Posts Tagged ‘Tom Zetts’
Youngstown State Off To A 2-0 Conference Start, 35-24 Road Winnners
Youngstown State continued attempting to make believers out of skeptics on Saturday. The Penguins won the turnover count, ultimately resulting in winning the game against Indiana State, 35-24 to raise the record to 5-1 and 2-0 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference standings.
Martin Ruiz, who has emerged as the feature back, continued his consistent production as he scored three times from 44, 13, and six yards out. Ruiz would finish the game with 141 of YSU’s 196 rushing yards on 23 carries.
The turning point of the game was a 95-yard interception return for a touchdown by Jameel Smith (below). Indiana State was threatening to take the lead when Smith picked off Mike Perish and went almost the length of the entire field to completely kill the Sycamores momentum and giving the Penguins a 14-3 lead.
The Penguins were ahead 21-10 at the half when the weather got ugly. A thunderstorm rolled through and would delay the game 75 minutes.
After the lengthy delay, Kurt Hess found Christian Bryan for a two yard score that would increase the Penguin lead to 35-10. Hess played his consistent brand of football for the Guins not turning the ball over and making plays while protecting the ball. He would finish the game with 14 completions in 23 attempts for 164 yards.
Hess also reached yet another milestone. Needing only five yards entering the game, he broke a record held by Tom Zetts for passing yards and total offense.
Indiana State racked up some yards as the Penguins were giving small yardage in exchange for clock in the fourth quarter.
Perish, the Sycamore quarterback, entered the game boasting the best passing game in the conference, but when a team is 1-4, many yards get compiled in late game situations when you are trailing. He would finish the game with 392 yards and three touchdowns.
Highly touted running back, Shakir Bell, was held in check by a stingy Penguins run defense. Bell would finish the contest with seven carries for 17 yards and didn’t even lead the Sycamores in rushes.
Next up for YSU (5-1, 2-0) is Illinois State. The Redbirds defeated Western Illinois 35-21 to even their conference record at 1-1. The home game will mark the first time during the Eric Wolford era that a YSU team will be riding a two game road winning streak.
Penguins Close Regular Season With A 27-6 Pasting Of Indiana State
Youngstown State came into their last regular season game knowing that they had to win against a good Indiana State team to have any chance at all to make the postseason. Taking care of their business to the tune of 27-6, all YSU could do was hope for some help to make the playoffs.
The billing for this game was the matchup of running backs as Jamaine Cook and Shakir Bell, the two anchors of their teams respective offenses. However, field goal kicking took center stage, and nobody would have predicted a David Brown and Tanner Fritschle matchup to determine the outcome of two potent offensive units.
Bell, reportedly, did not start the game for disciplinary reasons. Toward the end of the first quarter, the Sycamores junior tailback emerged from the bench. In the end though, the YSU offense proved to be the best defense against Bell. By building a big lead, the Sycamores were forced to pas more than they normally would like, meaning no Bell to worry about.
Brown booted a 20 yard field goal in the first quarter and a 47-yarder before the half. Fritschle kicked a 30-yard field goal. With the two field goals, Brown put the Penguins ahead, 6-3, at the half.
Fritschle would boot a 32-yard field goal that made it a 6-6 game. Once the Penguins punted on their ensuing possession, the Sycamores drove deep into Penguin territory, but came away with zero points as Donald D’Alesio picked off a pass attempt at the YSU three yard line.
The Penguins would take that possession and turned it into a 97-yard drive that culminated in Kurt Hess throwing a beautiful fade pattern to Andrew Williams with 3:20 remaining in the third period.
With that touchdown pass, Hess’s 52nd, the junior quarterback surpassed Tom Zetts as the Penguins all-time touchdown tosser. In the present, it gave the Penguins a 13-6 lead.
The Penguins controlled all three phases of the game. The special teams were the best they have been all season, and the defense has improved steadily to look as good as they had all year.
“Our conference deserves to have four teams in the playoffs. It is like the SEC at this level. We beat a BCS team [Pitt] and I have always been told that those count as two”, said YSU Coach Eric Wolford.
Coach Wolford was as pleased as he had been with any of the other six Penguin victories.
“I feel confident with our strength of schedule, it will be enough for the committee to take a look at us. Anytime you can hold Bell under 100 yards, it’s a good day for your defense”, commented Wolford.
