Saturday, August 25, 2007

The 2007 NCAA Previewtacular: THE ACC

THE CONSENSUS:

ACC Atlantic:
1. Florida State (#14 overall - AT: #26, LN: #21, SN: #11, SS: --, ST: #7)
2. Boston College (#30t overall - AT: #27, LN: #24, SN: #28, SS: -- , ST: #41)
3. Wake Forest (#39 overall - AT: #32, LN: #20, SN: #45, SS: --, ST: #51)
4. Clemson (#45 overall - AT: #51, LN: #33, SN: #44, SS: #22, ST: #45)
5. Maryland (#50 overall - AT: #50, LN: #56, SN: #47, SS: --, ST: #48)
6. NC State (#55 overall - AT: #65, LN: #53, SN: #70, SS: --, ST: #46)

ACC Coastal:
1. Virginia Tech (#10 overall - AT: #9, LN: #8, SN: #7, SS: #9, ST: #13)
2. Miami (#29 overall - AT: #24, LN: #38, SN: #30, SS: --, ST: #24)
3. Georgia Tech (#30t overall - AT: #14, LN: #31, SN: #37, SS: --, ST: #38)
4. Virginia (#44 overall - AT: #54, LN: #37, SN: #43, SS: --, ST: #37)
5. North Carolina (#81 overall - AT: #77, LN: #80, SN: #84, SS: --, ST: #85)
6. Duke (#104 overall - AT: #98, LN: #98, SN: #107, SS: --, ST: #101)

OVERRATED: Boston College. There's no astoundingly overrated team, but BC's the best choice here. The talent's there, but the Eagles were fairly lucky last year, and changing such proven offensive schemes, especially along the line, seems like a bad idea.

UNDERRATED: Miami. I almost went with Clemson, but Florida State seems to be the sexy rebound pick, and Miami's in just as good a situation, if not better. And statistically, Miami isn't very far behind Virginia Tech at all.


THE TFFE OFFICIAL RANKINGS, POWER POLL STYLE:

ACC Atlantic:

1. Florida State

There's no revelation that FSU projected out to a 10-win team last year or anything - FSU was in fact about 7, mayyybe 8 win team last year, but just happened to be in the same division as three extremely lucky teams. Still, the Seminoles should be a much-improved, if not elite, team this year, partially due to not only getting rid of horrible OC Jeff Bowden, but bringing in Jimbo Fisher from LSU to replace him. Whichever QB winds up starting, be it Drew Weatherford (2154 yards, 55.7%, 12/11) or Xavier Lee (885, 51.2, 7/5), should see improved stats from last year, and will have two returning starters to throw to: senior De'Cody Fagg and 6'6" touchdown machine Greg Carr. The running game loses Lorenzo Booker, but returns #2 back Antone Smith, as well as FB Joe Surratt, who led the team in rushing touchdowns. They'll be running behind a line that returns three starters and should be much improved - not only did it disappoint last year, but the Noles bring in OL coach Rick Trickett, who had some excellent offensive lines at West Virginia. On defense, things should also be much improved - the defense was #15 in the country in yardage, but were somewhat unlucky as far as the scoring allowed. Three of four starters return along the defensive line, led by 2nd team all-ACC DT Andre Fluellen; however, the LB corps is not nearly as experienced, as the Noles return only starting OLB Geno Hayes and a bunch of players who missed the majority of last season with injuries. Still, much like the offensive line, FSU brings back ex-NC State coach Chuck Amato as LB coach, so the linebackers should both do well and be luckier with injuries this season. The secondary was, statistically, the weakness of the defense last year, but should now be the strength. All four starters return, including strong safety Myron Rolle, who could very well be the best sophomore in the country at any position. I'm not ready to call the Seminoles a surprise national title contender, but between underperformance last year (not statistically, but compared to the talent level), improvement due to experience, and one hell of a coaching staff, FSU should be much improved. One problem may be the schedule, as Florida State gets Clemson, Virginia Tech, and Florida on the road, as well playing Alabama in Jacksonville and hosting their rival that should also be much improved, Miami. Florida State should at least see an improvement to 8 or 9 wins, though, and could run roughshod over the ACC Atlantic.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 8-11 overall wins, 6-8 conference wins


