'05 preseason All American team

Jimmy Chitwood

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1st team offense:



QB Matt Leinart, Sr. USC: 'nough said. this guy is the best.



C Greg Eslinger, Sr. Minn: Selected to the 2005 Playboy All-America Team, the second consecutive season he has earned that prestigious honor - named a preseason All-American by Athlon, Lindy's and Street & Smith's - rated the No. 1 center in the country by Lindy's - has been named to the 2005 Rimington Trophy, Outland Trophy and Lombardi Award watch lists.



G Mark Setterstrom, Sr. Minn: Has established himself as one of the top guards in the nation - received preseason All-America recognition by Street & Smith's. Junior season named to Rivals.com All-America team.



G Matt Lentz, Sr. Mich: Lentz is probably the strongest and most durable player in Ann Arbor. He boasts a string of 25 consecutive starts at right guard for the Wolverines, and has played in 34 games in his career at Michigan. In 2004, Lentz was voted to the All-Big Ten team by the coaches.



T Eric Winston, Jr. Miami: Fully recovered from a 2004 knee injury and is ready to reclaim his position as the best offensive tackle in college football...Member of numerous 2005 preseason All-America teams, including Playboy...All-American candidate in 2004 whose season was cut short by a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in the fourth game. A dominating presence in the line who matured into perhaps the team's most vocal leader.



T Daryn Colledge, Sr. Boise St: Named to the 2005 Rotary Lombardi Award Watch List and the Outland Trophy Watch List...Named preseason second-team All-America and first-team All-WAC by Athlon Sports and honorable mention All-America and first-team All-WAC by Street & Smith's. Selected first team All-American by CollegeSportsReports.com. Ran a 4.93 40.



TE Zach Miller, Soph. Arizona St: Dynamic young player who returns to the field after a sensational freshman year...earned second-team All-America honors last season, just one of four freshmen in the nation to earn first- or second-team accolades. Shattered ASU's freshman receiving records last year. Was nicknamed "The Truth" by his teammates for living up to the hype that tabbed him the No. 1 tight end prospect in the nation coming out of high school.



WR Eric Deslauriers, Jr. East. Mich: 84 catches, 1257 yards, 15.0ypc, 13touchdowns, 114.3 ypg. to rank fourth in the nation in receiving yards-per-game and fifth in catches-per-game. Scored 26 points in a single game last season.



WR Mike Hass, Sr. Oregon St: He was the offense for most of last year with 86 catches, 1379 yards, 16.0 ypc, 7 touchdowns. F<FONT face=Tahoma>inished third in the nation and first in the Pac-10 for receiving yards per game at 114.9. Set a conference record with 293 yards at Boise State. Named OSU's Offensive MVP. There are few better route runners, and no one has better hands.



RB Tre Smith, Jr. Auburn: First featured white tailback in the SEC since i've been watching. Missed last season due to injury. As true frosh, was only rusher to go for over 100 yards against Bama in 2002, gaining 126 yards on 25 carries. Owns high school's record in 100 meters.



RB Dan Burks, Jr. UAB: Finished excellent season for the Blazers as he totalled 880 yards with four rushing touchdowns. Averaged 5.4 yards per carry. Earned third-team All-Conference USA recognition.



1st team defense:



DL Kyle Williams, Sr. LSU: Williams should be a good, first day draft choice. He's tough and strong with a non-stop motor and good quickness on the interior. He's a rock against the run and is great at getting into the backfield. He'll make several All-America teams by the end of the season and will be the leader of what should be a great Tiger D.



DL Jesse Mahelona, Sr. Tenn: Mahelona came in from the JUCO ranks and immediately dominated as a tremendous interior pass rusher and anchor of the line. His experience turned into a godsend for the young line becoming the focus of everyone's blocking scheme. He's a smart player with the athleticism of a defensive end.



DL Dusty Dvoracek, Sr. OK: An all-star and top pro prospect in 2003, the 298-pound senior was kicked off the team last year and underwent counseling for alcohol issues. Back in the mix this spring, he showed that he intends to be every bit the player he was when he left before tearing a bicep. Once he shakes all the rust off, he'll be an All-Big XII performer once again.



