Archive for September, 2007

September 29th, 2007 by Travis

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Back from a long absence to contribute some end of season MLB ballots:

AL

MVP: 1. A-Rod, 2. Magglio Ordonez, 3. David Ortiz, 4. Ichiro, 5. Jorge Posada.
Comment: It’s a slam dunk, even I can’t take away anything from the punk-ass’s season. C.C. Sabathia, Mike Lowell, Carlos Pena, Victor Martinez and Placido Polanco would round out my top 10.

Cy Young: 1. C.C. Sabathia, 2. Josh Beckett, 3. John Lackey, 4. J.J. Putz, 5. Fausto Carmona.
Comment: It’s so close between Beckett and Sabathia, and while I think it will be hard to deny the game’s only 20-game winner a Cy Young award, Sabathia has been slightly better with less run support and more ip, more k and more quality starts. Kelvim Escobar, Johan Santana, Dan Haren, Scott Kazmir and Erik Bedard would round out my top 10.

ROY: 1. Dustin Pedroia, 2. Delmon Young, 3. Daisuke Matsuzaka, 4. Brian Bannister, 5. Jeremy Guthrie.
Comment: Young and Pedroia are close, and you’d think Young might get the nod because of power, but I was surprised to see Pedroia has a higher slugging percentage, on-base percentage and OPS. And young only had five more HR with a total of 13. So, Young’s only significant advantages are in RBI (which is negated by Pedroia’s equally large advantage in runs scored) and hits (which is solely because Pedroia wasn’t a full-time starter until late May. The three SP are all very close, and while Dice-K’s ERA is higher, he also has the most wins, most ip, the most QS, and far and away more K. I’ll admit he’s been disappointing, but had he gotten Beckett’s run support before the last six-week slide he would have been a 20-game winner with that bad ERA. Rafael Perez, Hideki Okajima, Joakim Soria, Reggie Willits and Akinori Iwamura round out the top 10, while Joba Chmaberlain wasn’t around long enough to get consideration.

MOY: 1. Eric Wedge, 2. Terry Francona, 3. Mike Scoscia, 4. Joe Torre, 5. John Gibbons.

NL

MVP: 1. Jimmy Rollins, 2. Prince Fielder, 3. Matt Holliday, 4. Chipper Jones, 5. Jake Peavy.
Comment: I’m not of the opinion the MVP “must” play for a contender, but I prefer it. But a “contender” doesn’t mean “playoff team.” So, I was convinced I’d pick Fielder until Rollins went 30-30 and seemed to kick-start Philly’s push. It’s close, but to me Rollins is every bit as valuable than Fielder and playing his best at the most important time and taking a team with no more overall talent farther while playing a premium position. Holliday and Chipper could be flip-flopped, too. Peavy could have jumped both. Albert Pujols, Miguel Cabrera, David Wright, Chase Utley, and Ryan Howard round out the top 10. Was difficult to leave out Hanley Ramirez (but he’s awful defensively), Soriano and Brandon Webb, but I love the phillies.

Cy Young: 1. Peavy, 2. Brandon Webb, 3. Aaron Harang, 4. Trevor Hoffman, 5. Brad Penny.
Comment: Next to AL MVP, this was the largest runaway. Harang was worth every bot of his $40 million — Arroyo not so much. Jose Valverde, Tim Hudson, Cole Hamels, John Smoltz and Roy Oswalt round out the top 10.

ROY: 1. Ryan Braun, 2. Troy Tulowitzki, 3. Hunter Pence, 4. Pete Moylan, 5. Kyle Kendrick.
Comment: The top three are out of this world, and James Loney was great in his half season, but the rest are far off the outrageous pace Braun, Tulowitzki and Pence set. If this were like the MVP award, it would be Tulowitzki’s but it’s not and you also can’t penalize Braun for Milawukee’s failure to promote him until almost June. Had he started the season in the majors he might have broken McGwire’s rookie HR record. Tim Lincecum, James Loney, Kevin Kouzmanoff, Chris Young (solely based on HR) and Micah Owings round out the top 10.

MOY: 1. Bob Melvin, 2. Charlie Manuel, 3. Clint Hurdle, 4. Bud Black.
Comment: Really, any of those managers could win it and I wouldn’t have a problem with it. The Diamondbacks have no business beign in contention — let alone winning their division — with that lineup. What the Phillies have done in spite of their pitching and maybe the most injuries of any contender is remarkable — even if I think Manuel has little to do with it.

Kentucky Football Weekly Update: Week 4 (updated)

September 24th, 2007 by Will

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In what may become a regular feature (if work rears its ugly head it’ll probably disappear), Allenby For Heisman! hopes to take a weekly look at the University of Kentucky’s place in the world of college football.

Another week, another head-turning victory for the University of Kentucky football team. Kentucky’s victory against Arkansas in Fayetteville solidified Kentucky’s place on the national scene as the Cats rocketed up the polls to heights not scene in our lifetime. Let’s get to it.

