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<title>TrojanWire - Games</title>
<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/games/index.php</link>
<description>USC Football As It Happens</description>
<copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 09:24:46 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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<docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs> 

<item>
<title>Top USC Olympic moments</title>
<description><![CDATA[    With the 29th Olympic Games sadly completed, its time to take a look at those who competed.<br />
<br />
They swam and they ran, some faster than others. But through competition, they became closer than brothers.<br />
<br />
Phelps' golds, basketball's redemption, 10-year-old gymnasts, Alicia Sacramone's falls.
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/top-usc-olympic-moments.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/top-usc-olympic-moments.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 09:24:46 -0800</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>If USC Was a Country</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p><img alt="usc-medal-count.jpg" src="http://www.trojanwire.com/images/usc-medal-count.jpg" width="361" height="324" /></p>

<p>If USC athletes had competed as a country in 2008, they would have placed 13th in the overall medal standings in the Beijing Games (and tied for eighth in golds).</p>

<p><a href="http://www.texassports.com/genrel/082508aaa.html">Texas</a> and <a href="http://www.gatorsports.com/article/20080825/NEWS/152020/1016/gators01&title=Gators_at_the_Games__Final_haul_is_14_medals">Florida</a> each earned 14 medals. <a href="http://www.mgoblue.com/history/article.aspx?id=143694">Michigan</a> 12.</p>

<p><a href="http://usctrojans.cstv.com/genrel/082508aac.html">USC Athletes Win 21 Medals At 2008 Beijing Olympics</a> [USCtrojans.com]</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/if-usc-was-a-country.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/if-usc-was-a-country.php</guid>
<category>Florida</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2008 11:38:21 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Five Women of Troy Take Water Polo Silver</title>
<description>    USC&apos;s Olympic medal tally ballooned further today, as five Women of Troy helped make history for the United States women&apos;s water polo team. A silver-medal finish in Beijing makes Team USA the only women&apos;s water polo team to medal in three consecutive Games, a feat that likely would not have been accomplished without the efforts of five first-time Olympians hailing from USC. USC junior Kami Craig and Trojan grads Patty Cardenas, Brittany Hayes, Moriah van Norman and Lauren Wenger all scored for Team USA during the run to the Olympic final. In the gold-medal match, the United States fell 9-8 to the Netherlands to take the silver medal in Beijing.
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/five-women-of-troy-take-water-polo-silver.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/five-women-of-troy-take-water-polo-silver.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 17:33:17 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Amy Rodriguez Gets Gold With USA Soccer</title>
<description>    It&apos;s been a pretty spectacular year for USC&apos;s Amy Rodriguez. Already a 2007 NCAA champion with the Women of Troy, Rodriguez captured an Olympic gold medal today in Beijing, as the U.S. women&apos;s soccer team edged Brazil 1-0 in extra time for the USA&apos;s third Olympic gold. A first-time Olympian, Rodriguez was an unwavering spark on the front lines throughout the Games. In the final against Brazil, it was Rodriguez who set up the game-winning goal from Carli Lloyd, slipping a pass back to Lloyd for the assist on the golden strike.
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/amy-rodriguez-gets-gold-with-usa-soccer.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/amy-rodriguez-gets-gold-with-usa-soccer.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 17:33:10 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>USC&apos;s Krumpholz Bound For Medal Rounds With Team USA</title>
<description>    In his first trip to the Olympic Games, USC&apos;s J.W. Krumpholz has helped the U.S. men&apos;s water polo team turn heads in Beijing, as Team USA has scored a slot in the semifinals for a sure shot at an Olympic medal. Krumpholz has scored twice for the United States, most recently notching a crucial goal out of set in the USA&apos;s 8-7 win over Germany. That win secured a first-place finish for Team USA in its group, securing a quarterfinal bye and automatic trip to the semifinals to assure the USA a spot in a medal game. It&apos;s the first trip to the medal round for the United States in 16 years, as the USA last reached the semis in 1992 and finished fourth.
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/uscs-krumpholz-bound-for-medal-rounds-with-team-usa.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/uscs-krumpholz-bound-for-medal-rounds-with-team-usa.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2008 14:29:46 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Bush Takes Note from Olympics</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/26aXWcVjs_M&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/26aXWcVjs_M&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br />
Easiest way into the endzone? Fly.</p>

<p>They told Reggie Bush to take the night off and tend to his swelling knee. They told him not to run. But they never told him not to fly. Not long after Bush convinced coach Sean Peyton to let him play in the Saints-Texans preseason game, he gave the world a glimpse of what he's still got to offer by sailing over Texas cornerback Jacque Reeves in-stride and into the endzone. And where did Bush get the inspiration?</p>

<blockquote>"I watched the 400-meter hurdles (Friday) night," Bush said about the Olympic Games in China. "(Reeves) gave it away early that he was going for my knees, and when I saw what he was doing, it was a spur-of-the-moment thing."
</blockquote>

<p>Quote from <a href="http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/5948459.html">Chron.com<br />
</a></p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/bush-takes-note-from-olympics.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/bush-takes-note-from-olympics.php</guid>
<category>Headlines</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 17 Aug 2008 20:22:00 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>PAC 10 Expansion: Gridiron</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <P>Many teams try to argue that strong recent performances justify a move to the PAC 10.  This post will attempt to separate the wheat from the chafe.  The reasons behind selecting teams for consideration are given in my introductory article.</p>

<P>By examining the record of a team over their last 9 PAC 10 games, an estimate of how each team would fair in a full PAC 10 schedule can be made.  How far back one has to go to find 9 games is given in parenthesis.  Examining the number of PAC 10 games in the last five years is a good measure of PAC 10 interest in playing each team.  This is amplified if the PAC 10 teams are willing to travel.  Bowl records over the last 10 years give a separate measure of performance over quality teams.  Home attendance measures the current fan base of each team.</p>

<P>Records are extracted from <A HREF="http://www.jameshowell.net/cf/scores/scoresindex.html">James Howell’s database</a>.  Attendance figures are from the <A HREF="http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/internet/attendance/IA_AVEATTENDANCE.pdf">NCAA</a> </p>

