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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Three P’S Await Cues Peyton, Powlus, Penn State Zero In On Success

Richard Rosenblatt Associated Press

If you know your three P’s this season, College Football 128 should be a snap.

Peyton’s in place at Tennessee, Penn State is atop the preseason poll and Ron Powlus is back for one last fling at remodeled Notre Dame.

“I haven’t been this excited since my freshman year,” said Powlus, the Irish quarterback who returns to play for new coach Bob Davie after four mostly sour seasons under Lou Holtz.

Peyton Manning chose to stay around, too, saying NFL millions can wait because he’s having so much fun at Tennessee. Chances are, the Heisman Trophy front-runner also wants another shot at Florida, the defending national champions who have defeated the Vols the past four years. He gets the chance on Sept. 20 at The Swamp in Gainesville.

“I guess everybody expected me to leave,” said Manning, eighth in the 1996 Heisman balloting and the only Top 10 finisher returning. “I really love college football, and it has a lot to do with how positive my experience has been here, guys on the team, coaches, the friends I’m making.”

Penn State coach Joe Paterno has other concerns - his Nittany Lions are No. 1 in The Associated Press preseason Top 25 for the first time in school history.

“It’s nice to be recognized, but it sets you up like a sitting duck,” said Paterno, who enters his 32nd season 11 wins shy of victory No. 300. “I hope we are prepared to handle it.”

In this 128th college football season, there are oodles of new faces, including 24 new coaches in Division I-A.

While Holtz resigned after 11 seasons in South Bend - he’s preparing for his rookie campaign as a CBS analyst - Mike DuBose takes over for Gene Stallings at Alabama; Walt Harris moves in for Johnny Majors at Pittsburgh; and the Big Ten has four new coaches: Ron Turner at Illinois, Cam Cameron at Indiana, Glen Mason at Minnesota and Joe Tiller at Purdue.

Not since 1987 have there been so many new coaches.

“The bottom line is if you don’t win or attendance starts to fall, college presidents are going to make a change,” says Brigham Young coach LaVell Edwards, beginning his 26th year with the Cougars.

At Grambling, 78-year-old Eddie Robinson gets to coach his 57th and final season after he was nearly ousted during the off-season. The Tigers, with two consecutive losing seasons, were placed on NCAA probation last month for minor rules violations, but Robinson was cleared of any wrongdoing.

“I’d like to coach to about 100, if I could live that long,” said Robinson, football’s winningest coach, college or pro, with 405 victories. “This is the only thing I’ve ever done.”

The bowl alliance enters its final year under the current format, with the Pac-10 and Big Ten conferences and Rose Bowl coming aboard next season. The change will make it easier for the alliance to match the top two teams for a true national title game.

This season, the Orange Bowl on Jan. 2 will serve as the top alliance game, with the Pac-10 and Big Ten champs headed to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl. The Sugar and Fiesta bowls are the other alliance games.

Two new bowls - the Motor City Bowl and Sports Humanitarian Bowl - have been added to the postseason.

Bowling and coaching aside, it’s the players who make the season. Even though 44 underclassmen chose the NFL - Orlando Pace, Darnell Autry, Troy Davis and Byron Hanspard among them - there are plenty of shining stars for ‘97.

Start with Manning, who threw for 3,287 yards and 20 touchdowns in leading the Vols to a 10-2 record, including a 38-28 win over Northwestern in the Citrus Bowl. With receivers such as Peerless Price and Marcus Nash still around, the Vols begin the season ranked No. 5.

Powlus, a passer held in check by Holtz’s ball-control offense, still enters the season with more TD passes (43) than any other Notre Dame quarterback. Last season, he threw for 1,942 yards and 12 TDs.

The Irish are ranked 11th in the preseason poll.

“I think he felt he hadn’t written his final chapter at Notre Dame and would always wonder what would have been,” Davie said. “That’s probably what it really came down to.”

Other quarterbacks ready for breakthrough seasons include Donovan McNabb of Syracuse, Brock Huard of Washington, Chad Hutchinson of Stanford, Ryan Clement of Miami and Chris Keldorf of North Carolina.

Wisconsin’s Ron Dayne, who took the Big Ten Conference by storm with 1,863 yards and 18 TDs as a freshman, could be ready for a 2,000-yard season. Penn State’s Curtis Enis (1,210 and 13 TDs) is capable of similar numbers if Paterno chooses to showcase his star.

On defense, big seasons could come from ends Grant Wistrom (Nebraska), Andre Wadsworth (Florida State), tackle Michael Myers (Alabama), linebackers Andy Katzenmoyer (Ohio State), Anthony Simmons (Clemson) and Brian Simmons (North Carolina), and cornerbacks Dre’ Bly (North Carolina) and Charles Woodson (Michigan).