University of Oklahoma starting quarterback Sam Bradford suffered a concussion during the Sooners' 34-27 loss to Texas Tech Saturday night.
Bradford departed the contest after Oklahoma's first offensive play. Bradford made a tackle after teammate Allen Patrick fumbled.
Bradford came back out for another series after suffering the concussion before giving way to Joey Halzle.
Bradford wasn't the only injury suffered by the Sooners. Stoops said wide receiver Adron Tennell tore an anterior cruciate and will miss the rest of the season,
Defensive end Alan Davis had a concussion and became the third Sooners defensive end injured this season.John Williams is out for the season after surgery on a torn Achilles' tendon, and Big 12 sacks leader Auston English has missed the past two games with a hairline fracture in his right leg. The Sooners had hoped English would return last week.
"He did a little bit and is getting closer, but again it's just too early in the week to know," Stoops said.
Running back DeMarco Murray's knee cap shifted
.Posted: November 19, 2007
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -- Oklahoma's leading rusher DeMarco Murray has a dislocated kneecap and will miss Saturday's game against Oklahoma State.
Bradford is the nation's top-rated passer, just ahead of Florida's Tim Tebow, and has 28 touchdowns with only six interceptions. He was replaced by Joey Halzle in the first quarter Saturday, and Stoops said that might have had an impact on the Sooners' season-worst 106 yards rushing.
Halzle, who had split time with freshman Keith Nichol as Bradford's backup earlier in the season, completed 21 of 41 passes for 291 yards with two touchdowns and one interception in his first significant playing time.
Stoops said he'd feel comfortable if Halzle had to start in Bradford's place this week.
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Oregon quarterback Dennis Dixon will miss the remainder of the season due to damage to the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.
Brady Leaf finished the game under center for Oregon and went 22-for-46 with 163 yards and two interceptions. Leaf is expected to continue as the starting signal-caller when the Ducks play at UCLA next Saturday.
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The UCLA Bruins are coming off a bye and finally getting healthy.
Although they again will start a quarterback who wasn't even on the depth chart at the position starting the season, and open with a walk-on at tailback when they face the No. 9 Oregon Ducks this weekend, they'll have several familiar faces back.
Ben Olson, their oft-injured No. 1 quarterback, is practicing again and may be available for "emergency" duty. Tailback Chris Markey, who led the Bruins in rushing and receiving last year but has been plagued by turf toe and other ailments this season, also could be ready to go.
Osaar Rasshan, who had been converted to receiver then switched back to quarterback when backup Pat Cowan was hurt two games ago, is scheduled to get his second start for UCLA on Saturday at the Rose Bowl.
Redshirt sophomore Craig Sheppard, a non-scholarship player, will open at tailback against Oregon (8-2, 5-2 Pac-10).
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At times, it seemed as if Mississippi quarterback Brent Schaeffer might never start again.
Yet with a week left in his college career, it looks like he'll get one last chance. Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron stopped short of naming Schaeffer the starter over Seth Adams for Friday's game at Mississippi State, but he gave broad hints Monday.
Orgeron said with a good week of practice, Schaeffer will start for the first time this season after starting all 12 games last year.
The Rebels hope Schaeffer can provide the same kind of spark against the Bulldogs that he did against top-ranked LSU in a 41-24 loss last Saturday. The senior came off the bench in relief of Adams in the second quarter and set career highs with 208 yards passing and 94 yards rushing against the nation's top defense.
He ran for one touchdown and threw for another, displaying the kind of athleticism and play-making ability Orgeron saw when he signed Schaeffer out of junior college.
Adams won the starting job away from Schaeffer after Orgeron opened the position to competition in the spring. At the time, the coach said Schaeffer needed to do a better job of attending classes and being a leader along with playing better on the field.
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Two years ago, the NCST Wolfpack rebounded from a miserably slow start with a hot second half and needed only a regular season-ending Senior Day victory against Maryland to become bowl eligible.
They got that win. Now they want another one.
So, the Wolfpack's clearest path to the postseason is to beat Maryland and hope Atlantic Division champion Boston College beats Miami.
