Author Archives: ianbethune

2011 BlogPoll Top 25 Ballot – Week 13

As many of you know, I am one of the voters in the BlogPoll Top 25. Each week, bloggers across the country representing the various FBS schools get together and put together their own top 25’s. Here at SOX & Dawgs, we are representing the UConn Huskies. The votes are then tabulated on Tuesday.

Each week we are asked to do an initial ballot. This allows you the reader to let us know in the comments whether you agree with my choices or not. The initial ballots will normally be done on Sunday.

After I check the comments for the initial ballot, I then resubmit my final ballot for the week. If there are comments, I’ll take them into consideration before submitting the final ballot by 8 a.m.on Tuesday.

You can check out the ballot I submitted earlier today by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the homepage.

SB Nation BlogPoll Top 25 College Football Rankings

SOX & Dawgs Ballot – Week 13

Rank Team Delta
1 LSU Tigers
2 Alabama Crimson Tide Arrow_up 1
3 Arkansas Razorbacks Arrow_up 2
4 Virginia Tech Hokies Arrow_up 4
5 Stanford Cardinal Arrow_up 4
6 Houston Cougars Arrow_up 4
7 Oklahoma St. Cowboys Arrow_down -5
8 Boise St. Broncos Arrow_up 3
9 Oregon Ducks Arrow_down -5
10 Oklahoma Sooners Arrow_down -4
11 Georgia Bulldogs Arrow_up 1
12 Michigan St. Spartans Arrow_up 1
13 South Carolina Gamecocks Arrow_up 1
14 Wisconsin Badgers Arrow_up 1
15 Penn St. Nittany Lions Arrow_up 2
16 Clemson Tigers Arrow_down -9
17 Michigan Wolverines Arrow_up 2
18 Kansas St. Wildcats Arrow_up 2
19 USC Trojans Arrow_up 2
20 TCU Horned Frogs Arrow_up 2
21 Nebraska Cornhuskers Arrow_down -5
22 Notre Dame Fighting Irish Arrow_up 2
23 Virginia Cavaliers
24 Southern Miss. Golden Eagles Arrow_down -6
25 West Virginia Mountaineers
Dropouts: Florida St. Seminoles

SB Nation BlogPoll College Football Top 25 Rankings »

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2011 NCAA Football Rankings – Week 13 (Nov. 20)

AP & USA Today Coaches' Polls

The NCAA college football rankings are out for week 13 and after a crazy weekend of upsets, there’s only one constant in the top five teams of both polls from last week. And that is the fact the LSU Tigers are ranked No. 1.

LSU is followed by Alabama, Arkansas, Stanford and Oklahoma State in the AP Poll. In the USA Today Coaches’ Poll, they are followed by Alabama, Arkansas, Virginia Tech and Stanford.

There are no Big East teams ranked in the top 25 of the AP Poll. In the coaches’ poll, the West Virginia Mountaineers stay at No. 23 after being on a bye this past weekend. They are top team in the others receiving votes in the AP Poll.

The Rutgers Scarlet Knights are the only team from the Big East among the others receiving votes in both polls. The Cincinnati Bearcats are also among the others receiving votes in the AP Poll.

It’ll be interesting to see how the BCS Standings look when they come out later on Sunday night.

For a full look at the 2011 NCAA Football Rankings for Week 13 (Nov. 20), click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

