Posts Tagged ‘Christian Bryan’

Game Week: Youngstown State At Southern Illinois

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A college football program is a big step up from a high school football team.  Even at the high school level, not too many freshmen play for the varsity team.  In a freshman-packed defense, Youngstown State University is gaining experience, valuable experience, where many of its members are new to college.  Coach Eric Wolford and his staff have recruited tirelessly to bring in some of the most talented athletes this country has to offer.  Wolford will never use the youth movement as an excuse for losing.

Southern Illinois (2-3, 1-2) expected more this season, just like YSU (2-3, 1-2).  The two teams paths will cross Saturday and one team will feel like they have advanced forward at the final whistle, while the other team will continue to search for answers.  The fact that these two teams share the same record is interesting in the sense that YSU can score and has, all season.  Southern Illinois has a tremendous defense.  The Salukis held North Dakota State, a team averaging 38 points per game,  to 60 yards rushing last week in a 9-3 loss.

“They have improved tremendously on defense”, said Coach Wolford of SIU.  “It should be a very aggressive football game that is filled with unique match-ups.  They have a running back, Jewel Hampton, who you can tell lifts weights and runs very hard.  Their quarterback [Kory Faulkner] does a very good job of managing the game.”

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“We’re still upbeat”, said Freshman WR Christian Bryan (above).  “We have had two tough losses in two games we feel we should have won.  In no way, shape, or form, has anyone on this team quit.  When we have somebody down, we need to finish them off, it is like we are missing that sense of urgency.”

Freshman LB Teven Williams also echoed positive sentiments.  “We have the talent to be great, there are just a few little things that need fixed.  We still feel our goal of making the playoffs is attainable.  When we have lost, it’s been on us this season, not anything the other team did.  Against Southern Illinois, we have to control the line of scrimmage and if everybody does their part, we will be fine.”

The Salukis have not lost to YSU in Carbondale since 2001, they have not lost a Homecoming game in nine years, and YSU has not won on the road in the conference under Wolford yet.  Last year, Youngstown State got by Southern Illinois by the score of 31-28 at Stambaugh Stadium.  The dynamic of Shane Montgomery’s offense can make all of those statistics meaningless with a solid performance against Southern Illinois’ powerful defense.   Kurt Hess remains the glue, Jamaine Cook is having an All-American type of year, the line is maturing, and the receiving group has improved light years since Spring. Once this defense matures, beware.

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“Everyone has had adversity in their lives”, said Wolford.  “Someone will get a phone call and get bad news today.  Adversity develops character and toughness and builds a stronger mentality.  I would admit if we were being out-schemed, but we aren’t.  We give these guys a game plan and you have got to line up right and get it done.  I have been on the floor many times, but I always get up.  This team will have it’s day and I wish I could say when, and I can’t say when, but I promise, that day is coming.”

This Saturday’s Youngstown State at Southern Illinois football game will be televised locally on WBCB “The CW”. Kickoff for the contest is slated for 3:05 p.m. Eastern Time/2:05 p.m. Central Time.

Armstrong Cable customers can watch the game on Channel 16 while Time Warner subscribers can see the game on Channel 14.  21 WFMJ and WBCB will also televise the Penguins’ games at UNI on Nov. 5 and at North Dakota State on Nov. 12.

As always, the game will be available on 570 WKBN beginning with the pregame show at 1:30 p.m.

YSU Comeback Falls Short, 35-28, To South Dakota State

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Youngstown State seems to be struggling for answers to this point of their season.  For the second conference game in a row, YSU played a very strong second half on both sides of the ball, but came up short, falling 35-28 to South Dakota State.  The loss marks the fourth time the Jackrabbits have got by the Penguins (2-3 ,1-2) since they joined the conference four years ago.

