hard to gauge the readiness of the team heading into the more demanding part of the schedule. The Buffaloes are also 3-0 and appear to be a much more fearsome challenger than Washington's first three opponents: Rutgers, Montana and Fresno State. Even Huskies coach Chris Petersen had to admit the first three games weren't of the arduous variety. "Away we go and now we start the hard part of our season," Petersen said Monday. "The one thing that you notice for the most part is everybody realizes league has started now and the intensity of those games kind of feel a little bit different. "It's not like kids play harder or don't play harder depending on the game . . . but maybe leading up to it there is a little more focus. Everybody understands how competitive this league is that we play in. " The contest with Colorado also is a rematch of last season's Pac-12 championship game. The Huskies rolled to a 41-10 victory in that meeting. Petersen regularly states that nothing that occurred last season matters during this season; he stayed true to form this week. "It's not that I want them to remember or forget, has nothing to do with that," Petersen said. "I've said this many times: the lessons that we've learned, good and bad, from last year's season, w | | | |