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The Fifth Quarter: Week 3 Rewind

Notre Dame v Michigan State Getty Images

As is the case each and every season, each and every week, any omission below is not on purpose, it’s merely intentional.

WINNERS

Manti Te’o
The All-American linebacker lost both his grandmother and longtime girlfriend in less than 24 hours earlier this week, and yet still played in No. 20 Notre Dame’s game against No. 10 Michigan State.  Te’o's teammates rose to the emotional occasion, stifling the Spartans’ offensively in the 20-3 loss.  ”I miss them, I miss them,” Te’o said after the win, adding, “but I know I’ll see them again one day.”  If you’re like me you likely can’t even begin to wrap your head around the gut-wrenching pain Te’o took to the field, and how heartbreaking the young man’s week has been, but there was some solace for the player in being surrounded by his football family in a time of unimaginable grief.

No Luck, no problem pwning Trojans
Dang, what’s your deal Stanford?  The past three seasons, Stanford has had USC’s number, although that was with Andrew Luck under center for the Cardinal.  In the first Cardinal-Trojans matchup of the post-Luck era, it was the same old, same old for Stanford.  And a crushing blow for ‘SC on a couple of levels.  Not only did Stanford improve to 3-0 on the season to likely take a huge leap from No. 21 when the polls are released Sunday afternoon, it sent the Trojans to its first loss and what will likely be a hefty tumble from its lofty pre-game perch as the No. 2 team in the country.  Additionally, the loss dealt a crippling — but not entirely fatal — blow to Matt Barkley‘s Heisman chances.  But back to Stanford.  With this huge win, the Cardinal has shown that they may not need much if any Luck to maintain its presence as a viable contender in the Pac-12 — and perhaps on a bigger stage as well.

The best defense is a really great defense
There was some concern, given the attrition the unit suffered after winning its second BcS title in three years, that No. 1 Alabama’s defense could be very un-Saban-like in 2012.  Yeah, like Coach Woodcock would ever allow something like that to happen on his watch.  In three games this season, the Tide defense has given up a total of two touchdowns — and both of those came in the season opener against Michigan after the No. 1 Tide had built up a 31-0 lead.  Last season. the Tide led the nation in scoring defense (8.1 ppg), rushing defense (72.1 yards per game) and average yards per carry (2.4); this season, the numbers in those categories are at 4.7 ppg, 58 ypg and 2.1 ypc.  Add in a quarterback who’s quietly putting up Heisman-like numbers to go along with a punishing rushing attack, and you have the Tide taking on the look of a team that could very well become the first team since Nebraska in the mid-90′s to win three titles in a span of four years.

They’re, ummm, back?
OK, this time we really mean it.  We think.  No. 5 Florida State is back.  Maybe.  Preseason after preseason for the past several years, prognosticators would predict this would be the year the Seminoles returned to national prominence, only to see FSU trip and stumble all over themselves on its way to a fair-to-middlin season.  Based on the annihilation of vexing nemesis Wake Forest, that may very well be the case.  The 52-0 woodshedding of the Demon Deacons — attempting to drop FSU for the fifth time in seven years — wasn’t even remotely as close as the final score would indicate as the ‘Noles were in control in every aspect of the game.  Standing at 3-0 on the young season, the Seminoles have reached that rarefied air for the first time since 2005 — the last time, ironically enough, FSU captured an ACC crown.  While there is still a ways to go, and knowing full well how the last several seasons have played out, there’s still time for the ‘Noles to poop itself.  For the time being, though, if it walks like a national title contender, talks like a national title contender…

Gators chomping at the SEC East bit
Three games into the 2012 season, and it appears No. 18 Florida is going to make the SEC East a three-horse race.  After opening the season with a MAC pastry, the Gators went on the road for SEC play in back-to-back weeks — and came out with a pair of impressive wins.  First, UF ruined Texas A&M’s conference coming out party in College Station, then ruined the Knoxville GameDay party with a decisive 37-24 thumping of No. 23 Tennessee.  That means the Gators have six SEC games the remainder of the season: five at home or at a neutral site (Kentucky, LSU, Missouri and preseason East favorites South Carolina and Georgia) and just one true road game (at Vanderbilt).  The road to the SEC championship game in the East may still run through Athens and/or Columbia, but the school in Gainesville will very likely have something to say about which school gets the right to face the West champ in Atlanta in early December.

Karma
Randy Edsall left UConn following the 2011 season to take his “dream job” at Maryland, and did so without telling his players face-to-face.  Saturday, the Huskies, Edsall’s former team, dropped the Terps, Edsall’s current team, 24-21.  Karma, she’s a nasty, vindictive wench.  In 15 career games at his new job, Edsall’s Terps are 4-11.  Yep, karma.

