Posts Tagged ‘Eric Wolford’
YSU Football Profiles: Dominique Barnes, Player of The Year
Favorite Penguin. Not an easy choice with Ross, Blose, Elliott, and Rodemoyer in the category. This was a great bunch of seniors, but one is a future YSU Hall of Famer, one has his name etched in the record books, one scored a touchdown against a 1-A opponent on a bubble screen. Perhaps the biggest reason why Dominique Barnes is the Paneech.com Player of The Year is because he would trade those last three achievements in for a shot at the playoffs and a better ending for his team. Barnes is humble, still somewhat shy, and is a huge-hearted person. Youngstown State will lose a great wide receiver, but more importantly, a great leader, the kind who led by example both on and off of the field.
Paneech: What is it going to feel like when this all ends?
Barnes: It still hasn’t hit me. I have played in every game here since I got here in 2007. It’s probably going to hit me after the game Saturday, it’s going to be emotional. I just hope we can go out with a win. When I got here as a freshman, I was immature and young, not really sure what I was doing.
Paneech: Who was influential to you here and helped you?
Barnes: The old coaching staff taught me how to grow up, how to mature. Playing with Donald Jones for two years taught me a lot, and I still talk to him.
Paneech: What’s next? What will you do after football? You have looked forward to next year since fourth grade knowing for sure there would be a next year, so where can you go from here?
Barnes: Who knows. Hopefully I can get a shot at the next level. I’m here and my mom wants me to graduate, and I really want to graduate from here. I only have a few classes left, not too much longer. I’m pretty sure that me, Brandian [Ross], Andre Elliott, Ely [Ducatel], Deonte Snow, a lot of us came in together and formed solid friendships. It’s going to be tough not playing with those guys anymore. I’m sure we are going to keep in contact in the future. I’m still gonna come and see games, I still have friends who will be back next season. I think next year, we are going to be really good, I’ll be excited.
Paneech: This team was upset about being picked seventh in the preseason polls. The record does not indicate what kind of year YSU had and it has to leave a sour taste to come so close so many times.
Barnes: It hurts, any loss leaves a sour taste in your mouth. Our record could be very different based on four or five plays. We could be 8-2 and getting ready for a playoff game. It really hurts with all of the time that the seniors put in here and this being the end. We came into the season with a new coaching staff and it is what it is, but it will always hurt.
Paneech: What was it like adjusting to a new coach and new staff?
Barnes: I won’t lie, it was hard. They came here in the Spring and we had our differences with the coaching staff. I was so used to Coach Heacock and his staff because that is who brought me here and that is who I grew up with. I think I adjusted well and had a pretty good year.
Paneech: What is your proudest achievement here?
Barnes: Well, Youngstown State is a known school across the country. The fact that I played in every game and when I leave here, people will remember my name, they will remember who Dominique Barnes was. I was fortunate to break a consecutive games reception record and my name is in the top five on a few other lists too. Don’t get me wrong, all of the records and history-making stuff is good, but I would trade it all for winning.
Paneech: This is an active group on Twitter. Are you going to keep Tweeting?
Barnes: When you are winning and everybody loves you, it’s easy to tweet, tweet, tweet. I’ll make sure I go on Twitter when this story goes up so I can re-tweet it to my followers.
Paneech: I thought Coach Wolford showed a lot of class when he said he would make sure that this graduating class would get a ring when the Penguins win a championship.
Barnes: It’s a great honor. I wish we could have earned it ourselves. Once you play at Youngstown State, you are always a Penguin, and thats a great honor. We are all going to thank him for that and I think within a few years that it is going to happen.
Paneech: Reflect on scoring a touchdown against Penn State, what was going through your mind as you were running down the sideline?
Barnes: Don’t get caught, don’t get caught! I seen Coach Wolford on my left as I ran by and I kept thinking about not getting caught. I looked back a few times and thought that if I did get caught how everyone back home would harass me about it, but I made it.
Yes, you did make it. Congratulations on a great career and best wishes for a productive and healthy future Dominique!
One Word Answers
Favorite Cartoon Character: Superman.
