Game Week: Youngstown State (5-3, 3-2) At Northern Iowa (6-2, 5-1)
Youngstown State will face their toughest test of the Eric Wolford Era this Saturday when they travel to face a very talented Northern Iowa team. The Panthers had a showdown with North Dakota State last week in a matchup of conference unbeatens, but came out on the short end of the stick, 27-19, and may have lost their best weapon on offense in the process. Wolford knows that his team has to put their best effort on the field for four quarters to win a game against a team like Mark Farley‘s Panthers.
Tirrell Rennie (#10, above), as of this writing on Thursday night, is still listed as questionable. I doubt Rennie is playing because when he got hurt at the start of the fourth quarter in last week’s game, he was unable to put any weight on his injured leg. In a game that important, Rennie would limp around and play through pain unless he was too injured to do so. My gut instinct is that Farley is just trying to keep everybody off-balance and guessing on the status of his quarterback, last year’s Missouri Valley Football Conference Player of The Year.
Unfortunately for the Penguins, this is a very good team, showing tremendous balance on both sides of the ball. Senior LJ Fort is second in the nation in tackles and made 15 of them last week. Fort is a good linebacker because of the stunts that Northern Iowa runs. Fort would also be the first to credit players like Ben Boothby, a three-technique down lineman, for keeping blockers off of him and allowing the playmaker to get to the ball. The Panthers defense ranks fourth nationally and gives up an average of less than ten points per game against conference opponents.
Youngstown State is currently ranked second in the nation in offense, averaging about 40 points per game. While the skeptics would argue that blowout wins against Valpairaiso and Saint Francis are the only reason that average is so high, keep in mind that YSU only put up six against Michigan State, and that works against a 40-point average.
Kurt Hess is loaded with weapons and has done a fantastic job of moving the ball around. Jamaine Cook is currently third in rushing yards nationally and he has skipped about five quarters due to decided outcomes. The offensive line knows that the Panthers defense is a handful, but can rise to the challenge.
“It starts with our line”, said Hess, who has been praising the big men all year. “They have to communicate and pick up all of the twists and stunts that make their defense so dangerous. I think they are smart enough to handle the assignments.”
Hess also commented on what this game means to his team. “This is the biggest game for me since I have been here. In order to make the run to the playoffs, I said three weeks ago that we would need six, and we got three of them so far. We must play 60 minutes against Northern Iowa, and I enjoy playing in that kind of loud environment. If we do what we are capable of and play that full 60 minutes, we are believing that we can do something really special.”
The YSU offense facing off against the Northern Iowa defense is a matchup made in heaven. Something has to give, and it will come down to who wants it more. The X-Factor in this contest will be the youthful Penguins defense. Leaders have emerged in the last three weeks and everybody seems to be playing better than the first four weeks of the season. Aronde Stanton has been a beast lately and Teven Williams seems to be emerging as a big-time linebacker.
The past is something that cannot get into the young minds of the YSU players. UNI has defeated the Penguins ten times in a row, the longest active streak in the league. The Panthers lead the all-time series 19-6, including last season’s 34-30 win over the upset-minded Penguins. The last time YSU won at Cedar Falls was in 1999.
I don’t think the Penguins players and coaches care too much about past statistics and records. Their focus is squarely on the 2011 Northern Iowa team that they face Saturday, period. If Rennie is unable to play, it does not guarantee anything for YSU, but it definitely takes a dual-threat all-star out of the mix and enhances the upstart Penguins odds of winning this war.
Kickoff is scheduled for 5 p.m. (EST) and the game will be televised on the CBWB Network.