Posts Tagged ‘Adaris Bellamy’

YSU Loses Third Consecutive Game On Late TD, 40-38, to Western Illinois

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Youngstown State At Western Illinois: Game Preview

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Youngstown State University (3-3, 1-2 MVFC) takes to the road in hopes of breaking a two-game losing streak.  The Penguins have lost back-to-back nailbiters to Missouri State and North Dakota State.  They are also winless on the road (0-2) in their 2010 campaign.  The #23rd-ranked Western Illinois  Leathernecks are currently sitting on a 4-2 record and are 2-1 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference and suffered their first league defeat last week to South Dakota State. 

Youngstown State holds a 15-10 edge in the series against Western Illinois with the Penguins winning the last six consecutive games.  Last year at Stambaugh Stadium, the Penguins raced out to a 31-0 lead at the half and Western Illinois rallied in the second half, but ultimately fell, 31-21.  The last time these two teams faced off in Macomb, Illinois, the Penguins squeaked out a 31-28 nailbiter in the last game of the season.  WhenYoungstown State scores 22 or more points, they have won 14 in a row against the Leathernecks.

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Last week, Youngstown State had problems with kickoffs.  After the game, Penguins Coach Eric Wolford made no bones about the problem.  “We have a kickoff specialist who has one job, to kick the ball into the end zone, that’s all he has to do.  He failed to do that today and you can expect changes.”  However, when asked directly about the kicking situation for this weekend, Wolford replied, “We made some changes on his fundamentals.  Jake [Smith] has worked hard and ironed it all out.  He just needed to get his fundamentals squared away, he’s gonna be ok.”

For the Penguins to be successful on Saturday night, Adaris Bellamy will have to step up and run hard like he did in the loss to North Dakota State.  On the season, Bellamy has 324 yards on 57 attempts.  Jamaine Cook’s status remains a mystery.  Cook took part in full workouts Tuesday and Wednesday, but did get banged up last week.  Cook leads the Penguins youthful rushing movement with 620 yards on 103 carries.  Jordan Thompson will be back in uniform this week as well to join Torrian Pace and Allen Jones

Dominique Barnes had another big week.  Barnes caught 10 passes for a career-high 151 yards last week.  If Barnes catches a pass this week, he will have a reception in 30 consecutive games which would tie him with Kyle Smith for the school record.  With one receiving yard Barnes will also tie Smith on the all-time Penguins yardage total for wideouts with 1,534, and if Barnes can muster 66 receiving yards he will move past Lorenzo Davis and into the Top-10.  With one catch, Barnes will catch Bob Ferranti for fifth all-time in receptions.  Jimmy “Flea” Ferranti still leads the way with 186 receptions, Barnes currently has 129.  Barnes may draw extra coverage allowing Kurt Hess to use other targets such as Ely Ducatel and Kevin Watts.

For Youngstown State, a challenge of holding a lead would be a good goal.  The Penguins have squandered 10 and 17 point leads the last two weeks.  Wolford remarked on that trend.  “We have addressed it, and after looking at it, it is more of a case of shooting yourself in the foot.  We have got to adjust to the adjustments and stop getting penalties and making huge mistakes.”

Western Illinois will need to keep doing whatever it is that is working at home.  The Fighting Leathernecks did not win a home game last season and have not lost one at Hanson Field yet this season.  Offensively, WIU is averaging about 47 points per game at home.  At home, the offense has scored in every quarter (12 total),  rushed for at least 300 yards per game, and the defense has recorded nine takeaways in those three home games.  The offense is led by Lito Senatus at WR and QB Matt Barr who can run the ball as well as heave it.  barr had 125 yards rushing in a game earlier this season.  Defensively, LB Kyle Glazier is a beast.  Glazier had 21 tackles against South Dakota State and obviously has a nose for the ball.

Brandian Ross had 13 tackles the last time these two teams played in Macomb.  He will need another big effort to keep the Penguins going as Andre Elliott will again not dress with shoulder problems.  Luke Matelan has really stepped it up and been the biggest playmaker for the experienced Penguin Defensive Line. 