The polls. Kentucky’s second upset victory on the spin saw the Cats move from No. 21 to No. 14 in the Associated Press Top 25 and from No. 23 to No. 15 in the USA Today Coaches’ Poll. [Link]

CBSSports. The Cats rose from No. 20 to No. 14 in the CBSSports.com 120. [Link] Saturday’s opponent, Florida Atlantic, is ranked No. 75. Like last week, CBSSports has the Cats in the Chick-fil-A bowl in Atlanta, Georgia, on December 31. But this week CBSSport projects Clemson as the Cats’ opponent (last week Boston College was projected). In Heisman news, all five of CBSSports experts have Kentucky quarterback Andre’ Woodson in their top five. Woodson is tied for second in the overall consensus. [Link]   

Also at CBSSports, Kentucky is the subject of a glowing article — given top billing on the CBSSports.com college football page — posted Monday by senior writer Dennis Dodd:

It’s weird how quick things change in college football. It’s astounding how quickly fortunes have changed in the state of Kentucky. Louisville came into the season as a national championship contender. It left Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium amid boos Saturday after losing to woeful Syracuse.

Kentucky is the toast of the state, and college football after a 4-0 start for only the second time since 1983. Back-to-back comeback wins against Louisville and Arkansas have left the Wildcats with their highest AP ranking (14th) since 1977. The last time Kentucky was 4-0 with at least one conference win was 1950 when Bear Bryant guided the program to a Sugar Bowl win over No. 1 Oklahoma.

Quarterback Andre Woodson is a big-time Heisman candidate carrying an ongoing NCAA record — 296 consecutive passes without an interception. 

[Link]

SI.com. Kentucky rose from No. 20 to No. 13 in Stewart Mandel’s Power Rankings. (Florida Atlantic was No. 72.) Mandel was full of praise for Andre’ Woodson:

While Graham Harrell threw for 650-plus yards last week, and Tim Tebow is producing 400 yards of offense and Colt Brennan is on pace for another 50-touchdown year, Andre Woodson has yet to throw for more than 275 yards in a game. Yet, you’d be hard-pressed to find a QB playing better.

[Link]

FOXSports. Kentucky rose from No. 19 to No. 15 in the CollegeFootballNews.com Rankings at FOXSports.com:

The Ranking Should Be Higher Because … the Louisville win was nice, but everyone wanted to see if the Wildcats were for real. Question answered, as the offense came through in the clutch yet again in the win over Arkansas.

The Ranking Should Be Lower Because … the Louisville win doesn’t appear to be nearly as big a deal now, while beating Arkansas isn’t like beating one of the top SEC teams. The meat of the schedule is coming up.  

 [Link] Florida Atlantic is ranked No. 85.

ESPN.com. For the first time since the Worldwide Leader implemented the ’Power 16′ in 2002, Kentucky is in it. The Cats were 17th last week, and Kentucky entered the rankings at lucky No. 13 this week:

Andre’ Woodson showcased his Heisman talents at Arkansas. Most impressive Woodson stat? He hasn’t thrown an INT in 296 passes. Oh, by the way, UK is 4-0 and has won nine of its last 10.    

[Link] (Because we’re posting the Weekly Update earlier than usual this week, we don’t yet have ESPN.com’s bowl projections. We’ll update when they become available.)

In their Week 4 bowl projections, senior writers Ivan Maisel and Mark Schlabach both project Kentucky in the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Florida (where each had the Cats last week). Maisel sees Kentucky facing Michigan (last week he projected Michigan State as Kentucky’s opponent) while Schlabach sees a rematch of the 1999 Outback Bowl with the Cats facing Penn State (last week he projected Michigan as the Cats’ opponent). [Link]

Sagarin Rankings. Kentucky rose from No. 19 to No. 13. Florida Atlantic is at No. 108.

Vegas Oddsmakers’ Top-25. We’re adding this this week. Vegas thinks the Cats are overrated in the polls; Kentucky comes at No. 21 in the oddsmakers’ rankings. [Link]

In other news, Tony Barnhart of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution writes that Woodson is a bona fide Heisman candidate:

Andre Woodson must be to your Heisman list: The Kentucky quarterback throws a late touchdown bomb to beat Louisville on Sept. 15. Down 29-21 in the fourth quarter, Woodson directs Kentucky to 21 unanswered points and a stunning 42-29 victory at Arkansas. On the season Woodson has completed 86 of 134 passing attempts (64.2 percent) for 1,008 yards and 11 touchdowns. He has thrown NO interceptions. In fact, he has thrown 296 straight passes without an interception, a new NCAA record.

[Link]

Other Wildcats are also garnering accolades; senior linebacke Wesley Woodyard was named Southeastern Conference Defensive Player of the Week and senior Jason Leger was named SEC Offensive Lineman of the week. [Link]. (KentuckySportsRadio.com’s Rob Gidel highlighted Leger’s play earlier today.)

