NC State vs Tennessee
August 31, 2012
Georgia Dome, Atlanta
Well, after driving home this morning from Atlanta, I had some time to think about last night's performance against the University of Tennessee. First off, kudos to UT for coming out and playing great the whole 60 minutes. State on the other hand, has some work to do. In the next couple paragraphs I will go over both the good and the bad that I saw from last nights game.
Good:
Mustafa Greene: I thought Mustafa looked great. I was a little surprised last week when the depth chart was released and Tony Creecy was listed as the starter. However, I was impressed with Mustafa's speed and ability to change directions so quickly, much improved from the Creecy-Washington duo of last year that seemed to never quite get where they wanted to go. Overall I am excited to see what Mustafa has in store for us this year, and the best part is he is still a sophomore.
Asa Watson: I had heard about Asa before, but I did not know he was this explosive. Asa will be a force to be reckoned with this year.
Bad:
David Amerson: I, along with almost every other State fan had high expectations this season for David. I was extremely disappointed last night with his performance. If I remember correctly, he overplayed his man at least twice, and two times his man broke away and scored a touchdown. Summary: Dissapointed.
Defensive Line: Horrible. Maybe touched Brey twice? I know UT has SEC caliber linemen, but still. We NEED to work on the pass rush if we want to be successful.
Offensive Play-calling:
This happened a lot more last year than it did in the game last night, but I get tired of having a 3rd and long and we run a screen pass out to a sideline. How long will it take for TOB & Co. to realize we cannot run a screen because our guys are too slow?
I did not go into this game expecting us to win, but I did expect us to at least put up a decent fight. I think the momentum changer was the first possession of the second-half when we were moving the ball great, had a first down, but Wentz (I think) was called for a personal foul on a late hit. After that we go 3-and-out and never really show a great fight after that.
Also, the 1st half was the widest experience I have ever had a sporting event. State's crowd was electric early, and UT fans were as well. The concourse rang of "Wolf-Pack" and the VOLS chant, and people trash talking. An absolute awesome experience. The best thing about the evening was that the UT band was on the other side of the dome, so I could barely hear the Rocky Top song which was great!
I would also like to take a second to remember the Tennessee student who fell from the upper level into the club level mezzanine seats, and later died at the hospital. Prayers and thoughts are with his family and the entire UT community.
Final Score: NC State 21, Tennessee 35
NC State (0-1, 0-0)
Next week:
NC State @ Connecticut, 12:00PM, ESPN3
My prediction:
NC State 31, UCONN 24
Politics, Sports, and more!
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Day 2: Edison, NYC, and Long Island
Day 2 of the trip brought some excitement, finally. The day started with the worst motel "continental" breakfast I have ever seen. The first stop of the day which was more of a time filler was Thomas Edison's laboratory in West Orange, NJ. I was actually pretty impressed with all of the stuff this man created that we take for granted today (ie electricity, speakers, moving pictures). Unfortunately, I forgot to take the camera out of the car so I did not get any pictures. During this tour I also met some State grads from the 90s who also went through the engineering department.
After that, and driving through about 5 miles without seeing a single caucasian, we drove through the Holland Tunnel into Manhattan. Since we did not park and get out, I only snapped a few pictures from the car. This one was on Madison Ave looking north towards Central Park.
After that, and driving through about 5 miles without seeing a single caucasian, we drove through the Holland Tunnel into Manhattan. Since we did not park and get out, I only snapped a few pictures from the car. This one was on Madison Ave looking north towards Central Park.
After another business stop in the Bronx, and fighting our way through more traffic, we arrived in Hampton Bays, NY, on Long Island where we will be for a few days.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Day 1: Travel Day
As promised, here is my daily blog post on my trip to New England this summer.
Today was the first day of the trip, and included an ~10 hour drive from Salisbury to Piscataway, NJ, which is the home of Rutgers University. I slept most of the morning, but was conscious when we drove through Washington DC. Even though we didn't get out and look around the city, we did get a pretty good view of several landmarks from I-395 including the Pentagon, the Washington Monument, Capitol Hill, the Yankees-Nationals game, and the top facade of the White House. We stopped in Baltimore for some business stops and the Star Spangled Celebration was going on in downtown Baltimore. One pretty cool thing here was the famous Blue Angels flight team were in town doing an air show. A few hours later and after some traffic delays and rip-off toll roads throughout Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey, we finally decided to stop here in Piscataway.
Nothing of importance happened today, but hopefully tomorrow I'll have some pictures to post up from the travels in NYC and Long Island.
