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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Gameday: maryland Homecoming issue
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Melvin Gordon leaps toward Heisman By Jim Dayton the daily cardinal
Although they seemed finished just one month ago, Melvin Gordon’s Heisman Trophy chances have rebounded as the running back has emerged as a legitimate contender for college football’s most prestigious award. To fully understand the context of Gordon’s Heisman campaign, we first have to acknowledge that he likely won’t walk away as the winner. Excluding Reggie Bush’s vacated 2005 Heisman, quarterbacks have won 12 of the past 13 trophies. Team performance is a factor as well. The only running back to win and keep the Heisman since 2000 was Alabama’s Mark Ingram Jr., who played for an undefeated national champion. The last Heisman-winning running back to play for a team with at least two losses was, coincidentally, former Badger Ron Dayne in 1999. But the fact he’s in the conversation is an extraordinary accomplishment in itself. Two games
into the season, Gordon’s preseason hype had dwindled after he disappeared in the second half against LSU and was stifled by Western Illinois. Gordon isn’t focused on the Heisman just yet. With six games left, he said it’s hard to project stats across the remainder of the regular season. But the thought of winning is still enticing. “To be honest, it’s every kid’s dream to win it, but if it happens, it happens,” Gordon said. Gordon’s dedication to his craft has rubbed off on teammates and the media alike. Stories of Gordon running ladder drills on his front lawn in the wee hours of the morning became legendary. “I’ve been for his vote since spring ball,” said fellow running back Corey Clement. “Ever since, I’ve just seen his work ethic, and I’m just like, there’s no way he can’t get it.” Despite the positional bias against running backs and the fact Heisman winners usually come from national title contenders, Gordon’s statisti-
cal resume is remarkable. Five games of at least 100 rushing yards. Two games of at least 250 yards. And three games with multiple touchdowns. Gordon has vastly outperformed what Ingram had done in the first half of 2009. Gordon has tallied 1,046 rushing yards on an average of 7.9 yards per carry while scoring 14 total touchdowns. Through six games, Ingram recorded 659 rushing yards on 5.9 yards per carry with 10 total touchdowns. But Ingram was running against the powerful defenses of the SEC, right? Not exactly. Not including the national title game against Texas, since the Heisman had already been awarded, Ingram faced only one rushing defense that finished the season ranked in the Top 40. 2009 was just a weak Heisman year. No player really stood out all season. Ingram received the lowest percentage of votes among winners since Nebraska’s Eric Crouch in 2001. For Gordon, 2014 is shap-
ing up to be a similar season. Oregon’s Marcus Mariota and Mississippi State’s Dak Prescott are deservedly the top two candidates heading into the second half. Mariota has some amazing numbers, leading the nation in efficiency rating and boasting a perfect 19:0 touchdown to interception ratio. The narrative of Mississippi State has boosted Prescott’s candidacy, as he’s the leader of the typically irrelevant program’s resurgence. But it’s far too early to say that Oregon and Mississippi State will be in the national title picture by season’s end. The Ducks have already lost once and it would seem strange if the Bulldogs remain undefeated during this chaotic season. If those teams fall off in the second half, Gordon’s window will open wider. He’s easily the strongest running back candidate, especially with Georgia’s Todd Gurley suspended indefinitely due to an autograph investigation. Being the best at his position certainly helps his Heisman case, but that’s
not how Gordon sees it. “Everyone considers Todd Gurley to be the best back. It just kind of sucks now because I want to compete against him,” Gordon said. “With him being out, it’s really not a fair chance. I feel like no matter what, they’ll be like ‘Todd’s the best,’ no matter what I do from here on out.” Gordon has made no secret that he scoreboard watches, constantly comparing himself to elite collegiate runners like Gurley and Indiana’s Tevin Coleman. But Clement said Gordon is able to separate player comparisons from media hype. “I just see him taking it one game at a time,” Clement said. “That’s probably the biggest respect I can have toward him for that because a lot of people get tied up in the media, just want to see how great they’re doing. He just kicks back and relaxes after every game.” That’s probably the best strategy. We’ll do the talking in the media. Gordon will let his numbers speak for themselves.
“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.”
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Five things to watch
By Brian Weidy the daily cardinal
Coming off their second and final bye week of the season, the Badgers (1-1 Big Ten, 4-2 overall) look to start the home stretch with a win against Maryland (2-1, 5-2). Let’s take a look at five things to watch during the game.
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Will Melvin Gordon reach 175 yards again?
Containing Melvin Gordon is a Sisyphean task. Put eight guys in the box? No problem. Nine? Still no problem. Ten? Just hope he doesn’t get to the second level. Gordon has at least 175 yards and a touchdown in each of his last four games including four touchdowns last game against the Illinois Fighting Illini. He currently has 1,046 yards and 13 touchdowns on the season in just
six games. The bona fide Heisman candidate is well on his way to breaking 2,000 yards rushing on the season, despite getting essentially no help from the passing game. Maryland is giving up 204.5 yards per game on the ground and even with a game plan that forces quarterback Joel Stave to throw the ball, Gordon will still get his yards.
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Can Joel Stave open up the box?
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Will Wisconsin’s special teams improve?
With Joel Stave under center, Wisconsin has the forward pass in its playbook. With everyone and their grandmother knowing that the Badgers want to run the ball, Stave will need to be able to complete passes in order for Gordon and Corey Clement to find room to run. Stave’s signature pass is the downfield play-action pass, though without Jared Abbrederis at the other end of those vertical passes, Stave has yet to complete one of those this season. If Stave can connect on one or two of those throws early on, it will not allow the Terrapins to stack the box as much as they would like. Furthermore, completing downfield passes will also help the team move the ball down the field in chunks.