Duke promoted to King
Miami running back Duke Johnson has scored six touchdowns in three games this season, including four in the win over Bethune-Cookman.  To say that Johnson is a home-run hitter barely scratches the surface as Johnson has scored on runs of 56, 54 and 28 yards; a pass that covered 50 yards; and a kickoff return of 95 yards.  His lone single of the young season was a one-yard TD run in Saturday’s win.  In his four-touchdown performance today, Johnson became the first FBS player since East Carolina’s Chris Johnson in 2007 with at least two rushing, one receiving and one return touchdown in the same game.  Too bad, though, Miami “fans” could care less about seeing one of the most exciting true freshman in the country live and in person (see below).

An uplifting Holliday at Duke
A little over two months after he suffered serious and life-threatening injuries in a jet ski accident, wide receiver Blair Holliday served as Duke’s honorary captain and led his teammates out onto the field for Saturday’s game against North Carolina Central.  In a statement released through the university, the Holliday family expressed thanks for the support they’ve received since the receiver’s accident during the Fourth of July holiday:

This journey has taken our family down paths we never would have imagined, and without the love and sustenance from so many individuals and groups, we would not have survived.  Without question, we have learned the magnitude and power of invocation!

Today is a special day for Blair.  Returning to Duke to share cherished moments with his teammates and friends has been a goal of his for several weeks.  While Blair has made significant progress with his rehabilitation, we have many challenges ahead.  Thank you for your continued support.

Willie Taggart’s agent
Western Kentucky downed in-state “rival” Kentucky 32-31 in overtime.  Taggart is now 9-6 over the past one-plus seasons at a school that’s been a full FBS member for just four years, and the third-year coach will be one of the hottest commodities on the next spinning of the coaching carousel.  Hence, Taggart’s agent is one lucky man, especially with a handful of jobs in the SEC and Pac-12 expected to open up between now and the end of the regular season.

A million rea$on$ to enjoy a good drubbing
FAU and Arkansas State received $1 million each from No. 7 Georgia and Nebraska, respectively, for their troubles Saturday.  While the athletic department coffers were stuffed off the field, their teams were crushed on it by a combined 65 points — 42-13 loss for ASU, 56-20 loss for FAU — and were outgained by a combined 646 yards.  So, uh, congrats on the paycheck games fellas?

LOSERS

Big Ten football
An embarrassing season-opening loss to Alabama by Michigan left Wisconsin. Nebraska and Michigan State as the national standard bearers  for the Big Ten.  Inexplicable losses by the Badgers and Cornhuskers in Week 2 to middle-of-the-pack Pac-12 schools left just the Spartans.  After Week 3?  2013 can’t get here fast enough for the conference.  MSU, the lone B1G school free of NCAA sanctions left with the talent  to maintain a presence at the BcS title table, was dropped in a 17-point loss to No. 20 Notre Dame.  So, after three weeks of the season, the only unbeaten teams left in the Big Ten that are eligible for the postseason — Ohio State is 3-0 but are banned from the conference championship game/bowl game — are Minnesota (chuckle) and Northwestern (giggle).  Regardless of how it’s spun, that’s a sad state of affairs for a conference that’s neither a leader nor a legend in 2012.

The state of Colorado
Colorado and Colorado State have combined to go 1-5 this season, with the lone win coming courtesy of the Rams season-opening trumping of… the Buffaloes.  Both teams lost to FCS schools in Week 2… and that wasn’t even the low point, at least for the Buffs.  Saturday, though, was.  The Buffs were eviscerated 69-14 by Fresno State in a game in which the Bulldogs actually stepped off CU’s throat in the second half.  At halftime, the Bulldogs led the Buffs 55-7 and had rolled up 516 yards of offense.  In the first quarter, Fresno scored 35 points and had 322 yards of offense.  Midway through the second quarter, the deficit was 48-0 before Fresno called off the dogs, so to speak.  It’s an abysmal and embarrassing situation for a Colorado football program that had moved into the Pac-12 last season — buyer’s remorse, anyone? — and could very well lead to second-year head coach Jon Embree‘s time at the school being very quick and extremely painful.

Holy crap, the Mayans were right
Bud Foster‘s Virginia Tech defense gave up 536 yards of total offense and 35 points to Pittsburgh — a team that came into this game ranked 66th and 108th , respectively, in those categories nationally — in a stunning 18-point loss for the No. 13 Hokies.  Plus, the Panthers’ first-year head coach is named Chryst, as an “anti.”  If that doesn’t prove the end of days is nigh, and the Mayans were indeed correct about the end of the world this December, I don’t know what does.

It’s been real, John L.
Entering 2012 with faint visions of BcS title contention, Arkansas watched as its season went up in flames in the loss to Louisiana-Monroe last weekend.  This weekend, Alabama took a leak all over the remaining embers.  It was highly doubtful that, barring at least an SEC West title, John L. Smith would remain on as the Razorbacks’ head coach past the the expiration of a contract that’s less than a year in length.  Based on the past two weeks, any and all doubt has all but been erased.  The only certainty in this situation?  The search for a new coach won’t be even remotely as entertaining as Smith’s brief stint as the Hogs’ head man.

