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College Football Playoff

For those college football nutjobs like me who can’t stand the offseason, this might be for you. With all the talk of a college football playoff in the news lately I decided to get creative with the only simulation tools I have: a PS3 and NCAA 12. Using the final BCS regular season standings for seeding; I have created a 24 team playoff (24 teams because the BCS standings doesn’t extend to 32) that I will simulate to see who virtually would have been the national champion. First off, I am in not in favor at all of a 24 team playoff. This is not conducive in reality. My playoff starts on December 17 (two weeks after the conference title games) and extends until January 14th. The Top 8 seeds all have first round byes and the higher seeded team will host until the semi-finals. The semi-finals will be played at the Orange and Sugar Bowls. The championship will be played at the Rose Bowl. I have gone to great extents to make this simulation as legitimate as possible including roster changes due to injury or suspension and even accurate weather conditions at the site where the games would have been played. Check it out here: http://short-sideoption.blogspot.com/ , it’s a good source of entertainment in the off-season! Also, what are Huskies fans idea for a playoff format (if College Football should have one at all?)

Playoff

Isaiah Thomas wins NBA Rookie of the Month

About 10 hours, now...

10 hours until The Esteemed Mrs. JNR and I find out the gender of Limabean NonReg. Sonogram is scheduled for 4:30, which means we'll probably actually see the tech at around 5:30.

Crossing my fingers and hoping to God it's a boy. Not that I'll be upset if it's a girl, but I'll take "Teenaged Son Completely Wipes Out the Fridge" any day of the week, over "Chastity of Teenaged Daughter Must Be Constantly Defended With Shotgun."

Wish me luck, Ags. It's gonna be a fun year.
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Oregon State wins Pac-12 wrestling championship

Oregon State edged Boise State to win the Pac-12 wrestling championship. Here is a release from the Pac-12:

OREGON STATE HOLDS OFF BOISE STATE TO WIN PAC-12 WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP

Pac-12 Wrestlers Claim 19 Automatic Berths into NCAA Tournament

Boise, ID (February 26, 2012) - Oregon State held off a late charge from host Boise State to claim the Pac-12 Wrestling Championship for the second time in three years before a lively crowd of 2,425 at Taco Bell Arena. Boise State’s Brent Chriswell was named Most Outstanding Wrestler for the tournament after claiming the 197-pound title.

The Beavers won four individual championships and secured a conference-high seven automatic qualifying berths for the NCAA Tournament.

Chriswell ignited the home crowd with a 5-2 win over OSU’s Taylor Meeks, the top seed, and cut into the Beaver lead with one match remaining. But OSU heavyweight Clayton Jack locked up the team title by winning his second consecutive Pac-12 title with a 3-0 win over Arizona State’s Levi Cooper.

Oregon State entered the championship meet ranked 16th in the country with a 10-3 mark and 5-0 in Pac-12 competition. They took a 13-point lead after the morning session by putting wrestlers in six of the 10 individual championships. Stanford was second with five title matches, while Boise State qualified for four.

Stanford’s Ryan Mango won the first individual title of the night defeating OSU’s Pat Rollins in the 125 division. It was Mango’s second career conference title after winning the 133-pound weight class in 2010. Boise State’s Brian Owen followed by defeating Cal State Bakersfield’s Frank Lomas 4-2 for the 133-pound crown.

The Beavers gained the momentum in the championship round when Michael Mangrum upset top seed, defending conference champion and #2 ranked Boris Novachkov from Cal Poly in the 141-pound weight class. Teammate Scott Sakaguchi gave the Beavers their second consecutive champion when he claimed the 149-pound title.

Boise State had a chance to close the gap in the 157-pound title match, but second seeded Roger Pena from OSU pulled out a 5-2 win over top-seed Georgi Ivanov from Boise State.

Cal Poly’s Dominic Kastl, Stanford’s Nick Amuchastegui and Boise State’s Jacob Swartz grabbed automatic berths into the NCAA tournament by winning the 165, 174 and 184-pound weight classes respectively.