Kickoff is scheduled for 7:07 p.m. with Bob Hannon and Ed Muransky calling the action on AM-570.

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Penguins Drop 34-29 Heartbreaker to North Dakota State

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Youngstown State University has been exceptional at jumping out to a lead all year.  Saturday, the Penguins scored first for the fifth time this season.  Unfortunately, they rarely score last and that formula held true again as North Dakota State (4-2, 1-2) rallied to take a lead with under a minute left in the game, giving up a 45-yard touchdown to fall 34-29.

The Penguins took the opening drive deep into North Dakota State territory but had to settle on a 43-yard Stephen Blose field goal.  The field goal came at the 10:45 mark of the first quarter.

With 6:49 left in the first quarter, YSU found the end zone. Kurt Hess plopped in on a quarterback keeper from two yards away to increase the Penguin lead to 10-0.  The drive was set up when David Rach recovered a fumble from Bison QB Brock Jensen at the NDSU 37-yard line.  The Penguins covered the 37 yards in 5 plays over a 2:28 stretch.

North Dakota State got on the scoreboard on the first play of the second quarter when DJ McNorton caught a 4-yard pass from Jose Mohler.  Mohler replaced Jensen who left the game with a collarbone injury.  The Bison drove 50 yards in seven plays to make it 10-7.

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The Penguins responded when Mr. Excitement, Dominique Barnes, caught a Hess long ball that covered 50 yards.  The duo (pictured) would hook up seven times for 117 yards in the first half.  With the touchdown the Penguins took back a ten-point advantage.

The advantage would not last very long.  North Dakota State scored on their next possession to make it a 17-14 Penguin lead.  Derrick Lang punched it in from a yard away capping off an 80-yard drive.  North Dakota State then claimed the lead with their next possession to take a 21-17 lead with 4:55 remaining in the first half.  Mike Sigers broke a big run (below) for a 56-yard touchdown to give the Bison their first lead of the game.

Blose got the Penguins to a one-point deficit with a 24-yard field goal.  At the half, the Penguins trailed the Bison 21-20.

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On their first drive of the second half, the Bison went 62 yards in six plays to extend their lead to 28-20.  The drive was capped off when Mohler found Matt Veldman for a five yard touchdown with 11:47 left in the third quarter.

YSU squandered chances on their next couple of drives.  Kevin Watts found some space on a reverse that went left but was stripped on the Penguin 49.  On their next drive, the Penguins faced a third down and twenty situation.  Hess hit Barnes on the right sideline and YSU picked up a personal foul to put YSU on the Bison six.  Adaris Bellamy ran hard through a hole but fumbled just before he crossed the plane.  The ball squirted out of the end zone and North Dakota State took over on their own twenty in an unpopular ruling with the crowd.

The Penguin defense rose to the challenge and Stephen Meadows sacked Mohler forcing a punt.  Bellamy came back out like a man possessed and carried the Penguins the majority of the way to score on a two-yard jaunt.  Bellamy did a great job of setting up blocks with steps and cuts of precision.  His balance and vision looked good and he topped the 100-yard plateau on the drive.  The Penguins, trailing 28-26, opted for a two-point conversion attempt.  On the chance, Hess through the ball to the back of the end zone where the ball was caught by Juilian Harrell, but Harrell could not get a foot down.  As a result, the Bison held a 28-26 fourth quarter lead.

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North Dakota State drove all the way to YSU’s six-yard line, but again the Penguin defense was up to the challenge.  The Bison had to settle for a Ryan Jastram 25-yard field goal attempt that missed the mark to the right.  The Penguins took over and rode the hot hand of Bellamy.  On a crucial third-and-six, Hess threw for Barnes who tipped the ball to himself and managed to catch it on a spectacular grab to keep the drive alive at the Bison 26 with 1:08 left to go in a 28-26 game.

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Stephen Blose had the stage set for a 38-yard field goal attempt to give the Penguins a 29-28 lead with :51 seconds left in the game.  The Penguins ate 4:34 up on the drive.  North Dakota State got a big return to their own 41.  A defensive holding penalty gave the Bison the ball on the Penguin 45 with :42 left on the clock.

