Friday, December 11, 2015

G-Rex's Heisman Primer

There is only one college football game this weekend (Army-Navy), but one event that does take place this weekend is the annual presentation of the Heisman Trophy (in New York), awarded to the best player in NCAA Division I FBS college football. There are three finalists, as well as plenty of other deserving candidates who didn't get an invite.

Snubs


Oklahoma Junior QB Baker Mayfield: 243-354, 3,389 yards, 35 TD, 5 INT; 131 rushes, 420 yards, 7 TD
Mayfield made a strong case for the Heisman, and believes he should have been a finalist. He led the Sooners through the wild Big 12 and emerged with just one loss, a championship, and a spot in the Playoff. Mayfield threw at least two touchdown pass in all but one game (which he threw one in).




Ohio State Junior RB Ezekiel Elliott: 262 rushes, 1,672 yards, 19 TD; 26 catches, 176 yards
It was the Michigan State game that not only ended Ohio State's title hopes, but also Elliott's Heisman hopes. He carried the ball just 12 times for 33 yards, and both he (in a post game "rant") and Urban Meyer admitted they should have given him the ball more. In every other game (including the next week vs. Michigan), Zeke rushed for over 100 yards.




LSU Sophomore RB Leonard Fournette: 271 rushes, 1,741 yards, 18 TD; 18 catches, 209 yards
Early in the season, it looked like Fournette winning the Heisman was almost a foregone conclusion. He had at least 150 yards rushing in his first seven games, but then he got contained by Alabama (19 carries, 31 yards) and Arkansas (19 carries, 91 yards) in consecutive weeks, dwindling his Heisman chances.




Navy Senior QB Keenan Reynolds: 46-84, 964 yards, 6 TD, 1 INT; 220 rushes, 1,093 yards, 19 TD
If the Heisman were a career award, Reynolds would probably win it. Reynolds is a four year starter who holds the NCAA record for most career rushing touchdowns (84), and he led the Midshipmen to the AAC Championship Game this season (where they lost to Houston).


  

Finalists


Stanford Sophomore RB Christian McCaffrey: 319 rushes, 1,847 yards, 8 TD; 41 catches, 540 yards, 4 TD
McCaffrey broke Barry Sanders record for most all-purpose yards in a season while leading the Cardinal to a Pac-12 Championship and the Rose Bowl. He may be the most versatile player in the country; he has also thrown two touchdown passes (he's attempted three) and returned a kickoff for a touchdown.




Alabama Junior RB Derrick Henry: 339 rushes, 1,986 yards, 23 TD; 10 catches, 97 yards
Henry was a workhorse back for the Tide, breaking the SEC record for most rushing yards in a season while averaging 26 carries a game, including 46 and 44 in his last two games (an Iron Bowl win and an SEC Championship win) respectively.




Clemson Sophomore QB Deshaun Watson: 287-413, 3,512 yards, 30 TD, 11 INT; 163 rushes, 887 yards, 11 TD
Watson came back from ACL surgery and piloted the Tigers to an undefeated season and an ACC Championship. The dual-threat had four games of 100 or more yards rushing and five games of three or more passing touchdowns.






G-Rex's Pick: Watson
Watson isn't the favorite to win the Heisman (many have him behind both McCaffrey and Henry), he should be. He's the only finalist who plays quarterback, widely thought of as the most important position. He also has intangibles like leadership and poise, and he led Clemson to an unbeaten season, which no other team in NCAA Division I accomplished. McCaffrey is highly versatile and productive, but Stanford lost twice and didn't make the Playoff. Henry is a very powerful runner, but he didn't do much else besides run the ball. Watson was extremely productive passing the ball and running the ball, and he didn't lose a game, something the others can't say.
G-Rex's Rankings: Watson, McCaffrey, Henry