LB A.J. Hawk, Sr. Ohio St: Hawk likely would've been a first round draft pick had he left school a year early. A tackling machine with 273 career stops with 24.5 tackles for loss and six interceptions, the 238-pound Hawk ripped off a 4.46 40-yard dash time proving that he doesn't just look fast when chasing down ball-carriers. In a good year for college football linebackers, Hawk will be at the head of the class with his tremendous instincts, production and toughness.



LB Chad Greenway, Sr. Iowa: Greenway went from being a good tackler to a great all-around player with three interceptions and another defensive back in pass coverage. He never, ever missed a one-on-one tackle and is strong at shedding blocks and stopping the run.



LB Spencer Havner, Sr. UCLA: Havner was a one-man-gang last year cleaning up everything the line couldn't take care of. He could've left for the NFL and been a third-round draft pick, but he came back to give the Bruins one of the nation's best linebackers, and to try to get a little bit bigger and faster. While not a blazer, he's more than quick enough in traffic to make plays and is tough as nails against the run.



LB Tim McGarigle, Sr. Northwestern: Nation's top returning tackler. Named to numerous preseason award watch lists: Rotary Lombardi (top lineman/linebacker), Chuck Bednarik (top defensive player), Dick Butkus (linebacker) and Ronnie Lott (defensive IMPACT). Tabbed one of TSN's three "Biggest Hitters" in its "Clutch Players" section. Designated by Street & Smith's as the Big Ten player with the "Best Instincts." At his best when things aren't going well and the defense needs a lift.



DB Jaxson Appel, Sr. Texas A&M: Appel, a preseason first-team All-America selection, was also named to the watch list last season. He is also on the watch list for the 2005 Chuck Bednarik Defensive Player of the Year Award. An All-Big 12 selection by The Associated Press last season, Appel needs nine tackles to become the school's all-time tackles leader for a defensive back. Appel has 289 stops and could join former All-Americans Dat Nguyen and Ed Simioni as A&M's only three-time tackle leaders.



DB Eric Weddle, Jr. Utah: The MWC's best safety and one of the best in the nation. On course for All-America honors since his freshman year. Named a first-team Freshman All-America cornerback in 2003. Best athlete and cover manon team. Plays corner in the nickel on slot receiver. Also all-conference candidate as punt returner.



DB Steven Gregory, Sr. 'Cuse: Moving back to corner after year at wide receiver. Despite playing just two seasons at corner already ranks fifth on SU's career passes defended list with 35, and is fourth on the pass break-ups record chart with 31.A Freshman All-American by The Sporting News. Ranked fifth nationally, and first among freshmen, in passes defended with 21, including two interceptions and 19 breakups. Total was second-highest single-season passes defended in SU history. Acknowledged as fastest player on team.



DB Jeff Backes, Sr. Northwestern: Tabbed the Anson Mount Scholar-Athlete by Playboy magazine. Attempting to become a three-time Academic All-America. A gifted athlete, acknowledged the best on the team since he stepped on campus, the move to cornerback was the second position change for him since coming to NU. Has moved from running back to wide receiver to the defensive secondary. His outstanding speed and leaping abilities provide him the physical tools to be a solid defensive performer. Continues to get better with experience. Great mind for the game. Northwestern's career leader in kickoff return average.



1st teams special teams



PK Mason Crosby, Jr. CU: The near unanimous selection for preseason first-team All-America honors at placekicker, he is a unanimous preseason all-Big 12 selection and is one of the favorites for the Lou Groza Award. He enters his junior year already third in field goals made at Colorado (26), and is tied for 21st in scoring and is tied for sixth in kick scoring (137 points). He is 26-of-32 in field goals made, not including bowl games, 15-for-15 from 40 yards in



P Tom Malone, Sr. USC: Malone has a career average of 44.5 yards per kick and will be on the short list for the Ray Guy Award. He can do it all from placement to airing it out. Named to pre-season Playboy All-American team for second consecutive year


KR Jeff Backes, Sr. Northwestern: see above


PR Danny Amendola, Soph.Tex Tech: All-Big 12 Conference First Team return specialist. Finished the season with 29 punt returns for 371 yards and a touchdown. Averaged 12.8 yards per return, most yards per return at Tech by a freshman since Tyrone Thurman's 13.5 yards in 1985. Total also ranks as seventh single-season best at Tech, bettering those of former Red Raider and NCAA punt return record holder Wes Welker during his freshman season.