<P><TABLE border = 1><TR><TD>Team</td><TD>Last 9</td><TD>Games(Home)</td><TD>Bowl</td><TD>Attendance</td><TR></tr><TD>Boise State</td><TD>3-6 (1998)</td><TD>5(2)</td><TD>5-3</td><TD>30338</td><TR></tr><TD>BYU</td><TD>3-6 (2003)</td><TD>9(3 & 2 Bowls)</td><TD>2-4</td><TD>64497</td><TR></tr><TD>Colorado</td><TD>3-6 (2000)</td><TD>5(3)</td><TD>3-4</td><TD>50509</td><TR></tr><TD>Fresno State</td><TD>3-6 (2002)</td><TD>8(3)</td><TD>3-4</td><TD>36291</td><TR></tr><TD>Hawaii</td><TD>4-5 (1998)</td><TD>4(4)</td><TD>4-2</td><TD>43514</td><TR></tr><TD>Idaho</td><TD>0-9 (2003)</td><TD>10(0)</td><TD>1-0</td><TD>11497</td><TR></tr><TD>Nevada</td><TD>1-8 (1998)</td><TD>4(1)</td><TD>1-2</td><TD>17087</td><TR></tr><TD>SDSU</td><TD>0-9 (2001)</td><TD>7(4)</td><TD>0-1</td><TD>27940</td><TR></tr><TD>San Jose St.</td><TD>1-9 (2002)</td><TD>5(2)</td><TD>1-0</td><TD>15465</td><TR></tr><TD>Texas</td><TD>4-5 (1987)</td><TD>2(2 Bowls)</td><TD>7-3</td><TD>85144</td><TR></tr><TD>UNLV</td><TD>2-7 (1983)</td><TD>0</td><TD>1-0</td><TD>29281</td><TR></tr><TD>Utah</td><TD>6-3 (2001)</td><TD>7(4)</td><TD>7-0</td><TD>42593</td><TR></tr></tr></table></p>

<P>Based on this data it is reasonable to eliminate Idaho, Nevada and UNLV from further consideration.  San Jose St. and SDSU will remain based on California politics.</p>

<P>I will mention that Texas and BYU are the only teams on the list with a national championship in football, Texas in 2005-06 over USC in the Rose Bowl.  Texas, Colorado, Utah and Boise State are the only teams listed that have been to a BCS Bowl, Texas twice and Utah before the non-BCS bar was lowered.</p>

<P>Texas undeniably has the best name nationally, but to find nine games against PAC 10 teams one must go back to the days of the SWC in 1987.  Four of those nine games were Bowl games.   The PAC 10 and Texas apparently have little interest in competing directly on the field.</p>

<P>Utah is the only team listed that has a winning record against the PAC 10 over its last nine tries.  Utah, SDSU and Hawaii have hosted the most PAC 10 teams.  Hawaii benefits from favorable NCAA rules allowing visitors an extra home game.  Idaho and BYU have the most games against the PAC 10 in recent years.  Fresno State has the most meetings excluding Bowl games.  Utah and Hawaii have hosted more Pac 10 teams than the rest.  While Boise State has been to more Bowl games that Utah, no team has won more bowl games than Texas and Utah.</p>

<P>Admitting that Boise State has defeated Utah twice over the period in question, Utah is the most competitive team the PAC 10 has on this list, other than Texas.  BYU plays more PAC 10 teams competitively, not just for homecoming.  BYU has one of the largest stadiums under consideration.</p>

<P>The top 5 attendance figures above are, in order, Texas, BYU, Colorado, Utah and Fresno St.</p>

<P>Utah and BYU are the teams that the PAC 10 has a demonstrated an interest in playing while providing good competition and maintaining the natural rivalry structure of the conference.</p>


&copy; www.fanblogs.com<p><a href="http://www.fanblogs.com/pac10/007583.php" title="Comment on PAC 10 Expansion: Gridiron">Comment on PAC 10 Expansion: Gridiron...</a></p>
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/pac-10-expansion-gridiron.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/pac-10-expansion-gridiron.php</guid>
<category>Texas</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2008 09:41:29 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Wazzu might be a trap game</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <p>The Bleacher Report has come up with <a href="http://www.bleacherreport.com/articles/26576-Six-Potential-Trap-Games-In-The-2008-College-Football-Season">a trap game for each conference</a>. The Pac-10 entry, not surprisingly, involves the Trojans:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>The Game:</strong> USC at Washington State, October 18</p>
<p><strong>Before:</strong> Arizona State</p>
<p><strong>Why it Will be a Trap Game:</strong> Arizona State appears to be main contender in 2008 to end USC&rsquo;s hegemony in the Pac-10. QB Rudy Carpenter will be in his senior year, it&#8217;s the second season under turnaround specialist Dennis Erickson, and the Sun Devils have seven returning starters on both sides of the ball. Given what Oregon has lost, ASU is the clear No. 2 in the conference this fall.</p>
<p>The week after that crucial game for USC comes a road match in Pullman, Washington. Washington State&rsquo;s team is a bit thin in the first year of the Paul Wulff regime, and he is installing a new offense and defense there. His no-huddle spread offense could be dangerous against USC if the Trojans are napping the week after a big game.</p>
<p>Plus, USC won by only six the last time it played at Washington State, and if they can lose to Stanford last year they can lose to anyone. If things click for the Cougars by mid-October, they could be dangerous in this game.</p>
<p><strong>Why it May Not Matter:</strong> Did I mention Washington State&#8217;s team is thin? It is, and it lost scholarships to Academic Progress Report-related penalties. Plus, there has been a rash of disciplinary and academic problems there. If injuries strike at all, they could torpedo the Cougars&rsquo; season entirely. Besides, the new schemes may not have gelled by this point, severely limiting Washington State&rsquo;s chances in this game.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>So I guess the takeaway here is that USC may or may not lose to Washington State.</p>

    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/wazzu-might-be-a-trap-game.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/wazzu-might-be-a-trap-game.php</guid>
<category>Washington State</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 03 Jun 2008 09:48:06 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Do the Long-Term USC Deal, Mayor Says</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <p>MAYOR ANTONIO R. VILLARAIGOSA<br />
City of Los Angeles</p>

