Posts Tagged ‘Kurt Hess’

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

IMG_2505

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.

IMG_2509

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.

IMG_8893

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.

Game Week: Valparaiso vs Youngstown State

IMG_2172

Youngstown State (0-1) welcomes Valparaiso (0-1) to The Ice Castle for its home opener Saturday.  Kickoff for the game is set for 4 p.m. and the Penguins have to know that, going in,  this is a total reversal of last weeks visit to East Lansing, Michigan to face the #17 ranked Spartans of Michigan State.  Valparaiso will visit the Penguins as the team that nobody will pick to win and YSU has to prove they are the confident team that easily rolls through the opponent when expected to.

“Monday, after the loss, we were a little bit down at practice and that was a good thing”, remarked YSU head coach Eric Wolford.  “Last year, we played ok for 14 minutes, but had pep in our step the following Monday because the expectations were lower.  We feel like we let one get away and that was a good sign at practice.”

Valparaiso throws the ball.  In a 49-35 loss to Franklin last week, the Crusaders chucked it up 42 times and had 394 yards through the air en route to their best offensive output since 2008.  The bad news for Valpo was that Franklin amassed 669 total yards.  Valparaiso held a 28-14 lead in that game before giving up 35 of the last 42 points scored.

Wolford went on to say, “We are going to shine the car up the rest of the week and take it for a drive on Saturday.”

IMG_2492

Last week’s Defensive Player of The Game for YSU, Jeremey Edwards, expressed how important it is to stay focused this week. “There were some things we did wrong last week and we should have won that game.  I made two mistakes that cost us and take responsibility for them.  We are fixing those things and want to come out strong this week.  I am very confident and always try to be number one, this team is striving to be number one.  It was a very intense week at practice and everyone was very focused.”

Valparaiso, members of the Pioneer League, has never faced Youngstown State on a football field before.  They will be playing with nothing to lose besides a 21-game winless streak.  Last season, Valpo actually lost a game 86-7 to Jacksonville.  Second-year coach, Dale Carlson, is in his 23rd season and holds an overall record of 110-115-3, but is 0-12 with the Crusaders job.

Look for the offense to get on track this week.  Expect big days from Kurt Hess, any combination of receivers and Jamaine Cook and Jordan Thompson, a couple of running backs, to grab a ‘c-note’ each.  If YSU wins by less than 30, I feel it would be a disappointment, nothing against Valpo, it’s just the Penguins are oozing with that much talent this season.

“We’re not there yet.  We still have a lot of room for improvement and some people think we are getting closer.  This group is very talented and has a chance to win, I can’t guarantee instant success, but I think the future looks very bright because of the combination we have here of a youth movement and upperclassmen leadership”, said Wolford.

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

IMG_9689

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.

IMG_9271

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.

IMG_9445

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

Game Week: Youngstown State at Michigan State

IMG_2409

Camp is over, school is in session, and football is in the air.  Youngstown State will start the 2011 season on the road at East Lansing to face off against the #17 ranked Michigan State Spartans.  The game is set for a 7:30 p.m. kickoff and will be televised on the Big-10 Network.  Friday’s contest will mark the first-ever meeting between the two teams.

Michigan State knows what it is like to be on National Television with this game extending that streak to 103 consecutive games dating back to 2002.  Youngstown State, on the other hand got some exposure in recent years with games against Penn State, Pitt, and Ohio State.  The Spartans are 5-4 at home in prime-time TV appearances.

“We will not just be satisfied if we score a touchdown”, exclaimed YSU Coach Eric Wolford.  “We cleared that hurdle last season and I am very confident in this football team.  This is a new season, last year does not matter anymore.  Today was the first day of classes and usually that means a bad practice takes place.  I was happy to say that this was a very good practice and we are very focused on what we need to do for the Michigan State game.”

“It’s okay to be excited, but we are keeping our focus on what we have to do Friday”, remarked YSU Senior Captain, John Sasson.  “Our goal is to win this game, our goal is to win every game and we have to do that one week at a time.  It is a very long season and games will be focused on one at a time.”

IMG_2191

For Youngstown State to have any shot at an upset, they have to control the clock, move the sticks and keep the ball away from the Spartans.  Sophomore QB Kurt Hess and RB Jamaine Cook, both recently named co-captains, lead a very experienced and talented Youngstown State backfield.  The Penguins averaged over 400 yards per game on offense in 2010 and have the backfield returning.

