RealClearSports: Call It the 'Bowl Complaint Series'

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


And from the sort-of-great Northwest comes the word. “Everybody is just tired of the system.’’ That was Chris Petersen, Boise State coach, the system meaning the Bowl Championship Series, which should be called the Bowl Complaint Series.

Everybody? An exaggeration by Mr. Peterson, who if he doesn’t like the status quo could have accepted the position reportedly offered him by UCLA, which is having as much trouble finding a new football coach as it did scoring points against USC.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Please, We Get It, the SEC Is Special

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Uncle! We concede. The rest of the country, that is. Nobody plays college football like they do below the Mason-Dixon Line, which is not to be confused with the Auburn defensive line.

Compared to the Southeastern Conference, the Big Ten is a big nothing. The Pac-10 is a pack of unfulfilled promises.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

Newsday (N.Y.): Auburn's defense the key to winning title

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- On the morning after, they kept handing trophies to Auburn coach Gene Chizik, the one from The Associated Press, the one from the Football Writers Association named for Grantland Rice, the one from the National Football Foundation named for Douglas MacArthur.

On a Tuesday in the desert, all the awards did was verify what happened Monday evening some 20 miles to the west, at University of Phoenix Stadium, where in front of a BCS-record crowd of 78,683, Chizik's team proved it was better than Oregon -- if barely.

Auburn showed what the Jets showed a couple of days earlier in the NFL playoffs: With a stout enough defense, a few key offensive plays down the stretch and a reliable kicker, a team can get through.

For the Jets, it was Nick Folk hitting one from 32 yards for a 17-16 win as time expired. For the Auburn Tigers, it was Wes Byrum hitting one from 19 yards for a 22-19 win as time expired.

In a game that sent Auburn to a 14-0 record (Oregon ended 12-1) and its second national title (the other was in 1957), the Tigers shut down a team that had averaged 49 points a game and had been held under 37 only once.

Oregon, with its dozens of uniform combinations -- Monday night, players wore chartreuse shoes -- and dozens of formations and plays, with rare exceptions couldn't get through, around or over the Auburn defenders.

"Man, our defense,'' said Auburn tackle Nick Fairley, the Lombardi Award winner. "We showed America everything we've done each and every Saturday. We went unnoticed throughout the year.''

What didn't go unnoticed was a run by Auburn's Michael Dyer in the game's final series. He seemed to be tackled on his own 45 after a 5-yard gain, but as proved correct by replay, Dyer landed on Oregon's Eddie Pleasant, not the ground, got up and sped to the Ducks' 23 for a gain of 37 yards.

What also didn't go unnoticed was the work of Auburn's Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Cam Newton, who ran for 64 net yards and passed for 265 and two touchdowns.

Whether Newton, who came to Auburn only last winter and became a controversial figure because of claims his father tried to get a payoff for directing Cam to another school, stays around is uncertain.

Asked how the outcome of the game would affect his decision to be an early entrant in the NFL draft, Newton said: "It is something I have to sit down with coach Chizik and my family and just get the vibe of so many different people. We will go from there.''

Where Auburn goes will be an issue. Fairley is a junior. Newton is a junior. If they return, the Tigers will be excellent in 2011.

Reminded Chizik, "I don't think you can have great teams without having some great players at some positions, coaches that know how to use them and a team chemistry that comes together.''

Auburn certainly had all three, and now has three more trophies.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/college/college-football/auburn-s-defense-the-key-to-winning-title-1.2602449
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Newton leads Auburn to BCS title

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


GLENDALE, Ariz. -- The speed freaks were freaked out. The quick strike was struck down.

A game that matched two of college football's best offenses was decided, of course, by one of college's finest defenses.

Oregon was supposed to turn the BCS National Championship Game into a track meet, but Auburn, strong and resilent, wouldn't let the Ducks get untracked.

The offense nicknamed the Quack Attack was always under attack.

"We played the best game of our lives,'' Auburn coach Gene Chizik said of his team.

In the end, it was a 19-yard field goal by Wes Byrum on the game's final play that gave the Tigers a 22-19 victory, a score that might have have seemed unlikely when one school, Oregon averaged nearly 50 points a game and the other, Auburn, almost 43.

But Southern California coach Lane Kiffin, who lost to Oregon this season and (while at Tennessee) lost to Auburn last season, predicted exactly what would happen, although he wouldn't predict a winner leading up to the game.

"The key is not going to be who moves the ball,'' Kiffin told the Los Angeles Times, "it's who's going to be able to make them slow down and force them to make the mistake.''

That was Auburn, with a beast of a defensive tackle, Nick Fairley, who won the Lombardi Award and had a great deal to do with a Southeastern Conference team winning a fifth straight title.

Fairley seemed to spend as much time in the Oregon backfield as, well, the Oregon backfield.

"Our blocking needed to improve,'' Oregon coach Chip Kelly said after the Ducks' first loss in 13 games. "It was a battle up front between our O-line and their D-line.''

It was a great battle in a great game, one that thrilled a University of Phoenix Stadium record crowd of 78,603.

Auburn finished 14-0, and when it was over, the players and coaches raced onto the field to celebrate the school's second national title.

"I guarantee you six months ago nobody thought we could do it,'' said Cam Newton, Auburn's controversial -- and Heisman Trophy-winning -- quarterback.

Newton completed 20 of 34 passes for 265 yards and two touchdowns, but it was that Auburn defense that made a difference. Only once, in a 15-13 win over California, had Oregon scored fewer than 37 points in a game. Now it's twice.

Oregon did get a touchdown and two-point conversion with 2:33 left in the game to tie it at 19, but in the third quarter, the Ducks could not score in four plays from the 3, a game-changing moment.

When the first quarter was scoreless, you knew it was going to be a strange evening. That was confirmed with a halftime score of 16-11, with Auburn in front. Oregon had the ball most of the first quarter, but after that Auburn controlled the game.

The Tigers finished with 519 yards on offense; Oregon, which prides itself on running off a play every 10 seconds and running up the score, had only 449, most of those through the air. Darron Thomas threw for 363.

"Auburn's front seven is really physical,'' Kiffin had pointed out. "Oregon's built a little bit different. They're not as big defensively but they are really fast and in such phenomenal shape, they're able to play their fourth-quarter defense.''

Auburn basically played defense all four quarters. The adage is that defense wins. In the 2011 BCS title game, it certainly did.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/college/newton-leads-auburn-to-bcs-title-1.2600752
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

RealClearSports: Colt Is the Real McCoy

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. -- This is southern California at its luxurious best, the Marriott Hotel on a bluff, the Pacific in the distance, the outside temperature in the mid 70s.

Except the kid wearing the white jersey with No. 12 on the front is inside, and his view is of cameras, microphones and prying journalists.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010