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Florida vs LSU, Prediction Pick, 2009

Posted on 08 October 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

Florida vs LSU, Prediction Pick, 2009
Is this, in fact, the biggest game of 2009? According to the rankings it is, as these are the two highest-ranked teams to play this year.
Yet this game has no real implications in the SEC races, since (4) LSU and (1) Florida are in different divisions. While a loss could hurt either’s chances of winning their respective divisions, they could play again in the SEC championship game. So we may learn nothing Saturday night other than: 1. It’s still loud in Baton Rouge during night games and 2. The winning team was better than the losing team on October 10, 2009.

If Florida wins, this game doesn’t matter because we expect them to and LSU hasn’t been playing very well anyway. Worse, even if they lose, Florida fans can say Tim Tebow didn’t play, or was playing hurt two weeks after a bad concussion. Thus, do BCS voters take that into account when ranking Florida if they lose on Saturday?

This could cause BCS chaos, people! Dogs and cats living together. Mass hysteria!

The key matchup isn’t Florida’s offense against LSU’s defense. It’s whether LSU’s offense can get away with doing just enough not to lose again against Florida’s defense. The Gators don’t suck on that side of the ball like, say, everyone else LSU has played.

The Tigers’ offense has shown all the hallmarks of having a quarterback who just isn’t ready to manage a game yet. LSU is almost totally ineffective in the red zone, can’t get its running backs going because opposing defenses know to stop them first and has made a few plays through the air, but missed a lot of them too. Make no mistake, Jordan Jefferson is going to figure it out any day now, but he hasn’t yet, and that’s not a good sign for Saturday.

Here’s how the Tigers can win: I’ll admit it’s kind of obvious, but either Keiland Williams or Charles Scott is going to have to step up, along with the offensive line. Not because they’re the key (obviously Gary Crowton’s sparing use of his two stud backs so far shows they aren’t), but because it will open things up for the real playmakers: Brandon LaFell and Terrance Toliver. Those guys can beat Florida’s DB’s and cause all kinds of hell for Florida’s defense. That is, if Jefferson can find them consistently.

Frankly, it’s more likely they’ll get open than Florida’s defense suddenly letting Scott and Williams waltz through the front seven like they’re Jim Brown and O.J. Simpson before he cut two people’s heads off.

OK, OK, fine. Let’s talk about Tebow and Florida’s offense. LSU happens to be the best defense Florida has faced. And if John Brantley is in there instead of Tebow, it’s going to  be a massive disruption to Florida’s running game because it relies so heavily on Tebow or the threat of Tebow. He’s like a nuclear missile. The threat of him is nearly as scary as actually using him.
Don’t forget that Urban Meyer’s offense worked with a less-athletic quarterback (Alex Smith) and they won a national championship with Chris Leak taking the majority of the snaps, so Brantley might actually enhance things both on the ground and through the air. Jeff Demps and Chris Rainey are going to have to be huge though and Florida’s going to need to find a fullback for at least one game.

Notice how I didn’t mention any of the receivers because they might as well have been anonymous through the first five weeks of this season. I wonder if Tebow even knew their names before the concussion, because he certainly doesn’t now.

Look, even with a foggy Tim Tebow or a full-strength John Brantley, Florida is better than LSU at almost every position, in virtually every matchup and in all three phases of the game. LSU’s only shot is a hall-of-fame defensive effort, a crowd on par with Ohio State fans at this year’s USC game and efficiency on offense that hasn’t been displayed yet. Doesn’t look good, does it?

Florida is a seven point favorite at the moment, and given all the issues surrounding their personnel, it’s hard to see them covering, though they should still beat LSU.

My prediction: both teams start slow and LSU actually takes an early lead. Florida then proceeds to suck the life out of the stadium by matriculating the ball down the field, playing solid defense the rest of the way, and winning a close game. Florida wins but doesn’t cover the seven points.