Hess (above) doesn’t look toward the Michigan State game feeling any pressure as a newly named captain, the first sophomore in YSU history to be donned with such an honorable title.  “I am trying to have fun.  I don’t see this as pressure as much as I do responsibility.  The responsibility is every day and you can’t take plays off at practice, being a leader means you are accountable.”

Still in question is the passing game.  With the loss of Dominique Barnes and a slew of new faces in camp, the air game is the biggest question mark for the Penguins going into 2011.  Michigan State is not a team that will be easy to tear apart in third-and-long situations with Senior FS Trenton Robinson, a 2010 All-Conference Pick,  roaming the middle, and a solid pass rush featuring DT Jerel Worthy.

“I think we are going to play a good game and stayed focused.  We want to stay grounded and fight until it is over and we are ready to play this game.  We have a lot of bad taste in our mouth from last season and I know we are hungry”, added Hess.

Offensively, the Spartans feature one of the best quarterbacks in the Big-10, Kirk Cousins.  Cousins is like a right-handed Steve Young who has good mobility and arm strength and makes very precise decisions.  Edwin Baker will receive the majority of the carries for Michigan State and earned post-season Big-10 honors last year.  The Penguins, who will look much better on defense this season will have their hands full with a well-balanced offense.

On a sad note, prayers are with Spartan Coach Mark Dantonio whose father passed away Sunday.  Dantonio, from Zanesville, Ohio, will hold his press conference on Tuesday and leave to attend the services.  He is expected to be back for the opener on Friday.

With a nation of football-starved fanatics, the Penguins have vowed to give it their best shot on Friday.  Michigan State has a lofty goal of winning the Big-10 Championship outright this season.  Let the games begin!

Youngstown State Football Names Captains

IMG_7831

Youngstown State Head Football Coach Eric Wolford announced to the Penguins on Saturday morning that senior linebacker John Sasson (Pittsburgh, Pa.), senior defensive tackle Andrew Johnson (Detroit, Mich.), junior tailback Jamaine Cook (Cleveland, Ohio) and sophomore quarterback Kurt Hess (Dayton, Ohio) have been selected as team captains for the 2011 season.

Hess is believed to be the first sophomore in school history to be named captain. He is the first quarterback to be tabbed a captain since Tom Zetts in 2007. Last year as a redshirt freshman Hess started all 11 games at quarterback.

Cook, who is on the preseason Watch List for the Walter Payton Award, rushed for 1,276 yards as a sophomore and was named second-team All-Missouri Valley Football Confernece last year.

Sasson is coming off a career-high 89 tackles from the 2010 campaign. Entering last year he had a total of 90 career tackles before doubling his career output last season.

Johnson, who transfered from Bowling Green prior to last season, had a strong camp and should be ready for a breakout season on the defensive line. He started last year on a good note before being slowed by an ankle injury the remainder of the season.

YSU is set to practice on Sunday morning at Stambaugh Stadium. Monday brings the first day of classes and the first evening practice of the season. The Guins are scheduled to practice beginning at 7 p.m. that night.

YSU opens the season on Friday, Sept. 2 at Michigan State. The contest will be televised on the Big Ten Network and carried on 570 WKBN AM.

Season and Individual Game Tickets for the 2011 season are now on sale through the YSU Athletic Ticket Office. For ticket information contact the YSU Athletic Ticket Office at (330) 941-1978.

Defense Dominates In First YSU Scrimmage

IMG_2184

Coach Eric Wolford and his staff are going to have to really take a deep look at a few things as a result of the first scrimmage held Saturday morning.  Wolford said he will have a depth chart in place on Monday and that he has a good idea of who his 60 top guys are.  The cog that got jammed was the offense on Saturday.

This past offseason, Wolford said he was recruiting heavier on the defensive side of the ball for depth and guys who have the ability to finish a game.  Last season, YSU had consecutive weeks of nightmares, losing games that they were winning with less than two minutes remaining.  It wasn’t just a couple of times either, but rather almost every week in the last seven games.

IMG_2216

The most obvious improvement to the 2011 version of Wolford’s tenure is the defensive front.  The ones, or first string, had trouble running the ball and protecting whatever quarterback was taking the snaps.  Don’t get me wrong, there were some offensive sparks in the scrimmage, but mostly through the air.  The offense averaged 422 yards per game last season and has it’s quarterback and running game back.  On Saturday, either the defensive unit played over its’ head or the offense underachieved.  There was not much of a running attack through the first 100 plays.