So far this season, Rafael Gaglianone has established himself as both a fan favorite and a reminder that field goals are always an adventure when wearing the cardinal and white. Gaglianone hit a 51-yard field goal in his first game against LSU, but is 5-for-8 since and has missed an extra point to boot. Furthermore, the punting game has been downright awful. The team is 109th in punting average at 39.0 yards per punt and is 121st in the country in net yardage at 34.1 net yards per punt, which is fourth to last. Between punter Drew Meyer and Gaglianone, the special teams need to improve if they want to start finishing drives and flipping the field when they can’t.
Can Wisconsin stop the run?
Can the Badgers stop the Terrapin receivers?
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Maryland hardly has a top rushing attack; however, the Badgers have struggled containing mobile quarterbacks in the past and have had trouble stopping the run in these past two games. Two games ago, the Badgers gave up 203 yards on the ground to Northwestern and last game, they gave up 75 yards on the ground to reserve quarterback Aaron Bailey, who came in late in the third quarter. Maryland quarterback C.J. Brown is both the team’s leading passer and the team’s leading rusher, rushing 64 times for 263 yards and five scores so far on the season. Brown may not be the fastest player on the team, but he has a knack for using his legs when the situation calls for it. While Wisconsin will worry about the Maryland passing attack, they can’t lose sight of Brown, who will run for a first down if he needs to.
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So far this season, beyond the special teams, the one thing that has stuck out the most is the inability for Wisconsin to stop opponents’ downfield passing game. Their corners will very much be put to the test this week against the Terrapins’ receiving corps. The two players to watch on the outside for the Terps are Stefon Diggs and Deon Long. Diggs has 45 receptions for 580 yards and four scores while Long has 27 receptions for 307 yards and a score. Sojourn Shelton has struggled mightily while Darius Hillary has been better but still not great. Those two will need to step up in a big way if they are to contain the two aforementioned talented receivers. Beyond those two, the Badgers can’t sleep on receiver Marcus Leak, who has 16 catches for 253 yards and three scores himself.
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Maryland surprises in inaugural B1G season redshirt sophomore Perry Hills under center this season. Rowe Maryland is well on its way tore his ACL prior to the Iowa to making a bowl game for the game, opening up playing time second straight year. At 5-2, for Hills. they currently sit at third in Rowe looked ready to take the East division of the Big Ten, the helm before his injury, but coming off of a big connow Maryland will ference win over Iowa be forced to continlast week. ue with Brown, who A solid game from draws comparisons redshirt senior quarterto Tanner McEvoy Intercepback C.J. Brown put the with a sub-60 percent tions by Terrapins ahead 38-21 in completion percentWilliam Likely, the the fourth quarter, and age, and Hills, who most in the they held on for the win. has only 10 attempts Big Ten this He didn’t have the best on the year. season. day passing, throwing Brown leads the for only 120 yards and team in rushing, two interceptions, but although starting Receptions rushed for 99 yards. junior running back by Stefon This came off of a Brandon Ross averagDiggs, the highest total bye week that followed a es 4.8 yards per carry. in the Big demoralizing loss to Ohio He and backup Wes Ten and tied State early this month. Brown, a sophomore, for the 23rd They allowed 52 points each average around most in the to the Buckeyes while only 35 yards per game. country. only scoring 24 themOn the other side of selves. Maryland’s other the ball, the Terrapins loss came against West Virginia, have a strong pass rush from where it lost on a last-second senior defensive lineman Andre field goal. Monroe. Monroe is only listed Passing has been one of the at 5 feet 11 inches, but he has biggest issues so far for the team. 5.5 sacks and seven tackles for They’ve alternated between loss on the season, two of which Brown, junior Caleb Rowe and came last week against Iowa.
By Lorin Cox
The Daily Cardinal
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Behind him, sophomore linebacker Yannick Ngakoue has been a force as well. He leads the team with 9.5 tackles for loss along with four sacks. He and senior linebacker Cole Farrand, who leads the team in tackles, have wreaked havoc on opponents’ offenses in 2014. Sophomore cornerback William Likely leads UM’s secondary with four interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns. As a whole, the Terrapins’ secondary has been fairly mediocre, giving up over 250 yards per game. Maryland has improved its win total each year under head coach Randy Edsall, who is in his fourth season with the Terrapins. Edsall, who is 18-26 with Maryland, previously spent 12 seasons at helm at UConn. He went 74-70 with the Huskies, winning two Big East titles and earning a berth in the 2011 Fiesta Bowl. The Terrapins have playmakers on both sides of the ball, but they have been unable to put it all together in a couple games this season. Upsetting Wisconsin on the road would be huge for them as they look to reach bowl eligibility.
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Who’s that on the field? The Wisconsin depth chart FS SS 31 Lubern Figaro 19 Leo Musso
OLB
ILB
58 Joe Schobert 24 Keelon Brookins
CB
86 Alex Erickson 16 Reggie Love 12 Natrell Jamerson 15 Rob Wheelwright
95 Arthur Goldberg 94 Conor Sheehy
LG
61 Tyler Marz 62 Walker Williams
30 Derek Landisch 43 Michael Trotter
NG
34 Chikwe Obasih 6 Alec James
LT
ILB
59 Marcus Trotter 32 Leon Jacobs
DE
5 Darius Hillary 25 Derrick Tindal
WR
7 Michael Caputo 21 Peniel Jean
C
73 Dallas Lewallen 71 Ray Ball
OLB
47 Vince Biegel 41 Jesse Hayes
DE
RG
25 Melvin Gordon 6 Corey Clement
RT
78 Rob Havenstein 74 Hayden Biegel
TE
WR
3 Kenzel Doe 9 Jordan Fredrick 17 George Rushing
49 Sam Arneson 46 Austin Traylor 48 Troy Fumagalli
QB
RB
8 Sojourn Shelton 4 Devin Gaulden
91 Konrad Zagzebski 93 Jake Keefer
70 Dan Voltz 54 Kyle Costigan 63 Michael Deiter 55 Trent Denlinger
2 Joel Stave OR 5 Tanner McEvoy
CB
FB
20 Austin Ramesh 26 Derek Straus
nd
St
olle
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Courtesy of uwbadgers.com
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Gophers move up in rankings 1
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By Jack Baer the daily cardinal
It was a fairly calm week in the Big Ten with four teams on byes. Michigan State and Ohio State both won their games 56-17, Maryland looked strong and a major poll found Minnesota’s one-point win over Purdue very impressive for some reason. Here’s how that all shook it out in the rankings for eight of our voters.