<p>FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE<br />
December 5, 2007</p>

<p></p>

<p>MAYOR VILLARAIGOSA URGES COLISEUM COMMISSION TO APPROVE LONG TERM <br />
AGREEMENT WITH USC</p>

<p>Villaraigosa outlines seven principles as basis for agreement to make the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum the permanent home of the Trojans</p>

<p>LOS ANGELES -- Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa issued the following letter to the members of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission today as it met to discuss the fate of USC Athletics at the L.A. Coliseum.  In the letter, Mayor VIllaraigosa outlines seven principles as basis for agreement to make the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum the permanent home of the Trojans:</p>

<p><br />
December 5, 2007</p>

<p>Coliseum Commissioners<br />
3911 S. Figueroa Street<br />
Los Angeles, CA  90037</p>

<p>Dear Coliseum Commissioners:</p>

<p>For eighty-five years, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum has been synonymous with Trojan Athletics.  With this great university calling this great public building home, the public interest has been served in countless ways.</p>

<p>I believe that the future of the Los Angeles Coliseum is inconceivable without USC and I, therefore, urge the Coliseum Commission to immediately negotiate a long-term agreement with the University of Southern California based on the following rules of the game:</p>

<p>First, USC makes a long-term commitment to the Coliseum that will bring jobs and produce economic vitality in South Los Angeles long into the future.</p>

<p>Second, the Coliseum Commission and USC commit to a major renovation to bring the facility up to modern standards.</p>

<p>Third, the renovation efforts will give priority to necessary improvements in amenities serving the larger public, such as restrooms and concession areas.</p>

<p>Fourth, USC agrees to make a significant financial commitment to the restoration project.</p>

<p>Fifth, the Coliseum Commission and USC acknowledge that the Coliseum is a public treasure which belongs to all members of our community, and that opportunities for community access, use and enjoyment of the Coliseum in a variety of athletic, education and cultural events <br />
will be enhanced and improved.</p>

<p>Sixth, the Coliseum will be treated at all times as an historical landmark, and its architectural character shall be protected and preserved.</p>

<p>And seventh, any agreement will recognize a superseding interest in bringing the Olympic Games to the Coliseum.</p>

<p>I am committed to working together as teammates to get this agreement over the goal line.</p>