“We settled down a little bit in the second half.  It is very difficult when you take a lead.  We just haven’t arrived yet and we are going to have to make some changes, put some different guys in spots and do something different.”, said coach Eric Wolford.  “There is plenty of blame to spread around, but there is plenty of football left.  We have had so many losses and I have coached a lot of football, and this was a difficult loss.  Give them credit, they played hard.  They recruit too, they have scholarships too.”

YSU put the first points on the scoreboard when Jamaine Cook tallied for a seven-yard strike capping off a nice eleven play, 75 yard drive which featured some new wrinkles.  Those new wrinkles included using a three-back set with TE David Rogers lined up in the backfield and Adaris Bellamy motioning out of the backfield.

The Penguins lead would be short lived as the Jackrabbits put up two touchdowns by the end of the quarter to hold a 14-7 lead. Tyrel Kool punched in the first score from a yard out.  On their next possession, Dale Moss hauled in a 27-yard pass from Austin Sumner to give the Jackrabbits the seven point advantage.

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In the second quarter, Youngstown State scored when Kurt Hess found Christian Bryan for the first time in the game on a 51-yard completion.  The scoring drive took four plays and covered 75 yards.  South Dakota State managed to put up another touchdown before intermission when Sumner found Brandon Hubert with 16 ticks left on the clock.

Once play resumed, the Penguins came out looking like a different team. Jelani Berassa hauled in a 48-yard pass from Hess to tie the game at 21.  On the ensuing possession, Sumner made a bad read and found the Penguins Sam LB Davion Rogers who returned the pick 27 yards for a score and a 28-21 YSU lead.

In the final quarter, SDSU manufactured an 88 yard scoring drive in 14 plays.  The drive was capped off when Sumner threw his third TD of the day, this one a five-yarder to Aaron Rollin, to tie the game, 28-28.

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The Penguins went to work in the fourth quarter of a tie game.  Hess led the offense on a nice drive in which the Penguins converted a fourth-and-two on SDSU’s 41 to keep the drive going.  The Penguins would settle for a field goal attempt by punter Nick Liste , not kicker David Brown, that was unsuccessful.  The 44-yard try sailed just to the right of the goalpost.

On the very next play, Sumner found Rollin with an out-and-up pump fake that froze Jimmy May.  Rollin caught the ball at about YSU’s 25 and trotted in giving the Jackrabbits a 35-28 lead.

YSU got the ball back with 5:55 left in the game.  The drive started on their own 45 yard line thanks to an excessive celebration penalty on South Dakota State’s touchdown, and the actual kickoff going out of bounds.  Cook rattled off 18 yards on the first play to get down to the SDSU 37.  A holding penalty against YSU’s Chris Elkins backed the Penguins up into a 2nd & 16 situation, and the Penguins would fail to convert the opportunity into points.

The Penguins got the ball back with 2:30 left in the game.  Hess, again, led a poised drive down the field, this one with no timeouts.  YSU got all the way to the Jackrabbits 17-yard line but could not convert a fourth-and-ten, losing the ball on downs.

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Kurt Hess finished the game 18-34 for 243 yards, was picked off twice and had a couple of touchdowns.  Jamaine Cook finished with 107 rushing yards on 18 carries, he also caught four balls for 40 yards.  Teven Williams had 10 tackles, six solo, for the Penguin defense.

Andrew Johnson, another captain, commented on the loss.  “Words can’t explain it.  We started slow and we are a lot more talented than we were last year.  I can’t really explain it.  We go hard and try our best.”  Johnson finished the game with two sacks.

“We had them”, said Cook.  “We got in some third-and-long situations and Kurt had to try to come out and scramble around to try to make plays.  We have to keep things from falling apart.  As a captain, I am committed to doing that.”

For the Jackrabbits, Sumner was 22-35 for 345 yards.  Aaron Rollin finished with 155 yards on 8 catches.  Zach Zenner led the ground attack with 97 yards on 16 carries.

