Saturday, November 27, 2010

Hoke Era Ending Already?, Garland

I, for one, was curious but not worried when it was revealed that the University of Minnesota made overtures to San Diego State football coach Brady Hoke early this week. There were more reasons to reject the Gophers job than to take it, with the possible hitch being that UM officials were planning to bury their new hire in cash.

I always saw Hoke here for the long term to build the SDSU program unless someone else made an offer he couldn't refuse, and I didn't see that coming for awhile. Also, based on various media reports in recent years, one gets the impression that Hoke, offensive coordinator Al Borges and defensive coordinator Rocky Long committed to each other -- the only exception being if Borges was given a long-coveted head coaching job.

Now I think conditions are changing, and that Hoke might receive such an offer that he can't turn down. None of the big names connected to the Minnesota job along with him seem realistic to me, and his credentials are right there with other candidates like Al Golden of Temple.

The market is turning into the coaches favor, which will drive up salary offers. The head coach at Vanderbilt resigned, the coach at Indiana is on shaky ground in territory where Hoke is familiar, and Ohio State's rout of Michigan might have ended the star-crossed tenure of Rich Rodriguez in Ann Arbor.

Hoke would be interested in two of those three jobs, and he would be sought-after in both. If for some strange reason Stanford's Jim Harbaugh cast his lot with the Wolverines, it wouldn't be outside the realm of possibility for Hoke to end up at The Farm, where he and Borges could salivate over the best offensive line in college football, as well as the best quarterback by far in Andrew Luck, with all due respect to Auburn's Cam Newton.

None of my thinking has anything to do with loyalty to schools, players or coaching colleagues, or SDSU's status as a mere stepping stone. It's all about market forces at work, and those forces are turning against the chances of Hoke remaining in San Diego.

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When all is said and done, I hope Hoke stays. Earlier in the week, I'd have rated the odds 75-25 that he remains at SDSU. Now it's more like 50-50. Hoke has been the perfect head coach for the past almost three calendar years, waking up the sleeping giant of Aztecs football. In a way, his success is what makes him replaceable. Athletic Director Jim Sterk can hire from within or bring someone from the outside who can build on a foundation that is now firm.

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I'm on record of not being fond of former Padres P Jon Garland. He was very little of what he was made out to be when first signed. I'm certainly not going to like him anymore now that he's signed with the Dodgers. I hope he's every bit as wild with LA as he was at Petco.

That said, GM Jed Hoyer has his work cut out for him.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Giving Thanks to a Great Local Sports Year

Sports is often trivial in the overall scheme of things, below the real life concerns of jobs and family, our troops abroad and terrorists still trying to get to us at home.

With the proper perspective laid, 2010 has been a heck of a year for sports in San Diego, and I give thanks for what we've all enjoyed for nearly 11 months. Remember, we started the calendar in downer mode with the Chargers losing the playoff game to the Jets and the Padres not expected to do well. But we got over the Bolts setback and went on a wild ride that, thankfully, is not over yet.

So share with me the following thanks:

-- For Steve Fisher, for the patience to build a program over the long term and providing other coaches at San Diego State the proper path to success.

-- For the Padres in general, for making the summer far more interesting than it could have been.

-- For high school baseball, for never failing to be the best of the best in San Diego.

-- For Brady Hoke, for being a man of character who will see the building of the San Diego State football program through and will have the common sense to know SDSU has a higher upside on the gridiron than Minnesota.

-- For Laura Hoke, who will tell Brady that she has no intention of moving to Minneapolis.

-- For Norv Turner, who is simply one hell of a coach no matter what the detractors say. Look at the other brand-name coaches who were unable to hold things together when their teams started to slide.

-- And staying on the Chargers, being able to watch a QB as great and as fiercely competitive as Philip Rivers.

-- For The San Diego Union-Tribune, which continues to do a fine job reporting on local sports, and has upgraded its coverage of SDSU athletics, despite all the changes and cutbacks.

-- Also in the media, for Chris Ello and Brent Schrotenboer for putting the necessary heat on BYU and the Mountain West Conference over "Replaygate."

-- For David Eckstein, who gave everything he had and, somehow, more. He is the epitome of how to play the game of baseball.

-- For Bud Black, who was deserving of the NL Manager of the Year Award over very strong and similarly deserving competition.

-- For DJ Gay, who understands the necessity of filling a team need.

