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#5 Lousiville 44, #3 West Virginia 34 (Final)

I realize this fellas. That wasn't the point. Louisville, Boise St., Notre Dame, etc.; will still be there over Wisconsin (hypothetically) and not deserve it, due to the BCS's stupid rules. Would there be a limit of 2 spots per conference if a mid major, Big east, Notre Dame at 8 or better, and every conference didn't get an auto bid? It doesn't reward the 10 best teams necessarily.
 
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Bernini;651018; said:
Not so fast....look who Rutgers have accumulated their defensive performances against. Pretty much the same teams that Louisville and West Virginia have, who came into this game 7th and 8th in the nation in scoring defense. The Big East is fool's gold. I've been saying it all year. You have pundits hyping up South Florida and Cincinnati as if they weren't mid majors just two minutes ago, or they magically transformed their mid major recruits into major ones overnight. It has really been funny to watch guys like Herbstreit and Petros Papadopldjskjdkis stumble over each other to do that because it was the chic thing to do. If my Wisconsin goes 11-1, and loses a BCS spot to: a Big East team, Boise St., the ACC rep, Notre Dame, etc.; it will be a farce.

Where to start with this post....

First off, Rutgers has played a few teams that have an offensive pulse. We, as Buckeye fans don't think Illinois poses much of a threat, but Rutgers SHUT THEM OUT.

Secondly, Greg Schiano has built a very good foundation for a defense. Chances are they read their keys and play to their responsbilities quite a bit MORE than wither Louisville or WVA did tonight.

Finally, Wisconsin won't make the BCS unless scUM or OSU fall completely flat in the final 3 games. The BCS only allows 2 teams per conference in....
 
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Bernini;651025; said:
I realize this fellas. That wasn't the point. Louisville, Boise St., Notre Dame, etc.; will still be there over Wisconsin (hypothetically) and not deserve it, due to the BCS's stupid rules. Would there be a limit of 2 spots per conference if a mid major, Big east, Notre Dame at 8 or better, and every conference didn't get an auto bid? It doesn't reward the 10 best teams necessarily.

No one ever said that the BCS rewarded the 10 best teams.....

This isn't the forum to really debate this either.....
 
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We, as Buckeye fans don't think Illinois poses much of a threat, but Rutgers SHUT THEM OUT.

I think Juice's inexperience really showed in that game after coming in to bail out Brasic. Still a good accomplisment for the state university of New Jersey. Illinois's O has improved by leaps and bounds since the beginning of the year.

I wasn't impressed with either D tonight but I think some of the credit on that goes to both of the O's. West Virginia just made too many mistakes tonight. Their inability to make many big plays in the passing game really hurts their offense. White and Slaton are legit on the ground. Brohm and Mario Urrutia will end up being first round draft picks. He carved up a questionable WVU secondary on a bad thumb. I think Louisville is a notch below the level of OSU and scUM but I think they'd carve up Wisconsin.
 
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Cards beasts of Big East
Deck WVU, face Rutgers next