1. No. 8 Michigan State (7 first place votes), 111 points
While the Spartan defense isn’t as strong as last year’s elite unit, the offensive side has more than made up for that. Their lowest scoring output of the year is 27 points, and junior quarterback Connor Cook is probably the best quarterback in the Big Ten. This team could very well drop at least 50 on Michigan this week.
2. No. 13 Ohio State (1), 104 points
The Buckeyes keep looking stronger, this time blowing the doors off Rutgers 56-17. In your latest “J.T. Barrett keeps improving” news, the redshirt freshman quarterback registered a 99.2 QBR against the Scarlet Knights, according to ESPN. It’s looking more and more like Ohio State will be the team to give Michigan State all they can handle Nov. 8.
3. No. 16 Nebraska, 97 points
It’s a little boring to predict the Huskers will win a weak West division and then lose in the championship game to Michigan State or Ohio State, but come on, it feels like that scenario has something like an 80 percent chance of playing out, doesn’t it? Also, fun fact— the four top rushers in the FBS are all in the Big Ten: Indiana’s Tevin Coleman, Melvin Gordon, Nebraska’s Ameer Abdullah, and Minnesota’s David Cobb.
4. Wisconsin, 83 points
Not much to say about the Badgers after a bye week. The story of their Big Ten season will depend on how far Melvin Gordon can take them and how much the quarterback play can
drag them back. While they have an easy schedule, the emergence of Rutgers and Maryland as not-awful teams means they no longer have that huge scheduling advantage.
5. Minnesota, 82 points
While we attach AP rankings to teams in our stories here, it’s worth noting the coaches poll has Minnesota ranked 24th. Why? I’m not so sure, considering they’re coming off a onepoint win against a bottom-three Big Ten team in Purdue. That 6-1 record looks mighty attractive in the current landscape, but the Gophers’ best win is over Michigan and they were blown out in their one loss to No. 10 TCU. We still don’t know if Minnesota can pass the ball to pull out close games, so it is very possible the Gophers are at peak value at this point.
6. Maryland, 70 points
The Terrapins are a good win away from declaring themselves as the third-best team in the East, by virtue of a strong win over Iowa and Rutgers getting beaten down by Ohio State more than the Buckeyes did to the Terps. Stefon Diggs remains as scary as a greased-up rocket somehow capable of juking in mid-air.
7. Iowa, 68 points
Iowa seemed shaped up to be a dark horse to take the West thanks to a very easy schedule, but their loss to Maryland means they will probably have to beat two of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Nebraska. I just don’t see that happening. They have a frustratingly inefficient offense and Kirk Ferentz isn’t the kind of coach known for engineering sudden offensive turnarounds.
8. Rutgers, 49 points
Rutgers looked solid until it ran into the Ohio State wall. Senior quarterback Gary Nova is 12th in the FBS in passer rating, but you have to wonder if that will matter if the Scarlet Knights defense can’t hold off top offenses, like this week against Nebraska.
9. Northwestern, 47 points
The Wildcats got crushed by
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4
Nebraska and only the running game looked like a competitive Big Ten unit. Now’s the time to just sit down and quietly contemplate on how Northwestern beat Mississippi State convincingly in the 2013 calendar year.
10. Penn State, 44 points
It was a bye week for the Nittany Lions, which should let a shallow team rest up for a huge matchup with Ohio State. That could be sophomore quarterback Christian Hackenberg’s last chance to resurrect his season, as he currently is sitting on a 59.0 percent completion rate and a 5-to-7 touchdowninterception ratio. Rumor has it that if Michigan State breaks 40 in the first half against the Wolverines (which they are very capable of doing), the halftime show will be Brady Hoke getting fired out of a cannon. Conversely, the only way Hoke can be sure to keep his job until at least the end of the season will be a win over the Spartans. Good luck with that.
12. Indiana, 21 points
The Hoosiers beating a midtier SEC team on the road definitely happened and is an inspiring reminder that anything is possible (as long as you have a running back like Tevin Coleman). Indiana was never going to make any noise in the conference until it shows it can play defense and, well, they gave up a combined 101 points to Iowa and Michigan State in the last two weeks.
13. Purdue, 19 points
The Boilermakers led Minnesota late, but weren’t able to hold on. It’s still encouraging that the game was so close, the Boilermaker rushing offense went through the strong Gopher defense like a freight train. (Their logo is a train, get it? Nailed it.)
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Big Ten Standings East
Big Ten
Overall
West
Big Ten
Overall
Michigan State Ohio State Maryland Rutgers Michigan Penn State Indiana Minnesota Nebraska Iowa Northwestern Wisconsin Purdue Illinois
3-0 2-0 2-1 1-2 1-2 1-2 0-3 3-0 2-1 2-1 2-2 1-1 1-3 0-3
6-1 5-1 5-2 5-2 3-4 4-2 3-4 6-1 6-1 5-2 3-4 4-2 3-5 3-4
14. Illinois, 8 points
Hello, unanimous worst team in the Big Ten. Illinois is in the midst of a tough schedule stretch of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio State, and Iowa. It will be a shock if they come out of that stretch with even one win.
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11. Michigan, 37 points
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Prescott leads Heisman race in Week 9 By Jim Dayton the daily cardinal
This is the sixth edition of the Heisman Watch, a weekly feature tracking the candidates for college football’s most prestigious award. For previous rankings, check The Daily Cardinal website.
