Category: Non-AQ Written by Austin Cox
Boise State has reached home-and-home scheduling agreements with Louisiana-Lafayette and Connecticut.
Athletic officials announced deals Wednesday that put both teams on Boise State's 2014 schedule. The Broncos will travel to UConn on Sept. 13 then host the Ragin' Cajuns one week later.
The deal sends Boise State to Louisiana-Lafayette for the 2016 season and brings Connecticut to Boise in the 2018 season.
Boise State was once on track to play UConn more frequently, but the Broncos backed out of a commitment to join the Big East Conference, opting instead to stay in the Mountain West.
Louisiana-Lafayette plays in the Sun Belt Conference and has posted consecutive 9-4 seasons and postseason bowl victories.
The series get the Broncos closer to filling out nonconference schedules through 2017.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 March 2013 17:28
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Category: Non-AQ Written by Associated Press
New Mexico State is expected to announce that its football program has found a new home.
Sun Belt Conference and school officials say both sides are scheduled Wednesday to announce that the Aggies will accept an invitation to join the Sun Belt Conference in 2014. The move comes after the Western Athletic Conference gave up trying to field a football league in 2013.
New Mexico State played eight years in the WAC and its football team will play as an independent in 2013.
Sun Belt Conference Commissioner Karl Benson will hold a teleconference Wednesday and school officials will hold a news conference afterward in the Pan American Center.
The Aggies, who went 1-11 last season, have not appeared in a bowl game since 1960.
Associated Press
Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 March 2013 16:55
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Category: Non-AQ Written by Associated Press
Jameill Showers, the quarterback Johnny Manziel beat out to become the starter at Texas A&M last season, is transferring to UTEP and will be eligible to play next season.
New Miners coach Sean Kugler announced Wednesday that Showers would be joining the program and have two years of eligibility left. Showers is eligible to play immediately because he is on target to graduate from Texas A&M in June. He will take graduate classes at UTEP.
Showers, from Killeen, Texas, competed with Manziel for the starting job in the spring and preseason last year, but ended up as the backup to the Heisman Trophy winner. Showers was 27 for 44 for 319 yards and two touchdown passes in limited playing time for the Aggies. He also ran nine times for 39 yards.
In 2011, Showers backed up Ryan Tannehill, who ended up being drafted in the first round by the Miami Dolphins.
Kugler, a former UTEP player and coach, was hired in December after Mike Price retired.
Associated Press
Last Updated on Thursday, 28 February 2013 21:47
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Category: Non-AQ Written by Associated Press
Not long after Nick Montana pulled off his helmet, he was approached by fans who'd descended from the stands after Tulane's recent spring game, hoping to meet the new quarterback with the famous last name and familiar face.
''You look like your dad,'' one said, and Montana produced polite smile and nodded, as if he'd heard that countless times before.
He signed his name to a white-and-green Tulane jersey worn by a young boy. An adult fan then pulled out a couple of Joe Montana football cards, asking for signatures on those as well. Again, the son of the Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback obliged.
Montana understands the source of the adulation and tries to handle it gracefully. Still, he feels he hasn't really earned it and doesn't seem entirely comfortable with the expectations that come with being the son of a four-time Super Bowl winner - and playing the same position.
''I've lived with it my whole life. I'm used to it,'' Montana said. ''I tend to think people make a bigger deal about it than it is, so I just try to be a college student, playing football just like any of the other guys on the team.''
The fact is, Montana still has a lot to prove at the Division I level. His first go-around at Washington didn't go so well.
After a redshirt freshman season, he was beaten out by Keith Price for the starting job in 2011, then opted to play a season in junior college near home in Southern California before giving college football's highest division another shot.
Montana chose Tulane, where he'll pursue a business degree and play home games next season in the Superdome, where his father won one of his Super Bowls with the San Francisco 49ers over John Elway's Denver Broncos in 1990.
Of course, the stands won't be nearly as full, or the stakes as high.
Tulane does not play in a major BCS conference and would be fortunate to crack the top 10 in the national rankings even if it went undefeated - never mind that the Wave went 2-10 in Conference USA last season, extending a bowl drought that dates back to 2002.
Montana, however, said he believes in second-year coach Curtis Johnson, a former receivers coach with the Super Bowl-winning New Orleans Saints in 2009. Montana likes the pro-style offense at Tulane and said his priorities have changed as he's matured.
''A lot of it was, my freshman year, I came in with the wrong mentality, I guess, just loving college. So I feel like I've grown up a lot more,'' Montana added. ''Seeing CJ, the offense he runs and the coaches he has around him, (Tulane) was a hard place to pass up.''
Johnson said Montana will have to earn the starting job by beating out redshirt freshman Devin Powell in August camp.
Yet the coach added that he sought out the younger Montana because ''he's a winner'' with ''good pedigree.''
