Tag Archives: clemson

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 6 – AP Top 25

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 6 – AP Top 25

1 LSU (40) 5-0 1473
2 Alabama (12) 5-0 1435
3 Oklahoma (7) 4-0 1397
4 Wisconsin 5-0 1266
5 Boise State (1) 4-0 1248
6 Oklahoma State 4-0 1191
7 Stanford 4-0 1185
8 Clemson 5-0 1093
9 Oregon 3-1 1028
10 Arkansas 4-1 860
11 Texas 4-0 833
12 Michigan 5-0 812
13 Georgia Tech 5-0 667
14 Nebraska 4-1 555
15 Auburn 4-1 550
16 West Virginia 4-1 544
17 Florida 4-1 498
18 South Carolina 4-1 487
19 Illinois 5-0 428
20 Kansas State 4-0 349
21 Virginia Tech 4-1 341
22 Arizona State 4-1 256
23 Florida State 2-2 237
24 Texas A&M 2-2 216
25 Baylor 3-1 186

Dropped from rankings: South Florida 16, TCU 20

Others receiving votes: Michigan State 154, Houston 68, Washington 37, Texas Tech 25, Notre Dame 24, South Florida 22, Georgia 11, Penn State 9, USC 7, Southern Methodist 5, Cincinnati 1, Pittsburgh 1, Tennessee 1,

Fanatic Sports and Cards – 2011 College Football Top 10

Fanatic Sports and Cards 2nd 2011 College Football Top 10

1. Alabama 5-0
2. LSU 5-0
3. Oklahoma 4-0
4. Wisconsin 5-0
5. Boise State 4-0
6. Oregon 3-1
7. Clemson 5-0
8. Oklahoma State 4-0
9. Stanford 4-0
10. Arkansas 4-1

I still think Alabama and LSU are head and shoulders above the rest and Alabama is better than LSU.

No. 13 Clemson hopes to keep rolling vs. Hokies

CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Clemson first-year offensive coordinator Chad Morris hopes the Tigers have a much better feeling leaving Virginia Tech this season.

Morris said Monday he’s heard from plenty of people about the 13th-ranked Tigers’ miserable 24-7 loss at Blacksburg, Va., in 2006, a defeat that began a late-season slide for Clemson.

Morris says he and the coach’s won’t let up on the Tigers (4-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), despite back-to-back victories over defending national champion Auburn and ACC Atlantic Division winner Florida State the past two weeks.

Clemson has used Morris’ offense to make an early mark in the league race and the national picture. Morris says now is not the time for players to ease up simply because the Tigers are off to their best start in four years.

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 5 – USA Today Poll

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 5 – USA Today Poll

RK TEAM RECORD PTS
1 Oklahoma (32) 3-0 1434
2 Alabama (7) 4-0 1404
2 LSU (20) 4-0 1404
4 Stanford 3-0 1225
5 Boise State 3-0 1223
6 Oklahoma State 4-0 1172
7 Wisconsin 4-0 1156
8 Nebraska 4-0 1040
9 South Carolina 4-0 976
10 Virginia Tech 4-0 935
11 Oregon 3-1 914
12 Florida 4-0 817
13 Texas A&M 2-1 681
14 South Florida 4-0 631
15 Clemson 4-0 598
16 Baylor 3-0 528
17 Texas 3-0 525
18 Arkansas 3-1 432
19 Michigan 4-0 414
20 TCU 3-1 364
21 Georgia Tech 4-0 333
22 Illinois 4-0 181
23 West Virginia 3-1 158
24 Florida State 2-2 157
25 Michigan State 3-1 153

Dropped from rankings: North Carolina 25

Others receiving votes: Houston 70, Ohio State 61, Arizona State 57, Penn State 34, Iowa State 33, Kansas State 13, North Carolina 13, Texas Tech 13, Utah 11, Northwestern 5, Washington 3, Tennessee 3, Auburn 2, Temple 1, Air Force 1