1. Dak Prescott, Mississippi State QB (Last Week: 1)
The Bulldogs were on a bye last week, so no reason to move the Dak Attack down. Prescott is the nation’s premier dual-threat quarterback, with four games of at least 200 yards passing and 100 yards rushing. He’s on pace to record over 1,000 yards on the ground. My concerns with Prescott stem from his susceptibility to turnovers. In his last game two weeks ago against Auburn, he threw interceptions on consecutive drives. One of those picks came in the end zone. I’m also not sure if Mississippi State can remain at the top all season long. The Bulldogs don’t need to go undefeated for Prescott to win the Heisman, but more than one loss could derail his campaign. Mississippi State has a rather favorable schedule ahead, but the Bulldogs do have road games with Alabama and Ole Miss looming. But for now, Prescott deserves to be the favorite.
2. Marcus Mariota, Oregon QB (LW: 2)
Mariota is easily the best player in college football this season. Right now, he loses out to Prescott just based on Mississippi State being No. 1 in the nation.
Sometimes narratives win out over stats. Mariota’s stats are amazing. He has 19 touchdowns and zero interceptions. He leads the nation in efficiency rating, is second in yards per attempt and is fourth in completion percentage. Mariota ripped Washington last week for a season-high 336 yards. The Huskies aren’t much of a pass defense, ranking 115th nationally, but this Saturday Oregon gets a California secondary that ranks dead last, one that allows a whopping 391 passing yards per game. Expect more big numbers from Mariota.
3. Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin RB (LW: 3)
Gordon is the best running back in the nation. He leads the country with an average of 174.3 rushing yards per game. On pace for nearly 2,100 yards, Gordon could boost his candidacy if the Badgers make the Big Ten championship game, giving him an extra game to put up more superb numbers. Gordon has scored 14 total touchdowns and is averaging 7.9 yards per carry. That’s the fifthhighest mark among players who average at least 10 carries per game. Gordon will need some help to surpass the talented players above him. Even though quarterbacks have dominated the Heisman recently, Gordon should remain one of the top three candidates provided Wisconsin doesn’t lose to another mediocre team. The Badgers get Maryland this week, and the Terrapins rank 104th in
rush defense.
4. Bo Wallace, Ole Miss QB (LW: 4)
This is where the drop-off begins, as Prescott, Mariota and Gordon are lightyears ahead of Wallace in the Heisman race. It’s strange that Prescott’s narrative of being the quarterback of an upstart team from the state of Mississippi hasn’t translated to Wallace. He doesn’t get nearly the same amount of media attention as Prescott, but perhaps that’s because the Rebels started the season at No. 18 while the Bulldogs began the year unranked. Wallace’s season has been a bit of an odd trajectory. After his first three games, he led the nation in completion percentage. In that same period, he tossed four interceptions. Since then, he’s thrown just two picks in four games while seeing his completion rate drop a full 10 percentage points. Ole Miss faces the country’s fourth-ranked passing defense this weekend in LSU. More so than Prescott, Wallace and the Rebels need to stay in the playoff hunt if he is to win the Heisman.
5. Brett Hundley, UCLA QB (LW: 8)
The nation’s current leader in completion percentage with a 72.5 rate, Hundley has had only one game where he’s completed less than 70 percent of his passes. His best game of the year came in a September blowout of Arizona State, when he threw for 355 yards and four touchdowns on just 23 pass attempts. Hundley is more than a
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checkdown quarterback, however. He ranks 10th in yards per attempt and is sixth in efficiency rating. He’s thrown only four interceptions and 13 touchdowns. Hundley is firmly entrenched in the second tier of Heisman candidates.
6. Tevin Coleman, Indiana RB (LW: 5)
I’ve been saying this all season, but no matter what Coleman does on the field, he has practically a zero percent chance of winning the Heisman simply because he plays for a 3-4 Indiana team. Only once has a Heisman winner come from a team with a losing record—Notre Dame’s Paul Hornung in 1956, when the Fighting Irish went 2-8. Don’t expect Coleman to buck the trend. Still, he’s second only to Gordon in rushing yards per game and has the highest yards per carry in the country. He at least deserves a few votes come December.
7. Ameer Abdullah, Nebraska RB (LW: 9)
Abdullah is tied for first in the nation with 16 total touchdowns. He’s scored multiple times in five of seven games and has three 200-yard performances. Abdullah’s candidacy is discredited because of two terrible games against McNeese State and Michigan State. The Spartans have an incredible defense, so it’s hard to blame Abdullah for that game in which he carried the ball 24 times for just 45 yards. McNeese State is a different story, though. I’m more willing to look past Melvin Gordon’s poor game against Western Illinois than Abdullah against McNeese State just because Gordon has been otherworldly lately. His one bad game seems like an anomaly. But for Abdullah to have two bad games will hurt his chances, no matter if it was against the powerful Spartan defense.
8. Blake Sims, Alabama QB (LW: Not Ranked)
Sims is the only newcomer to this week’s list. He replaces Texas A&M’s Kenny Hill. Not coincidentally, Sims and the Tide obliterated Hill’s Aggies last weekend in a 59-0 whooping. Sims had been on the verge of making this list several times
before, but hadn’t made the cut. But he’s on here now, ranking fourth in yards per attempt and fourth in efficiency rating. As I’ve said before, team performance is crucial. Despite losing to Ole Miss, Alabama is a bona fide contender for the College Football Playoff. If the Tide can knock off Mississippi State and Auburn down the stretch, expect Sims to become a prime Heisman candidate.
9. Everett Golson, Notre Dame QB (LW: 6)
Well the Irish didn’t beat Florida State last weekend, but Golson was solid. He threw for 313 yards and three touchdowns, but he did have two interceptions, one of which came on a last-second heave on fourth-andgoal from the 18. The loss pretty much kills Golson’s chances at winning the award. His overall numbers just aren’t that great. A 61.2 percent completion rate, mediocre 7.4 yards per attempt and an efficiency rating that ranks 36th won’t win the Heisman. With unimpressive stats, his entire candidacy revolved around the Fighting Irish remaining undefeated. Though Notre Dame still could make it into the Playoff with one loss, that won’t really mean anything for Golson’s Heisman chances.