511-louisville_celebrates.JPG
[SIZE=-1]Louisville's Adrian Grady celebrates Cardinals' win over West Virginia in huge Big East matchup. [/SIZE]
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - The rabid Louisville fans, who made up 95% of the sellout crowd of 43,217 at Papa John Cardinal Stadium, showed up wearing black T-shirts that said, "Beat WVU" for last night's game against third-ranked West Virginia. U of L's athletic officials billed this as "Blackout Thursday," a chance to erase the bitter memories of last year's meltdown in Morgantown, a 46-44 triple-overtime loss to the Mountaineers in which Louisville coughed up a 24-7 fourth-quarter lead.
It turned out to be Knockout Thursday.
The fifth-ranked Cardinals (8-0) put that nightmare back in the closet, cruising past the Mountaineers, 44-34, in a wild shootout in this marquee Big East game that ended with fans swarming the field and bringing down both goal posts. West Virginia (7-1) had 540 yards of total offense and Louisville finished with 468. The 1,008 yards were a conference record. "I think this was as big a win as our program has ever had," Louisville coach Bobby Petrino said. "We wanted to be aggressive, because we knew how explosive they can be."
The Cardinals, who should move up in next week's polls, will visit unbeaten, 15th-ranked Rutgers (8-0) Thursday night in what should be the biggest game involving a metropolitan-area team in at least 40 years, since Princeton was running the single wing in a then-still meaningful Ivy League. Or, as one clever North Jersey writer put it, since "1869," when the Scarlet Knights played the Tigers in the first college football game in history.
By way of perspective, Rutgers never has played in a game in which both teams were ranked. It will not be easy. The Cardinals cooked Rutgers for 56 points here last year. But this will be Rutgers' chance to knock off this goliath.
Junior quarterback Brian Brohm, a hometown hero, was playing just his third game since returning from a thumb injury to his throwing hand suffered in the second half of a 31-7 victory over Miami on Sept. 16. He completed 19 of 26 passes for 354 yards and one TD against the Mountaineers' suspect secondary. It was the eighth 300-yard passing game for Brohm and the best he has looked all season, the QB averaging an eye-popping 18.6 yards per completion. Wide receiver Harry Douglas caught six passes for 116 yards and 6-6 big play threat Mario Uruttia had six catches for 113 yards, including a 7-yard TD reception.
It is doubtful either team would match up well with Ohio State or Michigan, since neither has a national-championship caliber defense. But this still was a special night for Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese, who watched his league get trashed after Miami, BC and Virginia Tech all bolted to the ACC. Louisville now should have the inside track on a BCS bid. "When I got to my room down here, I turned on the TV and the first movie I ran into was "Cinderella Man,'" Tranghese said.
It has been a fairy tale ride so far.
If Louisville finishes 12-0, the Cardinals definitely will be in the discussion for a spot in the national championship game. "If we win out, I think we deserve to be there," Brohm said. "But it's out of our hands. We have no control of that. We just need to win this Rutgers game and keep going."
Tranghese said he would not get involved in lobbying for one of his teams. "If we finish third in the computer rankings and go to the Orange Bowl, it will be an enormous accomplishment, especially since some people tried to push us out of the BCS altogether a couple years ago," he said.
Louisville took control when Brandon Cox stripped WVU running back Steve Slaton - who had difficulty gripping the ball - and Malik Jackson picked up the fumble, returning it 13yards for a touchdown for a 23-14 lead with 12:08 left in the third quarter. Then Guy Trent returned a punt 40 yards for another score before Brohm methodically finished the job.
Brohm could hear the crowd chanting "BCS" as he left the field. "That's been a dream of mine since I've been a kid, to see Louisville on this type of stage," he said.
 
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Cardinals make case for title shot
No. 5 Louisville 44, No. 3 West Virginia 34
By Clark Spencer
The Miami Herald
Article Last Updated:11/03/2006 02:39:10 AM MST


LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Football at the University of Louisville once bordered on the lip of extinction. Now it clings to the cusp of the wildly unimaginable - a national title chase that gained steam Thursday.
Louisville hasn't reached the top yet. But it most likely inched closer.
The No. 5 Cardinals made their strongest case yet by knocking off No. 3 West Virginia 44-34 in a Big East Conference clash of unbeatens. And Louisville won't have to wait long to further bolster its argument for a title shot in the Jan. 8 championship game.
Up next for the Cardinals: No. 15 Rutgers, which is 8-0.
Another pair of unbeaten teams - Ohio State and Michigan - hold down the top two spots in the Bowl Championship Series rankings. Ultimately, though, one will lose. The Big Ten rivals face each other on Nov. 18.
A host of teams with one loss - teams such as Florida and Texas - might jockey for position with the Cardinals (8-0, 3-0 Big East). But impact victories, like the impressive one Louisville claimed at Papa John's Stadium over the Mountaineers (7-1, 2-1), should enhance their bid.
If Thursday's outcome did anything, it probably shoved West Virginia out of the title picture. And that possibility all but disappeared within the first five plays of the second half.
West Virginia running back Steve Slaton, an All-American candidate, lost two
fumbles in that small span. Banks of stadium lights blinked out after the first fumble. The Cardinals capitalized on the second miscue, scoring on a recovery and 13-yard touchdown return by Louisville linebacker Malik Jackson.
Jackson's fumble return made it 23-14, and the margin swelled shortly after when Louisville's Trent Guy returned a punt 40 yards for a touchdown. West Virginia never recovered despite out-gaining Louisville 540 to 468 in yardage.

