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2005 BIG 12 Conference Preview |
Texas and Oklahoma. Oklahoma and
Texas. Though the Big 12 will have several strong
teams again this season, the conference will once
again be decided when these two titans clash on Oct.
8 in Dallas. The rivalry has been rather hammer-and-nail
the last few years, with the Sooners taking five straight
against the Longhorns by an average score of 36-13.
But I believe that this is finally the year that Texas
breaks through.
Colorado should once again pull through
in the North Division, but it will receive stiff competition
from some unlikely sources. I predict that Iowa State
and Kansas will both have respectable seasons (by
their modest standards) and push the Buffaloes. The
wild card of the entire conference may be the Nebraska
Cornhuskers. They’re coming off their first
losing season in almost 40 years and should be back
with a vengeance.
Although players like Cedric Benson
and Jason White have departed, there is still plenty
of star power remaining in the Big 12. Sophomore running
back Adrian Peterson has to enter the season as the
favorite for the Heisman Trophy, but Texas QB Vincent
Young and Texas A&M signal caller Reggie McNeal
should give him a run for his money.
Here is how I predict the standings
will look like in late December:
Texas Longhorns (10-1, 7-1)
Preview
Mack Brown shamelessly lobbied for
his team to earn a BCS bid last year, and made the
most of the opportunity by beating Michigan 38-37
in the first-ever meeting between the traditional
powers. Brown parlayed that exciting win, and a 70-19
record at Texas over the last seven years, into a
$25 million contract for the next 10 seasons. Gone
are Cedric Benson (Chicago Bears) and Derrick Johnson
(Kansas City Chiefs), two of the best players at their
respective positions in school history. But plenty
of talent, and 16 starters, remain from last year’s
Rose Bowl champs. But the question remains –
can the Longhorns beat Oklahoma? They meet in Dallas
on Oct. 8 in a game that will again decide the conference
championship.
Strengths: Vince Young
quarterbacked the nation’s seventh-ranked offense
in 2004 and became the first Texas quarterback to
both run and pass for over 1,000 yards. He is 17-2
as a starter, and his name is already on the short
list of players gunning for the Heisman Trophy. He
will have the benefit of a mammoth offensive line
in front of him, anchored by All-American tackle Jonathan
Scott, and playmakers in WR Limas Sweed and RB Ramonce
Taylor. Defensively, they return nine starters from
a unit that finished 16th in the country against the
run. They have depth on the front line, and a solid
secondary.
Weakness:: Without
Benson, the Longhorns lack a true No. 1 back. Taylor
averaged an astounding 10.1 yards per carry last year,
but he only had 28 touches. Selvin Young is another
possibility in the backfield, but he missed all of
spring practice to focus on his grades. The linebacking
core is also an area of concern, simply because an
animal like Johnson is nearly impossible to replace.
Finally, even though it may have more talent, can
Texas get past that severe mental block and beat the
Sooners?
Best Bet: Nov. 5 vs.
Baylor. Texas has outscored the Bears 100-14 the last
two years. The number on this game will be enormous,
but playing in Baylor should keep it at or below 40.
Texas will be trying to impress voters late in the
year. 58-7 sounds about right.
Be Wary Of: Sept. 10 at Ohio State.
Texas has been a poor 11-16 ATS against non-conference
foes, including 7-7 in the last three years. The Buckeyes
are 10-5 in non-conference games over the last three
years.
Oklahoma
Sooners (9-2, 6-2) Preview
I don’t know who the 2005 Orange
Bowl was worse for – Bob Stoops or Ashlee Simpson.
Regardless, the 55-19 maiming that the Sooners endured
at the hands of USC is most assuredly ancient history
around Norman. Oklahoma returns only 10 starters from
last year’s club, but rebuilding for them isn’t
that same as, say, Louisiana Tech. Jason White was
denied an 11th year of eligibility, so OU will be
looking for a new QB. They also lost Outland Award
winner Jammal Brown (New Orleans Saints) at tackle,
and saw three of their wide receivers go in the top
100 picks at the NFL draft. All in all, that is a
lot to make up for. However, with Heisman runner-up
Adrian Peterson back for his sophomore season things
could be a lot worse.
Strengths: It’s all about Peterson
this year in Norman. He electrified the nation last
year as a freshman, finishing with 339 carries for
1,925 yards and 15 touchdowns. He did benefit from
an outstanding passing game, and will see more eight-man
fronts this year, but the Heisman front-runner should
again have a tough offensive line to work with. Dusty
Dvoracek returns from a team-imposed suspension and
will anchor the Sooners defensive line. In 2003 Dvoracek
has seven sacks and 16 tackles for losses.