2. Clemson

The best team in the absolute mess that was the ACC last year? The Clemson Tigers, and quite easily. The only teams to finish top-15 in both scoring offense and defense? LSU, Ohio State, and Clemson. Top-15 in both yardage offense and defense? Ohio State, Boise State, and Clemson. This was just a snakebit team against BC and Maryland, and one that could've easily beaten South Carolina to give them 11 wins. Still, Clemson's suffered some heavy losses to graduation, so that doesn't matter as much as it could've. Clemson sees a new QB take over in junior Cullen Harper - while this may seem like a step down, last year also saw a first-year starter in senior Will Proctor, so Harper should at least match his line of 2353 yards on 60.2% passing and a 16/11 TD/INT ratio. While the WR corps should be down due to the loss of #3 Thomas Hunter and NFL-talent #1 Chansi Stuckey, Harper should be helped by the continued improvement of one of the best RB duos in the country, James Davis and CJ Spiller. If not the WRs, the offensive line is the biggest concern - all-ACC left tackle Barry Richardson returns, but only one other part-time starter in left guard Chris McDuffie. Still, the Tigers at least return lots of players who have taken snaps, so while the OL should definitely regress, the cupboard isn't completely bare. All in all, the offense should regress, but remain above-average, especially due to having Davis, Spiller, and Richardson; and really, despite all the losses, the OL situation is the only real change from last year - if the line gets their act together, the offense could perform in the top-15 or 20 again. On defense, there's also a lot to like. While the defensive line loses #4 overall pick DE Gaines Adams, they replace him with sophomore Ricky Sapp, a top-tier defensive recruit. The linebackers essentially return all three starters, as '05 starting OLB Tramaine Billie returns alongside Nick Watkins and Antonio Clay. The secondary was the strength of the defense last year, and while the Tigers lose both starting CBs, they should still be quite above-average. Both starting safeties return, and while soph CBs Crezdon Butler and Chris Chancellor, both gained experience last year, with Butler even tying for the team lead in INTs without even starting. All in all, the key with Clemson is the offensive line - otherwise, things are fairly comparable to last year, where, again, Clemson projected out to a ten-win team. Unfortunately, Clemson starts the season off with Florida State, which looks like a likely loss - FSU's progression will be more coaching-related, while Clemson's is due to losing talent, which suggests Florida State should be readier earlier. Outside of that, home against Virginia Tech, and at South Carolina, it looks like a fairly smooth ride for Clemson through the season, although the Tigers may be vulnerable to an upset early (at NC State and at Georgia Tech are calling to me here). Still, things look at about the same level as last year, and as a result, Clemson should have a similar record.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 7-10 overall wins, 4-7 conference wins


3. NC State

3-5 are insanely close, as there's lots of things to both love and hate about each team. NC State had fairly bad luck last year, going 3-9 but projecting to 5-7, and while that bounceback alone might put them up here (Wake, BC, and Maryland will all regress horribly), the hiring of Tom O'Brien was an absolute coup. The obvious improvement will be along the offensive line, where, while three starters are lost, the Wolfpack return the rest of the top 10; O'Brien's been an offensive line-crafting machine at BC, so life should be much easier for the backfield. Speaking of, QB play should be much improved, whether the starter is Nebraska transfer Harrison Beck or returning starter Dan Evans, who couldn't do much worse (1843 yards, 53.1%, 6/11 TD/INT). The offensive line improvement should be even better news for the RB duo of Andre Brown and Toney Baker, two juniors with NFL talent. Even with the loss of top TE Anthony Hill for the season, if the offensive line improves as expected, this looks to be one of the most improved offenses in the nation, going from below-average to, at least, in the upper half of the nation. The defense is somewhat less of a sure thing. On the plus side, the defense was about average last year, but unlucky in terms of scoring vs. yardage allowed. Also, as usual, NC State has a loaded D-line, returning three of four starters, including stud DT DeMario Pressley. The main reason for skepticism is the hiring of new DC Mike Archer - Archer did well as the Pittsburgh Steelers LB coach from '96 to '02, but he's spent the last few years overseeing an absolutely porous Kentucky defense. Still, Kentucky does have all-SEC linebacker Wesley Woodyard, so maybe Archer only has magic working with the LBs; and that's actually good news, since that's the least experienced unit on the team. The secondary only returns two starters, but there's experience past that -- new SS DaJuan Morgan led the team in INTs last year and is the team's returning tackler, despite only one start last year. Though there are the questions on defense, this still looks like a team that will rebound, mostly due to offense and coaching. Outside of Louisville, the Wolfpack has a winnable OOC slate, though they have the bad fortune of getting both BC and Wake Forest on the road. Still, if NC State can win one of those two, or get an upset elsewhere on the ACC slate, they should make it to bowl eligibility. Either way, things are looking up.

