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Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Photos: Nigerian referee beaten badly by irate football fans in Abuja




 According to Sunrise Sports Executive producer, Toyin Ibitoye, a center referee named Charles Ozigbo (pictured above) was assaulted by Nigerian football fans during a match between Rangers Bee of Kaduna and Kwara United of Ilorin in Abuja yesterday December 19th. The referee was reportedly attacked after he gave a penalty to one of the clubs. The supporters of the opposing club entered the football field and attacked the referee bringing the match to a abrupt halt. The match was subsequently cancelled.

Robert Upshaw's long journey from bust to budding stardom


NCAA Basketball: Wooden Legacy-Long Beach State vs Washington
November 28, 2014; Fullerton, CA, USA; Washington Huskies head coach Lorenzo Romar speaks with center Robert Upshaw (24) during a stoppage in play in the first half at Titan Gym. (Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports )
Basketball coach Pat Geil has removed many players from practice for lackluster effort or shoddy performance.
Only once has he yanked a kid off the court for doing too well.

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When Robert Upshaw enrolled at San Joaquin Memorial High School four years ago, the highly touted 6-foot-11 junior initially could only practice with his new team because of California transfer rules. Geil put Upshaw on the scout team in practice until the center's knack for swatting away shots in the paint created an unusual problem.
"He was blocking so many shots and making it so difficult to score that our starting big guys began losing confidence," Geil said. "When they got in games, they were hesitant to shoot. Eventually, we had to tell Rob, 'Why don't you sit out for a while.' Our big guys couldn't get up any shots against him in practice and it was killing us."

Scoring against Upshaw hasn't been any easier for opposing college players this season than it was for his San Joaquin Memorial teammates four years ago. The University of Washington sophomore is turning away shots at an absurd pace, averaging a national-best 4.8 blocks despite coming off the bench every game this season and only logging 19.1 minutes per night.

The emergence of Upshaw as a defensive anchor is a huge reason 16th-ranked Washington has won its first nine games and held opponents to an anemic 33 percent shooting. The Huskies' array of tall, athletic guards have been able to defend aggressively and close out hard on 3-point shooters without fear of being beaten off the dribble since they know there's a shot blocker with a 7-foot-51/2-inch wingspan lurking in the paint to erase mistakes.

Upshaw's impact on defense isn't the only way he has contributed to Washington's quest to end a three-year NCAA tournament drought. The former top 50 recruit has also averaged an efficient 10.9 points and a team-high 7.1 rebounds, further validating the Washington staff's decision to offer him a second chance after Fresno State dismissed him from school the summer after his freshman season.

"What I've tried to do is be the person Washington has been missing, a big man that can block shots, run the floor, rebound and also score," Upshaw said. "I'm having success but I'm not satisfied. I know I can be a lot better than what I am right now. I think this is the start of what I can be, and I just have to keep improving."
Upshaw's evolution into an impact college player and an NBA prospect is a testament to his perseverance because there were times when it seemed his basketball career had stalled.

This is a guy who averaged an underwhelming 4.1 points and 3.8 rebounds as a freshman at Fresno State despite arriving with more hype than any recruit the school has landed in years. This is a guy who Fresno State coach Rodney Terry suspended twice as a freshman for team rules violations and eventually decided was more trouble than he was worth. This is a guy whose spot on the Washington roster was in jeopardy last spring after the coaching staff banned him from attending practices or games so he could address his off-court issues.

"I think it has made Rob a stronger person fighting through so many obstacles to get to this point," said his mother Ceylon Sherman. "Rob has always been a sweet, caring person, but the decisions and choices he was making weren't the right ones. He has matured a lot over the last year or two. Now he appreciates what he has more because he had to work harder to achieve it."
Before Upshaw could evolve into an elite basketball prospect, he first had to give the sport a chance.
Upshaw's mom played from third grade through high school and both his older brothers were basketball players too, but he preferred soccer and baseball. Only after he rocketed up to 6-8 entering eighth grade did he finally grow tired of his family's not-so-subtle encouragement and decide to give basketball a try.

Even though Upshaw hadn't played basketball nearly as long as most of his peers and he was in such poor shape that he'd get tired after a couple trips down the floor, his size, footwork and coordination enabled him to quickly emerge as a potential Division I prospect anyway. By the end of his sophomore year at Edison High School, Louisville, Georgetown, Texas, Arizona and UCLA were among the many programs dispatching coaches to Fresno in order to pursue him.