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Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt won't announce until gametime whether freshman Pat Bostick, the starter most of the season, or Kevan Smith will open at quarterback Saturday against South Florida.
An ineffective Bostick was benched during a 20-16 loss to Rutgers last Saturday, but returned to throw an interception into the end zone during the final minute. Bostick was replaced earlier in the game by redshirt freshman Kevan Smith, but Smith injured his right shoulder.
Smith did not separate his shoulder, as Pitt initially thought, and could play Saturday against South Florida (8-3, 3-3 Big East) if he outperforms Bostick during practice.
Bill Stull began the season as Pitt's quarterback, but injured a thumb in the Sept. 1 opener against Eastern Michigan and hasn't played again. Smith started the next two games but was replaced by Bostick midway through a Sept. 22 loss to Connecticut, and Bostick had played since.
Bostick, a star at Manheim Township High in Lancaster, Pa., a season ago, is 121-of-196 for 1,135 yards, six touchdowns and eight interceptions for Pitt (4-6, 2-3). Smith is 36-of-64 for 415 yards, one touchdown and four interceptions.
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Miami quarterback Kyle Wright was beaten up at Virginia Tech, and still had the battle scars to prove it Monday.
There's nasty scrapes on his chin, right hand and right leg.
His left hand is oddly swollen. Bruises adorn his body.
Miami has lost three straight and five of its last six games, including two straight by at least 30 points for the first time in 63 years.
But Wright -- who was sacked five times and knocked down on several other plays against the Hokies -- doesn't believe the Hurricanes have abandoned all hope.
The Hurricanes haven't lost to Boston College since 1984 -- the game where Doug Flutie threw his famous "Hail Flutie" pass to Gerard Phelan to cap the Eagles' 47-45 win at the Orange Bowl.
Miami has won all 15 meetings since, and hasn't lost at Boston College since 1975. The Eagles (9-2, 5-2) have already clinched the ACC's Atlantic Division title and a spot in next weekend's league title game, but are chasing the school's first 10-win regular season since 1940 as well.
All-time, Miami is 23-3 against Boston College, an indicator that the Hurricanes' bowl hopes aren't exactly shot yet.
Yeah, so what, as VT’s HC Beamer had never beaten FSU before this year. Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
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Billboard Material:
Florida State linebacker Geno Hayes invited the wrath of Florida Gator fans on Monday, boldly predicting that "Tim Tebow's going down" when the rivals meet in the regular-season finale for both teams.
"The bigger they are the harder they fall," Hayes said. "Hopefully we can go out there and shatter his dream."
Tebow has run for 20 touchdowns and passed for 26 more this season to become the first quarterback in NCAA history to reach 20 touchdowns in each category. The 46 touchdowns nearly doubles the 24 TDs produced by the Seminole offense.
Defensive coordinator Mickey Andrews most likely would have preferred his star linebacker not provide any additional motivation for the 12th-ranked Gators.
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Last season, Missouri beat Kansas for the first time in four years.
What about Saturday?
"It's really hard to pick. They're both really, really good," said Iowa State coach Gene Chizik, whose first season ended with a loss Saturday at Kansas, three weeks after losing to Missouri. "Both do different things that pose different problems. ... Both are worthy of representing the North, no matter who wins."
Kansas State played the Jayhawks in early October and lost to Missouri on Saturday.
"Kansas has really improved. When we watched them getting ready for our game, I thought they were the best team we had played then," Wildcats coach Ron Prince said. "I find Missouri very, very challenging. They are a very difficult team to deal with, with so many weapons and they are so good on defense."
This game could have been on the Kansas campus, but the schools agreed long before the season to play at Arrowhead Stadium.
"We've known for a long time we were going to play this game over there. We're ready to do it," Mangino said. "It's the same case with Missouri next year, have the game at Arrowhead and not on their campus. Everything is equal. There's no advantage or disadvantage to either team."
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TEXAS TURNAROUND?: Oklahoma's loss Saturday at Texas Tech did more than knock the 10th-ranked Sooners out of the national championship picture. It kept Texas in contention for the Big 12 South title and a possible BCS game.