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LSU vs Georgia, Prediction Pick, 2009

Posted on 02 October 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

LSU vs Georgia, Prediction Pick, 2009
By McD Rumors and Rants

Is No. 4 LSU the worst top ten team at the moment? It certainly seems that they’re the most vulnerable. The Tigers haven’t played a complete offensive and defensive game yet in 2009. They’ve had spots, but every one of their flaws has come to light, then kept showing up repeatedly.

The facts are these: LSU is a pretty good defensive team. Not great, not overly-talented, but pretty good. The offense? That’s another issue. They have every tool an offense would hypothetically need. Dual-threat quarterback? Check. Athletic, speedy wide receivers? Check. A stable of amazing runners? Check. An offensive line full of studs? Check. And yet they haven’t blown out any of the mediocre-to-bad teams on their schedule so far: Washington, Vanderbilt, Louisiana-Lafayette, and Mississippi State. Three of those four games were in doubt in the second half, even.

So what gives?

Against No. 14 Georgia, the offense needs to find a way to stay on the field and be efficient. LSU knows how to access its playmakers, but it’s clear the offensive coaches don’t trust quarterback Jordan Jefferson to carry them with all the safe, short passes he throws. That’s why his statistics look decent and he hasn’t thrown many interceptions. The problem is, the passing game isn’t exactly scary either.

That means LSU’s running game ought to be the focus of the playcalling, but it isn’t. It is unforgivable that a team with Keiland Williams and Charles Scott would fail to get them 40-45 combined carries, especially in games the team is winning. The Tigers have been getting that dynamic duo about 20-28 combined carries per game. Speedster Trindon Holliday only has seven total offensive touches in four games!

Against Mississippi State, LSU only ran for 30 yards (!) on 31 attempts. The Tigers never trailed after the first quarter, but they averaged 1 yard per carry for the game, and did not have a running back with double-digit carries. That’s on head coach Les Miles and offensive coordinator Gary Crowton. I have strong feelings about Les Miles, but someone needs to buy FireGaryCrowton.com and fast.

Georgia’s offense is going to tear LSU up if the Tigers are sloppy and inefficient again on offensive side of the ball – like they were against Mississippi State. LSU’s secondary already has an unfavorable (to say the very least) matchup with AJ Green, and if that unit is on the field for an extended amount of time because Crowton just hates running the ball, it’s curtains for LSU.

I don’t think too highly of Georgia’s offense or defense. The Bulldogs’ defense is soft and can be beaten like a drum (119 points allowed in four games) while their offense is overly conservative and doesn’t have any playmakers other than Green. Georgia would be outscored by their opponents on the season if not for the shoot out against Arkansas’ horrible defense. At it’s core, Georgia is a very mediocre team. LSU is going to rush/blitz the hell out of quarterback Joe Cox and try to add to the five interceptions he’s already thrown in four games. The Bulldogs’ overall blah-ness the only reason I’m not 100% sure Georgia is going to win on Saturday. Plus Mark Richt is their head coach. Enough said.

Georgia is favored by 2.5 right now, and I really, really hate picking the Bulldogs. They’re really unpredictable, conservative, and not what you’d call “clutch.” But I have to go with track records for 2009 so far, and that tells me LSU isn’t going to do enough to win. They just haven’t been consistent. My head tells me it’s so obvious they should use their huge offensive line and pound Scott and Williams down Georgia’s throat, but they haven’t done that yet, even when beating lesser teams. At least Georgia has an identity. I just don’t think LSU will score enough points. I’m sad to say it, but take Georgia by a figgie even though LSU really is the vastly superior team.

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LSU vs Mississippi State, Prediction Pick, 2009

Posted on 25 September 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

LSU vs Mississippi State, Prediction Pick, 2009
By McD from Rumors and Rants

Auburn ran for 390 yards on Mississippi State two weeks ago. Vanderbilt only averaged 1.1 yards per carry against the Bulldog defense last week. The difference? Auburn actually has talent in the backfield, much like LSU. What does that mean for this week’s SEC West clash? I have no idea.