Favorite Meal: McChicken, Fries, and a Sweet Tea at McDonald’s.
Worst Class You Took: Accounting.
Best Class You Took: Public Relations, taking it now.
Favorite Halloween Costume As A Kid: Football Player.
Favorite NFL Player of All-Time: Donald Jones.
Other Colleges You Watch: Michigan and Michigan State.
A Coach You Would Love To Play For: (laughs) Whoever is throwing the ball 45 times a game, like Boise State.
Cell Phone Choice: iphone and A T & T.
Favorite ESPN Anchor: Chris Berman.
YSU Tidbits
- The 2010 YSU Football season closes out this Saturday with a home game against Indiana State. The game will honor seniors who played football, marched in the band, or cheered this season.
- South Dakota has accepted an invitation to join the Missouri Valley Football Conference beginning with the 2012-13 academic year. USD received a formal invitation from Conference Commissioner Patty Viverito last Wednesday and accepted on Thursday.
- Youngstown State junior Kelsey Kempton was named First-Team ESPN the Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-District IV, announced by the Academic All-America® Committee. Kempton, who carries a 4.0 grade-point average with a major in exercise science, is the first Youngstown State women’s ssoccer player to be named to the first-team and just the second player in history to earn academic all-district honors.
- Youngstown State freshman Allison Ludwig was named to the Horizon League Women’s Soccer All-Newcomer Team. Ludwig, who missed five league games due to a broken hand, tied a YSU freshman record and ranked fourth in the Horizon League with eight goals in 2010.
More Heartache, 41-39 Loss Stings Penguins
If you analyzed the turnover that first-year coach Eric Wolford had to deal with in his inaugural season, you probably would scratch your head trying to figure out how Youngstown State was even in so many close games. Saturday, the Penguins dropped another heartbreaker, 41-39, to Illinois State. The loss dropped the Penguins to 3-7 overall, and 1-6 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference.
The NCAA standard for scholarships to award for a football program sits at 63. Youngstown State is only using 53 due in part to some of the fallout of a new program. People quit when they do not buy in to something new. Wolford is a hard-nosed coach who wants his team to be on the same page. Some of the returning scholarship players from last season’s Jon Heacock era did not buy in to what Wolford was selling and left seeking greener pastures. The result of this process is a group of talented seniors who are surrounded by youth and inexperience.
The best example would be the defensive secondary. The loss of Andre Elliott has crippled the Penguins defense, period. One guy does not make a team, but his senior counterpart, Brandian Ross, just can’t do everything else while the new guys learn as fast as they can. Coach Ron Stoops recently discussed the blowing of late leads and how inexperience can contribute to such patterns. We discussed Donald D’Alesio, the talented Cardinal Mooney recruit who earned playing time. “Donald is good and has the talent, but he hasn’t even had a year to adapt to the speed difference at this level, has not had a full year of weight training which will help him down the road.” D’Alesio, Will Shaw, and Randy Louis tried to do as much as they could to keep opposing teams out of the end zones late in games. Since the loss of Elliott, the Penguins are winless.
My praise goes to Defensive Coordinator Rick Kravitz, as well as Stoops, for working with what they have to come so close. In Saturday’s loss, this defense actually kept the Penguins in the game allowing the offense to score a couple of times before yielding the big play at the end of the game again. In this situation, Kravitz has tried many different things. He has blitzed and gotten burned, he has sat in a prevent, like he did yesterday setting up a pair of defenders 25 yards off of the ball, he has disguised blitz and dropped back into coverage, he has disguised coverage only and blitzed… bottom line is Kravitz is relying on mostly inexperienced players to make big plays at a new level, and it hasn’t worked yet. He has no alternative, and I am sure it drives him crazy, as much as it baffles Wolford.
“We got closer, there was only point seven seconds left this time. Usually we let it get away with 53 seconds or so”, commented Wolford after the game.
