November 25, 2008

Paterno released from hospital

Penn State coach Joe Paterno was released from the Mount Nittany Medical Center and returned home Tuesday, the university announced in a press release.

The release said Paterno is no longer experiencing hip-related pain, and he will continue his rehabilitation at home. He was expected to be walking by Monday.

Paterno had hip replacement surgery Sunday, one day after Saturday's 49-18 win over Michigan State that clinched a share of the Big Ten championship and likely Rose Bowl berth.

Paterno is expected to resume coaching Monday when players return after Thanksgiving break, the release said.

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November 24, 2008

Hardware time

Media Selections

First Team

Offense
QB - Daryll Clark, Penn State
RB - Shonn Greene, Iowa
RB - Javon Ringer, Michigan State
WR - Arrelious Benn, Illinois
WR - Eric Decker, Minnesota
C - A.Q. Shipley, Penn State
G - Seth Olsen, Iowa
G - Rich Ohrnberger, Penn State
T - Alex Boone, Ohio State
T - Gerald Cadogan, Ohio State
TE - Garrett Graham, Wisconsin
K - Kevin Kelly, Penn State

Defense
DL - Mitch King, Iowa
DL - Jammie Kirlew, Indiana
DL - Willie VanDeSteeg, Minnesota
DL - Aaron Maybin, Penn State
LB - Brit Miller, Illinois
LB - James Laurinaitis, Ohio State
LB - Navorro Bowman, Penn State
DB - Vontae Davis, Illinois
DB - Otis Wiley, Michigan State
DB - Malcolm Jenkins, Ohio State
DB - Allen Langford, Wisconsin
P - Zoltan Mesko, Michigan

Second Team

Offense
QB - Juice Williams, Illinois
RB - Chris Wells, Ohio State
RB - Evan Royster, Penn State
WR - Deon Butler, Penn State
WR - Derrick Williams, Penn State
C - (tie) - Ryan McDonald, Illinois
- Rob Bruggeman, Iowa
G - Roland Martin, Michigan State
G - Kraig Urbik, Wisconsin
T - (three-way tie) - Xavier Fulton, Illinois
- Kyle Calloway, Iowa
- Jesse Miller, Michigan State
TE - Jack Simmons, Minnesota
K - Brett Swenson, Michigan State

Defense
DL - Matt Kroul, Iowa
DL - Brandon Graham, Michigan
DL - Corey Wootton, Northwestern
DL - Jared Odrick, Penn State
LB - Pat Angerer, Iowa
LB - Greg Jones, Michigan State
LB - Marcus Freeman, Ohio State
DB - Traye Simmons, Minnesota
DB - Kurt Coleman, Ohio State
DB - Lydell Sargeant, Penn State
DB - Anthony Scirrotto, Penn State
P - Alex Bates, Michigan State

HONORABLE MENTION: ILLINOIS: Jon Asamoah, Michael Hoomanawanui, Derek Walker; INDIANA: Chris Hagerup; IOWA: Bryan Bulaga, Ryan Donahue, A.J. Edds, Bradley Fletcher, Brent Greenwood, Brandon Myers, Amari Spievey; MICHIGAN: Obi Ezeh, Tim Jamison, Terrance Taylor; MICHIGAN STATE: Trevor Anderson, Charlie Gantt, Brian Hoyer, Justin Kershaw, Brandon Long, Joel Nitchman, Chris Rucker, Blair White; MINNESOTA: Kyle Theret, Adam Weber; NORTHWESTERN: John Gill, Keegan Kennedy, Sherrick McManis, Eric Peterman, Brad Phillips, Brendan Smith, Amado Villarreal; OHIO STATE: Nader Abdallah, Rory Nicol, Terrelle Pryor, Brian Robiskie; PENN STATE: Jeremy Boone, Tony Davis, Josh Gaines, Dennis Landolt, Mark Rubin, Stefen Wisniewski; PURDUE: Anthony Heygood, Ryan Kerrigan, Greg Orton, Kory Sheets, Desmond Tardy, Torri Williams; WISCONSIN: P.J. Hill, Andy Kemp, DeAndre Levy, Mike Newkirk, Matt Shaughnessy, Eric Vanden Heuvel, Philip Welch.

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Shonn Greene, Iowa
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: James Laurinaitis, Ohio State
FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR: Terrelle Pryor, Ohio State
DAVE McCLAIN COACH OF THE YEAR: Joe Paterno, Penn State

***

Complete lists:

Coaches First Team

Offense
QB - Daryll Clark, Penn State
RB - Shonn Greene, Iowa
RB - Javon Ringer, Michigan State
WR - Eric Decker, Minnesota
WR - Derrick Williams, Penn State
C - A.Q. Shipley, Penn State
G - Seth Olsen, Iowa
G - Rich Ohrnberger, Penn State
T - Alex Boone, Ohio State
T - Gerald Cadogan, Penn State
TE - Brandon Myers, Iowa
K - Kevin Kelly, Penn State

Defense
DL - Mitch King, Iowa
DL - Corey Wootton, Northwestern
DL - Aaron Maybin, Penn State
DL - Jared Odrick, Penn State
LB - Greg Jones, Michigan State
LB - James Laurinaitis, Ohio State
LB - Navorro Bowman, Penn State
DB - Vontae Davis, Illinois
DB - Otis Wiley, Michigan State
DB - Malcolm Jenkins, Ohio State
DB - Anthony Scirrotto, Penn State
P - Zoltan Mesko, Michigan

Second Team

Offense
QB - Adam Weber, Minnesota
RB - Chris Wells, Ohio State
RB - Evan Royster, Penn State
WR - Arrelious Benn, Illinois
WR - David Gilreath, Wisconsin
C - Rob Bruggeman, Iowa
G - Stefen Wisniewski, Penn State
G - Kraig Urbik, Wisconsin
T - Xavier Fulton, Illinois
T - Bryan Bulaga, Iowa
TE - Garrett Graham, Wisconsin
K - Brett Swenson, Michigan State

Defense
DL - Jammie Kirlew, Indiana
DL - Brandon Graham, Michigan
DL - Willie VanDeSteeg, Minnesota
DL - Mike Newkirk, Wisconsin
LB - Britt Miller, Illinois
LB - Pat Angerer, Iowa
LB - Marcus Freeman, Ohio State
DB - Amari Spievey, Iowa
DB - Traye Simmons, Minnesota
DB - Allen Langford, Wisconsin
DB - Jay Valai, Wisconsin
P - Ryan Donahue, Iowa


HONORABLE MENTION: ILLINOIS: Jon Asamoah, Michael Hoomanawanui, Ryan McDonald, Derek Walker, Juice Williams; IOWA: Kyle Calloway, A.J. Edds, Bradley Fletcher, Matt Kroul; MICHIGAN: Obi Ezeh, Brandon Minor, Terrance Taylor; MICHIGAN STATE: Trevor Anderson, Aaron Bates, Charlie Gantt, Brian Hoyer, Roland Martin, Jesse Miller, Chris Rucker, Blair White; MINNESOTA: Jack Simmons; NORTHWESTERN: John Gill, Keegan Kennedy, Sherrick McManis, Eric Peterman, Brad Phillips, Brendan Smith, Tyrell Sutton, Amado Villarreal; OHIO STATE: Nader Abdallah, Kurt Coleman, Rory Nicol; PENN STATE: Jeremy Boone, Tony Davis, Dennis Landolt, Jordan Norwood, Mark Rubin, Tyrell Sales, Lydell Sargeant; PURDUE: Anthony Heygood, Greg Orton, David Pender, Kory Sheets, Torri Williams; WISCONSIN: Jonathan Casillas, Jason Chapman, P.J. Hill, Andy Kemp, DeAndre Levy, Matt Shaughnessy, Eric Vanden Heuvel, Philip Welch.

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Shonn Greene, Iowa
OFFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE YEAR: A.Q. Shipley, Penn State
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: James Laurinaitis, Ohio State
DEFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE YEAR: Mitch King, Iowa
FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR: Terrelle Pryor, Ohio State

Big Ten Sportsmanship Award Honorees: Brit Miller, ILL; Austin Starr, IND; Matt Kroul, IOWA; Sean Griffin, MICH; Javon Ringer, MSU; Jack Simmons, MINN; Eric Peterman, NU; Marcus Freeman, OSU; Gerald Cadogan, PSU; Ryan Baker, PUR; Chris Pressley, WIS.

***

Shocker of the year, Ohio State's Terelle Pryor was named rookie of the year.

Also, Shon Greene, from Iowa, was named the league's offensive player of the year after leading the league in rushing yards. Greene passed the century mark during every game and was the only back to rush for more than 100 yards against Penn State.

***

Drum roll for the coach of the year award, many great candidates, Tim Brewster from Minnesota, Pat Fitzgerald of Northwestern, Iowa's Kirk Ferentz, Michigan State's Mark Dantonio . . . .

But the winner is the dean of Big Ten coaches, Joe Paterno claimed the third conference coach of the year award of his career. Only Michigan's Bo Schembechler (with four) has been named COY more often.

***

Now let's move on to the rest of the teams, four Penn Staters earned second team honors and seven more receiver honorable mention.

Second Team

WR - Deon Butler
RB - Evan Royster
G - Stefen Wisniewski
CB - Lydell Sargeant

Honorable Mention

P - Jeremy Boone
CB - Tony Davis
DE - Josh Gaines
T - Dennis Landolt
WR - Jordan Norwood
S - Mark Rubin
LB - Tyrell Sales

***

So that's 10 first team selections for the Lions, far and away the most of any Big Ten school, Iowa finished second with four first-team selections.

***

Let's move to the defensive side of the ball, and four Lions earn first-team accolades.

DE - Aaron Maybin
DT - Jared Odrick
LB - Navorro Bowman
S - Anthony Scirrotto

Interesting note, neither Maybin nor Odrick were listed as starters at the beginning of the season, now they're first teamers.

Ohio State linebacker James Laurinaitis was named defense player of the year for the second year in a row.

***

MT. WOLF, Pa. -- The all-Big Ten teams are being announced at 7:30 this evening, and my watch says 7:30 so away we go.