YSU Comeback Bid Falls Just Short In 37-35 Loss To Indiana State

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Youngstown State University fought until the very end, but came up short in a 37-35 loss at Indiana State.  The Penguins overcame an awful start trailing by as many as 21 in the first half but were able to attempt an onside kick down only two with just over a minute left in the game.  Unfortunately, the kick never traveled ten yards and the Penguins offense never got back on the field. Shakir Bell had a huge day for the Sycamores and the hole the Penguins fell into in the first half could not be fixed by the final gun.

Bell had 21 carries for 256 yards, a 12.2 average per carry, and scored four times on runs of 62, 39, 61, and 51 — all in the first half.  The 256 yards recorded by Bell are an Indiana State school record.  Bell wasn’t flawless, despite the record, as he coughed one up in the second quarter.  YSU’s Aronde Stanton scooped up the fumble and raced toward the Penguin end zone to score a defensive touchdown that would have cut the score to 27-21.  Stanton, however, fumbled the ball on the ISU one-yard line and it rolled out of the end zone resulting in a touchback and the Sycamores retaining possession on their own 20.

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Youngstown State (2-2, 1-1) got a very solid performance from Jamaine Cook.  The junior tailback racked up 177 yards rushing and scored a pair of touchdowns for the Penguin offense. Kurt Hess and Jelani Berassa also hooked up for a pair of scores from four yards out.  Berassa finished the game with 44 yards receiving on six grabs.  Christian Bryan continued to play fantastic football for Youngstown State.  Bryan was the Penguins top yardage wideout, finishing with six catches for 72 yards.  Notably, the Penguins were five of five in the red zone, and Indiana State was two-of-two.

The passing game was also good, leading a nice two minute drive in the fourth quarter to bring the Penguins within two points.  Hess performed like a surgeon on the drive and had a couple of key runs, as well as passes, on the scoring march that would result in a touchdown.  Hess finished the game with 224 yards passing on 25 completions in 41 attempts.  He also gained 21 yards on the ground, but threw one interception.

Indiana State got decent production from others than Bell, mostly in the first half.  The efficient Ronnie Fouch completed 11-17 for 189 yards.  His top two targets were Michael Mardis and Alex Jones, who finished the game with 83 and 81 yards, respectively.  The Sycamores could only score three points in the second half as the YSU defense made some good adjustments at halftime to eliminate the big plays the Sycamore offense enjoyed in the opening sessions.

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Nick DeCraker recorded a sack for the Penguins. Josh Garner and Davion Rogers each recorded three unassisted tackles, and Travis Williams had a hand in eight tackles, two solo from his Will linebacker position.  Give the penguins defensive players and coaches credit for really turning things around most of the second half.

Indiana State got a monster effort on defense from Aaron Archie.  All Archie did was sack Hess twice, record seven solo tackles and assist on eleven other stops.

Other Penguins who had some statistics worth mentioning were Jordan Thompson who finished the game with 43 yards on eight carries, scored a touchdown, and caught a couple of passes for seven more yards. Kevin Watts (above) had a couple of catches in the Penguins final scoring drive for 19 yards and also returned three kickoffs for 57 yards.  Nick Liste had six punts for 239 yards (39.8 yards averaged per punt), and kicker David Brown was 5/5 on PAT’s.

Unfortunately, Eric Wolford, who stresses the importance and difficulties of winning on the road, dipped to 0-9 away from Youngstown State.  The win marks the first time that the Sycamores have gotten by the Penguins in Terre Haute after losing their first eleven tries at home.  Be assured that Wolford and staff did not take this loss lightly, and I am sure that the upcoming two weeks of practice will be very hard for the team.

Youngstown State is headed into a bye week but will return home on October 8 to face South Dakota State.

Offense Starts, Defense Finishes In YSU’s 34-27 Win Over Illinois State

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When Eric Wolford brought in the new recruits this past offseason, there were more defensive players than offensive.  Wolford explained in March that he wanted to bring in players to add depth and stability to his defense to finish games.  YSU failed to finish games last season after holding the lead in all eleven contests, ultimately losing their last seven, including a crippling defeat at Illinois State, by a score of 40-38.  Saturday, the defense came up big in the fourth quarter and shut the door on the explosive Redbirds offense en route to a 34-27 Penguins win.

