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Clark, Pryor Take Different Paths To Big Ten Showdown

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

They play the same position, and play it similarly, but that doesn’t mean Daryll Clark and Terrelle Pryor are alike.

They aren’t.

That, the kid has done, directing Ohio State to five consecutive victories after a 35-3 smackdown at USC. It has not always been pretty, as it sometimes isn’t when a freshman takes control, but Pryor has committed only two turnovers and has proven every bit the double-threat he was billed, with 653 yards passing and 411 rushing so far.

Until Saturday at MSU, Pryor’s total offense had declined in each of his four previous starts. But he made the Spartans look hopeless, hapless and clueless with 116 passing yards and 72 rushing yards, accounting for a touchdown each way.

Not even close.

The quarterbacks who will start Saturday for third-ranked Penn State (8-0, 4-0) and No. 10 Ohio State (7-1, 4-0) followed dramatically different paths to this first-place showdown in the Big Ten, paths that began in the state of the teams they will oppose Saturday night in Ohio Stadium.

Clark, a junior from Youngstown, Ohio, couldn’t draw much more than a glance from OSU coming out of high school because of questionable skills and borderline grades that forced him to a prep school for a year before he could enroll at State College.

Pryor, a true freshman from Jeannette, Pa., has been Mr. All That since his junior year of high school and was so coveted by every major program that he kept them all waiting six weeks after National Signing Day before making up his mind.

Penn State coach Joe Paterno made a rare in-home visit to lure Pryor to Happy Valley, but not even the Legend’s charms could get Pryor to more than sniff at life as a Nittany Lion.

“Penn State isn’t the place for me,” Pryor said the day he declared for OSU.”It’s just not. I don’t like the area. It’s country-looking. I just don’t like that place.”

You’d think Pryor would be making nicey-nice now, running from that jab as adroitly as he did Michigan State defenders in the Buckeyes’ 45-7 blowout last weekend.

You’d think so, but you’d be wrong.

“I’m in Ohio now,” Pryor said Saturday, when he was really in East Lansing. “Jeannette is still my hometown, but this is where I’m at. I’m not at Penn State, I’m not in Pennsylvania. I’m not here to make Penn State happy; I’m here to make Ohio State happy.”

“Everyone thinks I’m overrated,” Pryor said afterward. “Wait and see. The time will come, and you’ll find out.”

Clark sat and watched Pryor’s recruitment with interest, wondering if he would even get the chance to show what he could do if the phenom showed up on campus.

As Pryor’s decision dragged on, more and more friends approached Clark’s father, asking if his son would transfer and try to play elsewhere in the two seasons he had left.

“That was frustrating to my dad, that was frustrating to me because people would go to my dad about that, and I really didn’t think that was fair,” Clark said.

He then weathered a competition with teammate Pat Devlin to win the job, finally getting his first start after four years of waiting.

Now Clark is in command of the Big Ten’s highest-scoring offense (45.4 ppg.), one that produces 482 yards per game, 160 yards more on average than Ohio State.

“I sat back on Sunday and reminisced on the start of everything,” Clark said. “My mind was blown away with that. We’re doing so well and I’ve been through a lot of things, but I remained patient and quiet through everything…I didn’t really know what to expect. I was a nervous wreck as the season was approaching. I didn’t know what was going to happen.”

As far as Saturday, he knows exactly what to expect.

“It’s everything you dream of when you come to a Big Ten school and you’re from Ohio,” Clark said. “You’re going against a coach that is from your hometown, Jim Tressel, a really good guy. And you’re going down into the Horseshoe, and that’s one of the most hostile places to play in.”

It certainly has been for Penn State, which is 0-7 in Ohio Stadium since joining the Big Ten in 1993.

The Lions have scored just five touchdowns in those seven games, while Ohio State’s defense and special teams alone have scored eight TDs.

Paterno’s worst loss in a 43-year career came at OSU in 2000 (45-6), and his teams have been beaten by an average of 21 points in their last seven trips to Columbus.

Clark gets the chance to end that frustration, while Pryor has an opportunity to extend it.

“We got Daryll; they got Terrelle,” Penn State defensive coordinator Tom Bradley said. “Everybody’s happy.”

Around the Big Ten

Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio is sticking with senior Brian Hoyer at quarterback entering a Saturday game at Michigan (2-5, 1-2), despite Hoyer’s woeful performance in a 45-7 loss to Ohio State. Backup Kirk Cousins directed MSU (6-2, 3-1) to its only touchdown and completed his first 10 passes once Hoyer departed because of a hard tackle by OSU linebacker James Laurinaitis. Medical exams have ruled out a concussion, so Dantonio says, “Brian Hoyer is still our quarterback.”