#5 Louisville 44, #3 West Virginia 34
West Virginia 7 7 7 13-34
Louisville 3 13 14 14-44
First Quarter
Lou-FG Carmody 39, 10:48.
WVU-Slaton 42 run (McAfee kick), 4:18.
Second Quarter
Lou-FG Carmody 25, 13:34.
Lou-A.Allen 10 run (Carmody kick), 7:04.
WVU-White 2 run (McAfee kick), 4:42.
Lou-FG Carmody 18, 1:36.
Third Quarter
Lou-M.Jackson 13 fumble return (Carmody kick), 12:08.
Lou-Guy 40 punt return (Carmody kick), 9:23.
WVU-White 5 run (McAfee kick), 2:29.
Fourth Quarter
Lou-Urrutia 7 pass from Brohm (Carmody kick), 14:55.
WVU-White 5 run (run failed), 12:41.
Lou-A.Allen 5 run (Carmody kick), 10:19.
WVU-White 2 run (McAfee kick), 2:18.
A-43,217.
WVU Lou
24 ? First downs ? 22
50-318 ? Rushes-yards ? 32-114
222 ? Passing ? 354
13-21-0 ? Comp-Att-Int ? 19-26-0
0 ? Return Yards ? 40
2-29.0 ? Punts-Avg. ? 3-41.0
6-3 ? Fumbles-Lost ? 1-1
7-68 ? Penalties-Yards ? 4-40
32:08 ? Time of Possession ? 27:52
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
RUSHING-West Virginia, Slaton 18-156, White 23-125, Schmitt 5-28, Reynaud 1-6, Bruce 3-3. Louisville, K.Smith 13-73, A.Allen 12-47, Spillman 1-5, Douglas 1-2, Bolen 1-1, Brohm 4-(minus 14).
PASSING-West Virginia, White 13-20-0-222, Team 0-1-0-0. Louisville, Brohm 19-26-0-354.
RECEIVING-West Virginia, Reynaud 4-78, Slaton 3-74, B.Myles 3-50, Bolden 2-26, Schmitt 1-(minus 6). Louisville, Douglas 6-116, Urrutia 6-113, Riley 3-73, K.Smith 2-34, P.Carter 1-12, C.Thompson 1-6.
 
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john henderson | columnist
A brand-new beast
QB Brohm puts on stellar show for Cardinals
By John Henderson
Denver Post Staff Columnist
Article Last Updated:11/03/2006 01:48:36 AM MST
Louisville, Ky.
In lieu of a national playoff, in a sport in which every game is a win-or-out proposition, Thursday night's massive West Virginia-Louisville showdown was billed as a pseudo national semifinal.
But it was so much more than that, and third-ranked West Virginia had no idea what it was getting itself into. The biggest game in state of Kentucky history. The largest crowd in Louisville history. The biggest college game in ESPN history.
In the end, as the field at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium was covered in a pulsating wave of dancing, black-clad Louisville fans chanting "B-C-S! B-C-S!" the nation learned there's a new football power in the Bowl Championship Series equation. Fifth-ranked Louisville put on a show the country hasn't seen in recent memory in racing past third-ranked West Virginia, 44-34.
"We've been waiting on a win like this," Louisville cornerback William Gay said as some of the record 43,217 fans mobbed him and his teammates. "We're going to put it together and hope the BCS respects this win and we can move up in the rankings."
Count on it, William. Regardless of how Florida, fourth in the BCS, does at Vanderbilt on Saturday, bet on Louisville (8-0, 3-0 Big East) to leapfrog the Gators into that coveted No. 3 spot behind Ohio State and Michigan.
For one week at least. Louisville has exactly six days to relish the win before it plays its next biggest game in history when it visits 15th-ranked Rutgers (7-0, 2-0). Welcome to the new Beast of the East: Big East football.
Yes, this once-comatose conference is the new force in college football, and Thursday night proved it. The hoity-toity Southeastern Conference bills itself as having the wildest home-field advantage in the country, but it had nothing on Louisville.
The school promoted the game as "Black Out." Everyone wore black in 39-degree temperatures, and the entire stadium was one black blanket, with a sliver of yellow West Virginia fans making no consequence whatsoever. With the loudspeaker playing the demonic theme music from "The Omen" as the Cardinals entered the stadium, Papa John resembled more of a haunted house than a football venue.
It definitely turned into a nightmare for West Virginia (7-1, 2-1), set on debunking its 97th-ranked schedule with Heisman candidate Steve Slaton and one of the nation's fastest defenses. Instead, Louisville introduced next year's Heisman Trophy favorite. Brian Brohm, fully recovered from a thumb injury that slowed Louisville's offense the past two weeks, hit 19-of-26 passes for 354 yards and a touchdown.
Slaton and Pat White did their part. Slaton ran for 156 yards, and White ran for 125 and threw for 222 more - hey, SEC, you sure want some of the Big East? - but Louisville's underrated defense had as big a role as Brohm.
Holding a precarious 16-13 halftime lead after three Louisville drives resulted in field goals, the Cardinals forced Slaton to fumble on back-to-back plays. Louisville fumbled back the first one, but on West Virginia's next possession, defensive end Brandon Cox stripped Slaton and linebacker Malik Jackson returned it 13 yards for a 23-14 lead.
"It was a huge thing," Brohm said. "Then the offense, defense and special teams all got a boost, and that got the crowd going."
Slaton is indeed one of the nation's scariest backs. Louisville barely touched him as he juked and jived for massive chunks of yards on simple off-tackle plays. However, he hurt a nerve in his arm, which helped produce the fumbles and sidelined him for the next series.
By the time he returned, it was too late. Louisville held on West Virginia's next possession and freshman Trent Guy caught Scott Kozlowski's low 26-yard punt and raced 40 yards for the score to make it 30-14.
It didn't really matter that Smith and Slaton (when he hung on to the ball) were unstoppable. So was Brohm. With star tailback Michael Bush out for the year with a broken leg and the running attack hinting of mediocrity, Louisville coach Bobby Petrino didn't sit on the lead.
Brohm was remarkable, showing the kind of big-game smarts and guts that could make him next year's Troy Smith - if Brohm doesn't leave school early. He'll definitely put Thursday night on his NFL r?sum?. Junior Harry Douglas (six catches, 116 yards) and sophomore Mario Urrutia (six for 113) found huge holes in the Mountaineers' suspect secondary.
Brohm continued dodging West Virginia's desperate blitzes to keep answering. He drove Louisville 80 yards in only six plays, hitting 4-of-5 passes for 75 yards to ice the game with his 7-yard TD pass to Urrutia.
"He was awesome," Petrino said. "To execute like that, with more than 350 yards and with his focus on not only dropping back and passing but also with his checks and reads at the line, really says a lot about him."
The win, of course, could become nearly as worthless as the confetti covering the field after the game if Louisville loses at Rutgers. But for one night, there was a playoff atmosphere in a town where the only playoffs it ever understood were in March.
Welcome to the new Big East, folks. Enter if you dare.
 