For Wolford, it is a Catch 22 situation.  Is the defense that good?  Was the offense that bad?  Was it a combination of both?  However he analyzes things, he will know that offensively, there is much to do before the Michigan State opener.  One of the concerns this week was offensive line depth.  The five starters are solid.  However, there is a drop off after that of unproven raw talent that needs to step up.  Zach Larson going down for the year didn’t help much.  In fact, Wolford has moved Zach Conlan from defense to offense to try to plug that leak before it gets out of control.

IMG_2161

One of the brightest spots was the touchdown catch that Pat White hauled in from Kurt Hess covering about 40 yards.  White made a nice catch in the back right corner of the end zone.  Another bright spot was a lack of dropped balls by receivers.  Coach Andre Coleman has been working hard to try to prevent something that started during Spring practice from spilling over into Fall camp.

YSU Football: Marc Kanetsky And Tales Of The Beard

IMG_2063

Most men hate shaving. Marc Kanetsky showed up for camp with more than a full beard and has been getting double takes from everyone who has not seen him since last season.  Kanetsky, a senior from Hubbard, is standing out more than ever and has even gotten some black dye involved to add somewhat of an exclamation point.

“I started growing it out earlier in the Summer and it was coming in pretty good”, commented Kanetsky.  “I was talking to my brother who encouraged me that no matter what I did, not to shave it off.  As it was growing out, I figured I might as well dye it black, like Brian Wilson the baseball player.  I think it came out pretty good.  I’m not a Giants fan though, I remain a Tribe fan.”

Kanetsky, who is good friends with starter Kurt Hess and backup Patrick Angle, said he is preparing for the upcoming season.  ” I know Kurt is the guy, but I am going to be prepared every week in the event that I am called upon.  I am dying to get a chance, I have been waiting for three years to get in there and prove that I can play.”

Kanetsky’s father, Marty, commented on his sons facial hair experimentation.  “It’s a mans beard and I couldn’t grow one like that.  I tried, but I quit.  When he dyed it black, I thought it was awesome. Now what he has to do is dye the other half red and by the Michigan State game, he has a chance to be the lead-in for Sportscenter.”

Kanetsky is a 3.9 student attending YSU on academic scholarships that cover his housing and his books, he plays football because of a burning desire to compete and a sheer love of the game.

YSU Football Kickoff Weekend In Full Swing

IMG_7701

Turnover is usually a bad word in the game of football.  It signifies a loss of control and being on defense preventing points instead of having the ball and trying to score.  Youngstown State University Head Coach Eric Wolford has some major turnover issues to the tune of 46 new faces to learn.  In this case, turnover creates competition, and in this case, turnover is good.  Wolford kicked off football with a media press conference this week.

Wolford spoke highly of two transfers from Miami.  Redshirt freshman LB Travis Williams and redshirt freshman CB Devont’a Davis both came to YSU from a storied Hurricane program.  “Some of these kids transfer out because they get close to the coaches that recruit him”, remarked Wolford.  “We have a standard here, winning championships, that we plan on getting back to.  I don’t care where a guy is from, we have guys from many states, if he can help this football team win, follow the rules, and uphold the standards of the program he can play for us.”

Five of the 46 incoming players participated in Spring practice. With this influx of new talent, combined with the 36 new faces from last season, Wolford only has 23 players left from the Jon Heacock Era.  Wolford talked about what having a full year of recruiting does.  “Last season, I was hired in December and was very picky about picking a coaching staff.  There was not as much time spent as we were able to use this full year of recruiting.  We had camps that had over 900 campers, it is like test driving a car before you buy one.

IMG_7909

When asked if being picked to finish eighth in the conference this season would be used as motivation, Wolford was careful in saying, “I made the mistake last year of saying that we were better than we were picked.  Our guys will be motivated enough.”

Wolford credited Kurt Hess, Jamaine Cook, and Andrew Radakovich for taking steps this Summer to be leaders.  “Those guys have taken complete ownership of the team.  When a bunch of players in the program tell you, Wow, coach… ‘So-and-so can really play’, or the team doctor tells you that ‘we haven’t seen a guy like this around here, ever’.  And when someone else tells you that some of these guys don’t belong here, those are all good signs. When a whole bunch of people give you feedback like that, it makes you feel good.”

With only 29 practices until the Penguins venture North to take on Michigan State, the excitement is obvious, and the buzz is back.

