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December 19 , 2006 HOME - SPORTS NEWS

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL PICKS- (covers.com): big 10 preview.  Michigan Wolverines Lloyd Carr’s Wolverines are expected to go Hollywood and show off more flash on the offensive side than fans might be used to. Maybe it's because the coach has been hanging out with Russell Crowe in the offseason, but it's probably got more to do with the stable of talent on the offensive side. Traditionally, Michigan has built its championship teams on a foundation of solid defense, but this year should be different. Four defensive starters were drafted to the NFL and coordinator Ron English will have a lot to prove this year as the unit is rebuilt almost from scratch, but the secondary is solid and that should help. More importantly, the offense will be stacked. Quarterback Chad Henne is back for his senior season and although he was outshined by another Big Ten quarterback last season, this will be Henne’s year to steal the show. He’ll have a big, nasty offensive line with Mike Hart in the backfield and Mario Manningham putting fear into the hearts of defensive backs across the Midwest. Those weapons should be enough for Michigan to outgun Ohio State and win a 43rd Big Ten title. Predicted record: 11-1 Ohio State Buckeyes Not every team is USC – not even Ohio State. After the departure of Troy Smith, the Buckeyes have a major personnel problem as they try to find the guy to replace their Heisman-winning quarterback. After the spring game, the front-runner looks to be junior Todd Boeckman, but not far behind is sophomore Robby Schoenhoft. Throw redshirt freshman Antonio Henton in the mix and you’ve got yourself a full-blown free-for-all behind center – and while all these guys show promise, none of them are likely to collect any hardware this year. In the spring game, the three QBs were a combined 21-for-45. Whoever eventually wins the job, they won’t have much veteran help with receivers Ted Ginn, Anthony Gonzalez and tailback Antonio Pittman all gone to the NFL, but prepare for the emergence of new stars like receiver Brian Robiskie and 230-pound speedster Chris Wells at tailback. The defense will again be one of the best in the conference, but after the reputation the Buckeyes have earned over the last five or six years, they’ll have to repeat last year's 10.4 points allowed per game performance to cover pointspreads this year. That will be tough to do with only five returning starters. Predicted record: 11-1 Wisconsin Badgers Here’s another team that lost its starting quarterback, but unlike most other schools, Wisconsin doesn’t ask its signal caller to win games with his arm. With John Stocco trying to find a home in the NFL, senior Tyler Donovan will take over behind the usual group of inhumanly large offensive linemen. He looked OK in his few appearances last year, but his main job will be to hand the ball to P.J. Hill and watch the sophomore run to what could be a Heisman Trophy year. On defense, the Badgers will be absolutely impregnable. Last year’s unit allowed the fewest yards per game in the Big Ten and third fewest in the country, and will return largely intact. There will be a few missing pieces in the secondary from last year’s nation-leading pass efficiency defense, but a strong pass rush from the D-line will help as the new defensive backs get comfortable. Predicted record: 10-2 Purdue Boilermakers Faithful supporters have been waiting for this team to live up to expectations, but it’s been nothing but disappointments in West Lafayette in recent years. The Boilermakers have had the talent to contend for a Big Ten title for the last couple of seasons, but Joe Tiller hasn’t been able to motivate his troops. Defense has been the core of the problem and it might not be a good thing that nine starters return to a unit that allowed the most rushing yards in the Big Ten in 2006. However, there is plenty of talent here and bettors would be advised to watch how this defense performs early on because, as bad as they’ve been, if they ever gets it together they could surprise the conference. Another potential breakout star could be quarterback Curtis Painter. His impressive numbers last year were obscured by the team’s six losses, but he still threw for almost 4,000 yards (fourth in the nation). He’s also got one of the best targets in the game in Dorien Bryant. If these two underrated stars play at their best this season, the offense should be able to cover the home pointspreads that stung backers last year. Predicted record: 9-3 Penn State Nittany Lions They don’t call this place Linebacker U for nothing. Even though Paul Posluszny isn’t anchoring the defense in University Park anymore, they have another NFL-quality linebacker to take over in Dan Conner. The secondary will also be secure with Justin King and Anthony Scirrotto ball-hawking in the shadows, but it’s the front four that will be a topic of debate until the season is underway. Big Ten teams will probably try to run the ball against this young defensive line, so much of the Nittany Lions’ success will depend on how they perform. There’s also a considerable amount of pressure on senior quarterback Anthony Morelli, who hasn’t yet lived up to lofty expectations. He has to get over his Jeff George syndrome and stop trying to show off his arm strength on every passing play. A little patience and better decision-making will benefit the quarterback and his team. Predicted record: 8-4 Illinois Fighting Illini Say what you will about Ron Zook and his poor coaching record (including four wins in two seasons at Illinois) but you’ve got to think things are looking up for Illinois this fall. Zook just signed one of the best recruiting classes in the conference, which he can add to some incredible talent already on the roster. Even though the Illini were burried under a pile of losses last season, they covered against Iowa, Michigan State, Penn State, Wisconsin and Ohio State. You can expect more of the same as Zook builds his team around Juice Williams, the quarterback who spent last season auditioning for the role of most exciting player in the nation. If the recent spring game is anything to go by, Williams showed improvement in his accuracy and also found a new deep threat in freshman wideout Arrelious Benn, who caught five passes for 145 yards. Don’t pop the corks yet, but it