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ESPN

Brohm, Cardinals turning dreams into reality


By Pat Forde
ESPN.com
Archive


LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- This will sound like hyperbole. It's not. It's the truth:
At the intersection of improbable dream and manifest destiny, Brian Brohm delivered the performance Thursday night that he was born to deliver.
The national television cameras, the bowl scouts, the BCS standings, the national championship implications, the postgame mosh pit at delirious Papa John's Cardinal Stadium -- these un-Louisville-like trappings of football success were all but preordained for the most celebrated recruit in school history. The game plan for the home team's 44-34 blitzing of West Virginia, which officially put the Cardinals in the passing late to the national title, was drawn up when No. 12 was in the crib.
The fourth family member to wear Cardinal red and white envisioned the improbable scene as a child -- and truth be told, his dad, Oscar, undoubtedly envisioned it even earlier for the youngest of his three boys -- all of whom followed his footsteps to U of L. Little Brian was a quarterbacking savant, soaking up the teaching of the family QBs: Oscar and brother Jeff, who went on to the NFL.
Brian fulfilled the vision Thursday night, strafing the bewildered Mountaineers defense for 354 passing yards and a touchdown.
"He was awesome, wasn't he?" coach Bobby Petrino said. "You could see it all week long, how he prepared. He loves the big games."
The games have gotten no bigger than this in Louisville. That's why Brohm came here, and it's why his hometown university so desperately wanted him to come here.

ncf_g_brohm3_195.jpg

Andy Lyons/Getty Images
Brian Brohm torched the Mountaineers for 354 yards and one touchdown.