“Let me get that chair for you, Mr. Chizik… oh my, it’s very warm”
You could hear the grumblings rumbling off The Plains after an 0-2 start: “That Gene Chizik, he’s in over his head without Cam Newton.”  Despite the first win of the season, the wolves that are howling about the Auburn head coach likely won’t lessen in volume at any point in the near future.  Yes, Auburn defeated Louisiana-Monroe.  Yes, a win is a win is a win.  No, though, it shouldn’t give any comfort to anyone with a vested interest in the football program that the Tigers were taken to overtime at home by a Sun Belt Conference school after watching ULM do the same thing to Arkansas seven days ago.  Despite that example, Chizik was flat out-coached by his counterpart on the opposing sidelines, Todd Berry.  With the likes of Nick Saban, Les Miles, Mark Richt, Steve Spurrier among others littering the conference, being outcoached by an SBC head coach is the most sobering thought of the day.

If the ‘Canes snack on a cupcake, and nobody witnesses it…

Apathy, thy name is Miami of Florida football:

That photo was snapped by Associated Press writer Tim Reynolds in the second quarter of Miami’s game Saturday vs. Bethune-Cookman. And that’s an embarrassment even by the previously low attendance standards set by Miami “fans,” and regardless of the level of competition. The U “faithful” should be ashamed of that pitiful display, perhaps even as much as the university was; reportedly, the attendance figures for the game were not announced in the press box as is customary.

The Joker’s mild… and just about cooked
In two-plus seasons at Kentucky, Joker Phillips has compiled a 12-16 record, including Saturday’s overtime loss to Western Kentucky of all teams.  While Phillips is widely described as one of the nicest coaches in the business, whether he makes it a fourth season — or even gets to finish his third — is very much up in the air and in doubt.  UK will always, always be a basketball school trying to find its football self in the hyper-competitive world of the SEC.  The Wildcats simply don’t have the talent pool from which to draw to overcome being outcoached, and that’s something that seems to happen on a weekly basis.  The high point of Phillip’s tenure at UK was the win over Tennessee last season which ended a 26-game losing streak against the Vols that dated back to 1984.  The low points, however, have been plentiful, including the loss to WKU.  Too many, in fact, for Phillips to survive beyond 2012.

TOP 25 TOO-CLOSE-FOR-COMFORT
How ranked teams endured close shaves vs. unranked opponents

– No. 12 Ohio State 35, Cal 28: The only thing standing between a Buckeyes’ win and yet another embarrassment for the Big Ten was a 72-yard touchdown pass with 3:26 to play.  Well, that and yet another game of superb play from sophomore Braxton Miller.

– No. 16 TCU 20, Kansas 6: Simply put, the Horned Frogs should’ve beat a really bad Jayhawks team by at least double the final score, even being on the road.  There’s little doubt that the fiery Gary Patterson will use this game as a “teachable moment” for his young squad.

– No. 19 Louisville 39, North Carolina 34: It was literally a tale of two halves for the Cardinals, who started a season 3-0 for the first time since 2006.  After jumping out to a 36-7 lead at the half, the ‘Ville was outscored 27-3 the rest of the way as the Tar Heels nearly pulled off the upset.  As will likely be the case with Patterson. Charlie Strong will no doubt hammer home the concept of putting away an inferior opponent when you have the opportunity.

CFT TOP FIVE
A snapshot look at how my ballot would look Monday if I, ya know, had a real vote instead of a measly and meaningless preseason poll.

1. Alabama — This early in the season, there’s the Tide and then a huge gap to anyone else.  In the first three games, ‘Bama has outscored its opponents 128-14, including two straight shutouts. (Last week: No. 1)
Up next: vs. FAU

2. LSU — This spuds for you, LSU, as the Tigers had zero issues in dispatching Idaho 63-14.  Of course, LSU’s three wins have come against teams that are a combined 3-6, so the true tests for Tigers won’t come until they begin conference play in general and play Alabama specifically. (Last week: No. 3)
Up next: at Auburn

3. Oregon — Like LSU, the Ducks won’t be tested until conference play begins this coming weekend. (Last week: No. 4)
Up next: vs. No. 24 Arizona

4. Florida State: With the Demon that’s been Wake Forest exorcised, the Seminoles have the look of, yes, a team that’s back and ready to hop back onto the national stage. (Last week: unranked)
Up next: No. 11 Clemson

5. Stanford: You beat the No. 2 team in the country, you’re undefeated and ranked No. 21 heading into the game?  You get props in this meaningless exercise. (Last week: unranked)
Up next: at Washington

HE SAID IT
“Do I feel that we, at times, gave up out there? Absolutely.  As a leader it sucks to see people not do their jobs and to see things go wrong, there has been a lot of things go that way.” — injured Arkansas quarterback Tyler Wilson, lashing out at his teammates following the Razorbacks’ 52-0 drubbing at the hands of Alabama.

