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Pac 10 Fearless Predictions, Sept. 22
Story URL: http://cfn.scout.com/2/651505.html
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Staff
CollegeFootballNews.com | Sep 20, 2007 |
Previews and Predictions for the Week 4 Pac-10 Games.
Pac
10
Arizona
| Arizona St
| California
| Oregon
| Oregon St
Stanford
|
UCLA
| USC |
Washington
| Washington St
Pac 10 Fearless Predictions
Sept. 1 | Sept.
8 |
Sept. 15 | Sept. 29
Oct. 6 | Oct.
13 |
Oct. 20 | Oct.
27 |
Nov. 3 | Nov.
10 |
Nov. 17 | Nov.
24 | Dec.
1
How are the picks so far? SU:
21-6 ... ATS: 17-9
Pac 10
Game of
the Week
Oregon State (2-1) at Arizona State
(3-0)
10:00 PM
Why to watch:
After watching Arizona State plow
through three mediocre opponents to
start the season, it’s time to see if
this program is the genuine article or
just a product of a soft schedule. We
should start getting some answers with
this week’s visit from Oregon State, a
flawed team, yet the best the Sun Devils
have seen this season. Arizona State
has been in this position in recent
Septembers, but won’t get any national
attention until it starts beating Pac-10
teams and playing outside Tempe. The
Beavers are hopeful that last week’s
visit from Idaho State helped solve some
of the glaring issues that plagued the
offense in a win over Utah and a sloppy
loss to Cincinnati. Sean Canfield had
easily the best day of his career, but
getting it done against a Big Sky
defense won’t erase concerns about the
quarterback situation in Corvallis.
However, last week sure helped his
confidence, as did the return to form of
WR Sammie Stroughter, who caught his
nine passes of the year for 160 yards
and two touchdowns.
Why Oregon State might win: After
getting fooled so many times in recent
years, are we really ready to jump on
the Arizona State bandwagon? They’ve
yet to play an opponent that’ll finish
over .500, or can match Oregon State’s
physical play. For as mediocre as OSU
has started the season, the defense has
been outstanding, shutting down opposing
running games and making plays for
negative yards with a terrific front
seven. The Beavers second-ranked run
defense is allowing less than a yard per
carry, which will put the onus on
erratic Sun Devil QB Rudy Carpenter to
move the chains. Complicating things
further is RB Ryan Torain’s ankle
injury, which could shelve him for a
second straight game.
Why Arizona State might win:
Oregon State got a reprieve last week
form its dreadful quarterback situation,
but won’t be as fortunate this Saturday
night in the desert. The Sun Devil
defense has been transformed so far
under Craig Bray, allowing just one
touchdown pass in three games, and
leading the Pac-10 in scoring and total
defense. The numbers will soften as
Pac-10 play begins, but that won’t
change the fact that this is a far more
physical and fundamentally sound unit
than last year. Arizona State now has
the ability to make opponents
one-dimensional, especially ones with
issues at quarterback.
Who to watch: Senior LB Robert
James has become the unlikely epitome of
Arizona State’s new play-hard, play-fast
defense after sitting out most of 2006
with concussion-related headaches.
Through three games, he already has 30
tackles and a Pac-10-high six tackles
for loss from the weakside, and will be
in RB Yvenson Bernard’s hip pocket
throughout Saturday night’s game.
What will happen: Since 1969,
Oregon State has played in Tempe 15
times, losing every game. The Beavers
won’t get that elusive win in Sun Devil
Stadium, but their defense is going to
keep this game far tighter than
oddsmakers are suggesting. If Canfield
protects the ball and makes a few plays
in the passing game, OSU is capable of
pulling the upset.
