Friday, December 2, 2011

Trinity stakes claim to 'best team ever' and National Championship with 62-21 romp over Scott Co.

Herald Leader


Trinity not only won a Class 6A state football championship Friday night, it may have won a mythical national title, too.

The Shamrocks, rated No. 1 in America by Sports Illustrated and Rivals.com, put the finishing touches on a 14-0 season by smashing Scott County 62-21 in the Russell Athletic finals in WKU's L.T. Smith Stadium.

The 62 points are the most ever scored in a title game, eclipsing the mark set by Trinity in its 59-56 win over Male in 2002.

Trinity has won nine state titles in the last 11 years under Coach Bob Beatty, and owns a record 21 championships overall. (Highlands can tie with its 21st title if it beats Franklin-Simpson in the 4A finals on Saturday).

Are the Rocks No. 1 in the nation this season?

"I don't have any control over that and don't worry about that," Beatty said. "All I know is we'll take a trophy home tonight. Everything else is somebody's opinion. But if you take a look at our schedule, I think it sells itself."

Scott County Coach Jim McKee proclaimed Trinity the best team in the history of Kentucky high school football — and that was before the Rocks rolled his Cardinals.

He didn't change his opinion after Friday night's game.

"There's no close second," he said. "I watched Highlands when they had Jared Lorenzen and Derek Smith, and Male when they had Montrell Jones and Michael Bush. (Trinity) is just so complete."

The Rocks, who beat powerhouses from Tennessee, Ohio and Indiana's 4A champ Indianapolis Cathedral this year, were at their devastating best on offense in the finals. They piled up 600 yards with a balanced attack.

Junior quarterback Travis Wright completed 15 of 19 passes for 298 yards and four touchdowns.

Junior running back Dalyn Dawkins ran for 152 yards and four TDs.

Junior receiver James Quick had six catches for 120 yards and two scores.

Scott County, which never trailed in winning its first 14 games this year, gave the Rocks a fight early on.

The Cards stunned Trinity — and the crowd — by taking the opening kickoff and scoring in just two plays. Quarterback Ben Lawler had a 62-yard run on the first snap, and Dierrius Dumphord blew up the middle for an 18-yard touchdown on the next one.

But the thrill didn't last long. Trinity's Big Green Machine went to work and built a 42-14 halftime lead.

Scott County did have another highlight in the first half. Scott Daniel returned a kickoff 95 yards for a score to give the Cards' fans something to cheer about.

Trinity needed less than two minutes to score in the second half, and the snowball continued to turn into an avalanche of points.

The Rocks' Garrett Sauer had a 62-yard TD run early in the fourth quarter to make it 62-14, and that meant a mercy-rule running clock the rest of the way.

All-Time Louisville Catholic High School Football Team

By Billy Reed, Louisville Catholic Sports Net


The players below were selected solely by Hall of Fame sports journalist Billy Reed. The opinions and commentary does not necessarily reflect that of LouisvilleCatholicSports.com and should be treated as editorial commentary by columnist Reed.

I have a homework assignment for all you dear readers. Let's see if we can get a consensus on an all-time Louisville Catholic high school football team.

To get us started, I've picked my team. From now until Jan. 1, it will be up to you readers to tell me whom I've overlooked. If you can persuade me that your guy is more deserving than mine, I'll gladly make the substitution.

I took some liberties with players who went both ways. For example, our Louisville Catholic high schools have produced a surfeit of big-time offensive tackles. So when I found evidence that Trinity's Mike Pffeifer played both ways, I used him on defense even though he may have been better on offense.

What got me thinking about this was the current Trinity High team. It's obvious that these are Rocks for the ages, one of the state's all-time best teams. Heck, if they get the expected victory in the 6-A title game to close out a spectacular 14-0 season, they may well lay claim to be THE best.

So how would the individual stars of this Trinity team stack up against the best of the past? Very well, I think. That's why I picked two on my all-time team.

Let's go with the offense first.