And finally, as was noted earlier on this site, Kentucky football got some love from the Old Grey Lady today:

There have been a lot of long days the past few decades for the Wildcats (4-0), whose No. 14 ranking is their highest since Kalinowski’s senior year in 1977. But one of the few constants has been the program’s strong attendance. While their passion is not the same as it is for basketball, Kentucky fans have shown up and supported the football team through the coaching changes, N.C.A.A. scandals and lopsided defeats. Coach Rich Brooks said the team took more than 50,000 people to its bowl victory over Clemson last year.

“They’ve been pretty loyal through some pretty sorry football,” Brooks said in a telephone interview last night. “Some of it was while I was coaching here. They are being rewarded for being faithful.”

[Link]

Well, that’s that.

Onward and upward!

Rich Brooks is getting younger

September 24th, 2007 by jeb

From today’s New York Times:

When Brooks, 57, arrived at Kentucky in 2003, he said, the sanctions had limited the program to 68 scholarship players, well below the N.C.A.A. threshold of 85. Of those 68, Brooks said, 6 or 7 were former walk-ons, and the talent level was low because the specter of the N.C.A.A. sentence scared off top recruits. (Link)

Brooks actually turned 66 in August (Link)

Pre-game odds and ends

September 22nd, 2007 by Will

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Defensive improvement?

Since we’ve got a fourth of the season in the books, seems like a good time to compare Kentucky’s 2007 defensive numbers to the 2006 numbers.

Through three games, Kentucky is 70th in total defense (374 yards per game), 87th in rushing defense (185 yards per game), 39th in pass defense (189 yards per game), and 48th in scoring defense (21.3 points per game.

Last season, Kentucky finished 118th in total defense (453.38 yards per game), 108th in rushing defense (184.5 yards per game),118th in pass defense (268.92 yards per game), and 99th in scoring defense (28.4 points per game).

Make of that what you will.

Kentucky’s triplets and all-time records:

Rafael Little, Keenan Burton, and Andre’ Woodson are all moving up the charts in some significant Kentucky all-time records. We wanted to see where they stand through three games:

Little came into the season with 1,983 rushing yards. He’s gained 388 yards in three games, which gives him 2,371 for his career. He’s 277 yards behind George Adams, whose 2,648 yard place him fourth on Kentucky’s all-time charts. If Little stays healthy and productive, he could catch Mark Higgs, at 2,892 yards, and Moe Williams, at 3,333 yards, but Kentucky’s all-time leader, Sonny Collins with 3,835, is surely out of reach.

Burton came into the season at fifth in receptions (123), fourth in yards (1,635), and fourth in touchdown receptions (16). His 21 receptions give him 144 for his career, which passes Derek Homer (129) and places Burton fourth behind Anthony White (194), Derek Abney (197) and Craig Yeast (208).

With 257 yards through three games, Burton passed Quentin McCord (1,743) to move into third in all-time receiving yardage with 1,892 yards. He trails Abney (2,339) and Yeast (2,899).

Burton has two touchdown receptions on the season, giving him 18 for his career. He passed Steve Mellinger (17) and is tied with Abney (18) for second in Kentucky history. Yeast leads with 28.

Andre’ Woodson has passed for 743 yards and 9 touchdowns through three games. He entered the season at third all-time in passing yards. He now has 6,394 yards and still trails Tim Couch (8,394) and Jared Lorenzen (10,354).

He entered the season at third in all-time touchdown passes (39) and now has 48 for his career. He trails Babe Pirilli (50), Tim Couch (74), and Jared Lorenzen (78).

Assorted punditry re Arkansas vs. Kentucky:

–ESPN Radio’s Colin Cowherd has Arkansas as his lock of the week.

Phil Steele’s numbers like Arkansas (and he predicts the Cats to go 3-5 in conference — wins over Mississippi State, Vanderbilt, and Tennessee). [Link]
–During ESPN’s coverage of Tulsa vs. Oklahoma last night, Lou Holtz picked Arkansas and Mark May picked Kentucky. (Perhaps a good omen? Holtz picked Louisville and May Kentucky last week).

–On ESPN’s College Gameday this morning, Kirk Herbstreit picked Arkansas in a close game and Lee Corso picked Arkansas by at least two touchdowns. (Perhaps another good omen? Corso picked Louisville by at least two touchdowns at Louisville’s preseason luncheon.)

John Clay of the Lexington Herald-Leader likes the Cats:

Kentucky at Arkansas: Before the season, I picked Kentucky to triumph in Fayetteville. The Cats have played well at Arkansas before. Big first road test. Razorback secondary had trouble with Alabama. And Tide doesn’t possess UK’s array of weapons. Still, Kentucky must avoid letdown after big Louisville win. Plus find a way to contain McFadden. Kentucky 30, Arkansas 20.

