Posts Tagged ‘Brandian Ross’
#20 Youngstown State at Missouri State Game Preview
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.
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.
Wolford Turning Heads And Opening Eyes, YSU Beats SIU, 31-28
After being picked to finish seventh in the Missouri Valley Football Conference, Youngstown State University had to have September 25 circled on their calendars for a long time. Not only would that date signify the beginning of conference play, but it would also mark a game with Southern Illinois, defending champs and reigning FCS powerhouse of the past few years. Coach Eric Wolford and staff proved up to the biggest challenge of the season and rattled off 31 unanswered points to stomp the Salukis, 31-28.
Southern Illinois hit the scoreboard first with 2:16 left in the first quarter when Taylon Hunter returned a blocked punt 38 yards. The blocked punt came after YSU had punted the play before and downed the ball on the 1-yard line but a penalty forced the Penguins to kick again. The Salukis are not a team to give second chances to, and this particular instance proved that.
Southern Illinois scored again to push their first quarter lead to 14-0. Chris Dieker found John Goode in the end zone for an eight yard touchdown strike with just four seconds left in the quarter.
The mark of a good team is how they play in the face of adversity. Down 14-0, YSU could have packed it in and handled the beating. Coach Eric Wolford transcends a difference not seen here since Jim Tressel as his Penguins would rattle off 31 unanswered points over a quarter-and-a-half. The Penguins took the ball on their own 19 and marched 81 yards to get on the board. Kurt Hess put the exclamation point on the drive finding Kevin Watts in the right back side of the end zone.
When Southern Illinois got the ball back, YSU showed a flash of serious momentum on defense. David Rach (pictured above) knocked the ball from Dieker and Luke Matelan landed on it to give the Penguins the ball on Southern Illinois 18-yard line. Hess again found Watts from eight yards out to tie the game at 14.
Brandian Ross got into the act with a spectacular pick of Dieker setting the Penguins up on the Saluki 41-yard line. Hess showed a lot of poise on the drive that would give YSU a 21-14 halftime lead. Three times on the drive, Hess looked as though he would be sacked for a loss but each time managed to throw the ball for a completion. Carson Sharbaugh hauled in a 3-yard heave (below) from Hess to give the Penguins their first lead in the contest.
In the third quarter, YSU gave Southern Illinois a healthy dose of Jamaine Cook. Cook had consecutive carries of 10,8, 3, and 1 yard with the one-yarder resulting in another YSU touchdown. The plunge of a yard made the score 28-14 with 5:59 left in the third quarter and the lid came off of the place as all 17,660 red-wearing Penguin fans were cheering wildly.
Stephen Blose hit a 37-yard field goal to increase the Penguin margin to 31-14. The Penguin defense was outstanding and set the offense up with great field position the entire game.
Southern Illinois scored a touchdown with 1:28 when Dieker ran one in from four yards out to make it 31-21. Dieker then found Joe Alaria cut the lead to 31-28 with 44 seconds remaining. Southern Illinois attempted another onside kick but the ball went out of bounds on the hop and YSU ran the clock out for the win.
After the game, Hess talked about the victory. “Being down 14-0 is not what we expected or wanted, beating the defending champions was a big win for this program. We worked hard all Summer for this, we are going to celebrate and then get ready for Missouri State next week”. Hess finished the game 9-15 passing for 94 yards and three touchdowns. He also had six carries for 24 yards but more importantly, he did a great job managing the clock and making some clutch plays under pressure.
Jamaine Cook was the leader on the ground for the Penguins (3-1, 1-0) with 26 carries for 115 yards. Cook commented on the win. “I think this win sent the message to everyone that this is not the old Youngstown, this is a new Youngstown, and we’re back. The offensive line did a tremendous job and they are getting better every week.”
Coach Eric Wolford was in a great mood after the game and had praise for everyone involved with his program. “It’s a big win, I tried to downplay the game. We worked fundamentals hard this week. We gave them the 14 points at the beginning. They are a good football team but I didn’t sense any panic on the sidelines. You really find out what kind of person you are when you face adversity in your life. I have a lot of confidence in our football team and we all believe in each other, we have a really tight family. I told the team that we have been one of the teams doing the hunting, now we have officially become the hunted. We are ten scholarships under everyone else using 53, this win is a tribute to this coaching staff.”
Southern Illinois (1-3, 0-1) was paced by Dieker’s 24-42 passing for 258 yards. Dieker flipped a pair of touchdowns in the loss.
YSU Football Profiles: Andre Elliott
Andre Elliott is not your average Penguin. He has responsibilities and pressures that many student athletes do ot have to deal with as a parent. “At the end of the day I don’t have time for TV and video games, I would rather go and spend time with my kids. I have a daughter, a son, and a stepson. I prefer to just go home and spend time with my girl and the kids, that is a good night to me”, said Elliott. He does manage to sneak a Tweet in now and then, but for the most part, he is one of my favorite Penguins over the past few years and has earned the respect of many with his great on-field skill set.