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 5 – AP Top 25 Poll

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 5 – AP Top 25 Poll

1 LSU (42) 4-0 1471
2 Oklahoma (12) 3-0 1422
3 Alabama (5) 4-0 1413
4 Boise State (1) 3-0 1280
5 Oklahoma State 4-0 1209
6 Stanford 3-0 1205
7 Wisconsin 4-0 1177
8 Nebraska 4-0 991
9 Oregon 3-1 985
10 South Carolina 4-0 950
11 Virginia Tech 4-0 883
12 Florida 4-0 820
13 Clemson 4-0 744
14 Texas A&M 2-1 734
15 Baylor 3-0 659
16 South Florida 4-0 585
17 Texas 3-0 466
18 Arkansas 3-1 434
19 Michigan 4-0 417
20 TCU 3-1 338
21 Georgia Tech 4-0 298
22 West Virginia 3-1 280
23 Florida State 2-2 239
24 Illinois 4-0 179
25 Arizona State 3-1 112

Dropped from rankings: USC 23

Others receiving votes: Michigan State 51, Houston 38, Auburn 25, Iowa State 21, Ohio State 15, Kansas State 14, Utah 12, Penn State 9, Georgia 8, Washington 4, Tennessee 3, Notre Dame 3, Navy 2, USC 2, Mississippi State 1, Missouri 1

No. 11 FSU, No. 21 Clemson face injuries

CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher isn’t so sure injured quarterback EJ Manuel will play Saturday. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney is.

“I expect him to play,” the Tigers coach said this week as No. 21 Clemson gets ready to host the 11th-ranked Seminoles in an Atlantic Coast Conference game.

Manuel hurt his left, non-throwing shoulder in a 23-13 loss to No. 1 Oklahoma last week and the Seminoles (2-1) are eager to bounce back at Death Valley. That won’t be easy without Manuel, a junior who did not practice this week and was listed as questionable.

Swinney is planning for Manuel, but Florida State’s staff isn’t so sure their quarterback will be healthy enough to play. Fisher twice had similar injuries during his playing days and understands how painful they can be.

“But they are tolerable and you can manage through those,” Fisher said. “You’ve just got to make sure it doesn’t affect your throwing motion.”

An MRI showed no structural damage to Manuel’s shoulder.

Manuel’s motion was near flawless before the injury. He’s completed 67 percent of his passes for 666 yards and six touchdowns, and is among the top six in ACC pass efficiency and total offense.

The junior has also been the Seminoles most effective rusher for a ground game that’s yet to take off. Manuel leads the Seminoles with 79 yards rushing.

If Manuel can’t go, Florida State would again call on Clint Trickett, a freshman who subbed against Oklahoma and tied things up 13-all in the final quarter with a 56-yard touchdown pass to Rashad Greene.

Trickett took all the first-team snaps and looked good doing it, Fisher said. And all the while, “Guys are getting healthier,” he said.

Clemson had its own concerns after starting tailback Andre Ellington hurt is hamstring and was on the sideline for much of the second half in a 38-24 victory over defending national champion Auburn. But Swinney said Thursday that Ellington will play.

Manuel isn’t Florida State’s only issue. Receiver Bert Reed didn’t play against Oklahoma because of an ankle problem, while wideout Kenny Shaw left the field in an ambulance after a helmet-to-helmet hit. Shaw returned to the sideline before the end of the game.

While Reed hasn’t practiced, Shaw was back for Thursday’s workout. Fisher said injuries to key players makes for uncertain times around the football offices.

“It affects you,” the second-year head coach conceded. “Injuries are a part of football.”

So is coping with them.

Clemson didn’t do that so well a year ago when Ellington left the Boston College game with a foot injury. The Tigers lost to the Eagles, 16-10, then lost three more games in November and December to go 6-7, their first losing season in 12 years.

Ellington had offseason surgery and appeared strong this season, posting his longest touchdown run, a 74-yarder in a win over Wofford. But Ellington played 47 snaps against Auburn with only a handful coming in the second half after he tweaked his hamstring.

It appeared backup D.J. Howard would be a reliable option after he rushed for 86 yards last week. But Swinney said Howard hurt his hamstring at practice Tuesday and is questionable.

Howard’s play was critical down the stretch as Clemson held the ball and ran out the final 9:34 of the game.