Out of a large pool of elite programs Upshaw signed with Kansas State in November 2011 because of his strong bond with the players and staff and his belief that head coach Frank Martin's tough-love approach would get the most out of him. Upshaw intended to honor that letter of intent until a teammate at an all-star game approached him in late March 2012 and broke the news to him that Martin had just left Kansas State for South Carolina.

"It was heartbreaking," Sherman said. "We had taken our time to look for a perfect fit for Rob, and Kansas State was everything we were looking for. We were ready to move to Kansas. We were ready. It was frustrating when it happened because we were going to Kansas State because of Frank Martin. Once he left, we had to open the recruitment back up."

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Robert Upshaw (Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports)
Robert Upshaw (Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports)
With the spring signing period only weeks away, Upshaw didn't have much time to make a decision. He didn't want to go to Kansas State anymore because he'd be playing for a staff that didn't recruit him. He didn't want to follow Martin to South Carolina either. And while some elite programs that originally recruited him were still willing to free up a scholarship to make room for him, he was overwhelmed at the thought of starting his recruiting process all over again.
For that reason, Upshaw chose the school that felt most comfortable to him. He lived minutes from Fresno State's campus, he knew most of his future teammates and Terry had recruited him since his freshman year of high school when Terry was an assistant coach under Rick Barnes at Texas.

"Toward the end, Rob was just so frustrated with the recruiting process that he said he was going to give Fresno State a try," Sherman said. "I didn't want him to stay in Fresno, but against my wishes, that's what he did. It just didn't turn out to be a good fit for him."

The risk for celebrated basketball prospects who choose to play for their hometown college is that the spotlight shines brighter and the expectations are more burdensome. Success brings fame and adulation; failure ensures ignominy and criticism.

There are a handful of reasons why the most prized recruit of Terry's tenure experienced more scorn than praise as a Fresno State freshman.

Upshaw battled knee problems leading up to the start of the season that detracted from his explosiveness and conditioning. He also often gave an uneven effort in practices and games. And he got himself in trouble often enough away from basketball that Terry was compelled to suspend him twice for a total of four games late in the season before dismissing him the following summer.

Neither Upshaw nor anyone close to him chose to offer specifics when asked exactly what led to his dismissal, but their answers were still revealing. They describe Upshaw as a goodhearted but immature kid who made the type of foolhardy decisions college freshmen sometimes make when they're living on their own for the first time.

"I made some bad choices," Upshaw said. "What happened is done and I can't change that, but I learned from it. I'm not doing it now. I'm definitely not doing it now. I'm in a better stage of my life. Basically, I just had to grow up."
The first step in Upshaw's maturation process was spending part of the summer after his freshman year at John Lucas' Houston-based treatment program.

Lucas, a former NBA star whose career was nearly derailed by substance abuse, has gained national acclaim for training basketball players and for helping rehabilitate athletes whose lives have careened off track. The tough love approach Lucas favors was exactly what Upshaw needed to recalibrate his mindset for the comeback ahead.

"John Lucas was so good for Rob," said Upshaw's former AAU coach Clayton Williams. "That's when he started to make changes and make strides. He came back a different person."

One of Upshaw's first priorities after returning home was to find a school willing to offer him a second chance. Washington emerged as one of a handful of suitors once its staff did enough research to properly weigh the risks.

Assistant coach T.J. Otzelberger visited with Upshaw and the big man's family, friends and former coaches in hopes of assessing what went wrong at Fresno State and whether the off-court issues were likely to resurface. Otzelberger emerged from those conversations confident Upshaw was ready to make the necessary changes in his life and convinced the 7-footer could fill a need for a Washington program that lacked a shot blocking center on its roster.

"We certainly did a lot of digging to find out where he was at mentally," Otzelberger said. "From everything that Rob was saying to us, we felt like he wanted to turn his life around and he seemed sincere in those overtures. We knew his ability level and we knew the challenges of finding a legitimate rim protector. Between what Rob was saying to us and the tremendous upside that he has, it made him a risk we were willing to embrace."

Even though transfer-friendly Oregon and prestigious UCLA were among the other schools that expressed interest in Upshaw, Washington was a fairly easy choice.

