Wednesday, November 30, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

Former Clemson and NFL standout defensive tackle, and current Stanford assistant coach, Chester McGlockton died this morning at 42 of an apparent heart attack. McGlockton was a supremely athletic big man who was a very good player for the Tigers but did not truly come into his own until he matured off the field as a professional. He then enjoyed four straight pro bowl seasons with the Raiders. Once the poster child for gifted malcontent as a youngster, McGlockton had turned his life around so much that he became known later in his life as a great family man and promising coach.

In the 1980s NFL teams began to embrace extremely large men as middle linemen on defense. A disturbing number of those men are beginning to pass away in their 30s and 40s. While the NFL is finally looking at the causes of concussions and their role on the declining health of many former players, they also have to take a close look at the effect large size has on their former players.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

He's Baaaaaaack

I am not sure what to make of Urban Meyer's return to the coaching ranks. I am not a big fan of the guy as a person, as I do believe the moniker Urban Liar is an appropriate one, but he is a good coach. Not a great coach, but very good. He will do well at OSU where he will get first crack at many talented local players while grabbing a few top-notch players from around the country. He will get full support from all involved and the probation and losses of scholarships is not too bad. Considering he is now in the same conference with Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Minnesota, etc, he should be okay. Ohio State is a top 5, maybe top 3, program.
But there is more to it than that. At the heart of the recent OSU scandal was law breaking followed by a cover up by coach Jim Tressel. While we have no reason to believe Meyer would keep any NCAA rule violations to himself, he has a woeful record in recruiting the kind of kid who would break the laws in the first place. It took more than 20 arrests of Florida players before it became a school embarrassment (Meyer never seemed to notice)--how many in Columbus where there should be a zero policy for that type of behavior? And I believe the way he walked out on Florida was more cowardly than some legitimate move for his health and family. His coaching staff had been ripped to shreds by guys getting head coaching jobs, Tim Tebow graduated, his offense had been figured out and he was no longer the big guy in the conference with Nick Saban's success at Alabama. Suddenly he loved his family? The only way he could have proved me wrong was to stay away as how could a return be legitimate when you said you were leaving for health reasons and your family? He talks of working less, but that is impossible. Meyer won because he out-worked guys. Buckeye fans will expect nothing less than excellence even with probation.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

I am back from my trip and while not recharged at all--in fact I am exhausted--I am still an unabashed believer in college football. Part of the reason is that I was able to witness a fun college football atmosphere while seeing the sport as a part of a larger whole. I think what was best for me was to show some friends the Notre Dame campus, where the game is certainly important but not the be all and end all. There is no mention of football at the basilica or grotto, or in the administration building (topped by the golden dome), etc. And the folks in Boston College regalia looked a lot like the ones sporting the green (or more correctly the blue and gold). The game itself had its moments and was certainly the loudest for one without much national intrigue that I have ever witnessed.
Would I be so relieved if they had lost? Probably not. Does it eliminate all of my misgivings about the nature of the sport and the type of individual it attracts? Certainly not. But the sport is definitely worth fighting for.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

The Sandusky b.s. is really killing my enthusiasm for college football. Perhaps I have put too much time into the sport, or I have grown tired of constantly having to evaluate cheaters, greedy bastards and now molesters that I am tired. Maybe it is because I am constantly at National Football Foundation functions where the line is basically that college football is great for you.
Anyway, I am heading out to Notre Dame Saturday to see how much enthusiasm I have left. I'll report back soon.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

What We Learned Yesterday

Speed Kills
Sorry Stanford, but your wonderful run behind QB Andrew Luck has peaked with a place in the middle of the top ten. Being tough can only get you so far--and the Cardinal have climbed the heights of college football--but without elite speed Stanford cannot match up with teams like Oregon. And unfortunately they have to play Oregon every year.
Another Painful November Loss
Boise State is a very good program. But for the second straight year they lost to a very good and proud program, this time TCU, that wanted nothing better than to eliminate them from BCS Title Game consideration. This time they were "out-Boised" by the Horned Frogs who scored winning pts on 2-pt play. TCU then won game moments later on 4th-down stop only to have outcome delayed due to a ridiculous penalty as the refs were doing their best to help the home team. Then, like last year versus Nevada, a missed FG at game's end sent Boise to first loss of season.
Cowboys in Uncharted Territory
Can Oklahoma State really win out and go to the BCS Title Game? Texas Tech are now believers after getting spanked. With Stanford and Boise losing we are running out of teams that can prevent a rematch of LSU-Bama in the championship game. Of course, Georgia just may squash all of that by winning the SEC title. Let's wait and see.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Today's Picks

