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Sunday, Dec. 27, 2009

Auburn football: Tigers enjoy feast, focus on getting eighth victory

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TAMPA, Fla. — The Auburn football arrived in Tampa on Saturday for the Outback Bowl, which will be played on Friday.

The Tigers, who will hold their first practice in Tampa today, took part in two bowl-related functions on Saturday.

First, the Tigers and the Northwestern Wildcats were treated to an all-you-can eat dinner of steak, chicken and ribs. Then both teams went to a Tampa Bay Lightning hockey game.

“Everybody’s here and having a good time tonight,” Auburn coach Gene Chizik said in a press release. “We’re excited to get started tomorrow with practice. We’re here for one reason and that’s to win our eighth football game this season.

“There’s a balance to having fun and preparing to win the game and the players know that. Outback put on a great dinner for us tonight and it was a great way to start the week. It was everything you’d expect from Outback.”

“It was an amazing dinner tonight,” Tigers quarterback Chris Todd said. “It’s great to get off the plane or get off the road from traveling and have this kind of dinner the first night you’re here. We’re looking forward to the rest of the week.”

After this morning’s practice, the players will visit St. Joseph’s Children’s Hospital.

Chick-Fil-A- bowl

Kiffin says Vols rusty coming off break; kicking game remains a big concern

ATLANTA — The Tennessee Volunteers are a bit rusty coming off their short holiday break in new surroundings as they resume preparations for the Chick-Fil-A Bowl.

Coach Lane Kiffin says he thought Saturday’s practice was OK but he said a lot of things didn’t go perfect. He credits that to the break and the Vols getting used to the hotel in Georgia in the final days before Thursday night’s game.

Their first practice was at Decatur High School on Saturday morning after arriving in Atlanta on Friday night.

Kiffin still is trying to decide on a kicker. Neither Daniel Lincoln, Chad Cunningham nor Devin Mathis are kicking consistently enough that Kiffin has picked a starter.

Kiffin says that’s a big concern for the Vols playing against Virginia Tech.

Rose Bowl

Oregon coach Kelly has fun with Mickey Mouse but asks for Donald Duck instead

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Chip Kelly walked to the podium in front of Sleeping Beauty’s castle and cast a doleful look at the well-dressed mouse standing to his left.

“I’m a Duck fan. Sorry, Mickey,” the Oregon head coach said. “If you could get your boy Donald up here ...”

A few minutes later, in a moment that even Disneyland probably couldn’t engineer, two actual ducks flew in tandem over Saturday’s ceremony to kick off the week’s festivities for the 96th Rose Bowl, matching Kelly’s bigger Ducks against the Ohio State Buckeyes.

Both teams already had hit the practice field and the weight room in the 24 hours before their trip to Disneyland, the traditional post-Christmas stop for the Big Ten and Pac-10 champions.

Even if it’s daunting to squeeze their ample frames into teacups or Matterhorn bobsleds, the eighth-ranked Buckeyes (10-2) particularly seemed eager for a week in sunny southern California before their school’s first Rose Bowl since 1997.

“We’ve heard so much about it, but the Rose Bowl really is awesome,” Buckeyes linebacker Austin Spitler said, moments after a spray of red-and-white-and-green-and-yellow confetti ended the ceremony. “We’re looking forward to everything we’re doing this week, top to bottom.”

The trip is more of a homecoming for the large flock of Ducks who largely hail from both ends of California. No. 7 Oregon (10-2) is in the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1995, yet many players expect Pasadena to resemble Autzen Stadium back in Eugene.

“I’ve been to Disneyland maybe three or four times, but I’m bigger now,” said Oregon cornerback Walter Thurmond III, a West Covina native whose senior season ended with a right knee injury in late September. “We’ll see if I can fit on the rides. ... We’re definitely treating this like a home game. It’s important to hold it down for the West Coast.”

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel had four fewer players on the Buckeyes’ Christmas night flight than he hoped after the suspensions of kick returner and receiver Ray Small, defensive lineman Rob Rose, receiver Duron Carter and running back Bo DeLande, apparently for violating team rules.

The biggest loss likely is Small, the top backup behind starting receivers DeVier Posey and Dane Sanzenbacher, the top two candidates to assume Small’s punt return duties as well.

“I’m most disappointed obviously for the two older kids,” Tressel said of seniors Rose and Small. “This could have been a great end of a career, but life goes on.”

Ohio State’s greatest challenge is slowing down athletic Oregon quarterback Jeremiah Masoli, the San Francisco native who led the Ducks to their first Pac-10 title since 2001, ending USC’s seven-year reign. Masoli’s speed and arm strength are tough to duplicate in practice — but Ohio State faces a reasonably similar star in practice every day.

“Having Terrelle (Pryor) is a pretty good guy to practice against,” Buckeyes defensive lineman Doug Worthington said. “(Masoli’s) burst is ridiculous. You miss one tackle, and he’s gone. He’s a very talented guy.”

The Disneyland jaunt kicked off a week that includes the bountiful meal known as the Beef Bowl, a 54-year-old tradition at a landmark Beverly Hills restaurant where the teams consume several hundred pounds of prime rib. The players also will get free time in Los Angeles between practices leading up to Friday’s game.

“It’s L.A.,” Masoli said with a grin, just as the sun emerged from behind a cloud. “The whole atmosphere is different. This L.A., Hollywood, Disneyland atmosphere is great. We don’t get that all the time, especially where we live in Oregon.”

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