CFN Prediction: Arizona State 27 …
Oregon State
23... Line:
Arizona State -12
Must See Rating: (5 Curb Your
Enthusiasm - 1 Kid Nation)
... 3.5
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Pac 10 Saturday, Sept. 22 |
Arizona (1-2) at California
(3-0)
6:00 PM
Why to watch:
Talk about two teams headed in
opposite directions. With a
rout of Louisiana Tech last
week, Cal moved up two spots to
No. 6 in the latest AP Poll,
erasing the memory of its close
call with Colorado State a week
earlier. As expected, the Bear
offense is among the most
explosive in the country, but
the defense is going to be
stretched by recent injuries to
starting defensive linemen Matt
Malele and Rulon Davis, and LB
Zack Follett. Although Cal is
the heavy favorite on Saturday,
Jeff Tedford will be quick to
remind his team that it was No.
8 in the country last November
when it was stunned by Arizona,
24-20. The Wildcats are trying
to regroup after slipping below
.500 with an improbable home
loss to New Mexico last Saturday
night. With so many starters
back, this was the year the
program was finally returning to
the postseason, but a 1-3 start
with a rugged schedule remaining
could be too tough to overcome.
Why Arizona might win:
Cal entered the season with
major question marks along the
defensive line, so losing Malele
and Davis for any length of time
is going to be a tall hurdle.
The light has started to go on
for a Wildcat offense that’s
switching this year to Sonny
Dykes’ quick-strike spread
offense. Over the last two
weeks, Arizona has thrown for
741 yards and eight touchdown
passes, spreading the ball
around and getting picked off
just twice. With better pass
protection and less pressure
from the depleted Cal defense,
Willie Tuitama will continue to
make strides at the expense of
an iffy secondary.
Why Cal might win: What
in the name of Desert Swarm has
happened to the Arizona
defense? The unit that returned
10 starters and showed so much
promise entering the season is
94th nationally
against the pass and just got
shredded by New Mexico’s Donovan
Porterie for 327 yards and three
touchdowns. That’s a real bad
omen with Cal up next. The
Bears feature a balance,
40-point-a-game offense that’ll
beat the Wildcats with Nate
Longshore’s arm or Justin
Forsett’s legs. The blown
coverages and missed tackles
that have plagued Arizona in
2007 will prove to be fatal
against Tedford’s dynamic
offense.
Who to watch: The match
up between Cal WR DeSean Jackson
and Arizona CB Antoine Cason, a
pair of All-America candidates,
just might be the juiciest
one-on-one battle of the entire
weekend. It’s also worth
keeping a close watch on the
Bears’ Derrick Hill, who is set
to replace Malele on the
inside. Hill was one of the
most coveted defensive recruits
of 2006, and this could be the
opening that launches his career
into orbit.
What will happen: Arizona
is going to make some plays and
score some points on offense,
but the way the defense is
playing, Tedford will devour it
with a gameplan that exposes its
every flaw. It’s payback time
for those Cal holdovers that
remember last year’s devastating
loss in Tucson
CFN Prediction:
California
41 … Arizona 21 ... Line:
California -16
Must See Rating: (5
Curb Your Enthusiasm - 1
Kid Nation) ...
2.5
Washington State
(2-1) at USC (2-0)
8:00 PM
Why to watch:
USC’s response to last week’s
national debate whether LSU or
Oklahoma should occupy the top
spot in the rankings? It
destroyed Nebraska 49-31 in
Lincoln in a game that it led
42-10 at one point in the second
half. The clear message to the
rest of the country was that any
discussions about the No. 1 team
in the land had better include
the Trojans first … at least for
now. While USC is by no means a
finished product, its domination
along both lines will mask some
early growing pains,
particularly on offense. On
Saturday night, the Trojan backs
enjoyed gaping holes, en route
to rushing for 313 yards on just
38 carries. USC opens the
Pac-10 portion of its schedule
versus Washington State, a
program its handled the last
four years. The Cougars are
exactly where they’re expected
to be after three games, having
lost to Wisconsin in the opener,
and rebounded with wins over San
Diego State and Idaho. Wazzu
nearly won this game a year ago,
but will need more support from
the defense to pull off the
shocker on Saturday.