[Link]

Tony Barnhart of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution writes that he’s got a feeling about Kentucky:

Kentucky at Arkansas: Kentucky just posted one of the biggest wins in school history by beating No. 9 Louisville. Arkansas got beat at the buzzer at Alabama in a game that had fans second guessing coaches and officials. Kentucky coach Rich Brooks is making his first ever trip to Fayetteville, Ark. All the signs point to the Hogs but I’ve got a feeling about this Kentucky team. Kentucky 34, Arkansas 30.

(Perhaps a third good omen? Barnhart also picked us against Louisville.)[Link]

Bizarre day in college football

–Sure, as was demonstrated by Middle Tennessee State and our beloved Kentucky, Louisville probably had no business being ranked No. 9. But not in our wildest dreams (and certainly not in this guy’s — still got that ‘Unbridled Enthusiam’ buddy?) did we think the Cards would lose to Syracuse in Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium (or anywhere else, for that matter). One of the things that puzzles us about Louisville fans’ reactions to the Cards’ meltdown is that they all law the blame at the feet of the new coach, Steve Kragthorpe, but we don’t see anybody criticizing Athletic Director Tom Jurich for hiring him in the first place (especially since the ’search’ for Bobby Petrino’s successor that took all of 48 hours).

–Yea, they won, 41-40, but is there a team in college football more perpetually overrated than Nebraska? (And yes, we understand that people probably say the same thing about Kentucky Basketball as we’ve been a bit average the last two years yet always start the season in the top-25. But this has been going on with Nebraska since Frank Solich was there.)

What to make of Florida’s struggles with Ole Miss? We figure Coach Orgeron wanted revenge for Florida fan Orson Swindle hacking into Coach O’s Outlook page.

Onward and upward!

Louisville, Yom Kippur, and The Big Lebowski

September 20th, 2007 by jeb

 

Yesterday in an effort of preemptive damage control, Louisville noted that their Saturday game took place during Yom Kippur.

From the Courier Journal (Link)

The timing of Saturday’s football game against Syracuse could affect the University of Louisville’s attendance, and it has nothing to do with last week’s loss at Kentucky.

Saturday also is Yom Kippur, considered the holiest of all Jewish holidays. Yom Kippur, which means “Day of Atonement,” runs from sundown Friday until sundown Saturday. Many Jews abstain from all work or recreational activities and attend synagogue services during the holiday.

U of L originally wanted the game to be at night as part of a recruiting weekend, and that might not have conflicted with the holiday. But the game was picked up by ESPN Regional as its Big East Conference matchup of the week, so U of L was contractually obligated to comply with the network’s time demands. The game will be shown locally on WHAS-11.

Team spokesman Rocco Gasparro said he didn’t know of any U of L players who are Jewish.

This reminded us of the Big Lebowski… after the jump view a chat that might have taken place had Walter, Donny and the Dude lived in Louisville.  

FYI - This chat contains language directly from the film which was rated R for pervasive strong language.  If you’re easily offended by language you might not want to click.

(more…)

Dissecting a columnist’s sour grapes

September 19th, 2007 by Will

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As we teased yesterday, we’ve got plenty to say about yesterday’s Courier-Journal column that took yet another swing at the University of Kentucky for moving the Kentucky/Louisville game from Week 1 to Week 3. [In case you missed our first take on the Kentucky press’ bashing of Kentucky’s decision to move the game, you can find it here.] 

With Kentucky winning the football game, most journalists seem to have let the topic die. But not the author of yesterday’s column. In a column about Kentucky football and its coach, Rich Brooks, that was generally positive, the author couldn’t help but add the following:

The national overnight Nielsen ratings are in: The game generated a rating of .4. Mark Mandel of ESPN said that translates to about 371,000 households.

The audience for Arkansas against Alabama, which overlapped with UK-U of L for much of the night on big daddy ESPN, was six times as large. Southern California and Nebraska pulled a 5.0 on ABC.

Last season, when the UK-U of L game was played on Sunday, Sept. 3, at 8 p.m. and televised on ESPN, it generated a 1.8 rating. That game was over at halftime and still drew more than four times the audience of Saturday’s back-and-forth thriller.

That is the reason the game works better on the season’s first weekend. No competition from other college games. Considerably better national exposure.

We take issue with all of the quoted passage except the second paragraph, and now we’ll explain why.

First, the first paragraph, which notes the .4 rating. The author relies on the ESPN Classic overnight rating of .4. Evidently he’s so eager to say “told ya so” that he couldn’t wait for the final ratings. Those came out today and revealed the game had a rating of .79, making it the highest-rated program in ESPN Classic’s history. [Link] Further, it was revealed today that the final ratings don’t include the numbers for viewers watching the broadcast on Lexington’s WKYT and Louisville’s WHAS. Once those numbers are included in the rating, it’s likely that the difference between last year’s broadcast and this year’s broadcast will be only a few hundred thousand.

Of course, this would still mean that more people saw last year’s game than this year’s. But the author’s primary argument has been that Kentucky was costing itself considerable national exposure — so much exposure, in his opinion, that the lost exposure outweighed any competitive advantage gained from moving the game. If the difference between this year’s rating and last year’s is ultimately only two or three tenths of a Nielsen point, however, that argument is debunked (especially since Kentucky vindicated its decision to move the game by winning the game). 