HE SAID IT, THE SEQUEL
“The only problem I have with it is I’d love for everybody here to not be surprised by this.” — Stanford head coach David Shaw, when asked about fans storming the field after the Cardinal’s fourth straight win over USC.

FOR STATISTICAL PURPOSES ONLY

– Just 20 minutes into Florida State’s win over Wake, Chris Thompson had eight carries… and 197 yards.  Included in that total were touchdown runs of 74 and 80 yards.  Thompson had just one carry the rest of the game, and finished with a career-high of that same 197 yards.

– Brendan Bigelow, football gigolo: the Cal running back had four carries… and 156 yards, including touchdown runs of 81 and 59 yards, in Cal’s bid to upset No. 12 Ohio State on the road.  His 81-yard run was the longest by an opponent in Ohio Stadium history.

– Speaking of that game, OSU quarterback Braxton Miller accounted for five touchdowns — four passing, one rushing — in the Buckeyes’ 35-28 win.  For the season, Miller has had a hand in 12 of the Buckeyes’ 16 offensive touchdowns.

– West Virginia’s Geno Smith — in three quarters of work no less — completed 34-of-39 passes for 411 yards and five touchdowns in the rout of James Madison and now has as many touchdowns as he does incompletions (nine).  In the process, the Heisman contender broke Marc Bulger’s school record of 8,153 career yards.

Johnny Manziel accounted for 418 yards of total offense and six touchdowns — four passing, two rushing — as Texas A&M rebounded from a season-opening loss to Florida to pound SMU 48-3.  His 294 yards passing set a school record for a freshman.

– In place of the injured Wes Lunt, J.W. Walsh completed 20-of-29 passes for 341 yards, four TDs and zero interceptions before giving way to No. 3 quarterback Clint Chelf in Oklahoma State’s win over Louisiana-Lafayette.

– In that win over ULL, the Cowboys set school records for total offense (742 yards) and first downs (39).

– Rutgers running back Jawan Jamison set a single-game school record with 41 carries in the 23-13 conference win over USF Thursday night.

Connor Halliday passed for 378 yards and four touchdowns in Washington State’s 28-21 win over UNLV Friday night, pushing the Cougars to 2-1 in its first season under Mike Leach.

– Nebraska running back Ameer Abdullah rushed 30 times for 167 yards and two touchdowns, all career highs for the sophomore.

– No. 8 South Carolina’s 49-6 romp over UAB was the 200th of Steve Spurrier‘s career.  Spurrier, Virginia Tech’s Frank Beamer, Texas’ Mack Brown and Nevada’s Chris Ault are the only active FBS coaches to have reached that plateau.

– TCU defeated Kansas 20-6 in its first conference game as a member of the Big 12, improving the Horned Frogs to 4-1-1 when playing its first game in a new conference.  If I’m not mistaken, all of those games happened in the past six years.

– In the 56-20 win over FAU, No. 7 Georgia set a school record with 713 yards of total offense and became the first team in UGA history to score at least 40 points in each of the first three games of a season.

– No. 14 Texas’ 676 yards of total offense in the 66-31 shellacking of Ole Miss was the second-most in school history.

– Mississippi State was able to hang on to beat Troy 30-24 despite giving up 572 yards of total offense.

– SID stat of the day: Ohio State has won 60 consecutive regular-season non-conference home games against teams not ranked in the AP Top 25. The last loss? 34-17 to Florida State, Oct. 2, 1982.

– SID stat of the day, runner-up: Alabama’s 52-0 win marked the first time Arkansas has failed to score in Fayetteville since 1966.  On a completely unrelated note, Bobby Petrino can’t imagine being in Fayetteville that long without scoring.

– 2013 Oregon verbal commit Thomas Tyner rushed for 643 yards and 10 touchdowns in a single game Friday night, which also happened to be the talented back’s 18th birthday.  The Beaverton, Ore., high schooler, rated as the No. 6 running back in the country and the top player in the state of Oregon by Rivals.com, made an official visit to the Ducks last night.

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Delvon Simmons transferring again, this time from Texas Tech

Texas Tech v TCU Getty Images

A little over a month after signing on as a member of North Carolina’s 2011 recruiting class, Delvon Simmons was released from his Tar Heels scholarship and ultimately landed at Texas Tech.

Two years later, the defensive tackle is on the move yet again.

RedRaiderSports.com is reporting that Simmons has decided to transfer out of the Tech football program.  Apparently this doesn’t come as a shock to those who cover the team on a daily basis as Chris Level of that Rivals.com website wrote on Twitter that the player has “gone back and forth on wanting to transfer several times; this time, it’s happening.”

The Tech athletic department has yet to publicly confirm the defensive lineman’s impending departure.

As for potential transfer destinations, Simmons is already slated to visit USC this weekend.  Simmons was close to signing with the Trojans coming out of high school before (briefly) opting for the Tar Heels.

Additionally, Simmons is reportedly considering Miami, Penn State and Pittsburgh.

Simmons, who will be forced to sit out the 2013 season if he stays at the FBS level, will have two years to use two seasons of eligibility beginning in 2014.