Dustin Howard hauled in a backbreaker from Mohler covering 45 yards putting North Dakota State ahead 34-29.  NDSU went for a two-point conversion unsuccessfully setting the stage for Hail Mary central, but Kurt Hess fumbled and never really had a chance.  NDSU took over and ran the remaining time off of the clock to preserve their win.

The Penguins were led by Adaris Bellamy on the ground with 158 yards on 21 carries.  Kurt Hess was 22-31 for 252 yards and Dominique Barnes caught 10 balls for 151 yards.

The Bison got good efforts from Jose Mohler who ended up 11-14 for 192 yards.  DJ McNorton gained 90 yards on 17 carries and also caught 6 passes for 131 yards and a touchdown.

After the game, Barnes dejectedly addressed the media.  “They played a good game and fought back.  We watched the film and used what we saw.  Any loss is a tough loss, this one is really hard.  You have to win the turnover margin, and we did not do that today. We have to come back Monday and get ready for next week.”

Adaris Bellamy shared the frustration.  “I think I was in or down, but it’s on the referee.  It was real fulfilling to take the lead.  Coaches tell us to leave everything on the field.  This game I truly believe I left everything on the field. We lost it for ourselves, they had one more big play than we did in the end and that was the difference in the game.”

Coach Eric Wolford also assessed what he saw.  “When you kick the ball off, it should be in the end zone, not the thirty yard line.  Last week we gave a game away, this week we gave a game away.  Give them credit, they found a way.  We continue to give football games away with useless penalties and until we make a decision to rid that, we can’t win.  It is a problem when the kickoffs fall short of the 20. It is the kicker’s only job to kick the ball in the end zone, we couldn’t do that today, expect changes.

The Penguins dropped to 3-3 and 1-2 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference.  The Penguins head to Western Illinois in Macomb, Illinois to take a shot at rebounding from the last two devastating losses.

#17 North Dakota State at Youngstown State: Game Preview

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Youngstown State University (3-2, 1-1) will play host to North Dakota State (3-2, 1-1) this Saturday at 4 p.m. in Youngstown.  For the Penguins, undefeated at home, it is a chance to redeem themselves after falling 35-25 at Missouri State last week.  For the Bison, winners of three out of their last four road games, a win is a must to stay ranked.  North Dakota State is ranked at #17 this week.

Last season, YSU won a 39-35 shootout at the famed Fargodome.  Youngstown State leads the all-time series 3-1 and has never lost to the Bison at The Ice Castle (2-0).  However, the largest margin of victory in those three wins has been eight points.

If the Penguins can shut down the tandem of WR Warren Holloway and redshirt freshman QB Brock Jensen, they greatly improve their chances of winning this game.  Last week in a 28-16 loss to Western Illinois, the pair hooked up seven times for 184 yards.  With Andre Elliott’s status unknown, the Penguins have to dig in and take the big plays out of the Bison offense.  YSU will also have to play much closer to the first quarter of the last game rather than the last three quarters because North Dakota State boasts a big-play defense that already has ten takeaways this season.  On the ground, DJ McNorton is the Bison workhorse.  McNorton had 105 yards on the ground last week and over two hundred rushing yards the week before.

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This will be a good test for first-year Penguins Coach Eric Wolford.  In the past few weeks, Wolford has been adamant about the importance of these Missouri Valley Conference games.  He has also stressed that this 2010 Penguins team is still getting better.  Expect changes on this weeks depth chart on the defensive side of the ball.  A no-nonsense coach with respect for the game, Wolford claimed he would be sick watching last weeks game film.  Believe me, 106 penalty yards are keeping this man awake at night.

Jamaine Cook and Adaris Bellamy need to keep grinding it out to open the passing game up for Kurt Hess.  Once the Penguins got to the second quarter, they really struggled running the football.  Two touchdowns within 90 seconds forced the Penguins to revert to the pass which was ineffective due to the lack of a ground game to keep the opposing defense honest.  Offensive coordinator Shane Montgomery is a great thinker, expect a couple of new wrinkles.