My computer just wiped out my first attempt to give you guidance with college football betting. Tat should tell you something.
The theme today is underdog, my favorite show as a kid.
I like:
West Virginia +3.5
Missouri +1.5
Penn State +3.5
Iowa +3
Kansas State +5
Army +9
Auburn +12
Washington +12
UCLA +7
Oregon +3.5

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Joe is Gone

I am trying to imagine how this story would have been shaped if it involved virtually any other program. Notre Dame would have had its own special coverage due to it being a Catholic university, but no other traditional power would have had this level of scrutiny other than PSU because Penn State was considered a program doing things the right way. Of course this is a unique case in which the head coach is 84 and has been at the school as an assistant and then head coach for 60 years. And due to Paterno's impressive coaching resume, the story shifted from Sandusky, the child molester, to Paterno, the coach who did not do enough.
Is Paterno worthy of both the vitriol and the support? Should he have been allowed to coach out the season, or fired over the phone? What is the correct reaction concerning Paterno? Anger for his not doing everything to protect the victims in this case, or understanding that he was not told all of the facts. Demand that e be fired or riotting if he does?
Although I want this case taken on its own merits and not shaped by anyone's dislike of Penn State that was formed by a jealousy over their ability to win without breaking rules (in ESPN's awful summation of Paterno's career they have him coming up with the novel concept of having a great program of players that also went to school as if PSU is unique in that way), it did become clear to me that Paterno needed to step down. It is unfortunate that he tried to last out the season, but it is also clear that he should have retired years ago. Perhaps a 60-year-old Paterno reacts differently if approached by a grad assistant with awful charges about a trusted friend (Sandusky is described as "gentle" and "kind" in an old Paterno autobiography). And this weird hiding behind a misconception of what happened in the shower that awful 2002 evening, that somehow Paterno was okay in what he did not do because he only thought it was horseplay or fondling. What would be okay about Sandusky being naked in a shower after hours with a 10-year-old boy? And what is okay about fondling? No sugar coating of the phrase "anal rape" would be enough to prevent Paterno from calling the police. That a high school had to do it after Sandusky the volunteer was caught with young wrestlers many years later is sad. Penn State failed miserably and everyone involved needs to pay a high price.
And what is to be done about Sandusky? Obviously he is going to jail for life, but it is difficult to understand how he can continue to live his life, wife by his side, with all that is happening. Clearly the sickness drives him, but to remain in the community all of these years despite being caught numerous times is really unfathomable. His doing so really drives home the point that once you hear anything like this you must get the authorities involved because no matter how the abuser spins it, he cannot stop himself. No level of embarassment stopped Sandusky.
And what does this case tell us about ourselves as a community? It is not pretty. A lot of people are talking tough about what they would have done to Sandusky if they saw him do anything, but there is no report of anyone challenging him or threatening him. He was caught numerous times and the only adult who seemed upset was the one mother from 1998. Why didn't any of the tough PSU players past and present, when they heard the rumor and innuendo (and they ALL did) confront the guy? Matt Millen is now trying to talk tough on ESPN when he not only never bothered to find out more about his former coach but he remained on the Board of Directors of his not-for-profit. We have seen this before in other sports, especially those that involve children like gymnastics and swimming, and I do not remember a case where someone beat up the adult responsible or where the adult responsible was stopped immediately and taken away from kids ASAP. Instead with these types of cases, where the predator is not some creepy guy in an overcoat but the person in whom you put a ton of trust--a family member, a priest, a coach--we find that a majority of people chose to keep quiet about what they discover. It is unbelievable and sad.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

I fully expected to be writing today about last night's big match-up between Alabama and LSU. But the situation surrounding former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky is so disturbing that it is hard to talk about football.
I do not even know where to begin. I really do not feel like recounting the allegations here, but they are easy enough to find. And as we have witnessed with the sex scandals that plagued the Catholic Church, responsible people decided that it was more important to cover up this situation than follow the law. That it was more important to cover up this situation than to get Sandusky help. That it was more important to cover up this situation than PROTECT INNOCENT CHILDREN.
Once again the game of college football has been overshadowed by off-the-field problems. But this time instead of the talk consisting of recruiting violations or conference shake-ups, we are discussing brutal crimes against children and the inability of people entrusted with the lives of thousands of young people to protect them.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Today's Picks