Kurt Hess had a big day for the Penguins, tying a school record for touchdown passes in a game with four.  The offense sputtered a bit in the second half, but the defense did what it could not do last season, closed the door on the opponent at the most crucial juncture of the contest, preserving a victory in the Missouri Valley Conference opener for both teams.

“It was good to get the win and go 1-0 in the conference”, declared Wolford.  “We had our struggles.  We came out and started well on offense, but the most encouraging thing I saw today was the defense stepping up and securing the win.”

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The Penguins took the opening kickoff and got on the board first when Hess found Christian Bryan over the middle for a 25-yard touchdown to put the Penguins ahead 7-0.  Illinois State roared back when veteran signal caller Matt Brown marched the Redbirds into the end zone, hitting Tyrone Walker from twelve yards out.  The ensuing extra point was blocked, and the Penguins thanks to a solid play on special teams, had a 7-6 lead.

YSU would find paydirt again right before the first quarter ended as Hess found Kevin Watts for a ten yard strike.  After the YSU defense stuffed the Redbirds, Hess maneuvered the offense 76 yards in 11 plays, capping off the drive with a one-yard sneak off right guard to put the Penguins in front, 21-6.

Brown would get Illinois State closer when he connected with Matt Younger from five yards (below) to cut the Penguin lead to 20-13.  Not to give ground, YSU engineered another solid scoring drive against the highly touted Redbirds defense.  Hess would this time find Andre Barboza in the corner for a 20-yard strike to put the Penguins comfortably ahead, 28-13 heading to intermission.

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In the second half, Illinois State got on the board to cut the YSU lead to 28-20.  Ashton Leggett plunged in from a yard out with 4:58 left in the third quarter for the Redbirds.

Youngstown State again rose to the challenge when Hess hit Barbosa, this time for a 44-yard connection.  David Brown‘s PAT attempt was blocked, and the Penguins had a solid 34-20 lead.

Early in the fourth quarter, Brown threw his third touchdown, this time a seven-yarder to Marvon Sanders, to cut the lead to 34-27.

The next few possessions were dominated by great defensive play from both teams.  Youngstown State really did a great job down the stretch of stuffing the Redbirds when they had to.  With the offense sputtering, Hess found Barboza for a 35-yard completion on a third-and-eight that would preserve the win for the Penguins.

Hess commented on that crucial pass that let the air out of the Redbirds balloon.  “It was a gutsy call.  We decided to take a shot at it, and it ended up being a good play to finish off the game with.”

Wolford further elaborated on the big pass play that cemented the win.  “They were jamming the box figuring we would run the ball to force them to use their last timeout.  We figured we might as well take a shot and the worst case scenario would be that the clock would stop on an incompletion.  Kurt threw a nice ball and it worked well for us.”

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For the Penguins (2-1, 1-0), Hess finished the game 21-29 for 293 yards and a school record-tying effort of four touchdowns.  He was only sacked one time and the Penguins offensive line did a nice job keeping preseason All-American DT Eric Brunner away.  Cook had 30 carries for 122 yards, and Watts and Christian Bryan (above) both caught five balls for 68 and 64 yards respectively.  Barboza had three catches, two for scores, and finished with 74 yards.

Illinois State (1-2, 0-1) has a good team, they are going to win conference games and this was no pushover.  Brown finished his day 16-26 for 155 yards and 3 TD’s.  Sanders had six catches for 48 yards, and Leggett paced the running backs with 129 yards on 26 carries.

Youngstown State travels to Indiana State next Saturday.  The Penguins opened last season’s conference play with a big win at home over Southern Illinois, but failed to win the rest of the season.  This team can take steps forward with a good road win.