Defensively, YSU played pretty decent last week.  One blown coverage and a couple of drives in the second quarter hurt, but the two offensive turnovers resulting in touchdowns were the difference.  Look for Brandian Ross and Torrance Nicholson (defensive co-capains) to have big games for YSU’s defense.  Also, Luke Matelan, David Rach, and John Sasson have to keep playing big for the Penguins to have a chance.  Donald D’Alesio has stepped up as a true freshman recording 11 tackles in last week’s loss.

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The 4 p.m. start will also mark Alumni Day.  Be sure to hit the tailgate lots before the game and make a day of it.  This group of guys are busting their butts to be better.  The new coaching staff is spending countless hours preparing each week, and the enthusiasm is back, it’s in the players eyes this season.

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#20 Youngstown State at Missouri State Game Preview

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Youngstown State University (3-1, 1-0)  takes to the road this weekend to face Missouri State (1-2, 0-1).  Both teams opened Missouri Valley Conference play last weekend.  Youngstown State cleared the big hurdle called Southern Illinois in convincing fashion scoring 31 unanswered points against the defending champs.  With the big win, the Penguins find themselves ranked 20th in the latest FCS polls.  Missouri State lost a nailbiter to Illinois State in two overtimes, 44-41.  The two teams will play for a fifteenth time Saturday with YSU holding an 11-3 series lead.  However, Missouri State has won the last two meetings.

The Bears won 17-7 at Stambaugh Stadium last season and posted a 42-28 victory the last time these two teams played at Plaster Field in Springfield, Missouri.  The teams have split with three wins each over the past six years with Youngstown State winning seven consecutive times before that.  For Youngstown State, the bullseye has been officially placed after being forecast as a seventh place team.  No more hiding in the weeds, everyone knows there is talent on this team.  The next hurdle for first-year coach, Eric Wolford, is to win one on the road.  The Penguins are a perfect 3-0 at home and 0-1 on the road with a loss to Penn State

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For Missouri State, a better defensive effort is needed across the board.  Wolford and his crafty Offensive Coordinator, Shane Montgomery, have used a variety of weapons all season.  Nobody has truly emerged as the #1 running back.  Jamaine Cook has gotten the most carries but Adaris Bellamy and Jordan Thompson have been very effective and Torrian Pace has shown he can handle the load when called upon.  Kurt Hess has been outstanding for a Freshman.  Hess does not make mental errors and does a great job controlling the football.  Ely Ducatel and Kevin Watts have proven that if Dominique Barnes is taken out of the game and double teamed that they can step up and make plays.  The Bears can score, but are giving up 462 yards per game and 34 points per game. 

Youngstown State needs to realize that Missouri State rises to the challenge of big games.  The Bears have a very capable offense with senior quarterback Cody Kirby at the controls.  Missouri State averages 222 passing yards per game and just under 200 rushing yards per game, that is a pretty healthy balance.  Kirby poses adual threat of being a good runner as well as a great passer.  If the Penguins can bring the heat and contain Kirby at the same time, they should be successful stifling the Bears offense.  Coach Wolford has praised the Missouri State offensive line all week and called the Bears, “a dang good football team.” 

The Penguins will be playing without Andre Elliott, who is sidelined with a neck / shoulder problem.  Nick Gooden will step in and see some quality minutes in place of Elliott.  Brandian Ross (last week’s Missouri Valley Conference Defensive Player of The Week), Randy Louis, and Donald D’Alesio will have to work hard not only to contain Kirby, but also concentrate on shutting down Bears RB Chris Douglas (76 YPG) on the perimeter and WR Jermaine Saffold (16 catches, 263 yards) to keep the Bears on the ropes.

When asked if being ranked meant anything at this point, Coach Wolford responded.  “It’s obviously good for the fans and the media and the alumni.  It is what it is and we try not to let it be a distraction.  The only rankings that matter here are the ones at the end of the year.”  The last time the Penguins were ranked was in 2008 and this years 3-1 start equals last seasons record after four games.