THE REALM OF POSSIBLITIES: 4-8 overall wins, 1-5 conference wins


4. Boston College

BC was 10-3 last year, and returns 15 starters. Then why the low projection?

a) BC projected out to only a 6-7 win last year.
b) Head coach Tom O'Brien has left for NC State.
c) New coach Jeff Jagodzinski is apparently changing the offensive schemes, including the blocking of the offensive line, which has been a strength of BC for years.

The offense was decently above-average last year, and there's a lot to like in terms of returning talent, led by all-ACC QB Matt Ryan, who had 2942 yards on 61.6% passing and a 15/10 TD/INT ratio last year. Also returning are RBs LV Whitworth and Andre Callender, who will enter their fourth year splitting the load, and honestly, it feels like even longer. The point of interest, as mentioned above, will be the offensive line - the Eagles lose two starters that were, as usual, NFL draft picks, but return two of the best in the conference in left tackle Gosder Cherilus and left guard Ryan Poles. The offense is almost a complete crapshoot, dependent on how quickly they pick up the new schemes - there's the talent here to be great, but screwing with an offensive line that's always been successful just screams "horrible idea that will make everyone cry." The defense was fairly lucky last season - they were a top-15 scoring defense while only being above-average in terms of yardage. And there's actually a lot to like - if not for injured star LB Brian Toal missing the season, BC would be returning the entire starting front seven, which was excellent against the run last season. In the secondary, at least two positions will be set, as free safety Jamie Silva and 2nd team all-ACC CB DeJuan Tribble both return. There's some returning experience though, so things aren't completely dire otherwise. All in all, this projection may seem a bit low, but remember, this was a close to .500 team last year, and they now have a fairly unproven head coach. Still, it shouldn't be a lost season, as BC luckily gets both Wake and NC State at home, and doesn't have their toughest games (at Virginia Tech and Clemson, vs. FSU and Miami) until late in the season. It should be a down year, but there's easily enough talent here to make it to bowl eligibility.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 4-8 overall wins, 0-4 conference wins


5. Wake Forest

Wake Forest was a nice story last year. Wake Forest was also horribly lucky last year. Wake outperformed their projected record by 5 wins, the second-highest margin in the nation, and, interestingly, in their own division last year. Almost every starter returns on offense, but the offense last year wasn't that great - while they were below-average but passable in terms of scoring, as far as yardage goes, they were really quite bad. Quite very bad. QB Riley Skinner returns after becoming an out-of-nowhere 2nd team all-ACC selection, although his line (171/260, 65.8%, 9/5 TD/INT) was fine if not amazingly impressive. After injuries decimated last year's running back corps, the top 6 rushers all return, although leading rusher Kenneth Moore returns to his natural position of wide receiver. The offensive line should be the strength of the offense - four starters return, including all-ACC center Steve Justice, and the fifth spot will be taken by Matthew Brim, who started in '04 and '05. The offense should be improved, both due to experience and health, but should only be about passable. The defense, the strength of the team, should take a few steps back, however. Firstly, the defense was lucky, similar to BC but more extreme - the Demon Deacons finished in the top 10 in scoring defense, extremely high compared to just fairly above-average yardage numbers. Despite losing all-ACC middle linebacker Jon Abbate, the run defense should still be fine - it was fairly good, and Wake returns 5 of 7 starters. The secondary is another story - the pass defense was quite poor, and past returning strong safety Kevin Patterson, things are...mediocre. 2005 starting CB Alphonso Smith will man one of the two slots, and free safety Chip Vaughn had some decent tackle numbers last year, but this isn't a unit that inspires confidence. Again, while Wake was a great story, they look to regress by about half their wins - they luckily draw both Duke and UNC from the Coastal division, but unluckily have winnable games against Navy, BC, and Vanderbilt on the road. Wake's not going to completely implode -- they should continue to be a fine team, but they may have to pull off an upset or two to make it into a bowl.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 4-7 overall wins, 2-4 conference wins