The mention of the rating of last year’s game brings us to our second point, and the third paragraph. Here the author notes that last year’s game, played during Week 1 on Sunday in primetime and broadcast on ESPN, generated a 1.8 rating, far exceeding the rating of this year’s game. If you take it at face value, it’s hard to argue with this. But if you look at what ESPN was airing on Sunday night in Week 1, you’ll see the author is comparing apples to oranges.

His comparison assumes that this year’s game could have been broadcast on ESPN on Sunday night during Week 1. But he neglects to mention that ESPN, which entered into a lucrative contract with NASCAR to resume televising races again in 2007, was airing the Sharp AQUOS 500 from 7 p.m., and ESPN2 was airing Sunday Night Baseball from 8 p.m. So, even on Sunday night in Week 1, the Cats wouldn’t have been playing on an ESPN network available on basic cable in primetime.

The game could have been televised on ESPN or ESPN2 with an afternoon kickoff, like the 2005 game. That game, according to Street&Smith’s Sports Business Daily (which is a pay site; we don’t have a free link), had a lower rating, 1.2, than last year’s game, which isn’t surprising since it wasn’t played in primetime. It’s entirely possible that the total rating of this year’s broadcast will surpass that figure.

Then there’s the final paragraph of the quoted passage. We’ve got two issues with this paragraph. First, the author again tries to have it both ways. As we noted the first time we weighed in on this, he spent most of the summer stating the game should be played during Week 1 because there were no other big games. Then he abandoned this position on August 28 and wrote that there were several games in Week 1 that would “reshape the Top-25″ (implying that there were plenty of teams that, unlike Kentucky, didn’t need a warm-up game or two before taking on a difficult opponent). With yesterday’s column he flipped back to his original position.

So, to review, on August 28, Week 1 included several high-profile matchups presumably capable of garnering considerable national attention, including Tennessee at Cal, Georgia Tech at Notre Dame, and the latest edition of the Bowden Bowl, Florida State at Clemson. But on September 18, just three weeks later, Week 1 offered “no competition from other college games.” It’s a bit rich to suggest that Kentucky/Louisville would have been the story in Week 1 when the author is perfectly aware that several other compelling games were played in Week 1.

This brings us to our second contention with the last quoted paragraph: the elephant in the room, Appalachian State. Obviously, Kentucky vs. Louisville wasn’t the most-watched game of the Week 3, but it was the most talked about game from Saturday night through Sunday morning. Coverage of the game led off SportsCenter during that time and was the marquee story in the ESPNNews loop. Obviously, this wouldn’t have been the case in Week 1 when Appalachian State’s upset was by far the biggest story in college football.  

Another thing the column fails to mention is that playing the game in Week 3 made it a bigger victory for Kentucky. Louisville entered the season as No.10/11, but was a top-10 team in both polls in Week 3.

Oh, and the author also fails to point out that even though last year’s game was played in Week 1, there were about thirty thousand more people in attendance at this year’s game. But maybe that was just a coincidence. Honk!

To us, it certainly seems like Kentucky had its cake and ate it too. We got the win (the most important thing), and we got plenty of exposure (a nice bonus).

And since we’re not Awful Announcing, here’s hoping this is our last word on the topic (but if another stubborn columnist churns out another piece bashing Kentucky’s decision to move the game, all bets are off).  

Onward and upward!

Louisville Shirt

September 19th, 2007 by jeb

Related Posts: (Gracious Louisville Lineman Salutes Victorious Kentucky

Kentucky Football Weekly Update: Week 3

September 18th, 2007 by Will

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In what may become a regular feature (if work rears its ugly head it’ll probably disappear), Allenby For Heisman! hopes to take a weekly look at the University of Kentucky’s place in the world of college football.

Well, we all know what the University of Kentucky football team did in Week 3, and the victory over then-No. 9 Louisville has put the Wildcats on the national scene, and some pundits are already forecasting a New Year’s Day bowl and another major upset. Let’s get to it.

The polls. Despite our fears to the contrary, the Cats’ upset victory was enough to get Kentucky into both polls. The Associated Press Poll, in which the Cats received no votes last week, ranks Kentucky at No. 21. [Link] The USA Today Coaches’ Poll, which had the Cats at No. 37 if you tally the ‘others receiving votes’ column, ranks Kentucky at No. 23. [Link] The Cats’ opponent in Week 4, Arkansas, was unlucky to drop out of both polls after losing to then-unranked Alabama. (If you’re curious about who voted Louisville ahead of Kentucky in this week’s AP Poll, check A Pudge Is A Sandwich, which we saw linked at KentuckySportsRadio.com.)