They're coming right out of the gate firing with selections, so I'll cut the chitchat and get on with Penn State's winners,

Coaches first team

QB - Daryll Clark
WR - Derrick Wiliams
C - A.Q. Shipley
G - Rich Ohrnberger
T - Gerald Cadogan
K - Kevin Kelly

Media first team

QB - Daryll Clark
C - A.Q. Shipley
G - Rich Ohrnberger
T - Gerald Cadogan
K- Kevin Kelly

Coaches offensive lineman of the year - A.Q. Shipley

Shipley joined the Big Ten network from his hometown of Pittsburgh and talked about being named lineman of the year.

"I was estatic, it meant everything in the world," Shipley told the Big Ten Network. "So many greta linemen that come from the big ten every year, to be put at the top of that list meant everything."

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A day of accolades?

Nittany Lion quarterback Daryll Clark was named co-Big Ten offensive player of the week Monday.

The award came after Clark threw for a career-high 341 yards and four touchdowns, to go along with a touchdown on the ground, in Penn State's Big Ten title clinching win against Michigan State. His 341 yards was the sixth most in a single game in school history.

Clark averaged 21.3 yards per completion against the Spartans, including a career-long 70-yard touchdown pass to Deon Butler. Clark also surpassed the 2,000-yard passing mark against Michigan State, making him the 12th quarterback in Penn State history to do so.

It was the first of what is expected to be a big day for the 2008 Big Ten champions, the all-conference team will be announced tonight. So check back at 7:30 p.m. Monday, when I'll be live blogging the all-Big Ten team announcement show.

-- Wible

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November 23, 2008

Paterno has hip replacement surgery

Penn State Sports Information Director Jeff Nelson sent out an email Sunday afternoon confirming Joe Paterno had "successful" hip replacement surgery at Mount Nittany Medical Center earlier the same day.

According to the email, Dr. Wayne Sebastianelli reports that Paterno is "resting comfortably" and "anxious" to get home.

In the email, Nelson writes that Paterno should be on his feet by Monday and able to resume his coaching regimen when Penn State players return to school on Dec. 1 after Thanksgiving break.

--TJ

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November 22, 2008

LIVE FROM THE PRESS BOX - PSU vs. MSU

That's all for us folks as we're heading down to the field for the rest of the game. Thanks a lot for following along.

***
Michigan State begins its drive at the 37 and a few Hoyer completions now have the Spartans driving down to the Penn State 20 yard line.

Hoyer throws a nice strike to Blair White between a pair of defenders down to the eight yard line. Another first down for the Spartans. The rhythm is disrupted by another false start penalty.

First and goal at the 13. Bani Gbadyu bit on a fake but Hoyer missed an open Andrew Hawkenin the end zone. A second down fade attempt sails out of bounds, and Sarlegeant breaks up a fade route on 3rd down. Michigan State hits a field goal from 30 yards out.

9:09 left to play
Penn State 49, Michigan State 10

***
Attendance just announced, 109,845 on Senior Day.

Pat Devlin has entered the game for PSU, replacing Daryll Clark and his 341 yards and four touchdown passes.

Devlin now facing a 3rd and 8 at PSU's 22 yard line. Devlin checks down to Royster who sprints down the sidline for a 15 yard gain and a Lions first down at the 37.

On second down Royster carries it off the left side and picks up four. 3rd and 6 at the 41.

The Penn State air attack continues its domination. Deon Butler once again got through the secondary wide open and Devlin floated a beautiful strike down the middle of the field for an easy touchdown. The floodgates are wide open.

Drive Summary:
6 plays, 80 yards in 2:10

12:50 left in the game
Penn State 49, Michigan State 7

***
Michigan State takes control at its own 27 as Beaver Stadium is rocking. The top sections of the student section are starting to thin out a bit.

On second down, Ringer picks up a first down on a run to the left. First and 10 at the 38.

Lydell Sargeant just put a big hit on B.J. Cunningham to break up a pass. After a short completion on second down and an incomplete third-down pass, Michigan State punts to Williams. A short return puts Penn State at the 20 to start the fourth quarter.

End of the 3rd quarter
Penn State 42, Michigan State 7

***
Stephfon Green checks back into the game for PSU and picks up seven yards on two runs to start the drive. Michael Jordan picks up a tackle for the Spartans.

Penn State picks up back-to-back first downs on back-to-back Clark-Norwood connections. First and 10 at the 30 yard line.

I don't know that I've ever seen someone wide open as Daryll Clark hits Deon Butler down the seam for a way-too-easy 70 yard touchdown. Clark's dance at the line of scrimmage was quite a sight after Butler scored. Clark is now over 300 yards for the first time in his career.

Drive Summary:
5 plays, 97 yards in 2:19

1:32 left 3rd quarter
Penn State 42, Michigan State 7

***
A nice return by Glenn Winston puts Michigan State at its own 45 to start. Blair White gets a step on Tony Davis but Hoyer put it too far in front for an incompletion.

After a Hoyer completion for a first down, Michigan State tries some trickery but ends up turning the ball over. Hoyer swung the ball to Ringer, who threw it back across the field to Hoyer. It looked like a forward pass, but Hoyer got the ball, threw deep and was intercepted by Lydell Sargeant. For his efforts, Hoyer was slammed into the ground by Navorro Bowman after the throw.

It looks like Ringer's toss to Hoyer was forward, but somehow after review, the referees ruled that everything was legal. I have no idea how the refs came to that conclusion, but Penn State will take over at its own four.

3:51 left 3rd quarter

***
Talk in the press box drifts toward the much-coveted Land Grant Trophy. Rivalries trophies don't get more beautiful than that, right?

***
Penn State starting at its own 30. So far almost no offense for either team this half.

Royster runs off-tackle to the left and spins upfield for six. On second down Royster explodes through a huge hole on the right side of the line on a stretch play. He picked up 25 yards to the MSU 41 yard line. After just seven carries in the first half, it looks like a good move to get Royster the ball a bit more in the second half.

Clark's first down pass is apparently intended for Brackett but comes down about 10 yards away from everybody. PSU draws a flag on second down as Gerald Cadogan jumped the gun. Looks like he was a bit to anxious to start pulling to the right.

A Royster run gets PSU to the 42. 3rd and 11 for Penn State.

Clark finds a wide open Jordan Norwood streaking across the middle on a crossing route. It looks like the defensive back slipped, just like on Norwood's earlier long pass. He gets down to the nine yard line for a 33-yard gain.

Williams in the Wildcat formation on 2nd and 10. He runs a read option and keeps the ball, getting him down to the four. 3rd and goal, Clark hits Deon Butler on a quick slant for a touchdown. The Spartans will need a miracle to come back in this one. Kelly's extra point is good and PSU goes up by 28.

Scoring Drive:
8 plays, 70 yards in 3:21

4:34 left 3rd quarter
Penn State 35, Michigan State 7

***
Jared Odrick went almost un-touched through the line it seemed as he blasted Ringer for a two-yard loss on first down. Hoyer hits Ringer on a swing pass, he cuts to the middle of the field and gets close to a first down before Astorino wrapped him up.

On 3rd and 1 Ringer's troubles on the ground continue as Aaron Maybin hit him for another loss. Bates punts it away to Williams, who calls for a fair catch at the 30.

7:55 left 3rd quarter

***
Clark misses wide on a comeback route by Butler, and Royster follows it up with a short run. 3rd and 8.

Three and out for Penn State as Clark pulls the ball down and runs right but is stopped two yards short of a first down. Otis Wiley signals for a fair catch on the Boone punt but decides to let it hit the ground. The balls rolls to the Michigan State 17 yard line, where they'll start 1st and 10.

9:58 left 3rd quarter

***
A low Kevin Kelly kickoff is controlled by Michigan State and the Spartans will begin the second half at the 24 yard line.

A two-yard run by Ringer and an nine-yard pass give MSU a quick first down. Spartans right tackle Jesse Miller picks up yet another false start penalty. Ringer runs for no gain and Hoyer completes a short pass for four. Third and 11 for the Spartans.

Hoyer completes an out-route to Blair White but Sargeant wrapped up nicely six yards short of the marker. Fourth down and Williams fair catches for PSU at the 27 yard line.

11:34 left 3rd quarter

***
Hey everyone, Collegian men's basketball reporter Matt Brown here to take you the rest of the way through the second half.

Some halftime team stats:

First Downs: MSU 11, PSU 10
Total Yards: PSU 259, MSU 123
Passing Yards: PSU 215, MSU 109
Rushing Yards: PSU 44, MSU 16
Turnovers: MSU 1, PSU 0
Time of Possession: PSU 15:14, MSU 14:46
Third Downs: PSU 6-8, MSU 3-8

Stat leaders:
Passing
Daryll Clark, PSU: 11-18, 215 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT
Brian Hoyer, MSU: 14-22, 109 yards, 0 TD, 1 INT

Rushing
Evan Royster, PSU: 7 carries, 40 yards
Javon Ringer, MSU: 10 carries, 27 yards, 1 TD

Receiving
Jordan Norwood, PSU: 2 receptions, 75 yards
Derrick Williams, PSU: 4 receptions, 51 yards, 1 TD
B.J. Cunningham, MSU: 5 receptions, 43 yards
Blair White, MSU: 4 receptions, 30 yards

The Blue Band has played and the halftime tribute to the seniors, featuring the 2005 "I Told You So" stadium video, has also wrapped up. About 6 minutes left until things get underway in the second half.

***

Just 16 seconds left in the first half. Lions figure to run out the clock here at their 31 yard line. Green takes the carry and players rush toward the tunnel

Halftime
PSU 28, Mich. St. 7

***

1st-and-10 from the Lions' 14, and a pass interference penalty on Lydell Sargeant moves Mich. St. to the two yard line. I'm thinking Ringer gets the ball at some point.

First down sees Hoyer bootleg out to the right, but has to throw it out of the endzone. Hoyer fires from the gun on second down, appears to throw it out the reach of White, but Scirrotto gets flagged for interference. I thought it was uncatchable.