could be a good year in Champaign. Predicted record: 7-5 Michigan State Spartans This team will certainly miss quarterback Drew Stanton, who will be playing up the road with the Detroit Lions this year, but a solid offensive line can make such transitions go much more smoothly. The Spartans are in good shape up front with seniors at left tackle, left guard and center and returning starters at every spot on the front lines. A unit like that is also a big help for new head coach Mark Dantonio, who can depend on sound blocking and solid running game with three returning running backs while he works to build up the program. However, most of the preseason previews have set Michigan State way down in the polls, one even picking them to finish as low as 10th in the Big Ten. They may be in rebuilding mode, but this is a team that has underachieved for the better part of a decade under former coach John L. Smith. Bettors should keep a close eye on pointspreads because it could be time the Spartans finally exceed a few expectations. Predicted record: 6-6 Minnesota Golden Gophers Most preseason polls picked the Gophers to occupy the Big Ten basement this year, but this is a team that could be primed for an improvement. After the embarrassing loss in last year’s Insight Bowl, Glen Mason was fired and Tim Brewster was brought in as head coach. The former tight-ends coach for the Denver Broncos and San Diego Chargers is known for his recruiting prowess from his days at the University of Texas, but it's his enthusiasm and leadership that should benefit this team immediately. Minnesota really wasn’t as bad as they looked on paper last year. They came out on the wrong end of a lot of close games and, aside from blowouts against Ohio State and Wisconsin, they were competitive in almost every game. The Gophers covered the spread in their last four games of the season and even though they blew a 31-point lead in their bowl game, they still covered as 8-point underdogs to Texas Tech. That could be something to build on this year. Predicted record: 6-6 Iowa Hawkeyes Take a good look at Iowa’s 2006 against-the-spread record and burn it into your memory. You might want to believe in this team, but you might as well light your bankroll on fire if you’re even thinking about betting on the Hawkeyes after they covered in just two games last year. Everyone expected big things from Drew Tate and Co., but the season turned into an unmitigated disaster that included losses to Indiana and Northwestern. Forget that they put on a show in a 26-24 loss to Texas as a 9-point underdog in the Alamo Bowl. They lost Tate, they lost three of their best offensive linemen and although they’ll have what looks to be a good defense on paper, if you still think Kirk Ferentz can lead this team to victory, then you deserve to lose your money. Predicted record: 5-7 Northwestern Wildcats They’ve been the ugly stepsister of the Big Ten for as long as anyone can remember and despite the blip in the space-time continuum that allowed them to go 7-4 in 2005, Northwestern isn’t going to get any prettier this year. Their offense was the worst in the conference last year and you can't hope for much more this year. Their defense is toothless. They didn’t get within ten yards of the opposing quarterback last year and this might be the slowest defense in the conference. They have some size up front, which might help, but with back-to-back games against Ohio State and Michigan to start their Big Ten schedule, their season might be over before it really gets started. Predicted record: 4-8 Indiana Hoosiers Terry Hoeppner brought hope to Indiana when he arrived two years ago. He led the team to upset wins over Michigan Sate (+19) and Iowa (+6 ½) last year and things were supposed to continue to improve this year. Many bettors had the Hoosiers on their radars until the head coach’s health went south and kept him from his duties, a scenario that will doubtlessly hurt the team’s chances this year. Hoeppner had two brain surgeries over the last two months to remove tumors and it is still uncertain when he’ll return to Bloomington. It will be difficult for the Hoosiers to develop the consistency needed to turn a few shocking upsets into a winning season without their head coach at the helm. There is some great talent on the team – not the least of which is quarterback Kellen Lewis – but without direction and leadership, this team is likely to slide back into the abyss it's been in for the last decade. Predicted record: 4-8 NCAA FOOTBALL PICKS: (associated press): nebraska reciver arrested.   Wide receiver Maurice Purify was suspended indefinitely from the Nebraska football team Friday after his arrest on suspicion of drunken driving, his second run-in with law enforcement in five weeks. A State Patrol trooper stopped Purify at 12:25 a.m. at the intersection of Cornhusker Highway and North First Street in Lincoln. Purify was observed driving 53 mph in a 40 mph zone and failing to use his turn signal, patrol spokeswoman Deb Collins said. The 21-year-old Purify was taken to the Lincoln Detoxification Center after being ticketed on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. Collins said she didn't know Purify's blood-alcohol level at the time of his arrest. ''We are aware of Maurice's situation and we take it very seriously,'' coach Bill Callahan said. ''I met with Maurice today and explained to him that he is indefinitely suspended from the team. At this point, his future status with our team is uncertain.'' The Huskers are +100 favorites on newbodog.com to win the Big 12 North Division. A call seeking comment from Purify's attorney, Jon Braaten of Lincoln, was not immediately returned. Purify had been charged with two counts of assault, resisting arrest, trespassing and failure to comply after a May 5 incident at a downtown bar. Purify was accused of throwing a man over a table, hitting him several times and striking the man's girlfriend. Purify had been authorized to enter a pretrial diversion program in that case. City prosecutor John McQuinn couldn't be reached to comment on how Purify's arrest Friday would affect his participation in diversion. Purify, from Eureka, Calif., was Nebraska's second-leading receiver last season, catching 34 passes for 630 yards and seven touchdowns. He will be a senior in the fall.
NCAA FOOTBALL FREE PICKS- (associated press) : indiana could avoid ailing coaches contract.
 
