Friday, August 26, 2005

Blogpoll Roundtable No. 6

Here are my answers to the latest blogpoll roundtable. Check out Heisman Pundit for other bloggers' take on greatness and Saturdays.


What criteria do you use to determine if a team and its players are good?

This might not meet the haughty standards of Heisman Pundit, but to paraphrase former Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart “I know it when I see it.” (BTW, Stewart was talking porn, not football greatness.) Let me explain further.


Wins and losses are my first indicator, but I always consider who the team played. I usually respect a 9-2 team that took on the big boys more than a 10-1 team that fattened their record on teams the dregs of division 1A football. Ultimately, I go by what I see and who you beat.


As for player greatness, while I think size and speed and arm strength are important, I come up with something much more objective: can you do what you are supposed to do when everyone is trying to stop you? And when I consider that question, I do account for scheme. Any serviceable back could be a thousand yard rusher in BC’s system. Few have been great. But the offensive line, who blow guys off the ball over and over, and don’t miss assignments have been filled with greatness (Woody, Koppen, Columbo to name a few).


I am more impressed when someone like Reggie Bush returns a punt on the road, in fog and seemingly weaves through all 85 Oregon State players on scholarship than I am when he explodes untouched through a big hole on a run play.


I also have a soft spot for smart players, guys who hustle and do something that you haven’t seen before.



If you could choose one coach to build an offensive system for your school, who would it be? Conversly, who would you choose to devise the defense? Why?


Offensively, I’d go with Norm Chow. You can take your spreads/option hybrids. Give me Chow’s mixed bag of passing schemes and 30-year track record. He may not look as brilliant now that he is going against the best 32 defensive coordinators in the world, but the man can do no wrong at the college level.


He’s taken his game elsewhere, but I’d probably go with Nick Saban for defense. He learned from the best, understands the college game, and does a great job combining talent with schemes.


Describe your typical college football Saturday.

I wake up around 9 am EST. I am on some treadmill, ellipse or stairmaster by 10. I catch the end of Sportscenter and the beginning of Gameday. After sweating my ass off, I ruin any good it did me by going to pick up burritos from Willy’s (the only place in Atlanta to go; all you Chipotle and Moe’s fans can save it).


Once we’re home, I shower and then dive into the Willy’s just in time to see Corso put on a Mascot head. The BC game usually comes on at noon, so we turn the channel and keep it there for the next few hours. Like Larry Sanders -- no flipping. I don’t care what other game is on, I am totally focused on BC. Once the BC game ends, I’ll turn to the most interesting game of the day. We like to head to 5:30 mass, but if there is a really good game, I’ve been known to skip church. We usually have some sort of social plans for Saturday night. Fortunately in Atlanta every party or restaurant or place you might go has a college football game on in the background.


Once we get home Saturday night, I’ll watch the end of the ESPN game and then fall asleep to the late night WAC Gameplan game. This schedule repeats itself until December with variations coming into play if we go to the game or if BC plays on Thursday or Saturday night.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

BC lingo and things to know

I’ve had a few readers ask about the abbreviations I use. They are all shorthand nicknames that developed on Eagle Action. None are particularly original or inventive. Sometimes writing TOB is easier than writing Tom O’Brien. So for those readers who are new to BC, here are the common terms, things to know and nicknames:


TOB = BC head coach Tom O’Brien. When TOB was hired, our basketball coach was Jim O’Brien and referred to as OB. Tom O’Brien was called TOB. The "T" stayed even after Jim O’Brien left.


Kiwi = Mathias Kiwanuka, our preseason All-America defensive end. This is his nickname with the players too. Would you want to say or type Kiwanuka over and over?


Spaz = Defensive coordinator Frank Spaziani. Offensive coordinator Dana Bible receives the lion’s share of fan criticism but people will take shots at Spaz or Spazi too.


Gene D. = BC Athletic Director Gene DeFilippo. Gene is known for his people skills and politicking. His half-full, “all is well” attitude earned him the nickname Smilin’ Gene among some BC fans.


QP = Starting quarterback Quinton Porter. Many of our previous players were referred to by their initials on the BC message boards.


The Heights = The nickname for the campus. Also the name of the school newspaper.


Alumni = the football stadium.


BC is not BU. This may seem obvious to most northeastern readers, but you’d be surprised how often things are confused down here. Boston College is a university, but not the Boston University. BU is a few miles down the road from BC and a few light years apart in culture, campus and student bodies.


We are the Boston College Eagles. Not the Golden Eagles. Not the Bald Eagles. Not the War Eagles. Not the Screaming Eagles. Just Eagles. However, our mascot dresses like a bald eagle.


Email me if there is any confusion or other things I should add to this list.

Interweb news

Finally healthy, Andre Callender continues to play well. I know TOB prefers a feature back, but I expect Callender to get more carries than any of our No. 2s usually get. Also note that they are already hinting about red-shirting Brooks.


Here’s an update on BYU. It looks like their new offense is starting to gel.


The State published an article on the superior defenses in the ACC. They correctly point out that these things tend to be cyclical. A defensive, low-scoring conference plays to our strength since I think we’ll have trouble scoring. Maybe we can steal a couple of close games.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Season prediction Part III: what will happen

Finally we’ve come to the end of my self-indulgent filler piece. While very plausible, the previous two entries will not happen. This is my official game-by-game prediction for the upcoming season.


What will happen


At BYU. Win. BYU’s 3-3-5 is useful in a pass happy conference, but not against a team like BC. The Cougars’ spread keeps Kiwi from notching a sack, but our linebackers clog passing lanes all day. BC pounds the ball on the ground in a tough road win.


Army. Win. Army is game, but still a year or two away from making this interesting.


FSU. Loss. A classic. The Heights are hoping. FSU realizes BC is for real. Yet we blow a close game in the end.


At Clemson. Win. BC faced Toledo a few years ago, so the solid defense is ready for Tigers’ new attack. BC also benefits from facing Clemson early in the season, before Bowden and team turn it on in order to save his job again.


Ball State. Win. Not even interesting this year.


Virginia. Win. In all of my predictions, I penned this as a win. TOB plays his cards close to the vest, but little nuggets here and there make me think there is and always will be a special place in his heart for UVA. And getting ignored when Welsh retired has got to stick in his craw. Throw in Groh’s recent huge raise for putting up a win total very similar to Welsh and O’Brien and I think you’ve got all the motivation you need. The teams are scarily similar: two great defenses and conservative offenses. I think we have the advantage at the offensive line, while they probably have the better QB and backfield. BC wins a low scoring game.


Wake Forest. Win. BC doesn’t mess around this year. Wins easy.


At Virginia Tech. Loss. TOB’s record against Tech stinks, but the games and series is closer than it appears on paper. BC’s losses always seemed to hinge on a few key plays (often in special teams or some 80-yard Vick scramble). I don’t see us winning here, but it will be close.


At North Carolina. Loss. We will lose a game this year we should win (our annual WTF? game). My gut tells me it is this one or Wake. I can’t take another Wake loss, so I am saying we lose in Chapel Hill.


NC State. Win. Am I the only one who thinks bringing in Marc Trestman was a bad move for NC State? Just because a guy has a connection to Bill Walsh doesn’t mean he can install an offense and call a great game (i.e. Paul Hackett). I think BC wins this one, as Amato continues to struggle with life after Rivers.


At Maryland. Loss. As down as I am on Amato, I think very highly of Friedgen. I don’t see them as a losing team two years in a row. If he gets average performance from his QB, they are a bowl team. I think we lose here.


These leaves BC as 7-4 at the end of the regular season. Firmly bowl eligible, but not entirely bowl desirable. We played our polictics card last season to get into Charlotte, so look for Gene D to take one for the team and accept the invite to Boise. I think we’ll face Boise St. in an exciting game on the Blue Turf. BC wins to continue the bowl streak and finish the season at 8-4 and in the Top 25.

Basketball schedule unveiled

The athletic department finally released the 2005-2006 basketball schedule. It is a nice mix of regional games, a few notable out of conference games and of course, our inaugural ACC games.


I think BC will be one of the better teams in the country. Even if we are a disappointment, the non-conference schedule should pad our win total enough to get into the Tournament.


BC makes its first trip to Atlanta January 8. By then my wife will be in her final month of pregnancy. Ever the trooper, Mrs. Eagle assured me she still wants to go to the game. If her water breaks at Alexander, at least there will be a lot of Tech guys around to help with the delivery.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Tuesday news and notes

Sunday Morning Quarterback published his ACC Preview. He is not as bullish on BC as I am.