“We have to win road games”, insisted Wolford.  “It is tough to travel for six or seven hours to most of the places we have to go and win.  The goal is to go 1-0 every week and we will celebrate this win until tomorrow when we will focus on Indiana State.  Illinois State is a great team.  They had a top offense coming back and they are a well-coached group of talented recruits.  They have a great university and it is a great place.”

Penguins Make A Statement in Lopsided 77-13 Win Over Valpo

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On Saturday, Youngstown State University broke a lot of things.  The first thing they broke was Valparaiso, racking up a lopsided 77-13 victory.  They also broke school records for the most points scored in a quarter (35), most points in a half (63), and longest punt return (96 yards).  The game was so lopsided that running a continuous clock should have been an option for the second half.  The other thing broken was YSU’s eight-game losing streak.  Amazingly, YSU broke the record for points in a game, with 70, in the third quarter.  It was Lionel vs Fisher Price, Ali vs Cooney, and Mercedes vs Yugo.

Eric Wolford commented on the win.  “We showed a lot of maturity.  Last season after Penn State, there was a letdown.  This season after losing to Michigan State, we showed great maturity with no letdown and played a pretty good football game.  Next week we start conference play and I don’t want to get caught up because we scored 77 points this week.  We will continue to mature as this young team picks up experience each week.”

The Penguins scored on every possession in the first half and held a 63-6 lead at the break.  Marc Kanetsky took over at quarterback in the second quarter.  It was a game that the whole depth chart was used in intervals at some point.

YSU scored 35 points in the first quarter.  Jamaine Cook scored two touchdowns (1, 31) and Jordan Thompson punched in a pair (9, 10).  The other touchdown was an electrifying 96-yard punt return by Josh Lee breaking a 45 year-old school record of 92 yards.

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In the second quarter, the Penguins kept scoring.  Adaris Bellamy, the best-kept secret on the team, had a couple of rushing touchdowns from 34 and 13 yards out. Kurt Hess hit David Rogers for a 16-yard TD.  He also found Andre Barboza from 24 yards out.  The Penguins avearged 11.1 yards per play in the first half and the word dominant would be an understatement.

Bellamy and Cook both cracked the 100-yard mark in the first half.  Cook had 126 yards and Bellamy tacked on 101, both in the first half.  It was the first time two YSU backs had 100 yards each since 2008 when Jabari Scott and Cameron Keys did it.  The Penguins amassed 476 yards in the opening half.  They would finish the game with 657 yards, another new school record.

In the second half, Coach Wolford emptied the cupboard and YSU mounted an opening drive that would result in a Torrian Pace 17-yard run.  Pace was the fourth running back to score a touchdown.  The drive was 14 plays covering 84 yards without a single pass attempt by Kanetsky.  70-6 YSU.  The 70 points set  a school record for most points scored in a game.

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Parnell Taylor scored YSU’s last touchdown to make it 77-6.  The score, a two-yard plunge, was the first in the YSU career of Taylor.  Patrick Angle got some time engineering a 14 play-86 yard drive to round out the scoring for the Penguins.  Valpo punched one in late to close out the scoring at 77-13.

Adaris Bellamy led the way on the ground for the Penguins with 180 yards on 23 carries (7.8 yards per carry).  Afterwards Bellamy talked about the successful effort of the team.  “We came out ready to play just like we did last week against Michigan State, it doesn’t matter who we are playing.  Our goal is to go undefeated every week, break records every week, and get this program back to the way people are used to seeing, this kind of Penguin football.”

Christian Bryan had five grabs for 78 yards to lead the receivers.  Kurt Hess was 12 of 13 for 204 yards, 2 TD’s and no turnovers.  The only incompletion Hess had was a drop.  For Valpo, Eric Hoffman threw 30 passes, completed 14 and had 112 yards passing.  He was sacked three times.  Kevin Becker hauled in three for 38 yards for the Crusaders.  Dale Cook had seven carries for 39 yards for Valpo.