You can catch all of the action on AM-570 with the pregame show starting at 1:30 p.m. and kickoff slated for 2 p.m.  Bob Hannon will have the call with Ed Muransky offering his analysis and Dave Sess chiming in from the sidelines.

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Youngstown State vs Southern Illinois Game Preview

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Youngstown State University (2-1) welcomes Southern Illinois (1-2) to town for the Missouri Valley Conference opener for both teams.  Southern Illinois has enjoyed recent success against YSU winning the last three meetings.  Things have changed at both schools in the past year.  Eric Wolford has taken over YSU’s program and has the team really playing with a beam of confidence.  Southern Illinois seems to be missing their patented running game.  Overall, the series is tied at 10-10-1.

Last season, the Salukis defeated the Penguins, 27-8.  The last meeting at Stambaugh Stadium was forgettable for the Youngstown sports faithful as Southern Illinois won in a blowout, 33-0.  There are several streaks heading into Saturday’s game to make note of. Southern Illinois has won a conference record 14 straight Missouri Valley match-ups.  However, the Salukis are currently on a two-game losing streak falling to SE Missouri State last week and being handled easily by Illinois.  Their lone win came in the opening week of the season, a 70-7 (not a typo) win against Quincy.

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Youngstown State opened with a loss at Penn State and the Penguins have posted back-to-back wins over Butler and Central Connecticut to boost their win total, but more importantly, their confidence level.  One notable streak to watch will be based on the performance of Dominique Barnes.  Ironically, Barnes originally signed a letter of intent to attend Southern Illinois but later changed his mind and came to Youngstown State.  With one catch, Barnes will extend his consecutive games with a catch streak to 27 straight games. With two catches he will tie Renauld Ray for sixth place on the all-time Penguins reception list.  With six catches, Barnes can tie Lorenzo Davis for fifth on the all-time Penguin reception list.  If Barnes goes completely ballistic and catches 14 balls, he will tie Bob Ferranti for fourth.

The thing Southern Illinois has to be most concerned with is the arsenal of players Wolford has used this season.  Last week against Central Connecticut, the Penguins used four different running backs who all had at least nine carries each.  Adaris Bellamy, Torrian Pace, Jamaine Cook and Jordan Thompson have all had quality touches the first three weeks of the season.  Wolford has proven in the last two games that this year’s Penguins team is multi-faceted.  Take the run away and Kurt Hess can throw to Barnes, a healthy Ely Ducatel, and Kevin Watts.  It has been set up rather cleverly as a “pick your poison” type of offense.

The key to Youngstown State coming out of this with a win is to minimize penalties and mistakes.  The perfect game is what YSU needed to play to beat Penn State.  Sloppy play will not cut it this week.  The Penguins do a good job taking care of the ball and Southern Illinois is not the type of team you can make too many mistakes against .  YSU Receivers Coach, Phil Longo, coached at Southern Illinois as the Salukis Offensive Coordinator over the past two seasons.  He will surely provide some insight as to schemes, personnel, and even tendencies — more stuff than the Penguins could ever see on game films.

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Coach Wolford said that this game has to be played as a normal conference game, nothing more.  “Every conference game is a big game for us.  However we don’t make this particular game out to be the Super Bowl or anything.  If we approached it like that and made it too big, I think maybe guys would get too tight.  There is a certain degree of looseness you want and a right time to tighten down the screws and go. With young people, you have got to squeeze ’em.  When we squeeze them, we are pushing them to get better. At the same time, you better hug them and love them, squeeze them that way too.  These kids know that we love them even though we coach them hard.”

Wolford has done something really impressive.  Before each home game, the coaches and players, in suits and ties, walk through the main tailgate lot to share in the joy of a Saturday in Youngstown with the great Penguins fans.  Wolford has seem to have done everything right so far.  Attendance is up, there is no media scrutiny, his relationships with executives at YSU remain increasingly positive, and he has really liked coming home.

Beware this week, Southern Illinois, these are not the same Penguins you have beaten up on since 2007.