Next play Ringer gets his TD.

Scoring Drive:
14 plays, 76 yards, 2:25

0:22 left 1st half
PSU 28, Mich. St. 7

***

Michigan State converts the fourth down conversion for 12 yards. Hoyer is flushed from the pocket again and tosses the ball into the stands, where a fan made a great, over-the-railing catch.

Screen pass to Ringer who scampers out of bounds after picking up seven. 3rd-and-3 for Mich. St. Hoyer finds Cunningham over the middle for the first down.

Timeout Mich. State, one timeout remaining.

:42 seconds left 1st half

***

3rd-and-7 for the Spartans. White gets another catch, but is short of the first down. Penn State calls its seconds timeout of the half to try to salvage some time for a late-half drive.

1:12 left 1st half

***

The Lion mascot unveils his face and gets a nice ovation for his duties this season.

1st-and-10 for the Spartans at their own 24.

Blair White is on the other end of a Hoyer completion. Next play sees Hoyer throw a good ball over the middle, but the tight end is unable to get two hands on it.

Ringer met soon after he gets his paws on it again. The work-horse tailback hasn't been much of a factor this half.

Hoyer's doing some more dink-and-dunk-type passes. Timeout Spartans

1:26 left 1st half

***

One play later Clark finds Williams in the endzone for a 32-yard TD pass. Williams skied high to grab the ball and find pay dirt.

Scoring Drive:
1 play, 32 yards, :07

2:52 left 1st half
PSU 28, Mich. St. 0

***

Kevin Kelly has 415 points for his career now, moving him into 5th place on the NCAA's all-time scoring list.

Spartans ball 1st-and-10 from their own 14 after a personal foul penalty. Hoyer throws a quick pass out to Cunningham who scoots for seven yards. Hoyer throws the same ball, only this time to the left side.

Hoyer airs it out for a third straight time, but finds Scirrotto instead of his intended receiver. Lions ball at the Mich. St. 32.

2:59 left 1st half

***

Green gets popped on the opening play of the drive, getting whacked by Greg Jones four yards back. Clark has the Lions moving backwards again, sacked for three yards.

3rd-and-17 from their own 22. Green blows a block, then completely redeems himself by taking the screen 37 yards down to the Spartans 41.

Flags everywhere as Clark lays it out for Butler down the left sideline. Lions set up shop from their own 28.

Green loses a yard on his second carry of the game. Next play sees a crossing pattern to Zug, but the Manheim product can't hang on.

3rd-and-11. Clark in the gun, scales the defense then finds Zug again. Zug is stopped at the 1-yard line.

Clark takes the QB sweep to the right. Touchdown, Penn State!

Scoring Drive:
8 plays, 71 yards, 3:16

3:57 left 1st half
PSU 21, Mich. St. 0

***

Now we got packed Beaver Stadium. Spartans trouble with the kickoff, but take over at their own 17.

Ringer takes the zone read four yards, Lions still doing a good job bottling him up. Next play sees Hoyer complete to Mark Dell for a first down.

Ringer bursts up the middle for his highest rush of the day, a nine yard pick up. Ringer moves the chains again.

1st-and-10 on their own 42, now. Play action pass out to midfield. Spartans finding a rhythm after Ringer picks up the third first down of the drive.

Hoyer, meet Mr. Evans. Once Hoyer turns back from a play action, Evans is right in the QB's face. Loss of 11.

3rd-and-21 for the Spartans, now. Hoyer is flushed from the pocket and gets back to about the original line of scrimmage.

Lions take over at their own 29 with 7:13 remaining in the half.

***

3rd-and-8 is what's in front of the Lions. The cheerleaders and Lion on the field a little too long to delay the start of the quarter.

Royster takes a screen 19 yards. Royster spun away from a defender but then tripped over A.Q. Shipley. Clark goes back to the air, and Deon Butler just misses a spectacular one-handed catch.

Clark feeds Royster, who struts up the middle for three yards. 3rd-and-7 for the Lions at the Mich. St. 44. Crossing route by Norwood is pitch and catch for Clark. Norwood sneaks down the right sideline to the 18 yard line.

Royster goes off tackle on the left side down to the five line.

Touchdown Lawlor! Nice tribute to the senior who paved the way for many Royster scores this season.

Scoring Drive:
12 plays, 86 yards, 5:07

12:01 left 2nd quarter
PSU 14, Mich. St. 0

***

Royster picks up four on first down, then takes the next carry three more yards. On third down Clark finds Williams on a curl for a first down.

Clark airs it out to Zug on first down, but the throwing into the wind, Clark maybe put too much on it as he overshot Zug.

End of first quarter
PSU 7, Mich. St. 0

***

After a booming punt, Williams gets a pretty decent nine-yard return, but alas, block in the back on Nathan Stupar.

It'll be 1st-and-10 for the Lions at their own 14.

3rd-and-6 for the Spartans.

Hoyer can't put enough on it to get it to his target, B.J. Cunningham. Fourth down.

Looking down from the press box, there's a lot of people scrunched together down in the bleachers. Hey, least they're staying warm.

Ringer takes the handoff four yards to the Spartan 31. State staying in its base-formation 4-3 defense. Another run from this Winston guy. Mark Dantonio's got the nation second-leading rusher, and Winston has as many touches as Ringer.

Timeout Penn State

2:19 left 1st quarter

***

Royster chugs out seven yards. Then, Clark finds Williams for nine. First Down.

Clark fakes a pitch to Williams, but overshoots an open Norwood. Here's Williams in the "WildLion" formation, where he takes the snap. His run manages just three yards.

3rd-and-7 sees Williams dropping a pass over the middle. Cue Boone.

3:33 left 1st quarter
PSU 7, Mich. St. 0

***

Key fact: Michigan State is 8-0 on the year when they score first.

Glenn Winston gets a strong return, running it back down the Penn State sideline for 35 yards. 1st-and-10 at their own 43.

Winston takes the carry to the left side, but the Lions' D-line continues to be in hot pursuit of any Spartan tailback. Screen goes to Ringer for five yards, bringing up 3rd-and-five.

Hoyer in the shotgun. Ollie Ogbu wraps him up just as Hoyer sees daylight trying to scramble up the middle.

Williams fair catches the punt at the Lions' 12-yard line.

Lions first-and-ten from their 12 yard line. 5:51 to play first quarter

***

Grounds' crew members are blowing snow off the five-yard markers and along the sidelines. As gusts of wind blow snow off the lights, the sun makes its first appearance of the afternoon.

Back to the action. First-and-10, ball on their own 41 for the Lions. Clark goes to the air on the first play of the drive and finds Norwood on a 49-yard slant down to the Spartans 10 yard line. The Spartan corner slipped, allowing Norwood to give Clark an easy window.

Royster pounds it down to the five, bringing up 3rd-and-goal. Clark rolls out to his right, buying time, and at the last possible instant, finds Zug in the front corner of the endzone.

Scoring drive:
4 plays, 59 yards, 1:54

7:41 left 1st quarter
PSU 7, Mich. St. 0

***

Michigan State's all-offense back Javon Ringer got nailed in the backfield on first down. QB Brian Hoyer completes two straight passes to move the chains.

Tyrell Sales isn't fooled on a pump-fake-then pitch to Ringer. Loss of four on that play. Penn State is containing Ringer early on.

On 2nd down Hoyer throws downfield, but Scirrotto lays out a big hit to force the incompletion.

3rd and 19 and the right tackle for the Spartans jumps early the second time this drive.

Abe Koroma and Mo Evans sack Hoyer. Williams calls a fair catch on the ensuing punt.

9:35 left 1st quarter
No score

***

Michigan State won the coin flip and deferred til the second half. Penn State gets its gloves on the football first.

Williams fields the kickoff and take it up to Penn State 28-yard line.

Two plays of Evan Royster tally three yards.

Quarterback Daryll Clark got great protection on 3rd-and-7 and threw a strike to Jordan Norwood at the 45. The ruling was incomplete, as Norwood never had complete control of the football. Play was reviewed but remains as called.

A three-and-out for the Nittany Lions. Michigan State football on its own 18 after the 51-yard punt by Jeremy Boone.


***

Hey Pigskin enthusiasts, men's basketball reporter Nate Mink here to take you through first quarter action. Fifteen minutes until kickoff, and the seniors are getting introduced. Derrick Williams was the last senior to be honored and it sounded like D-Will got the loudest ovation.

During all the pre-game rituals, it was like a blizzard out there. It's still blowing around pretty good, and the green turf is slowly turning white. I feel bad for the Blue Sapphire.

Lot of empty seats where the students sit with five minutes to kickoff.

***

Good afternoon Nittany Nation, this is Collegian football reporter Travis Johnson coming to you live from the chilly confines of the press box at Beaver Stadium.

Chilly is an understatement. It's absolutely freezing in State College, Pa.

The temperature on the field is 27 degrees and could drop as the sun goes down.

Michigan State quarterback Brian Hoyer shouldn't mind the frigid temperature, however. Hoyer told me this summer at Big Ten Media Days in Chicago that playing at Penn State is his favorite road game.

Here's what Hoyer had to say.

"The fans are great. It gets loud."

Hoyer got his first career start at Penn State two years ago when then-starter Drew Stanton was injured. Hoyer remembered that game and told a group of youngsters at a football camp about it. He retold that story to me.

"My first start ever I remember playing at Penn State. It's so loud. I was working at a football camp, and these kids would ask us, 'What's the toughest stadium you play at?' Off the top of my head: Penn State."

"People can't hear you talking in the huddle. It's definitely a great atmosphere to play in. I think the coolest thing about it is you're driving into Penn State and it's all these hills and forests and stuff and then you just see this huge structure, this huge stadium."

KEYS TO THE GAME

PENN STATE:

The Lions will have to stop Spartan running back Javon Ringer. Michigan State's tailback is the Spartan offense. Ringer has thrashed defenses to the tune of 1548 yards this season. That's second best in the country. Penn State knows Ringer will get the ball a lot, he's carried the ball 353 times, 77 times more than the kid with the second-most carries.