“Really proud of the way D.J. stepped in,” Clemson offensive coordinator Chad Morris said.

The Tigers rolled up 624 yards of offense on the defending national champs. They’re not likely to have it as easy on a very healthy Florida State defense, which held Oklahoma to under 200 yards passing and fewer than 3 yards a carry.

“There’s no doubt how physical they played against Oklahoma,” Morris said. “That’s our biggest task.”

Seminoles middle linebacker Vince Williams called the Tigers offense, “smoke and mirrors kind of stuff.”

“They try and get you confused. They call the offense from the line of scrimmage like Oklahoma,” he continued. “They also do a lot of the same things” as the Sooners.

Clemson is trying for its 4-0 start since 2007 and to keep alive a streak of Death Valley success over Florida State, which hasn’t won at Memorial Stadium since 2001.

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 3 – USA Today Poll

2011 NCAA Football Rankings Week 3 – USA Today Poll

RK TEAM RECORD PTS
1 Oklahoma (44) 1-0 1453
2 Alabama (8) 2-0 1410
3 LSU (7) 2-0 1372
4 Boise State 1-0 1214
5 Florida State 2-0 1211
6 Stanford 2-0 1165
7 Oklahoma State 2-0 1072
8 Wisconsin 2-0 1033
9 Texas A&M 1-0 1001
10 Nebraska 2-0 911
11 South Carolina 2-0 863
12 Virginia Tech 2-0 842
13 Arkansas 2-0 825
14 Oregon 1-1 754
15 Michigan State 2-0 639
16 Ohio State 2-0 566
17 Florida 2-0 498
18 Arizona State 2-0 353
19 Auburn 2-0 331
20 West Virginia 2-0 304
21 Texas 2-0 260
22 South Florida 2-0 230
23 TCU 1-1 211
24 Baylor 1-0 171
25 Mississippi State 1-1 125

Dropped from rankings: Missouri 19, Penn State 20

Others receiving votes: Michigan 97, UCF 49, Houston 43, Northwestern 31, Penn State 29, North Carolina 23, Tennessee 21, Missouri 21, Georgia Tech 9, Maryland 9, Clemson 8, Washington 7, California 6, San Diego State 3, Georgia 2, Iowa State 2, Brigham Young 1

Improved FSU could give ACC’s reputation a boost

PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference’s reputation has taken plenty of hits in recent years.

Jimbo Fisher figures it’s time to change that, and he hopes his Florida State team is the one to lead the way.

From the moment the Seminoles stepped into the ACC 20 years ago, they were the league’s clear gold standard.

After yielding that title to Virginia Tech for a while, they seem ready to reclaim it.

“I think it’s important to every conference to have somebody in that (national championship) game or in that limelight, that atmosphere, you know?” Fisher said. “But you have to earn it. You have to get there. We haven’t here recently. Everything goes in strides. Go back in the (1990s), the SEC won a few but they weren’t in it. Florida State was in it. Miami. It all goes in cycles and comes around.”

And now, it seems the Seminoles have cycled back to being on top.

The media that cover the ACC have made Florida State the favorite to win its first league title since 2005 — the year the conference expanded to 12 teams. Since then, the Seminoles had three 7-6 finishes during Bobby Bowden’s final four seasons (2006-09) while slipping to third or lower in its division three times in that span.

In Fisher’s first season as the head coach they finished 10-4 — with two losses coming by a total six points — and won the Atlantic Division and the Chick-fil-A Bowl. And with the nucleus of that team returning, they have observers thinking that maybe those old, swaggering Seminoles are back.

Even if these Seminoles won’t come out and say it.

“People are going to say how they feel, give their own opinion, but that’s going to be something where we have to go out there and play,” quarterback E.J. Manuel said. “I’m not going to say we’re back or anything like that, because that would be taking respect away from those teams that were what Florida State is now. That’s what we’re working toward. Hopefully we can get to that point and just continue to win games.”

That certainly can’t hurt the perception of the ACC, which took plenty of hits when bellwether programs Florida State and Miami were sagging. When they struggle, the ACC seems weak, too.

Now the across-the-league hope is that when upsets inevitably happen, that’s because the underdogs are improved — and not because the favorites are overrated.