2nd team offense



QB Drew Tate, Jr. Iowa: Without any running game to rely on and an untested group of receivers to throw to, Tate still had a magnificent season and was the most valuable player in the Big Ten throwing for 2,786 yards and 20 touchdowns and ran for two scores.



C Mike Degory, Jr.Florida: Two-time selection to Rimington Trophy Watch list (2003 and 2004). All-SEC Second Team-Coaches' and AP in 2004. All-SEC Second Team-Coaches' and AP in 2003. Named UF's "Outstanding Offensive Lineman" in both 2003 and 2004. Earned a spot on The Sporting News Freshman All-America team in 2002



G Kory Lichtensteiger, Soph. Bowling Green: Named Freshman All-American by the FWAAA.


G Kyle Ralph, Jr. UNC: The team's best blocker, Ralph is an All-ACC performer who didn't allow a sack last year. He's great on the move and good at springing big runs.


T Ryan O'Callaghan, Sr. Cal: Emerged as one of the nation's finest offensive tackles last year and may be in line for 2005 All-America consideration.


T Travis Leffew, Sr. Louisville: Three-year letterwinner at offensive tackle andhas started a school record 38 straight games. Named third team All-America by the Associated Press and was a second team honoree by CNNSI.com. Voted first team All-Conference USA


TE Jeff King, Sr. Va Tech: King suffered from playing in the same conference, and the same state, as Virginia's Heath Miller. Now King should be in the mix for All-America honors and the Mackey Award with baby soft hands that always comes up with the big catch


WR Todd Blythe, Soph. ISU: An extremely physical, talented wide receiver who had a breakout freshman campaign and became one of the best scoring threats in the Big 12 Conference. Set school record with nine touchdown receptions. Led the team in receiving yards, average per catch and touchdowns. First team all-Big 12 (2004, espn.com, Dallas Morning News).



WR David Anderson, Sr. CSU: 57 catches, 940yards, 16.5 ypc 2touchdowns, 85.5 ypg. Physical and fast, Anderson has been the lone receiving threat for the Rams for the past two seasons


RB Kyle Bell, Soph. CSU: A big bruising back (6'2", 225)with speed (4.5 40) ran for over 8,000 yards in high school


RB Peyton Hillis, Soph. Arkansas: A freak of nature. Combines fullback size with tailback speed. The Hogs will use Hillis in a variety of ways, at tailback, fullback, H-back, in the slot, where ever, trying to get the ball in his hands as much as possible. One of the nation's top recruits, he rushed for 2,631 yards and 29 touchdowns, including nine touchdowns of more than 55 yards, on 261 carries for an average of 10.1 yards per carry in his senior season. His 2,631 yards was the second highest single-season total in Class AAAAA history


2nd team defense


DL John Syptak, Sr. Rice: Talented athlete who should be one of the top defensive players in Conference USA in 2005... High-energy player who has made an impact on the Owl defense since his freshman season


DL Pat Massey, Sr. Mich: Has played in 36 career games and made 21 starts at defensive end. Registered 28 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, four sacks and three pass breakups during career. Can play both defensive end and defensive tackle.


DL Devan Long, Sr. Oregon: Known for his ability to pressure the quarterback, has worked to improve his ability to hold his own at the line of scrimmage.


DL Garrett McIntyre, Sr. Fresno St: One of the WAC's greatest success stories, McIntyre walked-on to Fresno State and has grown into one of the league's top players. He can be a quick, undersized tackle or a 260-pound physical end. He's a fantastic pass rusher with 18 career sacks.


LB Will Derting, Sr. Wash. St: On the short list for the Butkus Award, Derting is tough as nails in the middle making 225 career tackles with 14.5 sacks and 30.5 tackles for loss. He's a huge hitter with great range against the run and tremendous instincts for getting into the backfield at the right time.


