Los Angeles Times

Irma is a big distractio­n, but FAU still shows up

- By Mike Hiserman mike.hiserman@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeHiserm­an

Florida canceled its home opener against Northern Colorado, and Florida State canceled its home game against Louisiana Monroe. Miami’s game at Arkansas State was scraped, and South Florida and Connecticu­t decided not to play. The game between Central Florida and Memphis was first moved from Saturday to Friday, then postponed.

All on account of Hurricane Irma, which by Saturday morning was taking dead aim at Florida’s southern coast.

Florida Internatio­nal played, after its game against Alcorn State was moved to Friday — and to Birmingham, Ala. And the Golden Panthers gave Butch Davis, the former Miami, North Carolina and Cleveland Browns coach, his first win in his second game since returning to college football.

The only major college football team from Florida that played Saturday was Florida Atlantic — and that almost didn’t happen even though the game was at Wisconsin.

“At one point, I thought we weren’t coming,” FAU coach Lane Kiffin told reporters after the Owls dropped a 31-14 decision to the No. 9 Badgers. “You got kids coming into the office saying, ‘Coach, I know it’s a football game, but I’m really the only one to take care of my grandma. We don’t know what’s coming.’

“But there was a decision to come and play. With all those distractio­ns, with all that stuff, I thought our guys stayed together in a difficult situation.”

Florida Atlantic kept the game competitiv­e most of the way, even though the Badgers gained 564 yards, including 357 rushing.

“I’d be lying if I said there weren’t any distractio­ns,” said Daniel Parr, FAU’s sophomore quarterbac­k. “We’re concerned about our families and whether they’re going to be safe or not.”

FAU stayed in Madison, Wis., after the game and had no set plan when it would return home. Wisconsin offered the team lodging, use of its training facilities and other aid. The Owls are scheduled to host Bethune Cookman next Saturday.

After Irma

Next Saturday’s Florida State-Miami game was reschedule­d to Oct. 7, which was supposed to be an off week for both teams, and Miami’s home game with Georgia Tech has been pushed back from Oct. 12 to Oct. 14, at the Hurricanes’ request.

Many happy returns

Dante Pettis, a senior from JSerra High in south Orange County, establishe­d a Pac-12 Conference record with his seventh career punt return for a touchdown. His 67-yard return against Montana broke the record that had been held by DeSean Jackson of California, which Pettis tied in Washington’s opener against Rutgers, when he took a punt back 61 yards.

Pettis had one punt return for a touchdown as a freshman, two as a sophomore, two more as a junior and already has two this season.

Doubling up?

Lamar Jackson may or may not be college football’s best college player — he won the Heisman Trophy last year — but he surely looks like the most valuable. With him, Louisville is a top-20 team. Without him? Not a chance.

The Cardinals don’t have a great defense, and when Jackson isn’t running or passing — granted, that’s not very often — even the offense can look pedestrian.

Jackson has his work cut out for him if he’s going to become only the second twotime winner of the Heisman, but he’s off to a flying start.

In Louisville’s opener against Purdue, a less-than-impressive 35-28 win, Jackson accounted for 485 yards and two touchdowns. Against North Carolina on Saturday, he was even better, passing for 393 yards and three touchdowns and running for 132 yards and three touchdowns in a 47-35 win.

That’s more than 1,000 total yards in two games, and at least one more believer.

“Lamar Jackson is every bit as good as everybody says he is and thinks he is,” North Carolina coach Larry Fedora said.

We’ll see how it goes from here. Next on the schedule: No. 3 Clemson.

Oh shush

When you’re not used to winning a bunch, and then all of a sudden you do, sometimes things get a little weird.

Witness what happened in the end zone at the conclusion of a 74-yard touchdown run by Ty Johnson of Maryland in the first quarter of a game against overmatche­d Towson.

Johnson had just finished a sprint down the left sideline, and given the Terrapins a three-touchdown lead less than nine minutes into the game, when he celebrated with an oft-seen move: He raised one of his index fingers in front of his helmet and gave the crowd a “Shhh.”

Maryland’s home crowd.

Defense gets offensive

Michigan’s offense hasn’t really hit stride, though the No. 8 Wolverines are 2-0. A 36-14 victory over Cincinnati was marred by two turnovers and seven penalties, and Michigan’s offense has only four touchdowns in two games.

No worries, though, because the Wolverines’ defense has three touchdowns — two intercepti­on returns and a fumble recovery in the end zone — plus a safety. That’s 20 points.

The offenses of Michigan’s opponents, Cincinnati and Florida, have scored 17 points — and that includes the extra points.

Up and down Brown

Oh, the highs and lows of college football. Anthony Brown of Boston College has been a college player for two games and experience­d both. Last week, Brown became the first Eagles quarterbac­k to win an opener as a freshman, something future NFL quarterbac­ks Doug Flutie, Glenn Foley and Matt Ryan failed to do.

This week, he had three passes intercepte­d, which were among four turnovers Wake Forest converted into 21 points on its way to a 34-10 win.

Numbers game

Pittsburgh ran 86 plays to Penn State’s 52, had the ball 38 minutes 20 seconds compared to 21:40, and outgained the Nittany Lions, 342-312. And lost, 33-14.

Two of Penn State’s scoring drives lasted about two and a half minutes. The others were one play, eight yards — set up by a 42yard return when a Max Browne pass was intercepte­d — and one play, 46 yards.

Extra points

Colorado has won the coin flip in 15 of its last 16 games. … Mike Riley now has a record of 1-7 at Autzen Stadium after Nebraska’s second-half rally fell short in a 42-35 loss at Oregon. The first six losses came when he was coach at Oregon State. The Ducks’ win stopped a five-game winning streak in the series by the Cornhusker­s. … Alabama under Nick Saban is nothing if not consistent. In home openers in Saban’s first 10 years, the Crimson Tide dispatched overmatche­d opponents by an average score of 39-7. The score against Fresno State: 41-10. … Duke quarterbac­k Daniel Jones had the nation’s longest streak without an intercepti­on end at 202 on his fifth pass against Northweste­rn.

 ?? Morry Gash Associated Press ?? NEW FLORIDA ATLANTIC coach Lane Kiffin leads his team on the field for a game at Wisconsin. The Owls aren’t sure when they will be able to return home.
Morry Gash Associated Press NEW FLORIDA ATLANTIC coach Lane Kiffin leads his team on the field for a game at Wisconsin. The Owls aren’t sure when they will be able to return home.

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