Wide receiver

James Quick (Trinity '13) and Nathan Dutton (Trinity '07). As good as Dutton was, Quick is better. Year after next, he's going to make some college head coach very, very happy.
Tight end

Howard Schnellenberger (Flaget '51). Long before he smoked his first pipe, Howard was an All-State receiver and an All-American at the University of Kentucky. His Wildcat teams were 3-0 against Tennessee.
Tackle

Maurice "Mo" Moorman (St. Xavier '62) and Will Wolford (St. X '84). Both went on to become all-pro players, Moorman with the Kansas City Chiefs and Wolford with the Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Indianapolis Colts.
Guards

Joe Koch (St. Xavier 1950) and Bob Talamini (St. X 1958). Koch's coach at UK said he was one of the best players he ever coached. The coach's name was Paul "Bear" Bryant. Talamini also went to UK and had an outstanding NFL career with the Houston Oilers.
Center

Otto Knop Sr. (St. Xavier 1948). He went to the University of Louisville and was center for a QB named Johnny Unitas. Nobody loved to hit and be hit more than Knop.
Quarterback

Brian Brohm (Trinity 2004). Why he didn't make it in the NFL remains a mystery to me, considering how good he was in high school and U of L.
Running back

Dalyn Dawkins (Trinity '13). This kid knows how to hit the hole and he just explodes through it.
Athlete

Paul Hornung (Flaget '52). In high school, he showed the versatility that served him so well at Notre Dame (1956 Heisman Trophy) and with the Green Bay Packers. Equally adept at quarterback or halfback, he also could catch the ball and kick it as a punter or place-kicker.
Now, the defense.

Down linemen

Pfeiffer (Trinity '84), Dickie Mueller (St. X '56), John Bohn (Flaget '57), and Bobby Lehmann (Flaget '58). A couple of national magazines named Bonn and Lehmann to their All-American teams.
Linebackers

Joe Federspiel (DeSales '67), Carwell Gardner (Trinity 1992), and Bernard Jackson (St. X '97). One of the hardest hitters ever produced in Kentucky or anywhere else, Federspiel was often the lone bright spot on some bad teams at UK and the New Orleans Saints.
Defensive backs

Dicky Lyons Sr. (St. X 1964), Bobby Reeves (St. X 1959), and Paul Calhoun (Bishop David '80). Lyons was as versatile as Hornung, doing everything for some bad UK teams in the 1960s. Calhoun was just as good a punter as he was a defender.
Punter

Ryan Tydlacka (Trinity '07). He might well have been the MVP for this season's 5-7 UK team. The NFL might be in his future.
Place kicker

Karl-Heinz Williams (Trinity '02). He had 23 career field goals and still holds school and state records for distance and accuracy.
Kick returner

Sherrill Sipes (Flaget '52). He was the state track champion in the dashes and was as highly coveted by college recruiters as Hornung. However, his career at Notre Dame was cut short by knee injuries.
Co-coaches

Paulie Miller of Flaget and Trinity; Johnny Meihaus of St. Xavier.
I feel badly about leaving off players such as Rick Norton of Flaget, Jeff Brohm of Trinity, Bob Kupper of Bishop David, Bubba Paris of DeSales, Mark Askin of St. X and Sam Robey of Trinity. Maybe you can convince me to substitute them.

Who makes your All-Time Catholic football team?

Let the arguments begin.



Coaching great, Howard Schnellenberger, now on a collision course with ... retirement

Rick Bozich, Courier-Journal


Hyperbole has always been as essential to the Howard Schnellenberger playbook as the flash of his championship rings. But this week, as he prepares to coach the 312th and final game of his college career, there is not an inch of exaggeration in this observation about the man:

If he had patiently parked himself at Miami, where he won 41 games, two bowls and a national title in five seasons, Schnellenberger would be exiting to a blizzard of confetti and enough championship bling to blind Bobby Bowden.

“I’m the guy who doesn’t have to worry about making that observation,” Schnellenberger said. “Everybody has made it for me.”

So does the coach agree that he would have five or six rings if he had resisted the urge in 1984 to begin the odyssey that took him from Miami to the United States Football League to the University of Louisville to Oklahoma and finally to Florida Atlantic?