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YSU Football Profiles: Adaris Bellamy

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Adaris Bellamy has emerged in Youngstown.  Anyone who watched Youngstown State’s 31-7 victory over Butler caught a glimpse of a bright future for the running game.  Bellamy, a freshman, was a part of that excitement and showed a small portion of his capabilities on a 25-yard touchdown scamper that put an exclamation point on the win for the Penguins.  Bellamy is fun to talk with, a good interview, and if he plays his cards right, the future of Youngstown State Football.  The Heisman pose (above) may be a bit premature, but the upside of this kid is through the roof.  He shows a killer spin move, but says that comes from instinct, not practice, it looks unrehearsed and more a reflection of his natural ability.

Paneech: You had a deal worked out to play in Florida.  How do you end up in Youngstown, Ohio?

Bellamy: I had an agreement with South Florida that if I went to a prep school and became eligible, I would play there.  Coach Leavitt got fired and they brought in Skip Holtz.  Coach Holtz did not honor my scholarship agreement.  I came here [Youngstown State] on a visit that my little cousin, who was already committed, set up with Coach Wolford. I liked it and ended up signing.  My teammates are like brothers to me and I love the family environment.  I know there are bigger programs I could go to out there, but I couldn’t ask for more.

Paneech: Are you looking forward to November when you could get used to some snow?

Bellamy: (laughing)  No!  Not at all! I wish we could stay in August and September forever.  Not looking forward to the white stuff at all.

Paneech: What was it like to play against a team like Penn State in Happy Valley?

Bellamy: It was major.  For that to be my first college game and to get to play in front of 100,000 plus was an amazing feeling.  I still can’t believe it to this day.  To play as well as we did in the first half, we basically set a target on our back.  As long as we play like that all through the season, we are going to be something very special.

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Paneech: Coach Wolford is very intense.  How will he manage keeping you guys calm when there is a bullseye on your backs?

Bellamy: As long as we play more like we did in the first half and not the second half, there isn’t a team in our conference that we should not beat. We have to keep it in our mind to come out and play at our intensity level and not the level of the other team.

Paneech: What NFL running back would you say you resemble on the field?

Bellamy: Either Clinton Portis or Frank Gore. Portis is a power back that can be shifty, which are a couple of the qualities that I have.  Gore can be a power back and can also break tackles, but he can do whatever the coach asks of him.

Paneech: Walk me through the typical day, start to finish.

Bellamy: I wake up off of instinct, I have never owned an alarm.  I get up and brush my teeth and head down for the morning workout.  After that, I take a shower and head off to breakfast check.  I then go to my nine and ten o’clock classes.  My third class is from 11:00 to 11:50 and when it ends I have an hour break to go eat some lunch.  After lunch I head back to the stadium for study table from 1:00 to 1:50.  Our team meetings start at 2:15 and we are usually in there for about 50 minutes then we have to be on the field for practice at 3:10.  Practice runs until like 5:00, 5:05.  We get dismissed, head to shower it up then go to the training table to eat.  After that, I go home to finish whatever homework I didn’t finish at study table, and after that I’m in the bed for the rest of the night.

Paneech: With Southern Illinois looming in the distance, do you guys watch them as the conference favorite or do you only worry about them come game week?

Bellamy: It is something we will worry about when the time comes.  We need to worry about who we have each week and concentrate on winning that game.  We can’t play this week if we worry about Southern Illinois.

One Word Answers

Song People Would Be Shocked To Know You Like: Party In The USA, Miley Cyrus.

Next Favorite Sport: There isn’t one.

Cartoon Character You Would Be: Bugs Bunny.

Best Fast Food: Taco Bell.

What Would You Order In An Omelet: Ham and Cheese.

Biggest Phobia: (long pause) ugh… I don’t even know.

Favorite Drink: Sunkist Orange.

Favorite Animal At The Zoo: Lion.

Worst Habit: I twitch a lot.

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Wolford Gets Win #1 As YSU Defeats Butler, 31-7

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Youngstown State University opened the home portion of their 2010 football schedule Saturday.  The opponent for the home opener was the Butler Bulldogs, defending co-champs of the Pioneer Football Conference. Youngstown State rode a very consistent offensive effort to rack up 286 rushing yards on their way to a 31-7 victory over Butler giving Eric Wolford his very first head coaching victory.