Purdue (2-5, 0-3)
coach Joe Tiller doesn’t have much choice at quarterback now that backup Joey Elliott is likely out for the year with a shoulder separation. Elliott relieved an ineffective Curtis Painter for the second time in three games Saturday at Northwestern. Painter’s senior season has been a major disappointment, given his six touchdown passes and nine interceptions. Last season, he threw for 29 TDs, with only 11 interceptions. Sophomore Justin Siler, a running back who played QB in high school, will be Painter’s backup Saturday against visiting Minnesota (6-1, 2-1).

Everyone wondered how Illinois (4-3, 2-2) would replace Big Ten MVP Rashard Mendenhall at tailback. Turns out, the guy the Illini miss most is middle linebacker J Leman. Illinois enters a Saturday game at Wisconsin (3-4, 0-4) ranked second in the league in rushing (204.9 ypg), but it’s ninth in rushing defense (150.9 ypg). That’s a killer, since Illinois can’t get the ball back for its offense and leaves that unit no margin for error when it does have possession.

Indiana (2-5, 0-4) should have quarterback Kellen Lewis back from a sprained ankle for Northwestern’s (6-1, 2-1) visit to Memorial Stadium. Maybe that will spark an IU offense that went 3-of-16 on third down — with two of the conversions via penalty — in a 55-13 loss to Illinois. IU must win four of its last five to claim a second straight bowl bid.

Michigan faces the same challenge, winning four of its final five, to sustain a 33-year bowl streak. Three of those games are on the road, where the Wolverines are 0-2 so far, and the others are 6-2 Michigan State this week and 6-1 Northwestern on Nov. 15. Quarterback Steven Threat should be ready to start Saturday against MSU after missing several crucial series in the 46-17 loss at Penn State when his triceps tightened to the point where he could not grip the football.

Source — FOX Sports

Oil Halts Climb, But Storm Threatens

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

NEW YORK (AP) – Oil prices were steady near $125 a barrel Monday as the market kept on eye on a tropical storm that could affect oil facilities in the Gulf of Mexico. Concerns that a showdown over Iran’s nuclear program could threaten crude supplies out of the Middle East also buoyed up prices.

By midday in Europe, light, sweet crude for September delivery fell 7 cents to $125.04 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract gained $1.02 on Friday to settle at $125.10 a barrel.

In London, September Brent crude was up 29 cents at $124.47 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

The National Hurricane Center issued a hurricane watch Sunday for the coast of western Louisiana and eastern Texas, which means that hurricane conditions are possible from Tropical Storm Edouard within the next 24 hours in the area.

The fifth named storm of the 2008 hurricane season has sustained maximum winds of about 50 miles per hour. By Sunday night, Edouard was located about 80 miles east-southeast off the mouth of the Mississippi River and about 390 miles east of Galveston, Texas.

Regarding Iran, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Saturday that the United States would have no choice “but to begin again to prepare sanctions resolutions for the (U.N.) Security Council” if Iran did not halt the development of its uranium enrichment program.

Rice said that given the U.N.’s current scheduling, sanctions probably could not be expected in the next few weeks, but the U.S. will begin working with allies toward that goal.

“There’s concern about a potential confrontation down the line,” said Victor Shum, an energy analyst with Purvin & Gertz consultancy in Singapore.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Sunday that diplomacy is the only way out of his country’s standoff with the West as an informal deadline expired on an offer of economic and other incentives by six world powers if Iran agreed to curb enrichment.

Iran’s leader made the comments a day after asserting that his country would not give up its “nuclear rights,” signaling that it would refuse demands to stop enriching uranium or at least not to expand its enrichment work.

The United States and its European allies fear Iran intends to use the technology to develop material for nuclear weapons under the cloak of a civilian nuclear power program. Iran denies the accusation.

On Friday, oil shot up as much as $4 after news reports quoted Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz as saying that Iran’s nuclear program was nearing a “major breakthrough” and that his country must be “prepared for every option.”

Mofaz, a hawkish former defense minister and military chief, is a top contender to succeed Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who announced last week he will resign in September amid a corruption probe.

In Nigeria, two French oil workers were kidnapped in that country’s volatile southern oil region Sunday. A statement released by France’s Foreign Ministry confirmed the kidnappings of the French nationals, but did not provide additional details about the two or say for which company they worked.

“You’ve got three supply-side worries pushing oil higher today: Iran, the storm and Nigeria,” Shum said.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 0.68 cent to $3.4454 a gallon, while gasoline prices gained 1.66 cents to $3.1009 a gallon. Natural gas futures increased 9.1 cents to $9.48 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source — CNN