The No. 13 Longhorns had an 0-2 conference record for the first time since 1956 after their 28-21 loss to Oklahoma on Oct. 6. They have since won five games in a row.
If Texas wins Friday at Texas A&M, and Oklahoma loses Saturday to Oklahoma State, the Longhorns are the Big 12 South champions. That would put them in the Big 12 championship game, where another victory would guarantee a BCS game.
Still, Mack Brown doesn't want his team looking past Texas A&M, which won last year's grudge match.
"We need to be focused on this game, and not worry about anything around it," Brown said. "After a couple of mishaps early, this team has been fighting every day to get back in the mix, and done that because they paid attention and did not look around."
Bob Stoops has to get Oklahoma over its disappointment and ready for its rivalry game.
"We understand there's a lot out there. To have an opportunity to be your conference champion, we value that in a big way here," Stoops said. "We have to have some discipline to get that done."
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Tailback was never expected to be a question for Virginia Tech this season, not after Branden Ore's first-team All-ACC performance in 2006.
But Ore's season started slowly after he missed some summer workouts to attend to some personal issues at home, and he's only now starting to really hit his stride. He was at his best last week with 81 yards and two touchdowns in a 44-14 victory against Miami, and said his health and an improving offensive line share the credit.
"I'm 100 percent now. I know it's late in the season, but it happened," he said of finally shaking some nagging injuries that conspired to make him less effective.
This" is another late season run by the No. 8 Hokies, one that finds them a victory at Virginia on Saturday away from another trip to the ACC championship on Dec. 1. The winner of the game at Charlottesville plays Boston College for the title.
Beamer, too, thinks it helps that the offensive line, riddled by injuries and inexperience for much of the year, is finally back together and getting better.
While Ore and the offense struggled earlier, the defense held the opposition to two touchdowns or less seven time as the Hokies won eight of their last nine games.
Now that the offense has topped 40 points in consecutive games against Florida State and the Hurricanes, Glennon sees only more good things in the future.
"We're at an all-time high in confidence level going into the biggest game of the season and one of the biggest games in this rivalry," he said.
"We picked the right time to start clicking."
Bradford departed the contest after Oklahoma's first offensive play. Bradford made a tackle after teammate Allen Patrick fumbled.
Bradford came back out for another series after suffering the concussion before giving way to Joey Halzle.
Bradford wasn't the only injury suffered by the Sooners. Stoops said wide receiver Adron Tennell tore an anterior cruciate and will miss the rest of the season,
Defensive end Alan Davis had a concussion and became the third Sooners defensive end injured this season.John Williams is out for the season after surgery on a torn Achilles' tendon, and Big 12 sacks leader Auston English has missed the past two games with a hairline fracture in his right leg. The Sooners had hoped English would return last week.
"He did a little bit and is getting closer, but again it's just too early in the week to know," Stoops said.
Running back DeMarco Murray's knee cap shifted
.Posted: November 19, 2007
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -- Oklahoma's leading rusher DeMarco Murray has a dislocated kneecap and will miss Saturday's game against Oklahoma State.
Bradford is the nation's top-rated passer, just ahead of Florida's Tim Tebow, and has 28 touchdowns with only six interceptions. He was replaced by Joey Halzle in the first quarter Saturday, and Stoops said that might have had an impact on the Sooners' season-worst 106 yards rushing.
Halzle, who had split time with freshman Keith Nichol as Bradford's backup earlier in the season, completed 21 of 41 passes for 291 yards with two touchdowns and one interception in his first significant playing time.
Stoops said he'd feel comfortable if Halzle had to start in Bradford's place this week.
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Oregon quarterback Dennis Dixon will miss the remainder of the season due to damage to the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.
Brady Leaf finished the game under center for Oregon and went 22-for-46 with 163 yards and two interceptions. Leaf is expected to continue as the starting signal-caller when the Ducks play at UCLA next Saturday.
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The UCLA Bruins are coming off a bye and finally getting healthy.
Although they again will start a quarterback who wasn't even on the depth chart at the position starting the season, and open with a walk-on at tailback when they face the No. 9 Oregon Ducks this weekend, they'll have several familiar faces back.