“Sometimes, you had teams that weren’t as good as other teams,” Manuel said. “But now, in this day and age, athletes are good everywhere. It doesn’t matter whether you go to our school, Duke, wherever. It’s still going to have a good program, and you can’t go into a game thinking you’re going to blow out somebody. You have to go in there and make plays, and actually do it yourself, not just in your mind.”

ATLANTIC

FLORIDA STATE — Key players: QB E.J. Manuel, WR Bert Reed, T Andrew Datko; DE Brandon Jenkins. Returning starters: 7 offense, 8 defense.

Notes: The Seminoles are looking for much bigger things than just their 35th straight winning season. Key test comes in Week 3 against Oklahoma. … Florida State’s total of 17 returning starters doesn’t include Manuel, whose six career starts came when NFL first-round pick Christian Ponder was injured.

CLEMSON — Key players: RB Andre Ellington, C Dalton Freeman; DT Brandon Thompson. Returning starters: 8 offense, 5 defense.

Notes: All eyes will be on sophomore QB Tajh Boyd, who replaces Kyle Parker after Parker gave up football for a pro baseball career. … Tigers lost six defensive starters who combined to make 171 starts, including All-America DE Da’Quan Bowers. … Ellington and RB Jamie Harper give Clemson a solid 1-2 punch in the backfield.

NORTH CAROLINA STATE — Key players: QB Mike Glennon, TE George Bryan; LB Audie Cole, DT J.R. Sweezy. Returning starters: 6 offense, 8 defense.

Notes: Glennon, a promising pocket passer, takes over after three-year starter Russell Wilson was released and transferred to Wisconsin. … Wolfpack have a special teams weapon in T.J. Graham, who has returned three kicks for TDs and is 522 yards shy of the ACC’s career kickoff return yardage record.

BOSTON COLLEGE — Key players: RB Montel Harris, TE Chris Pantale; LB Luke Kuechly. Returning starters: 7 offense, 7 defense.

Notes: Kuechly led the nation with 14 tackles per game last season. … Harris was tops in the ACC in rushing and is 1,002 yards shy of the ACC career rushing record. … Eagles chasing their 13th straight bowl berth.

MARYLAND — Key players: QB Danny O’Brien, WR Tony Logan; LB Kenny Tate. Returning starters: 5 offense, 7 defense.

Notes: New coach Randy Edsall enters with serious questions at the skill positions. He must replace WR Torrey Smith and RB Da’Rel Scott. … Logan returned 31 punts for 560 yards last season. … Former Division I head coaches Gary Crowton (BYU) and Greg Gattuso (Duquesne) are on Edsall’s staff.

WAKE FOREST — Key players: QB Tanner Price, RB Josh Harris; DE Kyle Wilber. Returning starters: 7 offense, 9 defense.

Notes: Demon Deacons return four senior starters on offensive line. … Wake Forest plays nine bowl teams from 2010, including Syracuse and Notre Dame. … Price started nine games as a freshman, a rarity at a school that prefers to redshirt all incoming players.

COASTAL

VIRGINIA TECH — Key players: WRs Jarrett Boykin and Danny Coale, RB David Wilson; CB Jayron Hosley, S Eddie Whitley. Returning starters: 6 offense, 6 defense.

Notes: Hokies are ACC’s only recognized champion from 2007-10 after Georgia Tech vacated its 2009 league title. … Virginia Tech faces a more manageable nonconference schedule (Appalachian State, East Carolina, Arkansas State, Marshall) than in recent years. … Hokies must replace QB Tyrod Taylor and RBs Darren Evans and Ryan Williams. All eyes will be on QB Logan Thomas.

MIAMI — Key players: WR Travis Benjamin; LB Sean Spence, S Ray-Ray Armstrong. Returning starters: 6 offense, 7 defense.

Notes: New coach Al Golden must settle on a quarterback — Jacory Harris or Stephen Morris — after Hurricanes threw 27 interceptions last season. … Nine opponents played in bowl games last season, including Ohio State, Kansas State and South Florida. … Spence, on whether the Hurricanes have underachieved: “We have a whole bunch of talent, as you can see. … To be 7-6, it just doesn’t add up. We know that.”