Paneech: Let’s start with the obvious. You were a carryover from last year under Coach Heacock, now you are playing for Coach Wolford. What is the difference between this year and last?
Elliott: They were actually pretty similar. They had the same goals in mind and have a common goal which is to get back to the playoffs where we used to be. The difference now is the enthusiasm. Coach Wolford brings a lot of enthusiasm and that rolls over to the players to bring to the field. When everyone is enthusiastic about the game, we just fly around and have fun.
Paneech: What about position coaches, is there a bigger difference this year than last?
Elliott: They are pretty much different even though they both worked really hard with us. Last year, Coach K (Kanatzer) did a lot in the film room with us. This year, Coach Stoops seems like he works harder on the field with us. They are both pretty tough coaches.
Paneech: You and a few of your fellow Penguins follow paneech.com on Twitter. What is your Twitter ID so we can build you some followers and talk about social media networking and sports. Who follows you that is big?
Elliott: My Twitter ID is Dre_Elliott2 and I tend to follow back anyone who follows me. Donald Jones follows me, the biggest response I ever had was from Kevin Hart, that was about it. I was active on Twitter early on and it just got old to me, so I fell back, now I am active with it again. I can easily see it shifting to something else because now my little sister is on it (laughing).
Paneech: You are majoring in Psychology. If I were an incoming freshman, what teacher should I take and what teacher should I maybe sidestep?
Elliott: I’m looking to finish up in December. The teacher to take would be Dr. Clayton, I love Dr. Clayton. I really don’t know who to avoid, I have had classes with mostly all of them and they all came off pretty good. There are some funny teachers like Dr. Flora that I would also recommend. The best class I ever took here at YSU though, is fencing. It’s pretty interesting getting to stab people for no reason (cracking up). The worst class I ever took was biology, I just couldn’t get into it.
Paneech: It has been said by the players, the coaches, and some of the media that if you guys play the way you did in the first half of the Penn State game that no one else left on the schedule can beat you. Do you agree?
Elliott: I agree with that. The rankings really don’t mean much in this conference because every team is a pretty good team and at anytime, anyone in the conference can beat anyone else. We have to play everyone in the conference as though we are playing for a National Championship. Being picked to finish seventh burned us, but it is a position we have to earn, and we failed to do that last year, so we have to fight for respect now.
Paneech: Who are you closest with on the team?
Elliott: Probably Brandian Ross, we take pretty much the same classes with the same major. My brother is actually his roommate so we do hang out a lot. I am still close with my family and they visit frequently. My mom just left today to go back to Cleveland and my dad gets down here when he can.
Paneech: If I were a high school senior in Youngstown, what would you say to make me want to go to YSU?
Elliott: There are a lot of things– the coaching staff, the fans, the intensity of the conference, the chance to play for a National Championship. The school is great and the enrollment has been growing, there is a great support system here.
One Word Answers
Musician That People Wouldn’t Believe You Listened To: Lady Gaga.
Favorite Restaurant: Cheesecake Factory. (Big ups to Dre_Elliott2@twitter.com on that).
Favorite TV Show: Fresh Prince of Bel Air.
Favorite Pro Wrestler: Hulk Hogan?
Favorite NFL Player: Ed Reed.
Favorite NBA Team: (pauses) Uh.. Cavaliers, even though LeBron is gone.
Order At Taco Bell: #6 Two chalupas and a soft taco with a strawberry fruitista freeze.
Best Football Move: My spin move coming on a blitz against Western Illinois last year.
Biggest Moment On The Field: 30-yard interception to the house against Northeastern last season.
If You Could Pick Anywhere To Live, Where Would You Go? France.
YSU vs Butler Preview
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.
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.
YSU Hangs On For A 31-21 Victory Against Western Illinois

On a perfect Fall evening, a football game involving two teams in a must-win situation took place in Youngstown. Youngstown State scored 31 first half points and Western Illinois didn’t score any. However, Western Illinois scored 21 second half points, and YSU failed to score a point. Combine the two very different halves and the result is a 31-21 YSU victory.
Youngstown State wasted little time getting on the scoreboard. Western Illinois booted the opening kickoff out-of-bounds giving YSU the ball on their own 40. Brandon Summers and the offense efficiently marched 60 yards in 10 plays. Kevin Smith capped the opening scoring drive with a 1-yard TD to give YSU a 7-0 lead. This marked the first time all year that YSU scored on their opening possession.
After stuffing the Leathernecks, the Penguins took over on their own 30 and marched 70 yards in 10 plays and Summers found Donald Jones for a 4-yard touchdown to increase the Penguin lead to 14-0 with 1:03 left in the first quarter. Kevin Smith had a key 26-yard run on the drive.
Western Illinois went 3-and-out. On the last play of the first quarter, Lenny Wicks returned a Leatherneck punt 25 yards to the WIU 38. At the end of one, it was all YSU, 14-0.
