I’ve been swamped with homework and having
to go to work so I’m behind on a few different articles I wanted to write.
Since that’s the case, I’m going to abbreviate the three and put them all in
here.
Notre
Dame is 5-0
The Fighting Irish had quite the weekend. They dominated the Miami Hurricanes
and moved to #7 in the AP Poll and could be in the Top 3 of the BCS Poll next
week. The Irish relied on their running offense to pound Miami into submission
in the second half of the game. There were four touchdowns scored in the second
half of the game and all were rushing touchdowns by Notre Dame. In fact, Irish
quarterbacks only threw THREE passes in the second half of the 41-3 blowout.
Although the running backs stole the show, young quarterback Everett Golson had
the best game of his short career. He finished the game 17/22 with 186 passing
yards and ran the ball six times for 51 yards.
The early season success and a juicy matchup with #17 Stanford on Saturday have
lured ESPN’s College Gameday to broadcast their traveling show from the
Notre Dame campus. I will have a preview of that game later in the week.
I’d also like to take this time to brag. I predict the score of each Irish game every week. I have been pretty close on some of them. Below, I’ve listed each opponent so far. The first score is what I predicted and the score in the bold is the actual score.
Navy: 34-10. 50-10
Purdue: 31-21. 20-17
Michigan State: 20-10. 20-3
Michigan: 34-16. 13-6
Miami: 31-6. 41-3
None of them are exact, but Navy, Michigan State, and Miami are damn close and Purdue isn’t too far off. The only one I really blew was Michigan but who saw a combined 19 points coming from that game?
CHUCKSTRONG
It came as a shock when Jim Irsay announced Colts head coach, Chuck Pagano, had
been diagnosed with Leukemia. Players, coaches, and fans were stunned but then
rallied together to support a man that we have only known a few months.
“CHUCKSTRONG” has become a rallying cry and has appeared on social media sites,
t-shirts, and posters in Lucas Oil Stadium. There was a short time for
the Colts to grieve but they knew they had to move on from the traumatic news
quickly and prepare for the game against the Green Bay Packers. The Packers
were Super Bowl Champions in 2010 and came into 2012 as Super Bowl favorites
because of their talented quarterback, Aaron Rodgers. Even if Pagano was on the
sideline for the game, it was difficult to see the Colts having any chance at
winning the game.
The offensive coordinator and replacement for Pagano, Bruce Arians, led the
team onto the field on Sunday afternoon as a head coach for the first time in
his long football career. Indianapolis struggled from the beginning of the game
and by halftime it appeared they were outmatched as the Packers led 21-3. I
gave up on the Colts and believed there was no way they would ever mount a
comeback. However, Coach Arians believed differently. He spoke to one of the
FOX reporters before heading to the locker room before halftime and said he was
going to continue to run the offense and defense the same way. He sounded calm
and not the least bit worried that he his teams had shown no signs of even
scoring a touchdown.
On the first drive of the 3rd quarter, Colts cornerback Jerraud
Powers intercepted an Aaron Rodger’s pass on the sideline. Then Andrew Luck
came out and led the Colts in a 39-yard drive that ended in a touchdown pass to
Dwayne Allen. The score was 21-10 and a small glimmer of hope began to appear
for the Colts. The next drive for the Packers was stopped and the Indy defense
forced a punt. Luck came onto the field and led the offense back down the field
and set up an Adam Vinatieri field goal that made the score 21-13. Now,
Indianapolis was only losing by one possession. The crowd became alive and the
energy was back on the Colts’ sidelines. The Packers couldn’t respond as their
kicker missed a 52-yard field goal. Here came Luck onto the field again for the
third time in the third quarter. The Colts got all the way to the Green Bay and
goal line and Luck displayed his Robert Griffin III impression by running for a
3-yard touchdown. Although we failed to get the 2-point conversion, we were
only behind two at the beginning of the 4th quarter as the score was
21-19.
The two teams went a couple of series without any points being scored. But
finally the Colts were able to lead for the first time after Vinatieri made
another field goal. With 4:44 left in the game, the Packers got the ball and in
just two plays scored a touchdown for the first time in the second half. They
led 27-22 and it looked like the comeback was over for Indy. The Colts had a
different mindset though. They showed grit, toughness, and heart by going on a
four-minute drive that had three third-down conversions and resulted in a
Luck-to-Reggie Wayne touchdown. They were successful on the third-down
conversion and led 30-27 with 35 seconds left.