The Penguins got on the scoreboard first with 3:35 left in the first quarter.  Jordan Thompson hit pay dirt from eight yards out. Thompson had the last three carries of the drive, covering 25 yards on runs of six and eleven yards before his scoring jaunt of eight yards.  Kurt Hess hooked up with Kevin Watts for 14 yards to start the scoring drive.  Stephen Blose knocked the extra point through to put YSU ahead, 7-0.

YSU added to their lead with 11:22 left in the first half when Adaris Bellamy tallied from five yards out.  The Blose extra point made it 14-0 in favor of the Penguins.  Bellamy had only four carries in the first half, good for 28 yards.

Butler got on the board with a touchdown when Andrew Huck found Jeff Larsen on an out pattern.  The drive was set up on a gadget play when Butler covered 41 yards on a double pass.  Huck took the snap, threw a lateral to Matt Kobli, who found Huck 10 yards downfield, and by himself.  Huck ran the other 31 yards after the catch.

YSU marched almost the length of the field before halftime, but had to settle for a 29-yard Stephen Blose field goal to make the score 17-7 at intermission.

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As the second half started, so did the rain. The elements were not enough to contain Mr. Electricity, Dominique Barnes.  Barnes fielded a punt and seemed contained but erupted through a small seam in the middle before getting downhill and racing past the Bulldog coverage for an 86-yard score.  The punt return was the second longest in school history.  Blose knocked the extra point through to put the Penguins comfortably in front, 24-7.

In the fourth quarter the Penguins tacked on 7 more points.  Bellamy, who averaged 10 yards per carry, capped off an 8 play 80 yard drive with a 25-yard run off of the left interior.  With Bellamy, Jamaine Cook, and Thompson, the Penguins showed a versatile selection of backfield weaponry.

The defense played strong too.  Andre Elliott and Brandian Ross were all over the field making tackles.  Butler went to a short passing game in the second half.  Once Huck found a receiver and threw the ball Ross was immediately in the face of the receiver. John Sasson had 10 tackles (six solo) and true freshman Donald D’Alesio had seven tackles with five solo.

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For Eric Wolford, it was win #1 as a head coach.  Wolford commented on how he felt notching his first victory.  “It really is different as a head coach.  You win a game 31-7 but you want to win 50-0.  It is special, but as a head coach it is also more stressful.”

Dominique Barnes spoke about the big punt return that took the wind out of Butler’s sails.  “Coach told us we needed to make a big play and we got one.  I have to praise the punt return unit for the great blocking on the touchdown.”  Barnes also commented on the run heavy play calling.  “We showed we can pass last week, this week we showed we can run, it is the best of both worlds.”

Youngstown State (1-1) gained a balanced 286 rushing yards in the game.  Jamaine Cook had 98 yards on 18 carries, Jordan Thompson had ten carries for 65 yards.  Adaris Bellamy had six touches for 60 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Torrian Pace had 9 carries for 39 yards.  Wolford commented on the youth factor at the running back position.  “We have three freshmen and a sophomore that can all get the job done.  The person with the hot hand will get a majority of the touches.”

Butler (1-1) was paced by Matt Kobli who had 46 yards on the ground.  Andrew Huck finished the game 20-32 for 148 yards through the air.

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YSU vs Butler Preview

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Youngstown State University is opening their home schedule for the 2010 season this Saturday at Stambaugh Stadium.  The opponent of the Penguins will be the Butler Bulldogs, 2009 Pioneer League Champions.  Youngstown State is coming off of a 44-14 loss at Penn State but gained national respectability in the loss by not giving up and holding a 7-6 lead through a good portion of the second quarter.  The Penguins have a good track record for home openers winning their last 14 in a row.  Butler is coming off a season-opening 29-13 victory over Albion.

If Youngstown State is to be successful, they will have to concentrate on shutting Butler’s junior quarterback, Andrew Huck, down. Against Albion, Huck was 20-31 for 222 yards with three touchdowns.  Bulldog wide receiver Jordan Koopman had nine receptions good for 108 yards.  Butler finished the game with 519 yards gained on offense.  As strong as the Bulldog offense looked, the defense also played well in holding Albion to 232 yards of team offense, and just 87 yards rushing.