AP Top 25 USA Today Coaches’ Poll
RK TEAM REC PTS PVS RK TEAM REC PTS PVS
1 LSU (60) 11-0 1500 1 1 LSU (59) 11-0 1475 1
2 Alabama 10-1 1440 3 2 Alabama 10-1 1413 3
3 Arkansas 10-1 1376 6 3 Arkansas 10-1 1349 6
4 Stanford 10-1 1224 8 4 Virginia Tech 10-1 1242 7
5 Oklahoma State 10-1 1206 2 5 Stanford 10-1 1222 9
6 Virginia Tech 10-1 1133 9 6 Oklahoma State 10-1 1156 2
7 Boise State 9-1 1025 10 7 Houston 11-0 1075 10
8 Houston 11-0 1018 11 8 Boise State 9-1 982 11
9 Oregon 9-2 1008 4 9 Oregon 9-2 933 4
10 USC 9-2 964 18 10 Michigan State 9-2 928 12
11 Michigan State 9-2 876 12 11 Oklahoma 8-2 826 5
12 Oklahoma 8-2 819 5 12 Wisconsin 9-2 808 13
13 Georgia 9-2 815 13 13 South Carolina 9-2 806 14
14 South Carolina 9-2 762 14 14 Georgia 9-2 803 15
15 Wisconsin 9-2 714 15 15 Kansas State 9-2 671 17
16 Kansas State 9-2 682 16 16 Michigan 9-2 618 18
17 Michigan 9-2 527 20 17 Clemson 9-2 587 8
18 Clemson 9-2 515 7 18 TCU 9-2 494 19
19 TCU 9-2 456 19 19 Penn State 9-2 455 21
20 Penn State 9-2 398 21 20 Baylor 7-3 302 NR
21 Baylor 7-3 383 25 21 Georgia Tech 8-3 203 23
22 Nebraska 8-3 155 17 22 Nebraska 8-3 165 16
22 Notre Dame 8-3 155 24 23 West Virginia 7-3 158 23
24 Virginia 8-3 147 NR 24 Notre Dame 8-3 156 25
25 Georgia Tech 8-3 77 NR 25 Virginia 8-3 154 NR
Dropped out of rankings: Dropped out of rankings:
Southern Miss 22, Florida State 23 Southern Miss 20, Florida State 22
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
West Virginia 37, Tulsa 34, Auburn 28, Southern Miss 12, Rutgers 6, Arkansas State 4, Iowa State 3, Cincinnati 1, Rutgers 54, Auburn 33, Southern Miss 25, Tulsa 23, Brigham Young 21, Arkansas State 10, NORIL 10, Missouri 8, Texas A&M 4, Utah 3, Texas 1, Florida State 1, Iowa State 1

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 11/20

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams as well as some of the other sports. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team as they’ll host the Coppin State Eagles this afternoon at the XL Center in Hartford, CT. Tip is scheduled for 1 p.m. and the game will be broadcast locally in CT on SNY.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Daniels Overshadowed; Lamb Hurt [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Jeremy Lamb Sprains Ankle [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Dom also answered a question in his mailbag [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Lamb sprains ankle in practice [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Drummond may start for UConn while Lamb could sit [CT Post]

Calhoun Wants More Bully Out Of Oriakhi [Hartford Courant]

DeAndre Daniels thriving in Andre Drummond’s shadow [New Haven Register]

Huskies are still working on their chemistry [The Day]

UConn Men’s Basketball Preview Glance — Vs. Coppin State [The Hour]

UConn Football links

What we learned in the Big East: Week 12 [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

No title defense for UConn [Chip Malafronte – New Haven Register]

Report Card: Louisville [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Postgame wrap Louisville [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Huskies Miss Out On Chances [UConnHuskies.com]

Louisville knocks off UConn, which falls out of Big East race [CT Post]

Huskies Fall To Louisville, 34-20 [Hartford Courant]

Failed Interception Bid One Of Many UConn Mistakes [Hartford Courant]

Bye Week Didn’t Help Huskies [Hartford Courant]

Another Painful Fumble For UConn [Hartford Courant]

Louisville ends Huskies’ Big East title hopes [New Haven Register]

Things go from bad to worse for Huskies [The Day]

Louisville football downs UConn 34-20 [Louisville Courier-Journal]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Strategy To Beat The ESPNU System [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Long Stretch For Mowins Includes UConn/Stanford Monday [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

No. 4 UConn Welcomes No. 5 Stanford on Monday [UConnHuskies.com]

Other UConn related links

W. Swimming. Swimming And Diving Competes on First Day In Pittsburgh [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Swimming. Men’s Swimming And Diving In Fourth At Pittsburgh [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Ice Hockey. UConn Women’s Hockey Loses Sixth Straight to No. 5 Boston [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Men’s Hockey Rallies But Falls at No. 9 Yale, 5-3 [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Cross Country. Huskies Take 11th at IC4A Championships To End Season [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Cross Country. Lauren Sara Set for NCAA Championships [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Senegalese standouts lead UConn in NCAA tourney [Norwich Bulletin]

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Voros Eager to Help Whale

By Bruce Berlet

Aaron Voros knows all about the unemployment rate in the United States continuing to hover around nine percent.

CT WhaleVoros, who spent the last eight seasons in the AHL and NHL, was part of the jobless force as he sat around New York City, training on his own but without work prospects, not far from where his former team played in Madison Square Garden and where he and Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist and best friend/left wing Sean Avery own a restaurant.