The critics are running their mouths about how the coaches are losing games. Coaches do not lose games, despite Wolford always taking the heat with every loss to keep the negativity off of his players. You can put guys in position to make plays all day long. If no one makes a play or steps up in these crucial situations, it can’t be pinned on the coaches. The players are giving their all, some have just never been in these situations at a higher level. It is unfortunate, especially for the seniors. In yet another classy gesture, Wolford has exclaimed then when this team wins a championship (and they will within the next three years), he will make sure that this year’s senior class receives rings for their contributions into the new program.
This coming Saturday marks the end for Dominique Barnes, Brandian Ross, Stephen Blose, Eric Rodemoyer, Andre Elliott, Nick Gooden, Bob Gratz, Erik Johnson, Kyle Banna, Jaimie Frasure, Rob Fernbeck, Luke Matelan, Torrance Nicholson, Brad Miller, Bobby Coates, Kyle Brown, Chris Gammon, and Tyler Figueroa. This senior class did all they could to win, the situation with the turnover in roster hampered their chances.
Plan on showing up to honor these seniors Saturday as they take the field one last time as Youngstown State Penguins, they are a great bunch of young men who stuck things out when they doubted where the program was headed and came out better people for it.
Kickoff against Indiana State is at 1 p.m. and the seniors will be honored.
Penguins Drop Another Nailbiter, 34-30, To Northern Iowa
The point was made earlier on this very website that YSU had lost their last nine games against Northern Iowa. The argumentative point was also made that Coach Eric Wolford had never lost to the Panthers. Something had to give and a streak would be broken. Unfortunately for YSU, Wolford did end up losing to Northern Iowa, 34-30, on Homecoming Saturday.
Youngstown State got on the board to take the lead with 11:18 to go in the opening period when Kurt Hess found seldom used Andre Barboza for a 33-yard touchdown. The drive marked what had now become a Penguin stereotype of jumping out to early leads and yielding late touchdowns.
Northern Iowa scored on the last play of the first quarter. Billy Hallgren kicked a 20-yard field goal. The Panthers appeared to have scored a touchdown, but it was nullified by a penalty. Hallgren’s kick made the score 7-3.
With 14:14 left in the first half, Dominique Barnes did his thing, making yet another big play for Youngstown State. Hess hit Barnes with a nice pass and Barnes ran about 40 yards down the YSU sideline for a 71-yard TD to increase the Penguins lead to 14-3.
Schuylar Oordt shrunk the YSU lead to 14-10 when he caught a 39-yard touchdown pass for the Panthers. Tirrell Rennie, known more for his running than passing at QB, threw a nice ball to Oordt who ran a post and didn’t have a Penguin very close to him.
The Penguins threatened again as time was running out in the first half. Will Shaw picked off a Rennie pass two yards deep in his own end zone and took off the other way. Shaw made it all the way to the Northern Iowa ten. After a couple of plays, the Penguins lined up for a third down FG attempt. Marc Kanetsky, the holder for Stephen Blose, picked the ball up and barely missed a tight end on the fake. With one second left in the half, Blose connected from 27 to give the Penguins a 17-10 lead.
The second half was a true battle of field position and long drives. Northern Iowa tied the game with 5:32 left in the third quarter. Rennie showed why he is such a threat as a runner for most of the drive. The score came on Rennie’s 29-yard run to tie the game at 17-17.
The Panthers nabbed the lead with 14:20 left in the game when Hallgren booted a 32-yard field goal. Northern Iowa capped off a nine play, 53 yard drive with the field goal to hold their first lead of the afternoon.
Youngstown State would respond when they pieced together a nice drive. With 8:39 left in the game, Adaris Bellamy scored a touchdown on a two-yard run. The drive that gave the Penguins a 23-20 lead took 13 plays and covered 81 yards. Stephen Blose missed the extra point to the right to keep the Panthers just a field goal behind.
The Panthers took the lead back when Jarred Herring scored on an 11-yard run. The touchdown capped off a seven play, 58 yard drive and made the score 27-23 in favor of visiting Northern Iowa.
With 2:27 left in the game, Jamaine Cook broke off a 39-yard run for a touchdown. With the run, Cook became the third person to gain 100 plus yards against a tough Panther defense. The run also gave Cook 1,000 yards for his career so far as a Penguin.