CBSSports. The Cats rose from No. 30 to No. 20 in the CBSSports.com 120. [Link] Arkansas is No. 27. CBSSports.com projects Kentucky will face Boston College in the Chick-fil-A Bowl in Atlanta, Georgia, on December 31.

SI.com. For the second straight week, Kentucky made a big move in the SI.com Power Rankings, jumping from No. 37 to No. 20. Arkansas is No. 17. [Link] Kentucky remains absent from SI.com’s bowl predictions, which haven’t been updated since preseason.

FoxSports. Kentucky rose from No. 32 to No. 19 in the CollegeFootballNews.com Rankings at FoxSports.com.  Arkansas is No. 28.

ESPN.com. In their updated bowl projections, Ivan Maisel and Mark Schlabach both have Kentucky in the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Florida, on January 1. Maisel sees the Cats battling Michigan State while Schlabach sees Kentucky battling Michigan. [Link] Kentucky leads the ‘others receiving votes’ column of the Power 16 with nine points, four behind No. 16 South Florida. [Link]

Sagarin Ratings. Kentucky rose from No. 30 to No. 19. Arkansas is at No. 14. [Link

In other news, at least one national writer has Kentucky picked for big things. Matt Hayes of the Sporting News sees Kentucky posting a 10-win season, which seems a bit crazy to us, but we like the optimism:

Look, I told you earlier this summer the ‘Cats would beat Louisville. This is a case of a talented quarterback growing up with the same skill guys around him for three or four years. And finally, UK can block someone on the offensive line.

That adds up to one explosive offense.

Don’t think Kentucky is finished, either. This team is destined for a New Year’s Day bowl. The ‘Cats won’t beat the big boys in the SEC because, eventually, they’ll need a stop from their defense.

An upcoming run of games against South Carolina (in Columbia on Thursday night) and LSU and Florida at home, will dictate the season. UK could lose all three, finish 9-3 and play an overblown Big Ten team in the Outback Bowl. At that point, we’ll see win No.10 — the first 10-win season in 30 years.

[Link] (We saw this linked at the UK Blogger’s page at the CJ. And speaking of the CJ, yes, we saw the paper once again take another pop at UK for switchig the game, and we’ll have more to saw about that tomorrow.)

Finally, he may not be a national writer, but Tony Barnhart knows his football. He sees big things for the Cats as well (and he did pick Kentucky to beat Louisville):

Kentucky is going to record a major upset in the SEC: After knocking off No. 9 Louisville Saturday night in Lexington, the Wildcats have now won eight of their last nine games dating back to last season. The only loss in that stretch was to Tennessee (17-12) in a game Kentucky had several chances to win. Kentucky has SEC home games with LSU, Florida, Mississippi State, and Tennessee. The Wildcats will win at least two of those.

[Link]

To wrap up, most everybody sees the Cats at a top-25 team with a bona fide shot at a New Year’s Day bowl. Of course, a loss at Arkansas this weekend (and we’re 6.5-point dogs last we checked), and we slip right back down. Here’s hoping we get it done in Fayetteville.

Onward and upward!

Gracious Louisville lineman salutes victorious Kentucky

September 17th, 2007 by Will

We’re hesitant to climb up on our high horse as every school has its share of obnoxious, crass, and vulgar fans. Yet, as far as we know, Kentucky’s actual players don’t run around flipping off opposing teams’ fans.

So, without further adu, here’s senior offensive lineman Breno Giacomini saying hello to the Kentucky faithful:

Pretty much your average Cardinal

Something to remember the next time some Louisville fan is lecturing you about Kentucky’s lack of class.

Reece Davis thinks Harry Douglas is a bit silly

September 15th, 2007 by Will

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Much has been made over the last few months about something we thought was a non-story — the decision of the University of Kentucky to market it’s football team in the Commonwealth’s largest city, Louisville. If you’re unaware, Kentucky’s marketing slogan for the football Wildcats is “Believe in Blue.” To market the Cats, the university has put up several billboards bearing things like, “Believe in Gatorade Baths,” “Believe in Loyalty,” and “Believe in Circus Catches.” [Images of all of them can be seen here.]

Despite their benign nature, the “Believe . . .” billboards have apparently caused quite a stir in Louisville, where Kentucky placed them close to Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium (but also adjacent to I-65 and the Louisville airport).

Harry Douglas, a fantastic wide receiver for Louisville and also a bit of geography buff, apparently, had this to say about the billboards in Louisville:

Wow. Whoever put them up there, it’s ridiculous. Lexington is in Lexington, and Louisville is in Louisville. [Link]

That quote appeared in a Courier-Journal story that — like every other CJ story that mentions the billboards — failed to mention Louisville’s decision several years ago to place billboards around the state promoting its athletic programs.* (There’s one adjacent to I-75 in northern Rockcastle County, for example. Bet the Rockcastle County UofL Alumni Chapter is very active. Bet Brad Durham loves it.) Of course, the CJ never mentions Louisville’s decision to schedule a game ahead of the UK/UofL game in 2001 to ensure Louisville had an extra game to prepare for Kentucky when its harping on Kentucky’s decision to move the game to Week 3, either.

