College football’s season is falling apart: MAC postpones fall sports

A very bad piece of news.

The wheels are falling off the wagon. It’s terrible. It’s awful. It sucks. No one wanted this… but it’s happening.

The college football season is falling apart. Belief that the sport can carry off a full season — from Week 1 through the College Football Playoff — is close to zero within the industry, probably the lowest point since the coronavirus pandemic hit in early March.

Saturday morning brought the huge news that the Mid-American Conference is postponing all fall sports, with the intention of trying to resume in the spring:

The fallout from the MAC’s decision to not play football in the fall has an immediate domino effect on other Power Five conferences. Just look at the ACC:

The MAC’s decision will also affect the other Group of Five conferences who — without the ability to schedule games against Power Five schools — had to play Group of Five games to fill out the nonconference schedules they hoped for. The AAC, which had hoped to play 12 games and four nonconference games, will be significantly hit by this decision from the MAC. No conference will escape the effects of this decision.

The edifice of college football, at least within the context of 2020, is crumbling. We can all see it. There is no point in pretending it isn’t.

Crucially, it has to be said that once again, the various conferences are all acting on their own. One conference does one thing here, and it affects other conferences over there. One conference acts, and the other conferences react, with the situation continuing to flow like a pinball which is violently redirected across the country until the game ends without a single winner… other than COVID-19, of course.

The lack of cohesive, unified leadership and guidance from the NCAA has been a key part of this mess — not the main source (that’s our government and our Congress failing to act on an appropriate scale, back in March and in subsequent months), but certainly a prominent source. The fragmented nature of college sports, allowed to persist by NCAA member schools who should have demanded far more from Mark Emmert but were content to coexist with his mediocrity, has played a significant part in creating this situation.

It didn’t have to be this way… but it is.

Maybe the pandemic will create a very different college sports landscape when we’re living with a vaccine and a return to normalcy in the summer of 2021. Right now, there is no normalcy, and there probably won’t be college football on Saturdays this fall.

Dammit.

MAC Cancels Football Season. What Does It Mean For The Rest Of College Football?

The MAC has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?

The MAC has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?


The MAC becomes the first conference to cancel the college football season, at least for the fall.

[jwplayer muPr0F4N]

The MAC announced on Saturday that it’s cancelling/postponing all fall sports due to the COVD-19 concerns. There’s a thought the league will try to play in the spring, but that’s not a huge part of the discussion at the moment.

The MAC had several issues go against them. The main issue was the concern over keeping the players safe, and part of that came with the cost and the resources to adequately test as needed. The other big problem was the Big Ten’s decision to go to a conference-only schedule.

11 MAC games vs. the Big Ten were affected by the scheduling change. In all, the MAC was expected to lose the paychecks from as many as 21 non-conference games. Every conference is different, but the lost revenue side of those games was devastating.

It might be a bit of a cynical overstatement to say that the MAC would still have fall football if the non-conference games weren’t cancelled, but that certainly – at the very least – tipped the scales. Combine the lost revenue with the massive health concerns, and there was a “what are we doing here?” aspect to the MAC”s decision.

There’s the idea that the MAC will play in the spring. In a perfect world, the rest of college football is able to play and figure out how to do this, and the MAC has the spotlight to itself and gets back some of the lost revenue – and does it all safely – through March and April.

And now all eyes turn to the Power Five conferences. Remember, every conference is different, every conference has a different power structure, and every conference has a different revenue stream for football to work off of. However …

Watch out for the Big Ten. Its season has been hanging by a thread for the last several weeks, and while there seemed to be hope after a schedule was announced, the training camps have changed the dynamic. Many teams aren’t practicing full out over concerns for player safety.

Basically, college football doesn’t have a plan. It didn’t create a real plan over the last four months, it didn’t get creative in figuring out whether or not players could play safely, and the sport kicked the can down the road as far as it can go. Now the season is here, and now the sport is realizing how hard it is to ethically and practically play college football. With that said …

No, the college football season isn’t done yet. Even if the Big Ten decides to follow the MAC’s lead, no matter what the optics, the SEC, ACC and Big 12 will still likely do everything humanly possible to play. However, it’ll be a bad, bad look if other conferences try to push things to the spring and everyone else doesn’t follow suit.