Penn State will have to establish an early rhythm on offense. If the Lions struggle to move the ball down the field, especially in this cold weather, it could affect their states of mind. Daryll Clark needs to throw the ball well and avoid interceptions against the conferences third-best secondary.

MICHIGAN STATE:

Not only is MSU going up against a formidable opponent in the Nittany Lions, they also have to face the country's loudest, rowdiest student section. The Spartans will need to take the crowd out of the game early so they can hear in their offensive huddle. They'll need a big play, drive or quick touchdown to do this.

Hoyer will need to deal with the snarling Penn State pass rush. He'll need to simply manage the game, and hand off to Ringer. When Penn State brings pressure, he'll need to get rid of the ball, avoid taking long sacks and throwing interceptions.

We're 50 minutes from kickoff and the student section is starting to fill up.

--TJ

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November 21, 2008

Honoring the Seniors

There will be a ceremony during halftime of Saturday's game between Penn State and Michigan State to honor the seniors in Penn State's student section.

Guido D'Elia, director of communications and branding for Penn State football, said Friday afternoon that a medley of pregame videos from previous seasons will be played at halftime to honor senior students who have come to home games for the past four seasons.

Students that have attended every home game dating back to the 2005 season have seen the Nittany Lions rack up a 25-2 home record.

Earlier this season, the Penn State student pulpit was voted the top student section in the country by ESPN The Magazine.

Earlier this year, Penn State seniors in the S Zone wore pink and black shirts to commemorate Penn State's original colors.

--TJ

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November 15, 2008

Hoosier Daddy?

With that, we're heading down to the field. Thanks for checking in.

***

Gotta love Sweet Caroline over the loudspeaker. What a classic by Mr. Neil Diamond.

Green runs for no yards.

On the next play, a screen pass to Green gives the Lions a first down.

Clark barrels down the middle for a first down at the 39.

On third down, Williams goes untouched into the endzone for a 36-yard TD. That run is the longest of his career.

*7:32 in the 4th. Drive Summary: 8 plays, 67 yards, 4:49*

*Penn State 34, Indiana 7*

***

Hello there kids. Julie Reis here to close this puppy up. Heading into the fourth quarter, this game is a lot closer than it should be. The Vegas boys had a line of over 30. Maybe that's why they pump oxygen into the casinos over there.

On the third play of the drive, Clark gives up another fumble and the Hoosiers take over at the 37.

We're all for giving Clark some time to shake off the loss at Iowa, but maybe it's the time to bring Pat Devlin in. On a day like today, fresh legs could help the Lions run up the score here in the final quarter.

With plenty of time, Kellen runs for a gain of one to bring the Hoosiers to a 4th and 6.

Cue crowd noise....what's left of it at least.

Kellen airs it out to Andrew Means at the goalline but the pass is incomplete with Mark Rubin on the coverage.

12:21 left on the clock, Penn State 27, Indiana 7.

***

Mark Rubin is the only thing between Kellen Lewis and a first down, as the Lion safety stops the QB after an eight yard gain on a 3rd and 12.

Clark will start the Lion drive from the 23.

He finds an open Graham Zug, who makes a dangerous leap over an Indiana defender before being brought down after a nine-yard gain. He obviously didn't see Friday Night Lights. The movie, that is.

A Royster three-yard run is good for the first, and with that, I'll take in the joy that is "Hey Baby" as the third quarter comes to a close. Seems like it's been a year since I heard the Blue Band play this song.

Sports chief Julie Reis will carry y'all the rest of the way.

***

Kellen Lewis finds Ray Fisher over the middle on 3rd and 8 for a 10 yard gain to the 19, giving Indy some breathing room after starting the drive from its own 7.

Josh Hull with the sack on 3rd and 5, forcing the Hoosiers to punt.

It takes an Indiana bounce all the way to the Lions' 30.

And on the first play of the drive, Clark throws downfield to a double-covered Deon Butler who gets his hands on the ball first, only to have it fall right into the lap of safety Brandon Mosley for the Indiana interception afterward.

Lewis and the boys will set up shop from their own 28 following the pick.

After a three-and-out, Indiana tries to catch Penn State sleeping with a fake punt, as the punter Chris Hagerup takes it up the middle for a net loss of one. I'm all for spicing this game up a bit, but running it with your punter on a fake? C'mon, Indy.

On 3rd and 7, Clark takes it himself to the 9 for a gain of 17. First down.

Two plays later, and Clark is lucky his offense gets to see a third down after Donnell Jones bobbles a pick in the end zone.

No worries, as he hits a slashing Butler in the middle of the end zone for a six-yard score on the very next play.

Kelly's extra point makes it 27-7 with 2:31 to go in the 3rd, as fans start to head for the exits. (Didn't they just get here last quarter?)

6 plays, 29 yards and 2:08 elapsed on the drive.

***

And with that, Credence's "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" comes on the loudspeakers to the delight of everyone. A little late if you ask me, with the rain at least temporarily gone, but I'm not complaining.

The Nittany Lions get the ball back after pressuring Indiana their whole drive and forcing them to punt.

Clark finds Deon Butler for 16 yards to the Indiana 43. Two plays later his throw is justttt over the outstreched arms of a wide open Jordan Norwood downfield. As editor Brian Eller says to my right, "Clark's gotta make that throw." I concur.

Clark rebounds on 3rd and 6 to find Norwood on the far side for a 17 yards and a first down to the Indy 22.

Clark gets drillllled on a 3rd and 7 and his pass goes off the hands of a diving Derrick Williams.

Kevin Kelly hits a 37-yard field goal to extend the Lion lead, capping off a 8 play, 40 yard 2:34 drive.

8:20 to go in the third,

Penn State 20, Indiana 7

***

Hey folks, men's basketball reporter Matt Fortuna here to take you through the third quarter.

A nice misdirection fake to Stephfon Green that Derrick Williams took to the right side had many of us fooled up here and, more importantly, went for 12 yards.

Darryl Clark finds Mickey Shuler for 19 yards on 3rd down before Evan Royster shows off a variety of spin moves on a 19 yard touchdown run.

The play caps a drive that went for 8 plays and 61 yards in 3:04.

11:51 left in the 3rd
Penn State 17, Indiana 7

***

Just took a look at the radar map and it looks as though we're about 15-20 minutes away from a downpour. Don't know if they have doppler in the locker rooms, but a heavy rain could alter game plans for the second half.

***

With Indiana punting from its own end zone, Nate Stupar broke through Indiana's line and blocked the punt, which was downed at Indiana's 20-yard line.

I'm not trying to toot my own horn, but Langenbacher and I called the block about 15 seconds before the snap. Stupar had been close to blocking every punt today and finally got to one before the end of the half.

Four plays later, Kelly hit a 32-yard field goal to give Penn State the lead entering the half.

Penn State 10, Indiana 7, halftime

Drive Summary: 4 plays, 5 yards, 0:26

***

Just a little ranting here, but why is Penn State throwing the ball so much? I know the coaching staff needs to get Clark's confidence back, but it's raining, Indianan isn't great against the run, the Lions should be going back to the playbook from the 1960s and just pound the ball with Royster.

Had Penn State stuck with that gameplan in the second half at Iowa, the Lions would likely still be undefeated, but the play callers got too cute, just like they are now.

If Penn State would play smashmouth football right now it'd be up by 14, at least. But as it stands, the Lions are still tied with I N D I A N A as the first half clock winds down past five minutes to play.

***

Did I say shootout? I meant, um, a sword fight with dull butter knives, on a Tuesday afternoon, in Salt Lake City.

Kevin Kelly missed a 40-yard field goal attempt wide right and the game remains gridlocked at 7. Indiana takes over in its own territory, looking for something to happen.

***

And two plays later, Indiana's Marcus Thigpen breaks of a 57-yard touchdown run. The run was designed to go to the left, but Thigpen did a little freelancing, juked to his right and took off down the sideline. Almost every member of the Lion defense over pursued on the play, giving Thigpen half of the field open.

What started as a yawner has turned into a shootout real quick.

Penn State 7, Indiana 7, 11:15 second quarter

Drive Summary: 2 plays, 76 yards, 0:38

***

Daryll Clark shakes off any cobwebs from last week as he hits Derrick Williams on a 40-yard touchdown pass. The throw wasn't the greatest, a little underthrown, but Williams adjusted well on the ball around the five-yard line, made his man miss and strolled into the end zone.

PSU 7, Indiana 0, 12:09 second quarter.

Drive Summary: 3 plays, 51 yards, 1:14

***

Howdy yall, it's Wible here and I'm gonna take over for the second half. Pretty unenthusiastic game thus far, doesn't really look like either team wants to be here right now.

Tons of mistakes and a turnover from both teams, can't really get a feel for the ebb and flow of the game thus far.

***

The Lions take the field for 1st down.

1st and 10, PSU 11

A screen pass complete to Jordan Norwood that gains 0 yards. Not the most timely play call I think.

2nd and 10

Clark rolls out, and the pass is complete to Butler for the PSU all-time receptions record with his 168th reception, passing Bobby Engram for most all-time. Oh, and the first down.

1st and 10, PSU 26

Clark completes another pass to Norwood over the middle for a nine-yard gain. A nice open field tackle to bring him down, though.

2nd and 1, PSU 35

A nice pitch to Williams on the right side, and his shifty skills get him a first down for Penn State. The offense is beginning to gel.

1st and 10, PSU 45

Clark's pass incomplete. Royster is spending the majority of this drive on the sideline. Hmm..

2nd and 10

Norwood catches on the left side for a gain of six.

3rd and 5

It's all about Norwood on this drive, as he catches another one for the first down. Penn State now has a first down on IU's 38.

1st and 10

Royster with the carry. He heads to the right side for a gain of 4.

2nd and 6

Clark's pass intended for Butler goes incomplete. Most passes to the sideline today have been off. Stick to the middle, boys, stick to the middle

3rd and 6

Sorry, a break in the action as we had to get Butler's update up on our page, but we're back.

Indiana and Penn State swap turnovers, and the Hoosiers will take the ball and start on their own 3. Mark Rubin intercepted Lewis' pass, and the very next play, Clark fumbles on a keeper.