Voros was kicking himself a bit for passing on a few opportunities, including in Russia and Switzerland, to escape the unemployment ranks this summer. Then he failed to get an invite to a NHL training camp, so he decided to call Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather on Monday night to ask for a chance to join the Connecticut Whale. Sather consulted with Rangers assistant GM/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld, who thought the rugged left wing might help the parent club and/or its AHL affiliate. Voros was delighted to sign a 25-game professional tryout contract on Tuesday and begin practicing with the Whale on Wednesday, and might make his Whale debut Sunday afternoon at Providence.

“I’m very fortunate to get the opportunity, and now my only goal is to help this team win,” said Voros, an eighth-round pick of the New Jersey Devils in 2001. “After playing for four years in the NHL, it still burns in my heart to play there. The season started without me having a team, and then I was waiting it out before I said I have to get playing. I called Mr. Sather and asked if I could play with the Whale and contribute if I could crack their lineup. He gave me a chance, and that’s what I’m doing now, one day at a time. All I’m concerned with is cracking this lineup and helping them win. Nothing else matters to me right now, and I’m really excited to be here.”

The 30-year-old Voros is actually happy to be anywhere, after what transpired in the second game of his sophomore year at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, where he had a full athletic scholarship and was named to the Central Collegiate Hockey Association All-Rookie team as a freshman. Voros drove to the net and fell on his leg, which kind of buckled and caused severe pain. The next day, he went for an X-ray, and doctors discovered a lump behind his left knee half the size of a baseball. After a magnetic resonance imaging test, three doctors over the next six months diagnosed the problem as osteosarcoma, a type of malignant bone cancer.

Voros tried to play through his pain and the trauma of apparently having a malignant cancer, then the Devils fortunately stepped in and told him to get second and third opinions. Fortunately, Voros listened, and after three more biopsies, the tumor was deemed benign.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“Obviously I was very thankful for that,” Voros said.

Voros then began flying to his hometown of Vancouver, British Columbia, and Seattle, Wash., to get tested and then have surgery around Christmas, a fitting time for a very religious individual. Doctors carved around his tumor, removed some of the femur and packed it with part of a cadaver.

“You go from on top of the world, thinking you might be a few months away from signing your first NHL contract, to being in a hospital bed with doctors telling you that in the next 48 hours you might have a life-or-death situation and that the best case scenario is you’re losing your leg from the hip down,” Voros said. “But it was more scary for my mom and dad and two little sisters, who definitely took it a lot tougher than me. At least when something happens to yourself, you’re kind of in the moment with the ups and downs. You don’t really notice them as they happen.

“The greatest experiences of your life you kind of take for granted as they’re happening, and the worst you kind of daze through them. I guess I felt kind of invincible at the time, and I guess that’s how I had to be. No matter what doctors told me, I always would ask how long before I could skate again, what types of procedures can we have to save as much of my leg as possible. I just had this mentality that I would make it no matter what, and God was very good to me.”

The surgeries were a success, but while Voros was recovering, he contracted a staph infection and had a Hickman line inserted into his heart. He had tubes attached to a pack that fed antibiotics into his system all day every day for eight weeks. He had to flush the tubes out daily with saline because the end of the tube by his heart would clot. He ended up having six operations and losing 50 pounds, dropping from 205 to 155.

But Voros worked overtime to regain the weight and his form so he could play his final collegiate season (2003-04), and then signed with the Devils.

“I was very blessed to have persevered with the help of a lot of people,” Voros said. “The people who are around me – my mom, my dad and God … I was very blessed.”

But hard work runs in the family, as his grandparents emigrated from Hungary in 1956 and settled in Vancouver after leaving during the Hungarian Revolution. In an interview in 2008, Voros said he is proud of his Hungarian roots and would love to represent Hungary on the international level if it were permissible.

“When the Rangers opened the season in Prague (Czech Republic) a few years ago, Hungary TV was there,” Voros recalled. “I had poked around about the opportunity to play for the national team because it would have obviously made my dad very proud. He didn’t get to see me play in the NHL because he passed away the summer before of a stroke.”