Weakness:: The secondary was highly
ranked last season, but Matt Leinhart tore it shreds
in the Orange Bowl. They lost three starters from
that unit, and could be suspect this season. Also,
there is uncertainty at quarterback. Paul Thompson,
Rhett Bomar and Tommy Grady will all compete for the
job this fall, and none threw over 14 passes in ’04.
Last year Oklahoma was ranked eighth in offense and
13th defense in the nation. They should again be solid,
but I don’t see them approaching either of those
numbers again.
Best Bet: Sept. 3, 2005 vs. Texas Christian.
TCU is one of the top teams in the Mountain West,
which may hold the line below four touchdowns. The
Horned Frogs have six new offensive starters, and
OU’s defense should have a field day.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 8, 2005 vs. Texas
(at Dallas). I’m going out on a limb here and
saying that I think Texas will finally top Oklahoma.
And if not, they should cover against the Sooners,
who should be the favorite despite a talent deficit.
However, if OU is an underdog, take the points and
run (Sooners are 8-3 as a dog under Stoops).
Texas Tech Red Raiders (8-3, 5-3) Preview
Mike Leach insists that not just any
quarterback can step in and put up huge numbers in
his pass-happy attack. The numbers say otherwise.
Texas Tech has dominated in its three straight bowl
wins, with three different signal callers completing
72 percent of their passes for 1,392 yards. This year,
it looks like its Cody Hodges’ turn to pad his
stats. Tech finished 8-4 last year, and returns 17
starters from that club. With a weak non-conference
schedule and both Texas A&M and Oklahoma at home,
Tech should be able to meet or exceed that win total.
Strengths: Last year
the Raiders led the nation with 399.7 passing yards
per game. That was 66 yards higher than the next closest
team. While Hodges is a bit green, Jarrett Hicks gives
him an All-American caliber wide receiver to throw
darts at. They return three starters along the defensive
line, which should help their defense improve from
its 46th national ranking.
Weakness:: Running
back Taurean Henderson has some academic issues to
deal with, needing 12 summer credits to maintain his
eligibility. Without him and his 16 touchdowns, first-year
starter Hodges will be asked to do even more. Also,
the Raiders were 77th against the run, yielding 176
yards per outing.
Best Bet: Nov. 5,
2005 vs. Texas A&M. If the Aggies live up to expectations,
they should roll into this game with one loss after
facing a much tougher schedule. That would lead to
a favorable line for Tech, which should shred A&M’s
weak secondary.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 22, 2004 at Texas.
This is the only game they play off turf all season,
and they’re 9-11 ATS on grass under Leach. This
game also pits pretty much the same two teams that
met last year when Tech got ripped 51-21 at home.
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Texas A&M Aggies (8-3, 5-3) Preview
The wheels came right off of a very
promising season after an inexcusable 35-34 loss at
Baylor last season. The Aggies never recovered, losing
three of their following four games and getting hammered
by Tennessee in the Cotton Bowl. But hopefully lessons
were learned, and that brutal finish has A&M hungry
this season. With multidimensional quarterback Reggie
McNeal leading the show, this could be the surprise
team out of the Big 12.
Strengths: McNeal generated 68 percent
of the Aggies offense and is a Heisman sleeper. He
piloted the nation’s 20th best offense (428
yards per game) and should build on his 3,509 total
yards and 22 touchdowns. Texas A&M also returns
four of its five starting offensive lineman from ‘04.
Defensively, safety Jaxson Appel is one of the best
in the county. They return eight starters on what
should be an improved defense, to go with nine returnees
on offense.
Weakness:: Turnover differential was
something that coach Dennis Franchione focused on
again this spring. The Aggies are 9-0 when they win
the turnover battle, but 2-13 when they don’t.
McNeal lost his go-to receiver, Terrence Murphy (Green
Bay Packers), from last year. The schedule also doesn’t
help. They have tough road games at Clemson and Colorado,
and a brutal finish at Texas Tech, at Oklahoma and
hosting Texas.
Best Bet: Sept. 3, 2005 at Clemson.
Clemson should be favored at home here, but they feature
six new starters on defense and may not be ready for
the Aggies experienced offense.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 8,
2005 at Colorado. If A&M gets hot and stays focused,
they could easily enter its game with Tech 8-0. But
this game at Boulder will be a battle.