Wow. It is 11:45. Let me get my picks in.
Texas Tech +14 at Texas
Vandy +13 at Florida
Wisconsin -27 vs Purdue
Oregon State +21 at Stanford
ASU -9 at UCLA
LSU +5 at Bama and
Okie State-KSU under 70

Friday, November 4, 2011

SEC Update

When did every game but one for this weekend get cancelled? With the attention usually reserved for the Super Bowl, this Saturday night's LSU-Alabama clash has become as hyped as any game in recent memory. But the hype for the Super Bowl, while often annoying, is reasonable for the championship game of the most popular sport in the country. This one is for first place in the SEC West. Sure the top ranking is on the line, but remember, games of the century usually only remain so if one of the combatants wins the national title. Remember the big game of the 2006 season? It was Ohio State versus Michigan and that game has lost a lot of its legs with OSU eventually losing the BCS Title Game and Michigan's program going into the tank soon after.
Don't get me wrong. I want this game to be a classic. But talk does not make the game one. After all, look at most every Super Bowl bore.
I make a prediction tomorrow morning.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

I went to Fordham University, class of 1986, and when I was a student FU employed a solid Division III program plus good basketball (well the first couple of years anyway) and baseball teams. But some big-shot donors, remembering the good ol' days for Rams football of 40-50 years prior, decided that Fordham should return to football glory--other sports be damned. Now, 25 years later, Fordham has a bad FCS football team and a bad basketball team. In that quarter of a century, however, the respect for academics at Fordham has grown greatly. It seems that Fordham can achieve academic improvement without athletic success (by the large team sports; the FU softball, women's swimming and women's crew have all done very well in recent years). But the powers that be feel that FU can have it all: academic success and a football team to be proud of, despite any number of obstacles such a decision will bring from the lack of space for a larger football stadium to the inability to keep good coaches to the total lack of desire by the local community. It is an awfully large amount of money to spend chasing the dreams of 80-year-old donors.
And so, believing that my Rams should be very good in basketball and solid in a lower lever of football, I refused to go to West Point recently to watch the Rams tangle with the Cadets. Playing games against Army and Connecticut this year and Navy next are part of the plan to elevate the program. I won't get into the game so as not to embarrass anyone but we were barely a scrimmage for an Army team that just lost its starting QB. What was the point?

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

View From Bennett Avenue

I finally got around to reading Jim Dent"s Resurrection about the 1964 football season at Notre Dame, and I was pleasantly surprised to see The USA Today College Football Encyclopedia in his bibliography. That is the first time I have seen my book referred to by another author and it certainly makes sense for Dent to have taken a gander at our work. While I did compile the Notre Dame statistics and lineup for that season, Bob Boyles was the one who wrote up the 1964 season. Great work Bob.
And what a fine year 1964 was for the Irish and for my family (my birth). Dent's book profiles the reclamation project brilliantly done by then first-year coach Ara Parseghian as he lifted Notre Dame from a dismal two-win season the year before to a near national championship. Dent does a fine job recreating the season as he follows it through the eyes of some of the players who were best utilized by the new coach. While the book is a natural for anyone interested in the history of Notre Dame football, it is a worthwhile read for fans nostalgic for a simpler time. What Parseghian accomplished was possible through sheer hard work and intelligent game planning. Now he would have to install his system and try to wait for the team to grasp the changes in concepts. While I certainly do not remember the 1964 season, I do remember the end of Ara's fine run as ND coach and I miss everything that he represented as a head coach.
One item near the end of the book that made me smile was Ara's talk to his team after their disappointing loss to USC at season's end that knocked them out of first place in the polls. While telling his team that he was proud of them, he also made it clear that he wanted them to act like Notre Dame men and to hold their heads high and not point fingers at the officiating crew, who made two huge calls that were questionable to say the least. I smiled because I thought of current Trojans coach Lane Kiffin who has been crying about the officiating from his loss to Stanford for a few days now and who still blames his team's loss to ND last season on a player. But the difference between Laney and Ara as head coaches and men are unbelievable huge.