10. Rakeem Cato, Marshall QB (LW: 10)
Cato just set the FBS record for consecutive games with a touchdown pass, a streak of 39 games to surpass Russell Wilson. However, he doesn’t have the greatest stats, specifically his 58.3 percent completion rate. Like every other player on this list, Cato’s chances of winning the Heisman are entirely dependent upon team performance. However, wins are even more essential for Cato considering he plays for Marshall, a Group of Five school that needs to go undefeated to remain nationally relevant. But going undefeated seems a foregone conclusion. Last weekend, the Thundering Herd faced a deficit for the first time all season. They wound up winning that game against Florida International, 45-13.
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Midseason All-Big Ten Team Compiled by Jim Dayton
QB: J.T. Barrett, Ohio State, RS FR RB: Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin, RS JR RB: Tevin Coleman, Indiana, JR WR: Tony Lippett, Michigan State, SR WR: Stefon Diggs, Maryland, JR TE: Maxx Williams, Minnesota, RS SO OT: Brandon Scherff, Iowa, SR OG: Zac Epping, Minnesota, RS SR C: Jack Allen, Michigan State, JR OG: Dan Feeney, Indiana, RS SO OT: Rob Havenstein, Wisconsin, RS SR
K: Brad Craddock, Maryland, JR P: Peter Mortell, Minnesota, RS JR KR: V’Angelo Bentley, Illinois, JR PR: De’Mornay Pierson-El, Nebraska, FR
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DL: Joey Bosa, Ohio State, SO DL: Drew Ott, Iowa, JR DL: Shilique Calhoun, JR LB: Damien Wilson, Michigan State, SR LB: Ed Davis, Michigan State, JR LB: Derek Landisch, Wisconsin, SR LB: Yannick Ngakoue, Maryland, SO CB: William Likely, Maryland, SO S: Michael Caputo, Wisconsin, RS JR S: Kurtis Drummond, Michigan State, SR CB: Nick Vanhoose, Northwestern JR
Offensive Player of the Year: Defensive Player of the Year: Freshman of the Year: Coach of the Year:
Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin Joey Bosa, Ohio State J.T. Barrett, Ohio State Urban Meyer, Ohio State
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THE WEEK IN NUMBERS 11
Years in a row Oregon has beaten Washington as the Ducks won 45-20 last weekend in Eugene
17
Closest margin of victory for Oregon over Washington during that 11-game win streak
59
Margin of victory for Alabama over Texas A&M, as the Crimson Tide whooped the Aggies, 59-0
23
Consecutive wins for Florida State, a streak dating back to Dec. 1, 2012
353
Combined penalty yards in the Baylor-West Virginia game. There were 32 total penalties.
7
Touchdown passes thrown by USC’s Cody Kessler, a school record, in a win over Colorado
119
Total yards of offense by Missouri against Florida, but the Tigers still rolled, 42-13
4
Number of defensive or special teams touchdowns by Missouri in that game
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Wishing you a joyous (and victorious) UW Homecoming 2014
16
Consecutive conference losses for SEC doormat Arkansas, a streak that extends to Oct. 27, 2012
202
Rushing yards by Georgia’s Nick Chubb last Saturday, the most by a Georgia freshman since 1987
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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WEEK 9 POLLS ASSOCIATED PRESS
1. Mississippi State (43) 1,480 2. Florida State (14) 1,433 3. Mississippi (3) 1,404 4. Alabama 1,235 5. Auburn 1,231 6. Oregon 1,142 7. Notre Dame 1,133 8. Michigan State 1,066 9. Georgia 1,055 10. TCU 962 11. Kansas State 905 12. Baylor 858 13. Ohio State 753 14. Arizona State 643 15. Arizona 639 16. Nebraska 537 17. Oklahoma 461 18. East Carolina 445 19. Utah 437 20. USC 356 21. Clemson 283 22. West Virginia 272 23. Marshall 184 24. LSU 177 25. UCLA 118
USA TODAY/COACHES 1. Mississippi State (36) 1,520 2. Florida State (22) 1,493 3. Mississippi (4) 1,447 4. Alabama 1,293 5. Michigan State 1,243 6. Auburn 1,210 7. Oregon 1,133 8. Notre Dame 1,117 9. Georgia 1,096 10. TCU 996 11. Kansas State 909 12. Ohio State 856 13. Baylor 853 14. Arizona State 654 15. Arizona 612 16. Nebraska 588 17. East Carolina 578 18. Oklahoma 482 19. Utah 371 20. Clemson 320 21. USC 258 22. Marshall 247 23. LSU 155 24. Minnesota 147 25. West Virginia 143
THIS WEEK’S BIG GAMES 22 WVU at Oklahoma State Stillwater, Okla. Saturday 2:30 p.m. ESPN 3 Ole Miss at 24 LSU Baton Rouge, La. Saturday 6:15 p.m. ESPN 20 USC at 19 Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Saturday 9 p.m. Fox Sports 1 gameday
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A special publication of
Fall 2014, Issue 6 2142 Vilas Communication Hall 821 University Avenue Madison, Wis., 53706-1497 News and Editorial 608-262-8000 fax 608-262-8100 edit@dailycardinal.com sports@dailycardinal.com l
Editor-in-Chief Jack Casey Managing Editor Jonah Beleckis Gameday Editors Zach Rastall Andrew Tucker Sports Editors Jack Baer Jim Dayton Photo Editors Emily Buck Tommy Yonash Graphics Editor Cameron Graff Social Media Manager Rachel Wanat Copy Chiefs Kara Evenson, Justine Jones Jessie Rodgers, Paige Villiard
Business Manager Brett Bachman Advertising Manager Jordan Laeyendecker Assistant Ad Manager Corissa Pennow Marketing Director Tim Smoot
Gameday is a publication of The Daily Cardinal. Any additional copies can be picked up at the Cardinal offices, 2142 Vilas Communication Hall. The Cardinal is a nonprofit organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales. The Daily Cardinal thanks Hometown News Group for their generous contribution in the production of Gameday. Its members help in sales, printing and publishing of each Gameday issue. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association. All copy, photographs and graphics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without specific written permission of the editor-in-chief. Š 2014, The Daily Cardinal Media Corporation ISSN 0011-5398
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– ©2014 Firehouse Subs.