Davion Rogers had some impressive plays, both on defense, and one exceptional effort on special teams.  Rogers ran over a potential blocker in the Valpo punt return wall and then proceeded to floor another would-be blocker two steps later before burying the return man.  You can’t ask for much more than that from a special teams player.  “We [defensive unit] take great pride knowing that we push the offense in practice and make them better each week”, commented Rogers.  ”  It had been 352 days since we won here.  We have some great players and we are going to take many huge steps this year.”

Mercifully, YSU turned the ball over on downs deep in Valpo territory ending their string of eleven straight touchdowns.

Give Wolford a gold star for showing a lot of class and calling off the dogs the entire second half.  Make no mistake about it, YSU could have put up a C-note today.  Wolford and Shane Montgomery did not call for a single pass and kept running the ball to keep the clock moving.

“I talked with their coach [Carlson] after the game”, said Wolford.  “He was very complimentary of our program and I told him that I was impressed that his guys kept playing hard.  They are in a very similar situation that we were in, trying to turn a program around with 48 new guys.”

YSU opens conference play next week at 4 p.m. when Illinois State rolls into town.

** Bottom Photo, courtesy of Ron Stevens.

Youngstown State Drops Opener, 28-6, at #17 Michigan State

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Youngstown State University fell 28-6 at Michigan State on Friday in the season opener for both teams.  The Penguins moved the ball on the Spartans but came up empty on two of the three drives they pieced together in the first half.  Michigan State rode the arm of Kirk Cousins and scored 14 points in each half on their way to the win.

“We do not see this as a moral victory”, said Eric Wolford at the post game press conference.  “I made that real clear to the players in the locker room.  Make no mistake about it, we came here to win.”

Cousins (below) was the story on offense for the Spartans, completing 18 of 22 passes for 222 yards and a touchdown.  He did a great job and completed a couple of passes with very small windows of opportunity.  B. J. Cunningham, the Spartans top receiver finished the game with 130 yards on six catches.  The two fifth year seniors hooked up for the lone aerial score.

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Michigan State got on the board first when Larry Caper rambled in for a six yard score to cap off a nine play, 80-yard drive with 12:04 left in the second quarter.  Youngstown State took the opening kickoff and moved the ball but got stuffed on a fourth-and-one to turn the ball over on Michigan State’s 30.

Youngstown State responded when Kurt Hess found Jelani Berassa with 7:38 in the second quarter for a touchdown to cut the lead to 7-6.  It marked Berassa’s first time into the end zone as a Penguin.  However, the extra point attempt failed as the snap was bad, leaving the Penguins behind, 7-6.

Michigan State wasted little time going 74 yards in four plays before Le’Veon Bell scampered in from three yards out to put the Spartans ahead, 14-6.  The big blow on the drive was a play action pitch and catch from cousins to Cunningham that covered nearly 50 yards.

Cunningham talked about the momentum swings.  “When they [YSU] missed the extra point it brought a lot of momentum to the team.  We went out there and started playing a little faster and a little harder.”

The score stayed at 14-6 until the half.  With 4:52 left in the third quarter, Michigan State struck for another score on the 18-yarder from Cousins to Cunningham.  The Spartans closed out the scoring with 7:09 left in the fourth quarter when Bell punched in another three-yard run for points.  Michigan State only had to march 17 yards for their final score as Hess was picked off.

“We were in it until there was about 8:18 left in the game”, remarked Wolford.  “They converted that turnover, which was a bad decision.”

For the Penguins, Jamaine Cook finished the game with 76 yards rushing on 17 carries.  Jeremy Edwards and John Sasson each finished the game with 11 tackles and Josh Garner chipped in with ten stops.

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Freshman Christian Bryan had a nice debut with six receptions for 45 yards.  Andre Stubbs, another freshman racked up 82 yards on four kickoff returns.

The Penguins open at home Saturday against Valparaiso with the kickoff scheduled for 4 p.m.

*All photos courtesy of Ron Stevens