Playing time didn't figure to be an issue with top big man Perris Blackwell graduating after the 2013-14 season. Upshaw also fancied the idea of playing for Washington's Lorenzo Romar, a head coach with a reputation for preparing his players for life outside basketball by serving as a father figure and hands-on mentor.

When Upshaw arrived at Washington at the start of the 2013-14 school year, Romar immediately set up some stipulations for what the 7-footer had to do earn his trust. Only if Upshaw lived up to Romar's expectations on and off the floor would he have the chance to play for the Huskies when he became eligible the following season.

"More than anything, we needed to see consistency on a daily basis," Otzelberger said. "We made sure he was attending class, doing well in school and addressing any issues he had away from the floor. We encouraged him to tackle those head-on and to get appropriate help and attend counseling or meetings if needed. And from a basketball standpoint, we wanted to see that daily commitment. He hadn't always been someone who had taken care of business on the court, off the court and in the classroom, so that's what we wanted to see."

Though Upshaw endeared himself to everyone at Washington with his warm, friendly personality, his transformation wasn't instantaneous. Romar even prohibited Upshaw from attending practice or sitting on the bench during games for the second half of last season to prove he wouldn't hesitate to cut ties with the 7 footer if necessary.

There were times Upshaw wasn't sure he'd ever have the chance to play for Washington, but he gradually won over the coaching staff by attending class, persevering through extra workouts and getting into the best shape of his life. Romar reinstated Upshaw to the team this summer, shaking his hand and congratulating him the progress he had made in his first calendar year at Washington.

"Coach Romar could have given up on me a long time ago but he hasn't," Upshaw said. "He has been like a second father to me. He wanted me to change my life and he wanted me to get myself together, so he had to give me a couple consequences in order to do that. It has really helped me. Look where I'm at now."
Indeed how far Upshaw has come in the past 18 months is pretty remarkable.

The person whose self-destructive choices nearly cost him his basketball career is now back on an upward trajectory. The player once dismissed from a losing program is now an unbeaten team's breakout star. The guy once derided as a bust is now one of the most feared shot blockers in the nation.

Earlier this month, Brad Roznovsky, an assistant coach at San Joaquin Memorial when Upshaw was there, visited his former player in Seattle for two days. He returned home from Seattle extremely encouraged by Upshaw's maturation on and off the court.

"I think he has really grown up," Roznovsky said. "There are a lot of people in the Fresno area who still come up to me and make jokes about Rob, but he is proving everyone wrong right now. From where he is now to where he was a year and a half ago, it's night and day."

Monday, December 2, 2013

Diver Tom Daley reveals gay relationship


Diver Tom Daley poses during a parade celebrating British athletes who competed in the London 2012 Olympic Games in London on September 10, 2012
Diver Tom Daley poses during a parade celebrating British athletes who competed in the London 2012 Olympic Games in London on September 10, 2012 (AFP Photo/David Davies)
London (AFP) - British diving star Tom Daley said on Monday he was in a relationship with a man but that he still "fancied" girls as he became the latest sports star to make a public declaration regarding their sexuality.
The 19-year-old, a bronze medallist at last year's London Olympics and one of the faces used in the pre-Games publicity, made the announcement in a YouTube clip which he hoped would end "rumours and speculation".
"Come spring this year my life changed massively when I met someone and they made me feel so happy, so safe and everything just feels great -- and that someone is a guy," said Daley.
"Of course I still fancy girls but right now I'm dating a guy and I couldn't be happier."
Daley added: "In an ideal world I wouldn't be doing this video because it shouldn't matter but recently I was misquoted in an interview and it made me feel really angry and frustrated, and emotions that I've never felt before when reading something about myself, and for me honesty is something that I really do believe in.
"I've been dating girls and I've never really had a serious relationship to talk about and now I feel kind of ready to talk about my relationships.
"People will say, 'But what would your dad say?'. "He always said to me as long as you're happy I'm happy, and right now I couldn't be happier.
"My mum's been supportive as well... all my friends and family have been so supportive which has been great."
Daley's father Rob, who had nurtured his career, died of cancer aged 40 just over a year before the Olympics.
The diver, who appeared on TV game shows after the London Games, said he still wanted to win gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
Daley finished on the podium in the 10-metre event in London last year.
He follows other leading divers in making a public statement about their sexuality.
Australia's Matthew Mitcham announced he was homosexual shortly before he won a diving gold medal at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, while four-time Olympic diving champion Greg Louganis came out as gay following his retirement in 1995.