6. Maryland

The luckiest team in the country last year, the Terps won 8 regular season games despite outgaining only one team: William & Mary. Expectations should thus be tempered for Maryland, even though there is some returning talent to like. At the head of the line is the receiving corps, which returns two amazingly fast starters - Danny Oquendo and 2nd team all-ACC Darrius Heyward-Bey. In fact, everyone with at least 10 receptions returns from last season, so this should be one of the best WR units in the conference. Who's throwing to them is a different matter, as two-year starter Sam Hollenbach departs, and looks to be succeeded by Florida transfer Josh Portis. Portis is a high-talent player, so his final numbers may look good-but-not-great like Hollenbach's (2371, 61.9%, 15/11), but there should be some rough patches early. Top two rushers Lance Ball and Keon Lattimore return for their senior years, but the running game may not be much improved, as the offensive line was hurt by left tackle Jared Gaither leaving for the NFL supplemental draft. That leaves only two starters, including 2nd team all-ACC guard Andrew Crummey. While there's experience returning to fill the now-open spots, things look somewhat mediocre. On the defensive side, four of the front seven return; the good news is that include includes 2nd team all-ACC LB Erin Henderson. The bad news is that this was one of the worst run defenses in the NCAA last season. Still, things should improve, if only through Henderson's maturation. Things in the secondary look better, as senior starters Isaiah Gardner and Chris Varner return at CB and SS, respectively. New FS JJ Justice also tied Henderson for the team lead with 2 INT. All in all, Maryland should be improved -- it's just that they're improving from a 3 or so win team than an 8-win one. Unfortunately, Maryland gets NC State and Wake on the road, diminishing the chances of an upset, but does get BC at home. The only probable wins look like Villanova, at FIU, and at UNC, as Maryland doesn't draw Duke from the Coastal, but this is a wholly decent team that I could see sneaking into bowl eligibility with some luck. Hell, they did it last year.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 3-6 overall wins, 1-4 conference wins


ACC Coastal:

1. Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech played to their record last year -- 10-2 in the regular season vs. 9-3 projected, but that was almost all on the strength of the #1 defense in the country, as the offense was one of the luckiest in the nation when it came to scoring vs. yardage. Sean Glennon returns at QB after a mediocre year (2191, 56.3%, 11/11), but he should improve, especially since he returns top WRs Eddie Royal and Josh Morgan. RB Branden Ore also returns, but he had a much better season than Glennon, gaining all-ACC honors on the strength of 1137 yards and 16 TD. He should also improve, as the offensive line is also moving upward, returning 3 starters, including 2nd team all-ACC tackle Duane Brown, and 2 others with starting experience. There's really not much to say about the defense, since the Hokies return 8 starters, and it should be, once again, threatening for top honors in the nation. There are three outstanding duos on this side of the ball -- senior DTs Carlton Powell and Barry Booker, one of the best CB duos in the country in juniors Brandon Flowers (3rd-team All-American) and Macho Harris, and outstanding senior linebackers Vince Hall (1st team all-ACC) and Xavier Adibi (2nd team all-ACC). This defense will be very good. Very great. Very EXCELLENT. Still, while I think VT has an elite defense, I don't see them as an elite-level team because of the offense, although that should improve. Still, Virginia Tech is a talented enough team, especially, again, on defense, where they may be able to sweep the ACC. Getting Florida State and Miami at home helps quite a bit towards that, too. The key game, obviously, is at LSU in the second game of the season - if Tech pulls off the upset, they can go undefeated. While it should be a great season for the Hokies, the ACC won't be a complete sinch - FSU should be much improved through better coaching, and there's not as big a gap as you'd think between VT and the next team on this list.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 8-12 overall wins, 5-8 conference wins