Terry Hoeppner's contract with Indiana University could be voided if a doctor determines the Indiana Hoosiers' ailing football coach is permanently disabled. The contract, obtained by The Associated Press under a Freedom of Information request, does not specify a timetable for making such a decision. Hoeppner, who turns 60 in August, has undergone two brain surgeries since December 2005 and is on his third medical leave from the team. Still, he signed a two-year extension to his contract last December. His latest absence began in mid-March and is the longest of the three. Hoeppner has not made a public appearance since late February at a NCAA luncheon in Indianapolis. Athletic director Rick Greenspan recently expressed concern over Hoeppner's prolonged absence but declined repeated interview requests from The Associated Press. The disability provision in Hoeppner's contract, which is similar to language in other coaches' contracts, allows the contract, which runs through June 2012, to be terminated for physical or mental disabilities. University spokesman Larry MacIntyre said Thursday that Greenspan must initiate the process. ''The employee reports to the athletic director, so it's in the hands of the athletic director,'' MacIntyre said. ''That's where it remains until the athletic director decides what to do.'' Both sides must agree on which doctor performs the exam. If they cannot agree, Dr. Vidya Kora, the president of the Indiana State Medical Association, would appoint one. The university president then must approve the doctor. Kora said Wednesday he has not been contacted. ''The only discussion that's taken place that I've been involved in is that Terry Hoeppner plans on coaching this fall, but that was a while ago,'' outgoing trustees president Stephen Ferguson said. ''Terry, as is his right, has kept all that information to himself.'' Hoeppner receives a base salary of $250,000 and another $300,000 for his role in promotional activities, which the university has continued to pay in his absence. He also receives $50,000 annually in deferred compensation and has incentive bonuses based on the Hoosiers' on-field performance. In early May, Hoeppner issued a statement through the university, saying he continued to receive medical treatment and remained ''inspired to return to coaching when my health permits.'' But there has been no indication of when he might return. With fall practice just two months away, a big decision looms for Greenspan. SportsInterAction.com has the Hoosiers as +5100 longshots to win the Big Ten title this season.
NCAA FOOTBALL PICKS- (associated press): notre dame narrows quarterbacking hunt.
 