Spygate II? Texans’ Smith ‘suspicious’ about Patriots’ halftime adjustments



Antonio Smith (sideways at left) dives at Tom Brady. (Getty Images)
On Sunday, the Texans were pushing the Patriots around the field in the first half. But, much like the Denver-New England game the week before, the Patriots made some halftime adjustments and ended up winning the game 34-31.
There are two possibilities here: that the Patriots are exceptionally good at changing game plans on the fly, or, as Texans defensive end Antonio Smith suggests, there's something "suspicious" going on.
"I'm very suspicious," Smith said to a group of reporters after the game. "I just think it will be a big coincidence if that just happened by chance. I don't know for sure, but I just know it was something that we practiced this week ... Either teams are spying on us or scouting us." Or possibly the Texans are a terrible football team, but we understand why Smith wouldn't take that explanation.
Smith said the team had practiced new defensive schemes this week that would not have shown up on film, but the Patriots appeared prepared for the new look. The Texans were up by 10 at halftime, but gave up 27 second-half points.
Tom Brady brushed off Smith's critique with the dismissiveness that he usually reserves for second-rate secondaries. "We've kind of been through a lot of this before," he told WEEI on Monday morning. "I don't really think much of it, truthfully. I just kind of have moved on."
Of course, the Patriots have "been through a lot of this before" during the first "Spygate" controversy. Back in 2007, the Pats were found to be taping the Jets during a September game, and the resulting firestorm and allegations even involved Congress. Belichick was fined $500,000, the Patriots were fined $250,000, and the team forfeited a first-round draft pick.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

BCS Standings: Ohio State finally controls its own destiny (maybe)


After weeks of waiting, wishing and hoping, Ohio State is finally in a position to play for a national championship.
The Buckeyes moved to No. 2 in the recently released BCS standings thanks to Auburn’s win over Alabama, which knocked the Tide from No. 1, where they had been all season, to No. 4.
Florida State, which was No. 2 last week, moves to No. 1 and holds that top spot for the first time since 1999. Auburn is No. 3 and Missouri comes in at No. 5.
But as we’ve learned in the past few weeks, nothing is set in stone. All of the teams in the Top 5 – except for Alabama – still have to play in conference championship games. Florida State faces No. 20 Duke in the ACC title game, Ohio State faces No. 10 Michigan State in the Big Ten title game and Auburn and Missouri will square off in the SEC championship. And any slip in those games could throw the BCS standings into a tizzy.
The game between Auburn and Missouri could have an impact on who plays in the national championship. It's possible that if Auburn were to win that game, it would jump Ohio State and move into No. 2.
But if it didn’t happen this week – after Auburn’s emotional, improbable and unbelievable win in the Iron Bowl – the chances of it happening after a victory against Missouri is slim.
Urban Meyer's Buckeyes had to like the penultimate BCS standings. (AP)
That’s because Ohio State finally faces an opponent with some BCS clout. Michigan State has one of the nation’s best defenses and because it is ranked in the top 10, if the Buckeyes beat the Spartans, there will be two clear-cut BCS conference undefeateds who deserve to be playing for the national title.
Even though the margin between Ohio State and Auburn is a mere .027 points, Ohio State leads Auburn in all three phases of the BCS standings – the Harris Poll, Coaches Poll and computer rankings. Not sure there's anything Auburn could do to sway the human polls to its side.
For the first time since the BCS standings were released, the Buckeyes don’t have to rely on someone else failing to push them forward. The road to the national championship game is finally in their hands. Beat Michigan State convincingly in the Big Ten Championship and the Buckeyes are heading to the game in Pasadena that really matters.
Here are some other notes from the BCS standings:
• Northern Illinois is No. 14 and one win away from playing in its second consecutive BCS bowl game. But much like last year, the Huskies don’t exactly match up well with any of the potential teams they might face.
• Baylor faded from national championship talk a week ago, but at No. 9 with a game against No. 25 Texas remaining, the Bears could still be in the hunt for an at-large bid to a BCS bowl. Their offense is an attractive draw, especially if they could be paired against Arizona State or Oregon.
• No. 16 Central Florida is one win away from securing an automatic BCS berth with an AAC title. It’s quite the feat considering this is UCF’s first year in an automatic qualifying conference.
• The chances of Alabama somehow sneaking back into the national championship are pretty slim, but the Tide are pretty much guaranteed a BCS at-large spot.
BCS Standings Week 14. (Photo credit: SB Nation)
BCS Standings Week 14. (Photo credit: SB Nation)