So let’s say the other conferences do play. Get ready for the transfer portal to be loaded with top MAC players. Buffalo RBs Jaret Patterson and Kevin Marks, UB DE Malcolm Koonce and LB James Patterson, Toledo RB Bryant Koback, Western Michigan defensive front seven stars Treshaun Hayward and Ali Fayad, and Miami University OT Tommy Doyle are Power Five starters if they choose to leave.

Through all of this, just remember, this will go by in a hurry. There will be college football again, even if it’s not everywhere for right now.

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

Preview 2020: College Football News All-MAC Team

Preview 2020: Previewing and looking ahead to the MAC season with the College Football News All-MAC Team & Top 30 players. 

Preview 2020: Previewing and looking ahead to the MAC season with the College Football News All-MAC Team & Top 30 players. 


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews  

2020 CFN All-Mountain West Team
2020 CFN Top 30 Mountain West Players

2020 Preseason CFN MAC Offensive Player of the Year

RB Jaret Patterson, Jr. Buffalo

It’s not just Patterson.

Give junior Kevin Marks a little credit – a lot of credit, actually – for being more than just a No. 2 guy in the Buffalo offense with close to 2,000 yards and 21 touchdowns over the last two seasons. Great in the rotation, he’s able to keep Patterson fresh.

The MAC is loaded with terrific backs this year, but the 5-9, 195-pound Patterson is the star of the bunch coming off a 1,799-yard, 19-touchdown season. He’ll catch a little bit, but one of the toughest pound-for-pound runners in college football – he carried the ball 181 times over the final six games with 15 touchdowns – is there to take over the offense and make it his.

2020 MAC Team Previews
East Akron | Bowling Green | Buffalo
Kent State | Miami Univ. | Ohio
West Ball State | Central Mich | Eastern Mich
Northern Illinois | Toledo | Western Michigan


CFN in 60 Video: CFN Preseason AP Poll Prediction
[jwplayer tXw9AaHk]


2020 Preseason CFN MAC Defensive Player of the Year

LB Treshaun Hayward, Sr. Western Michigan

The guy found his stride after being an okay backup in his first two seasons.

The 6-1, 225-pounder turned into the best player on a solid Western Michigan defense, coming u with 142 tackles with 4.5 sacks and 11 tackles for loss as he seemed to get in on every play.

Consistently great, he came up with ten tackles or more in nine games including an 18-stop performance against Eastern Michigan, and he turned into a rock in the open field.

Watch out for teammate Ali Fayad to be in the mix for the MAC Defensive Player of the Year with his pass rushing ability, but Hayward should be in for a special season again.

NEXT: CFN 2020 Preseason All-MAC Team

First Look: San Jose State vs. Central Michigan

Spartans take on the Chips in Week 1 of the college football season.

[jwplayer GQ6ePkax-sNi3MVSU]


First Look: San Jose State vs. Central Michigan


Early look at the Spartans Week 1 opponent.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Early OOC looks.

With the summer months upon us, it is time to take a look at the non-conference schedules for the Mountain West team-by-team. San Jose State takes on Central Michigan from the MAC and the Spartans will be heading to Michigan for the season opener.

Team: Central Michigan
Conference: MAC (West Division)
2019 Result: 8-6
Head coach: Jim McElwain (8-6, second year)
All-time series: 1-1

San Jose State takes on the Chips in Week 1 and it will be a good challenge for the Spartans and it will feature a former familiar face in its head coach Jim McElwain as he coached Colorado State from 2012-14 with a 22-15 record.

This Central Michigan team is going to be a tough one for the Spartans as the Chips are the highest-rated team in the MAC West for SP+ and projected to go back to its conference title game.

