UMass Lowell
Vermont
11:00 am, March 11
#25 Missouri
#4 Alabama
1:00 pm, March 11
Ohio State
#5 Purdue
1:00 pm, March 11
Norfolk State
Howard
1:00 pm, March 11
Saint Louis
VCU
1:00 pm, March 11
Cincinnati
#1 Houston
3:00 pm, March 11
Vanderbilt
#18 Texas A&M
3:30 pm, March 11
Penn State
#19 Indiana
3:30 pm, March 11
Fordham
Dayton
3:30 pm, March 11
Tulane
Memphis
5:30 pm, March 11
Texas Southern
Grambling
5:30 pm, March 11
#7 Texas
#3 Kansas
6:00 pm, March 11
Utah State
#20 San Diego State
6:00 pm, March 11
#15 Xavier
#6 Marquette
6:30 pm, March 11
Kent State
Toledo
7:30 pm, March 11
Marist
Iona
7:30 pm, March 11
#21 Duke
#13 Virginia
8:30 pm, March 11
UAB
Florida Atlantic
8:30 pm, March 11
Cal State Fullerton
UC Santa Barbara
9:30 pm, March 11
#8 Arizona
#2 UCLA
10:30 pm, March 11
Grand Canyon
Southern Utah
11:30 pm, March 11

CSD Mag Teaser: Can Lamar Jackson defend his Heisman trophy?

If you don’t know what the CSD Mag is, check out this link –> crazysportsdude.com/announcement

Only one person has ever won back-to-back Heisman trophies. Ohio State running back Archie Griffin, who won the honor in 1974 and 1975. Lamar Jackson looks to the same after a Heisman campaign in 2016. For him to repeat he will certainly have to improve, as many voters regretted their votes after Deshaun Watson’s performance in the College Football Playoff. Jackson was electric for the first half of the year, but in the second half he seemed to cool down. Once the ‘Cards started playing ACC defenses every week, the offensive line struggled, giving up 46 sacks over the course of the season. The bar will be set higher for Jackson in 2017, and I would guess that Sam Darnold or Baker Mayfield might steal his spot atop college football.

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