<p>Sincerely,</p>

<p>ANTONIO R. VILLARAIGOSA<br />
Mayor</p>
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/do-the-longterm-usc-deal-mayor-says.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/do-the-longterm-usc-deal-mayor-says.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 06 Dec 2007 17:13:34 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Pete Carroll Knows OJ (Mayo)</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <p>Filed under: <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/category/usc-football/" rel="tag">USC Football</a>, <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/category/pac-10/" rel="tag">Pac 10</a>, <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/category/bowl-games/" rel="tag">Bowl Games</a>, <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/category/ncaa-fb-coaching/" rel="tag">NCAA FB Coaching</a>, <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/category/los-angeles/" rel="tag">Los Angeles</a></p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Fs_meS7RBAw&amp;rel=1&amp;border=0" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Fs_meS7RBAw&amp;rel=1&amp;border=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>
<p> In case you thought that the USC Trojans weren't going to take the University of Illinois seriously in its Rose Bowl match-up, just take a look at what <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/tag/PeteCarroll/">Pete Carroll</a> and the Coaching staff did on their first day off after the regular season ended, according to official Trojan blog <a href="http://www.petecarroll.com/index.cfm?pk=viewall&amp;cd=NAA&amp;pid=400654&amp;utm_medium=redirect&amp;utm_source=uscripsit_blog">USCRipsit</a>.  Something makes me think that offensive coordinator <a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/tag/SteveSarkisian/">Steve Sarkisian </a>will be asking Oj Mayo to join him and his colleagues next year.<br /></p>
<br />Media sources report that the Men of Troy were <a href="http://www.insidesocal.com/usc/archives/2007/12/the-sounds-of-s.html">nonplussed with playing the Illini</a> on January 1st, least of which is because it eliminates any possibility that they'd have to lay a claim on a split "national championship" should Ohio State stumble against LSU in the BCS Title Game.  <a href="http://www.insidesocal.com/usc/archives/2007/12/thanks-rose-bow.html">Thanks Rose Bowl</a>, indeed.<p style="clear: both; padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;">&nbsp;</p><p><a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/2007/12/03/pete-carroll-knows-oj-mayo/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/forward/1053999/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.technorati.com/cosmos/search.html?rank=&amp;fc=1&amp;url=http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/2007/12/03/pete-carroll-knows-oj-mayo/" title="Linking Blogs">Linking&nbsp;Blogs</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/2007/12/03/pete-carroll-knows-oj-mayo/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/pete-carroll-knows-oj-mayo.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/pete-carroll-knows-oj-mayo.php</guid>
<category>LSU</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 03 Dec 2007 18:48:53 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Week three: USC 49, Nebraska 31, European tapestry, a centaur, Wilson</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <div class='snap_preview'><p>I arrived in Lincoln on Monday. I didn&#8217;t see my first USC fan until Wednesday night. The game was on Saturday. In the intervening time, to anyone who would listen, I explained my presence with an emphatic repetition of the first sentence above: &#8220;I&#8217;ve been here since <em>Monday</em>.&#8221; Judging by local reactions it was an effective way to evoke just how long this trip is going to be. One guy mock saluted me, bought me a beer and said &#8220;You&#8217;re gonna need this. Most people get here Friday and run out of things to do that night.&#8221;</p>
<p>He is wrong. He is right in that I spent a goodly amount of time Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday driving between the Barnes and Noble on O Street (where I read, among other things: <em>Friday Night Lights, It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium, Saturday Rules</em> and Johnny Cash&#8217;s autobiography <em>Cash</em>, by Johnny Cash) and the University of Nebraska&#8217;s library for want of anything to do, a state exacerbated by my at least theoretical presence in College Football Town, USA and the coming shadow of Lee Corso, whose eyes are the blank gray temples of atavism seen only in the better class of Conan the Barbarian-esque novellas.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.rammerjammeryellowhammer.com/weblog/archives/Corso1.jpg" height="358" width="518" /></p>
<p><em>His eyes may actually be blue, but that pitiless gaze is the same color as the stone used by the acolytes of Set when they built their blood stained ziggurats in Stygia-by-the-sea.</em></p>
<p>Saturday - game day - was an Event. The sky dawned a bold blood orange slammed beneath a marble slab of clouds so uniformly flat it looked like a parking lot suspended, upside down, thousands of feet above the ground. Apocalypse was in the air, as was Marlboro light. I shotgunned beverages called Beer 30 at 7:35 AM. I beheld a sign proclaiming, in words bold and proud, &#8220;John David Booty, which of course in German means a whale&#8217;s vagina&#8221; and watched it confiscated by the Gameday crew only to be regained by an elite task force assembled from the spare and sober parts of a formless, shapeless mass of writhing drunk Husker undergrads and ferried, Victor Laszlo-like, from the Vichy controlled underlings of college football&#8217;s flagship show to the bright American dawn of the southwest stands where red clad lovables popped the sign up again and again to the cheers of more than 13,000 fans alternatively screaming, between subtle Allied-Axis clashes in North Africa and the fenced in perimeter that was Home Depot&#8217;s designated spotlight area, &#8220;Hide the sign! Hide the sign!&#8221; and &#8220;Give it back! Give it back!&#8221;, and nary a sound was heard from Louis about all of this as he grinned his French grin and palmed bribes. I played Polish horseshoes, which is not, as the name suggests, a form of water polo. I was blamed for the aromatic assault left by the female ahead of me in the bathroom line at a house party near Lincoln Memorial Stadium, which prompted me to point at her and say &#8220;That&#8217;s her poop particles floating into your nose, not mine. I only had to pee,&#8221; and not feeling bad about it as she, in typical female fashion, cut ahead of me with nothing but a I&#8217;ll-be-sooooo-fast. I saw my family for ten minutes, then left by shouting &#8220;I&#8217;ll see you in South Bend!&#8221;, which, as you will agree, is pretty hardcore given that Notre Dame&#8217;s obliteration lay five weeks in the future. I gained an early head start on the Rapture when USC led 42-10. I had an <em>alright</em> time.</p>
<p>None of that was apparent on Thursday evening though, when I was sitting at Iguana&#8217;s minding my own longneck and wondering when the hell this town was gonna start being <em>Lincoln</em>. Three and a half days of niceness:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Me, to myself and to others but, really, to myself and with a lot more strained desperation than indicated: </strong>Nice people around here. Nice little campus you have here. Nice, that&#8217;s a sweet Husker Power wallet. Oh, that&#8217;s a nice deal on buffalo wings (10 cents per on Wednesdays at Brother&#8217;s). Nice offer of nachos, too (free on Tuesdays at Iguana&#8217;s). Yeah, Southern California is a nice place to live but it sure is nice here, too. Hey, does that movie theater serve beer and pizza? Nice. Shoot me, please, then time warp my body to Saturday where they have revivification and football.</p></blockquote>
<p>One thing that was not nice - <em>nice,</em> here, indicating all that is lovely but un-Apocalyptically college football - was/is Nebraska&#8217;s Memorial Stadium. As explained before, my first experience with Memorial on Monday was religious in tone and, much like Paul of Tarsus, I jumped the barbed wire at the southwest corner of the facility to get a look at what was, during large parts of the 1990s, college football&#8217;s Jerusalem. Unlike Paul I was not arrested and did not die languishing in a prison in Rome; instead, I roamed the innards of the facility and looked at the floodlights, the grass, the big N and the burning bush at the center of the field from which there came a voice:</p>
<blockquote><p>Let there be football. And it will not be <em>nice</em>. Now get ye to Knickerboxer&#8217;s on Thursday for taco night.</p></blockquote>
<p>(In my universe the Judeo-Christian overbeing is concerned with happy hour appetizer specials as well as the fate of your child, family, nation, team, etc.)</p>