Anyway, let’s get to last night. We were killing time before going out to dinner by watching the Troy/Oklahoma State game. The game was delayed because of weather, so Reece Davis, Lou Holtz, and Mark May were filling the delay by discussing this week’s games. After Holtz and May discussed UK/UofL (Holtz picked the Cards and May picked the Cats, for what it’s worth, and that’s not much, we’d say), Davis had this to say:

You know Kentucky bought billboards all around the state — “Believe in Blue” — and they featured some of the prominent Wildcat players. They put some in Louisville as well, and it got under Harry Douglas’ skin, he said “Hey, Louisville is in Louisville, and Lexington is in Lexington.”

Harry, I know you’re on your way to law school, but last time I checked, Louisville was in Kentucky. And it is the state university, I think they can put billboards there if they want.

This made our night.

We’re waiting for someone to ask Douglas how he feels about the Kentucky Derby being run in Louisville. Or the fact that Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium is adjacent to the Kentucky fairgrounds.

Onward and upward!

*To his credit, the author of the story did mention the Louisville billboards in a subsequent blog post. He noted, correctly, we think, that there’s a difference between placing a billboard in Frankfort and placing one next to a stadium. He failed to note that “Believe in Blue” was considerably less, how should we put this, less trash talkish?, than “We’re miles ahead.” [Link] This would be relevant, we feel, since the story was about how Louisville lets its play do the talking.

Kentucky Football Weekly Update: Week 2

September 12th, 2007 by Will

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In what may become a regular feature (if work rears its ugly head it’ll probably disappear), Allenby For Heisman! hopes to take a weekly look at the University of Kentucky’s place in the world of college football.

Week 2 saw the University of Kentucky Wildcats overcome a disappointing first half to comfortably dispatch the Kent State Golden Flashes, 56-20. Granted, Kent State isn’t the most formidable of opponents, but they do have a road win over a school from a Bowl Championship Series conference, Iowa State. (The Cyclones lost to a 1-AA school — not going to see any of that subdivision terminology from us – Northern Iowa, in Week 2. But, hey, they’re still in the Big XII last we checked.) Plus, as the Lexington Herald-Leader’s John Clay pointed out, this game had all the signs of a classic trap game. So it was nice to see Kentucky run out 36-point winners.

However, the win did little to impress the pollsters, and just like last week, Kentucky is nowhere near the AP Poll or the USA Today Coaches’ Poll top-25. Kentucky continues to receive no points in the AP Poll [Link], but improved from four to nine points in the Coaches’ Poll [Link]. That moves the Cats from No. 39 to No. 37 if you count the teams in the ‘others receiving votes’ column.

Like last week, we’ll look at where the national media outlets rank Kentucky:

CBS Sports. The Cats rose from No. 32 to No. 30 in the CBSSports.com 120 [Link]. That site’s updated bowl predictions still place Kentucky in the Independence Bowl in Shreveport, Louisiana, against Kansas [Link]. 

SI.com. The Cats moved the most here, jumping from No. 44 to No. 37 in SI.com’s Power Rankings [Link]. Kentucky remains absent from SI.com’s bowl predictions, which haven’t been updated since preseason.

FOX Sports.* Kentucky is ranked No. 32 in the CollegeFootballNews.com rankings at FOXSports.com [Link].

ESPN. Somewhat surprisingly, the WorldWideLeader doesn’t do a 1-120 ranking, but senior writers Ivan Maisel and Mark Schlabach update their bowl predictions weekly. Schlabach has moved the Cats from a matchup with Southern Miss in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tennessee, to a matchup with Kansas State in the Independence Bowl. Maisel has moved Kentucky from a matchup with Kansas State in the Independence Bowl (the matchup his colleague predicts this week) to a matchup with Florida State in the Music City Bowl in Nashville, Tennessee. (College football fans in Kentucky might also be curious to know that Schlabach has moved Louisville from the Sugar Bowl to the Gator Bowl, but Maisel still has the Cards in the Sugar Bowl) [Link].

USA Today.** Jeff Sagarin’s rankings place the Cats at No. 30, with a rating of 80.65 [Link].

Gennerally, then, we’d say these sites see Kentucky as a top-35 team headed for a third-tier bowl. (In our off-the-top-of-our-heads ranking system, BCS bowls would be Tier I, other New Year’s Day bowls would be Tier II, and the rest would be Tier III). That seems about right. Of course, if the Cats pull the upset on Saturday, we’d expect to see some Outback Bowl projections (or, if we dare to be so bold, Citrus Bowl projections — ha! we aspire to that which Spurrier deplores!). But, judging from this weeks’ polls, a win against Louisville still might not get the Cats in either top-25 poll.

Onward and upward!

*No, we didn’t neglect FOX Sports’ rankings last week because Jay Glazer is a muppet. We were simply unaware FOX Sports provided rankings. 

