Ron Zook, who was drummed out as Florida's head coach
after failing to duplicate Steve Spurrier's record with the Gators,
regained a measure of respect by motivating his Fighting Illini to a
28-21 upset of No. 1-ranked and unbeaten Ohio State Saturday (11-10-07).
The
victory marked the first time Illinois (8-3) had beaten a No. 1-ranked
team since 1956, and the first time it had done it away from home. The
loss ended Ohio State's conference and school streak of 20 consecutive
Big 10 wins by the Buckeyes, who are now 10-1.
The defeat not
only dampened Ohio State's dream of a national championship, it left
the Buckeyes tied with Michigan for the top spot in the Big 10 as
Wisconsin upset Michigan 37-21 the same day.
Not since Nov. 14,
1959 had Michigan and Ohio State both lost the week before their annual
year-end grudge match to decide the Big 10 title. This is how it is in
the Big 10, tiresome and boring as in recent years it is always Ohio
State or Michigan capturing the title. Other Big 10 teams compete but
never seem to challenge for the title.
Illinois picked up 260
yards rushing against Ohio State that came into the game giving up only
65 yards on the ground per game. This was not a huge surprise as the
Illini now rank 6th in rushing offense nationally, gaining 261 yards
per game. In other words, Illinois was on its game and Ohio State was
not.
Zook had a slow start as the Illinois head coach, going 2-9
and 2-10 his first two years before picking up his 8th win Saturday
against 3 losses. Zook was 1-15 in his first two years of Big 10
Conference play, going 0-8 his first year. You can bet the other Big 10
coaches know who Ron Zook is now.
Was Ohio State looking past Illinois to Michigan? I think so. The Buckeyes dropped to No. 7 in the AP Top 25 Poll.
No.
13-ranked Michigan (now 8-3) was knocked off by Wisconsin (also 8-3),
37-21. The Badgers meant business at home by taking a 23-7 lead into
the 4th quarter and matching the Wolverines 2 touchdowns to keep their
point margin and preserve their victory. Michigan slid to No. 23 in the
AP Poll.
No. 8-ranked Boston College (8-2) got stung for the
second straight week, this time by Maryland (5-5), 42-35. All of the
talk about the Eagles vaunted defense is fading away faster than fog on
a hot summer day.
Other teams that were embarrassed this week
included No. 16-ranked Connecticut (8-2), which lost to Cincinnati
(obviously a better 8-2 team), 27-3, and No. 21-ranked Alabama (now
6-4) which was upended by Mississippi State, (also 6-4), 17-12.
Imagine,
Mississippi State, which has been the doormat of the SEC for years,
rises up and whips Nick Saban's Alabama Crimson Tide. Even if the
Bulldogs lose to Arkansas and in-state rival Mississippi, Mississippi
State is already bowl eligible.
Alabama should handle Louisiana-Monroe next week and become bowl eligible with its 7th victory.
The
loss by Ohio State allowed some other contenders to show off a little
against much weaker competition. Here are some examples:
1) No. 2-ranked LSU (9-1) blistered No. 107-rated Louisiana Tech (4-6), 58-10.
2) No. 4-ranked Oklahoma (9-1) ripped No. 119-rated Baylor (3-8), 52-21.
3)
No. 19-ranked Boise State (9-1) rolled past hapless No. 166-rated Utah
State (0-10), 52-0. Despite its rating, Utah State is a Division 1A
school.
Only two 1A teams remain unbeaten-No. 5-ranked Kansas
(10-0) and No. 14-ranked Hawaii (9-0). The Jayhawks spotted No.
49-rated Oklahoma State (5-5) 4 touchdowns but still won 43-28.
The
Hawaii Warriors, ranked No. 14 but rated No. 29 by Sagarin, were
outscored 14-3 in the 4th quarter by No. 74-rated Fresno State (6-4)
but outlasted the Bulldogs, 37-30, to stay undefeated. Hawaii moved up
to 13th in Sunday's new AP Poll.
In two weeks, Hawaii will host
Boise State, now ranked 17th in the Poll, and a serious threat, even in
an away game, to beat the Warriors. Boise State is not to be confused
with the cupcakes Hawaii has been playing all season. After the Boise
State game, we will find out who is bad and who is sad.
The fact
that Kansas and Hawaii are the only two unbeaten teams left should come
as no surprise for two reasons. One, Hawaii is 1st (50 points per game)
and Kansas 2nd (45 ppg) nationally in scoring offense, and two, Kansas'
strength of schedule is 97th and Hawaii's is 157th among 119 Division
1A schools, not exactly impressive in either case.
Two other games deserve notice: the Navy-North Texas fiasco and the looming Harvard -Yale showdown in the Ivy League.
No.
77-rated Navy (6-4) hung on for dear life to beat No. 180-rated North
Texas (1-8), 74-62, in a game without a shred of defense that set a new
major college record for a combined game score. The 94 first-half
points (North Texas led 49-45) and the 63 combined points in the 2nd
quarter both set major college scoring records.
Just two weeks earlier, Weber State outlasted Portland State, 73-68, to set the all-divisions record.
These
basketball-score football games tend to confuse everyone. Clearly,
there is more interest in a 73-68 game than a 6-3 pushing match that
highlights defensive play. That said, these high-scoring games are
getting ridiculous. They remind me of Little League baseball scores
before they put on limits so everyone could go home and get to bed on
time.
Harvard (7-2) beat Penn (3-6) 23-7 and Yale (9-0) remained
undefeated, winning at Princeton (another 3-6 team), 27-6, to set up a
huge showdown at Yale in the 1-AA Ivy League. Both Harvard (rated
152nd) and Yale (rated 100th) are a perfect 6-0 in league play and will
meet undefeated for the first time since 1968 with the title on the
line.
Last year Yale beat Harvard at Harvard 34-13 to claim a
share of the Ivy League title with Princeton. The win over Harvard last
year was its first since 2000. Stay tuned to this match-up as it is
serious business in the New England area.
Copyright © 2007 Ed Bagley
Ed
Bagley's Blog Publishes Original Articles with Analysis and Commentary
on 5 Subjects: Sports, Movie Reviews, Lessons in Life, Jobs and
Careers, and Internet Marketing. My intention is to inform, educate,
delight and motivate you the reader.
Read my articles on "How to
Predict When Teams Are Overrated and Due for an Unexpected Loss", "The
Sagarin Ratings: What They Are, How to Read Them and What to Do With
Them" and my 14 consecutive weekly wrap-up articles on the 2007 College
Football Season.