<p>Being in a stadium by yourself is one of my favorite things about sports. The happier sort of accident made possible by evolution allows your brain - normally an epically badass device developed over millions of years to allow you, the byproduct of an unfathomably cruel and protracted and, worst of all, necessary game of Hungry Hungry Hippos, to do amazing things like recall and write the English alphabet and drink potable water from a glass and fly airplanes and such - to seize upon itself in a moment of glorious mendacity and tell you - aka, You, the nominal leader of your nervous ganglia which are at that moment revolting or at least demanding benefits commensurate with similar industries - things which aren&#8217;t true but, let&#8217;s face it, might as well be. You can imagine these untruths without batting an eye (which is a hell of a thing to do, as both actions involve that epically badass device you call a brain). You can see the empty stands full, serried ranks of humanity stretching into ovals, ellipses, geoids, horseshoes, oblongs, wearing colors primordial and sub-cortical. You can hear it because the silence magnifies what takes place on Saturdays and suddenly there you are, deafened by ghost explosions. Most of all you can feel the presence of the thousands of others who have come before and it makes the empty stadium, of all things, claustrophobic. You can also be blissfully unaware of cameras and security which, as Steve Ryan of BigRedReport.com told me over beers four days after I snuck into Memorial, must&#8217;ve been too amused by my awww-shucks awe to arrest me like they should&#8217;ve. And if you strain hard enough, you can catch the faintest whiff of iron tang mixed with photosynthesis pleated and formed into twenty-two rectangles, one for every angel and devil; the sundry smell of athletic tape so like vanilla smeared into glue; animal sweat; dry heaving fear the color of red clay; the scent of ozone almost visible where a receiver ran wild through the atmosphere just a year ago. I am reminded of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity%27s_Rainbow">Pynchon</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Now there grows among all the rooms, replacing the night&#8217;s old smoke, alcohol, and sweat, the fragile musaceous odor of Breakfast; flowery, permeating, surprising, more than the color of winter sunlight, taking over not so much through any brute pungency or volume as by the high intricacy of the weaving of its molecules, sharing the conjuror&#8217;s secret by which — though it is not often Death is told clearly to fuck off — the living genetic chains prove even labyrinthine enough to preserve some human face down ten or twenty generations&#8230; so the same assertion-through-structure allows this warm morning&#8217;s banana fragrance to meander, repossess, prevail. Is there any reason not to open every window, and let the kind scent blanket all Chelsea? As a spell, against falling objects&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>My visit to Memorial filled me with the Spirit, and I set upon Lincoln-Damascus with a fervor and a little bit of the Fear: talking with everyone I met, explaining my mission, seeking the color red in its every form, drinking with an abandon that laughed in the face of my meticulously updated-and-then-ignored budget, searching for a glimpse of that gorgeous stadium beneath the full Moon of Floodlights somewhere else even if it was at the bottom of a pint of Blue Moon&#8230; anything to find what what I was looking for, even if it was a jar of ether.</p>
<p>What did I find? A bunch of nice people, but this is Lincoln, Nebraska: a nice little town. Nothing that told me, on Saturday, the entire state would work itself into a blood frenzy and by 7:13 PM Central the third largest gathering of human beings in the state of Nebraska would find themselves all standing, watching USC&#8217;s David Buehler kick it short to Andre Jones at the Nebraska 18 and there he goes, 16 yards and here comes Sam Keller&#8230;.</p>
<p>So there I was on Thursday night sipping my beer and attempting to not mind my own business. That&#8217;s when I met Brad and Cole. One of them probably still thinks I&#8217;m from Bolivia, because mojitos come from Cuba which is nowhere near Brazil which begins with a B and is in South America and is right next to Brazil. This happy confusion is emblematic of the larger happy confusion of my being in Nebraska at the same time as them, which, as Brad&#8217;s girlfriend Anna put it when I left on Sunday morning, &#8220;is something out of a movie&#8221;. The next 60 hours or so of my life, except for a number of sixty minutes spent with fellow USC fans aching to know whether freshman receiver Brandon Carswell would redshirt and similar Freemasonish secrets only raving USC lunatics want to know, would be directed by the motley cast below&#8230;</p>
<p><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1346/1397209031_41db5ada17.jpg?v=0" /></p>
<p><em>The Adopt-a-Bolivian campaign has really come out swinging.</em></p>
<p>Brad and Cole and I met over mojitos, which is indeed very much like a movie but the kind that involves a slumming John Cusack and Diane Lane/Meg Ryan/etc. I derided their drinks, which were made with a single mint leaf and plenty of Rose&#8217;s lime juice. That&#8217;s not how you make mojitos. <em>This</em> is how you make mojitos.</p>
<p><a href="http://82sluggowin.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/01312004112107.jpg" title="knifey spoony"><img src="http://82sluggowin.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/01312004112107.jpg" alt="knifey spoony" /></a></p>
<p><em>I see you&#8217;ve played barstool-bartender before.</em></p>
<p>Eventually I came to be known as &#8220;the dude from Bolivia&#8221; because, as drunks all know, mojitos originated in Bolivia and velveeta tastes good. Later on when cultures clashed and the Nebraskans couldn&#8217;t understand something particularly Californian or at least non-Nebraskan (&#8221;You&#8217;re cold? WTF?&#8221;) we consoled ourselves by laughing at the differences between Lincoln and Bolivia, which is how the USSR and Reagan-era America should&#8217;ve done it. Brad and Cole offered to show me around Lincoln, which meant getting pitchers of an orange-ish concoction at Sandy&#8217;s, heading to Main Street (the bar) to take tequila shots to the <em>dome</em> and ending the night at a place I can&#8217;t remember the name of where I danced with a number of females, all of them black, all of them amused and all of them deigning to allow me to gyrate arhythmically next to them with nary a punch to my face, though perhaps they were a bit violent after all because my upper arms were sore the next morning when I awoke on B&amp;C&#8217;s couch but, now that I think about it, it&#8217;s possible the fleshy bruising above my triceps was due to the amusing and inevitable wrestling match B&amp;C engaged in once back at the house after, before and between shotgunning Beer 30, waking up their female housemate and demanding that I avail myself of all of their amenities including the shower, which I hadn&#8217;t used in four or five days at that point but would need shortly due to my attempting to keep B from powerbombing C which, as you doubtless do not need me to tell you, is a no no. If a man wants to powerbomb another man that is his prerogative, and let no man rent asunder the union of two men grappling, one about to hurl the other from four to five feet high unto the floor, because it is good.</p>
<p>This violence, so long hidden during the days of Mon-, Tues- and Wednes-, cropped up every now and then and validated everything I wanted to know about Nebraska, Nebraska football, and the sucking maw of suck that was Big Red post-1997. The state has less than two million residents, but the dominance it exuded from 1994 to Tom Osborne&#8217;s final year was, for anyone who wasn&#8217;t in a cave during the nineties, the kind of absolute manifestation of supremacy over land, water, air and especially fire the Americans demonstrated with Little Boy and Fat Man in 1945. We were, all of us who did not cheer for Big Red, awed at this terrible display of power; and every now and then, as I was gamely welcomed by everyone wearing that same primordial red, I would get this sense as I gazed up into the eyes of a 6&#8242;4&#8243; corn-fed Heartlander that, if he really wanted to, he could pick me up and snap me in twain and use the rounder half in a power back formation where he would, after running most of the way, pitch demi-me to Mike Rozier for the touchdown and the glory because that was the kind of program Nebraska had, baby, and here, let me buy you a drink. Welcome to Nebraska! Try the prime rib at Misty&#8217;s!</p>
<p>Make no mistake about confidence: Bill Callahan has managed, in a scant three and one quarter seasons, to reduce Nebraskans&#8217; expectations of their team to the point where almost no one - and that includes the Husker football student manager I talked to for several hours -  would predict anything but a loss. There were many signs around town with prophecies of 21-20 Nebraska or 13-10 Nebraska, etc., but all of them were last second fantasies produced by the more naive set of residents. This state knows its football and they knew Nebraska would lose - but to hell with that, California boy, we&#8217;ll show you how we do it in Nebraska! I was reminded of <em>To Kill a Mockingbird</em>:</p>
<blockquote><p>I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand. It&#8217;s when you know you&#8217;re licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and see it through no matter what.</p></blockquote>
<p>Now that&#8217;s cheesy. But it&#8217;s also true - or else why show up thirteen thousand strong and still counting at eight in the morning?</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=1409871582&amp;size=l"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1393/1408939599_6746842102.jpg?v=0" /></a></p>
<p><em>Do not antagonize Nebraska fans. Don&#8217;t believe me? Click on the above and look at the white sign at the bottom left corner.</em></p>
<p>For those of you too lazy to click on the above, let me summarize that sign for you:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>MARK MAY KNOWS FOOTBALL LIKE I KNOW EUROPEAN TAPESTRY</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>So let me now contribute this addendum to Harper Lee&#8217;s memorable book: courage isn&#8217;t a man with a gun in his hand - it&#8217;s a man with a sign that reads &#8220;MARK MAY KNOWS FOOTBALL LIKE I KNOW EUROPEAN TAPESTRY&#8221;.</p>