Grand Opening Event TheSunday, Firehouse Subs October 26Story 12:00-3:00 PM 449A State St. Madison, WI 53703
We opened our first Firehouse Subs in ’94, in our hometown of Jacksonville, FL. Growing up around great cooks, as well as feeding our fellow firefighters at the fire station, quality has always been everything to us. But we’re about more than great food, and we’re not a themed sub shop. Our family has decades of service as firefighters and police officers. Our dad is a retired fire captain (43 years), and we’re both former firefighters. We are the real deal, the food is our creation, and the company is built with a family of franchise operators that share our passion for serving others, right here in your community. We’re so sure our subs are the best, that if you try one bite and don’t agree, we’ll give you your money back. So, as they say at the fire station, “Let’s Eat!”
Appearances by:
Bucky Badger Barry Alvarez Ron Dayne Don Davey The UW Marching Band The Bucky Wagon! – Chris Sorensen and Robin Sorensen Co-Founders of Firehouse Subs
Happy Hour Sunday thru Friday 3:00-6:00 PM Free drink with any sandwich purchase!
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©2014 Firehouse Subs. This offer valid with coupon at Madison, WI locations only. Prices and participation may vary, see restaurant for details. Limit one per customer, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Valid after 4pm and weekends only. Exp. 12/31/2014.
©2014 Firehouse Subs. This offer valid with coupon at Madison, WI locations only. Prices and participation may vary, see restaurant for details. Limit one per customer, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Valid after 4pm and weekends only. Exp. 12/31/2014.
©2014 Firehouse Subs. This offer valid with coupon at Madison, WI locations only. Prices and participation may vary, see restaurant for details. Limit one per customer, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Valid after 4pm and weekends only. Exp. 12/31/2014.
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
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Top games to watch in college football’s Week 9 Zach Rastall The Daily Cardinal
As teams across the country enter the second half of their schedules, there might be more questions now than there were at the beginning of the season. Races for several conference titles and the Heisman Trophy remain wide open, and the College Football Playoff picture is still very much unclear thanks to a logjam in the SEC West. Here are some of the biggest games to watch this week as the college football season enters its home stretch.
Texas at No. 11 Kansas State
Last Saturday, Bill Snyder and the Wildcats reminded everybody just how lethal they are as the underdog. Kansas State went on the road and knocked off the Oklahoma Sooners, its 10th win as an underdog since 2011. More importantly, the Wildcats have announced themselves as the team to beat in the race for the Big 12 title. With TCU trouncing Oklahoma State and West Virginia shocking Baylor last weekend, Kansas State is the only team left unbeaten in conference play in the Big 12 this season. Now, coming off their victory over the Sooners, the Wildcats will look to avoid falling victim to a letdown loss when they
welcome Texas to Manhattan, Kansas, this Saturday. The Longhorns are off to a 3-4 start in Charlie Strong’s first season as head coach, and haven’t looked great against tough competition. However, they did defeat Iowa State in a thriller last week and still have the potential to throw the conference into greater chaos by upsetting Kansas State. If Wildcats quarterback Jake Waters, who has 17 total touchdowns on the season, continues to shine, they shouldn’t have too much trouble beating Texas at home.
No. 22 West Virginia at Oklahoma State
West Virginia head coach Dana Holgorsen entered the 2014 season squarely on the hot seat, but now has the Mountaineers in the thick of the Big 12 race. West Virginia played both Alabama and Oklahoma tough earlier in the year, but finally broke through this past Saturday against Baylor. Quarterback Clint Trickett threw a pair of touchdown passes in the fourth quarter to lead the Mountaineers to a 41-27 victory over the Bears. Trickett has passed for 2,525 yards, third-most in the FBS, and 15 touchdowns so far this season, and will need to be sharp again as his team
travels to Stillwater to take on Oklahoma State. The Cowboys were embarrassed on the road last Saturday, losing 42-9 to TCU. Mike Gundy’s team is still alive in the battle for the Big 12 title, but with Kansas State, Baylor and Oklahoma all remaining on their schedule, the Cowboys absolutely need to knock off West Virginia this weekend to stay in the race.
No. 3 Ole Miss at No. 24 LSU
No, you’re not dreaming. The state of Mississippi actually boasts two of the best teams in all of college football. This year’s Egg Bowl could have College Football Playoff implications, though both Ole Miss and Mississippi State have to take care of their business first. The Rebels, off to a 7-0 start, will travel to Baton Rouge this Saturday to take on Les Miles and the LSU Tigers. The Tigers have struggled at times this season, needing a fourth-quarter comeback to defeat a mediocre Florida team and getting blown out against Auburn three weeks ago. However, they responded well, decimating Kentucky 41-3 in their last game. LSU will have its hands full against the Rebels, who are holding opponents to just 10.6 points per game this year, the lowest in
the FBS. Quarterback Bo Wallace has also been solid for Ole Miss, throwing for 17 touchdowns and running for another two. Though Hugh Freeze has the Rebels looking dominant, winning under the lights in Death Valley is never an easy task.
beating Oregon State in double overtime in their past two games, the Utes have an opportunity to assert themselves in the battle for the Pac-12 South with a win over USC.