Celebration time, right? Surely there was no way that the Packers could
comeback with only 35 seconds left. Rodgers proved just the opposite. In three
plays he had the Packers at the Indianapolis 33-yard line with eight seconds
left. Green Bay’s Mason Crosby lined up for the field goal attempt. The ball
was snapped and Crosby began his kick. He got the ball off cleanly and it
soared into the air. It went on a trajectory that appeared to be heading right
through the uprights. All of a sudden, the ball veered to the left and the
field goal attempt was unsuccessful. Colts win! It was jubilation on the field
and inside Lucas Oil Stadium. Not only did we make a miraculous comeback, but
we did it while our head coach was in a hospital down the street fighting his
battle.
The star player of the game, Reggie Wayne, also gave a game ball to Bruce
Arians. He considers Pagano one of his best friends and it was Pagano that
coaxed Arians out of retirement and come to Indy. He had not only stop in for
the head coach, but he had to replace somebody he has known and respected for
decades.
NASCAR
Notes
The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series playoffs or the “Chase for the Sprint Cup”
concluded its fourth race and has only six left. Brad Keselowski is the points
leader and Jimmie Johnson and Denny Hamlin trail him. Those three are
considered the favorites to win the championship and one of them most likely
will. Kasey Kahne, Clint Bowyer, Jeff Gordon, and Tony Stewart are still in the
hunt, but they have to make up points
in the next couple of weeks. The other five drivers are too far back to
make any kind of run.
Last week’s race was at
the restrictor-plate track Talladega. These restrictor plate tracks create huge
packs of cars that then create huge, multi-car wrecks. The race on Sunday was
calm for about 187 of the 188 laps. On the final lap of the race, everybody was
in a huge pack of four-wide cars all gunning for first place. It was thrilling
to watch more than 25 of NASCAR’s best drivers be able to control their cars
while traveling 200 mph within feet of each other. Any wrong move or slight
mistake would cause havoc. Entering the final turn, Michael Waltrip and Casey
Mears got made a run for the lead. Stewart, who was leading, turned down to
block them. This was a slight mistake I just mentioned. Waltrip ran into the
back of Stewart and caused him to slide up the track and in front of the pack
of cars. Stewart got hit again by an oncoming car and almost went airborne.
Cars went crashing into other cars, the wall, and the infield grass. By the end
of the wreck only a handful of drivers were able to cross the finish line.
Everybody else went straight to the garage or had to get towed there.
This horrific crash brings up a few different topics. First off, should this
kind of racing even be allowed? It’s ridiculous to bring million-dollar cars to
a track where there’s a pretty good chance it’s going to get totaled. It’s even
more ridiculous when you consider one of those big wrecks could seriously
injure a driver or fan. Secondly, should a restrictor plate track be in the
Chase? When you race at ‘Dega or Daytona, everybody’s cars are equal because
you can only go so fast. This creates a lot of opportunity for drivers that
don’t have the experience or talent to race up front and cause accidents, as
was the case with Waltrip and Mears. Why should that kind of environment be
involved in deciding the championship? It is completely asinine that a mistake
by drivers like Waltrip, Mears, Terry Labonte, or David Gilliland could play
such a big part in the outcome of who wins the Chase. I understand that there
are risks at any track you race at, but if a guy spins out in Turn 3 at
Atlanta, there’s a good chance nobody else will be impacted. That isn’t the
case at restrictor-plate tracks.
Finally, I have a radical idea that I have heard nowhere else and you’re the
first people I’m going to tell. Have the Sprint Cup Series race the road course
at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The Sprint Cup boys have raced on the oval
at IMS since 1994. The event was a huge success in the 90’s but in the past
five years ticket sales have decreased and last year there were only about
140,000 sold. For 2012, IMS held a GRAND-AM race on Friday and Nationwide
Series race on Saturday in the hopes of luring more people to the track for the
Sunday race. That obviously did not happen. I have been to the last five 400’s
and they have all been seriously boring. I love NASCAR and IMS, but if I
consider the race boring then what do less avid fans think?
IMS has two options:
1) Let the event continue on and just be
content with the attendance. NASCAR is struggling at all tracks to draw fans so
IMS shouldn’t blame themselves. However, there is no way more than 200,000 come
to Brickyard in the near future, especially when there are so many other tracks
in the Midwest.
2) Make the Brickyard 400 a road course
race. Many NASCAR fans are clamoring for a third road course race on the
schedule and many want it in the Chase. NASCAR has also said it is interested
in adding another road course but doesn’t where they would go. What would get
more attention than a road course race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in
the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship? Plus, you could put this new
Brickyard in place of the race at ‘Dega. It’s a winning situation for
everybody. NASCAR would be happy to have the third road course. Fans would be
happy to see a road course be in the Chase. IMS would be happy to have a new
event. SMI and ISC would be happy because neither would gain nor lose a race.
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