LB Korey Hall, Jr. Boise St: Named preseason honorable mention All-America and first-team All-WAC by Street & Smith's and first-team All-WAC by Athlon Sports. Named to the 2005 Rotary Lombardi Award Watch List , the 2005 Bronko Nagurski Trophy Watch List, the 2005 Butkus Award Watch List, and the 2005 Chuck Bednarik Award Watch List. Named the nation's 12th-best inside linebacker by The Sporting News


LB Brian Toal, Soph. BC: One of the most coveted recruits in BC football history, Toal lived up to his billing, earning 2004 Big East Rookie of the Year honors. Also gained Freshman All-America honors from The Sporting News


DB Tom Zbikowski, Jr. Notre Dame: Playmaking safety who returns for his second season as a starter in 2005. Also could help the Irish as a punt return man. Intelligent player who raises the level of performance of those around him. Solid tackler who also has good coverage skills.


DB Ben Stratton, Sr. CSU: Moved to safety after hissophomore year (where he started all 13 games). Combines great size (6-2, 207) with fluid hips and above average cover skills. The move to safety has allowed him to make a lot more plays all over the field despite being the Rams best cover guy at the time of the move.


DB Sabby Piscitelli, Jr. Oreg. St: One of the best safeties on the West Coast. Arguably the quickest player on the team. Possesses excellent cover skills as well as being a force against the run.


DB Will Herring, Jr. Auburn: Second on the team with 61 tackles. Has started 24 consecutive games. Named first-team Freshman All-SEC by The Sporting News and the coachesin 2003and tied for the team lead with three interceptions


2nd team special teams


PK Andrew Wellock, Jr. East. Mich: 21-23 FGs, 32-33 extra points ... One of the nation's best kickers, Wellock only missed two field goals including six of seven from beyond 40 yards. He has a huge leg with a 52-yard bomb to his credit.


P Brandon Fields, Jr. Mich. St: If he isn't the nation's best punter, he isn't far off after leading the nation with a 47.9-yard average putting 13 inside the 20. He's 6-6 and 235 pounds with a monster leg


KR Chase Anastasio, Jr. Notre Dame: Speedy receiver/return man who will contend for a primary role in both areas this season. Was one of the team's regulars on kickoff returns last season


PR Hoost Marsh, Soph. Wyoming: Hoost Marsh returns as the First Team All-Mountain West Conference punt returner in 2005


Receivers to note: Johnny Quinn-North Texas, Nate Morton-Wake Forest, Kyle Ingraham-Purdue, Ed Hinkle-Iowa, Scott Mayle-Ohio, Chad Schroeder-Texas A&M


Defensive backs to note: Andrew Pace-corner Vanderbilt, Nate Soelberg-corner BYU, Josh Golden- corner Arizona State, Jamie Gasparella-corner Brown, Dustin Lopez-corner Memphis


Please discuss, 'cause i may have missed someone, or maybe i should have changed 'em around a little bit. Hope you enjoyEdited by: Don Wassall
 

white lightning

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Excellent job Jimmy C. I'm very impressed with your hard work.I would have to say that I agree with most but I would have David Anderson on the first team some how.I'm really excited to get this season going.ASU plays toNegroht on Fox Sports Net and they have alot of really good players.Both Josh Golden and Nate Soelberg should be on the first team as they are very good at shutting down receivers.Keep up the great work.It will be fun to watch and track all of these guys.
 

Don Wassall

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Great stuff, JC!
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jaxvid

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Good picks. Other mentions: Brian Leonard RB Rutgers, Nick Hartigan RB Brown, Ed Pricolo RB Sacred Heart.

Also I don't know if any two of the DB's listed are true cornerbacks so I would include Golden and Soelberg as WL mentioned.
 

Colonel_Reb

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I would include Andrew Pace CB from Vanderbilt in the second team, but other than that, it's a great list.
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Edited by: Colonel_Reb
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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update for the watch list: caught the Vandy-Wake Forest game last night. Andrew Pace went 1-on-1 with Wake's "speedy, big-play" receiver,chris davis,all night long, holding him to 3 catches for just 18 yards until the final drive of the game when Vandy switched to zone and their version of theprevent defense. davis caught 3 balls on the drive and ended the game with 41 yards total. i noticed that the announcer kept saying how Wake should get him involved more, he had to have said it at least 8 times! ha! great! coverage by Pace.


Nate Morton, conversely got little pre-game pub by the announcers as a threat for Wake but was open almost all night long. he caught 5 balls for 85 yards, routinely beating Vandy's other corner and safety's doubleteam. nice game.