No. 20 USC at No. 19 Utah
The Sun Devils also in the mix in the Pac-12 South, owning victories over USC and Stanford in their past two games. Now, they’ll head to Seattle to take on the Huskies in a cross-divisional matchup. Washington was the program that finally lured Chris Petersen away from Boise State, and he’s guided them to a 5-2 record through the first seven games. However, both of the Huskies’ losses have come against the only ranked teams they’ve faced this year. The Washington secondary has struggled this season, giving up 283.4 passing yards per game, the 14th-most in the FBS. This could be especially problematic given that the Huskies are going up against a potent Arizona State passing attack that ranks 11th in the country with 324 yards per game. That being said, the Pac-12 has been wildly unpredictable in 2014, so don’t be too surprised if Washington is able to pull off the upset against the Sun Devils.
With pretty much every team besides Colorado still alive in the Pac-12 South, every game the rest of the way is huge for all teams involved. The Trojans are off to a good start in Steve Sarkisian’s first season as head coach, currently sitting atop the division with a 4-1 conference record. They could even be undefeated in Pac-12 play right now, had it not been for a last-second Hail Mary by Arizona State earlier in the month. USC quarterback Cody Kessler is quietly putting together a stellar season, throwing for 1,884 yards and 18 touchdowns while completing 69.5 percent of his passes. Meanwhile, the Utes look poised to have their best season since moving to the Pac-12 in 2011. Utah went just 18-19 in its first three seasons as a member of the conference, including a 9-18 record in Pac-12 play, but are off to a much better start in 2014. After upsetting UCLA and
No. 14 Arizona State at Washington
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Wisconsin vs. Maryland
Maryland Terrapins
Wisconsin Badgers
team roster
team roster
Jordan, A.J. Stave, Joel Doe, Kenzel Gaulden, Devin Hillary, Darius McEvoy, Tanner Clement, Corey James, Alec Caputo, Michael Gillins, D.J. Shelton, Sojourn Fredrick, Jordan Gaglianone, Rafael Sanders, Krenwick Peavy, Jazz Reynard, T.J. Armstrong, Thad Jamerson, Natrell Bondoc, Evan Houston, Bart Senger, Connor Wheelwright, Robert Dixon, D’Cota Love, Reggie Cadogan, Sherard Rushing, George Baretz, Lance Connelly, Ryan Musso, Leo Ramesh, Austin Jean, Peniel Andersen, Chasen Kinlaw, Caleb Hudson, Austin Ogunbowale, Dare Brookins, Keelon Gordon, Melvin Tindal, Derrick Straus, Derek Deal, Taiwan Floyd, Terrance Landisch, Derek Cummins, Connor Figaro, Lubern Jacobs, Leon Obasih, Chikwe Watt, Derek Ferguson, Joe Spurling, D.J. Endicott, Andrew Neuville, Zander Rosowski, P.J. Kelliher, Brady Hayes, Jesse Watt, T.J. Trotter, Michael Steffes, Eric Herring, Warren Austin, Matt Traylor, Austin
CB QB WR CB CB QB RB DE S QB CB WR K WR WR CB QB WR S QB QB WR ILB WR OLB WR WR OLB S RB CB ILB RB DB RB S RB CB FB RB CB ILB WR S OLB DE FB S FB K LB P LS OLB TE ILB TE NG ILB TE
6-0 6-5 5-8 5-10 5-11 6-6 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-3 5-9 6-4 5-11 6-1 6-0 5-9 6-3 5-11 6-1 6-4 5-10 6-2 5-10 6-3 6-3 6-1 5-11 6-3 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-0 5-9 6-2 5-11 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-0 6-0 5-10 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 5-10 5-9 6-5 6-3 6-8 6-3 6-5 6-0 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-3
HUNTING I SPORTING CLAYS I GUN SHOP I RANGE I CORPORATE EVENTS I THE PUB
01 02 03 04 05 05 06 06 07 07 08 09 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 15 16 16 17 17 18 19 19 20 21 22 22 23 23 24 25 25 26 28 29 30 31 31 32 34 34 36 36 37 38 38 39 41 42 43 44 45 46 46
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190 220 176 187 188 222 217 259 212 201 178 214 231 193 187 175 215 180 201 218 183 201 206 214 232 190 195 225 194 247 194 221 180 205 188 209 213 174 230 216 191 231 200 179 230 268 236 210 212 175 226 186 247 229 247 220 259 294 218 248
RS JR RS JR SR RS JR RS JR RS JR SO RS FR RS JR FR SO RS JR FR FR RS FR JR RS SO FR FR RS SO RS FR SO FR RS SO RS SR FR SR FR RS SO RS FR RS SR FR FR FR RS SO RS FR RS JR FR RS JR FR RS JR SR RS SR FR SO RS FR RS JR RS FR RS FR SO FR FR RS FR RS JR RS FR RS SR RS SO RS SR FR RS JR
47 48 48 49 49 50 52 53 54 55 55 56 56 57 58 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 66 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 78 82 84 86 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 99
Biegel, Vince Cichy, Jack Fumagalli, Troy Arneson, Sam Schweitzer, Justin Harrison, Josh Maxwell, Jacob Edwards, T.J. Costigan, Kyle Denlinger, Trent Dooley, Garret Fischer, Ben McGuire, James Ruechel, Ben Panos, George Schobert, Joe Trotter, Marcus Udelhoven, Connor Marz, Tyler Williams, Walker Deiter, Michael Connors, Brett Benzschawel, Beau Gault, Jaden McNamara, Aiden Voltz, Dan Ball, Ray Hemer, Ben Lewallen, Dallas Biegel, Hayden Kapoi, Micah Schmidt, Logan Havenstein, Rob Stengel, Jake Maly, Austin Erickson, Alex Eckert, Sam Meyer, Drew Zagzebski, Konrad Patterson, Jeremy Keefer, Jake Sheehy, Conor Goldberg, Arthur Hirschfeld, Billy Russell, Jack Adeyanju, James