And yet, rushing offense in general remains something of a mystery three games into the season. The Tigers ran for 164 yards on 36 attempts last week against Louisiana-Lafayette and only won 31-3. In the same game, Jordan Jefferson threw 25 times. That’s the kind of run/pass balance you’d expect from LSU. But 164 yards seems low, especially when you see that Charles Scott and Keiland Williams only got 12 carries and 10 carries, respectively. LSU barely won the time of possession battle (by a whole four minutes) and, though they threw for three touchdowns, the passing game failed to move the ball consistently. Worse, Scott couldn’t convert a 4th and 1. Against ULL’s defensive line. You read that right.

Thus, my big question heading into LSU’s first conference game of the year is: what the hell is going on with the running game and the playcalling? Is it underwhelming because Gary Crowton’s spread tendencies are screwing up a great thing in Scott and Williams? Or is it because Scott and Williams aren’t performing well, putting the OC in a bind? Or is it because the offensive line isn’t all that good?

I’m not saying the Tigers need to run it more against MSU, but the running game, and the offense in general has been singularly mediocre in three straight games. It’s never been amazing under Les Miles (killing explosive offenses, whether it be another team’s or his own, is kind of Miles’ specialty), but I want to know what the hell’s going on and I’m not even an LSU fan.

As for beating Mississippi State, the usual checklist of efficiency in the passing game and explosiveness in the running game is how the Tigers will win. MSU’s offense is much better now, so 17 points won’t cut it this week, and LSU is going to need to play better defense than this guy (http://www.bustedcoverage.com/?p=20291).

That said, the big key to this game is Jordan Jefferson. He needs to be a much bigger threat both throwing and running for the rest of the season, or the shadow of Russell Shepard is going to loom larger and larger. Shepard got into the ULL game and averaged 5.3 YPC on four attempts, much better than Jefferson’s 3.1. They even had Jarrett Freaking Lee come in and throw a touchdown near the goal line.

The LSU passing game doesn’t scare anyone, which means no one is backing away from the line of scrimmage, thus screwing up what should be a scary good rushing attack. This might be a team more built for the Georgia Tech offense than any other in the country…except for maybe Georgia Tech (though I bet Paul Johnson would switch rosters with Les Miles in a second), but since LSU likes to spread it out a lot, Jefferson throwing has to be a much, much bigger threat against Mississippi State. So once again, I’m challenging the running backs and offensive line to truly dominate this week’s game. LSU really does need to keep the Bulldog offense off the field because they are a threat to score much more than they used to be. It’s not pretty, but they’re far better than last year.

The other key is the LSU rush defense. The Tigers allowed Vandy to rush for 122 yards while MSU only gave up 29 to the Commodores. Mississippi State has a myriad of runners they use to move the ball; it’s Florida’s offense, after all. Their passing game isn’t a huge threat to LSU’s somewhat sketchy veteran secondary, but the running game is. The Tigers simply cannot allow Mississippi State to control the clock and the pace of play because the LSU offense isn’t built to handle that. We have something of an old-school Big Ten matchup happening here: LSU must run the ball effectively and defend the run effectively. Plus Jefferson cannot screw them through the air. If that happens, unless something freaky like the Colts/Dolphins game from this past Monday goes down, LSU wins on the road and silences those damn cowbells for sure.

With a 12.5 point spread, I’m taking LSU and a VERY slight cover.

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LSU vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, Prediction Pick, 2009

Posted on 16 September 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

LSU vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, Prediction Pick, 2009
-McD Rumors and Rants

So LSU has played two games, the offense has underwhelmed in both, and the defense only truly played well against Vanderbilt. Saturday is when LSU puts it all together…or doesn’t.