Cam Newton goes full Justice League, adding Batman cleats to Superman styling


Cam Newton is ready to dispense justice. (Getty Images)
These are good days for Cam Newton. His current team is on a playoff trajectory and very much in the hunt for a division championship. His former team just pulled off the greatest miracle finish in college football history. And while he's best known for his Superman moves, Newton is now aligning himself with Batman. Because, as everyone knows, Batman > Superman.
Perhaps figuring that the Buccaneers are a superstitious and cowardly lot, Newton broke out some sporting Batman cleats before Sunday's game against Tampa Bay. Here's a closer look:
(Tip o' the cowl to SB Nation.)
This isn't the first time Newton has rocked some superheroic footwear; earlier this year, he broke out the Superman cleats before Week 1:
Then again, the Panthers lost to the Seahawks that game, so perhaps the Superman shoes didn't have the proper mojo. Also, since the NFL is the one entity more powerful than the Justice League, Newton had to remove both the Superman and Batman models before the game actually began. NFL rules don't permit such flashy footwear.
Of course, this now brings up the question of what superhero Newton will feature next. The Flash is too cliche, Green Lantern would clash with Carolina blue, and "Martian Manhunter" now has unacceptable overtones of both violence and racism (planet-ism?) Still, the way Newton and the Panthers are playing these days, he could get away with anything. Heck, he could even make even Aquaman cool.

Reports: Driver in car crash that killed Paul Walker drove in the Pirelli World Challenge



From left to right: Jeff Westphal, Paul Walker, Roger Rodas and Carl Rydquist. (Always Evolving Facebook)

Fast and the Furious actor Paul Walker was killed in a car crash on Saturday and, according to reports, the driver of the car was Roger Rodas, who has driven in the Pirelli World Challenge.
Rodas and Walker were Porsche enthusiasts and owned a race team together. The Porsche Carrera GT they were in crashed after they drove the car from a charity event. Authorities said that when they arrived, the car was engulfed in flames.
“Him and his buddy, his brother in arms at heart, just decided to joyride, take a spin," Antonio Holmes, a friend of Walker's who was at the event, told the Santa Clarita Valley Signal. "Something we all do. We're all car enthusiasts. ... We’re all here driving, enjoying each other, and God must’ve needed help."
The PWC is sanctioned by the Sports Car Club of America, and Rodas drove in the GTS Series this season. He finished second in the Porsche Drivers Cup Series last year with two wins for Always Evolving, the team that he and Walker started. Per his bio on the PWC site, Rodas was a wealth adviser for Merrill Lynch.

Brady Hoke and Michigan deserve credit, but there are no moral victories in The Game