Still, after enjoying the minor miracle and some divine intervention, Voros played 21/2 seasons with the Devils’ top affiliate in Albany and then Lowell before being traded on March 1, 2007 to the Minnesota Wild for a seventh-round pick in 2008. After starting the 2007-08 season with the AHL’s Houston Aeros, Voros was called up and played his first NHL game against the Colorado Avalanche on Nov. 11, 2007. Five days later, he scored his first NHL goal against his hometown Vancouver Canucks and star goalie Roberto Luongo.

Voros had seven goals and seven assists in 55 games in his NHL rookie season and was the Wild’s nominee for the 2008 Bill Masterton Trophy, as the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to the game, by the Twin Cities chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association. While with the Wild, Voros usually played on the top line with current New York Rangers standout wing Marian Gaborik and Pavol Demitra, a 16-year NHL veteran who was among the 35 members of the Yaroslavl Lokomotiv team in the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia to die in a plane crash on Sept. 7.

“That was very tough,” Voros said of Demitra’s death. “We were good friends when we played in Minny and golfed a lot when I was there for one summer. He and I and Gabby hung out a bit, used to eat together, and then we kept in touch off and on through the years. His death is really terrible. What people say and what you’ve heard are true. You really won’t find a better guy or teammate. He’s the kind of guy that if you spend a little bit of time with him, he grasps you, he touches you. Everything about him was great. He was a great person, so his death is definitely heart-wrenching. But it was terrible for all those guys. It’s just unfortunate.”

Despite the strong friendship with Gaborik and Demitra, Voros signed a three-year, $3.3 million contract with the Rangers on July 1, 2008, fulfilling a childhood dream to play for the team he grew up rooting for 3,000 miles away in Vancouver.

“I was a huge Mark Messier fan and kind of mentored my game after him,” Voros said. “When he got traded to the Rangers when I was 10, I just stuck with wherever he went. I was borderline obsessed.”

Voros was especially obsessed in the spring of 1994, when Messier and close friend/fellow future Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, a native of Cheshire and playoff MVP, led the Rangers to the Stanley Cup, beating the Canucks in seven games to end a 54-year title drought.

“I think I was suspended from elementary school the day we (the Rangers) won the Cup for some sort of elementary school prank,” Voros said with a smile. “They sent me home early, so I had to delay my own personal Stanley Cup parade for the next day. But I was definitely an obnoxious Rangers fan in Vancouver.

“I didn’t go home this year during the Stanley Club finals (the Canucks lost in seven games to the Boston Bruins), but you would be hard pressed to find a city that was as passionate as Vancouver was in 1994. I know people there, and Vancouver is more ‘corporatey’ now. Back then, it was more blue-collar. The landscape of that city has definitely changed.”

When Voros’ first shot at free agency arrived, he jumped at the opportunity to sign with the Rangers.

“As you grow older, you kind of lose touch of your favorite team and more fill up your own career,” Voros said. “Your commitment and focus goes to that, and you kind of lose touch with what’s going on in other leagues. But my whole life I considered myself a diehard Rangers fan, and when the Rangers called during the first chance I had at free agency, it was definitely a no-brainer.”

Voros had 11 goals, 12 assists and 211 penalty minutes in 95 games with the Rangers before he and forward Ryan Hillier were dealt to the Anaheim Ducks for defenseman Steve Eminger on July 9, 2010. Voros was scoreless with 43 penalty minutes in 12 games with the Ducks before he sustained a broken orbital bone above his left eye in a fight with Canucks defenseman Kevin Bieksa on Dec. 8, 2010. Voros was placed on the Ducks’ injured reserve list until Feb. 11 and then was scoreless in two games with the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, before being traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Feb. 15 for a conditional seventh-round pick in this year’s NHL draft. He had three goals, four assists and 61 PIM in 26 games with the Toronto Marlies but wasn’t re-signed in the offseason and eventually called Sather.

Voros’ ties to New York had already been enhanced in May, when he, Avery and Lundqvist opened their first restaurant in Manhattan called “Tiny’s & the Bar Upstairs”. It’s located at 135 West Broadway in the Tribeca district of southern Manhattan and has become a favorite among the local community. Later that month, Voros, Avery and future Rangers center Brad Richards, the plum of the offseason free-agent crop, vacationed together in Jamaica.

“After playing for the Rangers for a couple of years, I was able to form a lot of relationships and set a couple of roots down like anyone who falls in love with the area does,” Voros said. “I was very fortunate to have some good friends, and we are obviously still great friends, plus Sean is my best friend, so it was a good scenario. I live up here now, but the city is definitely a great place.”

