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The Goal - See 'em all!


 

"Steveo's Salvos" - May 6, 2007 Edition

"Salvos" is presented as the editorial content of CollegeFootballFan.com focusing on current issues surrounding college football and news about some of the teams on the CFF schedule this year.  Originally from a newsletter, this web site, CollegeFootballFan.com, has evolved. 

Out with the old - in with the new  - Just when we thought we had the final plan to see our remaining five teams, schedules started changing.  If everything stays as is, we still have it nailed!  Here's where we left off with our last plan:  "At first, we uttered unmentionable phrases when the schedule showed that the Vandals of Idaho would play at Nevada on October 27, the same day two other teams needed to complete the craziness, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, are scheduled to play.  We went back and looked a little more closely at the Idaho and Nevada games on the WAC schedule to see if there was any flexibility there to work around this "gridiron lock". Wow!  To our benefit, we saw a sliver of daylight and we're going for it.  Instead of heading to Nevada as initially desired, we're spending a weekend in Idaho for a Saturday/Sunday 'weekend doubleheader'.  On Saturday, October 13, Idaho hosts Fresno State in the Kibbie Dome in Moscow, ID.  The next day, 276 miles south in Boise, the Wolfpack of Nevada-Reno visits Boise State on the blue turf at Bronco Stadium in a game tentatively scheduled for ESPN.    With these games on our slate, we plan to try to see Kansas State at Auburn on Labor Day weekend, and somehow, we're going to get into the OU-OSU rivalry to finish the Goal on October 27!  We need to start making these arrangements now to assure we can get it done.  This should be fun! "  Well, before a call was to be made to T. Boone Pickens to see if he had an extra seat for his Cowboys at Oklahoma on October 27, the game was moved for TV purposes to the Saturday after Thanksgiving.  That ticket probably got tougher, the airfare just went up, and finishing up away from the family on Thanksgiving just wasn't what we had in mind!  October 27 arrangements were changed to get us to Reno which we thought would be a great place to reach the Goal anyway when Idaho visits Nevada ( a few Wolf pack fans have already invited us to drop by their tailgate parties)!  Our good friend Charlie Murren has a line on the Kansas State at Auburn game, but what do we do about the two Oklahoma schools?  Answer: add a third!   The gears started turning.  New game times were being announced as certain games were being moved to weekday nights.  Turns out that OU will visit Tulsa on Friday, Sept. 21, but hold on, Tulsa's Skelly Stadium only hold 35, 542 you say!  That's not an easy ticket.  No, but we have our "connections".  Chris Koreivo, one of our Left Coast followers, had told us in the past that if we ever needed to see a Tulsa game, he had the connection for us out in Long Beach.  We put out the call.  His buddy, Joe Pistoia, played TE for the Golden Hurricanes back in the late '60s.  His son Tyler is listed as a red-shirt freshman on this year's Tulsa team.  The family has an extra ticket for us to add the Sooners to the Goal.  We saw the Hurricanes not once last year for the first time, but twice.  This will be their rubber game for us as we saw them defeat Navy in OT in Annapolis and saw them lose their lead to SMU later in the season when we joined The Pony Club down on the Boulevard.  Thanks to Chris and Joe for putting that all together for us.  The following day about 100 miles away, the Cowboys of OSU host Texas Tech!  Does anyone out there have T. Boone's number?

Draft notes of note - OT Levi Brown was the highest pick we saw play this past season going from Penn State to the Arizona Cardinals as the fifth pick in the draft.  Ted Ginn, JR, whom we saw when Ohio state visited Penn State in 2005 was a controversial #9 pick at Miami, while Brady Quinn whom we saw play as a freshman against Washington State in 2003 surprisingly fell to #22 overall.  PSU's Paul Posluszny, two-time Butkus Award winner, will hopefully have a great career in Buffalo.  We had some inkling that Brown LB Zak DeOssie might follow in his father Steve's footsteps when we saw the Bruins fall to Princeton this past season, but not only did the Giants pick him in round 4, they like him as a long-snapper like his dad.  Little did we know that when WR Chandler Williams threw a key block for TE Sam Smith on an 89-yard TD play when Florida International fell to Maryland, 14-10, that we were seeing a seventh round pick who went to Minnesota.  Also selected from one of only two 1-A teams to finish 0-12, the Ravens supposedly picked up another find at the bottom in FIU OLB Antwan Barnes.  UTEP's passing attack of QB Jordan Palmer to WR Johnnie Lee Higgins who we saw connect six times for 82 yards and a TD in the opener against San Diego State went to Washington in the sixth and Oakland in the third respectively.  Versatile SS Eric Weddle of Utah is heading to the San Diego Chargers.  The Packers selected a kicker, Mason Crosby from Colorado, who we saw against CSU in the sixth round.  Our favorite pick of all though is the St. Louis Ram 7th round selection of WR Derek Stanley from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. We saw them fall to Mt. Union in the Division III Stagg Bowl championship game!  Stanley caught 17 TDs last season, but the Purple Raiders held him in check the day we saw him. We're rooting for him to make it in the pros though.

Big Tailgate Party - This year's event has to be on November 18 because that's when all the kids are most likely finished with football, soccer, fall baseball etc, and the week before Thanksgiving.  Pitt plays at Rutgers, but we doubt RU is still selling group plans now because of their new-found success.  Army hosts Tulsa and that could be interesting in Joe Pistoia, originally from Brooklyn, makes it up to West Point to see his son play. Harvard plays at Yale and right now that's kind of the way we're leaning.  It's good to have some options.

Goes around, comes around - The NCAA woke up and changed the rules back to where they were after much frustration last year - great!  The clock will stop on possession changes and the clock starts when the ball is touched by the receiving team.  Because these rules were different last year, there were 14 fewer plays on average last year to help reduce the amount of time per game.  Also, the kick-off rule was abused as a way to eat the clock by kicking it out of bounds and using time.  Two new rules will be to kick off from the 30 and to start the clock with 15 seconds instead of 25 after a time-out.

- Steve Koreivo, ed.