Youngstown State At South Dakota State: Game Preview
Youngstown State University currently stands at 3-4 overall and 1-3 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference. However, this predominantly young group of Penguins could well be 6-1 and undefeated in the conference. There are about ten total minutes of game time (all in the second half) that have doomed YSU this season. South Dakota State (2-4, 2-2) will host the Penguins for a 3 p.m. kickoff this Saturday.
The two teams seem to be headed in different directions, find their strengths in different halves, and YSU Coach Eric Wolford calls the 2010 Jackrabbits, “the best team I have seen on film this season.” SDSU had a rocky start to the season with four consecutive losses. One of those losses was to Nebraska. Since the 0-4 start the Jackrabbits have racked up victories against Southern Illinois (in Carbondale) by a score of 31-10, and the week before beat Western Illinois 33-29.
South Dakota State holds a 6-5 advantage in the head-to-head matchups against YSU. Last season the teams did battle in Youngstown with the Jackrabbits pulling off the win, 17-3. South Dakota State also lashed the Penguins 40-7 in 2008 at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium in Brookings, SD. The Penguins are 0-3 on the road this season but have not had trouble scoring. Last week in the loss at Western Illinois, Youngstown State tied the school record with 32 first downs and put up more than 500 yards of total offense for the second time this season.
In order for Youngstown State to have a shot at winning this road game, they must stop Kyle Minett (above). Minett entered the 2010 season with 3,069 career rushing yards. Last season he rushed for 1,304 yards and scored 16 TD’s. Sophomore Thomas O’Brien has 12 starts under his belt. South Dakota State is undefeated when O’Brien does not get picked off (5-0). Tyrel Kool has been the favorite target of O’Brien through the air. Expect Minett to get about 30 carries. If Youngstown State’s run defense can shut him down, the Jackrabbits may be forced to pass.
Defensively, Corey Jeske and Derek Domino are the two biggest impact players. Domino is a 6-3, 225 lb. linebacker that gets downhill fast for someone his size. Jeske is a 6-0 strong safety who finished the Western Illinois game with 17 tackles.
Offensively, Youngstown State needs to stick to their gameplan, it has been working all season. In the conference games the Penguins have averaged over 30 points per game but have lost three of them. The rotation of running backs that was three seems to be down to two. Jamaine Cook leads the team in rushing with 781 yards on 133 carries. Adaris Bellamy is coming off of a three touchdown performance. Dominique Barnes needs one catch to become the Youngstown State all-time leader for consecutive games with a catch (31). Teams know Barnes will get the ball sooner or later and when he does, anything can happen.
The achiles heel for YSU has been finishing. It can’t all be put on the defense because the offense has ended the last couple of games failing conversions. However, Rick Kravitz has had some really bad luck the last three weeks. Blitzing and getting burned, sitting back a bit and getting run through, and failing to stop virtually anyone with less than two minutes to go in a game, the Penguins need to treat closing situations with kid gloves. This defense is loaded with talent. Brandian Ross is one of the best to ever play in the defensive backfield and Torrance Nicholson showed last week why he is a co-captain. The rest of the defense has played, well, unpredictably. Consistency will come sooner than later and I expect the defense to really finish strong this season.
Penguin Coach Eric Wolford has reason to remain optimistic. “We had a good week of practice, we are enthusiastic and flying around, even having fun. We sure don’t practice like a 3-4 team and these kids still believe. I think football is fun, you should enjoy being around your kids and at the same time you must be able to push them, and that is what we emphasize. We can still finish third, maybe even second in the conference and we won’t quit.”