.Carlos Hyde had plenty reason to celebrate with 226 rushing yards and a TD in OSU's win. (AP)
Carlos Hyde had plenty reason to celebrate with 226 rushing yards and a TD in OSU's win. (AP)
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Across the last disastrous half of the season, as Michigan losses piled up and even victories were laced with futility, Brady Hoke had been mocked, cussed and even fired (at least by some fans).
So here on a sunny-but-cold last Saturday of November, with Michigan trailing Ohio State by a single point and 32 seconds left, Hoke was faced with a decision that really wasn't – kick an extra point to likely force overtime, or go for two and try to take the lead.
"We play the game to win," Hoke said.
So Hoke tried for the win, setting up one of the most dramatic plays this old and storied rivalry had ever seen. It left 113,211 people – whether clad in maize and blue, or scarlet and gray – holding their breath.
It didn't work. Devin Gardner's two-point conversion pass was picked off and Ohio State rolled out of Ann Arbor with a 42-41 victory and a 12-0 regular season heading into next week's Big Ten championship against Michigan State. "I would've done the same thing," Buckeyes coach Urban Meyer said. "You've got to win the game."
Braxton Miller (5) accounted for five TDs in the Buckeyes' 42-41 win. (USA Today)
Braxton Miller (5) accounted for five TDs in the Buckeyes' 42-41 win. (USA Today)
Hoke's decision will be called gutsy and to a point it was. It also wasn't that gutsy. His team was a huge underdog. The season was already shot, ending in a 7-5 record. His defense couldn't stop the Buckeyes and Carlos Hyde (226 rushing yards) in particular, so the promise of overtime wasn't bright. His kicker was spotty. Even in failing to convert, he was roundly (and predictably) praised just for attempting it.
Everyone loves a coach who tries to win, rather than simply not lose.
The mistake, if there was one, was apparently the play that was called. Ohio State had it scouted. They called timeout, got everyone a deep breath and the players said they were told Michigan would run one of just two plays. The one the Wolverines attempted – a short pass to Drew Dileo coming out of a three-receiver stack – was one of them.
So they suspected what was coming. Tyvis Powell jumped the route and made the play. It is perhaps the greatest testament to the juggernaut Meyer has built down in Columbus. Even in the most desperate of moments, the Buckeyes are not just prepared, but more than capable of calmly executing it.
And so that was that.
"That's an instant classic," said Meyer, whose team found a way to win its 24th consecutive game since he's become coach and hang in the BCS chase even if the manner of victory wasn't especially impressive.
This was a full-on rivalry game though, where records and rankings don't matter, where every point is earned, where the underdog doesn't quit.
These games aren't supposed to be easy. That's why they rarely are. Ohio State beat Michigan. It shouldn't ever apologize for that. If some BCS poll voters somewhere feel differently, well, whatever.
On this day Ohio State could only celebrate. And at this point of the season, with opinions on strength of schedule, conference might and relative ability mostly formed, it can only just keep winning and hope for something to happen elsewhere that can spring them to the BCS title game.
OSU's Dontre Wilson (1) throws a punch as the two teams scuffle Saturday. (AP)
OSU's Dontre Wilson (1) throws a punch as the two teams scuffle Saturday. (AP)
The time for politicking could wait. The truth was, these weren't the Wolverines of the last month they'd just defeated. This was the Michigan team that looked good on paper in the preseason. After averaging just 216.5 yards per game over the last four games, they racked up 603 on Saturday."We're Michigan," said offensive tackle Taylor Lewan. "We're bred to fight."
Where that fight was all year is anyone's guess. Hoke has said he likes the direction the program is headed, but this is still a five-loss team. While most of the postgame comments were positive, apparently the mood in the locker room was as sad as losing a game in this rivalry demands.

"We have a bunch of kids who fought hard for Michigan, played hard to the bitter end," said athletic director Dave Brandon, who has assured his coach will be around for years and years. "As we did so many times this season we were two yards away from a huge victory. But there are a lot of tears in the locker room because they didn't come here to play well. They came here to win."
So is this, even in year three of the Hoke tenure, a sign of what's the come? Will Michigan soon return to the elite of at least the conference, if not the nation? Or was this a sign of the state of this rivalry – the Buckeyes winning for the 11th time in 13 tries and Michigan stuck soothing its pain with close scores, great efforts and gutsy calls?
"I don't know if you can get an identity in one game, but I'll be very excited to see if we play with the same passion [in the next game]," Hoke said.
Ohio State's next game is Saturday in Indianapolis against Michigan State – a Big Ten title on the line, maybe even more. For Michigan – watching its two chief rivals play for a championship – is like having to choose which finger to have chopped off.
For Hoke, there is no sugarcoating what this year is about. He was reminded that his first year when Michigan went 11-2, beat Ohio State and won a BCS bowl game. He deemed it a failure anyway. So how does he describe this campaign?
Michigan QB Devin Gardner (98) finished with 451 passing yards and five total TDs. (USA Today)
Michigan QB Devin Gardner (98) finished with 451 passing yards and five total TDs. (USA Today)
"It would be the same," he said. "We have goals here. The goal is to win the Big Ten championship. Every year. We have 42 of them. More than anybody else. We want a 43rd."
That'll have to wait. A season of great promise ended with Hoke walking out of his press conference to find two men wearing canary yellow Fiesta Bowl blazers waiting to shake his hand. They were bowl execs, yet they weren't there to invite the Wolverines to a top-line BCS event. It's their secondary offering, the humble Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, where Michigan will likely wind up.
"We're looking to stay in touch," one said.
"Yeah, good to see you," Hoke said.
Not far away, behind Michigan Stadium, five victorious Ohio State buses idled. Unbeaten Buckeyes climbed aboard carrying box lunches from KFC and wearing big satisfied smiles – everything is still possible for them.
There are no moral victories or signs of potential or promises of a better day for Urban Meyer's Buckeyes. There are just victories, one after the next after the next after the next.