Today was the first day of the trip, and included an ~10 hour drive from Salisbury to Piscataway, NJ, which is the home of Rutgers University. I slept most of the morning, but was conscious when we drove through Washington DC. Even though we didn't get out and look around the city, we did get a pretty good view of several landmarks from I-395 including the Pentagon, the Washington Monument, Capitol Hill, the Yankees-Nationals game, and the top facade of the White House. We stopped in Baltimore for some business stops and the Star Spangled Celebration was going on in downtown Baltimore. One pretty cool thing here was the famous Blue Angels flight team were in town doing an air show. A few hours later and after some traffic delays and rip-off toll roads throughout Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey, we finally decided to stop here in Piscataway.
Nothing of importance happened today, but hopefully tomorrow I'll have some pictures to post up from the travels in NYC and Long Island.
Friday, May 18, 2012
The End of the ACC
Yes, you read that right. The end of the ACC as a dominant conference is about to end. In the last week, much has happened that has caused myself and numerous others to believe that a major conference realignment and shift is about to occur. It all started last weekend when Florida State Board of Trustees Chairman Andy Haggard dropped the bombshell that FSU could be interested in investigating other conferences, namely the Big 12. Then, this week at the annual ACC coaches conference in Florida, FSU was not in attendance. And if that was not enough to make you think this is a reality, the FSU President laid out a pros and cons list of a move to the Big 12. This is huge for the landscape of the ACC and the power conferences of football. If Florida State were to bolt to the Big 12, would they bring anyone with them, and would it spur other teams to follow suit and jump ship to other conferences?
Now, with the rumors of Florida State leaving the ACC circling around, the Big 12 and SEC announced today that it would be creating a new bowl where the winners of each respective conference would play each other in a game on New Years Day. This is significant because this lays the groundwork for a 4 team playoff to be created in the new BCS playoff system. Since the winners of the Pac 10 and Big 10 already play in Pasadena in the Rose Bowl, and now the winners of the Big 12 and SEC playing in this new bowl game, this works out perfectly for the 4 team playoff system. The winners of these two games could play for the National Championship. But here is the problem... Where do the rest of the BCS conferences fit in to this system, namely the ACC and Big East? No where. With collegiate athletics and especially football geared around money, no one is going to want to pay to see the ACC winner play the Big East winner in the Orange Bowl. So both of these conferences in my opinion have the death sentence written on them in terms of football. Now, with FSU rumored to leave to the Big 12, who else in the ACC is ready to jump ship, and where will they go? Let's find out.
We all know that the SEC is looking to expand to 16 teams, even the SEC commissioner says so. So with the SEC currently at 14 teams, who would be the other two that the conference are likely to tap? Currently, the SEC television footprint extends into every state in the south except for North Carolina and Virginia, so it would make fiscal sense to look to expand to those TV markets. UNC would be the most sought after in NC for obvious reasons, but the hierarchy at UNC-CH would not even consider stepping down to the SEC level in academics. Also, I doubt Carolina would leave the ACC without Duke, which the SEC probably would not consider. So that leaves NC State as the next viable option. In my opinion the Wolfpack would be a perfect fit for the SEC. The football program is decent enough in the sub-par ACC, but with a few years of the recruiting boost the SEC brings, it could pose a problem to some teams within the conference. State would also be in the top tier in basketball automatically as well. Add that to the NC TV market which is home to two top 30 markets, and we have a very viable candidate.
Next is Virginia, and Virginia Tech is the only team that makes sense. They hold their own in football and are decent enough in basketball and would fit in nicely in the SEC.
So where do the other teams in the ACC go? Well, I think this is how the new power 4 conferences will shape up to look like after the dust has settled (new teams in bold):
Now, with the rumors of Florida State leaving the ACC circling around, the Big 12 and SEC announced today that it would be creating a new bowl where the winners of each respective conference would play each other in a game on New Years Day. This is significant because this lays the groundwork for a 4 team playoff to be created in the new BCS playoff system. Since the winners of the Pac 10 and Big 10 already play in Pasadena in the Rose Bowl, and now the winners of the Big 12 and SEC playing in this new bowl game, this works out perfectly for the 4 team playoff system. The winners of these two games could play for the National Championship. But here is the problem... Where do the rest of the BCS conferences fit in to this system, namely the ACC and Big East? No where. With collegiate athletics and especially football geared around money, no one is going to want to pay to see the ACC winner play the Big East winner in the Orange Bowl. So both of these conferences in my opinion have the death sentence written on them in terms of football. Now, with FSU rumored to leave to the Big 12, who else in the ACC is ready to jump ship, and where will they go? Let's find out.