The official Blogpoll is finally ready for its debut. BC begins the season at No. 23. Congrats to Brian for all his hardwork.


The Sports Network released their BC preview. Pretty fluffy.


Basketball recruiting note: The Herald confirmed that Shamari Spears is coming to BC. The move to the ACC and Tyrese Rice made the difference.


In BC Hockey news, Pat Eaves is leaving school to join the Ottawa Senators. Both Eaves brothers served BC well. Best of luck to Pat.

Season prediction Part II: worst-case scenario

A couple of readers thought I was overly optimistic with my best-case scenario. I was. That was the intention. I don’t think it will happen. I don’t think the worst-case (below) will happen either, but it COULD happen. I think both scenarios are viable given our uncertainty at quarterback and the new conference.


Worst Case Scenario


At BYU. Loss. TOB’s maddening tradition of not having the team ready for the opener continues. Post-game press conference includes pat excuses about travel, the altitude and inexperience on offense.


Army. Win. Ross’ team gives us a scare, but we hold on.


FSU. Loss. FSU welcomes us to the conference with a thrashing. BC fans say it would be different if they came in the November cold blah, blah, blah. Hope is fading.


At Clemson. Loss. Another bad road loss. The team and the fans get our first taste of real southern football in Death Valley. Opposing offenses realize that you can triple team Kiwi and nulify our defense.


Ball State. Win. Even in a nightmare season, BC is able to win this one.


Virginia. Win. This is TOB’s Super Bowl. Even in a nightmare season I think we would win a game we shouldn’t. Normally that would be against Notre Dame, but since we are not playing the Irish this year, I think TOB will put all his eggs in this basket.


Wake Forest. Loss. BC controls most of the Wake game only to lose in the closing minutes Version 3.0.


At Virginia Tech. Loss. Tech kills us. Porter’s season and confidence are in ruins. Eagle Action posters are calling for TOB’s head and for Matt Ryan to start. Big East fans flood our message boards with “I told you so”s.


At North Carolina. Win. Playing conservatily, the Eagles wear on North Carolina again. Fans start hoping for a strong finish and a chance at a bowl game.


NC State. Loss. BC’s bowl streak ends when NC State wins and hands TOB his first losing season since 1999.


At Maryland. Loss. You thought the team didn’t come to play last season against Syracuse? Wait until you see this mail it in job.


BC is home for the holidays. Media and fans wonder if the school is in over its head. TOB feels real pressure for the first time as a Head Coach.


Stay tuned for Part III -- what I think will happen.

Monday, August 22, 2005

Season prediction Part I: best-case scenario

I wish I knew how the season would go. There are times when I think this is going to be the miracle season where everything falls into place. Other times I think we’re headed into a buzz saw and a long offseason of “I told you BC couldn’t compete in the ACC.” My actual and official game-by-game prediction will come later in the week. In the meantime, here is my best-case scenario prediction. I’ll post my worst-case next. I won’t predict 13-0 National Championship or 0-11, as I want to keep the best and worst somewhat viable.


Best Case Scenario


At BYU. Win. The travel and altitude doesn’t impact the Eagles. BC rolls over a still adjusting BYU team.


Army. Win. BC overpowers Army. The team and Quinton Porter are playing with a lot of confidence heading into FSU.


FSU. Win. Riding the hot start and fan excitement, BC defeats FSU in the school’s ACC debut. FSU struggles at Quarterback and BC’s defense is shaping up to be one of the better units in the conference.


At Clemson. Win. Clemson, still adjusting to its new offense, struggles and BC remains unbeaten.


Ball State. Win. BC avoids the previous season’s nail bitter and soundly defeats the MAC cellar dweller. At this point, BC breaks into the Top 10 and pundits start asking “Can BC win the conference?”


Virginia. Win. In a game that means more to TOB than any other, BC defeats UVA in a hard fought contest.


Wake Forest. Win. After letting the previous two games against the Demon Deacons slip through their fingers, BC controls the whole way through. Quinton Porter and Will Blackmon erase any bad Wake memories by hooking up for three touchdowns.


At Virginia Tech. Loss. The road to Pasedena hits a bump. BC loses a matchup between two Top 10 teams. The ESPN Thursday Night crew hands out plenty of moral victory pats on the back to the Eagles for their hot start and adjustment to the conference.


At North Carolina. Loss. Even in a dream season, BC still has to have a WTF? loss. Instead of taking care of a team they defeated in North Carolina 11 months ago, costly mistakes keep the game even. The Heels steal it in the end.


NC State. Win. BC avoids the three game losing streak. The defense, cold and offensive line prove too much for the Wolfpack.


At Maryland. Win. BC wins as Maryland struggles for the second straight season.


Despite defeating the ‘Noles head to head, FSU finishes the season with a better conference record and represents the division in the first ACC Championship Game.


Any disappointment over missing out on the Championship Game is lifted when BC is selected for the Gator Bowl. The excitement reaches a frenzy when it is announced they will face Notre Dame. BC defeats the Irish…again. The team finishes with a 10-2 record and in the Top 10 in both season-ending polls.


Stay tuned for Part II -- the worst-case scenario

Bowl projections: good and bad

I’ve mentioned before that Bowl projections are good filler, but ultimately hot air. The records and revenue determine which team goes where. Here are examples of good projections and sloppy ones. SI.com Stewart Mandel does a pretty solid job (he has BC going to Boise). Sportsline does a crappy job (BC returning to Charlotte?). Why do I say it is crappy when this is merely a guessing game? Because some options -- like poor drawing teams returning to a Bowl site (i.e. BC returning to Charlotte) -- can clearly be eliminated and Sportsline didn’t do that. How hard is it to make a good fake list?

Notes from the weekend

Quinton Porter played well in the latest scrimmage. Will Blackmon’s adjustment to offense seems to be coming along too.


BC’s two quarterback recruits’ seasons got off to a rough start. Billy Flutie broke his ankle and Ross Applegate’s team got slaughtered.


The weekend highlight was Craig Smith leading Team USA to a gold in the World University Games. I hope his calf injury doesn't linger.

Saturday, August 20, 2005

22 again

The AP released its preseason poll. Like the coaches poll, BC begins the season at No. 22. BC is one of five ACC teams in the Top 25.

Friday, August 19, 2005

Spring recap/preview Part VIII

Quarterbacks


I procrastinated over writing this post all summer. I want Quinton Porter to do well, but I am not optimistic. His career stats were not horrendous, but a little deceiving. The offense rarely clicked with him under center in 2003. Eagle Action poster Captain Coop surmised the situation well. His post follows. I’ll wrap up with my opinion below.


Captian Coop: "I just took a look at all the stats and game recaps from 2003 to refresh my memory as to exactly what Porter accomplished as QB that year. I think the sense around here [Eagle Action] (and, to be fair, in the media) is that Porter is an experienced, solid QB who just happened to get beat out by the stellar performance of Peterson, and that if Porter were to step back in this year and play like he did in 2003, we're a contender in our division. Based on what I found, if he doesn't make a major improvement, we're a .500 team at best this year:


Game One, Wake Forest: 22-39, 243 yards, 1 TD, 0 Int (2 fumbles, both lost). The numbers here look almost ok, but need to be taken in context. First, he lost the 2 fumbles, which more or less cost us the game. Second, 243 yards passing doesn't look so bad, until you consider that WFU gave up 280 yards per game in the air that year. Overall, a performance that was a lot worse than it looks on paper.


Game Two, Penn State: 10-21, 145 Yards, 2 TD, 1 Int. Had a nice 1st quarter and then was scattershot the rest of the game. This was not a good Penn State team, either.


Game Three: UConn: 14-27, 156 yards, 1 TD, 1 Int. Against a team not exactly known for its passing defense, and in a fairly close game, another unimpressive line.


Game Four: Miami: 6-18, 61 yards, 0 TDs, 1 Int. Horrific performance against a very good team. Just looked lost out there.


Game Five: Ball State: 17-25, 131 yards, 3 TDs, 0 Int. The three TDs were for a combined 6 yards. Throwing 25 passes and gaining 131 yards against a team this bad really speaks to the risk-averse decision-making that makes Porter such a favorite of TOB.


Game Six: Temple: 18-24, 308 yards, 3 TDs. Finally, a nice stat line. It came against a team that gave up 33 points per game that year, but it was a good performance.


Game Seven: Syracuse: 20-28, 249 yards, 2 TDs, 2 Ints. A big chunk of these yards came after BC was down 32-7 in the 4th quarter, so the yardage total isn't as good as it looks. Another solid performance, though.