For the 2011 recruiting class, Simmons was a four-star recruit rated as the No. 1 player in the state of Pennsylvania; the No. 5 defensive tackle in the country; and the No. 80 player at any position in the country.  He started all 13 games for the Red Raiders in 2012 after playing in 10 games as a true freshman in 2011.

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Akron player suspended after robbing tobacco store at gunpoint

Seth Cunningham Getty Images

Ladies and gentlemen, the college football offseason!

According to FOX8-TV in Cleveland, Akron football player Seth Cunningham is facing a charge of aggravated robbery following an incident late Thursday night.  And by “incident,” we mean the cornerback allegedly held up a tobacco pipe store at gunpoint.

Per the television station, “Cunningham, 21, entered the 24-hour store on Pearl Road Monday and waved a 9mm handgun in the air. He stole a water pipe worth $447 before taking off.”

Brunswick (Ohio) police caught up with and arrested Cunningham, who they allege admitted to the robbery.  He was taken to a county jail but was subsequently released after a $30,000 bond was posted.

The Zips subsequently confirmed that Cunningham has been indefinitely suspended from the football program.

The senior played in nine games in 2012.

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Saturday morning one-liners

Devin gardner

Meandering our way through the offseason, a single one-liner at a time…

– Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges has no problem with Devin Gardner fine-tuning his game with the help of a quarterback guru.

– The Omaha World-Herald says all the talk of more neutral site games in college football is a bunch of hot air.

– Graduating from Texas, former UT great Vince Young says the sheepskin trumps any pigskin glory he achieved with the Longhorns.

– Polynesian players are prospering at Utah.

PennLive.com: Michael Mauti‘s rise to Penn State icon was about so much more than his play.

– al.com: Auburn legend Terry Beasley fights back during week of despair, health scares

– With Nick Saban set to be inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame this weekend, some of the Tide coach’s knickknacks (get it?) will be on display.

– More than $91,000 raised for Mott Children’s Hospital by Michigan football.

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RB Daniel Jenkins transferring from Wazzu… back to Arizona

Daniel Jenkins AP

In December, it was announced that Daniel Jenkins would be transferring out of the Arizona football program after finishing second among Wildcat running backs in rushing yards last season.  In January, the running back took to Twitter to announce that he would be transferring to Washington State to continue his collegiate playing career.

Four months later?

Lt. Frank Drebin, take it away…

 

Friday night, UA head coach Rich Rodriguez announced that Jenkins had decided to leave Wazzu and transfer back to the Wildcats.  No reason was given for Jenkins’ decision to transfer back into the program from which he had left just five months ago.

Jenkins participated in spring practice at WSU and would’ve been eligible to play for the Cougars in 2013 as he had graduated from UA in December.  Now, he will be eligible to play for the Wildcats this season as a graduate transfer.

In 2012, Jenkins was third on the team in rushing behind the nation’s leading rusher Ka’Deem Carey (1,929 yards) and quarterback Matt Scott (506) with a career-high 293 yards.  As a four-star member of UA’s 2009 recruiting class, Jenkins was rated as the No. 12 all-purpose back in the country by Rivals.com.

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Backup QB Marquise Williams back at UNC

Marquise Williams AP

Shortly before National Signing Day this past February, it was reported that Marquise Williams was no longer enrolled at North Carolina. A couple of months later? That’s no longer the case.

UNC confirmed Friday that the quarterback is again enrolled at the school and is attending classes.  Academics prevented Williams from enrolling for the spring semester, which kept the player from participating in spring practice.

Last season, the former four-star recruit served as the primary backup to starter Bryn Renner, who returns to the Tar Heels this fall for his senior season.

Mitch Trubisky exited spring as the No. 2 quarterback on the depth chart as a true freshman.  Trubisky was an early enrollee after signing on as a member of the Tar Heels’ 2013 recruiting class.

As a redshirt freshman last season, Williams accounted for 127 yards passing and 186 yards rushing.  He scored four total touchdowns.

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Illini boot two, including second-leading receiver

Darius Millines Josh Johnson AP

Two months after being slapped with a suspension, Darius Millines, along with a teammate, has seen his career at Illinois come to an untimely end.

An Illini official confirmed to the Associated Press that Millines and defensive end Darrius Caldwell have been dismissed from the football program.  As expected, the only reason given was an unspecified violation of team rules.

The school has yet to offer up any public comments on what led to head coach Tim Beckman‘s decision to dismiss the duo.

In early March, the wide receiver was indefinitely suspended for the same set of reasons.  As a junior last season, Millines was second on the team with 319 receiving yards on 32 catches.

Caldwell played in 12 games as a redshirt freshman last season, credited with 17 tackles, five tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery.

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Report: S. Miss., SEC schools are transfer no-no’s for Wes Lunt

Mike Gundy AP

We don’t yet know to where Wes Lunt will transfer, but we do know where it won’t be.  Reportedly.