Ben Olson, their oft-injured No. 1 quarterback, is practicing again and may be available for "emergency" duty. Tailback Chris Markey, who led the Bruins in rushing and receiving last year but has been plagued by turf toe and other ailments this season, also could be ready to go.
Osaar Rasshan, who had been converted to receiver then switched back to quarterback when backup Pat Cowan was hurt two games ago, is scheduled to get his second start for UCLA on Saturday at the Rose Bowl.
Redshirt sophomore Craig Sheppard, a non-scholarship player, will open at tailback against Oregon (8-2, 5-2 Pac-10).
-------------------------------------------
At times, it seemed as if Mississippi quarterback Brent Schaeffer might never start again.
Yet with a week left in his college career, it looks like he'll get one last chance. Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron stopped short of naming Schaeffer the starter over Seth Adams for Friday's game at Mississippi State, but he gave broad hints Monday.
Orgeron said with a good week of practice, Schaeffer will start for the first time this season after starting all 12 games last year.
The Rebels hope Schaeffer can provide the same kind of spark against the Bulldogs that he did against top-ranked LSU in a 41-24 loss last Saturday. The senior came off the bench in relief of Adams in the second quarter and set career highs with 208 yards passing and 94 yards rushing against the nation's top defense.
He ran for one touchdown and threw for another, displaying the kind of athleticism and play-making ability Orgeron saw when he signed Schaeffer out of junior college.
Adams won the starting job away from Schaeffer after Orgeron opened the position to competition in the spring. At the time, the coach said Schaeffer needed to do a better job of attending classes and being a leader along with playing better on the field.
-----------------------------------------------------
Two years ago, the NCST Wolfpack rebounded from a miserably slow start with a hot second half and needed only a regular season-ending Senior Day victory against Maryland to become bowl eligible.
They got that win. Now they want another one.
So, the Wolfpack's clearest path to the postseason is to beat Maryland and hope Atlantic Division champion Boston College beats Miami.
------------------------------------------------------
Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt won't announce until gametime whether freshman Pat Bostick, the starter most of the season, or Kevan Smith will open at quarterback Saturday against South Florida.
An ineffective Bostick was benched during a 20-16 loss to Rutgers last Saturday, but returned to throw an interception into the end zone during the final minute. Bostick was replaced earlier in the game by redshirt freshman Kevan Smith, but Smith injured his right shoulder.
Smith did not separate his shoulder, as Pitt initially thought, and could play Saturday against South Florida (8-3, 3-3 Big East) if he outperforms Bostick during practice.
Bill Stull began the season as Pitt's quarterback, but injured a thumb in the Sept. 1 opener against Eastern Michigan and hasn't played again. Smith started the next two games but was replaced by Bostick midway through a Sept. 22 loss to Connecticut, and Bostick had played since.
Bostick, a star at Manheim Township High in Lancaster, Pa., a season ago, is 121-of-196 for 1,135 yards, six touchdowns and eight interceptions for Pitt (4-6, 2-3). Smith is 36-of-64 for 415 yards, one touchdown and four interceptions.
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Miami quarterback Kyle Wright was beaten up at Virginia Tech, and still had the battle scars to prove it Monday.
There's nasty scrapes on his chin, right hand and right leg.
His left hand is oddly swollen. Bruises adorn his body.
Miami has lost three straight and five of its last six games, including two straight by at least 30 points for the first time in 63 years.
But Wright -- who was sacked five times and knocked down on several other plays against the Hokies -- doesn't believe the Hurricanes have abandoned all hope.
The Hurricanes haven't lost to Boston College since 1984 -- the game where Doug Flutie threw his famous "Hail Flutie" pass to Gerard Phelan to cap the Eagles' 47-45 win at the Orange Bowl.
Miami has won all 15 meetings since, and hasn't lost at Boston College since 1975. The Eagles (9-2, 5-2) have already clinched the ACC's Atlantic Division title and a spot in next weekend's league title game, but are chasing the school's first 10-win regular season since 1940 as well.
All-time, Miami is 23-3 against Boston College, an indicator that the Hurricanes' bowl hopes aren't exactly shot yet.