 The competition to replace Brady Quinn as Notre Dame's starting quarterback was narrowed to three Wednesday instead of the two coach Charlie Weis wanted. Evan Sharpley, Jimmy Clausen and Demetrius Jones will vie for the job, Weis said. ''Each of these three young men brought something unique to the QB competition. Evan ran the operation the best, Jimmy threw the ball the best and Demetrius made the most plays. For these reasons, they will compete for playing time,'' Weis said. That left sophomore Zach Frazer out of the running. SPORTSBETTING.COM has listed the Irish at +5000 to win the 2008 BCS championship. Weis had said before spring practice began that he wanted to narrow the competition to two QBs by late May. Sharpley, Quinn's backup last season, is the only one of the three with game experience. He was in eight games last season, but threw just two passes, completing a 7-yarder against Michigan. Clausen is the most highly touted player to arrive at Notre Dame since Ron Powlus in 1993. Clausen enrolled at Notre Dame in January after graduating from high school early. Jones avoided possible controversy last week when prosecutors in LaPorte County dismissed a misdemeanor charge of marijuana possession against Jones after the owner of a car he was driving said in court papers was sure Jones didn't know the marijuana was in the ashtray. Notes: Weis also announced that cornerback Gary Gray, who enrolled in January after graduating from high school early, had shoulder surgery and is expected to miss the season. Gray was injured most of the spring. ... Notre Dame will use Big East officiating crews this season instead of crews from the Big Ten.
NCAA COLLEGE FOOTBALL FREE PICKS- (covers.com): reports on sec spring meeting.  Florida president Bernie Machen began planning a college football playoff after the Gators looked like they'd miss out on the title game last December. On Friday, he got a chance to pitch his idea to other decision-makers. Machen proposed his playoff plan on the final day of the Southeastern Conference's annual spring meetings, telling fellow school presidents and chancellors that the current Bowl Championship Series is simply leaving too much money on the table. ''Everybody wants to talk about it. I want to talk about it,'' Machen said. ''To give me time on the agenda is an encouraging sign. I've done my homework, and we're just going to talk about it. We've never sat down and had a detailed (meeting to ask), 'What do you like about the BCS? What would you like about a playoff?''' Machen's plan is complex, and it does not include details like how many teams would be involved in the playoff or when and where games would be played. The basis of his proposal is to form a limited liability corporation that, much like the BCS, would work outside the framework of the NCAA. He wants to keep the current bowl structure intact and then distribute revenue to all 119 Division I-A schools instead of keeping most of the money for the schools in the six BCS conferences. Machen believes the market would determine the playoff system, whether it be a four-team, eight-team, 16-team or ''plus-one'' format. ''There are no specifics,'' Machen said. ''The plan will evolve if people want to do it, based upon the market and the restrictions people put on it.'' The Pac-10 and the Big Ten have been strongly opposed to a playoff, wanting to stick closely to the Rose Bowl tradition, and coaches across the country said they would be hesitant to back a plan that might devalue the bowl system. But Machen believes that could change if the powerful SEC leads the charge for a playoff. ''We're one of the - some would say the - biggest player in college football, and if we made a move in that direction I think it would be a significant step that the others would have to pay attention to,'' Machen said. So could the Pac-10 and Big Ten be swayed? ''At this point, it's a little early to figure who's in and who's out,'' Machen said. ''Nobody's in because we don't have anything yet. If there's a playoff, I hope everybody would be in on it.'' Sportsbook.com has USC listed at +250 to win the BCS Championship game in 2008. SEC commissioner Mike Slive, also the BCS coordinator, recently asked the league's college leaders to start thinking about the future of the BCS. If they talk about it now and continue their discussions every time they meet over the next 18 months, Slive believes they could have a firm plan in place when it's time to renegotiate the next BCS contract. The current deal expires after the 2009 season. Slive acknowledged that the BCS is far from perfect. ''There's an annual nervousness that exists throughout the fall,'' Slive said. ''Weekend to weekend, there's a different set of issues that arise. The last couple of years it's obviously been successful and had a lack of relative controversy. Hopefully it will work out in the future.'' Slive also cautioned about trying to overhaul a system that has been good for the sport. ''Television ratings are up, attendance is up, interest is up every single weekend,'' he said. ''You can give the BCS some credit for the continued popularity of college football. You can be a critic of it, but even the most severe critic has to recognize that the current postseason format has continually reinforced the popularity of college football.'' There are sure to be critics of Machen's plan, and it was unclear whether even the SEC would support it. Vanderbilt chancellor Gordon Gee said there was little Machen could do to change his mind. ''In the spirit of academic vitality, one always listens to a proposal before you vote against it,'' Gee said. ''I've heard every variation from every possible person in America. I get e-mails all the time lobbying me from committed fans that have brilliant ideas. I'm not sure any variation on that would be anything fairly new.'' Gee, like many of his colleagues, believe adding more games while trying to maximize revenue would send the wrong message to universities and student-athletes. ''We've been consistent all along that we're trying to bring some semblance of integrity and some semblance of balance back into what we're doing, and this moves in exactly the wrong direction,'' Gee said. ''This is a slippery slope toward us finally just throwing in the towel and saying what we're about is fielding football teams and we have a university on the side, and I'm just not in favor of that.'' Slive said he didn't expect school presidents and chancellors to make a decision Friday regarding Machen's proposal. But he thought it was a good starting point for future discussions. ''We still have another year or so to think about it,'' Slive said. ''The question is: How do we preserve everything we have and at the same time, if there's something that's a little bit better, then maybe we ought to look at that?''
NCAA COLLEGE FOOTBALL FREE PICKS: (associated press): 5 year rule on the way. NCAA president Myles Brand said he isn't necessarily opposed to a recent proposal by the NCAA football issues committee that would extend player eligibility in the sport to five years. Brand, speaking Friday at the Women's College World Series, even said the idea ''might be favorable'' if it included the elimination of the practice of redshirting. Brand said that 80 percent of Division I football players are being redshirted and that it takes the average student about 4.7 years to graduate from college. ''I think if we do it right, to make sure student-athletes actually have educational activities throughout their five years, which approximates the actual practice, and we do away with medical redshirting (and) actual redshirting, I don't see anything wrong with that,'' Brand said. The NCAA football issues committee, led by Nebraska athletic director Steve Pederson, has requested that the proposal be discussed at the spring meetings of Division I football-playing conferences. Even if the idea gains support, it would have to go through several NCAA committees before a membership vote. During a wide-ranging news conference, Brand also said that he doesn't sense support among universities for a college football playing system, that the Academic Progress Report system - which measures eligibility and retention of student-athletes and mandates penalties for schools not meeting certain requirements - ''is not going anywhere.'' Sportsbook.com has USC listed as a +250 favorite to win the 2008 National Championship. FREE COLLEGE FOOTBALL PICKS- (covers.com): hoosiers coach still under going treatment.
  