“That’s what everybody else says,” he said, then laughed. “Why should I disclaim it?”

He shouldn’t disclaim it. It’s true. Tap 33 seasons times an average of eight victories into your calculator. Schnellenberger would have 264 wins, trailing only Joe Paterno, Bowden, Bear Bryant, Pop Warner and Amos Alonzo Stagg on the all-time list. What he started, other coaches finished at Miami, winning parts of four more national titles over the next two decades.

Back to reality — and the reality for this 77-year-old coach is still pretty remarkable. Schnellenberger will try to improve his career record of 158-150-3 when Florida Atlantic closes its season Saturday against Louisiana-Monroe in the sparkling 30,000-seat stadium the coach worked tirelessly to have constructed on the FAU campus in Boca Raton. Among active coaches, he is tied with Bill Snyder of Kansas State for 10th in victories, even while enduring his current 1-10 season.

His legacy won’t be national championships won. His legacy will be the ambition he pumped into the Miami, Louisville and Florida Atlantic programs, and the way he delivered on the lessons he learned from playing for Paulie Miller at Flaget High School and for Bryant and Blanton Collier at Kentucky.

A Statistical Analysis of the Miracles of Tim Tebow

By Chris Bruce and Andrew Mooney, Harvard College Sports Analysis


Over the first 5 weeks of the NFL season, the Kyle Orton-led Denver Broncos struggled to a 1-4 start. Then, yielding to fan pressure, they inserted Tim Tebow at quarterback and went 4-1 over the last 5 games in rather spectacular fashion, producing a flurry of ridiculous media coverage, spurring Denver fans to start wearing Jesus jerseys and creating a whole narrative around Tim Tebow’s Miracles. We thought we’d join the fray and quantify just how much of a miracle Tebow’s success has been.

The Kyle Orton era in 2011 was a rather unfortunate one for Denver. Given their points scored and points allowed, a Pythagorean expectation would predict them to win only 36% of their games, and with some close losses, they unsurprisingly fell to 1-4. After starting Tebow and winning 4 of 5, you might expect that the team’s performance had improved drastically, but that’s actually not the case. Tim Tebow’s Expected Points Added (EPA – AdvancedNFLStats.com’s measure of the points expected to come from the plays that a player executes) over his 5 games is more than 13 points below Kyle Orton’s. The Denver running backs’ and wide receivers’ EPA per game also dropped from the first 5 games to the last 5 games, from 0.5 to -3.8 and from 1.5 to 0.4 respectively. The only thing that has improved is the defense, and it hasn’t been by much – Football Outsiders’ Defense-adjusted Value Over Average (DVOA) for Denver’s defense, a measure of the effectiveness of a defense, has gone from an average of 9.5% to 8.7% (lower numbers, including larger negative numbers, are better in defensive DVOA). Given all of this, you would expect the Broncos’ probability of winning to drop even further – had they exhibited that performance over the first 5 games, their expected winning percentage would have dropped to about 20%. Tebow’s success, then, sounds more and more like a miracle.

And just how spectacular a miracle? Using Jeff Sagarin’s ratings for the last 5 weeks, which take into account strength of opponent and location of the game, the Broncos would have been expected to win 1.9 games over that 5 game stretch. So, it appears that Tim Tebow has (miraculously?) pulled an extra 2.1 wins out of thin air.

How can this be? Essentially, while Tebow and the rest of the Broncos have not been producing better numbers, they’ve been producing their best numbers at the right times. This can be seen in the difference between Expected Points Added and Win Probability Added (WPA) for Orton and Tebow. Win Probability Added is AdvancedNFLStats.com’s measure of how much a player’s plays have contributed to the team’s chance of winning the game. For instance, a 20 yard touchdown pass to take the lead as time expires will be worth much more WPA than a 20 yard touchdown pass to take the lead in the 1st quarter because, in the second scenario, there is still a significant probability that the opponent comes back to win. Tebow has a much worse EPA – meaning that he has objectively produced worse results over all of his plays – but a significantly better (though still negative) WPA – meaning that his plays have contributed more to the chances of his team winning. While Tebow’s plays have produced much fewer expected points than Orton’s, Tebow’s positive plays have come at crucial points in the game, when they have a much larger impact on the outcome: think his 20 yard TD run for the lead with 58 seconds left last week, or his 56 yard TD pass for the lead with 6:44 left the week before. Likewise, Tebow’s negative plays have come at points where their effect was less harmful. Similarly, the Denver running backs have also been exceeding their expected WPA over the past 5 games. Is this just coincidence or clutch play and strong leadership by a guy who “just wins football games”? The jury is still out for Tebow, but history does not bode well for Broncos fans.