Jay Cutler, though, the QB for Vandy, really got my attention. he was chosen over the black QB from Florida, chris leak, by the SEC coaches as first-team all-conference. he showed it, too, going 25-36 for 276 yards, a td, and a pick in the air, and leading the team in rushing, 89 yards on 10 carries.Edited by: Jimmy Chitwood
 

Colonel_Reb

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I'm glad Vandy won. Maybe they will have a good year and actually make it to a bowl for the first time in over 20 years. It would be nice for the 2'nd whitest SEC team.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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if you guys watch any of these guys play in any games, please post on the topic. what better way to become more knowledgable about players that the media refuses to hype? we have to do it ourselves.


i would appreciate it, because as much as i'd like to, i can't watch all their games myself. how unfortunate for me!
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Colonel_Reb

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Good thoughts Jimmy! Same goes for me, I only have ESPN where I'm at now, so I can't watch any of the other cable games. Unless the players are from western teams, I probably won't get a chance to see them much either.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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update for the watch list that i watched: i may have missed the boat on the RB's for the 1st team. as others have mentioned elsewhere on the board, Brian Leonard from Rutgers had a monster game. it was the first time i got to see him, and he reminds me a lot of Peyton Hillis from Arkansas. he's very versatile and athletic. when he hurdled that guy and then outran the corner, i thought the announcers were gonna go nuts! VERY impressive! and when he wasn't making plays himself, he was a devastating blocker.


Peyton Hillis also had a big day, although it wasagainst an over-matched opponent. 14 carries, 135 yards, and 3 td's. he did fumble twice, though. one of them was just sloppy ball-handling; the other was simply a perfect hit-helmet to ball. his combination of power, wiggle, and speed is simply incredible!


UAB's Dan Burks fumbled on the first play from scrimmage and only got 5 more touches in the game. he was benched in the second half, spending the rest of the game on the sideline with a towel on his head. the guy who replaced him was not exactly stellar, however, so his season might not be down the drain just yet.


Auburn's Tre Smith, as mentioned elsewhere with stats included,showed great burst in the open field, good vision, and amazing balance. despite his size, also showed impressive blocking ability picking up D-linemen and linebackers on the blitz. the running game was not used very well by the coaching staff, and Tuberville acknowledged at halftime that his O-line was doing very poorly. Smith was clearly the best back in the game, so hopefully the coaching staff will get their game plan straightened out.


Utah's Eric Weddle doesn't get much pub on this board, but that cat might be the best DB in the country. rod gilmore, a black announcer for ESPN, couldn't brag on him enough, raving about his cover skills, toughness, versatility, speed, etc. Weddle's coach even said he could start at8 positions for the Utes. and since he's also the holder on kicks, make that 9! for the game, Weddle had 8 tkls, 3tkls for loss, a forced fumble, and an interception he returned for a touchdown. once again, he plays corner in the nickle, always going man-to-man on the slot receiver. gilmore even pointed that out, talking about how hard it is to go one-on-one on the slot man but how Weddle does as good a job as anyone he's ever seen. pretty impressive.


Ohio's Scott Mayle is blazing fast, even the commentators said he had 4.3 speed. his problem is that he plays with a QB who couldn't hit the ground if he dropped the ball. that guy has an arm like vince young. yuck! Mayle constantly blew by his defender and his QB missed him. watching the game was like deja vu' over and over again. Mayle was open like a 7-11, but had few stats to show for it against Northwestern, finishing the game with 4 catches for 100 yards and 2 rushes for 13. he also returned 4 kickoffs for 97 yards.


Nothwestern's Tim McGarigle is one bad dude. wow! he's like a tackling machine. teammate, CB and return man,Jeff Backes missed the game for some reason.


Kyle Bell didn't start for Colorado State; he wasn't even the back-up. he was the third TB to get a shot toting the rock, but showed enough that he should be the guy the rest of the way. the top 2 guys were duds, while Bell showed power and speed, averaging an impressivenearly 5 ypc. he was one of two bright spots for CSU in the loss at Colorado.


the other was David Anderson. wow! the CU defense knew he going to be getting the ball, and they still couldn't stop him! 12 catches, 119 yards and a td. they couldn't cover that guy with a circus tent! CSU's Ben Stratton missed the game.