1st and 10, IU ball, IU 3

Lewis on the keeper to the 5

2nd and 7

And that's the end of the first quarter with no score here at Beaver Stadium. Both teams look pretty sloppy thus far, and the turnover battle stands at one a piece. Now, Wible will take over for the second quarter... Take it away, Wible.


***

1st and 10, IU 41

A nice screen pass to Andrew Means for a gain of 4

2nd and 6

A nice carry by Tre Burgess for a gain of 4

3rd and 2

Josh Hull with nice pressure to force Lewis to throw the ball away and force another 4th down for the Hoosiers.

4th and 3

Scirrotto fields the punt at the Penn State 11 and the Lion offense will try to move the ball into Indiana territory for the first time today. The defense looked solid on that drive, creating pressure in the backfield and forcing the Hoosiers to make some ill-advised decisions.

Penn State should try to establish the run a little more on this drive, which should help open up the passing game as the rain has all but stopped for now.

***

The Penn State offense takes the field, with Clark under center.

1st and 10

Pass incomplete to Deon Butler on the right sideline. We thought for a second Butler had the new Penn State all-time receiving record, but the refs called it incomplete.

2nd and 10

Clark on the keeper on 2nd down, and he barrels his way for a gain of nine straight up the middle. Wow, that was impressive, as he took a few Hoosier linebackers along for the ride.

"Is that a human being or a bulldozer?"- Travis on Clark's run.

3rd and 1

A huge hit up the middle stops the Lions in their tracks, and they'll be forced to punt.

4th and 1

A B-E-A-Utiful punt by Jeremy Boone all the way to about the IU 5, but a poor attempt to tackle by special teams lets the Hoosiers run it back to their 41 before Boone makes a nice stop to prevent the touchdown.

Offense looks a little sluggish, but it's early on here. Meanwhile the S Zone has taken shape in the student section, and the rain has seemed to lighten up. Let's see what the Hoosiers can do on their second drive.

***

Kellen Lewis gets the start for Indiana, as the Hoosiers start from their own 29. A handoff to running back Demetrius McCray on first down ends with a gain of two. Marcus Thigpen takes the draw play on second down and scurries for the first down. A 12-yd gain for the RB.

1st and 10

Lewis completes the pass to Terrance Turner for a gain of nine. Lewis rolls out of pocket.

2nd and 1

Handoff to McCray, left side. Stop made by Navorro Bowman and Mark Rubin. Gain of 3

1st and 10

Josh Hull comes up to make the stop on McCray as he finds no room up the middle. Only a yard on that carry.

2nd and 9, PSU 45

Pass complete to the right sideline, but a holding penalty on Indiana takes the Hoosiers back to their own 45 yard line. The rain continues to come down.

2nd and 20

Thigpen on the carry. He heads to the right side, and is stopped by Aaron Maybin for no gain. It's 3rd down, and the PSU defense is beginning to click.

3rd and 20

A nice effort by the Hoosiers to get the long first down, but the screen pass didn't quite get them there, as Anthony Scirrotto comes up to make the tackle. Nice read by Maybin to realize the screen. Maybin had early pressure, but dropped back when he realized Lewis was going to get rid of it.

4th and 11

The Hoosiers punt the ball, and Derrick Williams takes it and heads to the PSU 23 yard line where the Nittany Lions will start on their first offensive series. For the defense, a nice job after allowing a few first downs to stop Indiana's speedy running back/quarterback tandem around midfield. Oh, the penalty didn't hurt, either.


***

Well from the looks of the stadium right now, I must say it is extremely disappointing how empty it is. Yes, it's raining. Yes, it's noon. But this team is 9-1. There are Rose Bowl hopes on the line. And this team hasn't been home in a month. Get out of bed and support the team(that goes for you guys reading the blog, lol. Get yourselves here.)

We're about nine minutes from kickoff, and the teams are set to run out onto the field. We would like to take a minute to send our thoughts out to the Fisher family. For those who aren't aware, Charlotte Fisher, the wife of longtime Penn State broadcaster Fran Fisher, passed away yesterday at the age of 85. The Fisher family is very involved with Penn State athletics, and our thoughts go out to them.

The rain is starting to pick up, but luckily we're nice and dry here in the press box. The teams have just run out onto the field, so we'll get you started with some gameday action in a few....

******

Good morning Penn State football fans, and welcome to Beaver Stadium, as the Nittany Lions get set to face the Indiana Hoosiers.

Penn State returns home after four weeks away from the Beav. Last week, of course, most can remember the Lions dropping their first game of the season, losing 24-23 to unranked Iowa. That loss kept the Lions from capturing their 10th win, and also a likely shot at the national championship. All hope is not lost, however, as Penn State is still in good shape to win the Big Ten, and earn a spot in the Rose Bowl on Jan 1.

To do that Penn State must first take care of a Hoosier team that is on a bit of a downward slide. Indiana is 3-7 heading into today's game, and has had some issues at the quarterback position. Slingers Kellen Lewis and Ben Chappell have both been seeing time at the position, and as of now there hasn't been a clear decision as to who will get the start today.

It's a rainy one here in Happy Valley. The student section is non-existent, and even the rest of the stadium is taking its sweet ol' time filling in. We'll give a nice shout out to Indiana for their spanking clean uniforms. Not as fancy as the school's basketball warmups, of course, but still pretty nice.

As for the boys in blue and white, warmups are still going on, and everything looks normal. We've got 25 minutes until the game gets underway, so for now, let's just hope the weather clears up so we can get some more butts in the seats.

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November 14, 2008

Muddy Water

If you plan on going to the Penn State/Indiana game this weekend, be prepared for rain.

Weather gurus are predicting an 80 percent chance of rain, up from the 70 percent they were calling for yesterday.

According to Weather.com's Spectator Index, attendees of Saturday's game will not be comfortable at all.

The 80 percent chance of precipitation coupled with the 53 degree temperature and nine mph. winds contribute to a 1 on the Spectator Index. A "1" indicates spectators will face very poor conditions.

Gopsusports.com has also issued a fan advisory for Saturday's noon kickoff, warning Penn State tailgaters of muddy and rainy conditions.

Natural grass + massive amounts of rain = MUDBOWL.

Let's get sloppy!

--TJ

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Catching the Record

My partner is reporting that Penn State receiver Deon Butler will likely break Penn State's all-time receptions record this weekend.

I thought he would do it against Iowa, but Butler only tied it.

Today will probably be the last time Bobby Engram's name is on top of the record list, so we pay tribute to Engram, who is also the single-season receptions record holder for the Seattle Seahawks with 94 catches in 2007.

Here's Engram at work in 1994 for Penn State.

In addition to Butler, there are some other familiar current Lions moving up the list.

Here's the complete top ten with No. of receptions in parenthesis:

1. Bobby Engram (167) / Deon Butler (167)
3. Derrick Williams (149)
4. Jordan Norwood (143)
5. O.J. McDuffie (125)
6. Jack Curry (117)
7. Bryant Johnson (110)
8. Kenny Jackson (109)
9. Terry Smith (108)
10. Tony Johnson (107)

It's pretty tough to believe Butler was a walk-on to play defensive back.

--TJ

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More trouble for the 'noles

ESPN.com's Heather Dinich is reporting that five Florida State players will not play in the Seminoles' homecoming game against Boston College this weekend.

Taiwan Easterling, Bert Reed, Corey Surrency, Cameron Wade and Richard Goodman have been suspended by FSU head coach Bobby Bowden.

The five players were allegedly involved in a fight at the University's student union on Wednesday. Bowden suspended the players based on information he had gathered, not the police report.

The fight which police responded to a little after noon, was between the football players and members of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, police reported.

All five of the suspended players are wide receivers. Easterling, Reed and Surrency have combined for 51 catches, 722 yards and eight touchdowns this season. Wade has one catch while Goodman has not played this season.

Reed and Surrency were both suspended once previously this season by Bowden.

The suspensions come at a bad time for the Seminoles (7-2, 4-2) as they prepare to play Boston College (6-3, 2-3) on Saturday in a game that will go a long way in determining which team plays for the ACC title on Dec. 6.

Currently, Florida State is tied with Wake Forest for the lead in the Atlantic division.

--TJ

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November 13, 2008

Wanna sit at the front of the bus?

Ever wanted to ride to Beaver Stadium in style, just like the Nittany Lion football team?

Well now's your chance. For decades, the Lions have ridden to the stadium on gameday in the same familiar, plain blue buses. They were nothing special, just typical school buses painted blue and emblazoned with "The Pennsylvania State University" on the side.

During the summer the old buses just weren't going to cut it. After years of wear and tear the program decided to replace the old buses with new ones. Of course the familiar plain paint scheme hasn't changed.

But then the question arose, what would the university do with the old buses? We now have our answer.

If you're sitting around with an extra couple grand sitting in your pocket, you can purchase one of these bad boys. The engines look like they might need a little attention, but there it is, the official Penn State football bus, on the market.

You can sit in the same seats as LaVar Arrington, Michael Robinson, Kerry Collins, Ki-Jana Carter and even Joe Paterno himself, but my guess is it's gonna cost ya. I guess my VW's just gonna have to cut it for a little while longer.

-- Wible

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November 10, 2008

Left out in the cold?

There's been some discussion about Penn State not using heaters on its sideline Saturday when temperatures were in the 30s and winds exceeded 20 miles per hour.

Punter Jeremy Boone crouched between two equipment containers to shield himself from the wind, and other players wore jackets and jumped up and down at an attempt for warmth.

As it turns out, sports information director Jeff Nelson wrote in an e-mail Monday night that Penn State didn't request heaters from Iowa, which would have provided them if they asked. The Hawkeyes did use heaters.

Nelson said it's been seven or eight years since Penn State used heaters in a game.

What's this mean? Who knows. Maybe sure-handed wide receiver Jordan Norwood wouldn't have dropped a first down, maybe Daryll Clark would have had a better grip on some throws (especially the interception), maybe none of this would matter if the defense got some pressure on Iowa QB Ricky Stanzi when it needed to. Despite the cold weather and Iowa using heaters, Penn State still had plenty of chances to win and still should have won.