Colorado Buffaloes (7-4, 5-3) Preview
Despite plenty of off-field distractions
(watching the athletic director resign, the chancellor
transfer, and the university president leave), the
Buffaloes managed their third league title in four
years. They were hammered by a dominant Oklahoma squad
42-3 in the Big 12 Championship game, but they bounced
back to top UTEP in the Houston Bowl. Of course, the
specter of scandal still surrounds Gary Barnett and
may still have an underlying impact on his squad.
The team returns 17 starters, including quarterback
Joel Klatt, and 45 of their 50 returning players are
seniors or juniors. In what is still the weakest division
in the Big 12, there’s no reason Colorado can’t
make it four out of five.
Strengths: Barnett has called his group
of linebackers the best he’s had since he’s
been in Boulder. They are again led by last year’s
leading tackler, senior Brian Iwuh. Big 12 defensive
freshman of the year Jordon Dizon and Thaddeus Washington
will flank Iwuh. Klatt was inconsistent last year
(11 TD’s, 15 INT’s) but showed excellent
leadership, especially late in the season. His primary
target this season will be tight end Joe Klopfenstein,
who is a solid 6-feet, 5-inches and 245 pounds. Also,
Colorado possesses perhaps the best kicking tandem
of anyone in the country, with kicker Mason Crosby
and punter John Torp returning.
Weakness:: The loss of leading rusher
Bobby Purify (231 attempts, 1,097 yards, 9 TD’s)
leaves a gaping hole in the backfield. Senior Lawrence
Vickers will attempt to fill the void. The offensive
line allowed 62 pressures last season, which helped
contribute to the Buffs’ 85th national ranking
in total offense. Also, the secondary was torched
for 254.6 yards a game last year and 16 passing touchdowns.
Three of the four starters from that unit return,
but safety J.J. Billingsley is on indefinite suspension
for his grades.
Best Bet: Oct. 29, 2005 at Kansas State.
Colorado has been excellent ATS as an underdog (26-11
over the last seven years), and outstanding as a road
dog (18-7). They’ll be coming out of the toughest
stretch of their schedule, and ready for a late push.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 8, 2005 vs. Texas
A&M. Tough home game is sandwiched between tilts
at Miami, Oklahoma St., and Texas. The Buffs may be
favored (11-18 over last seven years as home favorite)
but aren’t the better team.
Iowa State Cyclones (7-4, 5-3) Preview
Last year’s sleeper team has
gotten the attention of the rest of the Big 12. After
a dismal 2-10 record in 2003 and a 2-4 start to 2004,
the Cyclones ripped off four straight wins and came
within a field goal of playing for the conference
championship. Instead, they finished 4-4 and lost
a tiebreaker to Colorado, whom they lost a 19-15 decision
to. They return their leading passer, rusher, receiver
and tackler from last year’s club. With the
division in a state of flux, the Cyclones could be
in for a special season.
Strengths: Bret Meyer stepped in as
a freshman and took control of the offense. He only
completed 52 percent of his passes, but didn’t
turn the ball over (only 6 INT’s). Stevie Hicks
rode the landslide to a very productive season (1,062
yards), but needs to improve the 3.9 yards per carry.
The run defense was the best it’s been since
WWII, allowing only 3.5 ypc and 139.2 yards per game.
Linebacker Tim Dobbins, a JUCO transfer, was last
year’s conference newcomer of the year.
Weakness:: Yes, the Cyclones had an
outstanding year last season, but they were pretty
lucky as well. They finished second in the nation
(behind Miami) in touchdowns scored when the offense
was off the field. They also blocked nine kicks. You
make your own luck, but I wouldn’t expect that
same level of good fortune.
Best Bet: Sept. 24, 2005 at Army. Iowa
State is 6-1 ATS over the last seven years as a road
favorite. That, and the Black Knights are terrible.
Be Wary Of: Sept. 10, 2005 vs. Iowa.
The Hawkeyes are a ridiculous 38-14 against the spread
over the last five years. More talent and the pride
factor will equal a big win for Iowa.
Nebraska Cornhuskers (6-5, 4-4) Preview
No such thing as rebuilding at Nebraska.
Coach Bill Callahan, who was bitterly tossed out of
Oakland two years ago, had one season to get his feet
under him, and now the Husker faithful are expecting
wins and bowl games. Nebraska suffered its first losing
season since 1961 last year. As a result, Callahan
had to abandon his hopes of having a couple years
to recruit and get some talent in Lincoln. Instead,
he brought in 13 transfers and is hoping they can
produce immediately.
Strengths: Cory Ross went over 1,100
yards last season, but may get bumped by Marlon Lucky,
Nebraska’s most highly touted runner since Ahman
Green. They return three offensive line starters and
have a ton of speed on the outside. Defensive back
Daniel Bullocks, brother of NFL draft pick Josh, returns
to try to shore up a leaky secondary.
