This college football season has one of the more compelling opening slates in recent memory. Cal-Tennessee, Arkansas-USC and Georgia Tech-Notre Dame are all on tap for Sept. 2; we’ll see if former Tennessee quarterback Brent Schaeffer will actually show up to play for Ole Miss against Memphis Sept. 3, and then we’ll watch the annual Miami-FSU penalty-fest on Sept. 4.
Gamblers will probably want to avoid this Cal-Tennessee, as there are just too many question marks:
- Will Tennessee’s offense rebound from last year’s ranked-about-100-of-119 performance?
- Does Erik Ainge have his head on straight?
- Will a new offensive line give him time to throw even if he does?
- Will the receiving corps underachieve again?
- Will a old/new offensive coordinator make a difference in the team’s attitude and performance?
- How is the team’s confidence after last year’s 5-6 record?
- Doesn’t Tennessee always play better when people write them off, and terribly when they’re predicted to do well?
- How will Cal’s offense play with its quarterback suspended for the opener?
- How will Cal react to playing in an SEC stadium with 100,000 fans who are actually watching the game?
Those go along with traditional questions about opening day sloppiness, jitters, off-season conditioning, and mental preparedness. And there are other unpredictable variables that come into play with teams that have rarely, if ever, played each other. The teams are about evenly-stocked with talent (aren’t most teams now?), but we know that rarely translates to wins and losses.
USC-Arkansas is mostly compelling to see what USC’s offense will look like without Heisman winners Reggie Bush and Matt Leinhart. Closer-but-not-close than last year’s USC blowout seems to be the consensus, but it’s opening day so anything can happen. And Arkansas did smack Texas around a couple of years ago.
As a Tennessee fan I should probably thank Notre Dame for taking Jimmy Clausen off my school’s hands, but it should be obvious I’d like Georgia Tech to beat the Irish given some of my past rants. That outcome is doubtful but not impossible given the Yellow Jackets’ habit of playing surprisingly well against highly-ranked opponents and surprisingly poorly against everyone else.
But what about Georgia fans? You’ve got yourself a conundrum. Check this Dawg Sports preview for background, come back and let me know what you think. The whole thing is worth a read, but I found this comparison especially interesting:
Notre Dame is a self-righteous condescending scourge awash in sanctimoniousness and bathed in media adulation. Georgia Tech is merely an annoyance, not unlike the insect with which the North Avenue Trade School’s mascot shares its name. A rigid and reflexive “Dawg Fan = Always Roots Against Tech” policy seems to me to give the Yellow Jackets pride of place out of all proportion to their actual significance, not at all unlike a strict “Vol Fan = Always Roots Against Vandy” stance.
Sound like hyperbole? Writer tkyleking points out that in the past 15 meetings, Tennessee is 14-1 against Vandy while Georgia is 12-3 against Georgia Tech.
I could take or leave Notre Dame. I think of the school as being an inoffensive second-tier program (the way Tennessee and, yes, Georgia are second tier programs compared to USC, Miami, and Oklahoma in recent years.. consistently top 25, but not in national title contention when bowl time rolls around). Jmac’s analysis is spot-on regarding the Irish:
[I]f we take a look at some of the existing data, we find that much of Notre Dame’s success came largely in the 1920s and the 1940s. It’s remarkable success, to be sure, but those numbers tend to artificially inflate their overall rankings. Notre Dame captured four national titles in the 1940s, losing only nine games in the entire decade.
However, upon looking at the 1950s and 1960s, we see a return to earth for the Irish. It was still an impressive 126-65-8, but it doesn’t compare to the gaudy 155-50-4 record Oklahoma put up and, all things considered, it isn’t that much better than Georgia’s 110-87-13 mark over the same 20-year span.
It seems to me the Irish were the program from 1920 through 1949, however they have done little to distinguish themselves since then. A title pops up here and there, but Notre Dame has done little — in comparison with the other members of the ‘Big Eight’ as well as upstart competitors like Miami and Florida State — to stake a longterm claim to its supposed throne.
You should read his post to get context about who his top 8 programs are. He makes a good case that Michigan is the best overall program, though I won’t say I agree with him without reviewing records on my own.
Predictions? Thoughts? Grievances?






It’s a shame that Arkansas’ all world RB, McFadden will probably miss the USC game due to his injured toe. Arkansas was the most physical team that UGA faced last year as far as I’m concerned. And McFadden sure laid a few licks on some LB’s trying to stop him. I don’t think Arky was going to win anyway. But I think they could’ve made it interesting. Maybe they still can?
If I were a Vol, I wouldn’t worry too much about Ainge. He’s the guy this year. He played great as a freshman. Now that he won’t have to worry about being pulled so quickly, he’ll probably get over his sophomore slump.
BTW, I wouldn’t touch a point spread on Cal-UT with a 10 ft. pole either. I think Cal might be a bit overated. But they’re definitely dangerous and could win. There’s always talk beforehand about western teams coming south to play in ginormous stadiums. But good ones usually don’t have a problem. They either win because they’re better or lose because they’re not. I’d take the urnge in this one though.
Yeah, I haven’t witnessed many GT-ND games in my lifetime. I don’t waste much energy on rooting against either of them. I’ve always been more of a “for” guy than “against” guy. Assuming ND can dodge the fish thrown at them like the last time they visited GT, they’ll probably win. But GT does have a habit of rising to the occasion now and then. Plus the last time ND opened a season down south, they barely beat Vandy in Nashville.
LOL, I forgot about McFadden. Didn’t he break his toe in a bar fight? Or am I thinking of another all-world tailback?
Nope, you’re right. Of all the injuries to have in a bar room fight, McFadden hurt his lil bitty toe.
I read this morning that he’s already had surgery and is expected to miss the USC game.
I have FSU season tickets for the first time since I graduated 9 years ago and I am so incredibly psyched I can hardly stand it.
You knew it was coming..
Go Dawgs!
Are you planning on coming to Athens for the UT game? If you don’t have tickets, it would be fun to tailgate.