Game Eight: Notre Dame: 13-25, 199 yards, 1 TD, 0 Int. Ho-hum game. [EAGLE IN ATLANTA NOTE: I am going to disagree with Coop here. Throwing was not impressive. But QP kept us in the game when special teams were falling apart. He hustled and ran around like a mad man. I thought this was going to be his turning point. Sad to say, it was not.]


Game Nine: Pitt 12-29, 186 Yards. 0 TD, 0 Int. Why even have a QB? He basically made no impact on this game with that stat line. His best contribution was not throwing interceptions. We scored 13 points and lost.


Game 10: WVU 8-14, 86 yards, 0 TDs, 0 Int. This was the game where PP took over and the offense was finally able to take some chances. Peterson threw for 231 yards that day, and although he was picked off 3 times, he threw 3 TDs and breathed some life into the offense.


Now, I would be willing to make some excuses for Porter's 2003 season. Yes, the risk-averse style that had him throwing 20+ passes for around 150 yards or less in a bunch of these games is coming down from TOB. Yes, the playcalling was paleolithic. Yes, the receivers dropped a lot of passes. But, Peterson stepped in with all the same excuses and the offense suddenly was significantly more effective. Against a late season schedule that included colder weather and tougher competition (no Ball State, Temple, UConn, Wake), Peterson threw for at least 230 yards in every game, and at least 2 TDs every game. The team scored 35, 34, and 35 points with Peterson running the show against Rutgers, Virginia Tech, and Colorado State. He also threw 3 of BC's 4 TDs in the WVU game (28 points). Meanwhile, the Porter-led offense had scored 24 against UConn...14 against Syracuse...13 against Pitt.


I'm not posting this to trash Porter. I just wanted to refresh our memories on his last starting season, and to make the point that we need IMPROVEMENT from him this year, not just his return. If he comes back playing like he did in 2003, we can expect a dropoff in our offensive production comparable to the difference between the offense under Peterson that year and the offense under Porter."



Now back to my opinion. No one is trashing Porter. He is a loyal kid, who is supposedly a nice guy. He handled last year’s redshirting and the sudden death of his father in 2003 as well as anyone could. But he still has to win football games. That’s the deal. And I have real doubt about his ability. He has the body, but has he learned how to run an offense?


Look at this table:


GameTrue 3 and outs
Penn State1
UConn1
Wake3
UMass3
Pitt2
ND5
Rutgers3
WVU4
Temple0
UNC3

**Please note that play by play was not available for Ball State.



That was Paul Peterson running the show. He was not perfect and we were not some offensive force, but he kept drives alive. We rarely went 3 and out. Now games are not exclusively won that way, but making plays and moving the chains gives your teammates confidence, helps the D and wears on your opponent. Can Porter do the same thing, or will he take off scrambling before the play is finished developing? Will TOB and Bible give him the free reign they gave Peterson?


(As for other QBs, Matt Ryan showed some promise last year. If he hits the field for anything other than mop up duty, we’ll have major growing pains.)



Reports of Porter’s maturity are encouraging. I am going to be a homer and say that he will have a good year. Predicated stat line: 2300 yards passing, 60% completion, 17TDs and 8 INTs. And he’ll start every game.


God, I hope I am right. He just needs to be solid for us to have a big year.

Cover boys

ESPN.com had a nice feature on BC (it was on the front page for most of the morning). It wasn’t all that different from this one in USA Today. Or this one in the Winston-Salem Journal. The Journal also had a feature on the new landscape in the ACC.


The Boston Herald published a notebook (L.V. is the starter) and a feature on Pat Ross. It is still unclear who is going to cover the team for the paper this season. I noticed Mike Shalin in some of the Media Day pictures but hasn’t had a Herald byline in weeks.


BC nominated Quinton Porter as a preseason candidate for the Davey O’Brien award. The school also published the transcript from Kiwi’s chat. It looks like they are going to try to make a player chat a regular feature.


In basketball news, Andy Katz has us just outside of the Top 10.

Thursday, August 18, 2005

What’s what

Trey Koziol is done for the year. Tough luck for the kid. I thought he was going to have a pretty good season. His injury leaves the team very thin at Tight End. Expect to see more passing to the backs. I sat infront of Trey’s mom at the Wake game last year. She was an emotional rollercoaster and he didn’t even play that much. Hope he has a speedy recovery.

In good news, Quinton Porter played well again.


StateFansNation gives me a nice compliment but more importantly, takes the time to look around at news in the conference.

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

My Blogpoll preseason ballot

This is my submission for the blogpoll. I have read many previews this summer, but still don’t consider myself an expert on all 25 teams. We’ll see how it turns out. I’ll post my weekly ballot here throughout the season.


1. Southern Cal
2. Texas
3. Tennessee
4. Michigan
5. Miami
6. Louisville
7. Virginia Tech
8. Ohio State
9. Oklahoma
10. Louisiana State
11. Auburn
12. Florida
13. Cal
14. Iowa
15. Florida State
16. Virginia
17. Texas Tech
18. Boston College
19. Texas A&M
20. Purdue
21. Georgia
22. Boise State
23. Alabama
24. UCLA
25. Fresno State

Two small links

Here is another Porter feature. I’ve been dreading writing the QB preview all summer. I have no idea what to expect. Every day I think he’ll turn the corner and other times I thin Ryan will be starting by Halloween. Look for my official stance on QP later in the week.


Here is a ACC defensive preview that mentions Kiwi. Warning, the formatting is funky.

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

News crumbs

Here is another feature on BC’s transition. Gotta love the interest from these southern papers.


This guy is also excited about BC road trips.


Reshuade Goodwyn is the latest Mass kid to commit to BC. Here is a recap of his success and the general promise of all the local kids going Division IA.

Tailgating compromise

BC wanted three hours of tailgating. The neighbors wanted the status quo of two hours. They split the difference. Fans now have an extra half hour to get fired up for Ball State. To outsiders this might seem trivial, but I cannot tell you how huge this is to the parties involved.

Monday, August 15, 2005

Weekend leftovers

Last week I mentioned the uncomfortable town-gown relationships between BC and its neighbors. Well now the locals are accusing BC of stacking the tailgating meeting with our own supporters. Yeah, they’re nuts. Don’t expect any changes this season.


The Portland Press-Herald wrote a nice article on their local boy. Perhaps I parse too much into these things, but I am amazed by the stuff that people say about Quinton Porter, including that he “sure not afraid to get hit” or that he is “confident” now. The way it comes out implies – to me at least – that he was afraid before. I am nervous, but I’m rooting for him. [THIS MAY GET CORRECTED, BUT PLEASE NOTE THAT THE WRITER CALLED PAUL PETERSON -- MR. PERFECT -- SCOTT PETERSON. THEY ARE ABOUT AS DIFFERENT AS CAN BE, BUT HEY, THEY BOTH LIKE FISHING.]


On a good note, L.V. is looking good.

A running back by any other name...

Jeff Ross was an unassuming backup to Derrick Knight. Last summer, he beat out a trio of freshmen for a starting spot. His unimpressive performance left him on the bench before halftime of the opener. Now he is back -- only this time as Survival Ross. The name change caught most fans buy surprise, but I guess it has always been his middle name. I don’t think the change will improve his standings on the depth chart.

The real TOB

Tom O'Brien is nearing a decade at the Heights. Always reserved in public, the media portrayed him as the constant Marine. In Brian Curtis' book, Curtis pointed out that TOB's office still looked like it was ready for inspection.


The guy is still a serious runner. Most regular joggers in the area have come across TOB once or twice. So last month when I saw that he drinks Mountain Dew, I was taken aback.

TOB does the Dew

Maybe he just wanted his press conference to have the Mountain Dew edge.

So when I was cruising through the pics from Media Day, this one stood out.
Check out the feet.

He's wearing flip-flops! With socks! Who is this guy? Where is our Tom O'Brien? Are the flip flops a sign of things to come? I don't think Bear Bryant would ever wear flip flops to a press conference. Maybe Mr. Marine is finally showing a little personality. I'll buy him some birks if we get to the Rose Bowl.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

More Media Day stuff

Friday's Media Day resulted in a lot of coverage Saturday.

The Globe went with a Quinton Porter angle. Quinton has talked a lot about Peterson's influence. Please, please, please let some of it show up against BYU.


The Herald had a feature and a notebook. The feature focused on Kiwi (the AP also sent out a Kiwi article). If any of his linemates can draw attention and the occasional double team, I think Kiwi can have a big year. The notebook talked about the running backs. Callender remains somewhat fragile, so look for L.V. to start.