Weakness:: Despite seeing two DB’s
picked in the first 40 players of the NFL draft, Nebraska
had the nation’s 110th-ranked pass defense last
year. Their defense was a train wreck last season,
yielding 27 points a game, and surrendering 45 and
34 points to Missouri and Iowa State, respectively.
Best Bet: Nov. 5, 2005 at Kansas. If
Nebraska is going to do anything in the Big 12, this
is a must game. Over the last decade, the Huskers
are 12-2 ATS in road games after a loss (the play
Oklahoma on Oct. 29).
Be Wary Of: Sept. 17, 2005 vs. Pittsburgh.
Callahan will be matched up with Dave Wannstedt, former
coach of the Miami Dolphins. Wannstedt should be familiar
with all of Callahan’s tricks.
Kansas Jayhawks (5-5, 4-4) Preview
Call me crazy, but I think this is
the year the Kansas snaps its 10-year losing streak.
They are loaded with experience, fielding a team with
a 50 juniors and seniors. Last season they finished
a disappointing 4-7, but they lost five games by six
points or less and topped their primary rivals, dousing
Kansas State and Missouri.
Strengths: The defense, which returns
eight starters and will rely on eight seniors, is
one of the best in the North Division. They have six
solid linebackers to rotate, led by all-league performer
Nick Reid. They also posses two solid defensive ends
(Jermail Ashley and Charlton Keith) and multidimensional
CB Charles Gordon. The offensive line is also solid,
and will see the return of four starters.
Weakness:: The skill positions on offense
are a mess. Four different quarterbacks started games
for Kansas last season. Brian Luke was the most impressive,
but is probably still buried on the depth chart behind
Adam Barmann and Jason Swanson. They lost 2004 leading
rusher John Randle, and now have little depth at that
position, and also have only one veteran receiver.
Points will be at a premium.
Best Bet: Nov. 19, 2005 vs. Iowa State.
The host in this series is 4-1 ATS over the past four
years.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 8, 2005 at Kansas
State. I see revenge for last year’s 31-28 win.
Also, K-State is 57-32-2 ATS at home under Bill Snyder.
Missouri Tigers (5-6, 2-6) Preview
Missouri was able to salvage some pride
by topping Iowa State in the season finale, knocking
the Cyclones out of the Big 12 title game, but the
season was pretty much a bust for the Tigers. They
were 3-11 against the spread in 2004, one year after
an outstanding 8-4 ATS in 2003. With only 32 returning
players, and no running back, I would expect another
down season.
Strengths: Quarterback Brad Smith is
entering his fourth year as a starter for the Tigers.
He had a nice year (2,185 yards, 52 percent, 21 total
touchdowns) in ’04, but needs some help. In
2003 he led all quarterbacks in the country in rushing,
but tried to become more of a drop-back passer in
2004. Most analysts think he needs to revert to the
scrambling, option QB he was before.
Weakness:: The Tigers defense has steadily
improved over the last five years. It gave up 33.7
points a game in 1999 and shrunk that number down
to 19.5 in 2004 while producing the country’s
14th-ranked defense. That’s good news, but the
bad news is that they only return three starters.
Also, it’s not a good thing when your quarterback
is your leading returning rusher.
Best Bet: Oct. 8, 2005 at Oklahoma
State. Over the last decade, Missouri is 30-2-2 ATS
when winning straight up on the road. Mizzou could
beat the Cowboys in Stillwater.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 29, 2005 at Kansas.
This is part of my hunch that Kansas is decent this
year. If the Tigers are favored, they’re only
2-6 ATS under Gary Pinkel when road favorites.
Kansas State Wildcats (4-7, 2-6) Preview
Last year’s disappointment ended
a streak of 11 consecutive bowl bids for the Wildcats.
I hate to spoil coach Bill Snyder’s fun, but
they’re going to be just as bad in 2005. Snyder
has been a miracle worker since he came to the program
in 1989, but reality might be setting back in around
Manhattan. They have a manageable schedule, but a
major bowl is out of the question.
Strengths: The K-state linebackers,
led by junior OLB Brandon Archer, are sure tacklers
and will hopefully be a stabilizing force on defense.
Offensively, the top two receivers, Jermaine Moreira
and Yamon Figurs, return and can hopefully make some
plays for QB Dylan Meier.
Weakness:: They return one starter on
the offensive line, and will have to clog the rest
of the holes with redshirt freshman and JUCO transfers.
Their returning rushers had a combined 77 yards between
them last season. The defense allowed an eye-popping
30.6 yards per game, and has serious issues in the
secondary.