Why Washington State might
win: Although many of Sam
Keller’s yards came when
Nebraska was playing from
behind, last week’s game showed
you can move the ball on the USC
pass defense. The Trojans
allowed the Huskers to complete
36-of-54 passes for 389 yards,
two touchdowns and two
interceptions. Alex Brink and
the Washington State passing
game have been razor sharp the
last two weeks, throwing for 776
yards, nine touchdowns, and just
two picks. Brink is a
battle-tested senior, who has
the experience and the depth at
receiver to move the chains on
the USC defense.
Why USC might win: After
two quiet weeks playing second
fiddle to the running game, John
David Booty and the Trojan
passing attack is about to get
loud. Real loud. Washington
State has a very shaky secondary
that’s given up almost 800 yards
in three games, and features
sophomore Devin Giles and true
freshman Chima Nwachukwu at the
cornerback spots. Although USC
will again run the ball well,
this is an ideal opportunity for
Booty to start developing a
rhythm with Patrick Turner,
David Ausberry, Vidal Hazelton,
and Fred Davis. This is one of
those games that Booty will
deliver 300 yards and three or
four touchdowns to get right
back onto the Heisman sonar.
Who to watch: Chauncey
Washington, C.J. Gable, and Joe
McKnight got most of the
preseason pub, but Stafon
Johnson has gotten the majority
of the carries in the first two
games. A 6-0, 210-pound burner
with great vision in the open
field, he’s averaging more than
nine yards a carry and is tied
for the team-lead with three
touchdowns.
What will happen: It’ll
be bombs away for a USC offense
that wants to work on its
passing attack long before the
schedule stiffens in the second
half of the year. The Trojans
will gobble up almost 500 yards
of balanced offense, and coast
to another one-sided victory.
CFN Prediction:
USC
45 … Washington State 20
... Line: USC -24
Must See Rating: (5
Curb Your Enthusiasm - 1
Kid Nation) ... 3
Oregon (3-0) at Stanford
(1-1)
10:00 PM
Why to watch:
Oregon started fast last year
before plummeting to a miserable
3-6 finish. After opening with
impressive wins over Houston,
Michigan, and Fresno State this
month, the Ducks are determined
to maintain the good vibes in
2007 beginning with this week’s
trip to Northern California, and
it can’t afford to start
slipping and have another
slide. Up eight spots to No. 13
in the polls, Oregon is winning
with a high-powered offense
that’s getting contributions
from everywhere, and vaulting QB
Dennis Dixon into the Heisman
discussion. This is Stanford,
so last week’s 37-0 whitewash of
San Jose State was cause for
celebration and contemplation
whether Jim Harbaugh’s first win
was a harbinger of better days
on the Farm. The Cardinal won
with defense and a physical
running game, hardly the
program’s calling cards, in its
most complete victory in years.
Putting up a fight against a
sizzling Oregon team would be
another sign of progress.
Why Oregon might win:
Sure, Stanford is coming off its
first shutout in 11 years, but
this is still the same defense
that gave up 624 yards and 45
points to UCLA in the opener.
And the same defense that’ll
struggle to slow down a balanced
Oregon offense that’s humming
right now. The Ducks haven’t
been held below 39 points this
season, getting timely passes
from Dixon and plenty of yards
on the ground from Jonathan
Stewart and Jeremiah Johnson.
Right now, there are just too
many playmakers on the Oregon
side for a questionable Cardinal
defense to contain.
Why Stanford might win:
You can move the ball on the
Oregon defense, especially by
running right at a pedestrian
front wall. The Ducks are ninth
in the Pac-10 in run defense,
despite having big leads in all
three of their games. Stanford
showed an ability to run the
ball with success last Saturday,
getting 276 yards on the ground,
140 from bruising Toby Gerhart,
who ran as if he was channeling
Tommy Vardell. The Cardinal
will test the interior of the
Oregon defense, limiting Dixon’s
touches and opening things up
for QB T.C. Ostrander to find
one of his talented receivers.