Getting Ready For 2011 YSU Football With Kurt Hess

IMG_1558

Last year at this time, Kurt Hess was adapting.  The changes he was dealing with were a transition from high school to college, playing in a new system for a new coach, and learning what his teammates could and could not handle.  Hess was named the starting quarterback before the season started and played mature beyond his years.  He has earned the respect of his coaches, teammates, and fans, and will continue to work hard to improve.

Paneech: You have a year under your belt and know the system, are the expectations higher this season?

Hess: I got a lot of good experience last season and have a great working relationship with Coach Wolford and Coach Montgomery.  We work well together and we bounce ideas off of each other.  We kind of know what to expect now and need to refine things.  Coach Montgomery will sit in the film room with me and analyze different aspects and mechanics and question why I did or didn’t do something.  As much as they have helped me, you should see some results this year.

Paneech: During the Spring, there were problems with receivers dropping the ball.  Additionally, last year this team was about 50/50 on a run pass ratio.  Can we expect more running this season?

Hess: I don’t believe we will be one-dimensional.  We have a good enough running game that we probably could be one-dimensional, but our receivers are working really hard to get better.  We come in a couple of times a week and do some seven-on-seven drills and we usually throw every night to get the timing right.  With the new guys, there is a lot of raw talent.  I am developing more confidence with them and I can see a big improvement from the Spring already.  We are building chemistry and trust, and that is so important.  It is what Dominique [Barnes] and I had last season.

IMG_7827

Paneech: What have you been doing in the offseason?

Hess: I try to find friends who have a pool, I really like swimming in the Summer.  I haven’t been to a Scrappers game yet, but I have made it to Cleveland to see the Indians.  I like going to Boardman and hitting the mall.  I am starting to get into my education classes and am really focusing on how to be a better role model and teacher for the kids.

Paneech: Last season you were immediately thrown into the fire at Penn State, and you guys played respectably.  This year it is off to Michigan State, what should we expect?

Hess: We need to have a good showing at Michigan State, and I think we will.  Last year it was a new era coming in at Youngstown State with a new coach.  We were thinking about at least scoring a touchdown and putting a few points on the board.  This year, we want to put more points on the board than they [Michigan State] do.  I think that is what we need to, and are going to do.

Paneech: One of the biggest areas of turnover was offensive line.  Eric Rodemoyers don’t grow on trees.  Do you feel like you might be scrambling a bit more this season?

Hess: We brought in some pretty big guys who have been working really hard and have increased their strength.  We have some veterans in D. J. Main and Andrew Radakovich who have been here for three or four years.  I still feel secure and have an automatic sense of trust for these guys.  Scrambling is part of the game, and although I don’t anticipate doing too much of it, I consider myself somewhat slippery.

IMG_0844

Paneech: With all of the new arrivals, have the veteran members of the team set up events to get the rookies feeling like they are a part of everything?

Hess: It’s not really any one gathering or one function.  We go out to Quaker Steak And Lube on Tuesday nights for the all-you-can-eat wings and we make sure that the new linemen go and get fed.  We play some pool basketball and had a swimming workout last week.  We all live pretty close together, so we are always playing NCAA or watching a movie.  There is a lot of contact and they are getting familiar with all of us.  We recruited a lot of raw talent, and you need that to compete in this conference.  I have not seen any of the new guys get lazy or cut a corner on anything yet.

Paneech: What, if any, bad habits have you formed over the past year that you need to fix?

Hess: One area I need to get better at is being a better practice player.  There are a lot of times when practice is not going how we would like it to go, and someone needs to get a first down or make some plays.  As a quarterback, and a leader, I need to be the person who can step up and make those things happen.  Practice will run much better if I make the effort to execute better.  I need to be the guy in a game that can make a big play on a 3rd and 12, or have to be able to scramble.  Last year there were guys bailing me out.  Barnes did, [Adaris] Bellamy did, Jamaine [Cook] did, it goes on and on.  Coming back as a veteran, I need to make more plays.

Paneech: Does Coach Montgomery, as a quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator, feel like you have a grasp on the offense?

Hess: Coach Montgomery is comfortable with me that I think he may give me more freedom than I had last season.  We are very comfortable with each other.  I trust his calls, as he trusts mine.  There will be things that change from week-to-week, but we do communicate well and we are both big Cincinnati Reds fans.

Paneech: The Reds are in trouble.

Hess: All we need is a solid month.