Friday, December 4, 2015

CFB Weekly Review/Preview: Championship Week

Hope you had a good Thanksgiving (and Black Friday, if you're into that). The Weekly Review/Preview is back from Thanksgiving break, and just in time for conference championship week. This week will determine who makes the College Football Playoff, and what bowls other teams go to. Right now, there are really about nine teams who still have a shot (even if it's minuscule) at making the Playoff:
  • Clemson: If the unbeaten Tigers take care of business Saturday in the ACC Championship, they will most likely be the #1 seed in the Playoff. If they are upset by North Carolina, they still have a chance of staying in the top four, but they will most likely be on the outside looking in.
  • Alabama: As with Clemson, the Tide are in with a win in the SEC Championship Saturday. They're out if they lose to offensively-challenged Florida.
  • Oklahoma: Oklahoma looks to have a Playoff spot locked up. They demolished Oklahoma State to take the Big 12 (which doesn't have a championship game) crown, and that's the final impression the Playoff Committee will get from them.
  • Iowa: The unbeaten Hawkeyes will play in a winner-take-all (or at least a Playoff spot) Big Ten Championship against Michigan State. Win and they're in. Lose and they're out.
  • Michigan State: The Spartans are in with a Big Ten Championship victory. If they lose, they most likely go to the Rose Bowl.
  • Ohio State: The Buckeyes played to their potential last Saturday against Michigan, running all over the Wolverines with J.T. Barrett and Ezekiel Elliott a week after Elliott hardly touched the ball in a loss to MSU. They need at least either Clemson or Alabama to lose to have a chance to defend their title
  • Stanford: The two-loss Cardinal are still in contention, but they will need to win the Pac-12 Championship against USC, hope either Clemson or Alabama lose, and hope the Playoff Committee values a conference championship over the eye test.
  • North Carolina: The Heels could sneak in with an upset of Clemson and a Stanford or Alabama loss. The problem is their strength of schedule; their lone loss was to South Carolina, and they played two FCS teams.
  • Florida: It's unlikely the Gators, who have struggled recently, including last week in a loss to Florida State, get in, but if they pull off an SEC Championship upset of Alabama, they have a sim chance.


Week 13 Review

Top Games

Baylor 21, TCU 28 2OT

In a double-overtime thriller, Trevon Boykin and TCU dashed the title (conference and national) hopes of third-string quarterback Chris Johnson and Baylor.

Led by their talented offense, Western Michigan ruined Toledo's hopes of winning a MAC Championship and playing in a New Year's 6 bowl game. They play Northern Illinois in the MAC Championship this weekend.

In last weekend's marquee game, Stanford rallied to knock off Notre Dame on a game-winning field goal in the final seconds.


Top Performances

California QB Jared Goff vs. Arizona State (W 48-46): 30-51, 542 yards, 5 TD
One of the top NFL prospect at quarterback put on a show in Cal's final regular season game, throwing five touchdowns to push the Bears past ASU.

Alabama RB Derrick Henry @ Auburn (W 29-13): 46 carries, 271 yards, TD
Henry is many people's Heisman front-runner after a dominating performance that saw him tote the rock 46 times.

Clemson QB Deshaun Watson @ South Carolina (W 37-32): 20-27, 279 yards passing, TD; 21 carries, 114 yards rushing, 3 TD
Another Heisman candidate, Watson kept the #1 Tigers unbeaten despite a scare from South Carolina.


Play of the Week



The best play from the holiday weekend goes to Southern Miss receiver Mike Thomas, who made an Odell Beckham-like catch in the end zone and somehow managed to get a foot down in bounds. Southern Miss beat Louisiana Tech and will play in the Conference USA Championship.


Play of the Weak



If there was a team that exemplified Play of the Weak best, it would be the Kansas Jayhawks. Somebody made this "hype video" to celebrate their 0-12 season.



Championship Week Preview

Quick Picks

Two Weeks Ago: 12-7
Season: 104-38

Friday
MAC Championship: Bowling Green 32, Northern Illinois 28 (8:00 PM, ESPN 2)
Saturday
Texas 38, #12 Baylor 32 (Noon, ESPN)
C-USA Championship: Southern Miss 34, Western Kentucky 45 (Noon, ESPN 2)
AAC Championship: #22 Temple 28, #19 Houston 42 (Noon, ABC)
SEC Championship: #18 Florida 13, #2 Alabama 30 (4:00 PM, CBS)
MWC Championship: Air Force 38, San Diego State 35 (7:00 PM, ESPN 2)
Pac-12 Championship: #20 USC 28, #7 Stanford 35 (7:45 PM, ESPN)
Big Ten Championship: #5 Michigan State 40, #4 Iowa 29 (8:00 PM, FOX)
ACC Championship: #10 North Carolina 34, #1 Clemson 32 (8:00 PM, ABC)