As for his friendship with the enigmatic Avery, who plays a similar gritty style, Voros smiled and said, “I like to think we’re almost yin and yang. But we match well. He’s very bright and very calculated. He’s almost just misunderstood and has got his own resume.”

Like Whale forward Jordan Owens did, Voros would like to add to his resume and convert a PTO into an AHL contract. Then maybe he could return to the NHL, where he had 18 goals, 19 assists and 395 penalty minutes in 162 games with the Wild, Rangers and Ducks.

Whale coach Ken Gernander knew the kind of player that he was getting before Voros even arrived Wednesday.

“He’s got a bit of grit to his game, he’s got some size (6 feet 4, 210 pounds) and is obviously a capable player having played at the NHL level and having some veteran experience,” Gernander said. “There’s quite a package there, but he had just been waiting as a free agent and skating kind of on his own, so there’s a difference between conditioning and game shape. We’ll just kind of monitor him and see when we can get him in.”

After all that Voros has had to endure, he can wait another few days, if necessary, to start his latest comeback.

Video: Dan Henderson Beats Shogun Rua By Unanimous Decision at UFC 139

In the main event at UFC 139 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA on Saturday night, we may have witnessed what was the greatest fight ever in the UFC between Dan Henderson and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua.

The pair battled for five rounds but in the end, it was Henderson who came out on top by unanimous decision (48-47, 48-47, 48-47) over Shogun.

The pair were awarded $70,000 bonuses by UFC president Dana White for fight of the night honors.

Here is the video of each of the rounds.

Round 1:

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To continue watching, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Round 2:

{flvremote}http://cdn.ianbethune.com/hendersonruaufc139round2.flv|375|281{/flvremote}

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Round 3:

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Round 4:

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Round 5 plus post-fight interviews:

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Video: Wanderlei Silva Beats Cung Le By TKO at UFC 139

In the co-main event at UFC 139 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA on Saturday night, Wanderlei Silva beat Cung Le by TKO (strikes) at 4:49 of the second round.

The pair were awarded $70,000 bonuses by UFC president Dana White for fight of the night honors.

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Video: Uriah Faber Submits Brian Bowles at UFC 139

In the third fight of the main event at UFC 139 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA, Uriah Faber beat Brian Bowles by submission (guillotine choke) at 1:27 of the second round.

Faber was awarded a $70,000 bonus by UFC president Dana White for submission of the night honors.

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Defenseman Lee Baldwin Rejoins Whale

HARTFORD, November 19, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Lee Baldwin to the Whale from its ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleAfter being assigned to the Road Warriors November 3, Baldwin, a second-year pro, was scoreless and +1 in four ECHL games, with five penalty minutes and four shots on goal.  In three games this season with the Whale, Baldwin had no points, with a +2 and six shots on goal.

Baldwin was signed as a free agent by the Rangers March 22, 2010, out of the University of Alaska-Anchorage.

The Whale return to action tomorrow, Sunday, November 20, visiting the Providence Bruins for a 4:05 PM game.  All the CT Whale Rockin’ Hockey action can be heard live on “The Rock”, 106.9 FM, WCCC, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  The Whale’s next home game is coming up this Wednesday, November 23, as the Portland Pirates invade the XL Center for a 7:00 start.  Five-thousand fans at that game receive a Whale rally towel, courtesy of Xfinity.

Tickets to all 2011-12 Whale home games are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Save on your tickets, and get the best seats, with a ticket plan for the Whale’s 2011-12 AHL campaign, which are on sale now. For information on season seats and mini plans, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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Video: Highlights of UConn Football’s 34-20 Loss To Louisville

Here are the lowlights, or highlights depending on your rooting interest, of the UConn Huskies football team’s 34-20 loss to the Louisville Cardinals on Saturday afternoon at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, CT on Saturday afternoon.

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UConn Beats Itself in 34-20 Loss To Louisville

Louisville's Dominique Brown, left, scores a touchdown as Connecticut's Blidi Wreh-Wilson (5) looks on during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Conn., Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011.

It’s hard to win a football game when you beat yourself with stupid mistakes. And that’s what happened to the UConn Huskies on Saturday afternoon with horrible special teams to start the game, eight dropped passes, a dumb roughing the kicker penalty and then lateraling the ball at the end of the game when you still had a timeout.