Carlos Anderson took the kickoff 58 yards to the Penguin 19 yard line. On the very next play, Rennie scored on a 19-yard run with 2:08 left to play and the trend of Youngstown State blowing late leads looked to be in the process of happening yet again. The quick turn of events made the score 34-30 in favor of the Panthers.
Youngstown State (3-6, 1-5) had a chance, but they ran out of downs and the end result was a 34-30 win for Northern Iowa in another heartbreaking loss. Kurt Hess, after the game, talked about the mindset of what happens to the Penguins through a game. “We were confident in our defense stopping them. We also thought that if they scored that we could answer. We will live with it for 24 hours, come Monday we need to prepare to play another game and put this behind us.”
Coach Wolford talked about the loss and maybe playing to the level of the competition being a good and a bad thing. “We have guys who continue to massage this thing. We have to contain the football, it’s a concept of knowing where the help is. Make sure the ball doesn’t get outside you. I can handle getting beat, but cant handle giving games away. I am confident that we are very close. I’m not going to make excuses for where we are at, but I will tell you that we are close.”
Hess finished the game 14-22 for 218 yards. Barnes caught 4 balls for 89 yards, and Cook had 26 rushes for 127 yards and a touchdown. Cook also caught three passes for 26 yards.
Northern Iowa (5-3, 4-1) was led by Rennie who was 8-16 for 152 yards and 28 carries for 194 yards on the ground. He had two rushing touchdowns and a passing touchdown for the Panthers.
#19 Northern Iowa At Youngstown State: Game Preview
Youngstown State University (3-5, 1-4) is not going to throw away the rest of their season to focus on the future. This team has been in transition since Eric Wolford was hired. Guys have quit, transferred in, transferred out, redshirted, adapted, walked on, and have all played a part in the rebirth of football at Youngstown State. The seniors who had to accept changes are starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel. This team is so much better than the record indicates.
Northern Iowa comes to town ranked 19th with only one loss in league play, and in sole possession of first place. The Panthers are 4-3 overall and have remained a consistent winner for years. In fact, Northern Iowa vs Youngstown State has had a consistent theme for the past nine seasons, a Panther win in every contest since 2000. Throw in the fact that YSU has lost four straight Homecoming games, and the writing should be on the wall.
Here are some things to consider before throwing this game into the loss column for the Penguins. Eric Wolford has never lost to Northern Iowa or Mark Farley. Three of the nine consecutive losses have been by two points or less. The last time they met in Youngstown, a blocked extra point late in the game preserved a 21-20 win. Last season, the Panthers pretty much had their way and handed the Penguins a 28-7 setback.
Youngstown State’s Defense needs to put forth a great effort to have a shot at a win this week. Losing Andre Elliott has really hurt a secondary not expected to have problems this season. Brandian Ross has been bouncing everywhere but teams have learned over the past few weeks to keep it away from him and pick on the young guys. Will Shaw, Randy Louis, and Donald D’Alesio are contributing but also getting picked on at crucial spots of games. Louis is now out indefinitely with shoulder problems.
Secondary Coach Ron Stoops talked about the defensive lapses. “Andre Elliott is hurt and we went into the first game with Nick [Gooden] and Shaw rotating. Really, its not been the personnel, there is a pass rush, linebackers, underneath coverage and all kind of factors to consider. We are not getting beat deep, more underneath and not tackling well as a defense. Bottom line is that we do have some youth in the secondary and inexperience can also be a part of it.”
Offensively, the Penguins are scoring. Senior Dominique Barnes set a record for catching a pass in 31 consecutive games and has more personal awards within reach. Barnes is a team guy and personal records remain secondary. The young “quad of doom” (Kurt Hess, Adaris Bellamy, Jamaine Cook, and Jordan Thompson) have produced as a group all year. Not at all what you would expect from a sophomore and three freshmen. Eric Rodemoyer has also been a force on the line.