Tim Tebow pep talk can't save Gators in blowout loss to Jameis Winston's Seminoles


GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Not even Tim Tebow could save the Gators on Saturday.
He sure did try. The Heisman winner spoke to the team before its game against No. 2 Florida State and delivered a message as only he can.
"It really penetrated my soul," said offensive lineman Max Garcia, his eyes watering slightly. "And it was real."
Tebow told the Gators that any man who gets knocked down has the ability to get back up, according to Garcia, but, "A man can get down and come back withered, can come back beaten. But a man that goes down and comes back and is changed and is different, that's who we are; that's who the Gators are."
The entire team was "locked in," and Florida came out of the locker room with an urgency that hasn't been seen much around this town for the majority of its first losing season since 1979. At the end of the first quarter Saturday, the Gators were down 3-0 to the heavy favorites but it felt in the stadium like they were winning by three touchdowns.
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WIll Muschamp reacts in frustration during Florida's 37-7 loss to Florida State. (USA Today)
Florida couldn't hold up, though. Florida State has the impactful Heisman Trophy candidate now. And Jameis Winston led just the way Tebow used to when he played in this rivalry game.
Of course, any comparison between Tebow and Winston is strictly on the field. Winston has been accused of rape, and if he's charged and convicted, he'll disgrace his university.

For now, however, he is one of the best quarterbacks in the nation, and his on-field leadership was on full display Saturday. Before a 96-yard second-quarter drive that changed the game for good, he told his offensive teammates, "This drive is going to define this game."
He was right. The Gators defenders were so hyped up before the drive that they were literally dancing on the field, waiting for Winston and his brethren to line up. The energy and noise could have easily overwhelmed many quarterbacks, but the freshman leader remained composed.
The Seminoles responded to Winston, "I got you!" And Winston came back with "OK, let's do it."
Winston converted a third-and-25, and the rout was on from there. The Seminoles finished the drive with a 45-yard touchdown catch by Kelvin Benjamin and ran away with the game. A 10-0 deficit spiraled into a 37-7 yawner. What could have been a serious challenge to a national championship bid turned into yet another lopsided win for the Seminoles in an 11-0 regular season.
That resilience, fueled in part by Winston's words and his ability, is something the Gators lack. Florida coach Will Muschamp cited a "woe is me" mentality after the game, mentioning "tough situations I wish we handled a little better." Muschamp has told the team "life is not fair," but that hasn't seemed to register. Florida didn't lose to Georgia Southern last week because of its injuries; it lost because it didn't have the right mindset. That's something only peers can build and maintain.
Winston is that kind of peer for the Seminoles. He called out Benjamin last night in front of the entire team, challenging him and telling him, "You're an unstoppable force." Benjamin then went out and had 212 yards and three touchdowns on Saturday. He proved he could indeed be an unstoppable force.
Jameis Winston (5) has Florida State on the verge of a BCS title berth now. (USA Today)
Yes, the Seminoles are stacked with talent. Winston didn't make Benjamin taller or faster. But the Gators are talented too. The Gators went to Tallahassee last season and whipped the Seminoles on their own field, and that Florida State team had 11 players who went on to the NFL. The Florida season highlight video, played for the team last night, had many clips from that game.

The Gators moved to 11-1 that day, and Muschamp truly thought he had the best team in the country. Now the coach is fighting for his job. The difference isn't just personnel. This season, small setbacks turned not into motivation, but into horrendous losses and embarrassing behavior like that shown Saturday by a Gators player who apparently spat at a Seminoles player during a stoppage in play. Part of that is on Muschamp, who clearly hasn't known what to say to turn the tide of negativity, but there was a season-long void in the locker room that he could not fill.
Winston, on the other hand, seems to always know what to say. Friday night, he asked teammates how many of them had ever been undefeated on any level. Not many raised their hands. It was a reminder of the situation, and the opportunity.
Tebow tried to do the same on Saturday: Remind the Gators of the situation, and the opportunity. "I'm going to stick to that for the rest of my life," Garcia said.
"When I saw him, I could just feel his leadership," Garcia added. "His presence, it just demanded that."
Every great team needs presence on the field. Florida State showed it Saturday. Florida has lost it completely.