His talent was the catalyst that could make a small miracle happen.
"It's been a dream of mine since I was a kid for Louisville to be on this stage," Brohm said.
There were a million reasons to doubt the dream. Brohm remembers being in the run-down Triple AAA baseball stadium the Cardinals used to call home at the tail end of a 1-10 season in 1997, along with just a few thousand other fans. Only someone with exceptional vision could look at that and see the seed of something this grand.
"It might have seemed, at the time, na?ve, or like I was in a dream world," Brohm said with a small chuckle. "But I always thought this could happen."
That's why a Catholic kid who spent his whole life in Catholic schools said no to Notre Dame and all its tradition. That's why a guy who was sure he could play right away in college said no to Tennessee and a recruiting pitch that guaranteed him a chance to start as a true freshman.
And that's why the nation's top quarterback recruit of 2003 said yes to Louisville, which at the time was still a Conference USA school that hadn't risen above Liberty Bowl level since 1990. No wonder consternation rippled through Gridworld when Brohm made his choice.
"I went ahead and went with my dream, instead of a decision other people might have made," Brohm said. "? People might have thought I was crazy, but I said when I signed I thought I'd have the opportunity to play for a Big East championship, play in a BCS game and play for the national championship."
After this game, the 6-foot-4, 224-pound junior's team has the inside track to the Big East championship and a stunningly real shot at playing for the BCS national championship. Louisville is 8-0 and, give or take a poll voter or computer program, in control of its own destiny.
There will be howls of complaint from the Establishment programs in the SEC and Big 12, among other locales, if Louisville runs the table and earns a title spot ahead of their champions. But if the Cardinals successfully negotiate a supremely difficult closing month of the season, they have an excellent chance of landing in Glendale, Ariz., opposite, say, Ohio State or Michigan.
But there is heavy lifting to do between now and early December, starting in the wholly improbably locale of Piscataway, N.J. Despite the expected pot shots from other leagues, the Big East has nothing to apologize for in terms of schedule strength in the closing month. While the entire city is busy slapping the Cardinals on their backs, they'll be trying to re-focus for a rigorous stretch run.
"We're kind of new to this Top 10 thing," Brohm said. "Hopefully we can stay here for a while."
To do so, they'll have to complete the second half of a Thursday night double against undefeated teams. How often has that happened this late in the season?
One week after winning the biggest game in its history, the Cardinals will be the visiting game in the biggest game Rutgers has played since the first game. As in, ever, in 1869, against Princeton. The game that got this crazy thing going.
"We've got a real tough game coming up next week with Rutgers," Brohm said. "Every week from here on out gets bigger."

ncf_g_petrino_195.jpg

Andy Lyons/Getty Images
Bobby Petrino found all the right plays against the Mountaineers.


The clear and present danger of falling flat in an obvious trap game was not lost on Brohm, even in the afterglow of this landmark victory. Asked if the West Virginia win was the biggest in school history (trust me, it was), he had a cautious response ready.
"It could end up being the biggest -- depending how we end up the season," Brohm said. "If we don't finish out, they'll look back and say, 'They beat West Virginia but couldn't finish.'"
Beating West Virginia would have been impossible if Brohm hadn't come back from thumb surgery in September. The injury occurred against Miami Sept. 16 and Brohm hurried back after missing two games. The rust showed, as he struggled through two subpar performances.
But Nov. 2 was always the date circled. He had to be ready for this one, and it came together in the 12 days between Louisville's last game and West Virginia.
"My zip came back," Brohm said. "When that came back I got a lot more confident in my throws."
He could hardly have looked more confident than he was last night. Armed with an aggressive game plan -- especially on first down -- Brohm lit up West Virginia's previously untested secondary.
Nobody in college football can carve up film like Petrino, and his study showed the Mountaineers to be vulnerable to seam routs from slot receivers. Louisville dialed up a go route to slot receiver Harry Douglas on the first play for 22 yards and never let up.
On the first play of subsequent possessions, Brohm threw a 20-yard strike to Mario Urrutia that was dropped; a 40-yard bomb to Douglas; a 36-yard pass to Urrutia, a 25-yard bullet to Douglas; and a 26-yard shot to Urrutia.
"We were trying to attack them," Brohm said. "We were going to take shots, throw haymakers."
West Virginia put itself on the ropes with two fumbles and some bad punt coverage in the third quarter, falling behind 30-14. But a resolute 92-yard drive brought the Mountaineers back within 30-21. That's when Brohm delivered the knockout shots.
He completed four of five passes on the next drive for 75 yards -- including a deft audible out of a run to an underneath route by little-used Jimmy Riley for 40 yards. Brohm capped the drive with a tight seven-yard lob along the sideline to Urrutia for a touchdown.
On the next possession Brohm hit Urrutia twice to put West Virginia on its heels, then let the running game finish off the drive for a 44-27 lead. The game was over at that point, and it was time for a basketball town to fully embrace football euphoria.
"You could tell these fans have been waiting for this for a long time," Brohm said.
So has he. Since he was born, to be precise.
 