Northern Iowa could care less about it being the 70th year of YSU Football, the WATTS, or Homecoming. Their mission is to keep winning to make the postseason playoffs again. The Panthers are led by QB Tirrell Rennie who likes to run. Rennie had four rushing touchdowns last weekend against Illinois State and leads his team with 754 yards on 129 carries. The Panthers also boast a very strong run defense that has only given up 100 yards twice this season. They are a methodical and well-coached team.
Homecoming Festivities incude a pre-game parade to start jus before 11 a.m. and proceed to the stadium. The court will be announced at halftime and a new king and queen will be crowned. Kickoff for the game is 1 p.m. and the radio telecast can be heard on AM-570. The game will also be shown on myTV at 10 p.m.
South Dakota State Sends Youngstown State Packing On Hobo Day, 30-20
Youngstown State (3-5, 1-4) was looking to finish strong. Having held second half leads in six of seven games this season, the kryptonite has been finishing. A big crowd was on hand in Brookings, SD as the South Dakota State Jackrabbits held their annual Hobo Day. Finishing would not be an issue because the Penguin Defense had no way to stop both Kyle Minett and Thomas O’Brien and YSU never had a lead in the second half and fell 30-20.
Kyle Minett wasted little time establishing the game plan the Jacks would want to follow. South Dakota State took the opening kickoff and drove 68 yards in seven plays to take a 7-0 lead. On the drive, Minett had four carries for 28 yards, and all the rest of the yardage, except for six, was Minett receiving yards from Thomas O’Brien.
Youngstown State responded with their first offensive possession as Stephen Blose knocked in a 34-yard FG to make it 7-3. On third down, deep in SDSU territory, an apparent pass interference call was never flagged, keeping the Missouri Valley Football Conference’s wishy-washy refs as an additional obstacle the Penguins must overcome to win.
Dominique Barnes took a step into the YSU all-time greats list when he caught a pass in his 31st consecutive game. Barnes would also cap a drive that allowed YSU to nab the lead momentarily. Kurt Hess found Barnes for a 33-yard strike. Oddly enough, the drive Barnes establishes his record, Blose misses his first extra point attempt after converting 55 in a row. With 1:41 left in the first quarter, it was YSU 9-7.
South Dakota State had been struggling with field goals. Peter Reifenrath was called upon to attempt a chip shot of 25 yards. Reifenrath missed wide right and the Jacks were now 2/9 on FG’s this season. Jamaine Cook fumbled finishing a hard run and Reifenrath got another shot, this time from 43 yards away. He nailed the field goal to give SDSU a 10-9 lead with 4:59 left in the half. On the drive, Minett was absent and believed to be banged up.
The Jackrabbits got a 53-yard hookup from O’Brien to Brandon Hubert with the first half time winding down to set up a first-and-goal on the YSU nine. Colin Cochart hauled in an O’Brien heave on the next play to give the Jacks a 17-9 lead at the half.
At the half, Penguins Coach Eric Wolford commented on being down after two quarters. “As sloppy of a half that we had, we are only down 17-9. We have to quit shooting ourselves in the foot, but we will be ok. I expect us to have a real good second half.”
The two teams exchanged third quarter field goals with YSU’s Blose connecting from 19 and SDSU’s Riefenrath nailing a 42-yarder to make the score 20-12 in favor of the Jackrabbits.
Youngstown State ran a fake punt toward the end of the third quarter. YSU Punter, Nick Liste, ran 12 yards to pick up a big YSU first down as Louie Matsakis digs into the special teams grab bag. The Penguins ended up punting for real three plays later as they failed to get any deeper into Jackrabbit territory. When the Jacks got the ball back, Minett lined up in a Wildcat formation and took the snap 42 yards to put SDSU inside YSU’s 10-yard line at the end of the third quarter. After the play, Minett again exited the game and was attended to by trainers for an apparent shoulder problem. Minett had 19 carries for 164 yards to this point, the first back the Penguins have faced this season to gain more than 100 yards on the ground.