-- For Beth Burns for taking a San Diego college basketball team to the Sweet 16 for the first time.

-- For Jene Morris and Quinese Davis, because Burns didn't do it without players.

-- For Stephen Strasburg, for displaying raw dominance, and for ultimately teaching us that some things are inevitable, no matter how much you try to avoid them.

-- For Eastlake High, for showing that quality prep football is not only played in the North County.

-- For having met the late-Bob Breitbard and enjoyed the work of Don Coryell -- and for having not just gone to Coryell's memorial service but got paid for it.

-- For catching Tony Gwynn's cancer early.

-- For the chance to view the amazing talents of Kawhi Leonard, Billy White, Vincent Brown, DeMarco Sampson and Miles Burris.

-- For the amazing additions to SDSU sports teams of James Rahon, Ronnie Hillman and Gavin Escobar.

-- For Mat Latos, who will give Padres GM Jed Hoyer someone to build around.

-- For a year in which San Diego State made a scintillating run into the NCAA Tournament, reached the Sweet 16 of the women's tourney and resurrected the football team; for the Padres pushing the World Champion Giants to the limit in the NL West; and for the rest of the AFC West sucking so much that the Chargers will likely come back and win the division despite a 2-5 start.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Aztecs Close Enough to Hurt

The San Diego State football team is pretty darn good, especially if it utilizes its assets of WRs Vincent Brown and DeMarco Sampson, and supreme bomb-tossing QB Ryan Lindley. They proved it in defeating Air Force and coming close in losses at Missouri and TCU, and Saturday night against Utah.

They just aren't quite good enough. The Utes, now 9-2 after getting schooled by the Horned Frogs, embarrassed by Notre Dame and taking SDSU's best shot, are where the Aztecs aspire to be. They have depth, experience and the confidence to know they are good and should win the type of game they found themselves in at rainy Qualcomm Stadium.

While the Aztecs turned the ball over four times, the Utes held onto the pigskin all night. Three of the turnovers were interceptions deep in Utes territory -- the final game-ending play in their end zone -- and a snap bobbled by P Brian Stahovich led to a blocked kick recovered at the SDSU three, leading to the winning points. Such plays are made by the better team, and given up by the lesser team. That's football.

They were able to run the ball while SDSU was held to 2.8 yards per carry. Rocky Long's gambling defense was burned more often than they pressured Ute QB Jordan Wynn, the Oceanside High grad who played efficiently in raising his career prep and college record to 4-0 in The Q. Utah dialed up a reasonable pass rush at times in the second half, and the last interception came with Lindley facing heat.

The teams traded tipped passes that went for touchdowns. The difference is the one the Utes got wouldn't have happened except for a young Aztecs secondary that saw a last seconds of the first half Hail Mary pass go off the fingertips of a freshman and into the hands of an opposing receiver. The third quarter tip drill caught be Brown for a 90-yard score was just a freak thing. However, to show how there is room still be to closed between these two programs, if Brown hadn't grabbed that ball and outrun Ute defenders to the end zone, the Utes would have shut out SDSU in the second half after allowing four touchdowns in the first 30 minutes.

It was a game the Aztecs could have won. Utah looked every bit the struggling team in the first half, and the Brown/Sampson combo absolutely torched their secondary. But they just didn't have enough to make the plays to win, and avoid the errors that make them lose.

The Aztecs are now 7-4 with horrible UNLV ahead and beatable Navy set to face them in the Poinsettia Bowl. The potential remains for a 9-4 season. Even if the Aztecs are not as complete as Utah, are not as good as a Top 25 program, the improvement in head coach Brady Hoke's second year is phenomenal. It might be a few years before SDSU has a roster talented and experienced enough across the two-deep to be a legitimate Top 25 program, but the trajectory is headed in the right direction.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Utes Are Aztecs Real Test, Save Ron Caragher, Padres Protections

Go throughout a football season with a rising program like San Diego State and you often hear that such-and-such upcoming game is going to a test, a real indicator of where you stack up with the rest of the teams.

Usually, you can take such statements with a grain of salt, but Saturday night's game against Utah at Qualcomm Stadium really is such a game. This will be the truest indicator all season of where the Aztecs are.