The Pac-12 had 19 wrestlers earn automatic bids into the NCAA Tournament, including seven for OSU, four for Boise State, four for Cal Poly, two for Stanford, one for ASU and one for Cal State Bakersfield. The qualifiers were: (125) Ryan Mango (Stan), Pat Rollins (OSU); (133) Brian Owen (BSU), Frank Lomas (CSB); (141) Mike Mangrum (OSU), Boris Novachkov (CP); (149) Scott Sakaguchi (OSU); (157) Roger Pena (OSU), Georgi Ivanov (BSU); (165) Dominic Kastl (CP); (174) Nick Amuchastegui (Stan), Ryan DesRoches (CP); (184) Jacob Swartz (BSU), Ty Vinson (OSU); (197) Brent Chriswell (BSU), Taylor Meeks (OSU), Ryan Smith (CP); (Heavyweight) Clayton Jack (OSU), Levi Cooper (ASU).


Final Team Standings
Oregon State 138.0
Boise State 129.0
Stanford 125.0
Arizona State 102.5
Cal Poly 98.0
Cal State Bakersfield 78.5

Huskies looking to finish strong as season comes to a close

As the end of the basketball season approaches, one loaded question about the Washington Huskies stands out:

Are Tony Wroten and Terrance Ross returning next season?

The issue has been brought up so much that head coach Lorenzo Romar did his best not to imply anything in this week’s press conference.

Even the media were advised not to ask because for both players, it was personally a touchy subject.

“You look at the reaction when the crowd, lovingly, chanted ‘One more year’ when Terrance [Ross] was at the free-throw line, he was embarrassed by that,” Romar said. “If he were alone, maybe he wouldn’t be as embarrassed, but this is a team. He’s a team guy.

“This is the same guy during a timeout is saying ‘Hey. If we get C.J. [Wilcox] the ball,’ ? not get me the ball, but if we get C.J. the ball? ‘C.J’s hit two in a row. If we can run this for C.J…,’ you’re talking about a team guy that way.”

Instead, Ross, Wroten and the rest of the Huskies are focused on finishing this season on a high note. A win this Saturday at Washington State (14-13, 6-9) would mark four consecutive 20-win seasons for the Huskies (19-8, 12-3).

If Washington wins out on the road against USC and UCLA as well as at Washington State, the Huskies could have Romar’s best conference record in his tenure. And, if so, this year’s record would be one game better than the Brandon Roy-led 2004-2005 Washington team that earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.

Road games have plagued Romar’s teams in the past. In nonconference games this season, Washington lost every game away from Seattle. Luckily, as this young team became more cohesive, they became more comfortable away from home. In 2012, the Huskies are 4-2 on the road.

“Does that mean we’ve solved our issues?” Romar said. “No, not necessarily but we’re better than we were. Each game’s a new adventure, a new unique challenge.”

Therefore, Romar and the Huskies aren’t taking their in-state rival lightly, regardless of their sub-.500 conference record. The team knows how hostile an environment Pullman can be and the fact that the Cougars won’t go down without a fight.

“They had every chance to beat UCLA at home, every chance to beat Arizona at home,“ Romar said. “So, it’s not gonna be easy.”

In their last meeting on Jan. 15, Washington was down by six at the half. Ross led the Huskies on a 26-6 run in the second half to earn a 75-65 win in Alaska Airlines Arena.

A key to winning at Pullman will be playing effective zone offense, something Washington has done well recently.

“I think we’ve been executing the zone really well, in practice and in games,” sophomore forward C.J. Wilcox said. “Working the ball, getting in the middle, and we have Tony [Wroten] and Terrance [Ross] in there that can create hundreds of possibilities.”

Playing zone defense is a key element to how the Cougars approach the game. In their last game, Washington State’s defense held Arizona State to 50 points and 38 percent from the field.

“Yeah, it’s good because that’s [Washington State’s] strength,” junior point guard Abdul Gaddy said. “Terrance [Ross] and Tony [Wroten] are strong in the middle, especially driving in the middle, catching it and going one-on-one with their big [man] that controls the middle. And then we have C.J.’s presence on the floor. It helps our zone offense and usually takes teams out of it.”

Even with confidence going into this weekend, the Huskies are humble and trying to create results.

“We’re just taking it game by game, but of course, 20 wins in a season is pretty good. People start to notice that,” Wilcox said. “But as far as us in our locker room, we’re just worried about every game, trying to win the rest of our games.”

Reaction to UW's home win over Arizona, and Wroten's dunk on Chol

I want to open up a discussion to anyone who wants to talk about the Huskies recent home win over the Arizona Wildcats 79-70. Terrence Ross had 25 points, and looked like the pro prospect everyone has been expecting him to be all season. The Huskies played a good all-around game offensively and defensively, and there were some highlight dunks from Aziz N'Diaye and Tony Wroten. Arizona is a good team, and saw its five-game win streak snapped. This win put the Huskies in sole possession of first place in the Pac-12 with a 12-3 record, ahead of California who is 11-3. The Huskies now finish the season with three road games at Washington State, USC, and UCLA. Sound off on the game and how you think the Huskies will finish the season as they push for a spot in the NCAA tournament.
This post was edited on 2/18 4:29 PM by Ron Newberry

POLL: Any other sport you would like to see coverage of?