According to Jeremy Fowler of CBSSports.com, Oklahoma State is restricting the quarterback from transferring to Southern Miss as well as any SEC school.  Such restrictions would severely limit desirable destinations for Lunt as he had been considering five schools; three of them — Southern Miss, Tennessee and Vanderbilt — are now off-limits because of his former school in general and his ex-coach specifically.

Still on Lunt’s radar are Illinois and Louisville.  Lunt either has or will in very short order visit the Illini, who are currently considered the front-runners by default.

A school spokesperson confirmed the head-scratching restrictions to Fowler, and stated it was between OSU head coach Mike Gundy and Lunt when asked why the player would not be released to that set of schools.  It’s unclear why Gundy — ya know, the “I’m a man, I’m 40″ rant guy when it came to defending one his players from the sharp barbs of the mean ol’ media — placed such restrictions on Lunt.

The Southern Miss football program is now headed by Todd Monken, who served as Gundy’s offensive coordinator in 2011 and 2012; the Cowboys and Golden Eagles are not slated to face each other during the regular season at any point over the next nine years.  After sitting out the 2013 season to satisfy NCAA transfer rules, Lunt will have three years of eligibility remaining; the only SEC school Oklahoma State will face in the regular season during that four-year timeframe is Mississippi State in 2013.

Ironically, Gundy spoke to at least two different schools this offseason about their head coaching vacancies, and would’ve been free to move to those programs without restriction.  The two schools he’s known to have spoken with about their openings?  Arkansas and Tennessee, both members of the SEC.

Excellent work, Coach Gundy.  You and your university and T. Boone should be very proud of the pettiness and double-standards on full display.  Stay classy, Stillwater.

UPDATED 6:26 p.m. ET: According to Zach Kerker, sports director at 1450 in Springfield, Ill., Lunt’s high school coach stated that his former player is also restricted from transferring to Pac-12 schools as well as Central Michigan (on OSU’s non-conference schedule in 2015 & 2016).  The reason behind the restrictions?  ”They could play in bowl games,” the coach said.

Pitiful.  Absolutely pitiful situation.

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FSU four-star recruit cleared by NCAA

DeMarcus Walker

While uncertainty still abound when it comes to one high-profile member of Florida State’s 2013 recruiting class, another has seen his status clarified in a positive way by an arm of the NCAA.

FSU announced Friday that defensive end DeMarcus Walker has been cleared by the NCAA Clearinghouse following months of uncertainty.  Walker was an early enrollee at FSU but did not participate in spring practice due to the Clearinghouse issue.

Reportedly, the issue stemmed from an online course he had taken in high school.

“Nole Nation I just got the best news ever I’m cleared academically now,” Walker wrote in a tweet posted to his Twitter account. “I swear ever(y) school on the schedule is in trouble now. #FEAR THE SPEAR.”

Walker was a four-star member of FSU’s recruiting class this year, rated as the No. 5 strongside defensive end in the country and the No. 11 player at any position in the state of Florida.  He was rated by Rivals.com as the No. 57 player in the country.

In part because of attrition and in part because of his talent, Walker is expected to contribute immediately to the Seminoles’ line rotation.

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Video: Saban talks to Dan Patrick about latest devil jab, Manziel

Alabama's head coach Saban instructs his players as they take on the LSU Tigers during their NCAA football game in Baton Rouge AP

Thanks in large part to it being a (very) low point in the offseason college football news cycle, another blast directed at Nick Saban has dominated the headlines over the past couple of days.

The Alabama head coach was referred to as “the devil himself” as well as accused of lacking a personality by Florida assistant Tim Davis at a booster function.  What differentiates this from Vanderbilt head coach James Franklin‘s “Nicky Satan” blast earlier this year is the fact that Saban and Davis had a previous working relationship, leading the former to label the latter’s comments as “terribly disappointing” and seemingly being left hurt by the jabs.

During an appearance via the telephone on the Dan Patrick Show Friday, Saban addressed that topic as well as multiple other issues — including the acknowledgement that preparations for the rematch with Johnny Manziel and Texas A&M are already ongoing.  Check out the video below.

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Friday morning one-liners

Dick Trickle

Meandering our way through the offseason, a single one-liner at a time…

al.com: While you’re going after Nick Saban, he’s going about his business.

– Speaking of Saban, have you ever wondered what the Alabama head coach would look like with Dana Holgorsen‘s hair?  If so, today’s your lucky day.

– Losing U.S. Open tennis could lead to CBS televising early-season SEC games.

Charlie Weis likes the hope fans have in the Jayhawks, but doesn’t want their faith to be blind.

– Auburn’s defensive line going back to basics in order to shore up its run defense.

Eric Weddle has become an unofficial ambassador for the Utah football program.

– Oklahoma State defensive coordinator Glenn Spencer and ESPN sideline reporter Jeannine Edwards are engaged to be married.

– Former Ole Miss quarterback Tom Luke has returned to his alma mater as the football program’s assistant athletics director for player development.