The Utes are a very good Mountain West Conference team that has stumbled on hard times the last two weeks. They were shocked by the TCU stormtroopers and were still too dazed to come out of the rain at Notre Dame. They are too well-coached and too talented to struggle for a third straight weekend, darn it. For the bulk of the season, they have existed where the Aztecs want to live, at the upper reaches of the conference and national rankings, with a big fat zero in the L column. Yet, the last two weeks have also proven that the Utes aren't perfect. Compare yourself with the Horned Frogs and you get yourself in trouble. The Aztecs 5-point loss in Fort Worth last week was good for a hand clap, but not a whole lot more. The Utes are a more realistic test, and it will be interesting to see how the Aztecs stack up.

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USD might have a good football coach in Ron Caragher. There hasn't been much positive to write about the Toreros on the gridiron the past couple of years as the record progressively slipped to 4-7 last year. However, even though USD finished the season 5-6 in 2010, there are some bright spots on which to build.

Once former Coronado High QB Mason Mills got settled in, the Toreros won four of their final five games. Two of their losses were to scholarship teams, three others were to the top three finishers in the Pioneer Football League standings and the other to Azusa-Pacific, which is plenty capable of knocking off USD in a down year. Once the Toreros got into conference play, their level, they went 5-3, and two of the setbacks to those teams above them came on the road.

No one is going to celebrate 5-6, but considering all the circumstances, it could have been worse.

I still have a hard time with the hypocrisy of the USD athletic administration, which saw fit to fire some pretty good coaches a few years back in an effort to grow their programs while not holding their successors to the same standards. They hit lightning in a bottle with ex-football coach Jim Harbaugh, now weaving his magic up north at Stanford, but those 11-1 seasons are becoming a distant memory. However, Caragher did a pretty good job to hold the program together, and it seems worthwhile to keep him around to see what next fall will bring.

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News: the Padres added seven minor leaguers to the 40-man roster Friday to protect them from the Rule V Draft, including top young pitching prospects Simon Castro and Jeremy Hefner.

Reaction: Of the seven, only one was among Baseball America's top 10 prospects in the organization...Castro. Several others on the BA list, like P Wynn Pelzer, were sent packing in mid-season trades. Another, P Corey Luebke, finished 2010 as a major league player.

Of those Top 10 players, which certainly will be updated this off-season to reflect the new realities will include most of the seven promoted on Friday, only Castro is on the 40-man roster. Just kind of strange.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Aztecs Handle Gonzaga on Road

Two things stood out to me in San Diego State's 79-76 victory at Gonzaga in mens' basketball Tuesday night.

First, the Bulldogs held a lead in the game for mere seconds early in the second half, after which the Aztecs fairly quickly recovered and built the lead back up to seven points. Which neatly segues to...

Second, this was a play or two from being a comfortable win at the home of the number 11 team in the nation, not the nail-biter it became. In a stretch around the five-minute mark, SDSU had possession something like four straight times with a chance to push a 7-point margin to a 9-point bulge, and couldn't do it. It was a couple parts failure, a couple parts Gonzaga being really good. Normal teams do not go into Spokane and win easily -- or come close to doing so the way the Aztecs did.

Huge win, though I disagree with those who call it the biggest in school history. I'm a believer in those kinds of labels meaning something, and post-season is what means something. I still rate the NIT quarterfinal win over Saint Mary's as SDSU's biggest win. New Mexico was ranked eighth when the Aztecs beat them in last season's Mountain West Tournament. But it is a very nice win, and I do believe that it punches their ticket into the NCAA Tournament.

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Meanwhile, SDSU football just can't win. With a chance to draw their biggest non-Sky Show crowd in years when they host Utah this Saturday, the weatherman starts predicting rain. The chance is 40 percent, so let's hope both us fans and the football team get lucky.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Aztecs Hoops and Football, Bowl Projections, Padres Get Centerfielder

San Diego State's season-opening 81-65 victory at Long Beach State Saturday afternoon serves as a preview of how this year is going to play out, hopefully. The schedule is loaded with favorites or contenders from lesser, but still respectable conferences, that will give State their best shots in games that are generally going to be at their place. That means close games well into the second half before SDSU's extreme depth of talent influences the outcome in a positive way.

The only game early on the calendar that I don't see that scenario playing out is Tuesday at Gonzaga. God only knows what's going to happen in Spokane against the #12 Bulldogs. Saint Mary's, at Viejas Arena on Dec. 1, is also a concern. But this, in general, is how games are going to play out.