Not using heaters is way, way down the list of Penn State's problems Saturday night, but it's interesting Penn State never asked.

-- JL

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Tragedy in the SEC

A man and a woman were shot to death in the southern Alabama town of Owassa following Saturday's Alabama-LSU football game. Witnesses said the two were shot following an argument about the game, while the spokesman for the slain man's family denied it.

ESPN: Two dead from argument over Alabama Crimson Tide-LSU Tigers game

-- Wible

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November 8, 2008

In-Game Blog -- Iowa

FINAL STATS
PSU Iowa
Yards Rushing 180 101
Attempts 46 32
Yards/att. 3.9 3.2
Passing Yds. 109 171
Comp-att-int. 10-24-1 15-25-1
Total off. 289 272
Plays 70 57
Penalties-yds. 3-35 5-47
Yds/punt 33 44.3
Time of poss. 35:52 24:08
3rd dwn. conv. 6 of 14 7 of 10
Sacks-yds. 3-16 1-19
Red zone trips 5 3
Red zone TDs 2 3

***

Iowa kicker Daniel Murray nailed a 31-yard field goal with one second left to play to give the Hawkeyes a 24-23 upset over Penn State.

As Murray's kick sailed through the uprights, students and fans started storming the field. The loss drops the Nittany Lions to 9-1, and all but ruins their chances of playing in the national title game.

Not a word was said as players walked off the field. Most still had their helmets one, save for Jordan Norwood, Josh Hull and A.Q. Shipley.

The field goal was set up by a controversial pass interference call on Anthony Scirrotto with Iowa facing third and 10 around midfield. Scirrotto came from behind the receiver and swatted the ball away. The official threw the flag, but it appeared on the replay that he made little to no contact with the receiver.

Later that drive, Murray nailed the kick and Kinnick Stadium went crazy.

***

And we're gonna head down to the field, be back after the game.

***

On third and one in Penn State territory, Evan Royster is stuffed for a loss of seven. There was some confusion before the play and Clark had to hurry to snap it.

***

Ladies and gentlemen, we have ourselves a tight ball game. Iowa took that Boone punt and went 44 yards over six plays, capped off by a six-yard Greene touchdown run. It appeared as Greene injured his wrist on the play, but it doesn't look serious.

The Hawkeyes have slowly crept back and now Penn State's offense needs to kill some clock and get some points.

PSU 23, Iowa 21, 9:20 fourth quarter

Drive Summary: 6 plays, 44 yards, 3:00

***

The Iowa defense forces another three and out and Boone is forced to punt from his own goal line. Punting into the wind, Boone's kick only goes 32 yards, Iowa takes over at the Penn State 44.

***

Second and three at the Iowa nine, and the WildLion strikes again, Williams takes the snap, follows Royster as a lead blocker and slashes into the end zone.

PSU 23, Iowa 14, 0:29 third quarter

Drive Summary: 4 plays, 28 yards, 1:58

***

And just like that, the turnover bug strikes again. Stanzi couldn't handle the snap, it went on the turf and Josh Hull fell on it.

Penn State ball, first and 10 at the Iowa 28.

***

Iowa's defense gets what it needs as the Hawkeyes for a three-and-out. Clark narrowly missed throwing an interception on third down when Iowa blitzed and he threw it away, the ball bounced off Iowa's Mitch King's hands.

Jeremy Boone connects on a 43-yard punt and Iowa takes over at its own 16.

***

Penn State defensive end Josh Gaines was on the sidelines during much of the last drive, pacing and limping. He's got a coat on now. His status for the rest of the game is unclear, but doesn't look good.

***

Stanzi has found his groove. He completed four of five passes on the drive, including a 27-yard touchdown pass to Derrell Johnson-Koullanos. Penn State safeties Mark Rubin and Anthony Scirrotto got crossed up on the play and Johnson-Koullanos was wide open.

The crowd is alive again and we've got ourselves a news ballgame.

PSU 16, Iowa 14, 4:39 third quarter.

Drive Summary: 10 plays, 73 yards, 5:43

***

Iowa's defense loves to have its back against its own goal line because one again it holds the Lions to a field goal.

Penn State 16, Iowa 7, 10:26 third quarter

Drive Summary: 5 plays, 21 yards, 2:01


***

Another pass to Butler and he just tied Engram for the career receptions record.

***

Once again, Iowa doesn't run the ball on 1st and 10 and Tyrell Sales makes Stanzi pay. Or, rather, Stanzi gives Sales a gift. He threw it to nothing but white jerseys and Sales picked it off. The first of Sales' career.

***

Both teams just came back out for the second half, Daryll Clark is pacing along the sidelines and every member of the defense just walked by him and gave him a pat.

Penn State's coverage unit stops the Hawkeyes for the first time today. Iowa starts first and 10 at its own 18.

***

There is no way this game should be even relatively close right now. Penn State has just dominated the Hawkeyes on offense, racking up three drives of more than five minutes, but could only muster 13 points. If the Lions could have gotten touchdowns instead of field goals this game would be over.

Iowa, meanwhile, needs to just keep feeding Greene the ball and not get too cute. When he's toted the rock, he's had success, something noone else on the Hawkeye offense can say. Iowa needs to move the ball and get some points, even a field goal would be enough, on the opening drive of the second half or Penn State could take the ball, put another extended drive together, continue to wear down the Hawkeye defense and put the game almost out of reach with a touchdown.

Expect the Hawkeye defense, especially the line, to get gassed during the second half and the Lion line to gain control.

***

Halftime Stats:
PSU Iowa
First Downs 18 5
Total Yards 203 70
Passing Yards 65 22
Att-Comp-Int 15-7-0 4-2-0
Rushing Yards 138 48
Rushes 32 11
Total Plays 48 17
Time of Poss. 23:34 6:26

***

And Josh Gaines sacks Stanzi to end the half.

PSU 13 Iowa 7, Halftime

***

Wow, Iowa has a passing game, amazing. Stanzi finally completes a pass with 16 seconds to play in the first half.

***

The play and time of possession differential is getting more obscene.

PSU -- 48 plays, 23:34
Iowa -- 11 plays, 5:31

***

A costly Rich Ohrnberger holding call keeps the Lions to a field goal. Kelly boots a 31-yard field goal to put the Lions ahead by six.

PSU 13 Iowa 7, 0:55 second quarter

Drive Summary: 16 plays, 78 yards, 8:18

***

Another pass to Butler.

Butler Record Countdown: 2

***

Clark scrambles for another first down, Penn State is just doing its thang methodically driving down the field.

Sidenote, Iowa's defensive line appears to be lining up offsides routinely, but it's only been called once. They're trying to pound Penn State's line at the snap.

***

Greene rumbles for another first down, but once again, on third and short, Iowa opts to drop Stanzi back rather than pound Greene, who has averaged 6.3 yards per carry.

Jared Odrick stripped Stanzi, who fell on the ball six yards behind the line of scrimmage. So Odrick's credited with a sack and fumble on the play.

A beautiful punt from Iowa's Ryan Donahue checked up like a Tiger Woods sand wedge at the Penn State eight.

***

So if you're keeping track at home, Penn State has run 33 plays and used up 15:16, while the Hawkeyes have run five plays spanning 2:12.

***

Three plays later, Royster pounds it in from the one-yard line for the touchdown.

PSU 10, Iowa 7, 12:32 second quarter

Drive Summary: 11 plays, 75 yards, 5:02

***

Facing third and eight at the Iowa 24, Clark hits Deon Butler for a gain of 10 yards and a first down. With the catch, Butler moves within two catches of Bobby Engram and the school's all-time receptions record.

Buter Countdown to Record: 3

***

There's a WildLion on the field. Penn State shows its version of the Wildcat formation popularized by former offensive coordinator Gus Malzhan, but originally invented by none other than the father of college football, Pop Warner.

In the formation, the quarterback, in this instance, Clark, starts in the shotgun then splits out and become a wide receiver. Then a running back or, in Penn State's formation wide receiver Derrick Williams, motions into the backfield, takes the direct snap and runs wide.

Williams has rushed for 17 yards on a pair of direct snaps this drive.

With that, the quarter comes to a close. Quick stat, total plays in the first quarter: PSU -- 26, Iowa -- 5

Iowa 7, PSU 3 End of First Quarter

***

More questionable play calling, this time from Iowa. Third and two and coach Kirk Ferentz elects to roll quarterback Ricky Stanzi out to his left and he has to throw it away. Why not pound the ball with Greene who has 32 yards on four carries? Then again, I'm not a football coach . . .

***

Kevin Kelly's kickoff gets hung up in the wind and only travels 45 yards. Iowa starts its drive at its own 39, more good field position.

***

Points are always good, but you gotta get a touchdown there. Penn State had six plays from the eight yard line and in and couldn't punch it in. Red zone offense has been one if its strengths all season, but not on that drive.

The Lions better wake up.

***

Three plays net the Lions -5 yards and now Kelly is on to attempt a 24-yard field goal. It's good, the 73rd of his career. With the kick Kelly broke the Big Ten record for career field goals, passing Ohio State's Mike Nugent.

Iowa 7, PSU 3, 4:11 first quarter

Drive Summary: 19 plays, 71 yards, 9:43

***

Facing third and goal at the Iowa 7, Clark threw for Graham Zug the throw fell to the ground, but Zug was grabbed on the play, which drive a flag for pass interference.

First and goal Penn State at the Iowa 2.

***

On third and four at the Iowa 20, Stephfon Green runs for 12 yards for the first down.

***

Clark overshoots his third receiver of the day, throwing into the wind. He appears to be a little too jazzed up right now.

***

And guess what the Lions did on their next drive . . . First two plays, two Evan Royster runs, and a first down.

***

Another sluggish road start for the Lions, and questionable play calling throwing on their first three plays with this wind. But I gotta say, I kind of like the call. Gotta show Iowa the playbook hasn't been thrown out the window.

Defense, on the other hand, better get its act together fast or else Greene will run all over them.

