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FanHouse Pac Ten Preview 2007

Latest Pac Ten Preview 2007 Stories

Pac Ten Football Preview '07: The Mediocre

With perennial BCS contender USC at the top of the Pac Ten, it is hard to draw the line between "contenders" and "pretenders"... In 2006, the Pac Ten faced the very real possibility of having five teams tied for fourth place in the conference--and 2007 looks like there could be eight bowl-eligible schools fighting for six mediocre bowls.

While these schools aren't quite worthy of being grouped in with Stanford among the conference "dregs" you won't see any of them traveling to Pasadena in January, either.

Oregon Ducks
Last year: 7-6 overall, 4-5 Pac Ten

WHY THEY'LL WIN: The Oregon Ducks have consistently been "contenders" for the Pac Ten crown but have consistently come up short in recent years. They have brought the spread-option to the Pac Ten and will continue with QB Dennis Dixon at the helm in 2007. Rivals' eyes are still adjusting to those wacky uniforms. The Ducks get conference favorites USC at home the week after the Trojans travel to South Bend for what could be a trap game.

WHY THEY WON'T: Oregon has consistently challenged for the Pac Ten crown but have consistently failed to pull it out. The Pac Ten has allegedly improved the quality of their referees this year, which won't give the Ducks that little something extra that propelled them ahead of Oklahoma in 2006.

PROGNOSIS: Oregon may not even be the best team in their own State, let alone their own conference. They should be able to hang with the Conference contenders, but on paper there are just too many schools that seem better than them.

Pac Ten Football Preview '07: Top Five Players

Coming up with a list of the best players in the Pac Ten conference is no easy task. It would be very easy just to go down the roster of the University of Southern California and pick at random and you'd probably come up with five players that are arguably among the best at their position. We tried to resist the urge...but came up short. Enjoy the list.

1. John David Booty, QB, Southern California
If the Heisman Trophy is going to return to the West Coast this year, it will be going to Trojan quarterback John David Booty. In his first year as a starter for the Men of Troy, Booty only led his team to a Pac Ten title and a win in the Rose Bowl. Not shabby, but not quite what Trojan fans have come to expect. If Booty hopes to finish his career with as few losses as his predecessor, he'll have to run the table and he just may.

Booty is not without his shortcomings, however. His mechanics mean that the Trojan signal caller has a low trajectory when he releases the ball--which can lead to some inopportune tipped balls in key situations, especially with a short field. What's more, Booty lost his two favorite targets--receivers Dwayne Jarrett and State Smith--to the NFL, meaning he'll have to earn every plaudit laid upon him in the 2007 season.

2. DeSean Jackson, WR, California
Expectations are high for the University of California's DeSean Jackson. Rivals.com and The Sporting News have him ranked as the nation's leading receiver and Rivals says he is the best special teams player in all the land. Jackson is on several watch lists for post-season honors, including the Belitnikoff and Randy Moss Awards--and something in the air in Berkeley has his name being touted as a potential Heisman Trophy candidate.

Last year, Jackson averaged 18 yards a catch on 59 receptions and was the lone bright spot in the Bears' loss to Arizona, with a career-long 62-yard touchdown catch and a 95-yard punt return en route to 285 all-purpose yards. Nearly one out of ever five times the ball is punted to Jackson, he returns it for a touchdown--making him a dual threat for the Golden Bears.

Pac Ten Football Preview '07: 2006 Recap



The Pac Ten Conference entered the 2006 season with one mandate: prove that they're worthy of their best team, the USC Trojans. For three consecutive years, the Men of Troy had steamrolled the competition in the Pac Ten leaving many to wonder just how good the rest of the conference was--and in 2006 the Pac Ten proved that it was, with a couple notable exception, able to hang with the best of the College Football universe.

Opening weekend amounted to a miniature Pac Ten-SEC challenge, with the Southeastern Conference coming out the winners. Although USC took eventual SEC West Champion Arkansas to task in Fayetteville, Washington State lost to Auburn and California barely put up a fight on Rocky Top.

By the end of the season, both Oregon State and UCLA had proven that the Trojans were fallable, and the bottom of the conference took its best shots at the top--with Arizona scoring one of the season's greatest upsets defeating conference co-champions California. Along the way, there was a cluster of five teams which were all battling to avoid third place in the Conference and the "coveted" Las Vegas Bowl invitation that went with it.

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