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Matt Simms leaving U of L
This according to a Rick Bozich blog on the C-J website.
Quarterback Matt Simms is leaving the University of Louisville football program. Simms, a redshirt sophomore quarterback, informed U of L coach Steve Kragthorpe of his decision this morning, U of L football sports information director Rocco Gasparro said.
No word on where Simms is headed. His mother arrived from New Jersey to help him pack his belongings and head home today.
Some expected Simms to replace Hunter Cantwell as the Cards' starting quarterback next season. After red-shirting last season, Simms played in only one game last season, completing 4 of 10 passes for 39 yards and one interception against Pittsburgh.
It's hard to call any news coming out of the football program surprising at this point, but Simms leaving does seem a bit odd after all of the "Matt has the advantage" and "Matt loves competition" remarks Kragthorpe made during his end of the season press conference. I thought from the beginning that passing on Mitch Mustain in order to keep Simms happy and committed was the first mistake Kragthorpe made here, and nothing that has happened since then has made me waver the least bit from that opinion.
I give this news a big, heartfelt "meh."
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Engine-fire warning forces emergency landing for U of L basketball team
Yikes, this had to have been just a bit unnerving.
Put it on C.L.:
A warning light indicating an engine fire forced the charter flight taking the University of Louisville men’s basketball team to its game at South Florida to return home and make an emergency landing about 30 minutes after takeoff this afternoon.
U of L spokesman Kenny Klein, who was on the charter to Tampa, said that there were no flames visible at any point. He said the players didn’t know of the problem until they saw fire engines lining the runway at Louisville International Airport.
...
Klein, who counted eight emergency vehicles on the runway, said, "We actually didn’t know what was going on with the plane until we completed the taxi and the captain came on and explained what happened…. there was initially an indication of some ice, and then [of] a fire."
The players did not have to make an emergency exit. Klein said they got off the same stairs on which they boarded the plane.
The emergency landing didn’t dramatically alter the Cardinals’ travel plans. Klein said instead of eating dinner in Tampa, they ate in Louisville as they awaited another charter plane.
What to watch: 1/6/09
Ohio State at Michigan State (7 p.m./ESPN2)
If tOSU can disappoint The Izzone then the Big Ten will be left with a lone league unbeaten (Wisconsin) after just ten days of conference play.
Connecticut at West Virginia (7 p.m./ESPNU)
Every night is must see TV.
Georgia at Georgia Tech (7 p.m./FS South/ESPN FullCourt)
You just know that somehow Reggie Ball is going to blow this for Tech.
Longwood at Florida (7 p.m./Sun Sports/ESPN FullCourt)
The second favorite team of myself and thousands of other nine-year-olds looks to pull a shocker in Gainesville. The complete focus of Gator Nation will undoubtedly be on the hardwood tonight.
Vilanova at Seton Hall (8 p.m./SNY/MASN)
My second favorite head coach in the country vs. one of the few people in the world who could make me question my fanhood if hired by Tom Jurich. Go 'Cats.
Texas at Arkansas (9 p.m./ESPN2)
All of the sudden, this is sort of a marquee game.
Purdue at Penn State (9 p.m./Big Ten Network)
Tell me a Crispin is playing and you've got my attention.
Alabama at Clemson (9 p.m./FS South/ESPN FullCourt)
Jon Wilner will not be watching.
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Louisville lands some studs
Hell of a title.
1 day ago
Mike Rutherford
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Kragthorpe names new assistant coaches
As much as I'd like to use this space for a 9,000 word ode to Edgar Sosa's game-winner, we have news from the sport where we can't beat Kentucky that must be discussed.
Steve Kragthorpe has hired Larry Slade and Brent Guy to fill the defensive spaces left vacant when Ron English and Eric Lewis left for Eastern Michigan. Guy will reportedly coach the linebackers while Slade will work with the defensive backs.
The other big news is that special teams cooridnator Mark Nelson has resigned to pursue other opportunities, and has been replaced by Jay Johnson. Johnson, a former offensive coordinator at Southern Mississippi, was an administrative assistant at U of L last season.
Guy spent the past four seasons as the head coach at Utah State where his record was 8-38. He was asked to step down on Nov. 17, 2008. Prior to that he had been the defensive coordinator at Boise State and Arizona State.
"Brent has a proven track record playing great defense wherever he has coached," said Kragthorpe. "I'm excited to add a coach with the expertise to our staff. He had great success at Arizona State as a defensive coordinator and can add a lot of expertise to that side of the football."