The Patriot-Ledger delivered a rare and welcome article on BC. A good angle too: overlooking our openers. I was at TOB's first game -- a loss to Temple in Philly. Openers have been rollercoasters ever since. BYU will not be a walk over. The team better be ready to play.


In an unrelated basketball note, Craig Smith is kicking ass at the University Games.

Friday, August 12, 2005

Media Day

Is it really Media Day if the official school site is the only one with coverage? Here is the news: Justin Bell out (probably for the season) after foot surgery. Andre Jones did not qualify. Frantz Joseph will transfer. Bell would have added nice depth. Joseph is no loss. Jones? Who knows. He was highly recruited, but I always wonder about a guy's dedication when he cannot get his act together in class.

Here are some pics. Kiwi with short hair.




Trueblood taking the short hair thing one step too far.




BCeagles.com posted a Media Day photo gallery.

Here is the transcript from TOB's press conference

Tailgating and trip planning

Here is an article on BC’s push to extend tailgating hours. Non-BC fans cannot comprehend how big an issue this is to Eagle fans. BC is in the middle of leafy suburbs and residents around the campus hate BC. The school and the neighbors go to court over issues big and small, so any progress in the tailgating rules would be a big win for the school and the fans (who long to tailgate for more than two hours).


The tailgating issue led into something I’ve been meaning to address: the BC gameday experience for visiting fans. A few ACC fans coming to Boston for the first time have emailed me wondering about where to park and what to expect. My advice: don’t drive. There are very few quality parking spots on campus and they are all taken by BC boosters. If you drive, you’ll get stuck at very inconvenient satellite parking lots, where the atmosphere is non-existent.


So if you are coming to Boston for a BC game, don’t try to approach it like a normal football weekend. Here are my recommendations for what to do and not do when coming to Boston this fall.


First recommendation: fly. With the rising gas prices, driving is getting more expensive anyway. And driving anywhere in New England on a Friday in the fall can be painful. There are enough low cost airlines flying into Logan that you can get reasonable rates.



Second rec: stay in Boston or Cambridge. You can get cheaper hotels outside the city, but you’ll need a car. By staying in Boston or Cambridge you can stick with cabs and the T (Boston’s subway). And if you are coming all the way to Boston, you might as well get a feel for the city. You won’t get that at the Hampton Inn in Burlington. To save a few bucks, book through Hotwire. Mrs. ATL_eagle and I usually stay in the Back Bay area near Newbury St.


Third rec: get a meal in the North End. The North End is Boston’s Italian neighborhood where you can get some of the best Italian food on the East Coast. Yes it is touristy. Yes it will be wicked crowded and tough to get a table on a Friday or Saturday, but it is worth it and once again: how often are you in Boston for a football weekend?


Fourth rec: get some seafood. Cliché, I know. But if you went to San Antonio wouldn’t you order Tex-Mex? Get a cup of Clam Chowder. You can’t miss at most places. Legal Seafood’s is pretty good and you’re bound to stumble into one of their many locations on your trip.


Fifth rec: take a cab to the game and take the T after. The B-line will take you right to BC’s campus, but it will drive you nuts with the constant stops. A cab will get you close enough to campus on a Saturday morning for a reasonable price. After the game, a cab is much tougher to find. So get on the T. You’ll probably be a little tired at that point so who cares about how many times the T stops.


Sixth rec: find a tailgate. This is dicey as I’ve never tried walking up to strangers at BC. If we are tailgating, we know where we are going. But I’ve seen BC fans welcome strangers many times. Don’t be a jerk, walk the rows of cars and chat up any friendlies. Since we don’t have any bad blood with any ACC fans, you’re bound to find someone who will give you a beer.


Final recommendation: do something touristy (Fodor’s guide stuff). There is not enough time to do everything in one weekend, but you’re in Boston, so at least hit one of the big tourist spots. I would recommend the Museum of Fine Arts, the New England Aquarium, or the Freedom Trail. I would skip the Museum of Science (I never thought it was that great), Faneuil Hall (overrated) or a Duck Tour. But do whatever excites you.


Boston is a great town. Just don’t expect or treat it like your typical college football roadtrip and you’ll have a great time.

SI stuff and other links

SI sees us as a middle of the pack team. The newstand preview ranked BC at 37 and Stewart Mandel predicted a third-place finish in the division. In a somewhat contradictory move, the same article also listed us as a team on the rise.


Other nuggets from their coverage include selecting Kiwi as the best player in the conference.


SI giveth respect and then taketh away. John Walters names the Top 10 moments of the Orange Bowl and then disses BC by picking Flutie’s pass as No. 2 moment? WTF? The pass is arguably the most famous play in college football. How can it be the second most important college moment in the Orange Bowl history? (Don’t worry. I’ll get over it.)


Here is a pick of the new museum within the Yawkey Center.




To read more on the new digs click here.


In basketball news, Smith and Dudley were named preseason candidates for the Wooden Award.

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Humpday links

Practice began this week. There’s been very little news and even less coverage.


The Washington Post wrote another welcome to the ACC piece.


Chris Fox is the latest in a long-line of Xaverian Brothers recruits. My old roommate, KirkDogg, also graduated from the southshore football power.


The team elected Kiwi and Ross team captains for 2005. With the honor, Kiwi becomes a rare two-year captain.


Here’s a riveting recap of Day 2 of practice.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Yes, I am a two-faced homer

I’ve been taking back-handed shots at Will Blackmon all offseason. Then SI.com had to go and post this sweet picture.


I’m in love all over again. Blackmon for Heisman!

Media bias

Fans cry bias whenever they are slighted by a writer or sports network. In most cases they should just calm down and take off the aluminum hats. But I think we all agree that there is media bias…and we eat it up when our team is portrayed favorably.


I don’t think good writers go out of their way to trash or praise a school. But I do think that if they have a good relationship with a school, and if the school fits an angle they are following, that said school will be top of mind and lead to favorable coverage.


Here’s an example. Pat Forde went up to BC during basketball season and received the royal treatment. He wrote a glowing story about the school. Four months later, we’re in football season and I think he still has the clam chowder on the brain. He picks us as a sleeper here. And in this list he mentions Blackmon and Toal as “hot” two-way players.

Atlanta vs. Boston

Sports and food can make a city great. In most cases Boston has Atlanta beat. Better Italian, Chinese, pizza, seafood, donuts. Boston has better fine dining and greasy spoons. The passion for the Red Sox and Patriots dwarfs anything Atlantans feel towards the Braves and Birds. But Atlanta’s two equalizers in the debate over which is the better city are barbeque and the passion for college football.


Exhibit A



I took this picture at the Pig-N-Chik. This is my favorite barbeque place and is less than two miles from my house. It is 1090 miles from BC and there is Boston College pennant hanging in the restaurant! In Boston, you’d be hard pressed to find anything BC-related two miles away from campus. (Yet every Dunkin Donuts north of Hartford has a Red Sox sticker or trinket on display.)


The southern traditions of the SEC and ACC mixed with the Big Ten and Big XII transplants has made Atlanta the melting pot of college football. On weekends it seems like anyone who is not at a game is in a sports bar watching one. School flags hang on front porches or whip out of car windows. The passion is contagious. I am pumped up about the season just thinking about it.


I miss going to games at Alumni, but living in Atlanta and watching the game via satellite with a nice pulled pork sandwich is not a bad tradeoff.

Monday, August 08, 2005

Blogpoll roundtable No. 5

Loyal reader LBIEagle took one look at the blogpoll on Brian’s blog and wondered how a real poll could include Temple in the Top 25. I reminded him that it was the “test” poll and that the real one would be up next week. Moments later, Brian sent out an email with the latest roundtable question. He’s the founder of the poll and a good guy, so I am glad he served as his own critic before the inevitable happened -- our poll turned out just as biased and lopsided as the “real” polls.


Human polls are inherently flawed because they are entirely subjective. I prefer them to the computer polls, but ultimately you are at the mercy of the voters. As Brian pointed out, even the most diehard college football fans in the world can only be very knowledgeable about a dozen or so teams. Look at it this way: let’s say you could watch 168 hours of football in a week (assuming no sleep or outside interests…which is probably the case with some of us). On an average weekend there is more than 200 hours of Division 1A football. So barring time machines and mega-Tivos, you can’t be an expert on every team. As a voter you are left to base some of you perspective on scores, reputations, bias, and numerous other subjective things. I have confidence that the blogpoll will deliver interesting results. Just remember the blogpoll voter makeup when Temple is in the Top 25 and Ohio State is not.


Now onto Brian’s question. Check out Mgoblog for other pollers comments.


Tell the world where the teams you know the most about should be ranked and why.