– This Georgia Tech grad assistant’s attempt at recruiting via photoshopping is bad. “Not bad meaning good but bad meaning bad,” says Run DMC.

– Not football-related, but Ohio is the most swearingest f—–g state in America.  O-F’N-H!!!

– Not football-related either, but RIP Dick Trickle.  Smoke ‘em if you’ve got ‘em

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2013 QB signee transferring from Mountaineers

Dana Holgorsen AP

An early enrollee has decided to take an early leave of the West Virginia football program, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is reporting.

Citing Chavas Rawlins‘ high school coach, the paper has confirmed that the quarterback will be transferring from the Mountaineers.  It appears as though the departure of WVU assistant Jake Spavital played a significant role in the player’s departure.

“Everyone at West Virginia was great to him, but as you know he came in right when Jake left,” Monessen (Penn.) high school coach Andy Pacak told the Post-Gazette. ”His initial decision was I’m gonna go down there and make the most of it, but that (loss of Spavital) weighed on him a little bit.”

Spavital, WVU’s quarterbacks coach the past two season, left in January for the same job at Texas A&M, plus the additional title of co-offensive coordinator.  Rawlins’ decision also comes a couple of weeks after Clint Trickett transferred in from Florida State and entered the Mountaineers’ quarterback fray.

Rawlins, a three-star member of WVU’s 2013 recruiting class and the only QB signed this year by the Mountaineers, participated in spring practice as an early signee but did not play in the spring game as all of the reps went to Paul Millard and Ford Childress.

“Chavas has been getting reps in practice and slowly we’ve been moving him along, but obviously he’s got a long ways to go,” said head coach Dana Holgorsen after the spring game.

If Rawlins transfers to another FBS school — there’s no early indication as to which direction he might be headed — he would have to sit out the 2013 season but would retain all of his eligibility.

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42 players named to initial Lott Trophy watch list

Manti Te'o

You know what this means, right?  Yep, we’re slowly inching closer to the start of a new season.

While that remains a little under four months away, one major postseason award has released its first watch list of the offseason, with the Lott IMPACT Trophy releasing its group of 42 players on the defensive side of the ball.  No finalists or semifinalists for last year’s award, won by Notre Dame Manti Te’o, are represented on this year’s watch list.

A total of seven conferences — the American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, MAC and Sun Belt Conference being the lone exceptions — and three independents — Army, BYU and Notre Dame — are represented this year, including a total of 37 different football programs.

Of the seven schools with two players on the list, three come from the Pac-12: Stanford (DL Henry Anderson, S Ed Reynolds), UCLA (LB Anthony Barr, LB Eric Kendricks) and Washington (DT Danny Shelton, LB John Timu).  Baylor (S Ahmad Dixon, LB Bryce Hager), Northwestern (DB Ibraheim Campbell, LB Damien Proby), Ohio State (CB Bradley Roby, LB Ryan Shazier) and Virginia Tech (CB Antone Exum, LB Jack Tyler).

The Pac-12 led all conferences with 11 players on the list, followed by the ACC, Big Ten and Big 12 with seven apiece.  Players from the SEC and Mountain West (two) were also part of the initial grouping.

The Lott Trophy is named in honor of former USC and San Francisco 49ers great Ronnie Lott, and is given out to the player who has the biggest IMPACT — Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity – on their teams both on and off the field.

For the complete Lott Trophy watch list, see below:

Henry Anderson, DL, Stanford
Geoffrey Bacon, LB, Army
Calvin Barnett, DL, Oklahoma State
Anthony Barr, LB, UCLA
Nat Behre, DB, San Diego State
Chris Borland, LB, Wisconsin
Max Bullough, LB, Michigan State
Ibraheim Campbell, DB, Northwestern
Ross Cockrell, CB, Duke
Aaron Colvin, CB, Oklahoma
Scott Crichton, DL, Oregon State
Alden Darby, DB, Arizona State
Aaron Donald, DL, Pitt
Steele DiVitto, LB, Boston College
Ahmad Dixon, S, Baylor
Ifo Ekpre-Olomu, CB, Oregon
Antone Exum, CB, Virginia Tech
Jake Fischer, LB, Arizona
Chase Garnham, LB, Vanderbilt
Bryce Hager, LB, Baylor
Jackson Jeffcoat, DE, Texas
A.J. Johnson, LB, Tennessee
Lamarcus Joyner, S/CB, Florida State
Eric Kendricks, LB, UCLA
Devon Kennard, DL, USC
James Morris, LB, Iowa
C.J. Moseley, LB, Alabama
Damien Proby, LB, Northwestern
Ed Reynolds, S, Stanford
Bradley Roby, CB, Ohio State
D.T. Shackleford, LB, Ole Miss
Ryan Shazier, LB, Ohio State
Danny Shelton, DT, Washington
Spencer Shuey, LB, Clemson
Derron Smith, DB, Fresno State
John Timu, LB, Washington
Stephon Tuitt, DE, Notre Dame
Jack Tyler, LB, Virginia Tech
Kyle Van Noy, LB, BYU
Jason Verrett, CB, TCU
Avery Williamson, LB, Kentucky
Ty Zimmerman, S, Kansas State

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Sabans labels latest devil jab ‘terribly disappointing’

Nick Saban AP

Brace yourself: what you’re about to see is some (gasp!) feelings and a hint of emotion coming from future college football Hall of Famer and current cyborg Nick Saban.