It's a bold move to use the word expertise twice in two sentences, but then again Steve Kragthorpe is a bold man. Is bold the word I'm looking for?
Slade spent the last ten seasons coaching the defensive backs at Tennessee, where he helped mold the likes of Eric Berry, Gibril Wilson, Deon Grant, Rashad Baker, Jabari Greer, Jonathan Wade and Jason Allen. He was the secondary coach at Washington when the Huskies shared the 1991 national championship, and he also worked at Maryland and with Kragthorpe at Texas A&M.
"Larry is one of the most-respected defensive back coaches in the nation," said Kragthorpe. "I worked with Larry at Texas A&M and he is one of the best I've ever been around. I'm excited that he has decided to join our staff."
Welcome aboard, fellas.
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Cards hang on in both polls
No. 21 according to the coaches, tied for 23rd in the AP.
Pitt is your nearly unanimous new No. 1.
2 days ago
Mike Rutherford
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Louisville 74, Kentucky 71
Let me start by saying that this was the first U of L/UK basketball game I've ever had the privilege of attending.
I'll never forget my first time.
A win over Kentucky is indescribably sweet whether the final score reads 99-32 or 5-4, but for victory to come via an improbable shot in the closing seconds after an equally improbable sequence of events had raised the collective hopes of big blue nation sky high, well, it's just a smidgen sweeter.
Whether this one shot serves as the catalyst to a brilliant final two seasons or is just another high point in a consistently erratic four-year career, no one can take last night away from Edgar Sosa, and no one can erase the mark he made on one of the highest profile rivalries in college sports.
The Louisville Cardinals beat the Kentucky Wildcats in basketball. The sun shines for another calendar year.
We talked a little bit about it here after the Ole Miss game, but this team's complete lack of a killer instinct was on full display yet again last night. When the only thing left to do is let foot meet throat, this batch of Cardinals appears totally unwilling to finish the job.
When the lead hit 11, Swopshire and Goode took consecutive bad shots early in the possession, and a silly foul was committed on the other end each time. When Sosa's two free-throws pushed the lead to seven with just under a minute to play, the eventual hero, T-Will and Andre McGee all started high-fiving and laughing like the final horn had just sounded. And after Earl Clark fouled Jodie Meeks to give UK the chance to tie the game at 71, no one in white said a word, they just stared at the ground and looked absolutely terrified.
No way Louisville wins that game if Sosa's shot doesn't fall.
With the exception of a wild shot in the lane and an equally wild pass when he could have had a relatively easy bucket, this was about the most extended dose of Good Edgar we've seen since the second Marquette game last season.
My initial reaction to him jumping on the scorer's table and thumping his chest was that it was yet another sign of him not being able to handle success or failure in the proper manner, but upon further thought, I think it'd be silly to look too deeply into the actions of a 20-year-old who's been through a lot over the past three years and who just moments earlier had hit the biggest shot of his life.
According to his head coach, Edgar's officially the man at the point now, which makes him - once again - perhaps the biggest key to or obstacle in the way of success for his team.
From this point on, I will never say anything when Terrence Williams pulls up from behind the arc. How someone can miss the rim by four feet and then stroke three triples in a row is just something I'm never going to understand, and I've accepted that. He hit big shot after big shot in the second half, pulled down a quiet eight rebounds and played stellar defense yet again.
It's time to lose the one-handed floater in the lane, though.
This team simply can't have this type of effort from Earl Clark every other night if it wants to win more than ten games in the Big East. His biggest problem right now is that when he catches the ball he freezes, giving his defender a chance to square up and other defenders a chance a to put themselves in a position to help if he chooses to drive. And when he catches the ball and doesn't freeze, he walks. Earl has to learn to catch and go without traveling. It's something he did consistently against Tennessee, but couldn't do two days later against North Carolina.
He's also a much better outside shooter when the pass is coming from the inside and he doesn't have to think about whether or not letting it fly is a good decision.
Less thinky, more unconscious usage of ridiculous talenty.
I was really disappointed that Samardo got into foul trouble because he made two of his better post moves this season during the limited time he did see on the floor. Even though he was going up against one of the better post players in the country, Samuels had to have been extremely relieved to not be seeing double and triple teams for the first time in over a month. He finally had some room to maneuver, and I would have like to have seen what he could have done had he played 30 or 35 minutes.
Louisville blocked seven shots, and I'm pretty sure six ended up in Patrick Patterson's hands for lay-ups or dunks.