''Nick has a lot of intangibles, a lot like Joe,'' Johnson said. ''He can escape. You saw him run around a bit, good touch passer, can move in and out of the pocket. He does some of the stuff that his dad does.''
Nick Montana threw a 4-yard scoring pass in the spring game in which he rolled right and lofted a pass to Justyn Shackleford in the back of the end zone, drawing immediate comparisons, albeit lightheartedly, to his father hitting Dwight Clark for ''the catch'' in the 1982 NFC title game against Dallas.
''It reminds me, yeah,'' a laughing Johnson said of the scoring pass. ''I just hope I see more of them.''
Montana later showcased his mobility with a short touchdown run.
Last season at Mount San Antonio College in Walnut, Calif., Montana passed for 2,652 yards and 22 touchdowns, and his team won its first 11 games before losing in the Southern California Junior College championship.
Since Montana enrolled at Tulane in January, his new teammates have noticed his father showing up at various football functions, and they've been delighted to see the former star whose career mostly predated their births, but whose highlights they've seen in NFL Films videos.
''He's one of the best to ever play,'' Tulane receiver Ryan Grant said. ''It's awesome to have his son here and it's awesome to see him around whenever he comes in town.''
The younger Montana described his father as someone who, while proud of his past, chooses to live in the present. He never looked for excuses to regale his sons with stories of his playing days at Notre Dame or in the NFL, and never pushed his sons to play football, never mind quarterback.
''He always had a laid-back approach, so it would always have to be me asking him, `Can we go throw?''' Nick Montana said. ''He's always been that way where he never tried to get involved with it unless we wanted him to.''
Montana hopes to play in the NFL. In that respect, Tulane was not such a curious choice; three former Green Wave quarterbacks - Shaun King, Patrick Ramsey and J.P. Losman - have played in the NFL in the past 15 years.
Also, he arrives as optimism about Tulane's football future is rising. Johnson has improved the ratings of Tulane's recruiting classes. Meanwhile, a new on-campus stadium - close to where the old Tulane Stadium hosted numerous Sugar Bowls and three Super Bowls - is scheduled to open in 2014.
Now those who hope to see Tulane competitive again view Montana's arrival as another encouraging sign.
''He has a great personality, great character,'' said Grant, who caught a 17-yard pass over the middle from Montana in the spring game. ''He has great form - a nice spiral. He can throw the ball. I'm glad to have him here.''
Associated Press
Last Updated on Saturday, 09 March 2013 15:56
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Category: Non-AQ Written by Associated Press
Ron Turner is going back to the college sideline. Florida International hired Turner as its football coach Thursday night, signing him to a five-year deal with a base salary of $500,000 annually. FIU director of sports and entertainment Pete Garcia said he received a faxed copy of the signed contract and that Turner would be in Miami for an introductory news conference Friday afternoon.
Turner — most recently the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' quarterbacks coach — replaces Mario Cristobal, who was fired last month.
''This guy knows football,'' Garcia said. ''He's the best quarterback coach in America, college or pro. So I'm very excited to get this guy. He's one of the best offensive minds in America. This guy's a total package. He can do it all.''
It will be Turner's first trip back to the college game since he was fired by Illinois in 2004, three seasons after taking the Illini to what was their first Big Ten title in a decade. Illinois went to the Sugar Bowl after that 10-2 season in 2001 and Turner was Big Ten coach of the year.
Illinois won only nine of its next 34 games under Turner, including just one Big Ten game in a two-season span. He left Illinois with a 35-57 record in eight seasons.
Still, Garcia was thrilled to get Turner, pointing to his role in working with elite NFL players like Peyton Manning (he was an offensive position coach with the Indianapolis Colts at the time) and Devin Hester (when Turner was the Chicago Bears' offensive coordinator).
''I'm very excited about this hire,'' Garcia said.
Cristobal was 27-47 at FIU, though won a Sun Belt championship in 2010 and took the Panthers to their first two bowl games - plus was widely credited for turning around a troubled program that had lost 23 straight games in one stretch. Injuries played a role in the Panthers finishing 3-9 this season.
Garcia said he consulted with current Indianapolis coach Chuck Pagano, Buccaneers coach Greg Schiano and Bucs' special assistant Butch Davis before hiring Turner.
''They all said the same thing,'' Garcia said. ''They all told me this was the guy we had to get.''
FIU will be the 10th college program Turner will be involved with coaching, with some of the others including USC, Stanford, Pitt and Arizona, all as either a position coach or coordinator. He also was San Jose State's head coach in 1992, going 7-4 before leaving to join the Bears' coaching staff.
Turner is the brother of Norv Turner, who was fired as coach of the San Diego Chargers this week.
Associated Press
Last Updated on Friday, 04 January 2013 13:53
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