Earlier in the week, Florida assistant Tim Davis was quoted at a booster function as referring to the Alabama head coach as “the devil himself.”  That was the second time this offseason that the Prince of Darkness has been brought up in reference to Saban, with Vanderbilt head coach James Franklin referring to the four-time BCS-title-winning coach as “Nicky Satan” in January.

This time, though, it was a little personal for Saban as Davis was a member of his Miami Dolphins staff for two years and spent another year on his Tide staff.  That familiarity led to some unexpected — and refreshing — honesty on the part of the coach prior to a Crimson Caravan event Thursday.

It really is a little terribly disappointing,” Saban said according to al.com. “I try to do right by the people that work for me,” he said. “It’s a tough, demanding job. And at the same time, if anybody had an issue or problem with me, I would want them to just tell me. …

“It’s just disappointing. If somebody has a problem with me, I’d appreciate it if they’d tell me. If I’m doing something to offend somebody, I’d certainly like to do whatever I have to do to fix it. It’s not our intention. It’s not what we try to do.

“We’re in a tough business. It’s very competitive. Sometimes you’ve got to demand that people do things that maybe they don’t want to do, but it’s not personal.”

Also included in Davis’ standup routine — which Saban apparently took to heart way more than we had assumed he would — the Gator offensive line coach took a jab at Saban’s personality, or lack thereof, in propping up his current boss Will Muschamp.

“[Muschamp's] like [Saban], only he’s got a personality,” the Gator assistant said. “He’ll smile at you. He’ll talk to you. You understand?”

Muschamp also worked under Saban for five years, four at LSU and one with the Dolphins, and the two have a level of respect for the other that goes beyond the football field.  It’s that respect that left Saban seemingly biting his tongue when it came to Davis’ personality shot.

“I know it’s not representative of Will Muschamp and the University of Florida and the way they do things,” he said. “I know that, because I’m close enough to Will to know that.”

What will be interesting to see is Muschamp’s response to one of his assistants taking digs at someone who is both a friend and conference competitor, albeit in a different division.  Even more interesting?  When the damn season gets here so this kind of stuff moves to the background.

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Virginia loses former four-star RB to transfer

Virginia v Georgia Tech Getty Images

Just a handful of weeks following the end of spring practice, Virginia’s depth and experience at the running back position has taken an unexpected hit.

In a press release, Cavaliers head coach Mike London announced that Clifton Richardson has been granted a release from his scholarship and will leave the football program.  No specific reason for the departure was given, although it appears to be an amicable parting of ways.

“Clifton Richardson has been granted permission to seek a release from his scholarship to pursue opportunities elsewhere,” said London in a statement. “Clifton will be leaving the University in good academic standing. I wish the best for Clifton as he pursues his academic and athletic goals.”

The release stated that Richardson will have two years of eligibility remaining plus a redshirt season.

Richardson appeared in 20 games during his Cavaliers career, rushing for 425 yards and two touchdowns.  In seven games last season, Richardson ran for just 59 yards as he battled an injury to his lower extremities.

A four-star member of Virginia’s 2011 recruiting class, Richardson was rated as the No. 20 RB in the country and the No. 6 player at any position in the state of Virginia.

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Thursday afternoon one-liners

Gene Smith

Meandering our way through the offseason, a single one-liner at a time…

– Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith supports the idea of playing the Big Ten championship game in Detroit when the contract with Indianapolis runs out in three years.

Newark Star Ledger: New athletic director Julie Hermann needs to prove she can be a visionary for Rutgers.

– While an agreement in principle has been reached to renew the Memphis-Tennessee hoops rivalry, a continuation of the football series remains up in the air.

– Michigan State’s Spartan Stadium North end zone project involves Homeland Security issue.

– Former Penn State quarterback Steven Bench tells the Tampa Bay Times his visit to USF left him impressed.

– At least for now, former Alabama offensive coordinator Jim McElwain is looking forward to bringing his Colorado State team to Bryant-Denny Stadium this fall.

– Having an East Coast recruiting presence is being embraced by Michigan State defensive coordinator Pat Narduzzi.

– Four Utes looking to replace the production in the running game lost with the departure of John White.

– Safety Ebo Makinde posted the fasted 40-yard dash time (4.24) at Boise State’s spring testing day.

– Speaking of Boise State, Bronco Stadium will be getting a new 60-foot-by-33-foot video board to replace the one installed in 2001.

– Class of 2014 Kentucky football recruits banding together on Twitter.

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