Some have said Les Miles called out Vanderbilt when he said the Ragin’ Cajuns had a better offense than the Commodores but, I mean, isn’t he pretty much right? It’s not like saying something that actually kind of makes sense is against the rules for football coaches. Just because Vanderbilt is in the SEC doesn’t mean a Sun Belt team can’t have a better offensive unit. Besides, they’re freaking Vanderbilt. Which, by the way is what LSU fan was saying to themselves after the Tigers looked a hell of a lot like Ohio State (and not in a good way) against them.

The LSU offense once again lacked any kind of punch against Vanderbilt, and Charles Scott hasn’t looked good yet. On the bright side, Keiland Williams looked fantastic in both games and is the team’s leading rusher. To beat Louisiana-Lafayette, and I mean REALLY beat them, not just win, the offense is going to have to be mistake free and Williams and Scott cannot be invisible. Obviously, that won’t happen, but keys to the game are keys to the game because the only way the Ragin’ Cajuns are winning is if LSU beats itself. Yes, I respect what Chris Masson and the offense have done, but beating Southern and “upsetting” Kansas State by scoring 17 points isn’t the kind of thing that gets its own piece on E:60.

I’m going to put this game squarely on the running backs. Kansas State ran for 196 yards on ULL and the lost. LSU shouldn’t truly need the passing game for any reason other than to keep the defense honest. Which is fine because Terrance Toliver and Brandon LaFell forgot to get off the bus against Vanderbilt anyway. But Williams and Scott had better run wild Saturday afternoon, and Les Miles had better let it happen. It’s time for LSU to let their studs out of the box. LSU had to throw 29 times last week, which is way too many even though I have to applaud Jordan Jefferson’s 20-29 performance. Efficiency in the passing game is nice, but this team lives and dies with the run, not with the dink-and-dunk passes Jefferson threw last week. And that’s as it should be.

Thus, that 27 point spread is a bit high if they’re going to run the ball and dominate the clock. Based on how things have gone thus far, this ought to be a comfortable win, but not a 50 point blowout. And I’m saying that so LSU fan can be happy when the Tigers really do blow them out of the water because I’m being bull-headed and taking the cover. On a side note, I wonder if LSU/ULL is like IU/Purdue in which everyone knows each other and the tailgating is just a giant combined beerfest. Oh, and try not to drink two kegs before the game, okay LSU fans?

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LSU vs Vanderbilt, Prediction Preview 2009

Posted on 10 September 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

LSU vs Vandy, Prediction Preview 2009
by: McD Rumors and Rants

The key for LSU against Vanderbilt is two-fold. First, they really need to shore up their back seven on defense and second, they need a much more efficient and mas fuerte performance from the offense. The expected well-lubricated crowd for the home-opener should help too. Night games in Baton Rouge are always a bit of a spectacle.

LSU’s defense looked shaky again when they beat Washington last week. Some of that is probably due to UW having a competent coach, but the questions about the Tigers’ ability at linebacker and in the secondary remain. Their speed is questionable at best, and it’s making every matchup against speedy teams that much scarier for the LSU faithful, and probably Les Miles too.

Well, maybe not this week since Vanderbilt is coming to town. The Commodores always play respectable defense, but their offense is routinely atrocious, even when Jay Cutler was there. They also like to run the ball before they pass, which plays right into LSU’s strength up front and, for a while at least, means the secondary won’t have to wonder how many times they’re going to get burned by no-name receivers. While I respect Bobby Johnson and Vandy, this squad doesn’t measure up against LSU, especially not on the road.

Against Washington, LSU sufferend from the kind of offensive schizophrenia that limited that unit last year as well. They couldn’t decide whether they want to spread it out and play fast with Jordan Jefferson, Keiland Williams and the receivers, or if they want to line it up with two tight ends and let Charles Scott batter away at defenses, filling the hole in the wall with their Cajun dead, so to speak.

