Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - The FCS playoffs are arriving Saturday and
we know you have the six-pack ready for the tailgate party.
Brrr, it's late November, we'll take the hot chocolate for a change.
Nevertheless, we can still provide a six-pack. Here are six compelling
questions as the 20-team field gets set to kick off the best postseason in
Division I college football:
Is this the right field?
The NCAA playoff committee faced a daunting task with at-large selections and
picked South Dakota State (8-3) and Stony Brook (9-2) with the final two at-
large bids. There were enough teams on the playoff bubble that the committee
was going to field criticism no matter its choices for the final teams.
Eastern Kentucky (8-3), Towson (7-4) and Lehigh (10-1) had playoff resumes and
reason to be angered by their omission from the field. That New Hampshire
(8-3) wasn't one of the final two selections was most surprising considering
the Wildcats were routed by Towson, 64-35, this past Saturday. It drew into
question the value of head-to-head results and whether committee members had
made their minds on UNH before Saturday's action.
Who are the winners and losers of the draw?
The winners are Wagner, which has a home game in the first round when
geographically it was a natural fit for a road trip to Stony Brook; Old
Dominion, whose No. 4 seed guarantees it won't have to travel to Georgia
Southern again this year; and defending national champion North Dakota State,
whose half of the draw is easier than the other half. The losers are
Villanova, which earned CAA Football's automatic bid but is traveling to Stony
Brook in the first round instead of possibly hosting Colgate; Central
Arkansas, which went from a possible seed to having to go on the road to
Georgia Southern in the second round; and the Big Sky Conference, whose three
teams, Eastern Washington, Montana State and Cal Poly, are together in the
Group of Death side of the bracket along with the likes of Appalachian State,
Illinois State and Sam Houston State.
What are the best matchups/potential matchups?
In the first round, Villanova at Stony Brook is a matchup of the No. 6 (Stony
Brook) and 8 (Villanova) rushing offenses in the FCS. In the second round,
Illinois State-Appalachian State features quarterbacks Matt Brown (ISU) and
Jamal Jackson (ASU), while Cal Poly takes its triple option to Sam Houston
State, having already won road games at FBS member Wyoming and Northern
Arizona. In the quarterfinals, it wouldn't get much better than Georgia
Southern at Old Dominion and Sam Houston State at Montana State, both
rematches from the last season's playoffs but with a reversal of home/away
teams. In the semifinals, oh a Montana State-Eastern Washington rematch
wouldn't be too bad, eh? In the championship game, North Dakota State versus,
well, any of the top teams from the Group of Death (whose winner will welcome
the three-week break before the Jan. 5 game in Frisco, Texas).
Which players have to rise to the occasion?
Montana State has underachieved in the playoffs the last two seasons, so it's
time for junior quarterback DeNarius McGhee to make it right. Old Dominion
sophomore quarterback Taylor Heinicke needs to put up points - lot of points -
to overcome a suspect Monarchs defense. North Dakota State plays at a higher
level when cornerback/kickoff returner Marcus Williams makes an electrifying
play. Georgia Southern needs nose tackle Brent Russell to be, well, Brent
Russell. And, hey, Willie Fritz, give the ball to your star running back at
Sam Houston State, Timothy Flanders.
What will win in the playoffs?
It would seem good defense. With the exception of South Dakota State and
Wagner, everybody has a fairly explosive offense, with 12 of the top 15 teams
in the FCS in scoring offense part of the field. That includes the top three
in Sam Houston State, Old Dominion and Colgate. The average national ranking
among all 20 teams is 22.9, with a median of 13.5. Defensively, it's a
different story behind North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Stony Brook and
Wagner, which are four of the top 10 scoring defenses. Only 10 of the top 38
are in the field, going all the way down to Eastern Illinois at No. 102. The
average national ranking among all 20 teams is 39.3, with a median of 33.5.
Who wins the national title?
The easy pick, and quite easily the right one, is No. 1-seeded North Dakota
State, which was the best team in the regular season. But the Bison offense
can throw in some clunkers, making the Missouri Valley Conference champ
vulnerable. Keep in mind that in the last two years - the first two with
20-team playoff fields - the teams that only played home games leading up to
the championship game advanced to Frisco, Texas (Eastern Washington and
Delaware in 2010, and North Dakota State and Sam Houston State last season).
But the FCS is balanced across the top, so any of the seeds - No. 2 Eastern
Washington, No. 3 Montana State, No. 4 Old Dominion and No. 5 Georgia Southern
- plus dangerous Sam Houston State are a threat to the defending national
champion Bison.
THE PICKS
Last Week's Record: 48-12 (.800)
Season Record: 561-182 (.755)
All Times ET
Thursday, Nov. 22
Turkey Day Classic: Tuskegee (9-1) at X-Alabama State (7-3), 4 p.m. At the
grand opening of ASU Stadium, the Hornets can't lose, can they?
Saturday, Nov. 24
FCS First Round: X-No. 24 Colgate (8-3) at Wagner (8-3), noon. Colgate
quarterback Gavin McCarney and running back Jordan McCord are on too much of a
roll.
FCS First Round: X-Coastal Carolina 7-4) at No. 22 Bethune-Cookman (9-2), 2
p.m. Coastal quarterback Aramis Hillary is the difference.
XXXIX Bayou Classic: Grambling State (1-9, 0-8 SWAC) at X-Southern (3-7, 2-6),
2:30 p.m. Southern's four losses against the tougher East Division are by a
combined 11 points.
FCS First Round: No. 25 Eastern Illinois (7-4) at X-No. 19 South Dakota State
(7-4), 3 p.m. But EIU's offense might be too good for the no-so-jackrabbit
Jackrabbits.
FCS First Round: No. 14 Villanova (8-3) at X-No. 10 Stony Brook (9-2), 3 p.m.
Each team has a chip on its shoulder.
The Sports Network