Fat bikes going big in Colorado


The silly-looking bikes are becoming increasingly accepted in Colorado mountain biking country

Fat Bike East Side Epic race; photo by Leaf Treinen
Fat Bike East Side Epic race; photo by Leaf Treinen
People are over the silly factor. Big, fat tires. Big, fat deal. While still a relatively small market, fat bikes are the fastest growing segment in the bike industry.
In Colorado, anything that keeps riders on their bikes longer is sure to catch on. And after a few years feeling out the market, fat bikes—specialized frames that can hold a tire meaty enough to tackle snow—are taking over the terrain in the West.
Fat bikes are becoming more and more popular in Colorado; photo by Leaf Treinen
Fat bikes are becoming more and more popular in Colorado; photo by Leaf Treinen
“What started as a small niche has turned into a winter phenomenon. Now we can ride bikes all year,” says Matt Hammett, a manager and buyer at Golden Bike Shop, a fat bike sales and rental leader on Colorado’s Front Range.
Golden Bike Shop sells Surly’s original Pugsley at an entry price point, but also newer models such as Salsa’s Muckluk, made for adventure riding, and the 9:Zero:7 carbon fiber line out of Alaska that offers frames with the weight and geometry for touring.
The biggest plus in newer fat bike models is they’re getting lighter. Some custom builds and the new Borealis lineout of Colorado Springs, Colorado, are weighing in at under 30 pounds. Parts and tires are easier to get, there are more models to choose from, and there are just more people out there riding fat bikes. “There’s more market acceptance. People are seeing it’s not just a passing phase,” says Hammett.
They’re now seen as a year-round bike, according to Hammett, who sold all his other bikes for a fatty. “They can be ridden anywhere.” Hammett pedals the fat bike for his 20-mile commute, on local trails including the recently expanded North Table Mountain Park trail system, adjacent to Coors Brewery in Golden, and on groomed cross-country ski trails. Colorado ski resorts are jumping on board, too, many now allowing fat biking alongside Nordic skiing and snowshoeing.
Fat Bikes East Side Epic Race; photo by Leaf Treinen
Fat Bikes East Side Epic Race; photo by Leaf Treinen
Tire pressure is everything on a fat bike and can change the riding experience drastically, says Darren Broome, a former Hawaii-based Army guy and current co-owner of Aloha Mountain Cyclery in Carbondale, Colorado, near Aspen. It’s what allows a fat bike to transition from hard-pack snow to desert sand to paved paths all on the same frame.
“The most technical stuff I’ve ever climbed was on my fat bike,” Broome says. So while you give up a little speed and acceleration, the obstacles you can tackle on a fat bike are amazing, he says. Fat bikes also require that you check speed on descents, reminds Broome, since the fat tires on a rigid frame create a suspension-like quality but can get a little “rowdy and bouncy and have a basketball-like effect” if a rider is not in control.
Fat bikes are being used by Colorado residents year-round; photo by Leaf Treinen
Fat bikes are being used by Colorado residents year-round; photo by Leaf Treinen
In Roaring Fork Valley, Broome and buddies ride packed trails on the lower section of Prince Creek when the snow falls. He says up to two inches of fresh snow is doable on a climb and three on a descent, but anything more than that can make for an ultra-demanding ride. Conditions are critical—test snow that’s too variable early season and you’ll post-hole. If you test snow that’s too icy late season, you’ll slide.
Sterling Mudge appreciates just that kind of challenge. He lives in Leadville, Colorado, the highest elevation incorporated city in the U.S., where it snows a lot and stays snowy for a long time. He counts eight friends who currently ride fat bikes. “Between the snowmobile club, Colorado Mountain College, Mt. Massive Golf Course, Tennessee Pass Nordic Center and the Mineral Belt Trail, our options can’t be beat,” says Mudge, who started a local fat bike race series that’s gaining traction and turning heads.
Fat Bikes Mineral Belt Mayham; photo by Leaf Treinen
Fat Bikes Mineral Belt Mayham race; photo by Leaf Treinen
When asked about the “silly” stigma still attached to fat bikes, Mudge says, “There are funnier-looking things out there—take, for example, snow blades. If you like riding bikes you will most likely enjoy riding a fat bike—on snow, sand or dirt.”
I don’t know about you, but I’m taking my lead from the locals. I’m ready to get over it and get on with the fun of fat biking.