<p>Courage can also be defined as a sign combining aspects of Stewart Bradley, Nebraska&#8217;s stand out linebacker who was drafted by the Eagles in the third round of the 2007 draft, with the body and legs of a horse to produce a centaur, a kind of visual play on words given the Trojan Horse. Why is this courageous? Because the intrepid man who performed this feat of strength never knew Bradley. The idea for it came up over a period of years during which the creator and a number of friends had repeated run-ins with Bradley - none of them direct and certainly none of them violent - and were wowed, again and again, by his &#8220;almost animal&#8221; look and the understanding that, if this were <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayao_Miyazaki">Hiyao Miyazaki&#8217;s</a> world, Bradley would&#8217;ve been born the magical, mythical creature that is a centaur. Said creator found his picture of Bradley - wearing the black shirt signifying a starter on Nebraska&#8217;s defense - during a party at a football player&#8217;s house and gamely swiped it; after several months with that poster and additional pictures he intended to use to make this centaur come alive he began to worry that, some day, another footballer would come to his house during a party and wonder, not without reason, why there appeared to be a shrine of some sort to Stewart Bradley. And that would beget violence. As Bradley&#8217;s collegiate playing days neared an end and the dream of creating a centaur poster out of him began to pick up, one cohort explained shakily:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Me and [Bradley] were in the same class last year and he kept looking at me. It freaked me out. I kept thinking, &#8220;Shit. Shit. What if he knows? What if he knows we think he looks like a centaur? And that we&#8217;ve been thinking this for years? And that we&#8217;re gonna turn him into a sign? What if he <em>knows</em>?&#8221; Because centaurs can sense that kind of thing. But he just stared through me in that Stewart Bradley way.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>I am waiting for an email with a picture to explain, but make no doubt about it: my coming unto Memorial Stadium the second of three times was heralded by no less than a centaur named Stewart Bradley straight out of Narnia, and the rest of the day took on the surreal tint of fantasy with one flick of a Kinko-enlarged horse tail.</p>
<p><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1105/1412554303_e0bbaf400e.jpg?v=1190303191" height="500" width="375" /></p>
<p><em>Waiting no longer&#8230; thank you to Anna of Omaha for the picture. And the DD&#8217;ing. And the Georgia peach. And&#8230;.</em></p>
<p>I cannot tell you in all honesty what took place Saturday. It was a day of wonders. I assaulted myself with alcohol, tobacco and narcotics. A star fell from the sky in the West, and we took it for an omen. I think Atlantis rose again. Somewhere in there, a game was played. Some of it was honorable; some of it was a farce; and somehow, USC kicked off the first half and the second half with&#8230; kickoffs? But from 7:35 AM to two in the morning, the kind of energy that was lacking for the first half of my stay in Lincoln manifested itself at last and everywhere there was fire and wind and floodlights. It felt like the End of the World, and I had a Ticket to Section 20. Lincoln was, at long last, something more than just nice: it was, once again, after so long and for at least a few moments, College Football Town, USA.</p>
<p>The next day I drove to Marion, Illinois. Why? Because a guy named blemblam (not his real name, which is much more ridiculous) has shepherded me from day one and provided tickets, encouragement and, in this case, an actual hotel room in Marion. He is emblematic of the kindness I&#8217;ve seen on the road, though he does not represent the unexpected kindnesses that have been so wonderful and satisfying because his was wholly expected: he is good people. Whatever else I&#8217;ve learned while traveling - and there have been many lessons, mainly involving what to do after getting robbed - always bows to this one final dictum: when you least expect it, people will go out of their way to help you. And when you do expect it though you shouldn&#8217;t because nothing is ever certain, they come through in ways that are unimaginable even if you have, like me, an imagination that doesn&#8217;t need the aid of hallucinogens.</p>
<p><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1263/1397209013_b7afd9f2a2.jpg?v=0" /></p>
<p><em>Benefactor extraordinaire.</em></p>
<p>So what else was I to do when, leaving Nebraska and on my way to Marion, I spotted a guy holding a hitchhiking thumb up on an on-ramp for US 29 South near the Nebraska-Iowa border? His sign said &#8220;St. Joseph, 90 miles&#8221;. I pulled over, and he got in.</p>
<p>Wilson is 53. I found this out haphazardly as I found out most things about him. He rambled on in an admirable way, switching quickly to new subjects with a zest to make them his own in the manner of incorrigibly unsettling strangers who colonize conversation topics the way the conquistadors did the Americas: with the brute force of blunt ideology and the septic casualness that comes from a lifetime of marginal living and smallpox immunity.</p>
<p>Physically Wilson is dessicated, burnt skin, unshaven and surrounded by that deep down smell you only get by not showering or washing your clothes for more than ten days. Except for the dessication I know it all very well. My first indication that it would be an interesting ride was when, not two miles from where I picked him up, we passed another hitchhiker with a sign that said &#8220;St. Joseph&#8221;. I asked Wilson if we should stop for him, though I added it&#8217;d be a tight fit given that my backseat is actually a bed filled with belongings.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fuck &#8216;im,&#8221; he said, and I drove on. Right about then I thought several things: 1) This is going to make good copy. 2) If he knifes me in the throat while I&#8217;m driving then we both die, so it would behoove me to not pull over again. 3) I wonder what he thinks about Florida pantsing Tennessee?</p>
<p>Turns out Wilson don&#8217;t give a fuck about Tennessee. In fact, they&#8217;re all a bunch of liars down there. Florida ain&#8217;t so bad. Good weather, nice looking titties. If they did beat the living shit outta Tennessee then good on them.</p>
<p>(&#8221;This really is going to make good copy,&#8221; I thought to myself, but quietly, because I&#8217;ve read/seen enough Stephen King to know that hitchhikers have a good fifty percent chance of being telepathic.)</p>
<p>We talk for a good hour on the way to St. Joseph. Wilson worked a lot of construction, did odd jobs on the Gulf Coast and ended up in Shreveport, Louisiana six or seven years before Katrina. This prompts me to ask him if he ever saw Evangel Christian HS play, because USC&#8217;s starting quarterback John David Booty played for ECHS and was the first high schooler to skip his senior year entirely and wasn&#8217;t that something?</p>
<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t a Christian,&#8221; Wilson replies. Thus ended one string of our conversation.</p>
<p>Wilson drops in these conversation enders every now and then, but for the most part he converses freely about old jobs, women, politics (all of Louisiana is corrupt and will fall into a pit soon enough), food, culture, old TV shows, Dick Butkus (&#8221;He was meaner than Hell and that&#8217;s the only way you ought to play&#8221;), the uselessness of basketball, hockey, soccer, golf, etc. compared to baseball and football, cars, and Merle Haggard.</p>
<p>(I resist the temptation to instantly blurt out &#8220;<a href="http://www.theonion.com/content/node/34254">Merle Haggard haggard</a>!&#8221;)</p>
<p>Wilson is, if not exactly enthusiastic, supportive of my road trip: &#8220;You&#8217;ve got to get out and see the world. If I had stayed in Texas it woulda been shit.&#8221;</p>
<p>On the subject of traveling: &#8220;I get treated like shit a lot. You&#8217;d be surprised how many people out there&#8217;d kill you as soon as look at you. Being poor is a crime in America.&#8221;</p>
<p>On kindness on the road: &#8220;Sometimes you find it. But more often than not it&#8217;s just cops hassling you and people asking you to leave. When all I wanna do is sleep it can be hell. Just so much shit to deal with just to sleep, you know? Hitchhiking ain&#8217;t what it used to be.&#8221;</p>
<p>On Baton Rouge: &#8220;Don&#8217;t go there. Stay away.&#8221;</p>
<p>On college football: &#8220;Oklahoma. Oklahoma&#8217;s my team. Fuck Texas. Nothing good ever happened to me there.&#8221;</p>
<p>As we get closer to St. Joseph I ask Wilson what&#8217;s there, to which he replies, &#8220;My daughter.&#8221; It&#8217;s as emphatic a conversation ender as he&#8217;s uttered, and I step away from the gaping abyss with a deft shuffle that would make any corner proud. I let him off near an exchange leading to St. Joseph and he thanks me then turns around without even a wave and walks off.</p>
<p>And now I&#8217;m in Murfreesboro, Tennessee to watch Western Kentucky play Middle Tennessee State. And after that Alabama. Let me say this for the south so far: no one&#8217;s allowed me to pay for a meal or a drink yet.</p>
<dl><strong>States visited: </strong> California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee.   </dl>
<dl><strong>Miles traveled: </strong>3,400ish. </dl>
<dl><strong>Times towed: </strong>Once. But I walked two miles to get my car back, so there.</dl>
<dl><strong>Games watched (at least partially):</strong> West Virginia/Maryland, Oklahoma State/Troy, Pittsburgh/Michigan State, Notre Dame/Michigan, Nebraska/USC</dl>
<dl><strong>Family members seen: </strong>Two.</dl>
<dl><strong>Duration of family time:</strong> Ten minutes, because no one wants to miss kickoff. </dl>
<dl><strong>USC Panic-Meter:</strong> Low. Too low. Oh my god. Something bad&#8217;s going to happen, isn&#8217;t it? </dl>
</div>
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/week-three-usc-49-nebraska-31-european-tapestry-a-centaur-wilson.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/week-three-usc-49-nebraska-31-european-tapestry-a-centaur-wilson.php</guid>
<category>Texas</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 20 Sep 2007 09:42:20 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Top 10 Most Memorable Games in the Carroll Era</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <p><em>Ben Malcolmson, USCRipsIt.com</em></p>
<p><img src="http://uscripsit.com/UserFiles/ndbushpushbig.jpg" width="450" /></p>
<p>Coach Pete Carroll has been on the sidelines for 78 games in his six-plus years at USC. And a fair share of those have been quite unforgettable. Below are the Top 10 Most Memorable Games in the Pete Carroll Era, ranked in descending order, followed by a list of honorable mention games. USCRipsIt.com, with some input from the coaching staff, compiled the ranking&#8230; <a href="http://uscripsit.com/news/newspage.php?news_id=1069" target="_blank">continue</a>
</p>