Indiana football coach Terry Hoeppner is still undergoing medical treatment and remains intent on returning to the sideline this fall. Athletic department officials released a short statement from Hoeppner on Tuesday, the first update on his health since an announcement nearly two months ago that he would not coach spring practice to recuperate from brain surgery. ''I continue to receive medical treatment and remain inspired to return to coaching when my health permits,'' Hoeppner said. ''I love Indiana University and Indiana football and will make decisions in the best interest of the program, as I have always attempted to do.'' Sportsbook.com has Indiana listed at +5000 to win the National Championship in 2008. Hoeppner had brain surgery twice in a 10-month span and has now left the team three times since December 2005. His last major public appearance was in late February when he spoke during an NCAA luncheon in Indianapolis. He also attended a news conference earlier that month to announce Indiana's newest recruits although the assistant coaches answered most of the questions and provided most of the details. Hoeppner left Miami (Ohio) in December 2004 to return to Indiana, his home state, and take over a Hoosiers program that last went to a bowl game in 1993. A year later, he had a tumor removed from his right temple and last September he had a second operation on the right side of his head. He then left the team for two weeks but watched both games from the press box before rejoining the team. Hoeppner later implied follow-up tests showed no recurrence of the tumor, but that doctors had removed only scar tissue. Hoeppner is 9-14 in his two seasons at Indiana, and he has reinvigorated enthusiasm in the program by reaching out to students and fans. In December, Hoeppner signed a two-year contract extension that would keep him in Bloomington through June 2012. But last month, Hoeppner announced he was skipping spring practice to regain his strength and energy, and when the Hoosiers played their annual crimson-and-cream game on April 14, he did not attend. Assistant Bill Lynch filled in as interim coach during each of Hoeppner's absences. Indiana also has two football camps scheduled in mid-June, but there has been no announcement regarding whether Hoeppner would run them. Athletic director Rick Greenspan has not provided many updates on Hoeppner's condition, citing both privacy concerns. In Tuesday's statement, Hoeppner again asked the media to respect his privacy, and Greenspan said he hoped Hoeppner would recover quickly. ''Hep's health is of the utmost interest and concern to us,'' Greenspan said. ''We'll continue to provide him with all of the support that we can with hopeful anticipation that he'll get well as quickly as possible.''
 
