APThis should be a banner year for the Big Ten. The problem is, few may get a chance to see it.
The Big Ten’s new television network is struggling to reach agreements with the biggest cable providers in the Midwest, and the clock is ticking on the Sept. 1 openers.
The sticking point is that the conference insists that it must be on basic expanded cable. Comcast and Time Warner say no way.
“When the cable company decides to send 70 channels — the food channel, and the dog channel and the bike channel and the jewelry channel — into your home, (we believe) that the Big Ten Network deserves to be in that grouping,” Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said. “Everything else is pretty negotiable.”
If the deals don’t get done, be prepared for infomercials instead of Big Ten showdowns.
The favorite figures to be MICHIGAN. In this era of kids jumping early to the pros, the Wolverines’ biggest stars are back. First massive left tackle Jake Long said he was coming back, which prodded tailback Mike Hart and QB Chad Henne to return.
“It’s not fair to criticize a guy for leaving, but for the three guys that stayed, I think it speaks volumes about them and what their values and goals are,” coach Lloyd Carr said. “We’re excited to have them back. They are three special guys, not just three special football players.”
The Wolverines still need to patch some holes on both lines and at linebacker, but standouts such as WR Mario Manningham, linebacker Shawn Crable and safety Jamar Adams should make that reconstruction easier.
All those literally blue-collar fans at The Big House have tired of the late-season pratfalls of the guys in winged helmets — four straight bowl losses and a three-year drought against rival Ohio State. Many are not happy with the coach.
WISCONSIN is loaded, just not at a couple of key spots. With QB John Stocco graduated, the nation’s most overlooked 12-1 team last year desperately needs Tyler Donovan or Allan Evridge — either one — to take control of the job. That’s the only hole on offense from a team that is riding a nine-game win streak.
“I can assure you you’re not going to see a two-platoon quarterback system out of Wisconsin,” coach Bret Bielema said. “Never say never, but that’s not on my agenda.”
OHIO STATE must rebuild its offense. No problem. A year ago the Buckeyes came in with just two starters on defense and all the new guys did was hold nine teams to 10 or fewer points. Of course, both sides of the ball picked up speed burns from Florida players running past them in the BCS championship game, which the Gators won by a stunningly easy 41-14 count. The Buckeyes are still embarrassed by that one.
“It’s an exciting time to get back at it, especially when your last game wasn’t as good as you would have liked it to have been,” coach Jim Tressel said.
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There is nothing that 80-year-old Joe Paterno would like better in his 42nd year as the head coach at PENN STATE than a third national title. He’s joined by standout LB Dan Connor and QB Anthony Morelli. The ol’ high-pants-and-white-socks coach has returned from knee surgery and now must find somebody to replace TB Tony Hunt (1,386 rushing yards, 27 catches) and LB Paul Posluszny, who led the team with 116 tackles.
“After I had the operation, the doctor asked me how long I wanted to still coach,” JoePa said. “I said, ’Five or six years.’ He said, ’There’s no reason why you can’t.”’ An 0-4 finish doomed IOWA to its first losing season (6-7) in six years under coach Kirk Ferentz. Most of the offensive line is gone, along with QB Drew Tate. Ferentz will earn his $2 million-plus annual salary if he can get the Hawkeyes flying up instead of down.
CFT: Virginia Tech officials say they're happy in the ACC and haven't talked to anyone about moving to a different conference.
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