**We totally meant to include Sagarin’s rankings last week (the man named Kentucky Football a retrospective National Champion, after all), but it slipped our minds as we worked against our Federer/Roddick deadline.

 

Rick Ankiel

September 11th, 2007 by jeb

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A friend made this just for fun.  “The Artifical” just doesn’t sound as good as “The Natural”.

SEC – Are they afraid to play good out of Conference teams?

September 11th, 2007 by jeb

Well Courier Journal columnist Rich Bozich thinks so.  In his column titled “Cats playing for SEC pride against Cards”  he states:

Most SEC teams won’t even take the call if they’re asked to go on the road to play a legitimate team from another BCS conference. (Link)

This comes on top what he wrote a couple of weeks ago.

I realize SEC teams don’t believe in out-of-conference rivals (Link)

To see if this is true Loge Level looked at the schedules of each team in the SEC and each in the Big East.
 

SEC
South Carolina - at North Carolina / Clemson (20)
Florida – Florida State
Kentucky – Louisville (9)
Tennessee – at California (8)
Vanderbilt – Wake Forest
Georgia – Oklahoma State / at Georgia Tech (15)
LSU – Virginia Tech (17)
Alabama – At Florida State
Arkansas – None
Auburn – Kansas State / South Florida
Mississippi – Missouri
Mississippi State – West Virginia (4)

The SEC plays 14 non-conference games 4 on the road and 6 against ranked teams

Big East
Connecticut – at Duke / at Virginia
South Florida – at Auburn / North Carolina
Louisville – at Kentucky / at NC State
Rutgers - Maryland
Pittsburgh – Michigan State / at Virginia
West Virginia – Maryland / Miss State
Cincinnati – Oregon State
Syracuse – Washington / at Iowa / Illinois

15 Games 7 on the road 0 ranked teams

So it is true that the Big East does play more out of conference road games than the SEC however its also true that the caliber of teams the SEC plays in their out of conference schedule is clearly superior.

But still these numbers are hard to compare because there are more teams in the SEC and the Big East teams play one less in-conference game.  So we will now look at how many games on average each team in the SEC and Big East play against BCS conference teams including those within their own conference.
 

The 12 SEC teams play 110 BCS games or 9.16 BCS games per team.
The 8 Big East teams play 71 BCS games or 8.875 BCS games per team.

Check out the logo

September 10th, 2007 by jeb

Will Gwen Stefani’s new L Fragrance become the official scent of Cardinal fans everywhere?

gwen-l.jpg

 

L, a L.A.M.B. Fragrance by Gwen Stefani Spray at Nordstrom (Link)

Weekly Update: Week 1

September 5th, 2007 by Will

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In what may become a regular feature (if work rears its ugly head it’ll probably disappear), Allenby For Heisman! hopes to take a weekly look at the University of Kentucky’s place in the world of college football.  

Kentucky’s predictable romp against outmanned and outclassed Eastern Kentucky University did little to change the Cats’ status as a team generally expected to land in a lower-tier bowl, which was to be expected.

The Cats are still nowhere near either the AP Poll or the USA Today Coaches’ Poll. Kentucky received no points in the former [Link] and four points in latter [Link], good for a No. 39 ranking if you count the teams ahead of them in the ‘others receiving votes’ column. We were really hoping the Cats would fare a bit better in the polls as we’d love to see a ranked Kentucky face a top-10 Louisville (more on this in the week before the Louisville game). But after Kentucky received such little love in the preseason polls, it became clear that wasn’t going to happen. This isn’t too surprising as Kentucky, even when bowl-worthy (think back to 1998-1999 and 2002) has never received much respect from the pollsters. We will confess to being disappointed at seeing the Clemson team Kentucky soundly defeated last December sneak into the AP Poll at No. 25 and leading the ‘others receiving votes’ pack in the Coaches’ Poll. But, again, we can’t say that we’re surprised.

Over at CBS Sports, the Cats rose from No. 36 to No. 34 in the CBSSports.com 120 [Link]. That site’s bowl predictions, updated September 3, place the Cats in the Independence Bowl in Shreveport, Louisiana, against Kansas [Link].

SI.com’s Power Rankings rank Kentucky decidedly lower at No 44, up from a pre-season rank of No. 46 [Link]. Kentucky is absent from SI.com’s bowl predictions, which haven’t been updated since August 24 [Link].

ESPN.com, however, is higher on the Cats. Ivan Maisel and Mark Schlabach, whose predictions were updated September 4, have Kentucky bowling [Link]. Maisel, the man who named Kentucky’s senior quarterback, Andre’ Woodson, an All-American, has Kentucky in the Independence Bowl against Kansas State. Schlabach has the Cats in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tennessee, against Southern Mississippi.

We’d also planned at combing through the mountain of preview magazines we collected this Summer to see how their predictions for the Cats turn out. But everybody picked the Cats to win against EKU anyway, and we’d much rather watch Federer/Roddick at the US Open.

Onward and upward!