The end result of this was nothing looked cohesive on that side of the ball, Washington dominated the time of possession (36:52 to 23:08), and Charles Scott and Keiland Williams had a combined 19 carries and no touchdowns.  That is not the LSU way of doing things. They did have some big plays in the passing game, but Jefferson never looked particularly comfortable and was not very efficient. They are not a finesse team and shouldn’t try to be one. If anything, they can improve the passing game’s efficiency by running the ball more and making Jefferson even more of a running threat than the eight carries he had last week. As it was, you could tell what was coming based on the formation LSU was in. Shotgun with Williams next to Jefferson was probably some kind of pass. I-formation meant run with Scott. It’s not rocket science (or even high school biology with Les Miles) but that was way, way too predictable last Saturday.

Thus, this week, it’s imperative the Tigers remember who they are and run the freaking ball. Should they do that while managing to shore up the defense a little, they should cruise, albeit in a hard-fought, physical game. This is a 14.5-point spread, and though LSU was surprised a bit by Washington, Vanderbilt, a conference opponent, shouldn’t be one. Expect a cover, Tigers fans.

-What do you think will happen? Leave a comment below, and tell us what you think. Subscribe, and come back all season-

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Premise: The SEC as Old School Tag Teams

Posted on 04 September 2009 by Andrew Rosin

Premise: The SEC as Old School Tag Teams

Let’s face it, I’m like the Fox Reality Television Department. I see a good idea, and I tweak it for my purposes. So, I saw Black Heart Gold Pants did a post comparing College Football Teams to pro wrestlers? I say two is better than one, I say the late 80′s are better than now, and I say that I remember the Conquistadors, and I care.

Mississippi State is…The Conquistadors

There’s a term in wrestling called Jobber to the Stars. You have a guy or a team with some name recognition. And they get to beat some random dudes. (Jackson State, Middle Tennessee State) But if they face somebody with any sort of expectation? They’re basically a guarantee game. Thus, they are the Conquistadors.

Auburn is…The Colossal Connection

 

Because Auburn is a school with traditionally outsized expectations. Bobby Lowder is a man who wanted this team to be as good as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. The problem with that? Chris Todd’s arm is as strong as a post Princess Bride Andre was agile. The defense hits hard and I know that Antonio Coleman’s going to poke the eye out of Jimmy Jack Funk if he crosses him.

Arkansas is…the Rockers

This is mainly due to their post team career. The offense is something that is destined for bigger and better things. A lot of talent on that side of the ball. The defense? They’re the one destined for a long string of drug arrests and 18 person audiences. Ryan Mallet’s got a superkick that would take your head clean off.

Ole Miss is…The Fabulous Freebirds

 

They’re the team that’s built on swagger and style. You have a gunslinging quarterback in Jevan Snead. You have two playmakers in Dexter McCluster and Shay Hodge. You have a defense that will hit you as if you have been blindsided by a foreign object. I know Oxford doesn’t seem to have much bad on their streets, but there is a chance for the most genteel championship riot of all time.

Alabama is…Money Inc.

Everybody has a price. Everybody’s gonna pay. And you know that the Million Dollar Saban? He always gets his way.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!

Well.

LSU is…The Four Horsemen

They aren’t exactly the most charismatic team that you build a narrative over. Not to say that Les Miles doesn’t work well from the meme that he is the Ric Flair of the SEC. (If Ric Flair wore hats.) But the team is at its best when the offense is technically proficient and the defense will beat you down in the parking lot. Last year? This was the iteration where you had to deal with Paul Romo or Steve McMichael.

Vanderbilt is…The Fabulous Rougeaus

The offense is filled with ennui. Self-loathing. People who smoke clove cigarettes. Add to that a love of independent film and DeGrassi. The defense is filled with technical proficency and hard hitting. They are as well coached as a team managed by the Mouth of the South. But this is a team that reeks of Quebecois.

