The Boston Globe - 30.08.2019

(vip2019) #1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 2019 The Boston Globe Sports C7


Las Vegas
line

Julian
Benbow

Christopher
Gasper

Greg
Lang

Craig
Larson

Michael
Vega
Last season 82-49 — 94-37 95-36 84-47
Virginia Tech
at Boston College

Virginia Tech
by 4½

Virginia Tech Boston College Boston College Boston College Boston College

UMass
at Rutgers

Rutgers
by 16

Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers

Oregon
at Auburn

Auburn
by 3½

Auburn Oregon Auburn Auburn Oregon

Wisconsin
at South Florida

Wisconsin
by 10½

Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin

Northwestern
at Stanford

Stanford
by 6

Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford

Notre Dame
at Louisville

Notre Dame
by 18

Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame

Syracuse
at Liberty

Syracuse
by 18½

Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse

Boise State
at Florida State

Florida State
by 6½

Florida State Florida State Florida State Florida State Florida State

Georgia
at Vanderbilt

Georgia
by 21½

Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia

Miami (Ohio)
at Iowa

Iowa
by 22

Iowa Iowa Iowa Iowa Iowa

Selections are not against the pointspread.

Globe staff’s college picksWEEK 1


eand wide receiver Aaron Parker
ack to try to make it happen
.
lve Regina: Joey Mauriello, the
monwealth Coast Conference Of-
ve Rookie of the Year, and seven
all-conference honorees return
hat looks like a strong season.

ne
tes: Well, it can’t get any worse
eBobcats, who finished 0-9 in

wdoin: The Polar Bears are un-
ew leadership after a 1-8 season,
oach B.J. Hammer has a history
ning programs around. He took
heny (1-29 in three years) to 6-4
1 8.
olby: Sophomore quarterback
Hersch, who was NESCAC Offen-
Rookie of the Year in 2018, leads
ay as the White Mules find their
ng under third-year coach Jack
rove.
usson: The Eagles have posted
ing seasons every year since
and with six All-Eastern Colle-
Football Conference selections
ning, that shouldn’t change any-
soon.
aine: After a program-best sea-
hat saw the Black Bears reach the
nal FCS semifinals, new coach
Charlton, the youngest coach in
ion 1, has a lot to live up to.
aine Maritime:Ifthere’sany
tspot, it’s NEWMAC Co-Rookie
eYear Terrell Thomas, an outside
acker who led the conference
1 1.9 tackles per game.
niversity of New England: The fu-
sbright for the Nor’Easters, who
hed 2-7 in their inaugural season,
Commonwealth Coast Defensive
ie of the Year Keegan Stanton-
returning alongside two all-con-
ce selections.

necticut
entral Connecticut: First-year
hRyan McCarthy is faced with
ions in the passing game after
raduation of quarterback Jacob
gala and the top three receivers.
oast Guard: The Bears (7-3) re-
dtheir most wins since 2007 and
nthree All-NEWMAC selections,

including junior Justin Moffatt, who
set a school record with 71 receptions
and led the conference in receptions
and yards.
Connecticut: In its last year in the
American Athletic Conference, Con-
necticut — coming off a one-win sea-
son — is looking for a new quarter-
back.
New Haven: The Chargers lost NE-
10 MVP Ajee Patterson to graduation,
but wide receiver Ju’An Williams, who
led the league in yards per game and
receiving touchdowns, returns to a
team picked to finish first in the
league after an NCAA second-round
appearance.
Sacred Heart: A defense that was
strong through a 7-4 season returns
10 starters, but the offense is thinned
after the graduation of starting QB
Kevin Duke and top receivers Andrew
O’Neill and Jordan Meachum.
Southern Connecticut:TheOwls
have holes to fill with the graduation
of Eli Parks, the NE-10 Offensive Play-
er of the Year who paced the confer-
ence in all rushing categories, and five
other all-conference honorees, but
were picked to finish fourth in the pre-
season poll.
Trinity: Ranked No. 30 among D3
programs by College Football Ameri-
ca, the Bantams return the NESCAC
Co-Rookie of the Year in sophomore
quarterback Seamus Lambert and sev-
en other conference honorees after an
8-1 season that saw them capture
their third straight NESCAC title.
Wesleyan: Junior defensive tackle
Taj Gooden, who was named a
D3football.com Preseason All-Ameri-
can after a sophomore campaign that
landed him on the All-NESCAC first
team, returns to a Cardinals team that
went 5-4.
Western Connecticut:TheColo-
nials (8-2) have some rebuilding to do
offensively after the loss of their quar-
terback, top four rushers, and top two
receivers.
Yale: There is depth behind center,
with senior Kurt Rawlings working
back from a season-ending injury in a
2018 season that still earned him All-
Ivy honorable mention, and Rookie of
the Year Griffin O’Connor, who took
over in his absence.