Offensive players to watch:

The quarterback situation is extremely dicey for Central Michigan as David Moore is likely to miss this game, plus the first month of the season after testing positive for a banned substance. That leaves them with untested quarterbacks in sophomore George Pearson, redshirt freshman Daniel Richardson, or incoming freshman Tyler Pape.

They do have weapons to assist the new quarterback. Running back Kobe Lewis who averaged 5.9 yards per carry and had 12 touchdowns. Lewis also was good for some big plays with 31 runs of 10 or more and nine of 20-plus.

The receiving group could be the best of all as they return two of the top three wide outs in Kalil Pimpleton and JaCorey Sullivan, plus they have a solid tight end in Tony Poljan. All of these will help the new quarterback adjust and have some friends to get the ball to.

Defensive players to watch:

On the other side of the ball, Central Michigan is a bit stronger overall with key players back in LB Troy Brown, DT Robi Stuart, and DE LaQuan Johnson. Brown was a first-team All-MAC player last year and led the league in tackles for loss last year. Those other two have a legitimate chance to join Brown as one of the best defenders in the league.

This defense could be one of the top best that the Spartans face all year and with San Jose State breaking in a new quarterback this will be a pretty big challenge in Week 1.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1375]

[protected-iframe id=”f7652191f99ba13728097498e8a79cd8-137729785-123448869″ info=”https://open.spotify.com/embed-podcast/show/48681pqFq0kB9dhrtPPoNd” width=”100%” height=”232″ frameborder=”0″]

College Football Group Of Five Conference Rankings: 20 for 2020 Offseason Topics No. 5

20 for 2020 offseason college football topics: How do the Group of Five conferences – AAC, C-USA, MAC, MW, Sun Belt – rank in the offseason?

[jwplayer 5W1ppI8V]


20 key offseason topics for 2020: No. 5. How do the college football Group of Five conferences – AAC, C-USA, MAC, MW, Sun Belt – rank in the offseason?


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

20 for 2020 Offseason Topics 
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Top 5 Instant Impact New Head Coaches
15. 2nd Year Coaches Who’ll Be Better
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. Key Transfers You Forgot About
12. Five Big Power 5 Upset Alerts
11. Great Players About To Go Nuclear
10. Group of 5 Teams In New Year’s Six Chase
9. Power 5 Sleeper Teams
8. Most Interesting Quarterback Battles
7. 5 Teams That Might Disappoint
6. 5 Teams That Might Surprise

We didn’t get spring football to get a better handle on all the teams and conferences, but here’s our look at where all the Group of Five conferences – American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West and Sun Belt – appear to be.

If and when the season gets rolling, we’ll reevaluate then.

5. Conference USA

This might seem a bit extreme considering the good teams at the top of the rock, but there’s way too much dead weight dragging down the rest of the league.

Louisiana Tech should be fantastic. Coming off a good year with the Independence Bowl win over Miami to close things out, it should be the star of the show.

Willie Taggart takes over a strong Florida Atlantic team, Marshall – as always – will be solid – and WKU and Southern Miss will be players.

UAB will once again put together a great record as it fattens up on the weak and the sad, North Texas and Middle Tennessee should bounce back a bit after clunkers, and FIU should be back in the battle for a bowl bid.

[lawrence-related id=507621]

And then there’s everyone else.

UTEP is WAY overdue for a wee bit of happy.

It’s been a brutal run for the Miners, but it’s still going to be an uphill climb. Old Dominion and UTSA are starting fresh with new head coaches, and Rice is still trying to turn the corner in Year Three under Mike Bloomgren.

The midsection on down is just too mediocre-to-awful. However, there’s no real argument if you want to move Conference USA up a spot or so and knock down …

NEXT: No. 4 Offseason Group of Five Conference

MAC Football Schedule 2020 Composite, Top Games To Watch Each Week

MAC football schedule 2020 composite. Week-by-week ranking of all of the games.

[jwplayer Xzdas8N4]


MAC football schedule 2020 composite. Week-by-week ranking of all of the games.