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Congrats, Louisville. Now prepare to defend yourself swapContent('firstHeader','applyHeader'); LOUISVILLE ? Take a bow, Louisville. Now, prepare to be disbelieved.
It was the greatest night in the long and proud history of the new Big East, which is about a month. A brace of top-5 teams. Opera music from Carmina Burana just before the home team took the field. Nearly all the fans wearing black ? Papa John's Cardinal Stadium looked like a judges' convention.
Since when does Louisville get this animated over a sports event in which the winner does not have hooves?
And in the end, a track meet of a football game, with four lead changes and 78 points and 1,008 yards and Louisville winning 44-34. And did we mention the six Mountaineer fumbles, three of them lost, one returned for a touchdown?
That means the Cardinals are 8-0, which means they have a chance to be 12-0. That should be good enough to play for the national championship, but maybe not. Soon to be the crux of the BCS matter.
"It showed we're for real," center Eric Wood said. "And we're here to stay."
Surely, the Cardinals know what's coming now, from every time zone. Florida, Auburn, USC, Texas, Notre Dame and all the other one-loss wannabes. There'll be more negative campaigning than a U.S. Senate race.
Some will grumble that you could count all the currently ranked teams Louisville has played on one hand and have four fingers left to hold the popcorn. Bashing Big East football is old sport, but the stakes have suddenly grown. They're not talking about the Peach Bowl.
And there's one conspicuous deed undone for the Cardinals. Six words that nobody ? not even the most ardent Big Eastonians ? would have expected to be important.
They still have to beat Rutgers.
So let's say they do on Nov. 9. They will have defeated a 7-0 team followed by an 8-0 team, which is pretty heavy lifting for one November. Should that not be enough?
"We can't control that," quarterback Brian Brohm said, "and we can't worry about that."
"There shouldn't be any question," Wood said.
"People want to yell and scream about their one-loss team, let them scream," Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese said. "But I just don't think it's going to affect anybody. I just think it's almost protectionist."
But it'll come, gale force. Thursday was a contest between two unbeaten teams. The BCS may end up a referendum on the Big East itself.
In a way, the conference is the Detroit Tigers of college football. Three years ago dead and buried ? as Miami, Virginia Tech and Boston College asked for a divorce, packed and moved in with the ACC. And now, prime time. Thursday nights, anyway.
The entertainment value was high Thursday night, if not always the execution. It would have been nice had West Virginia not handled the football as if it were a live hand grenade (Steve Slaton's arm going numb from a hit on a nerve didn't help). Or had either team showed more steel on defense.
For their efforts, the Cardinals will probably be No. 3 in the next polls ... and Public Enemy No. 1 in the SEC, where many of the one-loss teams grumble about strength of schedule.
So in the end, what if the math does them in? And the BCS formula decides that Big East perfection is not good enough?
"We just need to worry about Rutgers," coach Bobby Petrino said. "Then everything else will play out."
"If we win all our games," running back Kolby Smith said "There's no way they should leave us out."
Clearly the world has changed, when the two most important remaining games in the regular season are Michigan-Ohio State ... and Louisville-Rutgers.
 
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Louisville steals the show

By DICK JERARDI

[email protected]