The vast majority of players who started their careers with similar characteristics (a relatively high WPA given their EPA) eventually regressed towards the mean and saw their numbers come in line with expectations. A very clear relationship can be seen between a player’s WPA and EPA. The chart below shows the EPA and WPA of all seasons for all quarterbacks that have played in the league this year. Using a regression to quantify this relationship, we can then say what a quarterback’s expected Win Probability Added should be for the Expected Points Added during their play – or in other words, how much they should be expected to affect their team’s wins with their plays on the field, independent of timing during the game or score of the game when the plays occur. Tebow’s WPA so far this season is 0.39 higher than one would expect given the Expected Points Added by his plays. Other quarterbacks who started in a similar situation could not sustain this over multiple seasons. The graph below shows the average difference between actual WPA and expected WPA for all current quarterbacks who started their careers like Tim Tebow – with a significantly higher WPA than expected (we took all QBs who had a difference greater than or equal to Tebow’s in their first year attempting over 100 completions – 10 QBs fit the bill and had more than 1 season of play; interestingly this group included top QBs Aaron Rodgers, Tom Brady, Drew Brees and Eli Manning). Without fail, these quarterbacks saw their play converge towards the expected value over the long term (in case you were wondering, the spike in year 3 is due to exceptional seasons by both Tom Brady and Matt Ryan).

We can also look at another highly successful, mobile college quarterback with mechanical issues who succeeded early in the league, Vince Young. Young was dubbed a “winner” when he came into the league and got off to a solid 8-6 start as a starter in his first year. But after initially affecting his team’s wins much more than you would expect in his first year, his contribution to wins became much more in line with his play over time, as depicted by the red line in the above graph. After going 9-6 in his second year, he was replaced by Kerry Collins in his third year and came under fire from the media for reported motivation issues. Of course, Young had an outlier year in his 4th year, replacing Kerry Collins mid-season and ripping off a 7-3 record in his 10 games despite fairly average numbers. Accordingly he was dubbed a winner yet again, much like some members of the media are already doing this year. Regardless of the media representation of both players, the likelihood of Tim Tebow sustaining his current winning percentage looks rather dire.

Now before you Broncos fans get too angry, these numbers only argue that Tebow’s wins are more likely to become more in line with his play – if his play improves he’s likely to keep winning at a good rate. Or on the other hand, if you believe that Tebow is truly a clutch player that performs better in high impact situations, then he will sustain a higher winning rate with poorer play. But given that Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers haven’t been able to do that over the long term, I wouldn’t bet the farm on it.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Tim Tebow's life..The path less traveled in a secular world...a challenge to all Chrstian men

Tebow's Eye Black


The Broncos' turn around after starting Tim Tebow against Miami, followed by improbable after improbable win, has stirred more Tebow debate than anything we've seen since Tim Tebow emerged onto the national scene in the ESPN documentary "The Chosen One." Before Tebow there have been numerous outspoken Christian sports figures but none have caused the intense interest, following, hatred, and speculation that Tebow has. But why? Is Tebow so fascinating an individual? Or is it because he is so unconventional a figure in American culture today?

We as a nation are at a crossroads; economically, politically, and even spiritually. Our current president ran on a platform of "hope" because the nation's future looked bleak, and now, three years later, only more so. The same president that ran on hope also declared that America is "no longer a Christian nation," or at least not "just a Christian nation." Many took exception and even offense to this, but be honest, does the average American live by the Judeo-Christian principles our nation was founded on? Even at the most basic level by the ten commandments? No, they don't. They claim to "believe" in them, but don't seem to really live by them.