The team I know most about is Boston College. However, in ranking them, I am totally at a loss. There are two unknowns for most BC fans: how will Quinton Porter play and who the heck are these teams we’re playing? At this point I think Tom O’Brien can squeak out seven wins in any conference in the country. I also think we’ll win a crappy bowl. So starting the season at No. 22 seems right.


I live in Atlanta. I spend a lot of time sitting in traffic. While cruising the interstate at 25 mph, I listen to the flagship station of the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. There is no way this team deserves to be Top 25. Their defense should be very good. They have some great playmakers on offense. But Reggie Ball is not a consistent performer. And if things don’t start well, I think we could see a Mackovic-like mutiny on Chan Gailey.


Until I enrolled in the University of Georgia’s Terry School of Business, I loathed the Bulldogs. My surprisingly pleasant experience with the school and pending graduation converted me. I now consider the Dawgs my second team. That said, my knowledge of UGA football is minimal compared to my BC knowledge or the knowledge of your average Dawg fan. But I still know more than most outside the southeast. This season is Mark Richt’s real test. He is replacing his steady hand at QB, working without his bad cop Defensive Coordinator and his SEC division went through a major upgrade this season. I say letdown for the Dawgs. Third place finish in the East and a Peach Bowl date. Most polls have them as a Top 20 team. I think they should be 23-25.


Being in a different conference, I haven’t followed Pitt as closely as I normally would’ve but I have a hard time believing they are a Top 25 team. They weren’t that great last season. They just stepped up as BC and WVU melted. And the new coach is tinkering with what worked best last season -- the offense. They shouldn’t be ranked.


Notre Dame was underachieving last season. They enter this season unranked. I like Charlie Weis and think he’ll get these guys to perform. I think they should start the season at 21 or 22. They’ll finish the season in the Top 20.

Links and media criticisms

Here is another story on Ross Applegate and his road trip that ended with a BC commit.


If you’re reading this and a gambler (hey, this is a BC blog) you might want to check this out.


SI.com launched their college preview with an interesting look at cutting-edge offenses. A good job, in general. My one gripe is on this historical piece. Guys who work for the big sites are generally my generation (25-35). Most do good work. But I often find things lack historical perspective. How can you do a history piece on modern offense and start in 1997??? Obviously the first thing that stands out to me is that there is no mention of Flutie and his aggressive young offensive coordinator, Tom Coughlin. Flutie graduated holding dozens of NCAA passing records. Also, there is nary a mention of Norm Chow’s work at BYU or Mouse Davis or Don Coryell. I understand that the focus was on the spread, but others laid the ground work for today’s offense du jour many years ago.


Heading into the season, SI.com is leaps and bounds ahead of ESPN.com. The worldwide leader in sports led their preview with a blog-like conversation between Forde and Maisel. One problem -- this is a big pimp for their Insider, as this sort of thing will be subscription-only soon. ESPN might grow their revenue with this, but they won’t grow their audience. There is too much good, free stuff out there -- like this dual piece from EDSBS and BGS. You better bring something cool to the table if you are going to charge.

Friday, August 05, 2005

22 worked for Flutie

The coaches unveiled their preseason poll. BC enters the season at No. 22. In addition to BC, four other ACC teams cracked the top 25. Not a bad start for the new conference.


It is refreshing to be recognized by the coaches, but this is the poll that matters.

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Schedules and change of scenery

John Walters takes an interesting look at out of conference scheduling. He also points out that BC has one of the easiest out of conference schedules for 2005.


Here’s an article on BC and Louisville moving conferences. Straight forward apart from that they quote Jerry Petercuskie. When did the assistant start giving interviews? It was good to hear Jerry confirm the boost to recruiting.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Link-o-rama

I scour the internet looking for BC links, so you don’t have to…


The official BC site posted an interview with Josh Beekman. It seems like the O-line is going to miss Peterson as much as I am. Check out how the interviewer works in some of the talking points into the questions.


Unlike his teammate, Craig Smith did make a USA Basketball team.


Here’s an article on new members adjusting to the ACC.


This is a rehash of offseason BC stuff from Scout.com. Rivals would be wise to start giving away more of their stuff for free. As I read more and more college blogs, it confirms my belief that there is no need to pay of content.


This is an interesting press release from CSTV and ISP (one of BC’s marketing companies). We are getting closer and closer to every game being live over the internet. This is not a big deal and probably a step down in experience if you root for a premier team. This is great news if you root for a team like BC. For example, it is very unlikely that BC-Ball State will be picked up by any broadcaster. It is also unlikely that my pregnant wife would be up for a trip to see us take on the MAC power. If the game were streamed, I could watch from the comfort of my own home. Now, I’ll be stuck listening to the radio stream and using the gametracker.


Here’s another article on Boston movers and shakers trying to attract college championship games. Baseball will work. Mens basketball will work. Lacrosse will work. Everything else? Forget it. I know the Krafts would love to do it, but I see the ACC Championship game in Foxboro as a ticket sales disaster.


Here is an article on the Fenway Sports Group educating fans on the ACC. Bobby Bowden doesn’t even know who is in the conference these days, so imagine what Sully from Braintree is thinking.


Adidas is buying Reebok. This is great news since most BC fans despise our Reebok-designed apparel. The biggest complaint about Reebok is that they wouldn’t even produce maroon jerseys for us. They had no interest in spending money on BC, but needed to lockdown the only major sports school in their U.S. backyard. I imagine in this new arraignment, Reebok will drop out of the college game and we’ll be an Adidas school. Adidas better make maroon jerseys.


The Sporting News named Boston the best sports town in America. It is mostly a Pats, Red Sox thing, but they do mention BC as part of the success.


If you’re not reading Every Day Should Be Saturday, you should. Today -- per my suggestion -- they featured Spaz as their mustache of the day.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Dream job

Internet whipping boy Pete Fiutak loves him some BC. In CFN’s ripoff of the blogpoll roundtable, Fiutak selected BC as the school where he’d most like to coach. I love BC, but even I wouldn’t pick the job as the best in Division IA.


CFN didn’t ask my opinion on which job I would take, but I’ll give it anyway. North Carolina is very appealing, as is Stanford, but I think I would pick UCLA. It has got the right combo of weather, recruiting base and the opportunity to succeed. If Karl Dorrell gets run this year, look for many coaches to send out feelers on the job, including TOB.

Sunday, July 31, 2005

Weekend news

Jerry York underwent prostate surgery Friday. The prognosis is good.


Here is an article on this season's freshman class. They are not highly-regarded, but TOB seems unconcerned.

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Dudley dissed and other news

Jared Dudley was the last man cut from the Under-21 team. Given quotes like this “He did all the small things that make your team win” from the Phil Martelli, I think they were short-sighted in selecting the roster. Politics were probably in play too, as selector Jim Boeheim got his player on the team. Martelli spoke of Dudley’s tweener status as the reason he was cut. Dumb, dumb, dumb. In a tournament you need heady players who do the little things. Not size. Jared plays best with a chip on his shoulder, so hopefully this will motivate him this season.


More ink on the Georgia boy headed to BC. Not a ringing endorsement. I’m going to be a double-homer and say that he is going to be the Atlanta version of Glenn Foley and not another stiff.


Here is another article on the new voice of Boston College Football. This is a nice feature, but Meterparel should be warned that most diehard BC fans already hate him from his work on Dennis & Callahan.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Blogpoll roundtable No. 4

Here is my response to the latest Blogpoll roundtable. Head over to The Blue-Gray Sky to read what other pollers had to say.


1. Who are your rival(s)? I smell a conspiracy. I think this line of questioning is just an excuse for hundreds of BGS readers to write “BC is not our rival!” My response: “doth protest too much.” BC-ND doesn’t have the long-running history of other rivals, but it does have many important elements: student bodies and alumni networks that are very similar and have overlap outside of the schools, a unique feature (the last two Catholic schools playing IA football), a few memorable moments and most importantly bad blood. I’ve already given my perspective on the past, present and future of this rivalry, but thought I would expound on one aspect that the guys at BGS asked about -- pranks. Since there is little to do in South Bend on a Friday night, Notre Dame still holds good, old-fashioned pep rallies. In the fall of 1997, my drunken roommate stumbled upon the rally and did what until then was unthinkable -- he heckled the fans and speakers. He was shouted out and didn’t think much of it until it made the papers, was mentioned as a motivating factor by the players and Bob Davie and generally pissed off Irish fans. This was the start of a mini-tradition of BC players and fans being generally rude and obnoxious on any trip to South Bend. They can look down on us and demand to take us off their schedule, but with every little piece of turf we take and with every BC win, the rivalry becomes more heated.