We all know that the SEC is looking to expand to 16 teams, even the SEC commissioner says so. So with the SEC currently at 14 teams, who would be the other two that the conference are likely to tap? Currently, the SEC television footprint extends into every state in the south except for North Carolina and Virginia, so it would make fiscal sense to look to expand to those TV markets. UNC would be the most sought after in NC for obvious reasons, but the hierarchy at UNC-CH would not even consider stepping down to the SEC level in academics. Also, I doubt Carolina would leave the ACC without Duke, which the SEC probably would not consider. So that leaves NC State as the next viable option. In my opinion the Wolfpack would be a perfect fit for the SEC. The football program is decent enough in the sub-par ACC, but with a few years of the recruiting boost the SEC brings, it could pose a problem to some teams within the conference. State would also be in the top tier in basketball automatically as well. Add that to the NC TV market which is home to two top 30 markets, and we have a very viable candidate.
Next is Virginia, and Virginia Tech is the only team that makes sense. They hold their own in football and are decent enough in basketball and would fit in nicely in the SEC.
So where do the other teams in the ACC go? Well, I think this is how the new power 4 conferences will shape up to look like after the dust has settled (new teams in bold):
Big 12 Big
10 SEC Pac 10
Baylor Illinois Florida Arizona
Iowa State Indiana Georgia Arizona St
Kansas Iowa Kentucky Cal
Kansas State Michigan South Carolina Colorado
Oklahoma Michigan
State Tennessee Oregon
Oklahoma State Minnesota Vanderbilt Oregon St
Texas Nebraska Alabama Stanford
Texas Tech Northwestern Arkansas UCLA
TCU Ohio
State Auburn USC
West Virginia Penn
State LSU Utah
FSU Purdue Miss State Washington
Miami Wisconsin Ole Miss Wash St
Pittsburgh Duke Texas
A&M Boise State
Clemson Virginia Missouri BYU
Georgia Tech UNC-CH Virginia Tech Hawaii
L'ville (or Cincy) Notre Dame NC State San Diego St
And the ones left out of the mix to fend for themselves in a new ACC/Big East leftover conference:
Boston College, Wake Forest, Maryland, Syracuse, Connecticut, Rutgers, Cincinnati (or Louisville), South Florida, and UCF.
This would not have as huge of an impact on basketball as it does football, because the number from each conference that goes to the NCAA tournament varies each year, but it does heavily affect the football landscape... but who knows if we will even have football 20 years from now with the lawsuits and insurance liabilities we see with injuries today.
Regardless, I do know this. The ACC as a dominant, power conference is no more. The days of ACC Sunday Night Hoops on Fox Sports Net and the Boston College-Wake Forest football games on the ACC Network at 12:30 are the things about this conference that I will not miss. It has been a fun ride while it has lasted, but the grass is greener on the playing fields of the SEC, and I cannot wait for myself to see "SEC" written on the 25 yard line at Carter-Finley in the near future.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Amile Jefferson and the state of ACC Basketball
As most of us NC State fans know, Amile Jefferson finally made his decision yesterday as to where he would be attending college in the Fall. Unfortunately for us State fans, he chose Duke. However, I do not think this should cause us any worry. State is returning several key post players from last years lineup, including CJ Leslie, a junior, and Richard Howell, a senior. Both of these players proved themselves last year, and as long as both of them can stay out of foul trouble, I can see these two being a force to reckon with in the ACC next season. Beyond these two, State will need some help from redshirt junior Jordan Vandenberg and sophomore Thomas de Thaey. If one of these two can step up their game and be a competitor, State will be the team to beat in the ACC.
