(STATS) -- With some standouts in the FCS, it can be hard to tell when they have a big game.They make it happen so often.Quarterbacks Jeremiah Briscoe of Sam Houston State, Gage Gubrud of Eastern Washington and Devlin Hodges of Samford as well as James Madison running back Khalid Abdullah have been special on a weekly basis this season. On Tuesday, they were nominated to the STATS FCS Offensive Player of the Year Watch List.The four nominees:Khalid Abdullah, James Madison, TB, Sr., 5-10, 220, Newport News, VirginiaThis home run threat teams with childhood friend Cardon Johnson to give James Madison perhaps the most lethal 1-2 running back duo in the FCS. Abdullah has ability to get around the edges, but also terrific vision for finding holes. He runs hard through the line of scrimmage, picking up extra yards after contact. … Off to a superb start as a senior, including four straight 100-yard games, matching his season total of a year ago. ... Has an FCS-high 603 rushing yards (on 7.7 yards per carry) and tied for the national high with nine touchdowns. Coach Mike Houston says Abdullah has the strongest work habits on the Dukes nationally ranked team. … Fell just short of 1,000 yards as a junior, scoring 13 touchdowns.Jeremiah Briscoe, Sam Houston State, QB, R-Jr., 6-3, 220, HoustonA nationally rated quarterback in high school, Briscoe has traveled a winding road to become the leader of one of the FCS most prolific offenses. … Shared playing time in his first season at Sam Houston with Jared Johnson, the 2015 Southland Conference offensive player of the year, but Briscoe was a standout in the Bearkats playoff run to the national semifinals. … The pro-style passer threw for a school-record seven touchdown passes against Stephen F. Austin last Saturday, giving him 16 in only four games. … Spent his senior season in high school playing under Eliot Allen, who coached Andrew Luck. Briscoe transferred to Sam Houston from UAB after the Blazers program folded following the 2014 season.Gage Gubrud, Eastern Washington, QB, R-So., 6-2, 195, McMinnville, OregonWhen Gubrud (pronounced goo-brood) kicked excellent rugby-style punts into strong wind gusts at Weber State as a freshman, the Eagles surely knew they had a special player. As a sophomore in 2016, hes burst onto the scene after winning the starting quarterback job away from two returnees, including a 3,000-yard passer. … Dual-threat racked up a school-record 551 total yards with six total touchdowns in his first career start, EWUs 45-42 win over Pac-12 member Washington State to open the season. … Uses a quick release in the pocket, but also has good foot speed to gain yardage up the field. A former walk-on, Gubrud is among the FCS leaders in a number of statistical categories, including passing yards per game (383.2), total offense per game (438.2) and touchdown passes (18).Devlin Hodges, Samford, QB, R-So., 6-1, 213, Kimberly, AlabamaSamford coach Chris Hatcher turned over the keys to the offense to Hodges midway through the 2015 season and the Bulldogs have been dangerous ever since. Hodges is a dual-threat with a quick release and efficient style. In his first collegiate start against Western Carolina, Hodges was 42 of 61 for 399 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for 94 yards and a score. He finished his freshman season as the Southern Conferences offensive player of the month for November and made the conferences all-freshman team. Hes running less as a sophomore, but has been even better as a passer, throwing for 14 touchdowns and only two interceptions in four games.Preseason selections to the watch list were quarterbacks Aaron Bailey of Northern Iowa, Case Cookus of Northern Arizona, Austin Gahafer of Morehead State, KD Humphries of Murray State, Eli Jenkins of Jacksonville State, Kyle Lauletta of Richmond, RJ Noel of Sacred Heart and Peter Pujals of Holy Cross; running backs Kendell Anderson of William & Mary, Tarik Cohen of North Carolina A&T, Derrick Craine of Chattanooga, Chase Edmonds of Fordham, Darius Hammond of Charleston Southern, Kade Harrington of Lamar, DeAngelo Henderson of Coastal Carolina, John Santiago of North Dakota, Lenard Tillery of Southern and Darius Victor of Towson; and wide receivers Emmanuel Butler of Northern Arizona, Cooper Kupp of Eastern Washington, Justin Watson of Penn and Jake Wieneke of South Dakota State. Kupp won the award last season.A national panel of over 150 sports information and media relations