Reifenrath again connected to push the lead to 23-12, this field goal coming from 25 yards out at the 14:56 mark of the final quarter. When YSU punted, Minett again came out in the Wildcat to continue giving the YSU Defense fits. On a third-and nineteen the Penguins blew a coverage and O’Brien threw a slant to Aaron Rollin to the middle of the field where there was nobody within ten yards. With the extra point, the Jackrabbits took a 30-12 lead on the 41-yard strike.
Down 18 with about nine minutes left in the game, YSU went into hurry-up mode. Ely Ducatel hauled in a Hess pass for a 15-yard YSU TD to pull the Penguins to 30-18. Hess snuck in for a successful two-point conversion to cut the lead to ten with 5:34 remaining in the game.
After the game, Wolford made no excuses. “We’re not ready to win. We don’t execute things. We signal things in and our guys turn their heads before they get the whole signal. We need to keep working to get better, it’s hard to say something positive. They like to eat and lift weights like Youngstown State used to, there is no candy coating it, they kicked our ass.”
Jamaine Cook led the penguin rushing attack with 18 carries for 78 yards. Kurt Hess finished 26-46 passing for 263 yards, and Dominique Barnes caught ten balls for 110 yards and a TD. Ely Ducatel played a bigger role also scoring a touchdown and catching five passes for 70 yards in his best game. John Sasson and Donald D’Alesio both finished the game with ten tackles.
South Dakota State was paced by Kyle Minett. Minett ended the game with 236 all-purpose yards (185 rushing, 51 receiving). Thomas O’Brien was 14-25 for 283 yards.
YSU returns to Stambaugh Stadium for Homecoming next week against Northern Iowa, a team they have lost nine in a row against. Call the YSU ticket offices and grab a seat for all of the festivities Homecoming Week has to offer!
YSU Football Profiles: Jamaine Cook
Jamaine Cook is probably the quietest and most humble YSU Football Player I have ever interviewed. He doesn’t like to talk about himself too much, is quick to praise members of his team, and takes the politically correct answer in the shortest form that he can present it. The introverted running back speaks loudly with the ball in his hands. Through seven games, Cook leads the Penguins rushing game with 781 yards on 133 carries. He will probably top the 1,000 yard mark for his career at YSU this weekend, and he is just a sophomore.
Paneech: What is the mindset of this team following three close heartbreaking losses?
Cook: We have to get a win this week. We have goals and if we want to maintain our goals and reach them we have to win this game.
Paneech: Your coaches have chosen to employ a rotation to keep fresh legs on the field. When you are feeling it, is it tough to come out of the game? What is your favorite play?
Cook: I love the rotation and I think it helps us a lot. It keeps all of the backs fresh and I don’t have a problem sharing the reps. It is a good way to spread the love. My favorite play is 28 or 29 outside zone. It is a running play to the outside.
Paneech: To many, it is amazing that this team only uses 53 of 63 scholarships and have so many freshman and sophomores involved in the grand scheme of things.
Cook: We are optimistic about the future, but right now we are way more worried about finishing this year off strong. We can worry about next year when the time comes. At this point we are still keeping our hopes alive for making the playoffs.
Paneech: You come from Cleveland, and a big family. How many siblings do you have?
Cook: I have four sisters and two brothers. I have a sister that is 21, then me, then a brother who is 17, twin sisters that are 13, another sister who is 11, and a little brother who is four. My oldest sister is in college working to become a nurse, so the twins are obviously looking up and saying, yeah, that’s my brother playing football (laughs).
Paneech: Since you are from Cleveland, are you a Browns and Cavs fan?
Cook: Yes, I am a Browns fan, and I hate the Steelers. I don’t know why the Browns can’t ever put it all together, but I keep my faith in them and just hope that they can get a win from week-to-week. As far as the Cavs go, when Miami comes to Cleveland, I want to see the Cavs shut down LeBron because he left. He should not have left, so he deserves a loss when he comes here.
Paneech: Who is the NFL running back that you want to copy both on and off the field?
Cook: There is really no one right now, but I can say that Walter Payton is my favorite running back. He ran with an unbelievable amount of heart and passion, that is the way I want to run every time I am on the field.
One Word Answers
Favorite Soft Drink: Gatorade.