On their next possession, which started in the the third quarter and went into the 14:18 mark of the fourth, the Penguins scored again to make it 20-6. Cook capped off the short, six-play drive with a 32-yard burst off the left edge.
Once the Penguins went back on defense, they had Indiana State in an obvious passing mode and did a great job preventing anything big from happening. Dom Rich came off the right edge for a big sack on a first down blitz and Mike Perish had two more incompletions before the Sycamores would be forced to punt the ball away again.
“It was my guaranteed last game”, said Cook. “We wanted to go out with a bang. I will be praying tonight. Anytime you have a winning record, it is a successful season, but we have a standard here to make the playoffs, so it will be bittersweet.”
The Penguins scored on their third consecutive possession when Hess again went deep, finding Williams for the second time. The pitch and catch covered 43 yards and built the lead to 27-6.
“If we do make the playoffs, I don’t think we will lose again, we are absolutely playing our best right now”, said Rich.
Julius Childs accented the defensive effort with an interception, the second of the game for YSU. Going into this game, the Penguins only had two interceptions for the whole season.
Cook had a good game to close out his career as a Penguin. The senior tailback rambled for 124 yards on 30 carries. Cook entered the game with 3, 938 yards. This effort put him over the 4,000 yard mark, and he also eclipsed Adrian Brown for second on YSU’s all-time rushing list.
Besides breaking the record for passing touchdowns, Hess settled down, especially in the second half. Hess engineered several first downs and kept the Penguins way ahead in the vaunted time of possession category, which they won, 36:36-23:24. Hess was 20-28 for 248 yards and two touchdowns.
Bell didn’t have the Saturday he had last season against a Penguin defense that has been improving steadily all season. The junior had 18 carries for 54 yards.
Aronde Stanton talked about the YSU defensive success against Bell.
“It shows how much we improved, it is a credit to the coaches. There was a lot at stake today, and we came out and laid it all on the line. It bothers me because we left a few games out there, hopefully the good Lord will take care of us.”
YSU Travels To Macomb To Face Western Illinois
Youngstown State will travel to Macomb, Illinois, for their final regular season road contest to face Western Illinois. The Penguins (5-4, 2-4) are trying to regain the swagger that had them ranked as high as third in the polls. Then October came. The Leathernecks (3-6, 1-5) are having a pretty tough campaign as well, but hope that the adrenaline will propel them to a victory on Senior Day.
The Penguins have preached all season long that they will not look ahead, but rather, focus on the opponent of the week. Coach Eric Wolford also vowed that this team could not put all of its eggs in one basket, but a loss would surely eliminate the Penguins from any hopes of postseason life. The eggs are in one basket every week.
If the Penguins can secure a win in Macomb, next week’s contest against Indiana State will have huge playoff implications that could seed the winner. One week at a time though, as the focus is on the Leathernecks of Western Illinois.
Last season, the Penguins won a lopsided 56-11 verdict at Stambaugh Stadium. The Penguins have owned the Leathernecks in the recent years, winning seven of the last eight games, and now hold a 16-11 edge in the series. Even though Western Illinois has lost seven of their last eight, senior WR Charles Chestnut vows that his team is going to do all they can to win.
The Penguins have turned up the pressure, recording eleven sacks in the last three games. Aronde Stanton and Nick DeKraker have a sack in each of the three games.
Offensively, Kurt Hess needs one more touchdown pass to take sole ownership of the most touchdowns in a career. The junior signal caller is tied with Tom Zetts at 51 aerial tosses. RB Jamaine Cook (above) is the reigning MVFC Offensive Player of The Week as he popped out 203 yards on 42 carries last week in the win over South Dakota.
Cook is also chasing some historical marks. He can set the career mark at YSU for all-purpose yardage if he can accumulate 180 yards. He also trails Adrian Brown by 163 yards for second place on the all-time rushing yardage list.
“The win last week definitely helps us get our confidence back on track”, said OL Lamar Mady. “Everybody is level-headed and working hard to be prepared for the next game. We want to get the whole offense running strong again.”
Kickoff from Macomb is 2 pm EST (1 pm CST) and the game will be carried on WFMJ. Don’t count YSU out yet.
Youngstown State Football Names Captains
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.