2. Size up your chances in your rival games this year. Ugh. We’re in a new conference and not playing Notre Dame. Can someone talk Holy Cross into returning to Division IA?

3. If you could start up a new rivalry with another team, who would it be? BC fans are going to hate me for this, but I honestly think we should play UConn every year. Their litigious ways and slanderous comments during the Big East split makes it unlikely we will ever play them again, but I think it would make a good rivalry based on location and the fact that BC fans, in general, hate Uconn fans. Never has a nice run in chick hoops generated so much arrogance in a school and its fanbase. Talk to a UConn fan and you would think that their school is better than Harvard and has the athletic potential, success and history of Notre Dame, Alabama, UCLA, Michigan, Tennessee and Kansas combined. To sum it up, I would enjoy kicking their teeth in every year.

4. Overall, what do you think the best rivalry in college football is? No game consistently combines the history, passion and relevance to the national scene like Michigan-Ohio State. Plus you know it was Jim Tressel who trashed Michigan in The Sporting News preview.

5. Lastly, game trophies. What are the best and worst rivalry trophies out there? I love Paul Bunyan's Axe. It’s always funny to see uninsured, unpaid young athletes run around like crazy with sharp things. Worst rivalry trophy: the Maloof Trophy (New Mexico-New Mexico State). The trophy is not that embarrassing, but if you are going to win something from the Maloofs, wouldn’t you rather have courtside seats for the Kings, or a night in the Real World Suite at the Palms? A trophy? Couldn’t they at least arrange for Trishelle or Peja Stojakovic to hand over the trophy at the post game ceremony? No Maloof-related celebs…that’s gotta be a letdown for the players.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Say hello to the new kid

Many ACC writers took Day 2 of the ACC Football Kickoff to focus on the new northern team in the conference. (Taking the the new kid in school analogy a step too far, I would say BC would be a foreign exchange student who everyone is curious about on the first day. But not the hot chick type, more like the Asian guy that you lose interest in once you get him to swear in English in front of the teacher.)


My hometown paper’s esteemed college writer (BTW, am I the only Blog Poll member who likes Tony Barnhart?) led with a BC angle.


The Greenville paper likes the love BC is showing the ACC.


The Sun-Sentinel rehashes our final two years in the Big East.


The writers honored Kiwi as the Preseason Player of the Year. I hope his haircut doesn’t have a Sampson-like effect.


Most of the writers think we will finish behind Florida State in our division. However, none of the Bowdens seem to know who is in what division.


In Bowl news, the ACC locked up eight bids for 2006. But the conference is still short invites for this year. Look for Swofford and any of the teams on the outside to start begging for slots in this year’s fourth-tier bowls.


Finally, here is a picture of TOB holding court with reporters.



I never would have pegged him as a Mountain Dew drinker.

Monday, July 25, 2005

Three writers, one good effort

Being a college beat writer is not easy. You have to protect the subjects or risk losing access. There are only so many human interest stories to play up. And in BC’s case there is rarely breaking news. The two BC beat writers Mike Vega and Mike Shalin (I guess he kissed and made up with the Herald) do an okay job. At times they knock stuff out of the park. Other times it feels like they mail it in.


Maybe they are adjusting to the new surrounds, but they both wrote straight-forward “mail it in” stuff from their first ACC Football Kickoff. Both writers focused on Will Blackmon, who has been written about to death this summer. No new info (Will adjusting, used both ways, he’s excited, etc.). Normally no one would notice these “C” efforts and even fewer would care, but now fans can read any writer online. “C” efforts look even worse, when a writer from another part of the country takes a fresh look at BC star Mathias Kiwanuka. Kudos to the writer, Mike Harris. Instead of focusing on Kiwi’s Ugandan background (old news), he broke the story about Kiwi’s hair (new news) and provided a deeper explanation of why Kiwi came back for his senior year (Coach Willis). I read a ton of BC stuff and the last place I expect to learn about our players is from newspaper writers who don't cover BC.

ACC Simpsons



Some Miami fan made this image. Slighted ACC fans are now posting their Comic Book Guy rebuttals all over the internet (“we’re obviously Groundskeeper Willie”). BC fans won’t complain. Mayor Quimby is perfect.

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Flutie's legacy

A week after writing a nice article on Bill Flutie, Jackie MacMullan follows it up with an article on his cousin, Dougie. Dougie is Doug Flutie’s autistic son. Flutie will always be remembered for the game in Miami, but what he is doing for his son and other families with autistic children is more important.

Saturday, July 23, 2005

Barnhart likes BC

The AJC's Tony Barnhart restates his belief that BC will compete in the ACC. He also touches on some other issues in the conference. The article includes the coaches on the Hot Seat. BC faces all three this season.

Thursday, July 21, 2005

“Let’s put on a show” and other things

BC fans were considered the wine and cheese crowd of the Big East. The ACC, with its contingent of snooty private schools, is somewhat considered the wine and cheese conference. So when the two merge, how do you overcome this soft stigma? With a nice song and dance act!


In real news, the ACC Sports Journal published an article on BC recruiting which includes good quotes from TOB and short profiles of some of our recent commitments. Most BC fans know our pitch, but it is interesting to hear TOB confirm it.

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Music men

The future conference affiliations for the second- and third-tier bowls are falling into place. It looks like the ACC is close to locking up a relationship with the Music City Bowl. The ACC rep would face a SEC rep. This could create a little overlap with the Peach Bowl pairings, but it is better than going out to Boise.


Despite my presence, BC did not travel well to the 2001 Music City Bowl. It was a great game and TOB’s first win over a ranked opponent.


In reading all of these bowl articles, I’ve notice a common theme -- every committee plans on moving their date closer to New Year’s Day. This façade is funny to me. Like playing in the MienkeCarquestInsightGMAC Bowl is much more prestigious on December 30 as opposed to December 27. And that the date is the only reason people don’t travel to these games. The fact is that they are disappointments for many fans. When the whole season is built around conference championships and BCS games, it is hard to get the juices flowing for the third-level games. And as much as the committees want the 30th or 31st, ESPN is still calling the shots. They can only broadcast so many games and would rather have a Bowl Week, not a Bowl Long Weekend. As long as ESPN is the only game in town, Music City will be played whenever Bristol deems it appropriate.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Spring recap/preview Part VII

Running Backs


Under Tom O’Brien BC defined predictable. One of the hallmarks of the BC season was a focus on the ground game, with the featured back passing the 1,000 yard mark. Then came 2004: A dynamic QB and a platoon of young and injury-prone tailbacks led to a shift in the offense. Andre Callender, L.V. Whitworth and A.J. Brooks all played well and showed potential, but collectively they could not match Derrick Knight and Horace Dodd’s production from the year before.

Running BacksAttp per gameYds per gameTDs
Knight/Dodd3217021
Whit,Cal,Brooks3013710

**I did include Ross' stats, did not include QB rushing

This season, I think BC will revert back and focus on the ground game. I expect to see attempts increase and hopefully production will as well. I like all three and think whoever wins the role will have a great season. And if anyone struggles early, expect a quick hook (exhibit A: Dodd in 2002, exhibit B: Ross 2004). So here are the guys fighting for the starting job:


Andre Callender showed the ability to catch the ball and has the most elusive style of the three.


L.V. Whitworth is more of a power runner -- he’ll hit the hole and whoever is standing in his way. Fortunately in the Tire Bowl he showed the ability to adapt and finally ran around and away from defenders.


A. J. Brooks showed the best burst and seems to have the most speed. His big play ability could be needed, but I think the coaching staff has already tagged him as the No. 3 guy. Meaning he is unlikely to get a shot at the starting job. In fact, I bet after summer practice the coaching staff will potentially redshirt him. A.J. was supposed to redshirt last season, but injuries to Andre and L.V. forced the staff to use him.


While their styles are slightly different, their areas in need of improvement were all very similar -- staying on their feet, reading and reacting to the blocking and staying healthy.


Mark Palmer will start the reason at fullback. I think he can have a big season and could be a good safety net for Quinton Porter in the passing game. But blocking is the fullbacks first resposibilty in BC’s offense. If he doesn’t block well, Paddy Lynch will get some snaps. (If Lynch and Palmer struggle, I would like to see Whitworth used as Fullback. But there is no way Mr. Predictable would try that.)


BC will run the ball. And then run some more. I expect to see a healthy Whitworth run for 1,000 yards. Callender running for 500 and catching a few balls. Brooks will probably draw the short straw, but will hopefully benefit from a redshirt year.