Huge minutes from George Goode, who continues to be the most pleasant surprise of the season. The only two mistakes he made were the two shots he took, and you kind of almost felt like he earned the right to take them. He did a tremendous job on Patterson without help, and managed to play 22 minutes without turning the ball over. Him flying to the corner, stripping the ball from Stevenson and then finding T-Will for a three was an enormous momentum play.
The quality of play in this series has really been down over the last few years, but I thought this game was played at an unexpectedly high level. Maybe it was just because both teams shot the ball uncharacteristically well, but the game felt far more crisp than I had anticipated.
Easily Jerry Smith's best effort of the season. He did an exceptional job on Jodie Meeks when No. 23 was his assignment, and he proved that he does, in fact, still possess the ability to let the ball fly from his hands in the direction of the basket. You can make the contested shot, my man, go ahead and take it a few more times if you need proof.
Also, Jerry going into one of his near-seizures while we were making a run in the second half and he was waiting to check in was pretty entertaining to watch.
This is why you have to love Andre McGee:
"That's the Edgar Sosa that I know," said Andre McGee, the senior who shares time at point guard with Sosa. "He's a tough, confident player who can make all the plays. Everybody on this team believes in him. He just has to stop being so hard on himself."
The kid only cares about winning. He's not David Padgett, but he's the closest thing we have.
You couldn't have picked a worse time to pick up a T if you're Billy Gillispie. Your team has just taken its first lead in what feels like two years and then after you decide to, apparently, protest a play in which there was obviously no foul and your team actually ended up scoring, the other guys go on a 12-0 run.
Many thanks, Bill.
Some very solid signs in the crowd, but "Pop, Lock and Swop it" gets my official nod.
Here's my runner-up in the middle:
If you hadn't learned two years ago, when he's healthy, Jodie Meeks is a hell of a player. Regardless of what Patterson does, if Meeks stays the Cats will be tough in '08-'09.
I just don't understand how a pair of 240-pounders playing sumo wrestling in the lane doesn't warrant a whistle, but a hand on the hip of a 180-pound guard near midcourt does. Tim Higgins sucks. He's awful. Nobody came to see you. The fact that we know your name means you're not good at your job. Stop strutting, you're an assclown.
This was far and away the best performance by my man Michael Porter, which made me sort of proud. If you would have told me before the game that Porter would play 33 minutes and not turn the ball over once, I would have told you we were about to lose...handily.
The brother of a friend of mine said before the game that Sosa was going to be the "savior," a comment which was met with a mixture of eye rolls and half-smiles.
Jesse Mudd is a prophet.
I couldn't believe Preston Knowles entered the game and promptly allowed Meeks to stroke a pair of threes right in front of him. I also couldn't believe he air-balled a ten-foot jump shot. And I really couldn't believe that after all that he could still be the biggest bad ass in the history of the world.
Francisco Garcia = debonair
Given the inordinate amount of playing time afforded to Jonathan Huffman two years ago and Josh Chichester last season, I said before the game that Kyle Kuric had better be ready for the night of his life. It was no Sosa as savior, but the three from the corner did make me feel pretty good.
An older, blue-clad fan sitting next to me gave me a high-five after the frenzy in the crowd settled down. Congratulations ma'am, you just earned Kentucky fans two points on the Card Chronicle scorecard, which brings their grand total to negative 15,667.
T-Will's dunk was cool.
We won and I am happy.
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Two Hoosiers commit to Cards
From Jody Demling:
Not only did Pitino watch his Cardinals beat rival Kentucky 74-71 at the buzzer, but he landed commitments from two top national prospects in the Class of 2011.
Indianapolis Lawrence North sophomores Ryan Taylor and Michael Chandler gave Pitino the good news after the win over UK.
"We told (assistant coach Richard Pitino), and he said there couldn't be a better day than this," Taylor said. "And then when we told Coach Pitino; he told us he didn't like champagne but that he was going to get a bottle tonight."
Taylor, a 6-foot-6 forward, picked the Cards over Cincinnati, Illinois, Purdue, Indiana and Kentucky. The 6-11 Chandler was being courted by Ohio State, Kentucky, Indiana and Florida.
Most scouting services only rank the top 10 sophomores, but Taylor and Chandler have shined on AAU stages. Taylor starts for Lawrence North and is one of its top rebounders.
"These are two very good gets early on," Scout.com national analyst Evan Daniels said. " … Ryan Taylor right now is an undersized post, but he's really athletic and tough.
"Chandler is a guy who is 6-11 and doesn't get a lot of playing time (in high school), but from what I have seen in the AAU circuit the kid has loads of potential."
2 days ago
Mike Rutherford
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Appropriate
2 days ago
Mike Rutherford
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