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News and notes from the non-AQ schools: “BYU freshman wide receiver Ross Apo dislocated his left index finger during practice Wednesday and had surgery. He is expected to be out about six weeks. Apo did not have a catch in the opener against Washington last week. “ULM will start Jyruss Edwards at running back when the Warhawks open their season Saturday night against No. 14 Arkansas. Edwards had been listed as the No. 2 running back behind Frank Goodin throughout the fall

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Non-AQ news and notes roundup

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Are Boise State and TCU gaining respect from coaches around the country? Texas coach Mack Brown became the latest coach to say he would not have a problem with a non-AQ team making it into the national championship game if they deserved to be there at the end of the year. When asked earlier this week whether he would be OK with that scenario, Brown said this, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: “The way the [BCS] rules are, absolutely. If you don’t like it, change the rules.” Brown went on to add that he expects his team to be in the mix should it go undefeated, and believes it would finish higher than an undefeated Boise State or TCU. He is right there. But with the rules as they are currently configured, he seems to have a more inclusive approach should either or both of the non-AQ teams be the only ones to go undefeated. “I have not been a proponent of everything in the BCS,” Brown said. “I would think strength of schedule should be a bigger part of it than it is. And it’s not. And if that’s the case, then TCU and Boise have to be considered top teams. If somebody doesn’t like it, they need to go back and change the formula.” Last month, Florida coach Urban Meyer told The Sporting News, “If Boise State is the best team in America at the end of the season, you better believe I would vote them No. 1 . If they deserve to play in the BCS championship game, they should play in it.” Boise State and TCU inched up higher in the latest coaches’ poll this week, with the Broncos moving up two spots to No. 3 and TCU moving up two spots to No. 5.  No non-AQ team has played for a national championship before, and it remains to be seen whether undefeated Boise State and/or TCU would be voted into the top two spots at the end of the season. That has been a big source of debate and contention in the past week, since both teams won their openers against schools from automatic qualifying conferences. It is easy for coaches to say today that Boise State and TCU would deserve a spot in the title game, but it is another thing to say it come December, with the actual championship on the line.

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Boise State, TCU gaining cred from coaches

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Fifth ranked Texas Volleyball enters Dante’s Rings of Hell the Nike Big Four Volleyball Classic Friday in pursuit of its 1001th win. To earn it, the Horns will have to battle #1 Penn State, #2 Stanford, and #4 Florida. Whoever named it the “Big Four” tournament wasn’t messing around. In the first month of the season, #5 Texas will have played the top four national squads. The winner—really the survivor—of the tournament should emerge as the national favorite to start the regular season.

In a weekend of big matchups, the local story will be Texas’ shot to earn revenge against the Nittany Lions. You might remember that Texas was up two sets on Penn State in the NCAA Championship before losing three in a row. Talk about snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. Penn State, the first choice for any volleyball recruit, travels to Gainesville armed with Deja McClendon and Blair Brown. The two hitters have combined for 130 kills in only eighteen sets. Brown, a 6’5’’ Senior, spent her summer training with the US National Team. Setting for the Lions will be handled by Kristen Carpenter. Alyssa D’Errico will don the opposite jersey at libero. With fifteen service aces, D’Errico is no slouch behind the line either.

Stanford ‘s Alix Klineman was a second-team All American last season. This year, her senior season, she is averaging 4.77 kills per game. Texas’ front line will have to reduce her impact to stay competitive.

Florida may be 5-0, but they haven’t exactly been dominating their opposition. They only have 26 more kills, 19 more assists, and 17.5 more blocks than their sub-par opponents.Florida has operated a spike-by –committee approach led by Kelly Murphy, Callie Rivers, and Kristy Jaeckel.

 

There is good and bad news going into this weekend, I’ll try to lay out the important ones.

Good News: Texas has been ranked in the top ten for sixty-one straight weeks and the top five for thirty-four weeks.

Bad News: Texas dropped from #2 to #5 this week after being swept by Illinois on Friday.

Good News: Juliann Faucette has seventy kills in 20 sets.

Bad News: Illinois’ success resulted from dealing with her normally deadly spikes.

Good News: With 208 sets on the season, Hannah Allison is playing like a veteran. Based on this interview, she seems like a down-to-earth girl too.

Bad News: This weekend will be a remarkably tough challenge for any freshman. She is about to be Gilberted, for lack of a better term.

Good News: Unlike Stanford, Texas has already been challenged this season.

Bad News: Unlike Texas’ early opponents, Stanford has four players over 6’4’’ including 6’6’’ outside hitter Hayley Spelman.

Good News: Texas will have a height advantage over Florida, the weekend’s easiest opponent.

Bad News: Easiest is relative, as the tournament will be played in always-rowdy Gainesville.

Good News: Rachel Adams, Sha’Dare McNeal, and Jennifer Doris are racking up the blocks.

Bad News: The Gators, Lions, and Cardinal are significantly more athletic than the McNeese State….. whatever those girls called themselves.

Good News: Freshman Sarah Palmer performed well in her first sets in Gregory. She will likely replace fellow Hawaiian Sydney Yogi at Libero in two seasons.

Bad News: To play their tempo, the Longhorns will need stellar play off the bench. Even Yogi eventually gets warn-out from throwing herself at the floor.