 
 
FREE COLLEGE FOOTBALL PICKS- (associated press) mother of stabbed punter say's he's doing fine. 
 
 Florence Mendoza squirmed in a fourth-row bench Thursday as lawyers discussed the case against the former Northern Colorado backup punter accused of trying to kill her son. ''I don't think anybody would like to sit and hear what went on the night that their son was hurt,'' Mendoza said after a motions hearing for Mitch Cozad, charged with attempted first-degree murder in a knife attack on her son Rafael, the starting punter. ''It's hard (being here),'' she said. Rafael Mendoza was attacked on Sept. 11 in a dimly lit parking lot outside his apartment in Evans, a small town adjacent to Greeley. He suffered a 3- to 5-inch-deep wound in his kicking leg. Cozad, of Wheatland, Wyo., has pleaded not guilty and remains free on $500,000 bail. If found guilty of attempted murder, he could face up to 48 years in prison. Police have said they believe Cozad stabbed Mendoza to try to get the starting job, and the case drew quick comparisons to the assault by Tonya Harding's hit man on Nancy Kerrigan. Cozad's case is scheduled to go to trial July 30. A pretrial readiness conference was moved up to July 2, the last day the judge will accept a plea agreement. Asked whether talks were under way about a plea deal, defense lawyer Joseph Gavaldon said only that ''they're always ongoing.'' District attorney spokeswoman Jennifer Finch declined to comment. Florence Mendoza said she doesn't know how she'd feel about a plea deal. ''I think that would be up to my son,'' she said. Prosecutor Michele Meyer called four witnesses: two Evans police officers; a university police officer; and Nathan Cole, the university's coordinator for student rights and responsibilities. Cole testified about bringing an eviction notice and a no-trespass letter to Cozad's dorm room on Sept. 12. Cozad, who was suspended from the university and kicked off the team, had an hour to vacate his dorm room. While Cozad waited in Cole's office for his mother to pick him up, Evans police arrived, handcuffed Cozad and took him away, Cole said. After nearly two hours of testimony Thursday, Florence Mendoza walked outside and leaned against a concrete wall in the bright sun. She said her son still can't put the attack behind him. ''Too soon,'' she said. ''I think he's doing the best he can to handle it.'' Rafael Mendoza returned to the team just two weeks after the attack and averaged 39.9 yards on 56 punts last season. He hopes to punt for the Bears again next fall, his mother said. ''You've got to try out, same as every year,'' she said. COLLEGE FOOTBALL FREE PICKS: (associated press) odds to win 2008 national championship. USC +250
 
Florida +700 
 
Michigan +800 
 
LSU +1200
 
Texas +1000
 
West Virginia +1200
 
Oklahoma +3000
 
Penn St +3500  Arkansas +3500
 
Georgia +4500 
 
Nebraska +3500 
 
Virginia Tech +3500 
 
Ohio St +2000 
 
Florida St +3500
 
Wisconsin +3500
 
Texas A&M +6000 Louisville +2000
 
Auburn +6000
 
California +5000
 
Tennessee +5000
 
Miami FL +4000
 
Rutgers +5000
 
Notre Dame +4000 
 
Alabama +7500 
 
Iowa +10000
 
UCLA +5000
 
Clemson +7500
 
Oregon +10000 
 
BYU +20000
 
Colorado +20000 
 
South Carolina +10000
 
TCU +20000
 
Arizona St +20000
 
Oregon St +20000 
 
Boston College +20000 
 
Missouri +20000
 
Texas Tech +2000 
 
Boise St +20000
 
Arizona +20000 
 
Wake Forest +20000
 
Maryland +20000
 
North Carolina St +20000
 
Georgia Tech +20000
 
Hawaii +20000 
 
Oklahoma St +20000 
 
Pittsburgh +20000 
 
Kansas St +20000 
 
Purdue +20000 
 
South Florida +20000 
 



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