directors, broadcasters, writers and other dignitaries will vote on the STATS FCS Offensive Player of the Year following the regular season. Also, STATS will honor the outstanding defensive player in the FCS, a freshman player of the year, a coach of the year and the Eddie & Doris Robinson Scholar-Athlete of the Year. Fake Custom Jerseys Online . Perhaps Carroll was so prepared for a break because he believes there is very little the Seattle Seahawks need heading into the off-season. "I dont see anything that we need to add. We just have to get better," Carroll said. Cheap Custom Jerseys .J. -- Josh Cribbs was in the Pro Bowl in February and out of a job six months later. http://www.jerseyscustom.us/custom-san-francisco-49ers-jerseys/ . - Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco is not a fan of his teams use of the wildcat formation, saying "it makes you look like a high school offence. Custom Dallas Cowboys Jerseys . -- Adam Snyder returned to the San Francisco 49ers this season because the offensive lineman thought it was his best opportunity to win a championship. Cheap Custom Jerseys China . - Blake Griffin had 30 points and 12 rebounds, J. A roundup of the past weeks notable boxing results from around the world:Saturday at Anaheim, Calif.David Emanuel Peralta W12 Robert Guerrero Welterweight Scores: 116-112, 115-113 Peralta, 115-113 Guerrero Records: Peralta (26-2-1, 14 KOs); Guerrero (33-5-1, 18 KOs)Rafaels remarks: When a fighter is matched softly their opponent is often called a cab driver, a snarky way of describing a guy given virtually no chance to win. Peralta, who turns 34 on Wednesday, certainly fit the description. Literally. A part-time fighter, his actual job is that of a cab driver in his native Argentina. He had a nice record and was brought to the United States -- as a massive underdog -- to fight for the first time against Guerrero, 31, of Gilroy, California, who was badly in need of a win coming off a loss for a vacant welterweight title to Danny Garcia in January and 2-3 in his previous five fights.Most viewed Guerrero, a former two-division titleholder, as a badly faded fighter even before this bout, which headlined a Premier Boxing Champions card on Spike. Now it quite clear that he really is done as a top fighter -- and as a main event performer for that matter -- after this clear loss (despite the one scorecard in his favor) to the painfully slow Peralta, whose previous opposition had been about as bad as it gets.Guerrero, who made $500,000 to Peraltas $30,000, got off to a solid start and looked pretty good for the first couple of rounds but then it was mostly downhill. Peralta kept up a persistent attack, came forward, controlled the action and took it to Guerrero, whose timing, speed and reflexes are not what they were. Peraltas margin of victory should have been even greater because in the ninth round referee Ray Corona blew a clear knockdown. Peralta blasted Guerrero with a pair of right hands that landed cleanly and sent him sagging into the corner post, which clearly held him up. It should have definitely been ruled a knockdown and was obvious in real time and on the television replays. Regardless, Peralta took it to Guerrero for the rest of the fight and got the well-deserved upset (prompting him to do an insanely bizarre dance in the ring!) and likely ended Guerreros run as a meaningful fighter.Freddy Hernandez W10 Alfredo Angulo Super middleweight Scores: 98-92, 97-93 (twice) Records: Hernandez (34-8, 22 KOs); Angulo (24-6, 20 KOs)Rafaels remarks: If you thought Robert Guerrero was a shot fighter after his poor showing in an upset loss to a low-level opponent in the main event, Angulo, 33, of Mexico, showed himself to be even more totally shot in this loss to Hernandez, 37, also of Mexico, a journeyman opponent who had his best days about eight years ago as a welterweight. Angulo and Hernandez were both fighting for the first time in one year and, as expected, slugged it out in an entertaining and bloody high-contact fight. But all the hard fights have clearly taken more of a toll on fan-favorite Angulo, who took a beating and should strongly consider retirement.As usual, Angulo pressured Hernandez, who suffered a bad cut over his left eye in the fifth round, and landed a lot of punches. But Hernandez landed a ton of shots also and appeared to have more steam on his. He also employed a solid jab that he kept in Angulos face, where his left eye/cheek was swollen