OLB ILB TE TE OLB OLB OL OLB OL OL DE LB LS ILB OL ILB ILB LS OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL WR TE WR TE P DE NG DE DE NG DE K DE
dailycardinal.com
6-4 6-2 6-5 6-4 6-1 6-0 6-6 6-1 6-5 6-6 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-2 6-5 6-2 6-0 5-11 6-5 6-7 6-5 6-6 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-3 6-7 6-4 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-4 6-8 6-3 6-5 6-0 6-5 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-6 6-0 6-2
244 220 246 244 208 223 295 229 319 308 238 211 216 224 301 240 226 211 321 320 317 311 291 310 315 311 324 274 321 303 323 300 333 203 250 196 220 187 277 326 269 279 290 271 176 262
RS SO SO RS FR SR FR RS SR FR FR RS SR RS SO RS FR FR RS SR RS SR FR JR RS SR RS SO RS JR RS SO FR FR FR FR RS FR RS SO RS JR RS FR RS SR RS FR FR RS SO RS SR RS JR RS JR RS SO FR RS JR RS SR FR RS JR FR RS SO FR JR RS JR
1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 7 7 8 9 10 11 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 24 25 26 27 29 29 30 31 32 33 33 34 35 36 37 38 38 39 40 41 42 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 49
Diggs, Stefon Cockerille, Shane Collins, Milan Barry-Pollock, Milan Greene, Adam Brown, Wes Likely, William Reid, Albert Long, Deon Morton, Zac Ngakoue, Yannick Rowe, Caleb Jacobs, Levern Burke, Tyler Ulmer, Will Conyers, Denzel Hills, Perry Jacobs, Taivon Lane, DeAndre Johnson, Jeremiah Craddock, Brad Brown, C.J. Woods, Josh Renfro, Nathan Hendy, A.J. Nixon, Anthony Davis, Sean Dancel, Zach Carter Jr. Jermaine Ezeagwu, Daniel Ventura, J.T. Carter, Antwaine Clark, Undray Hill, Alvin Riddle, Joe Tart, Michael Goins Jr. Kenneth Egbuaba, Nnamdi Ross, Jarrett Stefanelli, Andrew Washington, Michael Veii, Jaquille Twine, Alex Dennah, Elvis Thompson, Avery Conteh, Rashid Shrader, Lee Walker, Cavon Robinson, Matt Aniebonam, Jesse Dean, Brock Miles, Tehuti Brooks, Jalen Isaacs, Andrew Ross, Brandon Logan, Abner Farrand, Cole Hayward, Derrick Cierski, Tyler Franco, Ruben
WR QB DB DB K RB DB RB WR RB LB QB WR LB WR DB QB WR WR DB P/K QB DB P/K DB DB DB DB LB DB DB DB DB DB RB P/K RB LB DB RB DB WR LB DB LB DB P LB LB LB LB RB LB TE RB LB LB TE RB DL
6-0 6-2 6-1 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-7 5-9 6-0 5-10 6-2 6-3 5-11 6-3 6-0 6-3 6-2 5-9 5-7 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-1 6-1 5-9 5-11 6-0 6-2 5-9 6-0 5-9 5-10 5-9 5-9 6-0 6-2 6-2 5-11 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-0 5-10 6-1 6-2 5-10 6-1 6-3 6-5 5-11 6-5
190 215 207 195 195 210 175 207 185 175 250 215 180 240 190 210 215 160 175 193 185 218 190 205 200 200 200 205 240 205 200 180 195 195 210 200 230 216 205 230 180 187 235 210 230 185 180 240 245 240 225 205 230 245 210 240 245 235 280 260
JR RS FR RS FR RS SO RS FR SO SO JR SR FR SO JR JR FR FR JR RS SO RS FR SO SR JR FR FR JR SR JR JR JR RS FR FR RS FR FR JR JR SO SR SO FR SO SO SR SO SR RS FR JR SR FR SO SR FR SO SO RS FR SO JR SO SR RS FR SR RS SO
50 51 52 53 54 55 56 56 57 58 59 60 61 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 73 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 95 96 97 98 99
Mulrooney, Evan Cudjoe-Virgil, Yannick Jones, Malik Goree, L.A. Dulaney, JaJuan Doyle, Ryan Adams, Nate Gillespie, Matt Opara, Kingsley Prince, Damian Carpenter, Christian Grommer, Stephen Wheeler, Jake Minter, Mike Moore, Brendan Conaboy, Sal Zeller, Andrew Shaw, David Altamirano, Silvano Marchese, Joe Christie, Sean Schmitt, Michael Agaruwa, Banks Gray, Derwin Dunn, Michael Myers, Spencer Tucker, Ty Shelton, Maurice Adams, Daniel Winfree, Juwann Leak, Marcus Culmer, Malcolm Etta-Tawo, Amba Gray, Andrew McMahon, Brian Gallo, P.J. Roca, Eric Braglio, Roman Bowers, Keith Burkett, Chandler Monroe, Andre Ukandu, Azubuike Kulka, Brett Kilgo, Darius Murphy, Clarence Jefferson, Quinton
OL LB DL LB OL OL LS LB DL OL LS OL OL OL OL OL OL DL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL DL DL OL WR WR WR WR WR TE TE TE TE DL DL LB DL DL DL DL LB DL
6-4 6-2 6-4 6-2 6-2 6-4 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-3 5-11 6-4 6-7 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-4 6-4 6-2 6-3 6-4 6-3 6-5 6-5 6-5 6-4 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-0 5-11 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-3 5-11 6-0 6-4 6-3 6-2 6-3
295 250 265 245 295 300 220 240 290 300 220 295 310 300 280 295 310 290 290 275 310 245 235 300 300 275 260 290 210 195 210 185 200 235 240 250 240 265 285 240 282 300 240 319 250 285
JR SR RS FR SR RS FR JR FR FR RS FR FR SO JR SR RS FR FR SR JR FR SR RS FR FR SR FR FR SO SR SO SO JR FR JR SO SO FR SO SO RS FR SO SR RS FR SR SO FR SR SR JR
Milford Hills Fall Football.
Johnson Creek, WI I T 920.699.2249 I milfordhills.com
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