Enter into this cultural climate a young, bright eyed and over eager QB who looked and worked out like a linebacker. A guy so nice that to find a cultural reference to compare him to you had to go back to Richie Cunningham on Happy Days, and as a player to Bronko Nagurski, and that's quite a combination.

With so few relevant, much less strong and masculine, Christian figures in American culture today, Tim Tebow has become a rare example of masculine Christianity, while also representing the benefits of Christian ideals and standards in American life today where so many other public figures have cast them aside.

But is the intense interest and "hate" for Tim Tebow because he's an outspoken Christian? We don't really think so because there are numerous other Christians that no one pays any real attention. Why are so many other Christians easily dismissed and not Tebow?

Not long ago we heard Stephen A. Smith debate Tebow and "Tebow hating" on First Take (14:30 mark), and he had an interesting point.

"[Tebow] is not hated. What it is is that what he represents...people look at that and they are saying 'we don't want to be held to that standard because we can't live up to it.' So you don't want him elevated and that is why...The big elephant in the room is that you have people out there that look at his lifestyle, his religion and the way he wears it on his [sleeve], they look at all of that and what they don't want is for him to be elevated to such a point that he's the standard that everybody [has to live up to]...Just call it what it is...Is that really hating you or is that just wanting to avoid you being the one who sets a standard that the rest of us know we can't meet?"

No one would care about Tim Tebow's standards if he wasn't a winner. He wins and he wins unconventionally, and that makes a lot of people uncomfortable for a lot of reasons.

But Tebow's unconventionality also shatters preconceived notions on what a Christian is and forces those who don't want to think about faith, and God, and their individual purpose in life by invading their weekly means of escape, i.e. football.

Tebow is as unconventional a Christian as he is a football player simply because he not only "believes it" but lives it. He is simultaneously lauded and reviled because he embodies so many of the ideals of masculinity that Christian men seem to have either lost or ceded and that American Christianity seems to no longer value or promote.

He's an aggressive, intense competitor. He's a beast who refuses to quit. He'll out work you, and if he can't over power you, he'll out last you. That would be fine for most fans if he only did it on the field but he also seems to out work, out persevere and out perform in the moral arena as well. And in the same improbable way that he wins on the field, he wins off it too. On the eve of a prime time game against the Jets that may define his early career as a QB to the nation, is Tebow nervous? No, he's excited to announce that his foundation is building a hospital in the Philippines. As fierce a competitor he is, football is secondary to his faith. And that's what they hate.

Once upon a time Tim Tebow wasn't unconventional, he was the average Joe; a polite, hard working, decent, God-fearing man who could play on both sides of the ball. But today, that Joe is a rare breed. Tebow isn't setting a new standard that others can't meet, like Stephen A. believes. He's an uncomfortable reminder of the ones we used to have and live.


To all the Christians who read this blog, we'd like to issue you this challenge. Lets make Tebow irrelevant. Imagine that so many Christians actually lived a strong Christian life that someone like Tebow was so typical, so commonplace that it wouldn't warrant discussing, much less dissecting.

How about bringing the same passion, commitment, determination, hard work and excellence to our everyday lives that others are forced to consider our faith and our God as a result of our everyday actions?

How about taking the hits from the skeptics in our sphere of influence with the same polite, level headed and gracious approach that we see Tebow do, week after week, year after year?

Instead of "tebowing", i.e. taking a picture of yourself pretending to pray, how about really praying for those around you who are in need?

Instead of wearing a 15 jersey with "Jesus" emblazoned on the back, how about feeding the sick, supporting orphans, visiting prisoners, and providing health care to those less fortunate. How about acting like a follower of the real Jesus, instead of just wearing his name?

And instead of "believing" Tebow can get it done on the field, how about we all join him off the field and make being a real Christian the standard and not the exception?

Let Tebow silence his critics on the field, and let us as fans join forces and silence the critics off the field by making the man Tebow is just one of the many instead of one of the few.