ntlookthisfall
By Alan Blinder
THE NEW YORK TIMES
HOOVER, Ala. — The first
time Ed Orgeron, Louisiana
State’s football coach, led a
Southeastern Conference pro-
gram, Steve Spurrier had a
warning when all of the region’s
gridiron gods kept their jobs
from one season to the next.
“Folks, look around,” Org-
eron remembered Spurrier,
then at South Carolina, saying
at a 2006 meeting of the
league’s coaches. “It ain’t going
to be like this next year.”
A similar grounded-in-histo-
ry, watch-your-back admoni-
tion is in order this year as col-
lege football teams begin a new
season. For the first time since
2006, every SEC football team
has returned its head coach —
perhaps as close as the notori-
ously demanding, overbearing
and fickle conference can come
to signaling some form of pa-
tience or contentedness.
Yet no one seems quite cer-
tain how 14 of the South’s most

scrutinized men together
achieved a measure of group
job security, tenuous as it might
be, found in no other Power
Five conference this past offsea-
son.
“It’s an enigma,” Phillip Ful-
mer, the athletic director at
Tennessee, said in an interview
13 years after he was a member
of the conference’s last stable
head coaching corps. “I think
it’s an aberration.”
Certainly so. Between the
2012 season, when Missouri
and Texas A&M first played in
the conference, and 2017, the
SEC averaged about two head
coaching changes a year. Ahead
of the 2018 season, five teams
hired new leaders, and Missis-
sippi removed the “interim” tag
from its coach. Then, despite all
the chatter about who was up
and who was down and wheth-
er a college might pay some-
one’s seven-figure buyout,
nothing changed for 2019.
Coaches and administrators
suggested university officials

were increasingly learning to
shrug off more of the social me-
dia furor that follows a ques-
tionable decision, a blown lead
or an old-fashioned blowout.
Some said the big buyout
coststiedtotheleague’scoach-
ing contracts influenced deci-
sions — as of April, according to
a USA Today database, at least
nine SEC head coaches had
school buyouts exceeding $10
million. Others noted that uni-
versity leaders had come to be-
lieve that only so many coaches
might be prepared for every-
thing that comes with coaching
in a conference that does more
swaggering than most. This
summer, Spurrier was among
those who suspected that the
turnover before the 2018 sea-
son gave rise to the stability —
and that it would prove fleet-
ing.
Indeed, it’s all too easy to
imagine some booster some-
place sharpening a knife and
suggesting that a seven-win
season is simply insufficient.
There is always a demand for
speed: Most SEC coaches who
wind up unemployed lose their
jobs because they just lose too
many football games to the
wrong rivals — and too quickly.
“The more time you have as
a coach, you can really build
your program and recruit to a
certainpersonalitythatfits
who you are,” said Matt Luke,
the coach at Mississippi. “For-
tunately or unfortunately, this
is a performance-based busi-
ness.”
But the development of a ti-
tle-winning program, several
coaches noted, is not instant.
Nick Saban, the most feted
coach of the era, was 7-6 in his
first year at Alabama before
NCAA penalties reduced the
win total to two.
He posted a 12-2 record the
next season. He capped his
third season in Tuscaloosa with
a national championship and
was quickly honored with a 9-
foot bronze statue outside Bry-
ant-Denny Stadium.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW

NonewcoachesnewforSEC


BRUCE NEWMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mississippi coach Matt Luke
said SEC football is “a per-
formance-based business.”

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