A lot is being made about transfer G James Rahon making 4-of-7 from behind the three-point stripe. What caught my attention was DJ Gay's 4-of-5 on threes. If he can shoot well over the course of the season, then the Aztecs are going to be good for a lot of points.

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San Diego State football fans should enjoy what they have in QB Ryan Lindley, an imperfect work in progress as a passer who might throw the best deep ball of anyone in the college game. No play is more fun to watch than the bomb, and no one hits more of them than Lindley, thanks in huge part to WRs Vincent Brown and DeMarco Sampson.

Lindley at TCU, against the best defense overall in college football, and the best passing defense, completed throws of 49, 33 and 35 yards, all to Brown and the last two for scores. The first went to the Frogs' one. Another TD was set up by a long completion.

The Aztecs back in the early-1990s had a QB named Tim Gutierrez who rode pine most of his career, finally got into some games and displayed a beautiful touch on deep passes but suffered a career-ending injury. Just a couple of years before that, Dan McGwire was unmatched in throwing bombs to WR Patrick Rowe. That was a long, long time ago, and it is nice to have it back.

The flip-side is that Lindley has absolutely no touch for short passes. He's been the starting QB since the beginning of his redshirt freshman season, and I still don't think he's completed a screen pass. The only ones I know of that didn't hit the ground ended up in the hands of a defensive player. I exaggerate, but only slightly. It's an unusual trade-off in a world where 99 percent of quarterbacks owe their careers to the late-Bill Walsh's development of the short passing game. Fans need to take the bad with the good.

One other thing sets Lindley apart, his ability to lead a football team. It appears that leadership on the Aztecs is not tightly centralized, but on offense seems spread across FB Brandon Sullivan, C Trask Iosefa and other seniors. But the junior Lindley is the quarterback, so on the field, he runs the show. Every Mountain West Conference opponent until Saturday gave SDSU its best shot, and I don't know if the Aztecs would have won any of them without Lindley's steady presence. State won those games because he made plays, and allowed others to make plays. That's important.

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The past couple weeks have greatly narrowed the field of likely schools for San Diego's two bowl games.

Holiday

Big 12: I think you can call Nebraska, Missouri and Oklahoma State gone, but I don't see a second BCS team from this conference, so the selection order should be straightforward. Texas A&M is hot and has a tie-breaking win over Oklahoma. So the choices probably come down to Kansas State, which has an easy path to a final record of 8-4 with games against Colorado and North Texas, or the Sooners, who are 8-2 but still have to play at Baylor and at Oklahoma State.

Pac-10: Oregon and Stanford are out of the picture, but the Cardinal serves as the linchpin. If they beat Cal next week in The Big Game at Berkeley, they're going to join the Ducks in the BCS. That knocks the Holiday Bowl down still another notch in the selection process. A Stanford BCS scenario could mean Cal at 6-6 or 7-5 or UCLA at 6-6 or 7-5. I don't think Holiday Bowl officials thought of themselves offering a 6-6 bowl when they were devalued effective 2010, but look at the Pac-10 standings and you'll see the potential. If Stanford loses to Cal, look for Arizona to make a return trip.

Poinsettia

Navy is in for sure but SDSU, also nearly a sure thing just hours before this Sunday writing, now could be ticketed for Las Vegas. Utah's collapse, coupled with an Aztecs upset of the Utes next Saturday, will make SDSU the clear second choice in the conference. Apparently, the bowl directors work all this stuff out so the odds are still Utah to Vegas and SDSU to the Poinsettia. But an Aztecs win over the Utes, and maybe even a BYU win over Utah, could change matters.

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The three decade-long Gwynn Era is over in San Diego.

That's my take on the trade announced Saturday that brought 23-year-old Cameron Maybin over from the Marlins in exchange for relievers Ryan Webb and Edward Mujica. Maybin is an athletic centerfield prospect who is five years younger than Tony Gwynn Jr., who in his year and a half in San Diego has pretty much proven that he is a good defensive outfielder who can't hit.

Maybin is supposed to be a great defender who can't hit, at least so far. But it's early to give up on him, while we pretty much know what the Padres have in Gwynn. Maybin was brought over specifically to fill his role. It is a shame, but junior is not going to be on the Friars roster by April.