CU kicker Mason Crosby once again showed he is the nation's best, going 3-3 on FG's, including the 47-yard game winner with 4 seconds left. the guy has a golden toe or something. on a side note, the game showed a bunch of talented white skill position guys on both sides of the ball.


the only reason to watch the 'Cuse-W.V. game for Caste members was the Orange's Steve Gregory. for those of you who've never seen this kid play, take a look. too many people throw around the term "lock-down corner"about any good cover guy, but rarely is it true. this guy may qualify, though. i only got to watch the second half of the game, but despite missing 3 plays due to cramps, Gregory shut down his side of the field. the W.V. QB never evenattempted to throwto his man. i wouldn't have believed it if i hadn't watched for myself. the guy is unreal.


i tivoed the BYU game in order to watch Nate Soelberg. he had his bell rung on the first play, but bounced right back. it shows how tough a kid he is. looks very strong in run support and shows good speed covering the deep ball. he looks to have the physical tools to be a top-notch cover man, but needs to work on his technique. he peaks into the backfield too much, making him susceptible to play-action or double moves such as hitch-and-goes. thatneeds tobe fixed by the coaching staff, but physically he has what it takes. overall, BYU's defense is solid. they had a game plan of making BC sustain long drives by completing dink and dunk passes or running the ball. the plan worked; they gave up just 20 points despite their ownoffense never sustaining a drive. BYU's O was just 4-16 on 3rd down and 0-2 on 4th. that puts a lot of pressure on the defense. pick it up BYU!


the Memphis-Ole Miss game was black as night depsite being played in the afternoon. very few bright spots, but Memphis' Dustin Lopez played well at corner. he's not very physical, but is like white icing on those chocolate receivers. he gave up just one completion for 8 yards in man coverage. he was beat on another play, but the "phenomenal athlete" at wideout dropped the ball. go figure. Lopez has great cover skills and superior speed from what he displayed in the game, but he's a lot like Deion Sanders. i don't think he could knock down an old woman.


the final game i saw was FSU-Miami.three white guys stood out, two of whom are not on my watch list. O tackle Eric Winston from Miami is the real deal. the guy is the best in the game, in my opinion. teammate, TE Greg Olsen was incredible. he had 8 catches for 137 yards, and had a knack for making the big play. on one sequence he had 4 catches in a row on 3rd down, and they all resulted in 1st downs including a 3rd and 19. nice job!


FSU free safety Kyler Hall had one int, and nearly had 3 more. tremendous ball skills. i haven't seen a tkl total for him yet, but the guy was always around the ball. he's one to keep an eye on.


whew! i need a break. but do i ever love labor day weekend!Edited by: Jimmy Chitwood
 

jaxvid

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Hey Jimmy, that's great stuff man. Thanks for the update. I'd rather rather read your posts then a UP write up of the game.

Here's report from the game I attended, U of Michigan vs. Nortern Illinois. Nothing but white QB's and o'lineman. Actually NUI had two safeties that were white. (35) Dustin UTSCHIG, and (8) Mark REITER, Utschig led the team in tackles, and their white tightend Jake NORDIN, was 1451 12.8 after one catch a white fan yelled "don't let the white guy catch any passes!!!" Real funny.
 

whiteCB

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Good post Jimmy but how could you leave out Ohio St OLB Bobby Carpenter. He had 93 tackles, 2.5 sacks, and 3 ints last year. He's more than worthy to be on this list and will be a 1st round draft pick as well this year.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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hey whiteCB, that's the point of this list. i couldn't include everyone of all the talented white guys in the country. i was bound to overlook someone, even though it would be hard to knock the guys i chose off the list. the best part of what this board stands for, though, is it is what guys do on the field that matters. my pre-season list is very likely to change by the time the season finishes up. hype and all the mediaPR b.s. doesn't matter. if guys blow up and the media overlooks 'em, it is our duty to recognize their achievements. i encourage posters to comment on other talented and deserving players who are worthy of our praise. or on the ones mentioned above if they catch their games.


and thanks for the help!
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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i attended the Arkansas-Vanderbilt game on Saturday, and while it was a devastating loss for my beloved Hogs, i did get to see 2 of our potential All-Americans go at it.