Instead of being "unconventional" on and off the field, let's make the man we all admire one of us, just another face in the crowd that exemplifies the grace and mercy of Jesus, and not just another empty jersey in the stands.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The target just got bigger...will Cats be #1 next week?


Darius Miller #1 on #1

#2 Ohio State looked awful tough beating the Dukies tonight by a cool 22, and a tough week awaits the Big Blue this week with games Thursday against those Catholic boys from Saint John's on Long Island, and then Saturday against the former top ranked Tar Heels on Saturday. Can the diaper dandies stand the heat? The answer may rest with #1 on #1 senior Darius Miller. Miller has accepted his role as the 6th man this year, and has been a steadying influence on the Cats starting youngsters. Alex Groberman over at Opposing Views talked to Coach Cal yesterday about being #1 this early in the season.

The Kentucky Wildcats are no strangers to being ranked No. 1 in the nation. Over head coach John Calipari’s three-year run with the team, they have accomplished the dubious feat twice. Never has it ultimately resulted in a national championship.

Monday, on heels of his latest No. 1 in ranking in both the AP and USA Today/ESPN Polls, Kentucky’s biggest and brightest star took his team’s early season anointment with a grain of salt.

"This early in the season, it's nice," Calipari said in a statement. "But it's not that significant. It just puts a bigger target on us."

The Wildcats slipped into the No. 1 spot this week following a surprising loss by the North Carolina Tar Heels to the UNLV Runnin’ Rebels in last Saturday’s final of the Las Vegas Invitational. Of course, seeing as Kentucky and North Carolina are slated to square off this coming Saturday, both teams’ respective promotions and demotions may be short lived.

"Obviously, not everyone thinks that we're the best team," Calipari said. "Starting three freshmen and two sophomores, they may be right. I'll be anxious to see how the team accepts the challenge this week."

Kentucky last sat atop the standings in late January of 2010. In its very next game, Calipari’s Wildcats fell to the South Carolina Gamecocks in a close, 68-62 upset. Kentucky would never reclaim that No. 1 ranking, and eventually went on to lose to West Virginia Mountaineersin the NCAA East Regional finals.

In order to find a year in which Kentucky both ranked No. 1 in the nation and won the championship, you would have to go back to 1995-96. That year they reigned supreme above the competition for five weeks en route to eventual glory.

Following their 87-63 blowout victory over the Portland Pilots last Saturday, Kentucky was awarded a five day breather. Up next, they will face the always-dangerous -- albeit this season only 4-3 -- St. John’s Red Storm on Thursday, Dec. 1.

Tipoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. eastern time.

AP Top 25

1 Kentucky (46)
2 Ohio State (17)
3 Duke (2)
4 Syracuse
5 North Carolina
6 Louisville
7 Baylor
8 Connecticut
9 Wisconsin
10 Florida
11 Xavier
12 Alabama
13 Missouri
14 Michigan
15 Kansas
16 Marquette
17 Pittsburgh
18 UNLV
19 Gonzaga
20 Vanderbilt
21 Mississippi State
22 Memphis
23 Saint Louis
24 California
25 Texas A&M

Must see video...Auburn Offensive Coordinator's wife sounds off!

Auburn offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn is considered one of the most innovative minds in college football.
Despite Auburn’s 42 to 14 loss to No. 2 Alabama in the Iron Bowl, and a 7-5 season this year, Malzahn is still highly regarded.
He’s been mentioned as a potential head coach at the University of North Carolina, among other schools.
He was instrumental in bringing star quarterback Cam Newton to Auburn for the 2010 season and he helped lead the Tigers to the BCS National Championship.
But this video of Malzahn’s wife, Kristi, could have a negative impact on Malzahn’s future coaching career. It's also embarrassing to Auburn University.

Kristi fires off intimate details about Gus' thoughts about his players, Cam Newton's recruitment and Lou Holtz' speech patterns at a Christian Leadership Summit. Nothing truly damning, unless you blush at moderately saucy language in front of a man of the cloth. Loose lips sink ships, and it's highly probable Gus will be captaining one next season. I'm disappointed he didn't ask her about Nick Saban.