Whether it is wise to replace him with a .246 career hitter is another story.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Notes on Padres, Aztecs, Chargers

Padres: Even with Adrian Gonzalez likely to miss most of spring training while rehabbing from shoulder surgery, I'm not sure the Padres can afford to get another first baseman. There are too many other needs to spend money on or trade for. I'm willing to have Kyle Blanks ready to go there than someone else who will just fill in a little bit...I was surprised to read how 3B Chase Headley stuck out 139 times last season. Those kinds of numbers come from power guys, not players who hit 11 HR and 58 RBIs. I give the kid another season, but his 2010 performance was one of the worst at the plate you could imagine. Okay, there was RF Ryan Ludwick, I stand corrected. GM Jed Hoyer's infatuation with Ludwick is mind-boggling and makes me question his judgment...The Padres will re-sign P Chris Young. Just watch. I was a little surprised that C Yorvit Torrealba left. I'm not sure he'll get more money elsewhere. He's a guy we should really want back, and be willing to pay some good bucks for...Did anyone like P Jon Garland? Didn't think so.

San Diego State Football: The idea of an SDSU-Navy Poinsettia Bowl is just great, for the game, the city, the bowl and the Aztecs. The hoteliers aren't liking it, but I betcha they end up doing better than they expect...As bad as I feel about DE BJ Williams season, and college career, -ending injury, SDSU will be hurt worse by the loss of senior LB Marcus Yarborough. Hope his injured arch will be healed by the Utah game. Now sophomore Rob Andrews steps in, followed by redshirt freshman Nick Tenhaeff. Fortunately, both have seen plenty of action this fall, but if this week's depth chart is indeed accurate, it represents some shuffling of the linebacker corp right before, yikes, TCU...I'm a little worried for next year for how few plays young receivers have seen. Yeah, the Aztecs starting combo of Vincent Brown and DeMarco Sampson is the best in the league and among the best in the nation, but you want the kids getting some experience, too.

San Diego State Basketball: Don't worry much about the lack of announcements on the recruiting front. Such news always drips slowly from the Mesa, but is usually good...The key to the success of the upcoming season will be how comfortable forwards Billy White and Malcolm Thomas have become with each other. White was no longer in the forefront last season with Thomas around and Kawhi Leonard becoming a star. We were so used to White making these unbelievably athletic plays, but they were few and far between last season. If those guys have settled into their roles, watch out...So how do I feel about U-T sports writer Nick Canepa's column on the possibility of a national championship? All he did was ask "why not?" so it's not like he's gone off his rocker. But the formula exists. They're deep, athletic, experienced and committed to defense. They will be very solid at guard with DJ Gay and Chase Tapley. Their front line is as good as any in the country, and analyst Greg Anthony calls the Aztecs bigs THE best. And they have a star whose broad shoulders they can latch onto in Leonard. Yeah, I agree, why not?...The whole thing is strange. The cynic would ask, how about just winning a tournament game for once? And that's legitimate. I don't know about a national title, and I certainly wouldn't shell out big bucks for Final Four tix, but anything short of getting to the second week of the tournament would be a disappointment.

Chargers: I know a lot of guys need to heal, but I think this bye comes at a bad time. They're finally on a winning streak and, especially in the second half at Houston, appeared to be putting things together...Patience to all the people who worry that QB Philip Rivers will be over-looked when it comes to awards, since the Bolts are under .500. If they really are turning things around, and make it to the playoffs, he'll get some serious MVP consideration...You want to know why the Bills are 0-8 and haven't won anything since Marv Levy retired? Because they waste their time signing the likes of Shawne Merriman, who immediately aggravates his Achilles tendon injury and is now out indefinitely. Sure, Merriman might help them someday. Maybe...With the Chargers not playing Sunday, Kansas City at Denver might be the game to keep an eye on. It could say a lot about the Bolts chances in the second half of the season.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Basketball Starts as Football Hits its Peak

Wasn't it just last year when San Diego fans of college athletics couldn't get to basketball season fast enough because football wasn't going well?

Times have changed. With San Diego State at 7-2 and ranked 27th on the gridiron, and headed for a showdown at TCU this weekend, the beginning of the hoops season looms but seems much, much too early. Really, it only got cold at night this week. It's still fall, but the round-ballers are ready to take center stage.

Expectations are off the charts at SDSU, where the men's team is ranked for the first time ever and inspiring usually sober sports columnists to speculate on chances for a national championship. The women are unranked after losing its backcourt from last season's Sweet 16 club, but replacements are ready to step in.