***

Two plays later, Shonn Greene scampers 14 yards for an Iowa touchdown. Greene accounted for all 25 Iowa yards on the drive.

Iowa 7 PSU 0, 13:54 first quarter

Drive Summary: 2 plays, 25 yards, 0:35

***

On third and 10, Daryll Clark drops back to pass and Hawkeye defensive end Adrian Clayborn strips clark, and the officials rule Clark recovered the ball on the one-yard line. It was under review and was confirmed. But the replay I saw looked like Clark recovered it in the end zone.

Boone punts it away from his own end zone into the teeth of the wind. The ball is returned to the 25, great opening field position for the Hawkeyes.

***

Iowa's kickoff man Daniel Murray needs a holder for the kick. That tells ya how strong the wind is.

Here we go.

The kickoff, going with the wind, drifts five yards deep into the end zone for a touchback.

***

A.Q. Shipley calls tails, and ... it fails.

Iowa wins the toss and wisely differs, the Lions take the ball and Penn State will start the game heading into the wind. So we'll get to see how the spread HD works in less-than-good conditions.

***

Now it's gametime, Enter Sandman just blaring from the PA system as the jumbotron shows the Hawkeyes walking to the tunnel.

Meanwhile, Penn State's captains emerge from their locker room.

And as has been tradition under coach Kirk Ferentz, the Hawkeyes come out holding hands.

Almost immediately after Penn State takes the field to about 2 seconds of "boos."

***

Four cheerleaders just carried Herkie Hawkeye out onto the field. I don't really know what to say about Herkie. He's a character, looks kind of like a manged blackbird with anorexia. I'm not trying to be a jerk or anything, but Herkie ain't winning any best-looking mascot contests anytime soon.

***

And I almost just soiled myself. Right at the end of the national anthem there was a three-jet flyover that went right over the pressbox and shook the whole thing. Just call me Mavrick, Goose.

The crowd, as a whole, is pretty spotty. I guess that's what happens when your team is 5-4. There's still a third of the student section empty and tons of patches of bare seats everywhere around Kinnick.

***

Twenty minutes before kickoff, Joe Paterno, in a golfcart, made his way from the Penn State locker room toward the pressbox. Must've left his team with some last-minute words of wisdom before heading to his post above the field.

***

IOWA CITY, Iowa -- Ok, it's gametime, with Penn State's Big Ten and BCS title hopes on the line. The Lions are heading for the tunnel and running right past the Penn State section in the southeast corner of the stadium.

Obviously not too many people got the memo of the blackout and greeneout because there's a lot of black spread amongst the green in the student section and a lot of gold throughout the rest of the stadium.

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Live from the Pressbox -- Iowa

IOWA CITY, Iowa -- It's Wible here, just got in the pressbox, and thank the lord because it's pretty brutal outside. Nothing we're not used to back in Pennsylvania, but when we stepped on the plane it was 65 degrees, now it's 35 and windy. No mountains to stop the wind out here in the midwest.

Just as we settled in to the pressbox, the Nittany Lions came out on the field to just take a look around and get accustomed to the place, after all Penn State hasn't been to Kinnick Stadium since 1994.

Most of the players were dressed in black suits, but one all-gray suit, topped off by gray shoes stood out. Daryll Clark was the third Lion on the field and walked from one end zone to the opposite goal post, the whole time rocking out to whatever was flowing through his ipod.

But the best candidate for dancing with the stars today is Aaron Maybin. He was shakin' his grove thang for 30 or 40 seconds in the end zone, while sporting a sweater vest. Taking a cue from Ohio State coach Jim Tressel?

The big question is what affect will the weather have on the game. It's windy, with gusts approaching 30 miles per hour. It won't be easy to throw in this weather. As I speak, Pat Devlin is testing his arm and his throws are flying a little high, but actually don't look too bad.

That said, I'm predicting a conservative, run-first game plan from both teams. A lot of Evan Royster and a lot of Shonn Greene. Not feeling too good about my prediction of 34 points for Penn State, but I feel solid about Iowa not reaching 10.

I'm gonna grab a quick bite to eat and will check back with yall a little closer to game time.

***

The pressbox is pretty nice and the stadium looks worlds better than it did the last time I was here in 2004. A lot of renovations and there's a pretty cool series of pictures on the wall showing the demolition of the old pressbox in 2005.

The sky's starting to spit flurries, but nothing too hard. Snow shouldn't be an issue, but the wind and cold will be. The ball's gotta feel as hard as a log.

Still no sign of any Hawkeye players, but the fans are starting to filer in. It's supposed to be a "blackout" today, with a twist. Every Iowa fan is supposed to wear black, except for the students, who are encouraged to wear green, for Iowa running back Shonn Greene. It seems like every time Penn State goes on the road the other team holds a "blackout" or a "scarlet fever." Guess the "whiteout's" catching on.

***

Back to the field, Kevin Kelly is on the field talking with Mike McQueary about the wind. Kicking into the wind in the north end zone, a 50-yard attempt falls well short and Kelly's 40-yard try barely clears the crossbar. But on his next attempt Kelly nails it. The ball starts out fine, but then just dies around the goalline.

***

Watching the punters kick into the wind is pretty brutal. Jeremy Boone's longest punt into the wind was 35 yards, and he kick a few ducks that didn't travel further than maybe 20 yards. Field position is going to be key in this game (duh).

***

Clark's throws don't look too hampered by the wind, he's throw tight spirals and only had a ball fly on him a few times. The receivers have dropped a couple balls and fallen a few times. It's tough to catch with numb hands.

***

Quick aside, being a lifelong Pittsburgh Steelers fan, I love Iowa's uniforms. The story behind the uniforms is former Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry, who was hired to rectify a losing program in 1978, wanted to first give Iowa the look of a winner. And since both Iowa and Pittsburgh shared black and gold color schemes and the Steelers were the dominant NFL franchise at the time, he gained permission from then Pittsburgh owner Art Rooney to copy the Steelers' uniform scheme.

***

Aight, it's less than half an hour till gametime, so I'm gonna pick this bad boy up in another thread. Catch ya on the flipside.

-- Wible

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Is this heaven? No, it's Iowa

Just got up and took a walk outside to grab a cup of coffee.

There are snowflakes in the air and it's bitter, bitter bold. So cold that I saw a guy milking a cow and instead of milk, it came out as ice cream (got it from a joke website).

Also pretty windy here on the plains, I'd guess around 15 mph or so.

According to weather.com, the gametime forecast is 38 degrees with a 30 percent chance of snow and up to 25 mph winds. But I'd bet the ole' thermometer would be lucky to up to 38.

It's not the most conducive weather, but it's football, and this is what the Big Ten is all about. We'll see how it affects the spread HD offense, but if I were a betting man, I'd wager on a lot of running and low scoring.

I'm gonna go hop in the shower and try to wake up, I'll check back with yall from the stadium.

-- Wible

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November 7, 2008

Seeing Pink

Maybe you've read the full story about Iowa's pink visiting locker room.

Now, here it is in it's full pink splendor.

Here's another look.

And one more.

--Travis

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To get to Iowa you gotta go through Baltimore

Howdy yall,

Wible and Langenbacher here, and we're sitting in the Baltimore-Washington/Thurgood Marshall Airport (gotta love airports named after supreme court justices).

The nice lady from Northwest Airlines just came over the loudspeaker to let us know our flight is delayed about 10 minutes, but we should be arriving in Minneapolis, Minn. on time. And best of all, she said there's snow on the ground in Minnesota, eh der donchaknow.

(Yea, you heard right, Minnesota. We're going from State College to York, Pa. (to see momma and poppa Wible and sleep Thursday night) to Baltimore, Md., to Minneapolis, Minn., then on to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, which, coincidentally, is roughly half an hour from Iowa City, Iowa. So basically we're traveling in a sideways, reverse "S." Don't believe me? Chart it on a map.)

Anywho, the trip, thus far, has been pretty uneventful. We got into York around 10 Thursday night and were invited by a nice, big ole' bowl of kielbasa and red pepper pasta.

Shoot, we're boarding, I'll pick this up whenever we reach terra firma.

