Archive for January, 2011

Auburn and Oregon decide who is the No. 1 team in the country

Race to the finish

There will be plenty of high-octane horsepower on display tonight as Auburn and Oregon decide who is the No. 1 team in the country

By BLAIR KERKHOFF
KANSAS CITY STAR

Jan. 9, 2011, 10:52PM

photo
Dave Martin AP

Auburn QB Cam Newton has been the center of attention throughout the season — on and off the field.

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Oregon has the fastest car. Auburn has the best driver. The college football season is a race to the finish.

Don’t blink tonight during the BCS Championship Game or you will miss the Ducks’ “blur” offense or Tigers quarterback Cam Newton streaking by.

The nation’s most entertaining teams are the last ones standing, making the game at University of Phoenix Stadium a college football grand finale.

“I know it’s a hot ticket,” Auburn coach Gene Chizik said.

As hot as the participants: the top-ranked Tigers (13-0), champions of the Southeastern Conference and college football’s ruling class, and the second-ranked Ducks (12-0), the dominant champion of the Pac-10.

Neither was expected in the BCS title game. Both started the season ranked outside the top 10, and their process to perfection differed.

Four times this season, Auburn erased double-digit deficits, with no hole deeper than the one it dug on Nov. 26 at Alabama.

The defending national champion and bitter rival Crimson Tide opened a 24-0 lead, and BCS analysts quickly were computing the Tigers’ chances of reaching the title game with one loss.

But as he did against Clemson, Georgia and South Carolina, Newton rallied the troops for an improbable?28-27 comeback.

“We’re all about finishing, and that’s why we’re here now,” Auburn linebacker Josh Bynes said.

Who could blame the Tigers for carrying a sense of invincibility?

“I think the chemistry of our team was built on the fact that we’ve had to win games about every way you can win them,” Chizik said. “We’ve had to win them late, with offense, defense and special teams. When you do that, it can’t do anything but help.”

It also doesn’t hurt to have the game’s best player.

In his major-college debut season, Newton has been the center of attention throughout the season — on and off the field.

Season to remember

In one of the most dominant individual seasons in the game’s history, Newton took over a team that finished 3-5 in the SEC and passed for 2,589 yards and 28 touchdowns and rushed for 1,409 and 20 touchdowns.

News broke about midway through the season that Newton’s father Cecil had tried to sell his son’s ability to Mississippi State for $180,000 after Cam’s year at Blinn College in Texas.

The NCAA ruled Cam Newton didn’t know about this. He was ruled ineligible for one day and then reinstated. The investigation is ongoing.

“I look back on it and consider it a blessing,” Newton said. “I think the whole process has made me stronger.”

Oregon’s offense runs teams into exhaustion with a no-huddle spread that attacks on two levels. The Ducks’ team speed, starting with running back LaMichael James, is difficult enough to defend.

But with Oregon’s fast-forward approach, defenses are challenged to keep pace.

“It makes it so teams can’t sub,” James said. “That’s a big key for us. They get tired, and they have the wrong personnel group in.”

Your pace or mine?

Chizik said his Tigers will do all they can to slow down Oregon, including a pregame review of the rule book with the officiating crew from the Big Ten. The Auburn coach said he will want the crew to be a stickler for the rule that allows defensive substitutions when the offense changes personnel.

“The officials meet with us before every game, and that will be a big discussion,” Chizik said.

Let it be, said Ducks coach Chip Kelly.

“When we want to play fast, we know the rules,” Kelly said. “If we’re trying to play at a fast tempo, we’re not trying to sub in those situations.”

Oregon has the weapons to take full advantage. James leads the nation in rushing at 152 yards per game. Quarterback Darron Thomas, an unknown when the season started, efficiently engineers the scheme. He has thrown 28 touchdown passes with only seven interceptions.

Two games defined Oregon’s season. On Oct. 2, the Ducks ran away from Stanford 52-31, handing the Cardinal their only loss this season. The offense was stymied for the only time all season at California in November, but Oregon pulled out a 15-13 victory.