MAC Football Schedule Composite 2020

Each week’s games ranking from most interesting to least.

MAC Football Schedule Week 1

Thursday, Sept. 3
Maine at Ball State

Friday, Sept. 4
Colgate at Western Michigan

Saturday, Sept. 5
Miami University at Pitt
Toledo at Tulsa
Eastern Michigan at Kentucky
San Jose State at Central Michigan
Buffalo at Kansas State
Kent State at Penn State
Bowling Green at Ohio State
Youngstown State at Akron
Rhode Island at Northern Illinois
NC Central at Ohio

MAC Football Schedule Week 2

Friday, Sept. 11
Western Michigan at Cincinnati

Saturday, Sept. 12
Akron at New Mexico State
Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Miami University
Ball State at Michigan
Central Michigan at Nebraska
Coastal Carolina at Eastern Michigan
Kennesaw at Kent State
Northern Illinois at Maryland
Ohio at Boston College
Robert Morris at Bowling Green
Saint Francis at Buffalo
San Diego State at Toledo

MAC Football Schedule Week 3

Saturday, Sept. 19
Akron at Clemson
Ball State at Indiana
Bowling Green at Illinois
Buffalo at Ohio State
Central Michigan at Northwestern
Cincinnati at Miami University
Kent State at Kentucky
Marshall at Ohio
Northern Illinois at Eastern Michigan
Toledo at Michigan State
Western Michigan at Notre Dame

MAC Football Schedule Week 4

Saturday, Sept. 26
Bryant at Central Michigan
Buffalo at Bowling Green
Central Connecticut at Toledo
Eastern Michigan at Missouri
Kent State at Alabama
Miami University at Akron
Northern Illinois at Iowa
Ohio at Texas State
Syracuse at Western Michigan
Wyoming at Ball State

MAC Football Schedule Week 5

 Saturday, Oct. 3
Akron at Buffalo
Army at Miami University
Central Michigan at Eastern Michigan
Kent State at Northern Illinois
Liberty at Bowling Green
Ohio at Toledo
Western Michigan at Ball State

MAC Football Schedule Week 6

Saturday, Oct. 10
Akron at Kent State
Ball State at Buffalo
Central Michigan at Northern Illinois
Eastern Michigan at Ohio
Miami University at Bowling Green
Toledo at Western Michigan

MAC Football Schedule Week 7

Saturday, Oct. 17
Bowling Green at Toledo
Eastern Michigan at Army
Kent State at Buffalo
Northern Illinois at Ball State
Ohio at Miami University
UMass at Akron
Western Michigan at Central Michigan

MAC Football Schedule Week 8

Saturday, Oct. 24
Akron at Ball State
Bowling Green at Ohio
Buffalo at Army
BYU at Northern Illinois
Miami University at Central Michigan
Toledo at Eastern Michigan
Western Michigan at Kent State

MAC Football Schedule Week 9

Saturday, Oct. 31
Ball State at Miami University
Eastern Michigan at Western Michigan
Toledo at Akron

MAC Football Schedule Week 10

Tuesday, Nov. 3
Buffalo at Northern Illinois

Wednesday, Nov. 4
Kent State at Bowling Green
Ohio at Central Michigan

MAC Football Schedule Week 11

Tuesday, Nov. 10
Eastern Michigan at Ball State
Miami University at Buffalo
Northern Illinois at Western Michigan

Wednesday, Nov. 11
Central Michigan at Toledo
Ohio at Kent State

Saturday, Nov. 14
Bowling Green at Akron

MAC Football Schedule Week 12

Tuesday, Nov. 17
Kent State at Miami University
Toledo at Northern Illinois

Wednesday, Nov. 18
Ball State at Central Michigan
Buffalo at Ohio

Saturday, Nov. 21
Bowling Green at Eastern Michigan
Western Michigan at Akron

MAC Football Schedule Week 13

Tuesday, Nov. 24
Ball State at Toledo
Central Michigan at Kent State

Friday, Nov. 27
Akron at Ohio
Eastern Michigan at Miami University
Northern Illinois at Bowling Green
Buffalo at Western Michigan

Friday Dec. 4 or Saturday, Dec. 5
East Division Champion vs. West Division Champion
Marathon MAC Championship Game
Ford Field in Detroit, Mich.