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Texas Volleyball – Big Four Volleyball Classic Preview

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It will definitely be a close game but this matchup is too big for Jim Tressel to lose at home this early in the season. Texas ’ offense did seem a bit stale in Week 1, but don’t be so fast to write the Longhorns off just because they didn’t light up… Source: Bleacher Report

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Week 2 College Football Predictions: Picks Against the Spread

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I’ll be tracking the Nebraska Cornhuskers each week of the season leading up to the big game in Lincoln — and, perhaps, beyond, if a Big 12 Championship Game rematch looks likely. For more on the Huskers, head over to SB Nation ’s superb Nebraska blog, C Source: Burnt Orange Nation :: A Texas Longhorns Blog

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Nebraska Football 2010: Week One Review

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I’ll be tracking the Nebraska Cornhuskers each week of the season leading up to the big game in Lincoln — and, perhaps, beyond, if a Big 12 Championship Game rematch looks likely. For more on the Huskers, head over to SB Nation ’s superb Nebraska blog, C Source: Burnt Orange Nation :: A Texas Longhorns Blog

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Nebraska Football 2010: Week One Review

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CEDRIC GOLDEN WHAT I’M LOOKING FOR THIS WEEK Since some Texas fans were upset that Garrett Gilbert wasn’t Dan Marino in the season opener, I’m looking for offensive coordinator Greg Davis to open up the offense this week since the Longhorns showed they were a veritable ground machine against Rice.

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What we’re looking for out of Texas-Wyoming: Gilbert’s stats

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But the Longhorns liked what they saw from Jones, and they’re hoping he brings that personality with him every game this season. “He brings passion every day. He brings emotion,” Texas coach Mack Brown said. “And he’s one of those guys like Sam Acho,… Source: Austin American-Statesman

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Horns happy with Jones’ solid season start

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Kendall Hunter doesn’t talk much, but he was talking before Saturday’s game against Washington State. Even if his words were brief and quiet as usual. “I’m ready, I’m ready,” he kept telling his position coach. If only Washington State, warming up across the field at Boone Pickens Stadium, knew just how ready Oklahoma State’s running back really was. Hobbled by an ankle injury in 2009, Hunter missed five games and managed just 382 yards while attempting to play through the injury for most of the season. His first carry went for 17 yards, his day developed into a 257-yard season debut, and now Hunter needs only 126 yards to surpass his output in all of 2009. After one week of football, he’s the nation’s leading rusher. “Above average? Would that work?” said Oklahoma State offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen, describing Hunter’s day. “He is the fifth-best back in the Big 12 , right? Nah, he’s obviously pretty good. Heck, you know, it’s all about what you do for me lately. I understand how the whole thing works. He was pretty good two years ago, he’s the type of kid who’s not going to sit there and pout and feel sorry for himself. He’s going to be motivated by things some people won’t be motivated by.” Hunter had to sit and watch while his teammate, Keith Toston, took his spot and rushed for 1,200 yards in one of the most anticipated seasons in school history. Hunter got just one carry while Texas beat the Cowboys 41-14 in Stillwater. Hunter might not say last season’s frustrations weighed on him or were on his mind, but he ran like it in his triumphant return to the field for his senior season. “As the game went on, I kept asking him if he was tired and he kept saying, ‘I just want to keep playing,’ said Robert Gillespie, Oklahoma State’s running backs coach. “He wanted to get out there so bad and just have fun. It was taken away from him last year, so this whole offseason he’s been working to get stronger, faster and smarter to become a better player.” Gillespie came to Oklahoma State before 2009, excited to coach an All-American coming off a 1,555-yard season, after three years coaching backs at South Carolina. Gillespie was disappointed Hunter didn’t spend the season as his featured back, but saw the work he put in despite the injury. Saturday night was a long time coming. Gillespie says Holgorsen’s offense, implemented during spring and preseason camp, should fit Hunter perfectly and set him up for success at the next level. Scouts have seen Hunter — a “strange combination of quick, fast and powerful,” Holgorsen says — run around and over defenders. This year, he’ll have more chances to show he won’t allow defenders to return the favor in pass protection. “The film don’t lie, and the tape don’t lie,” Holgorsen said. “Hopefully we can win some games and he gets on TV and everybody can see what the kid’s capable of, because he’s the best one I’ve been around.” Oklahoma State’s new Air Raid offense figured to be pass-happy as the name suggests, with Hunter getting plenty of receptions as the team’s obvious best offensive talent. He carried the ball 21 times against Washington State, amassing an outlandish 12.2 yards per carry, but sat for much of the 65-17 blowout’s second half. The Cowboys threw Hunter’s way about four times, Holgorsen estimated, but failed to establish the screen game or short passing game. Hunter finished with three catches for minus-4 yards. So instead, they took the simpler route to getting their playmaker the ball: handing it to him. “We’re going to face some pretty good teams, I’m not oblivious to that. Some pretty good defenses out there with the likes of Texas, Oklahoma, Texas A&M, Nebraska and Texas Tech that are going to have something to say about it. Everybody’s going to try to stop the run,” Holgorsen said. “We’re going to have to be able to execute that stuff to take some pressure off the running game. But that’s why I’m here, that’s why I’ve been hired.” Holgorsen knew the offense wouldn’t be perfect on opening night. Far from it, he expected. He estimates it took two years before he got it to look “decent” at Texas Tech.

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OSU’s Hunter returns with a venegance

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Former Longhorn quarterback Sherrod Harris, who gave up football this season to focus on graduating, gets some love in a column by ESPN.com’s Gregg Easterbrook. Easterbrook has an interesting take on athletic scholarships. His point is, by

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Sherrod Harris gets some ESPN love

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