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TROJANS ON MARCH
By LENN ROBBINS
MIDDLE MAN: Coach Pete Carroll hugs wide receiver Steve Smith (left) and quarter back John David Booty during Southern Cal's 44-24 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday night.
November 27, 2006 -- LOS ANGELES - Don't tell Pete Carroll there is no playoff system in college football.
While coaches such as Florida's Urban Meyer believe that public outcries will somehow sway the voters or get the computer geeks to tweak their machines, the Southern Cal coach has adapted a version of the school's fight song as his philosophy: Instead of "Fight On," Carroll believes in, "Play On."
"We've had a heck of a schedule and really to come out with only one loss is a pretty good achievement," Carroll said after his team routed Notre Dame, 44-24. "You can't win them all, but our schedule has served us perfectly. To have us finish a season like we have is just awesome. It has been a playoff run for us."
After beating Oregon, Cal and Notre Dame, USC's schedule indeed has served it well. The Trojans (.946) yesterday leapfrogged Michigan (.921) into second in the BCS rankings. If the Trojans (10-1) beat UCLA Saturday, they almost surely will retain the No. 2 spot and face No. 1 Ohio State in the national title game on Jan. 8.
The Wolverines (11-1) are third, followed by Florida (11-1), which plays Arkansas Saturday in the SEC title game. Even in the event of an unconvincing USC win over UCLA and a Florida destruction of Arkansas, it's unlikely the Gators (.889) could jump the Trojans. The Gators (.884) actually dropped despite a 21-14 win at FSU.
The other big loser yesterday was Notre Dame, which dropped from fifth to 10th. The Irish are guaranteed a BCS bowl slot if they finish in the Top 8 of the final standings. Now taking the Irish would open up the BCS to controversy. LSU was the other big winner, moving from 10th to fifth after winning 31-26 at Arkansas.
Because the Rose Bowl loses Ohio State and USC, it has the first two picks. Michigan seems a lock for the Rose, but a rematch against ND is possibly foiled.
If Rutgers wins at West Virginia Saturday, the Big East could have two BCS entries. The Scarlet Knights would automatically go, and Louisville, which moved up to sixth, also could get in.
The Trojans will be playing in their third straight BCS title game, an amazing accomplishment in an age of reduced scholarships and improved programs. And USC has done it despite losing Heisman Trophy winners Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush.
TROJANS ON MARCH
By LENN ROBBINS
MIDDLE MAN: Coach Pete Carroll hugs wide receiver Steve Smith (left) and quarter back John David Booty during Southern Cal's 44-24 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday night.
November 27, 2006 -- LOS ANGELES - Don't tell Pete Carroll there is no playoff system in college football.
While coaches such as Florida's Urban Meyer believe that public outcries will somehow sway the voters or get the computer geeks to tweak their machines, the Southern Cal coach has adapted a version of the school's fight song as his philosophy: Instead of "Fight On," Carroll believes in, "Play On."
"We've had a heck of a schedule and really to come out with only one loss is a pretty good achievement," Carroll said after his team routed Notre Dame, 44-24. "You can't win them all, but our schedule has served us perfectly. To have us finish a season like we have is just awesome. It has been a playoff run for us."
After beating Oregon, Cal and Notre Dame, USC's schedule indeed has served it well. The Trojans (.946) yesterday leapfrogged Michigan (.921) into second in the BCS rankings. If the Trojans (10-1) beat UCLA Saturday, they almost surely will retain the No. 2 spot and face No. 1 Ohio State in the national title game on Jan. 8.
The Wolverines (11-1) are third, followed by Florida (11-1), which plays Arkansas Saturday in the SEC title game. Even in the event of an unconvincing USC win over UCLA and a Florida destruction of Arkansas, it's unlikely the Gators (.889) could jump the Trojans. The Gators (.884) actually dropped despite a 21-14 win at FSU.
The other big loser yesterday was Notre Dame, which dropped from fifth to 10th. The Irish are guaranteed a BCS bowl slot if they finish in the Top 8 of the final standings. Now taking the Irish would open up the BCS to controversy. LSU was the other big winner, moving from 10th to fifth after winning 31-26 at Arkansas.
Because the Rose Bowl loses Ohio State and USC, it has the first two picks. Michigan seems a lock for the Rose, but a rematch against ND is possibly foiled.
If Rutgers wins at West Virginia Saturday, the Big East could have two BCS entries. The Scarlet Knights would automatically go, and Louisville, which moved up to sixth, also could get in.
The Trojans will be playing in their third straight BCS title game, an amazing accomplishment in an age of reduced scholarships and improved programs. And USC has done it despite losing Heisman Trophy winners Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush.
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