If UDubNation.com were to add a new sport as part of its coverage, including covering that sport's recruiting scene, which one would you like that to be?
This post was edited on 2/18 10:40 AM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/18 3:06 PM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/18 3:44 PM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/18 3:45 PM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/18 3:45 PM by Ron Newberry

Could Wroten be Freshman of the Year?

Well, he's at least made it into the Top 5. Wroten has been named in the Top 5 for the Wayman Tisdale Award, which is given to the nation's best freshman. He's a finalist along with Cody Zeller, Austin Rivers, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist and Anthony Davis. Here's the official release:

Feb. 15, 2012
ST. LOUIS - Husky freshman guard Tony Wroten is among five finalist for the 2012 Wayman Tisdale Award, which is given to the National Freshman of the Year, it was announced today by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association.
Wroten (Seattle, Wash./Garfield HS) joins a distinguish list that includes Indiana's Cody Zeller, Duke's Austin Rivers and Kentucky teammates Anthony Davis and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist.
In his first year at Washington, Wroten is threatening numerous Husky freshman records and has helped propel his team into a first-place tie in the Pac-12 standings. Wroten is averaging 16.4 points per game, 4.7 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.9 steals. Not only is Wroten the Pac-12 Conference's freshman leader in scoring, assists and steals, but his scoring average is fourth among all freshmen in college basketball, while his per game steals average ranks sixth.
Wroten is on pace to end the year as Washington's all-time freshman scorer and steals leader. He also should end up among UW's top-five freshman assist leaders.
The 6-foot-5 Wroten is tied for the team lead in double-figure scoring games with 23 out of 25. He has scored 20 or more points a team best eight times and his 188 free throw attempts represent 33% of the Huskies total attempts this year.
The award will be presented to the men's National Freshman of the Year at a gala banquet on Mon., April 16 at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. The announcement of the winner will come at the USBWA College Basketball Awards Breakfast on Fri., March 30 in New Orleans in conjunction with the NCAA Men's Final Four.
The USBWA has chosen a national freshman of the year since the 1988-89 season when LSU's Chris Jackson was the recipient. Last season, Ohio State's Jared Sullinger became the winner of the first Wayman Tisdale Award. Other previous winners of the award include Kevin Durant, Carmelo Anthony, Jason Kidd and Chris Webber.
The Tisdale Award winner will receive a statuette designed by nationally-recognized sculptor Shan Gray. The April 16 banquet will also honor Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski as the recipient of the Wayman Tisdale Humanitarian Award.
The late Wayman Tisdale was a three-time USBWA All-American at the University of Oklahoma. Following a stint on the 1984 U.S. Olympic basketball team, he played 12 seasons in the NBA before retiring in 1997 to focus on a blossoming jazz music career. In March 2007, he was diagnosed with cancer and, following a courageous and difficult battle that included the amputation of his right leg in 2008, he passed away in May 2009.
The Wayman Tisdale Freshman of the Year Award presented by Devon is produced by Access Sports, an Oklahoma City-based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization committed to supporting various charitable causes, including funding prosthetic devices for needy individuals through the Wayman L. Tisdale Foundation, educational scholarships through the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, and funding of youth basketball programs throughout the state of Oklahoma through Wayman's Lightning Basketball League.
Tickets and sponsorship information for the April 16 event are available at the Tisdale Award website, access-sports.net, or by contacting Scott Hill (405-749-1515, scott.hill@access-sports.net). For more information on the USBWA Awards Breakfast in New Orleans, including purchasing tickets, visit usbwa.com.

Wroten has some stiff competition. I would say there is precisely a 0 percent chance he somehow beats Anthony Davis for the award. Does anyone think he has a chance?

Still, a nice mention for Wroten on the national scale.

Huskies to play in new tournament next season

The Washington Huskies basketball team has officially been announced as a participant for the Hall of Fame Tip-off Tournament.

UW will be in a bracket with Ohio State, Seton Hall and Rhode Island. Rhode Island is struggling this season, but Ohio State is a Top 5 program and Seton Hall has a good chance at making this year's NCAA Tournament. This should be some good competition for the Huskies next year.