Yeah, so what, as VT’s HC Beamer had never beaten FSU before this year. Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
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Billboard Material:
Florida State linebacker Geno Hayes invited the wrath of Florida Gator fans on Monday, boldly predicting that "Tim Tebow's going down" when the rivals meet in the regular-season finale for both teams.
"The bigger they are the harder they fall," Hayes said. "Hopefully we can go out there and shatter his dream."
Tebow has run for 20 touchdowns and passed for 26 more this season to become the first quarterback in NCAA history to reach 20 touchdowns in each category. The 46 touchdowns nearly doubles the 24 TDs produced by the Seminole offense.
Defensive coordinator Mickey Andrews most likely would have preferred his star linebacker not provide any additional motivation for the 12th-ranked Gators.
------------------------------------------------
Last season, Missouri beat Kansas for the first time in four years.
What about Saturday?
"It's really hard to pick. They're both really, really good," said Iowa State coach Gene Chizik, whose first season ended with a loss Saturday at Kansas, three weeks after losing to Missouri. "Both do different things that pose different problems. ... Both are worthy of representing the North, no matter who wins."
Kansas State played the Jayhawks in early October and lost to Missouri on Saturday.
"Kansas has really improved. When we watched them getting ready for our game, I thought they were the best team we had played then," Wildcats coach Ron Prince said. "I find Missouri very, very challenging. They are a very difficult team to deal with, with so many weapons and they are so good on defense."
This game could have been on the Kansas campus, but the schools agreed long before the season to play at Arrowhead Stadium.
"We've known for a long time we were going to play this game over there. We're ready to do it," Mangino said. "It's the same case with Missouri next year, have the game at Arrowhead and not on their campus. Everything is equal. There's no advantage or disadvantage to either team."
--------------------------------------
TEXAS TURNAROUND?: Oklahoma's loss Saturday at Texas Tech did more than knock the 10th-ranked Sooners out of the national championship picture. It kept Texas in contention for the Big 12 South title and a possible BCS game.
The No. 13 Longhorns had an 0-2 conference record for the first time since 1956 after their 28-21 loss to Oklahoma on Oct. 6. They have since won five games in a row.
If Texas wins Friday at Texas A&M, and Oklahoma loses Saturday to Oklahoma State, the Longhorns are the Big 12 South champions. That would put them in the Big 12 championship game, where another victory would guarantee a BCS game.
Still, Mack Brown doesn't want his team looking past Texas A&M, which won last year's grudge match.
"We need to be focused on this game, and not worry about anything around it," Brown said. "After a couple of mishaps early, this team has been fighting every day to get back in the mix, and done that because they paid attention and did not look around."
Bob Stoops has to get Oklahoma over its disappointment and ready for its rivalry game.
"We understand there's a lot out there. To have an opportunity to be your conference champion, we value that in a big way here," Stoops said. "We have to have some discipline to get that done."
------
Tailback was never expected to be a question for Virginia Tech this season, not after Branden Ore's first-team All-ACC performance in 2006.
But Ore's season started slowly after he missed some summer workouts to attend to some personal issues at home, and he's only now starting to really hit his stride. He was at his best last week with 81 yards and two touchdowns in a 44-14 victory against Miami, and said his health and an improving offensive line share the credit.
"I'm 100 percent now. I know it's late in the season, but it happened," he said of finally shaking some nagging injuries that conspired to make him less effective.
This" is another late season run by the No. 8 Hokies, one that finds them a victory at Virginia on Saturday away from another trip to the ACC championship on Dec. 1. The winner of the game at Charlottesville plays Boston College for the title.
Beamer, too, thinks it helps that the offensive line, riddled by injuries and inexperience for much of the year, is finally back together and getting better.
While Ore and the offense struggled earlier, the defense held the opposition to two touchdowns or less seven time as the Hokies won eight of their last nine games.
Now that the offense has topped 40 points in consecutive games against Florida State and the Hurricanes, Glennon sees only more good things in the future.
"We're at an all-time high in confidence level going into the biggest game of the season and one of the biggest games in this rivalry," he said.
"We picked the right time to start clicking."