The men start at Long Beach State Saturday before traveling to a showdown at Gonzaga Monday night. The women host UCLA Friday and have two more home games at Viejas Arena before Thanksgiving.

By the way, as this is written, womens' coach Beth Burns tweeted that she had a big day getting in Letters-of-Intent, so theoretically something will be announced Thursday.

The USD women announced five signees earlier in the day, including Katie Kuklok of Poway High.

The Toreros, both men and women, are in a rebuilding year, as noted in a previous post.

It's going to be a great year, but it's coming just a little too soon. We still have our attention on football.

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I loved the list of the top 50 high school athletes in the 50 years of the San Diego Section of the CIF. While everyone included deserves to be there, you can come up with a list of many others who are just as deserving. A lot of people have already chimed in with their suggestions of who else should be on the list. Here are mine:

-- Darnay Scott, Kearny, football

-- Willie Banks, Oceanside, track

-- Chris Chambliss, Oceanside, baseball, football

-- Brian Sipe, Grossmont, football

-- Thom Hunt, Patrick Henry, track

-- Brian Giles, Granite Hills, football, baseball

-- Percy Gilbert, San Diego, football, basketball

Even without those guys, the list includes three Heisman Trophy winners, a Super Bowl MVP and several Olympic gold medalists. The list is on SignonSanDiego.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

Chargers and Aztecs Win Ugly, Football Notes

When you're 3-5 and on the road in the NFL, or a college team that hasn't been to a bowl game in 12 years, style points mean little. "Just win, baby" really means something -- don't care how. That the Chargers and San Diego State held on for victories this weekend means everything.

The Bolts 29-23 victory at Houston puts them just a game under .500 with a bye-week coming up. The next month of the schedule will determine how the season goes, as Denver, Kansas City and Oakland all come to Qualcomm Stadium, with a trip to Indianapolis thrown in. Win all the home games and you're at 7-6 and in the hunt. I see no way the Bolts contend for a wildcard -- unless they get unexpectedly hot -- but the AFC West remains in play.

I've had my disagreements with the way GM AJ Smith has performed, though I think he's done pretty well overall, but I've never been among the inexplicable legions of coach Norv Turner-haters. In fact, I'd go as far as to say the past two weeks have given us a glimpse of Turner's best coaching since he's been with the Chargers. He has lost most of his receivers and his All-Pro tight end, and has been hampered by a rookie running back who has not immediately met expectations, but his team has combined the past two weeks for 62 points and more than 800 yards of offense. That's pretty amazing.

-- That intentional grounding penalty on the Texans QB in the fourth quarter was horrible. Good, but horrible. Texans fans have a right to think they got jobbed.

-- Houston's Arian Foster looks like the man among boys he was at Mission Bay High, not the average back he appeared to be in college at Tennessee.

-- Bad special teams comes because you suck in players 30-53. Evaluation of a general manager's first-round draft pick is so over-hyped that you forget how important it is to have quality depth. That the Bolts have had punts blocked in three straight games is inexcusable.

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The 2010 San Diego State football team is the most resilient I have perhaps ever seen in my thirty-plus years of watching them. No team since 1998 has been quite so gutty, and no coincidence, that was the last year the Aztecs went bowling.

As mistake piled upon misfortune in Saturday night's 24-19 victory over Colorado State, previous editions of SDSU would have folded like fresh laundry. Not this bunch. The defense, which spent about 22 minutes of the first half on the field -- and mostly on their end because of turnovers -- was spectacular in holding the Rams to a pair of field goals. Only one Rams drive, late in the fourth quarter, was productive in the second half -- the other TD was by the Rams defense on a fumble return.

Finally, the offense came together late in the first half and was solid through most of the second 30 minutes.

Sure, other Aztecs teams might have crushed the Rams by three touchdowns, but they would have blown a couple of other games, too. In fact, if you look at Aztec football history, you see more often than not gritty teams that find a way to pull out close games, not pretty boys who dominate.

The '98 Aztecs that went to the Las Vegas Bowl beat New Mexico by 3, Utah by 1 thanks to a missed Ute extra point, UTEP by 5, Tulsa by 10 in a much closer game and Fresno State 10-0.