YSU covered 38 yards in 5 plays to increase the lead to 21-0. It was the Dana Brown show on this particular drive as Brown carried the ball on every play with the last being a one yard rushing touchdown at 12:33 of the second quarter.
In a continual display of dominance, YSU’s Na’eem Outler sacked WIU quarterback Wil Lunt and Sir Demarco Bledsoe pounced on the ball. On the very first offensive play, Summers went to the end zone for Donald Jones who made a remarkable effort but was interfered with giving YSU first-and-goal on the Leatherneck 8-yard line. Two plays later, Summers hooked up with Dominique Barnes for the eight yard score pushing the margin to 28-0 with 10:30 left in the first half.
Stephen Blose connected on a 27-yard field goal with 1:52 left in the half. The Penguin drive was 54 yards in 9 plays. It almost seemed as though the Penguins were concentrating more on chewing clock and getting Jabari Scott some carries. To this point, everything had clicked on offense, all three running backs had some yards, and Summers was 9 for 9 passing.
On the ensuing kickoff, YSU’s Brandian Ross recovered a fumble to give the Penguins the ball on WIU’s 37-yard line. The Penguins were unable to convert the turnover into any points however, about the only bad series they ran in the first half. Western Illinois seemed content to just run the clock out and try to get to the locker for a halftime regrouping session. At the half, this one was all YSU as the Penguins dominated the Leathernecks in every possible statistic for a 31-0 lead at the break.
Western Illionois came out a better team in the second half. The Leathernecks scored on a 30-yard strike from Lunt to Justin Rideau. The scoring drive was 9 plays for 77 yards and cut the YSU lead to 31-7 with 10:23 left in the third quarter.
Brandon Summers was intercepted by Stephen Moore and a personal foul gave the ball to WIU at the YSU 38. On a third-and-22, YSU got flagged for a roughing the passer penalty giving Western Illinois the ball on the YSU 12. On the very next play, Dre Gibbs coughed up the ball by the YSU goal line and Lenny Wicks recovered for the Penguins to help swing the momentum back to the side it was on the entire first half.
At the end of the third quarter, YSU maintained their 31-7 lead with a strong running attack that chewed the last six minutes of the quarter up. With the start of the fourth quarter, YSU had the ball on their own 48. The first play of the fourth quarter, however, proved costly as Summers was chased down from behind and the ball came loose. Brandon Kreczmer recovered the ball for the Leathernecks at YSU’s 34.
With 12:25 left in the game, Western Illinois got an 11-yard scamper from Gibbs to successfully convert the turnover into points and further cut into the dwindling YSU lead, now 31-14.
The Leathernecks continued marching back as Lito Senatus caught a bullet from Lunt for 12 yards and a touchdown with 7:54 remaining in the game. The lead was down to 31-21 and Western Illinois was playing as good as YSU did in the first half. Conversely, YSU was playing as poorly as Western did in the first half.
After another three-and-out, YSU punted the ball away. Western Illinois started their next drive on their own 29. Andre Elliott blitzed and absolutely smashed Lunt as he was releasing a pass which wobbled about half of its intended ditance where David Rach was waiting to intercept the ball back for the Penguins.

YSU successfully chewed up the rest of the fourth quarter on the shoulders of Senior TB Kevin Smith (pictured) and held off a fierce Leatherneck comeback to preserve what seemed like a blowout but ended up somewhat of a nailbiter.
For YSU, Kevin Smith finished with 113 yards on 28 carries and a TD. Donald Jones caught 8 passes for 94 yards and one TD. Brandon Summers finished 12-18 for 134 yards, an interception, and two TD’s. Stephen Blose had a good day as he kicked four extra points and was 1/1 on field goals.
Western Illinois was headed by Dre Gibbs who finished the game with 162 all-purpose yards (155 rushing, 7 receiving). QB Wil Lunt was 9-19 for 109 yards, one interception, and two TD’s. Justin Rideau caught 5 Lunt passes for 79 yards and 2 TD’s. The statistic that buried the Leathernecks was penalty yards. WIU accumulated 11 penalties for 108 yards compared to YSU having only five penalties.
After the game, Coach Jon Heacock praised the effort of his opponent. “I don’t care what the records are. You better show up and play every minute of every game on Saturday. Give them [Western Illinois] credit for fighting until the end and playing hard. We have some time [with the bye week] to pick out the things we can’t do and the things that we can do and become more consistent.”
Senior TB Kevin Smith, who has a couple of fumbles this season commented on grinding out the last four minutes of the game. “It felt good. I had a couple of drops and it felt good that the coaches had the confidence in me to give me the ball and run down the clock.”
Lenny Wicks talked about whether or not he was ready for the bye week. “Yes, we have some time to rest and get alot of practice in to get ready for Southern Illinois because that’s a big game.”
YSU travels to Southern Illinois for an October 24th game. With the extra week of preparation, Coach Heacock will have the team ready for that big game.



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