Favorite Fast Food: Burger King! Double Stacker, Two Rodeo Burgers and a Medium Fry.
Favorite TV Show: ESPN Sportscenter.
Favorite Video Game: Madden 2010.
Favorite Pro Wrestler: Brock Lesnar.
What’s Easier, The Dentist or The Doctor? : The Doctor.
How Many Times Do You Shave In A Month? Two to Three times to look up to par.
Best Movie Ever Made? 300.
Desperate Housewives or Dancing With The Stars? Dancing With The Stars.
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.”
YSU Football Profiles: Kurt Hess
Kurt Hess is one poised young man. As Hess approached me to do this interview, he rubbed the stitches under his chin and looked at his fingers for traces of blood. The finger he used to check was on his right hand because most of his left hand was bandaged up too, and the illusion of blood on the bandaged hand could come from either cut, leaving him confused as to where he actually may have been bleeding from. It is unrehearsed, rational thinking that sometimes makes people special. Coach Wolford has said on a couple of different occasions this season that adversity is the true test of a player. Those who bounce back from it are the strongest. This is a pretty strong redshirt freshman.
Paneech: Tell the infamous story about quarterback camp in Toledo a few years back.
Hess: I went to a camp at Toledo University for quarterbacks. I was going into my sophomore year of high school and was just hoping to learn more so I could get some playing time that year. Toledo was showing off this marquee quarterback at the camp. His name was Brandon Summers. One of the people I got to meet at the camp was Marc Kanetsky, who was from the Youngstown area and we got to be friends through camp. Our fathers talked and ironically, he and I are both here and Brandon Summers transferred here from Toledo and played quarterback here last year. (How is that for a great “Small World” story?)
Paneech: The season has been somewhat of a rollercoaster ride, how much pressure is on you?
Hess: We are still confident as a team. There has been absolutely no finger pointing or blaming anyone, it is a testament to just how strong of a group we are. It is really like a big family, we all care greatly for one another. I can only keep trying to improve and do things that this team needs me to do to win moving forward.
Paneech: How are you adapting to Youngstown?
Hess: Well, I grew up in Dayton and it is very similar to Youngstown, they are both cities that work very hard. It seems like Youngstown gets a little bit more snow, I remember last year after I was here on a visit, Youngstown got a couple of feet, it was suprisingly different than Dayton.
Paneech: The general football philosophy is that a team has to be able to run before they can pass. If an opponent senses you are going to run and put eight men in the box, what do you think of?
Hess: (laughs) I pretty much salivate. I get excited to know that a team is going to try to cover the talented wide receivers that we have in man.
Paneech: I watch Coach Montgomery and Marc Kanetsky signal stuff into you. I get confused. However, can the other teams catch on by picking off our signs?
Hess: We don’t keep the signs the same, they change frequently. Everybody is looking for a part of what is being flashed in.
Paneech: Who is the best NFL Quarterback and why?
Hess: Most people would probably say Peyton Manning or Drew Brees, and it is tough to argue with that. Personally, I think Carson Palmer is the best quarterback in the NFL even though he is struggling a bit this season, he has a gun and is really smart about what he does with the ball. I grew up a Bengals fan, so that might affect my choice a little.
Paneech: What are the best and the worst parts of YSU so far?
Hess: The college is outstanding. This is a great place to go to school and the people here are great too. The town is really into their football and the people make it a very family oriented environment. So far, there isn’t anything that I don’t like about Youngstown.
One Word Answers
Favorite Color: Blue.
Worst Habit: Biting My Nails.
Dancing With The Stars or Desperate Housewives? Desperate Housewives.
Favorite Sport Other Than FB: Basketball, NBA and NCAA both.
Best Video Game Ever: Sonic The Hedgehog on Sega Genesis.
Favorite Band: Journey. (Note: Hess was not born when Infinity was released.)
YSU Loses Third Consecutive Game On Late TD, 40-38, to Western Illinois
Youngstown State University headed off for Macomb winless on the road (0-2) this season. Western Illinois entered Saturday perfect at home and statistically smashing any team that came near Hanson Field. In the end, nothing changed. YSU still could not win on the road, Western Illinois still was undefeated at home, and YSU still couldn’t hold a lead with less than two minutes left, losing this one, 40-38.