and marked up by the end of the fight.Terrell Gausha W10 Steve Martinez Junior middleweight Scores: 97-93 (twice), 95-95 Records: Gausha (19-0, 9 KOs); Martinez (16-3, 13 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Gausha, 28, a 2012 U.S. Olympian from Cleveland, had a tougher time than perhaps many expected against Martinez, 26, of Bronx, New York, but came out on top in the majority decision win against the most notable opponent he has had so far. Both guys landed quality shots and Martinez put on a good body attack, but was warned for low blows by referee Jack Reiss in the fifth round. Gausha also did a good job attacking Martinez to the body but also showed a more diverse arsenal, including a good jab and solid counter punching as he took control late in the fight against a seemingly tiring Martinez.ddddddddddddSaturday at Fallon, NevadaMiguel Marriaga TKO6 Guy Robb Featherweight Records: Marriaga (24-1, 20 KOs); Robb (18-2, 8 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Since a lopsided decision loss in a featherweight world title fight against overweight Nicholas Walters 14 months ago, Marriaga, 29, a big puncher from Colombia, has won four fights in a row, including this nice knockout of Robb, 27, of Sacramento, California, in the main event of Top Ranks Solo Boxeo Tecate card on UniMas.In the sixth round, Marriaga caught Robb with a series of right hands. As each one landed, Robb appeared to be cracking. And then Marriaga landed another big one flush and sent Robb sprawling to the mat. He beat the count but was unsteady and referee Russell Mora waved off the fight at 2 minutes, 6 seconds, ending Robbs 11-fight winning streak. The win kept Marriaga on track to becoming the eventual mandatory challenger for featherweight world titleholder Oscar Valdez (20-0, 18 KOs).Jose Felix Jr. TKO6 Robert Frankel Lightweight Records: Felix Jr. (34-1-1, 26 KOs); Frankel (34-17-7, 7 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Felix, 24, of Mexico, extended his winning streak to seven fights in a row since a decision loss to Bryan Vasquez for an interim junior lightweight belt in April 2012. This latest victory came against 36-year-old Denver journeyman Frankel, whom Felix took apart and beat up before scoring the knockout in a mismatch.Midway through the sixth round, Felix buckled Frankel with a right hand. Later in the round, he landed several unanswered shots, including body punches and right hands that forced him to hold on. Then Felix punched him into the corner and continued to unload until referee Vic Drakulich waved off the fight at 2 minutes, 23 seconds as Frankel sank to one knee. After the fight, Felix called for a world title shot against Englands Terry Flanagan (31-0, 12 KOs).Tuesday at Bethlehem, Pa.Caleb Plant W10 Juan De Angel Middleweight Scores: 100-89 (three times) Records: Plant (14-0, 10 KOs); De Angel (18-5-1, 17 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Plant, a 24-year-old prospect from Nashville, Tennessee, looked good in his first scheduled 10-round bout as he dominated De Angel, 29, of Colombia, en route to a shutout decision. To punctuate his dominance, Plant knocked De Angel down in the fourth round with a left hook in the main event of a Premier Boxing Champions card. Plant fought with maturity, showing patience. He established his range and distance early on and never let the aggressive De Angel, who lost his second fight in a row, get into the fight or land any big shots, which was pretty much his only prayer to win. Instead, De Angel, perhaps feeling Plants good power on the knockdown, spent a lot of the remainder of the fight attempting to tie him up and avoid and exchanges. In the ninth round, an accidental clash of heads opened a cut on Plants head but it certainly was not enough to derail him on his way to the victory.In the co-feature pitting welterweights from Washington, D.C., southpaw David Grayton (15-1, 11 KOs), 29, knocked out 21-year-old Kareem Martin (8-1-1, 3 KOs) in the final round of their eight-round fight. Grayton dropped Marin with a left hand to the body in the eighth round and while he beat the count, Grayton was all over him when the fight resumed. During a flurry of punches, Benjy Esteves Jr. waved off the fight 41 seconds into the round.Also, two-time Olympian Carlos Gongora (6-0, 5 KOs), 27, of Ecuador, knocked out Ronald Mixon (7-1, 6 KOs), 27, of Los Angeles, at 1 minute, 16 seconds of their light heavyweight fight. ' ' '