Hillis is the real deal, but the coaches use him in a lot of different roles besides tailback. he catches balls from the slot or out of the backfield as a FB, including one on Saturday where he drug 3 Vandy defenders into the endzone! amazing! he also blocks for the other backs a lot. however, he suffers from a coaching staff who, when lining him up as a TB, isn't creative. they run dive plays almost exclusively, and considering the Arkansas QB is pathetic, opposing defenses have already clued in on who to stop for the Razorbacks.

on the other side of the ball, Vanderbilt cornerback Andrew Pace is awesome! the Hogs only threw at him once, a 7-yard completion on 2nd-and-9. other than that he took away an entire side of the field! Vandy's D usually lined Pace up on the side with fewer receivers (for example, the Hogs used a lot of 3-wide sets, with 2 to one side and 1 to the other, or had multiple tight ends, etc.). the Commodores would put Pace on the weak side and have that safety come up to cue the running backs, leaving Pace on an island all day. on the other side of the offense, the DB's would have deep safety help over the top. but despite being one-on-one all day, Pace was never challenged! that's either terrible game planning by the Hogs' coaches or tremendous respect for the only white corner in the SEC...
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also, Vandy's QB, Jay Cutler is just really good. if his receivers hadn't dropped as many balls as the crappy ones on my Razorbacks, he might have had only 2 incompletions!

also watched Ohio, and Scott Mayle once again suffered because of the game plan and poor QB. he only caught a couple of short passes and ran the ball on a couple of end arounds...poor guy deserves more opportunities, but Solich is determined to run the option i think.

on a side note, i've got a few games tivoed to watch this week and give updates on some other guys, but seriously, am i the only cat who watches any of these dudes play?
 

Colonel_Reb

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To answer your question Jimmy, no. It's just that I don't have the time to do all the analysis, and I don't have Tivo either. I will however be at all BYU's home games this year. Anyway, thanks for the info on that game. I don't think there are many castefootballers in the South right now. I know of a couple, but thats it. I still keep in touch with whats going on in the SEC, but my schoolwork is number one now.
 

white lightning

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Thanks Jimmy,you are the main man for college football.I look forward to reading all of your updates.Glad to have you here helping out at this great site.Keep up the great work.Who needs Sports Illustrated.lol.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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finally got to watch 2 games of note from last week. the first was Oregon State versus Boise State. now we all know about Mike Hass, but i just wanted to break down his game. what makes him truly special is not his speed. he's fast, but not especially so. he'll never star on the track team, but so what? what he brings to the table are superior hands, impressive strength, exceptional acceleration, and amazing balance. (i'm almost running out of superlatives!) he is incredibly quick in and out of his breaks (due to his balance and explosiveness) creating a large amount of space for his QB to throw the ball. he almost never drops a ball, even poorly thrown ones. he's difficult to jam because of his strength and agility (btw, he's also a better than average blocker on running plays). he quite literally is open, and could be thrown to, on almost every play. with his explosive first step and above-average speed he can get deep before a DB realizes it. furthermore, his ability to pick up yards after the catch is icing on the cake. a VERY special player. enjoy him while you can, because who knows how poorly the NFL will treat him?

next, i took a look at the ASU-LSU contest, and in particular ASU's cornerback Josh Golden. he is certainly a top-notch cover guy. has VERY impressive closing speed (as shown by catching former All-American kick returner, and LSU's fastest player, skyler green from behind on a play that ended up being called back on a penalty). he tends to cover deep balls better than the underneath stuff, often giving too much cushion for some reason. fluidly changes direction, doesn't have the dreaded "stiff hips." not an especially imposing physical specimen, Golden has adequate size and is more than willing to stick his nose in there with the big boys and make a hit. has a knack for being around the ball in the running game, but was only tested early in the passing game. his lack of strength makes shedding blocks difficult when trying to disengage to make a tackle. overall, a tremendous athlete (likely the fastest guy on ASU's roster unless they're red-shirting a speedster) with superior ball skills and deep speed who needs to refine his technique to become a total-shutdown corner. no doubt about it, though, the guy is a baller.
 

