Big East Conference Football
The Big Eight has an interesting group of geographically diverse
football programs. The Louisville Cardinals are the favorites
with defending champion Pittsburg not far behind. The champion
receives an automatic BCS berth.
2005 Predicted Order of Finish
1. LOUISVILLE After a near-miss in 2004, the Cardinals come on
the scene like gangbusters. Sophomore Brian Brohm will step in
the shoes of last year's senior quarterback, Stefan LeFors and
there will be little drop-off in production. There will be
Travis Leffew anchoring the offensive line and he will also have
multiple offensive weapons. There will be wide receivers
Montrell Jones and Josua Tinch for him hit on the deep routes.
With the defense dominating like they did in 2004, the Cards
should be bound for a BCS bowl.
2. PITTSBURGH There will be plenty of talent on both sides of
the ball. Junior quarterback Tyler Palko, who passed for 3,067
yards and 24 touchdowns in 2004, will have plenty of talent
around him. There will be wide receivers Greg Lee and Joe
DelSardo. With linebacker H.B. Blades and defensive back Bernard
"Josh" Lay, the panthers have a chance to challenge Louisville
and win the crown again.
3. SYRACUSE Syracuse has nine starters back on defense and there
in lies their strength. The defense is vital in containing some
potent offensives. Their offensive has Damien Rhodes to carry
the load. He is the tailback and has bulked up to carry the
load. Syracuse should earn a bowl bid but not of the caliber of
the Cardinals and Panthers.
4. WEST VIRGINIA Inexperience, especially at quarterback, is the
main trait of the Mountaineers. Three players will battle to
replace Rasheed Marshall at quarterback. They are Adam Bedarik,
Dwayne Thompson, and Pat Smith. The defense will need to replace
Adam "Pac-Man" Jones in the secondary with Jahmile Addae or Mike
Lorello as the likely candidates. They will not be able to
compete for the league title, but could win over Rutgers or
Syracuse.
5. RUTGERS The Scarlet Knights are thinking bowl bid. A bowl bid
will hinge on quarterback Ryan Hart, who tossed more
interceptions (19) last year than touchdowns (17). If the team
is to make a serious bid for the postseason, he will have to
improve his error ways dramatically. If no improvement by Hart,
then freshman Jabu Lovelace will get a look. The running game is
handled by Brian Leonard. With their favorable schedule, Rutgers
could have a winning season and possible bowl bid.
6. CONNECTICUT Matt Bonislawski is the favorite to fill the hugh
void created by the graduation of quarterback Dan Orlovsky.
Don't be surprised if freshman D.J. Hernandez takes his turn at
quarterback. Which ever is the quarterback, he will have the
talented running back Cornell Brockington. With a "yards per
game average" of 101.5, Brockington is among the league's best
runners. Linebacker James Hargrave leads a strong defense. The
quarterback holds the key to this team being an upper-division
team.
7. CINCINNATI The Bearcats have numerous holes to fill after
graduating 26 seniors and 17 starters last year. The biggest
hole is at quarterback where freshman Dustin Grutza has the lead
over Nick Davilla for the job. The defense has no returning
starting linebackers but have defensive lineman Adam Roberts,
who does not know when to stop. The Bearcats will win enough
games to keep out of the cellar.
8. SOUTH FLORIDA As the Bulls enter the season with more
questions than answers, the will find it difficult to keep out
of the cellar. They do have one of the top running quarterbacks
in Andre Hall. He was last years offensive Most Valuable Player
and set a new USF single- season record with 1,357 yards.
Incumbent quarterback Pat Julmiste will find it hard to hold his
position while competing against Courtney Denson, an Auburn
transfer.