2. Miami

Uh oh, they're back. Though they may not have ever really left - this team projected out to about 8 wins last year, and five of their six losses were by ten points or less. Miami was a less extreme version of Virginia Tech last year - their offense was slightly better, and their defense was #5 in yardage to VT's #1. The only real difference was Virginia Tech was somehow lucky enough to score 6.5 more points per game. On offense, the big question mark will be the QB position; Kyle Wright and Kirby Freeman combined for 2527 yards and a mediocre 15/15 TD/INT ratio, with Wright seeing most of the snaps. A starter hasn't been named, but the talent's there for greatly improved numbers. They'll be helped by a greatly improved offensive line, which returns four starters, including honorable mention all-ACC guard Derrick Morse, and the depth chart is stacked with the type of talent you'd expect at Miami. Last year's top running back returns in sophomore Javarris James, though he'll be threatened by frosh Graig Cooper; this is another position that has too much talent not to rebound, as the Canes averaged only a paltry 3.5 yards per carry. On the defensive side, the third-best rushing defense in the nation returns four of the front seven, led by all-ACC DE/6'8" freak of nature/future top draft pick Calais Campbell. Again, Miami's a team that constantly reloads with talent, so the run defense should once again be above-average, but another top 3 finish may be a bit of a stretch. The secondary, above-average but still the relative weakness last year, should be quite improved - three starters return, and new starting SS Lovon Ponder has enough experience that he might as well be considered a fourth. Miami, again, is in very much the same situation as Virginia Tech, returning an elite defense and a disappointing offense that should improve. Miami may have the better offense this year, especially with Virginia Tech's chances for regression, but the defense is the key, and I think Virginia Tech should remain elite, while Miami may regress slightly, but should remain easily above-average. Still, this should be quite the rebound year for Miami, though unfortunately they have three hellish road games at Oklahoma, Florida State, and Virginia Tech. Miami has the talent to win one, maybe even two, but having all three on the road prevents them from, in my mind, being surprise national title contenders.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 8-11 overall wins, 5-8 conference wins


3. Georgia Tech

Shockingly for a Chan Gailey team, Georgia Tech projected out to a 7-win team, overperforming that by two wins. The big news for this team is the loss of WR Calvin Johnson, who was probably the best player in college football last year. While this leaves James Johnson as the only receiver who's really done anything, Calvin's loss may be negated by the loss of four-year starting QB Reggie Ball, who had a decent 20/14 TD/INT ratio last year, but his usual mind-bogglingly low 44.4% completion percentage. Junior Taylor Bennett takes over for Ball, and had decent numbers in limited action last year: 523 yards, 60.3% with a 5/2 ratio. Luckily for Bennett, GT also returns pretty much everyone of note outside the receiving corps: ACC-leading rusher Tashard Choice returns behind an improved offensive line, which returns four starters, including three seniors and honorable mention all-ACC left tackle Andrew Gardner. The defense should once again be top-20 or better, as GT returns a lot of talent there as well. While the defensive line loses all-ACC DT Joe Anoai, his replacement, Vance Walker, has starting experience, and GT returns the other three starters. The secondary has a similar situation - they only lose starting CB Kenny Scott, but his replacement, Jahi Word-Daniels, also has starting experience, and Tech has one of the best safety duos out there in Djay Jones and all-ACC strong safety Jamal Lewis. The linebacking corps also has one open spot, although there's much less experienced depth than the other two units - still, the unit may be home to Tech's best player - 2nd team all-ACC MLB Philip Wheeler. And a rare mention of special teams -- senior punter Durant Brooks is probably the best in the nation. Georgia Tech luckily gets ND kicking off the year, so that should be a win, but the Yellow Jackets get Miami and the swing game with Virginia on the road, and have to deal with Virginia Tech and Georgia late in the year at home. Once again, GT should be a solidly above-average team, although the schedule may result in another 7 or so-win season; the offense should improve, and the defense should remain in the top tier.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 6-9 overall wins, 4-6 conference wins