Here's the official release:

Springfield, Mass. ? The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced the field of
teams and brackets for the 2012 Tip-Off Tournament. The annual NCAA men’s exempt
tournament, sponsored by the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, will take place the weekend
of November 16th-18th at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut featuring eight
schools in two four-team brackets. All teams will also compete in two campus round games.

Teams scheduled to participate in this year’s Tip-Off tournament are Loyola University
Maryland (MAAC), Norfolk State University (MEAC), Ohio State University (Big Ten),
Seton Hall University (Big East), University of Albany (America East), University of
Missouri-Kansas City (Summit League), University of Rhode Island (Atlantic 10) and
University of Washington (Pac-12).

“This year’s Tip-Off Tournament will once again showcase some of the best college basketball
programs in the country,” said John L. Doleva, President and CEO of the Basketball Hall of
Fame. “We are looking forward to welcoming each of these teams, as they compete at
Mohegan Sun, one of the finest facilities in the country.”

The 2012 Tip-Off Tournament game schedule will be separated into two brackets. The
Springfield bracket will include Albany, Loyola, UMKC and Norfolk State. The Naismith bracket
will consist of Ohio State, Washington, Seton Hall, and Rhode Island. Game times and
sessions for both rounds will be announced at a later date.

“On behalf of Mohegan Sun, we are excited to be able to once again host one of the most
prestigious tournaments in college basketball,” said Jeffrey Hartmann, President and Chief
Executive Officer of Mohegan Sun. “We appreciate the Hall of Fame’s passion for basketball,
and we look forward to continuing our relationship and hosting another great event in
November.”

The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference will serve as the host conference for the annual event.
The MAAC will host the men’s and women’s basketball championships at the MassMutual
Center in Springfield, MA this March and has developed a strong partnership with the
Basketball Hall of Fame, including the opening of a MAAC exhibit in the Hall of Fame museum.

“The MAAC is excited to extend its support of the Basketball Hall of Fame’s Tip-Off
Tournament again in 2012,” said Rich Ensor, Commissioner of the MAAC. “The MAAC and the
Hall of Fame continue to expand its relationship and we look forward to working together in the
future on many projects, including the annual Tip-Off Tournament.

”Tickets for the 2012 Basketball Hall of Fame Tip-Off at Mohegan Sun Arena will go on sale in
the near future. For more information on the event, log on to www.halloffametipoff.com

Huskies lose big to Ducks, 82-57

For a team in first place in the Pac-12, it's a bit of a head scratcher to watch the Huskies lose so overwhelmingly, 82-57, to the Oregon Ducks tonight in Eugene.

Oregon jumped out 8-0 and never really let up. For as good as Washington's record is in the conference, this just does not look like a team of the caliber of Lorenzo Romar's potent teams in the recent past.

But the Huskies are young and they are primed to be very good in the next few seasons. I just don't see any anything special in the postseason this year. Does anyone disagree, and seeing something I'm not? This conference is down this year.
This post was edited on 2/9 10:23 PM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/9 11:27 PM by Ron Newberry

Washington-Oregon box score

Rivals top 100 juniors released Wednesday; join live chat

Rivals.com will hold a live chat Wednesday at 9 a.m. Pacific to hold discussion over the top 100 juniors that will be released the same day.

The Rivals100 is the top 100 recruited players from the Class of 2013. Surely, Skyline quarterback Max Browne will make the cut. This class doesn't quite have the star power in the Northwest that it had in 2012. Tailback Thomas Tyner of Aloha, Ore., will be another Rivals100 pick, I'm guessing.

Who am I missing?
This post was edited on 2/7 7:57 PM by Ron Newberry
This post was edited on 2/7 7:57 PM by Ron Newberry

Rivals live chat at 9 a.m. Pacific time

Jermaine Kearse invited to combine

UW's senior WR, Jermaine Kearse, has been invited to the NFL combine. There had been rumors of him being invited, but after his disappointing season, I had my doubts.

Chris Polk, Senio Kelemete, and Alameda Ta'amu were all invited, but those aren't nearly as big of surprises. Kearse, on the other hand, who has struggled with drops all year, really needs to impress at the combine. Proving his quickness and speed is going to be all that more important, especially since he didn't have the chance to impress at any postseason "all-star" games.

What do you all think, does Kearse get drafted? It will be tough, but he's a big guy who I'm sure teams will have interest in, regardless of his struggles.
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