***
Whelp,
We're back. Sorry about the quick adios there, but there's only one flight to Cedar Rapids.
Anywho, it was a pretty relaxing night in good ole' M.t Wolf, Pa., (for all you political pundits out there, York County was technically the reddest country in the Commonwealth on election day.)
We got to catch the end of the TCU-Utah game, and before you scoff, both teams were ranked in the top- 15 at the time, and could very well be in the top three or four in the Big Ten.
After receiving tons of praise for its defense all season, TCU gave up a long game-winning drive with 0:48 to play as Utah held on to stay undefeated and keep its BCS hopes alive.
Unfortunately we didn't have time to take in York County in all its glory. Did you know York was the first capital of the U:nited States? Is home to Harley Davidson and York Barbell plants? Was the original home fo the York peppermint patty? The York Fair is the country's oldest fair?
OK, I'm done with my audition for the York County Visitors' Bureau.
We got a quick breakfast at Manchester Café, man I miss cheap, grease-laden food. It's much better than the pricy, grease-laden food they got in State College.
Walking out of the restaurant my mom pointed out what used to be a bank right near the restaurant and told the story about how my dad worked there when it robbed. My dad took over the story and recalled how the would-be robber shoved a rifle in his face and dad stared down the barrel. So the criminal ran out and started driving off through a cornfield. Unfortunately for him, my pops slipped some paint bombs disguised as money in with the stash and they exploded during the carried and the guy lost control and crashed. He was fine, but was apprehended on the spot.
That story just further proves a long-standing fact about my dad: He's a Grade-A badass.
Back to our trip, we wished my rents well, hopped in the Subaru Outback and headed south for the land of crabs, lacrosse and midshipmen.
We hit some traffice, but nothing a little lead foot couldn't make up for (I won't tell who drove), got to the airport and hopped on the plane.
***
We're sitting here on the tarmac and for some reason it's taking roughly 23 minutes to run some paperwork to the control tower. Now I'm not saying you gotta be Usain Bolt, but how long does it take to get some paper a couple thousand feet? Or even better yet, there's this new invention called wireless communication, I learned about in Comm 401, media history (I'm still waiting for my test grade). See, there was this guy Marconi who thought, hmm, if I get some energy waves or magnetic waves or something, I could send the letter "S' across the Atlantic, so he did.
Then on Christmas Eve some other guy, Fessenden, figured out a way to play an opera prelude, read a bible verse and play "O Holy Night," to a bunch of sailors at sea. And they heard. Presto, the first radio broadcast in history. Eat that howard Stern.
Sitting on the plane, it's just like any other plane, expect it's a fighter jet. Not really, but I wish it was, which gets be thinking, you always see video of fighter planes doing loops, flying upside down and doing barrel rolls. Can one of these commercial big boys do those manuevers? I tried to slip the pilot 20 bucks to do a loop during our trip but we've stayed pretty level thus far.
Ther'es a pretty cute baby two seats in front of me. The lil' dude's in love with the overhead air conditioner, blower type things, whatever they're called. He's got giant eyes and a huge smile.
Now's he's looking at me, sucking on his thumb. I used to suck on my thumb all the time, so much so it got callused (I know, probably sounds disgusting but my thumb is probably the greatest tasting thing in the world, even better than whoppie pie.)
Seeing the kid reminds me, quick shoutout to my nephew Jack who took his first steps last week. Way to go buddy, only a few more months and I can teach you how to cut like Evan Royster.
This might be the roughest flight I've ever been on. The "fasten seat belt," light has been on for pretty much an hour already and we keep bouncing around.
Looking out the window I just counted 27 lakes in one vista, only 9,973 to go as we fly over the Gopher state.
The pilot just came over the loudspeaker and apologized for the turbulence (what are we gonna do, complain and demand to get off the plane)? She also told us it's not snowing yet in Minneapolis, which sucks cause I wanted to pelt someone, probably Josh, with a snowball. Nothing personal, I just like throwing snowballs.
Speaking of snow, looking out the window I can't tell if its clouds or snow drifts that we're flying over. If it's clouds I'm pretty sure we're flying over the north pole, which would be pretty cool.
Speaking of snow, not many people know this about me but one of my dreams since boyhood has been to run the Iditarod dogsled race held every year in Alaska. The 1,051-mile race runs from Anchorage to Nome and pits man and dog against the wild. It's just you, your dogs and your sled for eight to 20 days. I think it'd be pretty cool to see the northern lights in the middle of the Alaskan wild with no sound but the howl of the wind and the howl of your dogs to disturb you.
Well we're starting our dissent to Minneapolis and the flight attendant is yelling at me to turn off my computer. Since I don't have a parachute in my backpack and therefore don't want to get kicked off this flight, I'm gonna turn it off. There probably won't be time in Minneapolis to update considering our layover has been cut from 40 to 20 minutes, so I'll talk to yall in Cedar Rapids.
***
Got off the plane in Minneapolis and it was pretty cold. Felt about 40 or so, but no snow on the ground, just rain. Guess the snowball battle will have to wait till another day.
We went to the gate on our boarding passes, A12, and there was nobody there. After uttering a few expletives, we got to one of those big screens with the flights and realized the gate had changed,
Whatever, we made it on time, no biggie. At the gate there was a guy in a Penn State hat and another in a PSU shirt and one people wearing the Black and Gold of Iowa.
Got in our seats and we sat. And sat. And sat.
Finally, the pilot came over the loudspeaker to announce, get this.
"We have exited the gate, but before we can take off we need to burn off 200 pounds of fuel."
Two-hundred pounds of fuel? Two-hundred pounds of petroleum? Two-hundred pounds of %#$@#% mother effing fuel?
You've got to be kidding me. Gas stations are charging $2.50 (at least) per gallon for this stuff and the pilot has to burn it? No wonder the airline industry is in such perils.
You're charging me 15 bucks to check a bag and I can't even get a pack of friggin' peanuts during a two-hour flight, but you still have the financial stability to sit on a runway for half an hour and "burn off" 200 gallons of fuel? That just ain't right.
We finally got off the ground and guess what, More friggin turbulence. What is it with the Midwest? Now I know why John Madden rides around the country in his pimped out tour bus.
Well, if you couldn't tell, I'm in a little of a cranky mood, so I'm gonna sit here and try to enjoy my tiny cup of ginger ale, which, coincidentially, is smaller than a 25 cent draft at the Cellblock. They could at least give us the can.
I promise I'll be in better spirits when we land, I mean who couldn't be happy in the land of corn and rasllin'?
***
For those of you wondering what one listens too during a 2-hour and 20-minute flight from Baltimore to Minneaplois, here it is. There are the tunes that were flowing through my ears (gotta love itunes suffle).
Claude DeBussy - Clair De Lune
TuPac - Changes
The Band - The Weight
Creedence Clearwater Revival - Fortunate Son
Dave Matthews Band - Ants Marching
Steam - Na Na Hey Hey
Van Morrison - And It Stoned Me
The Allman Brothers - Ramblin' Man
Radiohead - Fake Plastic Trees
The Rolling Stones - Ruby Tuesday
Led Zeppelin - Since I've Been Lovin' You
Wilson Pickett - Land of 1,000 Dances
Wu-Tang Clan - C.R.E.A.M.
Al Green - Let's Stay Together
The Killers - When You Were Young
Alan Jackson - Where I Come From
Todd Snider - Train Song
Rage Against the Machine - Killing in the Name
Love - Andmoragain
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Snow
Danger Mouse - Encore
Metallica - Nothing Else Matters
The Flamming Lips - Do You Realize?
Oasis - Part of the Queue
Kanye West - Good Life
Frank Sinatra - Somewhere Beyond the Sea

-- Wible

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November 4, 2008

Tuesday with Joepa

Sitting in the Beaver Stadium media room for Joe Paterno's Tuesday press conference, here's what we've learned so far:

-- Paterno and his squad can't do anything about the BCS, the only thing they have any control over is Iowa.

-- Daryll Clark "should be fine Saturday," against Iowa after suffering a concussion against Ohio State.

-- When Paterno met with doctors last week they advised him on how to deal with the media as much as they advised him on his leg.

-- His leg is something that can be fixed and he'll take care of it after the season. "I don't think anybody has a deep concern about where I am."

-- Paterno said he isn't "as smart as the media when I watch games." This was in response to a question about whether he gets a chance to see other conferences, mainly the Big 12 and SEC, and also if the national media's opinion on the Big Ten is not fair to the conference.

-- Wible

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November 2, 2008

Bye week observations

A few observations from today's college football games ...

* It will be interesting to see where Penn State lands in the polls after Texas Tech's terrific win against Texas. Three weeks ago, then-No. 5 Texas beat then-No. 1 Oklahoma and leapt to the top spot in the polls. Texas Tech was No. 7 when it beat top-ranked Texas, so it would be realistic to think the Red Raiders could be the top-ranked team in the country.

* The best guess here is the Associated Press and coaches polls will have Alabama first, Penn State second and Texas Tech slightly behind. However, Texas Tech will receive a huge boost in the BCS rankings in strength of schedule and the other computer rankings, so the Red Raiders could be in the top two of the BCS, the only poll that matters.

* That being said, Texas Tech winning was the best scenario the Nittany Lions could have hoped for, even if the Red Raiders end up jumping Penn State in the polls on Sunday. Texas Tech plays Oklahoma State next weekend and then has a bye before playing at Oklahoma, so their path to an undefeated regular season will be infinitely more difficult than Texas, which doesn't play a ranked team in its final three regular season games.

* Will Penn State end up being the only BCS team to go undefeated? It's sure looking that way. Alabama beat Arkansas State (the same team PSU dropped in favor of Oregon State) and along with PSU and Texas Tech are the three BCS unbeatens. Alabama still plays at LSU and possibly in the SEC championship game against Florida, which might be the best team in the country right now.

* Within the conference, what in the world were Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema and Minnesota coach Tim Brewster thinking? Bielema foolishly called a timeout when Michigan State was scrambling to get the field goal unit onto the field. The Spartans had 12 seconds on the clock when timeout was called and still weren't completely set. The extra time allowed Brett Swenson to kick a 44-yard field goal for a 25-24 win.

* As for Brewster, his team was tied 17-17 with Northwestern with 26 seconds remaining, and the Gophers were home. Instead of taking the ball into overtime, Brewster let quarterback Adam Weber try to move the ball into field goal range, which was at least 40 yards away. Weber ended up throwing an interception that was returned for a touchdown with 12 seconds remaining, and Minnesota lost, 24-17. In that situation, with No. 17 Minnesota playing at home, it would have made more sense to take your chances in overtime. The Gophers are a superior team to Northwestern and should be able to beat the Wildcats at home. If not, better to lose in overtime than to try to force something at the end of regulation.

-- JL

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About November 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Footblog in November 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

October 2008 is the previous archive.

December 2008 is the next archive.

The Daily Collegian Online

80

The Roster

Mug

Matt Fortuna is a junior majoring in journalism and a football reporter for the Collegian. He has previously covered the men's tennis, soccer and basketball teams. A traditionalist, he would like nothing more than to see Joe Paterno throw it back to his Brooklyn days and install the single-wing offense this season.

Mug

Nate Mink is a junior majoring in journalism and a football reporter for the Daily Collegian and a 5-foot-10 sesquipedalian from Allentown who has tried to grow facial hair for 20 years. Sadly, he has been unsuccessful thus far. He is anxious to get a new driver's license in September and hopes the bartenders at Zanzibar in Ann Arbor believe he's 21.

Mug

Wayne Staats is a senior majoring in journalism and history and is a football reporter for the Collegian. He previously covered the baseball and women's basketball teams. He never made it far playing competitive football, unless Nerf football in grade school counts.

Mug

Matt Brown is a senior majoring in journalism and is the Collegian's football editor. He previously covered the Penn State men's basketball, baseball and women's soccer teams. While a fan of most sports, he thinks the 14 Saturdays of the college football season are the best 14 days of the year and all 34 bowl games are worth watching.

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