4. Virginia

Virginia's been bandied about somewhat as a surprise team, and my first instinct was that I didn't see it. But upon closer inspection, there's a lot to like. Admittedly, the offense was among the worst in the nation last season, but there's a lot of indicators for improvement on that side of the ball. Firstly, all five starters return on the offensive line, led by talented seniors C Jordy Lipsey and RG Ian-Yates Cunningham, along with junior and HS uber-recruit left tackle Eugene Monroe. That should lead to a huge improvement for a running game that didn't crack 100 yards/game last year. It's also good news for sophomore QB Jameel Sewell, who was thrown to the wolves last year and put up numbers that were neither that good nor a complete disaster: 1342 yards, 57.9%, 5/6 TD/INT. Still, he should be one of many ACC QBs who see dramatic improvement over their results from last year. Despite reasons for optimism on offense, the defense is still the star of the show. Virginia had the #21 defense last year, and returns an astounding 10 of 11 starters, losing only 2nd team all-ACC CB Marcus Hamilton. The pass defense was surprisingly great at #18 last season, and should remain at that level if not improve, as Hamilton's spot looks to be filled by Mike Brown, who has had sporadic starting experience over the last two seasons. The front seven, which was also above-average last year, obviously should also improve by returning all seven starters, led by 2nd team all-ACC DE/Howie's son Chris Long. With this amount of returning talent there's not much to say -- they were very good last year, and should continue to be that good, if not better! Wow. Virginia may not be an elite team next year, if only because there's so much the offense can improve by, but they may have a Rutgers-esque 9 or 10 win season with a fairly weak schedule. Their closest peer is Georgia Tech, who they get at home, and the Cavs are lucky enough to avoid both Florida State and Clemson from the Atlantic division. Amazingly, Virginia may be 10-0 heading into their last two games, at Miami, and at home against Virginia Tech. And even if things go poorly and Virginia doesn't perform up to expectations, that schedule should at least guarantee a return to bowl eligibility.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 7-10 overall wins, 4-6 conference wins


5. North Carolina

UNC projected out to a 4-5 win team last year, which is amazing when you look at how horrible their final yardage statistics were -- still, the Heels had winnable games against Rutgers and Wake Forest, both of which would've had them meet that 5-win projection. Still, last year pretty much doesn't matter, as only 9 starters return, one of which is now ex-QB The Joe Dailey Interception Experience, who moves to receiver. Luckily, three of the four returning starters on offense are along the offensive line. That may lead to some improvement for the offense as a whole - talented WR Hakeem Nicks returns, and new QB and redshirt freshman TJ Yates is unproven, but can only improve on last year's numbers (2156, ~51%, 11/18 ratio). The RB corps is also unproven but highly talented, led by sophomore and member of the NCAA all-name team Richie Rich. The defense should have a strong line, but not much else. DE Hilee Taylor and DT Kentwan Balmer return along said line, and uber-recruit DT Marvin Austin should find a place soon enough, but past that the only real standouts are senior OLB Durell Mapp and junior FS Trimane Goddard, an '05 starter who returns from injury. Really, for the moment, this isn't a much better team than Duke, as the Blue Devils return more experience. Still, UNC can reload with a higher level of talent, and the gap is only getting larger with Butch Davis's recruiting. UNC gets Maryland and Duke at home, which are probably the two most winnable conference games, but the schedule looks too tough for bowl eligibility to be possible. Watch out in 2008, though.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 2-5 overall wins, 1-3 conference wins


6. Duke

Duke wasn't THAT awful last year -- hell, they had winnable games against Richmond, UNC, Wake, and even Miami. Still, on a statistical level, they were near the bottom on both offense and defense, and while the entire starting offense returns, the defense doesn't have near that luxury. Anytime all five starter return on the line, an offense should be improved, and Duke is no exception -- especially since a surprisingly talented stable of running backs suffered injuries last year, and soph QB Thaddeus Lewis should be much-improved after being thrown to the wolves last year due to their starter's suspension. On defense, at least the returning starters are mostly good ones. Sophomore DT Vince Oghobaase may be Duke's best recruit ever, MLB Mike Tauiliili was a freshman All-American in 2005, and FS Chris Davis and DE Patrick Bailey are both two-year starters. Starting SS Adrian Aye-Darko also returns, but the secondary should be the defense's weakness, as the CB position is especially up for grabs. Duke should be much improved, and should manage a win or two somewhere along the line. Still, the Blue Devils don't have a I-AA opponent this year, and of the winnable games (UNC, UConn, Northwestern, even Navy), only Connecticut's at home. I'd like to call for a surprise season for Duke, since they're not really as bad as advertised, and they are a team returning their entire offense, but the schedule's too tough to avoid another dire season.

THE REALM OF POSSIBILITIES: 0-3 overall wins, 0-1 conference wins

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