Who to watch: It might be
time for Oregon to start getting
TE Ed Dickson more involved in
the passing game. A converted
defensive end with the speed and
athleticism to be the next Tim
Day in Eugene, he showed signs
of emerging last weekend,
catching three passes and his
first career touchdown
reception.
What will happen:
Although there are signs that
Stanford is moving forward under
Harbaugh, they’ll be harder to
pinpoint against an Oregon team
that’s executing very well these
days. Dixon will remain hot,
getting a touchdown with his arm
and legs for the fourth game
in-a-row
CFN Prediction:
Oregon
41 … Stanford 20...
Line: Oregon -16.5
Must See Rating: (5
Curb Your Enthusiasm - 1
Kid Nation) ...
2.5
Washington
(2-1) at UCLA (2-1)
10:15 PM
Why to watch:
Both teams are coming off
sloppy, lopsided losses, making
this an early crossroads game
for both programs. Win, and a
3-1 start looks pretty good.
Lose, and those sick, sinking
feelings from the last few years
will begin to set in. After
looking worthy of a ranking in
the first two weeks, the Bruins’
44-6 loss to Utah came as one of
Week Three’s huge surprises,
feeding those that felt this
team was overrated. It was a
complete collapse that knocked
the program out of the Top 25,
and once again turned up the
heat on head coach Karl Dorrell.
If for nothing else, it’ll be
fascinating to see how the
Bruins respond to the pressure
this weekend. Although in
losing 33-14 to Ohio State,
Washington learned that it’s not
quite ready to beat a power
program, the program has to feel
pretty good about where it’s at
after three games. With USC,
Arizona State, and Oregon
upcoming for the Huskies,
however, a second straight loss
could change the climate around
Seattle and be the start of a
long losing streak.
Why Washington might win:
For all the talk of UCLA’s
vaunted, veteran-laden defense,
the unit has been shockingly
easy to navigate this month,
especially through the air. The
Bruins are 112th
nationally against the pass
after allowing 264 yards and
four touchdown passes to Utah
journeyman Tommy Grady. While
they’ve been getting pressure on
the outside, it hasn’t made much
of a difference for a troubled
secondary. Washington QB Jake
Locker will have an opportunity
to outplay the more heralded Ben
Olson, who’s regressed in each
of the last two weeks after
playing so well in the opener at
Stanford.
Why UCLA might win: After
seeing Ohio State just bully the
Washington defense for 263
rushing yards, look for the
Bruins to lean heavily on the
underrated backfield tandem of
Chris Markey and Kahlil Bell.
Before last week, when an early
deficit changed the playbook,
UCLA was running with authority
and getting the most out of its
rotation. Locker’s future is
beaming, but the Buckeyes proved
that he’s still prone to rookie
mistakes when faced with
pressure. Bruin linemen Bruce
Davis, Kevin Brown, and Korey
Bosworth will be applying lots
of pressure Saturday night.
Who to watch: Olson
remains a head-scratcher with
all of the attributes of an
All-American quarterback, yet
little to show for it at this
level. Just when it looked like
he was ready to turn the corner,
he had a head-on collision with
mediocrity and the Utah
defense. If Olson can’t bounce
back in a hurry, Dorrell could
summons Patrick Cowan from the
bullpen. As if the quarterback
needs more to worry about, his
best blocker, Shannon Tevaga,
injured his knee on Saturday,
and could be out for a few
weeks.
What will happen: In a
pivotal game for both schools,
the UCLA defense will come to
the aid of the offense, creating
key turnovers and shortening the
field for Olson. Bruin K Kai
Forbath will nail three field
goals to provide the
difference.
CFN Prediction:
UCLA
30 … Washington 20
...
Line: UCLA -5.5
Must See Rating: (5
Curb Your Enthusiasm - 1
Kid Nation) ... 3
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