    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/top-10-most-memorable-games-in-the-carroll-era.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/top-10-most-memorable-games-in-the-carroll-era.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2007 19:16:30 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>The 25-Carry Back</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <p>Does he exist?&nbsp; Is he endangered?&nbsp; Is he extinct?</p><p>We've all read and heard from scouts, coaches and analysts talk about someone being a 25-carry back.&nbsp; Such a player is given idealized status among tailbacks.&nbsp; He is a heroic figure, durable and dependable and highly prized by fans and coach alike.</p><p>But is he real?&nbsp; Are we being fooled?&nbsp; Is the 25-carry-back a relic, a throwback?</p><p>After looking at some data, I was surprised to find he's still kicking around but not as we classically interpret him.&nbsp; In my mind's eye, the 25-carry-back was someone like Marcus Allen.&nbsp; A player who could be counted on to carry the ball nearly 30 times every game.&nbsp; We can throw in names like Eric Dickerson, Walter Payton and Barry Sanders as well to give us an idea who exactly is being talked about.</p><p>Sadly, those guys are throwbacks.&nbsp; The modern 25-carry-back does it different.</p><p>Among the <a target="_blank" href="http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/natlRank.jsp?year=2006&div=4&rpt=IA_playerrush&site=org">NCAA's top 100 D-IA rushers in 2006</a>, only Rutgers' Ray Rice averaged more than 25 carries a game.&nbsp; Just one guy!<br /></p><p>I went through the data and compiled a spreadsheet which recorded the number of games each top 100 rusher played and how many times he had 25 or more carries in a game.&nbsp; The results can be seen in the chart below:</p><p><span class="full-image-float-none"><img alt="25-Carry-Backs-Chart.jpg" src="http://www.collegefootballresource.com/storage/25-Carry-Backs-Chart.jpg" /></span> <br /><em><strong>(Games with 25+ carries on the vertical, back NCAA rankings 1-100 on the horizontal)</strong></em></p><p>Not one player reached the 25-carry mark more than six times.&nbsp; Fresno State's Dwayne Wright had the best overall rate, but that meant he went for 25+ carries in only 50 per cent of his games.</p><p>Looking at the data, the conclusion I drew was that today's backs can still do the 25-carry-a-game thing, but not with the alleged regularity of days past.&nbsp; He's not completely gone, but he's also a rare bird indeed.&nbsp; When someone says a player is a 25-carry back and they're talking about someone who can't/doesn't do it at least 4-6 times a year, I now reserve the right to call BS.</p><p>Looking at my spreadsheet, I would only give that honor to a handful of backs, namely Dwayne Wright (six games with 25+ carries in 2006), P.J. Hill (6), Mike Hart (6), Garrett Wolfe (5), Ian Johnson (5), Ray Rice (5), Darren McFadden (5), Tony Hunt (5) and Tanard Choice (5).&nbsp; And if we're feeling generous, maybe mention the following players (all with four games at 25+ carries): Dennis Kennedy, Mark Bonds, Branden Ore, Amir Pinnix, Kevin Smith and Damion Fletcher.&nbsp; At most, that's 15 out of 100 backs who can do that 25-carry thing at a rate supposedly much lower than their forebears.</p><p>Why is this?&nbsp; I'm not a rocket scientist but most of the reasons are obvious.</p><ol><li>Passing's up.&nbsp; The college game at present is quite pass-happy.&nbsp; The days of Student Body Right and Three Yards and a Cloud of Dust have given way to the spread, Mike Leach's pass-pass-pass style and the west coast offense and all its variants.</li><li>Split backfields.&nbsp; Many <a target="_blank" href="http://collegefootball.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=668511">teams are opting for &quot;thunder and lightning&quot; tandems in their backfield</a>.&nbsp; This reduces the wear-and-tear on both backs and forces opponents to prepare for multiple running styles and abilities.&nbsp; It also asks backs capable of being the workhorse to make like Marshawn Lynch instead of Mike Hart.</li><li>Backs as receivers.&nbsp; Blame the west coast offense with its quick-hitters to backs and fullbacks.&nbsp; As backs become more involved in the passing game their carries can go down either situationally or due to stamina issues.</li><li>Specialists.&nbsp; If the split backfield wasn't enough, teams often utilize a waterbug third down specialist who can run and receive and log a few touches a game.&nbsp; Again, this reduces carries for a primary back who might otherwise be having another 25-carry day.</li><li>Running quarterbacks.&nbsp; The option is all but dead in college football, but running quarterbacks give defenses fits and steal carries from competent backfield mates.&nbsp; Pat White's phenomenal run ability meant that teammate Steve Slaton was the only top-10 rusher in the NCAA to reach the 25-carry plateau just twice in 13 games.</li></ol>Conclusion: nothing you didn't already know.&nbsp; We're in a different ballgame but it's annoying just the same to hear commentators ramble on about 25-carry backs.&nbsp; I've provided some data (in the chart and also in a rudimentary excel spreadsheet for download below) that is a snapshot of the NCAA's top 100 rushers from 2006 that shows most backs just aren't carrying the ball 25 times a game right now.&nbsp; The best of them don't do it more than five or six times a season.&nbsp; The result is not so much a bell curve but a small cluster near the top of the rankings followed by a lengthy tail of backs who are happy to avoid the 25-carry mark all but a few times a season.<br />
    