NORTH CAROLINA — Key players: RB Ryan Houston, QB Bryn Renner; DT Quinton Coples, CB Charles Brown. Returning starters: 6 offense, 6 defense.

Notes: League’s biggest question mark is how Tar Heels will respond to late July firing of coach Butch Davis. … Defensive coordinator Everett Withers steps in as the interim replacement. … Houston, who elected to redshirt last season after he initially was held out and later cleared in the NCAA investigation into the program, had surgery to repair a broken shoulder blade suffered in the spring game.

GEORGIA TECH — Key players: RB Roddy Jones; DT Logan Walls, LB Steven Sylvester. Returning starters: 6 offense, 5 defense.

Notes: QBs Tevin Washington and Synjyn Days are competing to replace three-year starter Joshua Nesbitt. … Yellow Jackets were made to vacate their 2009 ACC championship and Orange Bowl appearance following an NCAA investigation. … Jones has averaged 7.46 yards per carry for his career.

VIRGINIA — Key players: WR Kris Burd, OG Austin Pasztor; DT Matt Conrath, CB Chase Minnifield. Returning starters: 8 offense, 9 defense.

Notes: Cavaliers lead the ACC with 19 returning starters. … Minnifield’s 10 career interceptions lead all active players. … Coach Mike London must settle on a replacement for QB Marc Verica.

DUKE — Key players: QB Sean Renfree, WRs Connor Vernon and Donovan Varner; S Matt Daniels. Returning starters: 7 offense, 8 defense.

Notes: Blue Devils welcome back the league’s top returning passer (Renfree), top two receivers (Vernon, Varner) and top kicker (Will Snyderwine). … Duke hopes its 4-2-5 scheme will show improvement after it was the league’s worst defense in 2010.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

Caldwell comfortable as OL coach at Clemson

Robbie Caldwell stole the show at last year’s Southeastern Conference media gathering with his folksy tales of pipefitting and turkey farms.

The former Vanderbilt coach is outside the spotlight and far away from the SEC lectern this summer, preparing for his first season as Clemson’s offensive line coach.

Read more at ESPN

Four Star QB Chad Kelly commits to Clemson

Four-star quarterback Chad Kelly, who’s the nation’s No. 5 QB and No. 80 in the ESPNU 150, committed to Clemson on Thursday. He chose the Tigers over Purdue, Syracuse, Florida State, Michigan State and Buffalo.

Kelly, who plays at Buffalo (N.Y.) Saint Joseph’s Collegiate Institute, is the nephew of former Bills quarterback and Hall of Famer Jim Kelly. Chad Kelly threw for 2,159 yards and 24 touchdown passes last year as a junior. He also rushed for over 1,000 yards and 15 TDs.

“I mainly picked Clemson because of the atmosphere,” Kelly said. “I knew Day One from my first visit. Of all the schools I saw it had the best atmosphere, a family atmosphere. From every coach to all the players and to people in the community, it was perfect for me. I just fell in love with Clemson.”

Read more at ESPN

Which 12 seed will upset a 5

When people scramble to fill out their NCAA tournament brackets, one of the first things they consider is what upsets they should pick. And where better to turn than the 5 vs. 12 matchups, which have a reputation as being a place where the chalk does not stick to the blackboard.

#5 Kansas St v. #12 Utah State
#5 Arizona v. #12 Memphis
#5 Vanderbilt v. #12 Richmond
#5 West Virginia vs. #12 UAB or #12 Clemson

It happens every year, or it at least seems like it happens every year. So who is it going to be? Honestly I could see every one of theses #5 seeds losing, of course I can also see them winning.

I’m actually going to go with two. I’m taking Utah State over Kansas State and Richmond over Vanderbilt. I haven’t been impressed with K State or Vanderbilt this year. K State lost 3 times to Colorado. Both Utah State and Richmond have veteran teams who were both in the tournament last year. Utah State has 30 wins and Richmond runs a very hard system to defend. Richmond’s tournament pedigree also can’t be denied, they have won several first round games over the years.

Read more at Midwest Sports Fans