Kentucky is…The Public Enemy

Few teams get so much out of so little like Rich Brooks and the Wildcats. They’re trying for their fourth straight bowl win off of little more than Randall Cobb, Trevard Lindley, and a frying pan. You don’t know how they’re going to do this. But if you take them lightly? They will put you through a table.

South Carolina is…The Hart Foundation

If the Hart Foundation was in some sort of an Ultamaceian time paradox. The offense is Bret Hart. The bitter, concussed, stroked out Bret Hart. The defense? Ellis Johnson has a team that is ready willing and able to punch you in the mouth, stroke their awesome goat, and cackle about it. Just ask Russell Wilson. But the best there was isn’t exactly going to hold up their end of the deal.

Tennessee is…Demolition

Now, you look at the way the Road Warriors had galvanized mid-80′s tag-team wrestling and the WWE asked why not us? So they have the Dave Clausen like success of the outfit known as the Powers of Pain. But you dress up this new era? You get the power and the paint of top prospect Bryce Brown and the outlaw tomfoolery of one Lane Kiffin. In some form or fashion, these kids will be Walking Disasters.  

Georgia is…The Twin Towers

As this is the greatest official rivalry in the SEC, you need to have the great foil to the super duo. And as Florida is the Mania and the Madness? Georgia has to be the Law and Order and the Jive Soul Bro. They are a talented team, and if you are anybody else besides a championship contender and or Florida? They will break your face off.

Florida is…The Megapowers

You have Hulk Hogan (Tim Tebow) and Randy “Macho Man” Savage (Brandon Spikes) both in their primes. You have Urban Meyer as a savvier Miss Elizabeth. You have a team that’s bound to win every game that they play. The only thing that I can see that ends them is if Brandon Spikes accuses Tim Tebow of jealous eyes.

So while you wonder if anyone can take the Megapowers down? I’ll do something else. I already know, dear reader.

I already know.

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LSU vs Washington, Prediction Preview 2009

Posted on 03 September 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

LSU vs Washington, Prediction Preview 2009
–McD, Rumors and Rants.

This game is partially not LSU’s fault. They couldn’t have known Washington would be this bad when they put it on the schedule. That said, Steve Sarkisian is in charge now,and you never know; teams do freaky things during the debut of a new head coach at home. LSU could find themselves in a very unexpected battle.

And, karmically, that would serve them right for not using Keiland Williams the last two years. The same kid who did this to Virginia Tech is behind Charles Scott (who is essentially a very, very athletic fullback) on the depth chart now and was stuck behind Jacob Hester two years ago. That’s right. Jacob. Freaking. Hester. I’m not saying Hester and Scott aren’t good running backs. They both had good numbers and Charles Scott and LenDale White have a lot in common as prospects. But even White had Reggie Bush running with him. Did I mention Williams and Scott are within five pounds of each other? Hmm, which back would Urban Meyer use? The one who is athletic, can be both a powerful and elusive back or the guy who runs straight ahead? The answer is both. Duh. I’m not saying, I’m just saying….One more Keiland Williams video? Okay one more. My favorite part of this one is that Herbstreit agrees with me, and this was two years ago!

Jordan Jefferson and the rest of the offense may actually have something to scare the Washington defense with. That is, if Jefferson can pass with any kind of efficiency. Or maybe teams on the ’09 schedule can just sell out to stop Scott and (hopefully) Williams and then Jefferson can surprise them, like what happened to Georgia Tech at the Chick-Fil-A bowl. You know things are bad when fans are justifying a quarterback because he completed his first nine passes against an ACC squad. Hold your breath, Ti-guh fans, Russell Shepard is waiting in the wings.

Defensively, the Tigers shouldn’t have much trouble with Washington’s offense. I’m not going to lie, I love me some Jake Locker. His passing skills are about as developed as Jefferson’s, but man is he amazing to watch. The homeless man’s Tim Tebow still has a lot of potential to unlock and Steve Sarkisian may or may not be the coach to do it. We’ll see.