Best Bet: Sept. 24, 2005 vs. North
Texas. The Mean Green serve as cannon fodder for many
major conferences, and even lost by 23 to Baylor last
year.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 15, 2005 at Texas
Tech. The Wildcats only lost to the Raiders by 10
at home last season. But their atrocious secondary
should get ripped apart this year.
Oklahoma St. Cowboys (5-6, 2-6) Preview
Oklahoma State is just the wrong team
in the wrong place at the wrong time. Last year, the
Cowboys finished 7-5 overall and 4-4 in the Big 12.
Their conference mark left them in fifth place in
the South Division, but would have been tied for the
top spot in the North. It’s pretty much the
same deal this year. Former OSU standout Mike Gundy
in his first season as head coach, and takes over
a team with 44 returning lettermen and 16 returning
starters. But they still don’t have the talent
to topple their foes in the South.
Strengths: If Donovan Woods maintains
the starting quarterback gig, he has an excellent
chemistry with brother D’Juan Woods. The two
hooked up 29 times last year for 650 yards.
Weakness:: The Cowboys have unsettled
situations at pretty much every key position on the
field. With no defined quarterback, running back or
defensive leader, I don’t see them competing
with the top teams in their division. Also, the loss
of Vernon Grant, a three-year starter in the secondary,
hurts OSU both on and off the field.
Best Bet: Nov. 19, 2005 vs. Baylor.
This will be the last home game of the season and
Senior Night. Fueled by a stirring memorial of Grant
– who was killed in a car accident in May –
the Cowboys will crush the Bears.
Be Wary Of: Oct. 15, 2005 at Texas
A&M. Their first true road test will come at the
hands of a tough Aggies squad.
Baylor Bears (3-8, 1-7) Preview
Even though it’s a small consolation
to the Baylor fans, the Bears finished an impressive
7-3 against the spread last season. What was good
news for their fans was Baylor’s incredible
upset of Texas A&M last year. They won 35-34 despite
entering as 24.5-point underdogs. They return 48 players
from last year’s club, and they have he modest
goal of their first four-win season since 1996.
Strengths: With eight defensive starters
returning, Baylor should at least be able to avoid
any 60-point explosions by opposing offenses. They
bring back their top rusher and receiver, but neither
one of them topped 600 yards last year. In punter
Danny Sepulveda (Ray Guy Award winner, 46.0 avg.,
26 punts inside the 20) Baylor has one of the best
in the nation.
Weakness:: The Bears have lost 24 straight
road games since the 2000 opener at North Texas. The
offense lacks any depth or cohesiveness and eight
defensive starters come back from a unit that let
up 421.6 yards and 36.9 points per game last year.
Best Bet: Sept. 10, 2005 vs. Samford.
Baylor is 6-0 ATS versus non-conference opponents
recently. Under third-year coach Guy Morriss they
are 1-0 as home favorites and 8-2 as home dogs.
Be Wary Of: Nov. 12, 2005 at Missouri.
The Bears are 0-10 in Game Ten on the schedule over
the last decade, and 1-12 as road underdogs versus
and opponent coming of a loss.
Overall Expectations:
The Big 12 was 4-3 in bowl games last
year, highlighted by Texas’ exciting victory
over Michigan in the Rose Bowl. This year, two early
non-conference clashes will determine the Big 12’s
spot in college football’s hierarchy. Texas
travels to meet Ohio State on Sept. 10 in a game that
may eliminate one of the teams’ national title
hopes. Oklahoma heads out to UCLA on Sept. 17, hoping
to gain some respect in California after the beat
down that USC game them in last year’s Orange
Bowl.
While Oklahoma and Texas are obviously
the heavyweights in this division, the teams to really
watch are Texas A&M and Texas Tech. Either one
of those teams could upset the Horns or the Sooners
and cripple someone’s shot at not just the conference
championship, but also the national championship.
I have each of them at 8-3, but I wouldn’t be
surprised if one of the gets hot and makes a run into
the Top 10 at some point this year. The two teams
meet on Nov. 5 in Lubbock in what should be an outstanding
game.
The North Division is once again the
weaker sister in the conference. However, it the teams
that comprise it could be a lot more interesting to
bet on. There’s parity (or mediocrity, take
your pick) from top to bottom, and any one of five
teams has a legit shot to meet and get crushed by
Texas in the conference championship.
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By:
Robert
Ferringo OF Doc's Sports
Doc's Sports are well
known Handicapping gurus. They are documented members
of The Professional Handicappers League. Read more
of their articles.
Get
their premium plays here >>
|