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - This town always has been about horse racing and basketball. Last night, in the shadow of the Twin Spires at Churchill Downs a few blocks down Central Avenue, it was about football at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium.
They run the world's most famous horse race here every May. They are running the $20 million Breeders' Cup here tomorrow. Rick Pitino's basketball team plays in Freedom Hall at the Fairgrounds a mile or so away. Football?
It was No. 3 West Virginia vs. No. 5 Louisville, two unbeaten teams in November as the temperature headed for the high 20s. Winner stays alive for a shot at the Jan. 8 BCS championship game in Glendale, Ariz. Loser disappears.
A game like this was the dream when they moved from mangy old Cardinals Stadium along I-65 near the track in 1998. Even the most optimistic could not have imagined a record crowd of 43,217 (they're already talking about expanding the capacity by 50 percent), a national ESPN audience, a press box that was jammed with writers from all over the country, and a game that was, in some ways, an entr?e to a football version of the Final Four.
Johnny Unitas played at the Ville a half-century ago. To prove it, there is a statue of him beyond one of the end zones. Even the legendary Johnny U. might not have recognized this brand of football.
It was definitely 21st century football - Louisville's pro offense with four and sometimes five wideouts along with a power running game and West Virginia's run-happy spread option that when it gets rolling must look to a defender like that giant boulder in "Raiders of the Lost Ark."
By the time, they totaled up all the yards (1,008, a Big East record by 101 yards) and all the points (78), Louisville had won, 44-34. The Big East unbeaten fest continues next Thursday when Louisville goes to Rutgers. When all the football smoke disappears after the Nov. 18 Ohio State-Michigan Game of the Millennium, there will be, at most, three unbeaten teams (Boise State is also unbeaten) left standing. Louisville gave itself a chance to be one of them.
"Offensively, we tried to be as aggressive as we've ever been because we knew how much of a threat they were," Louisville coach Bobby Petrino said.
Louisville (8-0) led, 16-14, as the second half began until Conwell-Egan High's Steve Slaton, who had not lost a fumble all year, lost fumbles on consecutive touches for West Virginia. The second was returned 13 yards for a touchdown by Malik Jackson. WVU went backward on its next possession, got off a 26-yard punt that was promptly returned 40 yards by Trent Guy for another touchdown. Just that fast, Louisville had control and, even with all the offensive yards, that sequence would decide the game.
In between the fumbles, several rows of lights went out, dimming the field. By the time they came back on, it had been reported that Slaton had a strained muscle in his left forearm and lost some feeling in his hand. WVU was going to try a comeback without its star runner.
A lesser team might have packed it in. Instead, WVU (7-1) methodically ran off a 14-play, 92-yard touchdown drive to close to 30-21.
Louisville was not sitting on the lead. The Cardinals were still winging the ball all about the field. And roared right back down the field behind brilliant quarterback Brian Brohm to score again and make it 37-21. Johnny U. would have been proud of Brohm, who was 19 of 26 for 354 yards.
Was it the biggest win in school history?
"It could end up being that," Brohm said. "It depends on how we end up."
Slaton returned after that drive, caught a pass, ran with speed and power. In barely 2 minutes, WVU's brilliant quarterback Pat White (347 yards rushing and passing) was in the end zone, the third of his four touchdowns, making it 37-27. WVU botched a two-point conversion attempt.
Naturally, Louisville was back in the end zone a few minutes later to stretch the lead back to 44-27. Four series. Four touchdowns. The defenses had little left.
Slaton had been breaking Louisville hearts and ankles on his way to 156 yards on 18 carries. He caught three passes for 74 yards. He had a 42-yard, first-quarter touchdown run where he made an angle disappear in about three strides. He had another run where he made so many cuts at such high speed that defenders were falling down from dizziness. Slaton rushed for 2,000 yards in his first 13 college starts. Then came the fumbles, the injury and the end of WVU's 14-game winning streak.
This was quite the scene while it lasted. A few thousand WVU fans slipped over the border, their two areas of yellow in stark contrast to a stadium that was "blacked out" by all the Ville fans dressed in black, giving the place the eerie look of an old newsreel look at stadiums that are no longer standing. When it was over, nearly half the field was filled with celebrating fans. In this surreal setting, Louisville, playing the biggest football game in the history of the state, was still standing.
 
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Louisville rolls into national picture

No. 5 Cardinals keep themselves in position for a shot at the BCS title game after closing strong in 44-34 win over No. 3 West Virginia.
By Robyn Norwood, Times Staff Writer
November 3, 2006

LOUISVILLE, KY. ? Grasping for a way to describe the most-hyped football game in Louisville history, some locals compared it to something they're more familiar with, a Final Four.

What the Cardinals have their hearts set on after a 44-34 Big East Conference victory over previously undefeated West Virginia is college football's final two, the Bowl Championship Series title game.

They have a ways to go, even after handling the No. 3 team in the BCS standings relatively easily Thursday, inspiring fans to storm the field as security quickly lowered the goal posts.

Even though the game was entertaining, it didn't particularly look like championship football as the unbeaten Cardinals, No. 5 in the BCS standings, took advantage of the Mountaineers' trouble with fumbles and penalties and survived some problems of their own.

To get to the BCS title game, Louisville probably would have to overtake the loser of the Ohio State-Michigan game Nov. 18 and possibly a one-loss Southeastern Conference team as well.

"If we win out, there's no way they should leave us out," running back Kolby Smith said.

To have any chance, Louisville (8-0) would have to go undefeated, and the next big step, odd as it sounds, is a road game against still-unbeaten Rutgers next Thursday.

"Now the biggest game in Louisville history is this Rutgers game," said quarterback Brian Brohm, who passed for 354 yards and a touchdown.

Even with the Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs on Saturday, Louisville football was the biggest story in town this week.

Thursday before 8 a.m., a local TV reporter stood in temperatures in the 30s and reported from an empty stadium.

By nighttime, a crowd of 43,217 ? a record for Papa John's Cardinal Stadium ? packed the stands, most of them wearing black to take part in what Louisville promoted as a "blackout."

Despite the running of speedy, slippery running back Steve Slaton, who rushed for 156 yards, and elusive quarterback Pat White, who ran for 125 yards and four touchdowns, West Virginia couldn't keep up with Louisville.

"They have two players who are as good as anybody in the country," Louisville Coach Bobby Petrino said. "That's why we had to stay aggressive on offense, to keep them off the field."

Plays such as Slaton's 42-yard touchdown run kept West Virginia in the game early.

But big mistakes helped do in the Mountaineers.