Youngstown State looks to unleash a whole bunch of offense.  QB Kurt Hess did little to look like a nervous freshman in the loss at Penn State.  Hess did not commit a turnover, was only sacked once against a nationally prominent defense, and even led his team to an unlikely time of possession advantage.  Hess’s hookup to Dominique Barnes in the first quarter marked the longest regular season passing play from scrimmage for YSU since 1998.  Barnes had 11 catches (ties school record)  for 135 yards and showed the nation why his speed and elusiveness might get some notice from those teams that play on Sundays.  Speaking of playing on Sundays, Eric Rodemoyer will be.  That is not a prediction, that is a guarantee.  Rodemoyer has been nothing short of dominant in the past eleven weeks winning the Lineman of The Week Award ten of those weeks.

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Saturday’s contest will mark the first time these two schools have ever met on a football field.  Both schools are members of the Horizon League for basketball.  Everyone should recall that Butler marched through the NCAA Tournament before losing a heartbreaker in the final game.  For a moment, Youngstown State became an extension of Butler’s fan base.  However on Saturday, a school with a decent football program is coming to Youngstown to play football, not basketball.  I can’t see YSU losing this game unless they shoot themselves in the foot repeatedly.  The bigger, faster, stronger slogan would prove true this weekend if both teams play to their potential.

Eric Wolford is too intense of a coach to let the team suffer any kind of a letdown after Saturday’s loss at Happy Valley.  Barnes and Ely Ducatel both scored touchdowns against the Nittany Lions, both will score plenty this season.  However, this is the week when Youngstown will get their first glimpse of Adaris Bellamy.  Bellamy and Jamaine Cook are going to be household names in Youngstown for the next few years.  Offensive Coordinator Shane Montgomery said it best last week when he stated, “The best way to give Kurt [Hess] confidence is to establish a running game, which in turn will help the passing game.”  Look for the Penguins to have a huge Saturday running the football.

Defensively, Brandian Ross always looks good.  He can tackle and he can cover.  David Rach had a pick against Penn State, but he also broke up another pass and was involved in eight tackles.  Holding All-American Evan Royster to 40 yards is a victory in itself.

Kickoff time is set for 6 p.m. at The Ice Castle.  Expect a huge crowd for a rebirth of attitude and spirit.

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Magnified Intensity

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The Youngstown State University football program has a full plate this season.  On September 4, the Penguins travel to Happy Valley for a visit with the #14 team in the country, Penn State.  The Penguins will play every Missouri Valley Conference game with a chip on their shoulders after being picked to finish seventh in the conference.  Monday night the Penguins opened full-contact practice with a bang at a public workout.

The most obvious thing that was different in the Summer edition of the “Oklahoma” drill compared to the Spring version was the increased vibe of intensity.  In the Spring, the coaches did most of the pointing, yelling, and screaming. At Stambaugh Stadium on Monday the players made the noise, hit with aggression, got into each others faces, and the coaches were a side dish this time.

Eric Wolford, if for nothing else, has a feather in his new cap already – the ability to motivate.  Wolford is a no-nonsense coach who has and will continue to run a tight ship.  Vowing to eliminate all of the riff-raff and dead weight is one thing, but actually doing just that in a very short period of time is commendable.

After the Oklahoma drills, the offense and defense scrimmaged under game conditions.  Purdue transfer Najee Tyler looked like the frontrunner for the quarterback derby.  Tyler looks like a young Randall Cunningham and will create headaches for defensive coordinators all season.  Another newcomer, Adaris Bellamy had a couple of slick runs for the offense.  Eric Rodemoyer, Nick Gooden, and Torrance Nicholson all looked sharp and focused.  Dominique Barnes is going to have a monster season and played consistently during the scrimmage portion Monday.

Penn State plays #1 Alabama in week two of the upcoming season, a week after they face YSU.  Don’t look too far ahead JoPa, the kids from the valley are coming to visit.

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