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

USU Football: Keys to victory over Kent State

Aggies and Golden Flashes square off in third annual Frisco Bowl for bragging rights

Contact/Follow @SamMcConkie & @MWCwire

USU looks to end season on strong note against Golden Flashes

Bowl Season: Utah State (7-5) vs Kent State (6-6)

When: Friday, December 20th, 2019 – 5:30 pm MST

WHERE: Toyota Stadium; Frisco, Texas (20,500)

TV: ESPN2

STREAMING: Sling TV – Get a seven-day free trial.

RADIO: Utah State radio broadcast on 1280 the zone (1280 AM), 1280thezone.com / Tunein.com

ODDS (via ESPN): Utah State -6.5

Three Keys to a Utah State victory

1. Get excited

It’s no secret just how uninspired and unmotivated USU looked against New Mexico in the regular season finale. Yes, Utah State won the game by double digits, but they didn’t look good for much of it. Thanks to a quick avalanche of mistakes and turnovers by New Mexico, the Aggies posted a dominant second quarter. However, the Aggies got outscored in the second half. In the final quarter, they didn’t score at all and looked like they were just trying to get out of Albuquerque as soon as possible.

Against Kent State, a flat performance could prove costly and end this season on a sour note. Kent State is going to a bowl game for the first time since 2012, and this is just their third bowl appearance in school history. The Golden Flashes are going to be plenty motivated to win this game and snap their winless postseason streak. Coming into the game, they’ve won three in a row, all within one possession. USU has done well in close games themselves this season, so they must take this upset-minded team seriously and come out swinging.

2. Lean heavily on the run game

Gerold Bright has a great opportunity to finish his senior year with a bang. He’s rushed for a solid 827 yards and eight touchdowns through the regular season. Against an extremely poor run defense like Kent State’s, he should be able to have a career game. He may not eclipse his season-high of 179 rush yards against Colorado State, but a monster performance is very much within reach and would put him close to 1,000 yards for the year. If Jaylen Warren is finally healthy enough to consistently help out, both of these backs can do some heavy damage to the Golden Flashes.

3. Contain Dustin Crum

Though Kent State will be hard pressed to win a defensive struggle against the Aggies, they can give themselves an excellent chance at winning in a shootout. QB Dustin Crum fuels Kent State’s offense with a good arm and dangerous rushing ability. He not only leads his team in net rushing yards, he rarely makes mistakes. Crum set a school record by completing over 68 percent of his passes, and his 18:2 touchdown to interception ratio is one of the best in college football. The sheer number of yards he’s responsible for on the season may not look eye-popping, but he’s made every one of them count. 

This quarterback plainly has enough offensive balance to keep USU’s defense guessing. The Aggies have gotten burned on deep passes a lot this season, and that trend will continue unless the Aggie D-line can generate some much needed pressure. USU has only gotten a moderate number of sacks this season, coming in at 83rd in the NCAA with 22. It’s time for this defense to step up its game or risk getting an embarrassing loss.

Final Thoughts

USU has significantly improved its program in the last decade, making bowl games eight of the last nine seasons. Kent State is only in a bowl for the third time, having never won in the postseason. USU may look to end this decade on a winning note, but Kent State will be gunning for it extra hard.

This is going to be a close, hard-fought game. Even one or two mistakes could spell doom for either squad. In Jordan Love‘s last collegiate game, I expect him to have a convincing stat line burnished by a strong ground game from Bright and Warren. The Golden Flashes will never go away, but depth will come into play in the fourth quarter and the Aggies will come out and secure another trophy.

Utah State 38 – Kent State 34

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=645997210]