EMERALD BOWL – Dec. 28th, 8:30 EST
Maryland vs. Oregon State –
The Terps were one of football’s most confounding squads in 2007. Maryland was as competitive as anyone against West Virginia in the season’s first half. A win at Rutgers and a win at home against Georgia Tech had Maryland at 4-2 and looking like a dark horse ACC title contender. Then home losses to UVA and Clemson preceded a painful road loss at North Carolina, putting Maryland at 4-5 and on the cusp of bowl elimination. But a huge win over BC in the home finale gave the Terps just the boost they needed to sneak in to bowl eligibility at 6-6. Over on the left coast, Oregon State got off to a dubious beginning, dropping lopsided battles at Cincinnati and Arizona State. What we didn’t know in September was that those two squads would be two of college football’s biggest surprises this year, and the losses weren’t nearly as bad as they looked at the time. Since September, the Beavers are a sparkling 6-1, with only a loss at USC against their record.
OSU is second to only Boston College nationally in stopping the run, surrendering just 74.92 yards a game in the pass-happy Pac 10. But the pass D is pretty solid, too, ranking 31st nationwide in efficiency D, despite giving up quite a few yards. The Beaver defense is led by Derrick Doggett, who averaged 7+ tackles a game and finished 11th in the Pac-10 in TFL. As good as the rush D was, the pass rush was even better. OSU was 3rd in the country in sacks and 6th in TFL; you don’t find a lot of teams that boast 3 of its league’s top 8 sackers, but the Beavers had Victor Butler, Slade Norris and Dorian Smith all in the Pac-10’s top ranks this year. All this is really bad news for the Terps, who were absolutely terrible at protecting its backfield this year. Maryland ranked 107th nationally in sacks allowed, giving up a brutal 3.17 QB takedowns a game. With OSU bringing the heat, can Chris Turner (3rd in the ACC in efficiency) avoid the rush and make throws down field? Not likely, as Turner isn’t exactly the model of escapability; with 39 rushes for -14 yards, Turner isn’t the type of QB to beat the Beaver D. To top it off, Keon Lattimore, who started the year with 4 100-yard games in his first five tries, disappeared at midseason, and hasn’t stopped the century mark since September. Leon Bell has been solid in his stead (7th in ACC rushing yards), but the Terps just don’t have the horses to outrun OSU, especially in San Francisco, where the Beavers will get a virtual home game. Oregon State 35, Maryland 17.
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