      
  
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<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/the-25carry-back.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/the-25carry-back.php</guid>
<category>Marcus Allen</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 03 May 2007 09:47:15 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>CFN: Rose Bowl will be best Bowl Game</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>USC vs Michigan gets top billing because:</p>

<blockquote>The BCS Championship game is bigger, but this is the one you really want to watch. It's a matchup of the 2007 preseason No. 1 vs. preseason No. 2. </blockquote>

<p>That's right, the winner of the Granddaddy will be a preseason No. 1.</p>

<p><a href="http://cfn.scout.com/2/597354.html">Ranking the Bowl Games from 1 to 32</a> [Scout.com via <a href="http://">Student Body Right</a>]</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/cfn-rose-bowl-will-be-best-bowl-game.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/cfn-rose-bowl-will-be-best-bowl-game.php</guid>
<category>BCS</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Dec 2006 18:06:15 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Time to Join the TrojanWire Pickin&apos; Derby is Running Out!</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>With the season bearing down like a <del>Mack truck</del> Trojan linebacker, don't forget to join the TrojanWire Pickin' Derby -- your chance to win T-Wire stickers and other goodies.  To enter, simply <a href="http://football.fantasysports.yahoo.com/college/register/joinprivategroup">click here</a>, and then enter the league info:</p>

<blockquote><strong>Group ID#: 17080<br />
Password: booty</strong></blockquote>

<p>Once you've entered, just submit your picks every week (5 minutes before the first game kicks off) to compete in the Derby.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/time-to-join-the-trojanwire-pickin-derby-is-running-out.php</link>
<guid>http://www.trojanwire.com/football/time-to-join-the-trojanwire-pickin-derby-is-running-out.php</guid>
<category>Games</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 31 Aug 2006 15:06:03 -0800</pubDate>
</item>


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