The only worry LSU might have is if Washington somehow got way, way faster in the offseason or if Locker manages to run wild. Sarkisian seems to favor a west-coast style approach with a hell of a lot of rollouts and bootlegs, so there’s a chance Locker could rush for some yards. Or that his passes could be woefully inaccurate, since that’s been his track record so far. The back seven for the Tigers was, uh, abominable in 2008 and worse, they were slow. That spells coaching staff overhaul on the defensive side of the ball. Hey look, it’s John Chavis! Chavis obviously has a ton of experience dealing with Tim Tebow, though I’m not sure how successful that ended up for him at Tennessee, but still. If anyone can plan for Locker, it’s him. It’s simply a question of whether the Tigers’ talented, but mediocre statistically, defense can stay in front of him. Otherwise, there’s not a whole lot to be scared of from Washington.

Look. LSU is favored by 17.5 points, and honestly, if they don’t win by 28, there ought to be a hell of a lot of grumbling in Baton Rouge. Les Miles is gonna keep his foot on the gas and run the ball with Scott out of the I-formation until Washington begs for mercy. Ciron Black is gonna be a busy man. Look for Scott’s YPC to be about 8.0 and for Williams to sit on the bench because Miles clearly hates him. Not that I’m complaining because the more Williams sits, the more likely it is for my Chargers to get him with like a sixth rounder in 2010. Sweet.

-What do you think will happen? Leave a comment below, and tell us what you think. Subscribe, and come back all season-

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SEC Football Preseason Predictions and Power Rankings, 2009

Posted on 16 August 2009 by Ethan Jaynes

SEC Football Preseason Predictions, 2009. Here they are short and sweet. I know that my predictions will not only raise eyebrows, but they will also bring my sanity into question. I can only say that I think the SEC West is the deepest we have ever seen. Parody will be the SEC West’s surname. With 2 weeks to go in the season there will be several teams with shots at going to the Atlanta for the championship. The SEC East will be sewn up fairly quickly by the impenetrable Florida Gators. Georgia will make a lot of heads turn picking up the trash.

Auburn and Tennessee will both bring some normalcy to the picture by running the ball and keeping their defense fresh so they can do what they know how to do. The coaches have changed but the top level talent is still there. The coaches and assistants will bring new life.  Alabama, Arkansas, and Ole Miss will all come back to Earth a little. Well, Alabama a lot. Alabama lost their best passing QB of all time ( by the #’s ), and they lost their top 1 or 2 ranked offensive lineman throughout their storied program’s history. Last year was the perfect storm for them, and they still lost their last 2 games.

Please do not be too offended, if your team is not where you expect it. This is the best conference in the nation, and it is the deepest I have ever seen it. #5 through #11 could lose to each other any given Saturday. #5 through #11 would be the pride of any other conference. That’s just how the SEC roles.

  1. Florida: 12-1, 1st in SEC East with a 7-1 SEC record = SEC Champions
  2. Georgia: 11-2, 2nd in SEC East with a 6-2 SEC record
  3. Alabama: 9-4, Tied 1st in SEC West with a 5-3 SEC record
  4. LSU: 9-4, Tied 1st in SEC West with a 5-3 SEC record
  5. South Carolina: 9-4, 3rd in SEC East with a 5-3 SEC record
  6. Auburn: 9-4, Tied 3rd in SEC West with a 4-4 SEC record
  7. Ole Miss: 8-5, Tied 3rd in SEC West with a 4-4 SEC record
  8. Tennessee: 7-6, Tied 4th in SEC East with a 3-5 SEC record
  9. Vanderbilt: 6-6, Tied 4th in SEC East with a 3-5 SEC record
  10. Arkansas: 5-7, 5th in SEC West with a 3-5 SEC record
  11. Kentucky: 5-7, 6th in SEC East with a 2-6 SEC record
  12. Mississippi State: 3-9 , 6th in SEC West with a 0-8 SEC record

That’s just how the SEC roles.

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