Youngstown State got on the scoreboard first when Stephen Blose booted a 35-yard field goal. The drive ate up 65 yards and took up 3:29.
Western Illinois roared back when Matt Barr orchestrated a perfect drive leading the Leathernecks down the field and hooking up with Terriun Crump for a 22-yard touchdown. The Leathernecks only needed 1:23 to go 74 yards and to claim the lead at 7-3.
Not to be outdone, Kurt Hess moved the Penguins right back into the end zone to allow YSU to reclaim the lead at 14-10. Hess and the offense enjoyed being in Leatherneck territory most of the first half. The great field position on this particular drive can be credited to the Penguin defense. After going for a touchdown inside Western Illinois’ 2-yard line unsuccessfully, the Penguin defense got stingy and forced WIU to punt after running three plays, setting up Hess and the offense in great shape.
Western again reclaimed the lead when Barr found one of his favorite targets, Lito Senatus, on a second-and-eight for a 21-yard touchdown. The dual-threat capabilities of Barr shined through on the drive as he both passed and ran. With 12:07 left in the first half, Western Illinois held a 14-10 lead.
Youngstown State would score the next 14 points on a pair of Adaris Bellamy runs (top photo, courtesy Ron Stevens and YSUSports.com). With 7:24 left in the half, Bellamy plunged in from one yard out giving the Penguins a 17-14 lead. Bellamy again scored with 2:16 remaining in the half, this time from three yards away to increase the YSU lead to 24-14. YSU’s defense held off the Leathernecks and the time elapsed ending the first half with Youngstown State ahead, 24-14.
In the second half, Western Illinois put together their own 14 unanswered point run to reclaim the lead. In the third quarter, Western Illinois exposed the YSU defense, much like the last two opponents. With 11:23 left in the third quarter, Barr snuck in from three yards out to make it 24-21. A few minutes later at the 3:30 mark, Barr again plunged in to give WIU their first lead of the second half, this time from five yards away.
YSU found a way, again to reclaim the lead. Bellamy scored his third touchdown of the game, this one a two-yard squeaker. Blose’s extra-point attempt was true and YSU had a 31-28 lead after three quarters.
In the fourth quarter, Caulton Ray gave the Leathernecks the lead back when he scooted into the end zone for a 10-yard touchdown. Charlie Jouett missed the extra point, so Western held a 34-31 lead.
YSU reclaimed the lead with a solid drive aided by a helmet-to-helmet hit on Kurt Hess to keep the drive going. With 5:27 left in the game, Jamaine Cook sprinted into the end zone to put the Penguins ahead 38-34.
In the nailbiter, Western Illinois went 80 yards in no time at all to take the lead. Jouett missed his second consecutive extra point to make it 40-38 in favor of the Leathernecks. Barr found Senatus again, this time from 17 yards out to put YSU in another disastrous predicament of blowing a lead with less than two minutes to go in a game.
YSU got the ball back with a little less than a minute to go. Hess got sacked and was lucky to get the ball back. On 4th and 2 yards to go, the Penguins failed to convert an out pattern, Hess threw a great pass, but it was dropped. WIU took over on downs and ran the clock out. The Penguins lose their third in a row, third consecutive on the road, and are still trying to learn how to win.
Wolford commented on the loss and not being able to hold a lead. “I don’t know what to say. I really don’t know what to say.” The poor officiating continued this week. On the last WIU scoring play, a flag was thrown but later picked up. Wolford was asked about the conversation he had with the ref about the disregarded foul. “We got homered.”
To reflect back to the Jim Tressel glory days at YSU, the Penguins were not blowing anyone out, they were winning games in the last couple of minutes. That is what made those teams so special, they could make the plays to win. This team is soooo special, the record would not do the talent any justice. Big tip of the cap to Torrance Nicholson who played like a man possessed tonight. Nicholson was everywhere, all game long.