Call that one an aberration, Thomas said.

“We just feel like nobody can stop us but ourselves,” he said.

There’s a fresh feeling about this game. Oregon, which has played in two previous BCS bowl games, has never won a football championship.

It’s Auburn’s second BCS bowl game, and the Tigers are looking to add a national championship trophy to put alongside the hardware from its only other one, from 1957.

“We’ll have thousands of fans here from Auburn that won’t have a ticket,” Chizik said. “We have former NFL players that are off the hook with excitement about this. It’s been a long time for our fans.”

A.J. Green makes exit official, and Dogs lose best weapon

12:56 pm January 9, 2011, by Jeff Schultz

The next time you see A.J. Green do this, it will be in the NFL.The next time you see A.J. Green do this, it will be in the NFL.

The least surprising Georgia transaction of this offseason could have the greatest impact.

Bulldogs wide receiver A.J. Green ended the lack-of-suspense Sunday: He will pass up his senior season and declared himself eligible for the NFL draft.

Bulldogs coach Mark Richt will have a difficult enough time trying to turn around a team that went 6-7 this season, including 3-5 in the SEC. But now he has lost his team’s best weapon and quarterback Aaron Murray’s No. 1 target.

This was a foregone conclusion. Green, who had 23 touchdowns and 166 receptions in 32 games, can’t improve his draft stock. Actually, the only thing that could have elevated where he will be taken in the draft just happened — Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck, the expected first overall pick,  announced he is returning to Stanford.

That means Green could be the first overall selection. At the very least, he is a lock to go in the top five picks. The last wide receiver to go first overall was Keyshawn Johnson in 1996. Georgia Tech’s Calvin Johnson went second overall three years ago (behind quarterback JaMarcus Russell).

“While it was a difficult decision, it came down to the opportunity of pursuing a dream I’ve had since early childhood,” Green said in a statement. “But Georgia is a great place and I’m so appreciative of the opportunity to be a Georgia Bulldog. I want to thank the coaches, my teammates and the fans who have supported me and helped me grow not only as a player but as a man.”

So now that it’s official, how do you expect Green’s departure to impact the Bulldogs?

A.J. Green could be No. 1 overall pick in NFL draft

9:14 am January 7, 2011, by Jeff Schultz

A.J. Green could be Georgia's second No. 1 overall NFL draft pick in the last three years, joining Matthew Stanford.A.J. Green could be Georgia’s second No. 1 overall NFL draft pick in the last three years, joining Matthew Stanford.

With Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck announcing that he’s returning to school for another season, there’s only one question:  Does A.J. Green send him a thank you note?

If Green says he’s coming back to Georgia, it would be even more stunning than Luck’s decision. I follow this general rule: When a college player sells his Independence Bowl jersey for $1,000, he’s ready to make money.

By Luck staying in school, Green could be the first overall pick. That would give Georgia two first overall selections in the last three years (Matthew Stafford went No. 1 to Detroit in 2008.) It would be a nice honor for the school but there also could be a sense of, “Why didn’t we do more with them?”

Green is considered a lock top-five selection. ESPN’s Mel Kiper ranked Green as the fourth best prospect on his current “Big Board” (requires Insider subscription), behind Luck, Clemson defensive end Da’Quan Bowers and Auburn defensive tackle Nick Fairley.

With no other quarterback worthy of being drafted first overall, there’s no obvious No. 1 pick. But several mock drafts already have Green slotted in the No. 1 spot and going to the Carolina Panthers. Excerpts from a couple of them:

The Orlando Sentinel: “Carolina has got to be upset that Andrew Luck, who was a lock here, is returning to Stanford. They could go with a defensive lineman here, but they are hurting bad at wide receiver and may take Green as an athletic, flashy pick to try and help Jimmy Clausen and pacify a restless fan base.”