Paneech:  Scott Rolen is all banged up and your pitching is weak.  [Edinson] Volquez and [Johnny] Cueto are horrible, I don’t see it.  Not this year.  They will need to reincarnate Eric Davis and Barry Larkin to have a shot with that staff.

Hess: (laughs) No, you are wrong.

Paneech: Any tattoo shops around here that are going to get Wolf in trouble?  What is your take on the Ohio State fallout?

Hess: I think it is a tough situation.  There were things that did not fall into the NCAA guidelines and Coach Tressel may have been put in a bad situation.  In my opinion, he has always been a players coach and always took care of his players like they were his own kids.  It may go on other places, but that kind of stuff, like the tattoos, isn’t really an issue here, it doesn’t exist.  We have a great staff and advisors who communicate well with Coach Wolford.  We sign papers that say we are not going to do this, this, and this.  As far as I am concerned, nobody here has done anything.

Despite Poor Weather, 39th YSU Red – White Game Shows Major Potential For 2011

IMG_0866

Remember when you were a kid and believed that March came in like a lion and went out like a lamb?  Inclement weather has dominated Spring 2011 thus far and Groundhog Day is turning into a bigger commercial farce than Sweetest Day.  The good news is that despite sloppy playing conditions, the 39th Annual Red-White game happened, and the play was anything but sloppy.

Both offense and defense took turns shining on both sides of the ball.  The White team raced out to a 17-0 lead and held on for a 24-14 victory.  Sophomore running back Allen Jones ran for 159 yards, but the real story is the White defense holding the Red offense, which is the first-team starting offense, to just 14 points.

Before the game started, Coach Eric Wolford ran over to the home sideline and started a comical rant.  Looking at me, he said, “It’s beautiful out here today, good day to get some sun.  I’m gonna work on my tan, should have brought my lotion.  Did you bring any I can use?”

IMG_0860

The White team reached into their bag of tricks on the very first play of the game.  Torrian Pace took a pitch on an apparent sweep right.  Pace, doing a good job showing a run, threw the ball downfield to Pat White.  White had to come out of the end zone to catch the ball at the one as it was slightly under thrown.  On the next play, Pace tallied on a one-yard touchdown to put the White ahead, 7-0.

Patrick Angle hooked up with White (above) in the corner of the end zone on a ten yard corner route to put the White team ahead, 14-0.  A dropped pass in the end zone would force the White group to settle on a David Brown 25-yard field goal to jump the lead to 17-0.

Jamaine Cook put his Red team on the board when he powered in from two yards out for six points to cut the margin to 17-7.  Earlier in the drive, Cook ran 22 yards on a 4th-and-1.  Kurt Hess also contributed on the drive as he would find Andre Barboza on a 4th-and-6 for 22 more yards to get to the White’s two yard line.

IMG_0857

With just under four minutes to go in the first half, Cook broke what looked to be a long run but was stripped of the ball by Josh Lee and Donald D’Alesio recovered the loose football to secure the 10-point lead to halftime.

On the second offensive play of the second half for the White team, Jones raced 94 yards to pay dirt, which would be the only points of the second half for the White.  The Red would later got the ball back and went into two-minute mode in a second half that featured a continuous clock.  Hess had a nice drive connecting with Barboza twice and David Rogers once before hitting Adaris Bellamy on a swing pass that would go 23 yards for a touchdown to cut the White lead to 24-14.

IMG_0844

Hess (above) finished the game 11-19 for 139 yards and a touchdown.  His big target of the day was Barboza who hauled in four Hess aerials for 69 yards.  For the White, Pat White was the top receiver with five catches for 68 yards and a touchdown.

Defensively, Kyle Sirl had eight tackles, three for a loss, for the Red.  Sirl and Ethan Stark recorded a pair of sacks each.  Obinna Ekweremuba had seven tackles to lead the White team, with two of those stops resulting in yardage losses.

The honorary coaches stayed dry as they were sitting upstairs in the enclosed press boxes.  Chatting with Eric Ryan, Tim Ryan, and Harry Meshel before the game started was enjoyable.

Last year, with very favorable weather, the Red-White game was Wolford’s coming out party.  There was a good crowd and a festive atmosphere.  This year, the luster may not have been as bright, but there were still people in the stands.  Conversely, the level of football played last season at this time, was a group of guys trying to grasp a system.  This year, it was mostly returning players who knew the system trying not to get hurt on a sloppy field.  Should be a great season and Wolford has things where they need to be at this point, the conclusion of Spring Football.