The '91 Freedom Bowl team beat UTEP by just a touchdown, topped Utah by 3 when their safeties collided while knocking away a last-second Hail Mary pass to the end zone, squeaked by Wyoming by 2, and suffered the infamous 52-52 tie with BYU.

The '86 Holiday Bowl Aztecs beat Utah by a touchdown, New Mexico by 4, UTEP by a 15-10 margin, Colorado State 27-26 on a late Todd Santos touchdown pass, Wyoming by a TD and BYU by a TD at 10-3.

You don't win 'em all by being pretty. You win them by being tough and responding when the other team hits you.

-- Let me be the first to say that SDSU will make a game of it next week against TCU in Fort Worth. If the Horned Frogs come out of that shellacking of Utah without an emotional letdown, then Gary Patterson is Coach of the Year. Besides, the Aztecs have shown they can rise to the occasion against good teams, and they'll be facing a couple of the best the next two weeks.

-- Thank goodness for late-night kickoffs. If any poll voters actually watched the Aztecs Saturday night, no way would they have received enough votes to be 27th in both polls. However, they could beat a lot of those teams ranked close behind them.

-- Ronnie Hillman ranks ninth nationally in rushing at 116 yards per game -- the highest for a freshman -- but the team only ranks 46th running the ball. "Only" really should be in quotes because they've generally ranked among college football's worst on the ground in recent seasons.

-- Safety Brandon Davis is turning into a pretty good kickoff returner, another area the Aztecs have needed to improve.

-- SDSU ranks fifth in tackles for loss with an average of 8 per game.

-- Is it too early to think about MWC honors? Brady Hoke deserves strong consideration for Coach of the Year unless Patterson gets the Frogs into the National Championship Game. Hillman is a lock for the first-team running back based on statistics, as is WR DeMarco Sampson. The very few sacks allowed should give strong consideration to C Trask Iosefa. On defense, LB Miles Burris and CB Leon McFadden should be first-teamers, while DE Ernie Lawson and CB Jose Perez deserve consideration. Meanwhile, and I don't think Aztecs fans realize this, but K Abel Perez is 15-20 on field goals, a total only matched by Ben Deline of CSU. Brian Stahovich should be a lock as the first-team punter.

Monday, November 01, 2010

Give Padres an Assist for Giants Title

Give the Padres an assist for the Giants first World Series championship since 1954. San Francisco needed to remain sharp for 162 games in order to win the National League West title, and that edge allowed them to battle game after game and, when all was done, remain the last team standing.

The Giants played seven one-run games in the NL playoffs, and won six. It's how they won throughout most of the year. Just look at their September results. They played 10 one-run games, winning six. Seven other games finished with margins of two runs, and the Giants won four. Their season was very Padres-like, but they needed incentive to get there. It was provided by the Friars.

Bruce Bochy's and Tim Flannery's Giants blew apart their roster at mid-season because they started off 1-7 against San Diego and fell 7.5 games off the lead by Independence Day. The impact of those facts resulted in the promotion of C Buster Posey and P Madison Bumgarner, the signing of LF Pat Burrell, and the acquisitions of P Javier Lopez, OF and NLCS MVP Cody Ross, and RF Jose Guillen. Those guys were critical in helping Los Gigantes overcome the Padres, fight past Atlanta, outlast Philadelphia and, ultimately, humiliate a Texas Rangers team that came into the World Series having dominated its opponents.

As cool as it was for the low-budget Padres to play as well as they did for four and a half months, it's also kind of fun to see a team full of castoffs defeat the league's bigwigs. Forget the Yankees, the Giants were the best team money could buy in 2010, with a major assist from the Padres.

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Game 5 featured the best pitcher's duel in a clinching game, with Tim Lincecum and Cliff Lee, since Jack Morris of the Twins downed John Smoltz of the Braves 1-0 in Game 7 in 1991.

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Interesting Historical Tidbit:

In February 2004, the University of Washington came down to play a three-game series at USD, with the Huskies taking two-of-three games. With the Toreros program on an upswing, I remember being kind of annoyed at the result even though the Dogs had some pretty good pitchers.

In the Saturday game, a 10-6 loss, the Toreros knocked the UW starter out of the box in the fifth inning, having received five walks, collecting five hits and scoring two runs. It was Lincecum.

It turned out to be nothing special. USD beat him two years later, roughing Lincecum up for seven runs on eight hits in five innings in an 8-4 win.