NFL Fanhouse: “So Andrew Luck won’t be the QB in Carolina next season. It’s a bad development for the Panthers, obviously, but what can you do? In this case, Carolina will either ride Jimmy Clausen or add a veteran QB (Vince Young? Donovan McNabb?) — either way, the Panthers need to give that quarterback some weapons. Green is an absolute stud.

Based on recent first overall picks and inflation, Luck left potentially $55 million of guaranteed salary on the table (pending changes in the next CBA that could cap rookie salaries). Two years ago, Stafford signed a contract worth up to $78 million, with $41.7 million guaranteed.

Maybe he and Green can build a library on campus or something.

UGA VIII treated for cancer; responding well

By Merritt Melancon – merritt.melancon@onlineathens.com

Published Saturday, January 08, 2011

Uga VIII, the mascot for University of Georgia athletic teams, has been diagnosed with lymphoma but is responding well to treatment.

http://images.morris.com/images/athens/mdControlled/cms/2011/01/08/767230686.jpg David Manning || Uga VIII, named Big Bad Bruce, has been diagnosed with lymphoma, a treatable but still fatal form of canine cancer.
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David Manning
Uga VIII, named Big Bad Bruce, has been diagnosed with lymphoma, a treatable but still fatal form of canine cancer.

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Originally named Big Bad Bruce, 1-year-old Uga VIII took over mascot duties in October but missed the Liberty Bowl on Dec. 30 because of a gastrointestinal bug.

Medical tests revealed that he’s got lymphoma, a treatable but still fatal form of canine cancer of the lymphatic system.

Specialists at the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine are treating Uga, including his primary veterinarian and namesake, Dr. Bruce Hollett, who has provided medical care for the Uga line for many years.

So far, Uga is responding well to treatment, said Claude Felton, associate athletic director.

“This news will certainly command the attention of all Georgia fans and supporters as well as others who follow collegiate athletics around the country, all (of whom), I’m sure will be following his progress closely with the greatest of hopes,” Felton said.

Uga VIII is the great-great-great-great-great grandson of the original Uga. Introduced to fans at homecoming this year, Uga VIII was born Sept. 12, 2009, and replaced Uga VII, who died of a heart condition at just 4 years old. The Seiler family of Savannah has provided mascots for UGA sporting events since 1956.

The Seilers did not return phone calls Friday checking on Uga’s specific condition.

Canine lymphoma is the most common form of canine cancer, said Dr. Nicole Northrup, a veterinary oncologist at UGA’s College of Veterinary Medicine.

While she could not comment on Uga’s case in particular, between 80 percent and 90 percent of dogs diagnosed with lymphoma go into full remission after chemotherapy and most live for another year or two in remission, Northrup said. Veterinarians are able to cure less than 10 percent of dogs.

Northrup sees several dogs with lymphoma in her office every day, she said. The disease affects all breeds, and while it is more common in middle-age dogs, Northrup has seen it in puppies who are only a few months old, she said.

Every case of canine lymphoma and every patient is unique, she said.

While researchers are currently studying several factors that might cause lymphoma in dogs, there is not a clear-cut cause, Northrup said.

The most common treatment for canine lymphoma is chemotherapy.

“A lot of people have family members who have been through chemotherapy or have been through it themselves and know it’s pretty tough on people,” Northrup said. “When we treat animals, we use lower doses because our goal is to prolong their survival but also maintain their quality of life.

“Our patients typically lead happy, healthy, normal lives on chemo,” she added. “You can come into our office and some of the healthiest-looking patients in the waiting room are the oncology patients undergoing chemotherapy. They come in and they get their chemotherapy, and then they go home and they can swim, and run outside or lay in front of TV if that’s what they want to do.”

Uga is expected to continue to appear at athletic events, but if he cannot, Russ, the half-brother of Uga VII, will fill in for him.

Russ served in the role at the final two games of the 2009 season following the death of Uga VII as well as the first six games of 2010. He also worked the sidelines at the Liberty Bowl.

Originally published in the Athens Banner-Herald on Saturday, January 08, 2011
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