Monday, July 18, 2005

New Eagle in Atlanta

As much as I try to avoid recruiting news, I felt the need to include something on the latest commit. Marietta, Georgia native and Walton High School's starting Quarterback Ross Applegate verballed to Boston College last week.


Ross is a big kid (TOB’s QB prototype) and plays for a perennial power here is Georgia. He is not as heralded as other Metro Atlanta QBs, but had interest from many other ACC schools. What excites me -- aside from the Atlanta aspect -- is that he plays at a high-level of competition. I think one of the differences between Paul Peterson (who came from a high-level Junior College) and Quinton Porter and a lesser extent Brian St. Pierre, was that Peterson played with and against many DIA players prior to BC. Porter and BSP did not. Walton sends kids to division IA and IAA schools every year. Ross should be prepared for the pressure, speed and rigors of playing in the ACC.


Also, here is a BC preview from Pack Pride. Some things are a little off, but that is to be expected. I am sure fans of other ACC schools will note my mistakes when I start talking out of my ass previewing their teams.

Friday, July 15, 2005

Friday links

Here's more on the next generation of Fluties. Nice touch by TOB to invite Billy's parents up to his office to make the offer. Eagle fans have often wondered how the somewhat charisma challenged O'Brien closes these kids. This confirms my belief -- he's good with parents.



Kenpom shoots holes in the home-court advantage myth. He uses the difference between the ACC and Big East as his springboard into the research. Basically it is tough to beat Duke because of Coach K and the five guys on the floor, not because of the Crazies.

My shilling for EverydayshouldbeSaturday continues with this link. This time they list their ACC All-Name team. Kiwi, Jazzmen and Tribble make the cut.

Thursday, July 14, 2005

So long, Shalin and other things

Wednesday night on WEEI, Mike Shalin confirmed that he is no longer with the Boston Herald. The Herald has not announced his replacement. Supposedly the paper is struggling, so it wouldn't surprise me to see them cut coverage from a beat status to just game stories. There were times when I felt Mike and Mike (the two BC beat writers) left a lot to be desired, but I am sad to see Shalin go. His basketball coverage stood out this season. Who knows if the team's play inspired him or he just hit a groove, but it was noticeably better. Best of luck to him in his new endeavors.


Nice article on our two Columbus boys. I’m glad someone finally admitted that they let the Fiesta Bowl slip through their fingers.


Here’s an article from the News & Record on our lack of rivals in the ACC. These things take time and I would gladly have the blank slate of the ACC than the litigious BS of the Big East.

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Blogpoll roundtable No. 3

Blog Poll roundtable No. 3, this time hosted by Michigan blogger Straight Bangin'. Check out his site for other blog pollers answers.


1. Which unheralded player on your team will be the hardest to replace? Which seemingly inconsequential player could make the biggest impact? While he received enough ink from Eagle in Atlanta to be considered overheralded, I have to go with Paul Peterson. The Mormon Flutie converted more Catholics than Brigham Young. More importlany he made BC football fun again. I have admitted to my hetero-man crush on Peterson many times. As for seemingly inconsequential player making a big impact, how about BC fullback Mark Palmer. The success of our running game is most often attributed to our massive line. The fullback was overlooked until Palmer struggled with his blocking last year. He has great hands, but needs to open holes. If he is serviceable enough with his blocking to stay on the field he could be an underrated offensive weapon.



2. Which regular-season game that won’t feature your team would you pay the most money to see this season? Why? I am going to actually list a game that I was going to attend for free. Here’s the story. My wife’s company has a pimped-out suite at Sanford. We only use it once a season when there is not a BC conflict. This year we were scheduled for the Arkansas-Georgia game. At the same time, we’ve been blessed and are expecting our first child this winter. Birthing classes are Saturday mornings in October, so I’ll miss our trip to Athens. But no fear, the baby will not interupt my viewing of BC football.


Bonus: Which rivalry game would you most like to attend? This question is harder to answer. All the storied rivalries have some appeal. But I am a patriot and a traditionalist, so I’ll say Army-Navy.


3. If your team were a rapper, who would it be and why? (Read Straight Bangin' to understand this joke.) This is easy. BC would be House of Pain. Both groups’ styles are straight forward and really white. Both are lacking in the skillz and skill positions. And as Notre Dame fans will be quick to point out: both try too hard to be Irish. (I don’t believe that BC wants to be Notre Dame, but I had to beat the Notre Dame fans to the punch on the joke.)

Midweek news

No real news on BC, so here are some items of interest that are related to BC.


The Fenway Sports Group is slowly flexing its muscle. To read this article you have to subscribe to some yokel paper in Washington. Don’t bother. I’ve signed up and read it so you don’t have to. Highlights include:

  • FSG is involved in more than just BC. They are dealing with signage and selling MLB.com’s ads.



  • BC was a natural first step and the ACC aspect made it very appealing to the Red Sox.



  • ISP doesn’t usually like partnering with others, but the Red Sox’s name and the Boston College aspect made it worth the risk.


  • None of this money counts towards MLB revenue sharing. I applaud the Red Sox on this last point. Like the Yankees, they have a valuable brand for which their owners paid an exorbitant amount of money. They have to pay off huge debts and budgets and the Kansas City Royals and Devil Rays are not entitled to every penny the big market guys earn, especially when the teams are aggressive and are trying to grow their businesses.


Here is an article on Chris Snee and his recovery from a mysterious illness. Not only is he a BC alum, he is married to a BC grad and his head coach (who is also his father-in-law) is former BC coach Tom Coughlin.


Finally I am on my way to Canada to kick Korey Banks’ ass. How dare he cheap shot my boy, Paul Peterson?

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

News and views

The Big XII is in the Gator Bowl mix. If the present discussion gets finalized the ACC would face a four-year rotation against either the Big XII, Notre Dame or the ACC.


SI.com published Athlon Sports' BC preview. It is pretty straight forward and covers what is in their preseason magazine. I'm kicking myself for already buying the mag at Borders.


I don't spend too much time on recruiting news, but this signee caught my attention. Bill has big shoes to fill if he remains a QB. (By the way, Bill is Doug's nephew -- not his son.)

Monday, July 11, 2005

Same field, new logo

From bceagles.com. I cannot wait to see the ACC logo in the lane on the Basketball court.




New voice of Boston College Football

Word is that John Meterparel is the new voice of Boston College football. Supposedly this has been in the works for a few months. Yet there is no press release from BC athletics. I wish John luck, but I’m disappointed that they didn’t bring back former BC announcer Sean Grande. My gut tells me Meterparel sees this as a springboard job. It would be nice to have a voice of BC for decades, rather than a few seasons. Given BC’s position in the Boston media hierarchy, the job will probably always attract short-timers.

The deal also shows the growing influence of the Red Sox in BC marketing. Meterparel is an announcer for the morning program on the Sox Flagship station and the Fenway Group helped put this pairing together.

Where we are going and were we aren’t

CFN released their preseason bowl predictions. They think BC will face Mizzou in the Champs Bowl. These things are fun time-fillers, drive fan interest and take very little time to put together. Hell, I can tell you where BC will go (assuming we’re bowl eligible again).


First where you won’t see BC: any BCS game and Charlotte. Last year was our best chance to put BC in the BCS. As optimistic as I am getting about this season it would take a string of miracles topped by us winning the ACC championship in Jacksonville to qualify for a BCS game. Not going to happen this year. You can also cross Charlotte off since we went last year as the Big East rep and they will always pick an ACC team within driving distance.


Where we might go: Gator Bowl or Peach Bowl. While the Peach would be a dream come true for me, I would be equally happy with the Gator. Both are long, long shots. The Gator invite would only happen if these specific dominoes fall. First, Notre Dame would have to qualify for the Big East slot. Their fans would buy enough tickets to offset BC’s poor travel record and the TV ratings would be appealing to the network. But -- here is the rub -- to get the invite BC would have to have a strong enough conference record, but still lose to the division to FSU. Because if BC makes the ACC Championship game and loses, we are not being invited back six weeks later. Ticket sales would be terrible. The Peach Bowl will only happen if we win the division and then lose in Jacksonville. I also think the Peach would only consider us if our SEC opponent guaranteed a sellout (Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Tennessee or South Carolina).


Where we are probably going: Boise or Champs (Orlando’s JV Bowl). I would prefer Orlando, but with the god-awful bowl games we’ve played in, it is only a matter of time before we are on the Blue Turf. These slots are all determined by who has been where and what matchup makes the most sense travel and television wise. Season records take a back seat to money (just look how UVA got jobbed last season).