Slaton, his left arm temporarily weak after a blow in the third quarter, fumbled on consecutive carries.

"I think he couldn't grip it with strength," Coach Rich Rodriguez said. "He's not a fumbler. We dropped it on the ground way too much."

West Virginia fumbled six times, losing three.

Louisville's lead after halftime was only 16-14 after the Cardinals settled for field goals on three trips inside the 20.

But in a bizarre sequence, Slaton fumbled near midfield and Louisville recovered.
 
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Louisville (8-0) stuns West Virginia

BY CLARK SPENCER

[email protected]

253393786010.jpg

ED REINKE/AP
CLOSE CALL: Louisville quarterback Brian Brohm throws over West Virginia defender Keilen Dykes during the first half Thursday night.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Football at the University of Louisville once bordered on the lip of extinction. Now it clings to the cusp of the wildly unimaginable -- a national title chase that gained steam on Thursday.
Louisville hasn't reached the top yet. But it most likely inched closer.
The No. 5 Cardinals made their strongest case yet by knocking off No. 3 West Virginia 44-34 in a Big East Conference clash of unbeatens. And Louisville won't have to wait very long to further bolster their argument for a title shot in the Jan. 8 Fiesta Bowl.
Up next for the Cardinals: No. 15 Rutgers, which is 8-0.
Another pair of unbeaten teams -- Ohio State and Michigan -- hold down the top two spots in the Bowl Championship Series rankings. Ultimately, though, one will lose. The Big Ten rivals face each other on Nov. 18.
A host of teams with one loss -- teams such as Florida and Texas -- might jockey for position with the Cardinals (8-0, 3-0 Big East). But impact victories, such as the impressive one Louisville claimed at Papa John's Stadium over the Mountaineers (7-1, 2-1), should enhance their bid.
QUICK STRIKES
If Thursday's outcome did anything, it probably shoved West Virginia out of the title picture. And that possibility all but disappeared within the first five plays of the second half.
West Virginia running back Steve Slaton, an All-American candidate, lost two fumbles in that small span. Banks of stadium lights blinked out after the first fumble. The Cardinals capitalized on the second miscue, scoring on a recovery and 13-yard touchdown return by Louisville linebacker Malik Jackson.
Jackson's fumble return made it 23-14, and the margin swelled shortly after when Louisville's Trent Guy returned a punt 40 yards for a touchdown. West Virginia never recovered despite out-gaining Louisville 540 to 468 in yardage.
''I think that was a huge stretch,'' Louisville quarterback Brian Brohm said of the two quick scores in the second half. ``They got everybody going -- offense, defense, special teams. That got the crowd into it.''
Said Louisville coach Bobby Petrino: ``Certainly the touchdown by Malik and the touchdown by Trent Guy were huge for us.''
Brohm helped to offset West Virginia's vaunted rushing attack, completing 19 of 26 passes for 354 yards and one touchdown. Slaton rushed for 156 yards.
When the game ended, thousands of fans poured onto the field.
So much for a once-moribund program that was in such straits in the early 1980s that there was talk of deemphasizing the program to I-AA status, if not dropping it altogether.
Now it's the talk of the town.
The Cardinals opened their basketball season Wednesday, and the Breeders' Cup thoroughbred championship is set for Saturday, mere furlongs away at Churchill Downs. But both events were relegated to secondary status behind what was being billed as the biggest football game ever played in Louisville, if not the state.
West Virginia attacked Louisville with the nation's No. 1 rushing offense, led by Slaton and quarterback Patrick White, who is as gifted with his legs as he is with his left passing arm. White threw for 222 yards and rushed for 125 more and four touchdowns. Slaton had a touchdown.
The Mountaineers finished with 318 rushing yards.
HAPPY AT HOME
Louisville was playing at home for only the second time since smashing the then-No. 18 Miami Hurricanes in September. The Hurricanes entered Papa John's Stadium with a swagger that day, stomping on the Cardinals' logo at midfield beforehand. After the thrashing, head coach Larry Coker said the Hurricanes were ``embarrassed.''
The Cardinals have done that to most of their opponents this season.
But there were questions about the strength of their schedule.
Louisville's first seven opponents have a collective record of 26-32. Their next four, including Rutgers next Thursday, are 22-10.
''We have to win the Rutgers game and try to keep going after that,'' Brohm said.
Said Petrino: ``It's certainly as big a win as we've had. But the biggest thing we have ahead of us now is the game we play next week at Rutgers. It gets harder and harder.''
But West Virginia was the first acid test for the Cardinals, and they passed.
The two teams combined for a staggering total of 1,108 yards.
 
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