Colonel_Reb

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I hope to see Josh Golden on TV later this year. Sounds like a fun player to watch.
 

jaxvid

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I nominate Jimmy Chitwood for castefootball's: "Executive Chief of Scouting, NCAA Football".
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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ha!
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thanks though! makes me feel smart anyway.
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one other guy that i'll post on the college stars page, but we haven't mentioned is Texas Tech wide receiver and punt returner Danny Amendola. he's productive enough to make my watch list, but i've not yet eyeballed him. any of you guys seen him play? last week he had 3 punt returns for 57 yards and 5 catches for 91 and 2 touchdowns.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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watch list guys i caught this week:

Eastern Michigan wideout Eric Deslauriers looks very good. he's a long, rangy receiver who gets on top of defensive backs in a hurry. he's about 6'5", 215 lbs. or so, and reminds me a lot of plaxico burress who played at Michigan State and is now in the NFL. it was the first time i had watched him, and it was exceedingly difficult to learn much because Michigan beat the crap out of EMU, but he looks like the real deal. the announcers even were bragging on him a little bit. they said he runs a 4.4 40, and i can believe it. he covers a lot of ground very quickly in his routes. the bad deal is, a lot like Scott Mayle at Ohio, Eric doesn't have much of a QB throwing to him. at least he was awful in this game, at one point throwing 7 incompletions in a row. terrible mechanics and a short-arm throwing motion. yuck! anyway, the jury is still out on how impressive Eric can be, but he certainly has been productive and is put together well. and if his QB is always that erratic, it makes his stats all the more incredible.

Syracuse's Steve Gregory impresses me every time i watch the Orange. the guy, in my mind, is probably the best corner in the country. period. he has tremendous acceleration, deep speed, unbelievable awareness, and the always-necessary fluid hips. and he tackles very well in the open field, always a concern with corners. the first play of the game was a bubble screen to his guy and he came up to tackle him for a 1-yard loss. nice! later, he made as nice a play as a corner will make this year...even the announcers were raving about it. on a double move, a hitch-and-go where the QB pump-faked and everything-a well-designed play, Gregory was all alone down the sideline and actually ran the route better than the receiver! he made the pick, and they only threw in his direction one more time, this time for a one-yard completion. the guy is phenomenal!

also, Syracuse has a defensive end that i had never noticed before: Ryan LaCasse, a senior. this dude is unreal! 6'3", 250 or so, and runs like a deer! in high school he ran a 10.5 100 meters! he has a nonstop motor, and that motor is attached to one fast mo-fo. he made a lot of plays, including chasing down Virginia's mobile QB on several occasions and he even intercepted a ball. this guy is over-talented and thus far appears to be under-appreciated. hopefully we'll correct that.

On a side note: didn't watch the game between SMU and Texas A&M live, but did catch some highlights. two guys on our list play fot the Aggies, and both are looking sharp. Jaxson Appel, as always, was around the ball. he recovered a fumble in the endzone for a score, and generally just hit anything that moved. wide receiver Chad Schroeder continues to be under-used but incredibly productive. he has only 3 catches on the year, but they have all gone for touchdowns. on the other side of the ball, SMU's best receiver is Bobby Chase, another big wideout- 6'4" 205 and runs a 4.5 40. Chase is a junior.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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watch list update:

Texas A&M WR Chad Schroeder is amazing! the Aggie sports guys call him "the touchdown machine." again, A&M used him sparely, but as the game announcers said "he makes the most of his opportunities." arguably the fastest player on the team, he touched the ball just twice in the game but scored both times: a 13-yard run and a 44-yard catch and run.

that makes 5 times he's had the ball in his hands this season- 4 catches and 1 run- and he's scored 5 TDs (which leads the team, btw). you'd think they'd get him the ball more often...

Utah's Eric Weddle continues his dominant performance and is probably THE best safety in the country. he recovered a fumble and snagged another interception in Utah's win last night. just for the record, Utah started 3 white DBs (in an unusual situation to counter Air Force's option game) and Air Force's entire secondary were white guys. also Utah started three white receivers and Air Force's best wideout looked to be American Indian/white, as well.Edited by: Jimmy Chitwood
 

surfsider

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Forgive the ignorance re: Schroeder but does he start for A&M? Seems like an awfully miniscule amount of touches.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Thats an incredible touches to TD ratio in my opinion.
 
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