The end result of all those blunders was a 34-20 loss to the Louisville Cardinals in front of 34,483 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, CT.

The Huskies fall to 4-6 (2-3 Big East) and need to win their final two games to become bowl-eligible. Speaking of becoming bowl-eligible, the Cardinals got there as they improve to 6-5 and are now tied with the Rutgers Scarlet Knights at 4-2 for first place in the Big East.

The final mistake UConn made came after they successfully executed an onsides kick and recovered it on their 41 yard line with 11 seconds to go in the game. They needed to go 59 yards and had one timeout.

But after Johnny McEntee hit Ryan Griffin at the 50 yard line. Instead of falling down and calling timeout, he lateraled the ball to Isiah Moore who then threw it back to McEntee and then McEntee decided to throw another forward pass that was picked off by Malcom Mitchell who returned it for a touchdown to end the game.

Had they just called a timeout, they would have a better chance to tie the game up. Instead, they’ll probably find themselves on ESPN’s Not Top 10 later in the week.

UConn really did beat themselves in this game.

They allowed Adrian Bushnell to return the opening kickoff for a touchdown. They dropped seven easily catchable balls on offense and even Blidi Wreh-Wilson, who returned after missing the last five games, dropped a sure-fire interception.

When you have an offense like UConn’s, you need all the help you can get. So when you drop seven balls in key situations, like Isiash Moore did on third down a few times, it hurts. It was just him though as Kashif Moore, Lyle McCombs and Ryan Griffin all had drops as well.

Louisville’s rushing defense wasn’t exactly spectacular coming into the game but they shutdown the combination of Scott McCummings and McCombs forcing McEntee to throw the ball 43 times. Not exactly the bread and butter of UConn’s offense as we know.

McCummings led the team 40 yards rushing while McCombs had just 33 yards. McEntee did throw for 253 yards but only completed 18 of his 43 passes with a touchdown pass and an interception.

We really can’t place blame on McEntee for this one like we’ve been able to do in the past. I really think if some of those drops had been caught, the complexion of the game probably would have changed.

At this point though, Pasqualoni has a decision to make.

Does he keep going with McEntee as his quarterback for the rest of the season? Or does he see what McCummings can do for an entire game?

Personally, I don’t think he’s got much to lose by going with McCummings in the final two games. It’s possible he could lose the final two games by doing what he’s been doing all season long. Why not try something different and see what happens.

Scoring:

Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Final
Louisville Cardinals 14 0 7 13 34
UConn Huskies 0 10 0 10 20

1st quarter

LOU – 14:45 – Adrian Bushell 100 Yd Kickoff Return (Chris Philpott Kick)

LOU – 05:51- Daniel Brown 6 Yd Run (Chris Philpott Kick)

2nd quarter

CON – 08:41- Dave Teggart 24 Yard Field Goal

CON – 00:53 – Kashif Moore 5 Yd Run (Dave Teggart Kick)

3rd quarter

LOU – 03:17 – Teddy Bridgewater 5 Yd Run (Chris Philpott Kick)

4th quarter

LOU – 09:52 – Teddy Bridgewater 1 Yd Run (Chris Philpott Kick)

CON – 08:34 – Kashif Moore 31 Yd Pass From Johnny McEntee (Dave Teggart Kick)

CON – 00:13 – Dave Teggart 37 Yard Field Goal

LOU – 00:00 – Malcolm Mitchell 36 Yd Fumble Return

To continue reading, the Louisville Cardinals @ UConn Huskies recap, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Offensive Players of the Game:

Do I really have to pick one? Do I go with Louisville QB Teddy Bridgewater who was 14-of-22 for 174 yards and interception but nine rushes for -1 yards and two touchdowns? Or do you I go with Kashif Moore who had seven catches for 110 yards and a touchdown but also had some key drops? You decide because I can’t.

Defensive Player of the Game:

UConn LB Sio Moore had 13 tackles (seven solo, six assisted), a sack for a loss of 11 yards and one pass breakup.

Turning Point of the Game:

With Lousiville holding a 14-10 lead in the third quarter, UConn forced the Cardinals into a punting situation at their 13 yard line. They would have gotten good field position at Louisville’s 45 yard line. Instead, Kendall Reyes was called for roughing the punter and the five yard penalty gave the Cardinals a first down. Nine plays later, Lousiville found themselves in the end zone and never looked back from there.