We now know for certain that UNC-CH and NC State will be playing each other in a home-and-home series next season, but after that it may be a few years before the Pack and Tar Heels face each other in each team's respective arena. NC State and UNC have been playing each other twice each season for almost a century, so why is the ACC deciding to change this long standing tradition now? Besides, the ACC prides itself on upholding tradition. The only somewhat logical reason to end this home-and-home series is money. With everything in college athletics now dictated by the dollar signs, I can see where ACC Commissioner John Swofford (I'll have more on him later) and ESPN decided to end this. I will admit, ESPN and subsequently the ACC make a lot of money off of the Duke-UNC rivalry, but what is going to happen to this so called rivalry when both Roy Williams and Coach K retire? K announced this week that he was not going to coach the 2016 US Olympic team, and I have been hearing rumors recently that K will retire after the 2013-2014 season. With NC State on the rise, and Duke appearing to be on the decline after their somewhat boring season last year and loss to Lehigh in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, I think this is a stupid move on the part of the Commissioner and ESPN. One way this could be solved is to institute two divisions. Once Syracuse and Pitt join the conference (probably in the fall of 2013), there will be 14 teams in the conference. Seven of these teams will be the original teams from the ACC, and the other seven will be implants from the Big East. So my two proposed divisions would shape up like this:
We now know for certain that UNC-CH and NC State will be playing each other in a home-and-home series next season, but after that it may be a few years before the Pack and Tar Heels face each other in each team's respective arena. NC State and UNC have been playing each other twice each season for almost a century, so why is the ACC deciding to change this long standing tradition now? Besides, the ACC prides itself on upholding tradition. The only somewhat logical reason to end this home-and-home series is money. With everything in college athletics now dictated by the dollar signs, I can see where ACC Commissioner John Swofford (I'll have more on him later) and ESPN decided to end this. I will admit, ESPN and subsequently the ACC make a lot of money off of the Duke-UNC rivalry, but what is going to happen to this so called rivalry when both Roy Williams and Coach K retire? K announced this week that he was not going to coach the 2016 US Olympic team, and I have been hearing rumors recently that K will retire after the 2013-2014 season. With NC State on the rise, and Duke appearing to be on the decline after their somewhat boring season last year and loss to Lehigh in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, I think this is a stupid move on the part of the Commissioner and ESPN. One way this could be solved is to institute two divisions. Once Syracuse and Pitt join the conference (probably in the fall of 2013), there will be 14 teams in the conference. Seven of these teams will be the original teams from the ACC, and the other seven will be implants from the Big East. So my two proposed divisions would shape up like this:
- Original ACC Teams
- Clemson
- Duke
- Maryland
- UNC-Chapel Hill
- NC State
- Virginia
- Wake Forest
- Old Big East Teams
- Boston College
- Georgia Tech
- Florida State
- Miami
- Pittsburgh
- Syracuse
- Virginia Tech
With this system I would have each team play every team in their division twice, home and away, and every team from the opposite division once. The only negative to this system is that there would be 19 conference games as opposed to the 18 game schedule that is proposed for next season. Another problem would be cross-state rivals in different divisions (i.e. UVA-VPI), but that could be easily rectified by scheduling a non-conference game in addition to the regularly scheduled ACC game. Even though this system would more than likely work, it would never be implemented because it is fair to all teams, which the ACC does not want.
Which brings me to my last point, ACC Commissioner John Swofford. Swofford has got to go. There are so many reasons that bring me to this conclusion that I do not have the time to list them all. However, I will highlight a few important ones. First, Swofford is a UNC grad. Why on earth is a commissioner of a league a graduate of one of its member institutions? This is just asking for trouble. When UNC was in trouble with the NCAA for their numerous athletic and academic scandals (more on that in a later post), who went to all or most of the meetings UNC had with the NCAA? You got it, John Swofford. But when the University of Miami and Georgia Tech were going through the same ordeal with the NCAA, who was no where to be found? You got it, John Swofford. Now this may not seem like a big deal, but there is no telling what went on behind closed doors in those meetings. However, I probably don't want to. Second, the ACC as a football power conference is no more. When did this all start you may ask? In my opinion it began when the conference expanded in the early 2000s to bring in Boston College (what a joke), Miami, and Virginia Tech. At the time, these schools were somewhat decent at football. But since their inception into the league, Boston College has become non-existent (literally), Miami is in trouble with the NCAA, and Virginia Tech is actually holding its own. How this relates to John Swofford is he orchestrated this expansion, and in my opinion has watered-down the quality of competition we every Saturday on the football field. I also think that this will repeat itself with the addition of the two perennial powerhouses (yeah right) Syracuse and Pittsburgh... Once again, it is all about the $$$ and expanding the ACC market into these new territories. My third and last reason is the sub-par officiating crews that run the basketball games for the league. It frustrates me to watch an ACC game, and see fouls called on the most subtle touches up by the top of the key. LET THE GUYS PLAY! If someone blatantly fouls someone on a layup or something similar, then by all means call that a foul, but not on something small like touch fouls. When I watch other conferences play, specifically the Big Ten, fouls are only called when they are rough fouls, and this is the reason why many people hold the Big Ten to be the best basketball conference in the country. I could also write a whole story here about the Hess-gate scandal as well since I witnessed the ordeal from 20 feet away, but for the essence of the time I will not delve into that topic today, but that also goes along the lines of favoritism showed by the ACC elite and the officiating crews. Had Karl Hess thrown Michael Jordan or Rasheed Wallace out of the Dean Dome for the same "objectionable behavior", all Hell would have broken loose and we would never hear of Karl Hess again. But like I said, that is for a different day.
So in summary, State will be just fine without Amile Jefferson, State better enjoy this year's home-and-home with UNC because it may be a while before it happens again, and John Swofford needs to be fired, plain and simple.
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