Of course there is also the “fill a slot” route which we have taken before. This is where BC is barely bowl eligible and doesn’t get one of the guaranteed ACC slots. In this case we would fill whatever slots cannot be filled by someone else. Unfortunately this scenario is much more likely than the Peach Bowl.

Harris fills BCS slot

The Harris Interactive College Football Poll will replace the AP Poll in this year's BCS. I don't think this will fix the BCS' problems. In my mind the national champion will come from this Poll.

Friday, July 08, 2005

How things have changed



A poster on Eagle Action brought this picture to my attention. It is former BC athletic director Bill Flynn touching up the logo on the basketball court. I don’t know the date but imagine -- based on the hair and logo -- that it was taken in the late ‘70s. It is a nice tribute to a guy who put his heart and soul into BC athletics. It is also a sign of how things have changed in college sports. Now there are whole teams of people working in these departments and the AD is a CEO, not a down and dirty, do what must be done, jack of all trades. Can you imagine an AD from any Division IA school doing this today?

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Spring recap/preview Part VI

Defensive Line


The defensive line has one of the best players in the country and two question marks.


ACC fans should learn the name Mathias Kiwanuka now since you’ll hear his name over and over in the pregame preambles on TV and radio. Kiwi has speed and size and is probably a top ten pick in next year's NFL draft. I don’t expect him to dominate in the ACC because he is going to be the focal point of all opposing offensive game plans. Last year, when he was more well known, some teams were able to neutralize him for long periods. Kiwi has speed, but is still somewhat slender and has trouble with double teams.


Kiwi will probably be a combine monster, but what is most overlooked about his style of play is his relentlessness. He really plays to the whistle and has been known to make downfield tackles and pick up a sack after getting knocked down and/or held. This style of play keeps us in games and will hopefully serve as a good lesson to his inexperienced teammates.


The only other experienced player on the D-line is Al Washington. Al is a little undersized to play the interior, but has been very reliable. He only collected a few tackles last season, but that was somewhat expected given that Bulman, Kiwi and Mettling were always around the ball. I don’t think he’ll have an all-conference season, but I do think he take advantage of Kiwi’s double teams.


The real pressure is going to be on the other spots. There is an assortment of guys who will get playing time. At End, Nick Larkin played well in spot duty last season but he is lean like Kiwi. He and Jake Ottolini (who he’ll split time with) will need Ron Brace and Justin Bell to take up space at the other tackle spot.


The rest of the unit is pure speculation. Jerry Willette, Ryan Thompson, B.J. Raji, and Jeff Burns will all get a chance to play. I am going to follow a hunch and say that Keith Willis will surprise and get serious playing time by the end of the season. Who knows? These guys are all blank slates. Hopefully they get good coaching.


As a whole the D-line should be solid. Kiwi’s presence alone will take a lot of the pressure off of the inexperienced guys. Plus they have a great group of linebackers and a respectable defensive backfield behind them. I worry about them stopping the run, but we don’t face that many running teams. If any of the unknowns steps up, this could be the best BC defense of all time. More likely, they'll all play okay and Kiwi will get manhandled and the linebackers will carry the team.

Smith, Stewart and Swindle

USA basketball invited Craig Smith to its World University Games Trials. Even if Craig doesn’t make the team, it is nice to see him recognized. In my opinion having Craig and Jared play this summer for USA basketball will raise their level of play this winter. Plus, the basketball team could use some good news.


My former colleague Stewart Mandel wrote about the conference realignment. Although it seems obvious, he is the first one to point out the imbalance in the two ACC divisions. Florida State will be the division favorite every year, but there is no reason to think other schools won’t raise their level of play. And if Bowden’s career starts to mirror JoePa’s, any school could be playing in Jacksonville.


Finally, blogs are filled with media critics (including me). The raw reactions and the pointing out of the missteps of the mainstream pundits is one of the most interesting aspects of this medium. So when I laughed out loud at this rebuttal of Trev Alberts by Orson Swindle (one of the contributors to Every Day Should Be Saturday), I felt I should link to it despite lack of BC content. The Every Day guys are also participating in the Blog Poll.

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

News of the day

Dennis Dodd writes a conference shift piece. I really think these guys should start calling their columns/articles/features blogs because Dennis takes a colorful approach to things with this piece that strays from traditional journalism (for example: calling the ACC raiders, when he knows this was a long dance among many teams). He can do what he wants, but at least as a blog the expectations for bias and opinion are different.


Here’s an interesting story on a BC assistant getting snubbed for a job with the BU women’s hockey team...because he is a man. Gender bias works both ways, I guess. I wonder how many women apply for jobs with men’s sports? I am not a lawyer, but the BU coach was dumb for telling the candidate that he didn’t get the job because he had a penis. Gary Barnett is the only football coach I could see saying something like that.


Princeton named Mike Fassel its director of football operations. Mike is a good guy who has overcome a lot, so best of luck to him. If he stayed healthy last year (he got hurt horsing around in his dorm room) I think we would have beaten Wake and Pitt. While I would like to think his two BC degrees made the difference in the hire, his connections didn't hurt.


Here is an interview with John Swofford on the new ACC. They mention the U.S. News rankings, but I have a feeling that BCS rankings are (and will be) more important.

Sunday, July 03, 2005

"Bad boys, bad boys..."

Earlier in the week I wondered why the Globe wasn't writing more positive stories on BC. Well a few days later they come out with an expose on the travails of the basketball team. Fortunately it is a holiday weekend so this won't get too much coverage. I've already said that the Williams incident might be the tipping point. Most of this info was already out, but I did learn that DeJuan Tribble was with Sean the night of the bust. It was good to hear that Ryan Sidney had pulled his life together. I loved him as a player and just wish he kept his nose clean at BC.

None of this is funny, but I did laugh at the hit and run on Ted Kennedy's wife's car.

Here is their timeline on the recent problems.

In an attempt to add balance the Globe wrote about the football program keeping clean...except for that whole kidnapping thing.

Friday, July 01, 2005

Happy and sappy thoughts on the ACC

Just like I wanted to put the negativity of the Big East behind me, I will use this entry as one last chance to gush and thank those who contributed to BC’s move to the ACC (in his or her own little way). After this I am back to news and my marooned-colored glasses form of analysis. (Who am I kidding? I am sure I’ll gush about a player, team or moment here and there.)


As Gene DeFilippo said, this is probably the biggest moment in BC sports history. So I’ll start by thanking Gene. He is far from perfect, but his dedication, networking and politicing where the key to BC’s entry.


Thanks to John Swofford. While not totally what he envisioned, his bold moves created this new conference and for his selection of BC, I am grateful.


Thanks to the fans and adminstrators of Clemson, Florida State, Georgia Tech and Miami. Without their support BC could have been hung out to dry many times.


Thanks to all the coaches and athletes who have served Boston College in the last ten years. Without your success on the field of play, BC would not have been considered for this opportunity.


Thanks to all the great administrators and athletes (most notably Doug Flutie and Bill Flynn). The foundation you laid is the reason BC athletics have thrived in the past 20 years.


Thank you to Father Leahy. Many questioned your understanding and dedication to athletics when you arrived, but with this ordeal, you have proven your love of sport and the school.


Thank you to Father Monan. You saved and transformed BC many years ago.


Finally thanks to the Boston College alumni. Without our success, generousity, and spirit there is no BC. The life of a school is its students and alumni. The community we joined in our late teens is nothing without us. As the cheer says: “We are…BC!”


Ever to Excel

Eagle in Atlanta Classic

For those who missed it, I thought I would repost this piece I wrote about the successes and failures of teams joining new conferences. (As always, I apologize for the funky layout of the tables in blogger.)

Hoops preview

ESPN weighs in with its midsummer ACC basketball preview. It is an interesting format with most of their talking heads contributing. Good comments on BC throughout, however, there is no mention of Sean Williams anywhere. There are three explanations for the oversight:

1. Al has got word out there that Williams will be back by January (and the OK State transfer rumors are false)

2. Good old-fashioned lazy reporting (unlikely since Katz has Al on speed dial) or

3. The brains in Bristol don’t think as much of Williams as Kenpom and I do.

ACC-eptance news

There’s plenty of links and news to mark BC's first official day in the ACC.


First, a celebration letter from Gene DeFilippo. Here is our press release. Our new conference also made an official announcement. Check out the front page for the new conference logo and the big “It’s Official” headline.


The Globe and the Herald covered the celebration party at Fenway. Interesting to note that neither of the BC beat writers wrote the stories. While BC fans focused on the ACC, most of the media focused on Fenway potentially hosting an ACC tournament.


Finally, for some southern flavor, here is the News-Record’s coverage of the festivities.

New kid in town