Offensive Notes:

Johnny McEntee was 18-of-43 for 253 yards with one touchdown pass and an interception. He was also sacked once. Scott McCummings led the Huskies with 40 yards rushing on eight carries. He was 0-for-2 on passing opportunities. Lyle McCombs had 10 rushes for 33 yards and two catches for 23 yards. Kashif Moore had seven catches for 110 yards and a touchdown. Isiah Moore had five catches for 60 yards and Ryan Griffin had two catches for 43 yards.

Defensive Notes:

Sio Moore led all players with 13 tackles (seven solo, six assisted), a sack for 11 yards and a pass breakup. Jory Johnson had 11 tackles (seven solo, four assisted) including three tackles for a loss of 16 yards. Yawin Smallwood had eight tackles (two solo, six assisted). Trevardo Williams had three tackles and two sacks for a loss of five yards. Dwayne Gratz had three tackles and an interception.

Special Teams Notes:

The kickoff coverage was awful except for the perfectly executed onsides kick at the end of the game. They allowed one 100 yard touchdown return and a total of 190 yards on five kickoff returns.

Injuries:

No injuries for the Huskies that I saw.

Blidi Wreh-Wilson did return to action after missing five games after injuring his knee.

Officials:

Referee: Jerry McGinn; Umpire: Richard Feeney; Linesman: Steve Matarante; Line judge: Ralph Newell; Back judge: James Downey; Field judge: Ben Vasconcells; Side judge: Chris Junjulas

Game Notes:

Louisville Cardinals @ UConn Huskies 11-19-11 box score

Here are postgame quotes from UConn head coach Paul Pasqualoni as well as some of his players and Louisville head coach Charlie Strong and his players.

Here are the starters for UConn:

OFFENSE
WR 6 Moore, Kashif
TE 94 Griffin, Ryan
LT 71 Ryan, Mike
LG 69 Greene, Steve
C 57 Petrus, Moe
RG 63 Masters, Adam
RT 77 Friend, Kevin
QB 18 McEntee, Johnny
TB 43 McCombs, Lyle
FB 39 Hinkley, Mark
WR 83 Moore, Isiah

DEFENSE
DE 48 WILLIAMS, Trev.
DT 4 MARTIN, Tywon
DT 99 Reyes, Kendall
DE 91 Joseph, Jesse
SLB 3 Moore, Sio
MLB 33 SMALLWOOD, Yaw.
WLB 28 Johnson, Jory
CB 7 Gratz, Dwayne
S 15 Junior, Jerome
S 40 Brown, Ty-Meer
DB 5 WREH-WILSON, B.

The rest of the notes are courtesy of the UConn Sports Information Department:

  • The loss drops the Huskies to 2-3 in BIG EAST play and 4-6 overall
  • UConn allowed the opening kickoff to be returned 100 yards for a TD
  • RB Lyle McCombs eclipsed the 1,000 yard plateau for the season in the first quarter
  • McCombs was held to 10 carries and 33 yards (both season lows)
  • K Dave Teggart connected on a 24-yard FG to put the first UConn points on the board in the second quarter
  • WR Kashif Moore rushed for a 5-yard TD run (first rush TD of his career) as well as hauled in a 31-yard TD reception
  • Moore lead the Huskies with 7 receptions and 110 yards
  • QB Johnny McEntee finished 18-43 for 253 yards with a TD and INT
  • The UConn defense registered 10 tackles for loss paced by LB Jory Johnson (13 tackles, 3.0 TFL) and LB Sio Moore (11 tackles, 2.5 TFL)
  • DL Trevardo Williams notched 2.0 sacks
  • Cole Wagner punted 9 times with an average of 41.9 yards/punt
  • The Husky offense only held the ball for 21:41 leaving the defense on the field for 38:19
  • UConn converted only 3 of 16 3rd down opportunities
  • The Huskies recovered an onside kick with 0:11 remaining

Big East Games and Results:

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Cincinnati 3
Rutgers 20

USF
Miami (FL), 3:30 p.m.

Things to Work On:

  • At this point, does it really matter.
  • Get the receivers some Stick’em. Those dropped balls killed them.
  • Shore up the holes on the kickoff coverage.
  • Make a decision at quarterback.

Up Next:

The Huskies will play their final home game of the 2011 season when they’ll host the Rutgers Scarlet Knights for a noon kickoff at Rentschler Field.

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Photo credit: AP Photo