Why Electronic Media Sites Struggle To Get Credentials
I have been at this blogging stuff for almost a year and I have tried to get credentialed to as many things as possible. I have had moderate success, but the rejection I have received is for what I think are the wrong reasons. Most of the time when I am denied a credential to a concert or major sporting event, I am handed the line that the performing party will only credential major traditional media such as television or newspapers. I understand that advertising is a reason why those outlets receive preferential treatment and I respect both the local newspaper and the local television stations.
My first break for a credential came with the now defunct Mahoning Valley Thunder arena football team. I called and asked, explained that I get some hits and outlined what I could do to help promote their product. The powers that be issued the credential and I was extensive in my coverage of a team that would pack it in at the end of the year. When I look at my hits and where they are coming from today, people are still looking at player profile pieces I did on Quorey Payne, Larry Harrison, Blake Powers, and Tom Zetts. I took about 95% of my own pictures, made sure to have a player profile up every week, did game previews and summaries, and received the respect of the people who took a chance on me.
My next big break was the Mahoning Valley Scrappers. The Scrappers are the short-season Single-A affiliate for the Cleveland Indians with Travis Fryman as their manager. I embraced the Scrappers project much the same way I did the Thunder. Profiles, pictures, game summaries, and extensive coverage. Overall, I feel the Scrappers also liked the efforts I put forth to cover their team.
I consider Youngstown State to be a sports school. With a national reputation as the school where Jim Tressel came from, I was so honored to gain access to YSU sporting events. I am currently covering football, but mens and womens basketball are right around the corner and I will be as extensive as I ever have. This was the biggest credential I have received to date and it really keeps me busy. I know players see their profiles because I receive favorable feedback from them. YSU has “traditional media” covering their games and I am thrilled that I am rubbing elbows with the best in the area.
The most recent credential came from the Youngstown Phantoms of the USHL. Same deal as above in the sense that I am trying to cover this team to the best of my ability. It is harder to take pictures at these games because of the glass, but I am doing my best to give the readers a good shot. This season is young but I feel comfortable with the coaches, players, and front office people who have extended the olive branch to the blogger.
Toward the end of the 2009 baseball season, I decided to take a chance and call the Pirates and Indians to maybe get a credential to one game at each place and interview anyone I could. Both markets refused to give me a credential stating non-traditional media with no affiliation could not be awarded credentials. I didn’t argue because if it is their policy, then so be it. The way I see it, baseball attendance in these two markets is not soaring and if they want to roil in disaster, it is obviously less pressure on me to find positive things to write about. The 4500 people who went to a Pirates home game surely would have spotted me and filed some form of complaint with Bud Selig or Pirate Management. That nearly empty press box would have needed a good cleaning after I got done with one game and I am well aware that cuts were made and it might be hard to send Ryan Doumit back up there with a broom with his shin hurting so badly.
My latest endeavor of credential seeking failure comes from the land of music. Concert promoters carry the same belief as MLB, an unlikely Rock & Jock connection. They too feel that traditional media is worthy of a credential. Mind you, a credential at a concert means you have permission to take pictures for the first three songs, there are no interviews or backstage access. To be denied the privelage to snap a few photos was upsetting. Traditional media was allowed to do so. This is brilliant for many reasons.
Firstly, I have no beefs with the local newspaper, I think they do tremendous work and the promotional articles are on time and to the point, they work. However, when a guy in New York is looking for a review on Styx, Daughtry, or Kelly Clarkson (all denials for me ), I don’t think he is going to hop in the Jeep and drive to Youngstown to read the local newspaper for a review. If these people were on the fence about buying a ticket, they would probably Google a specific band and maybe use a keyword of “review”. I know that is the route I would take. They find a website that reviewed the concert, they read the review, they are impressed that Styx played “I Am The Walrus” as their third song and want to hear it, so they buy tickets.
Will there be newspapers in 15 years? No one can answer that. I read mine every day and will continue to subscribe. But is there anyone with a brain cell who doesn’t think that websites are turning into mainstream media? There is an unlimited audience, it doesn’t cost a penny to visit most sites, and the coverage is adequate. Writers like Jay Marriotti have blasted the internet contributions in the past, probably because they feel threatened. Yeah, kudos to those who went to school for four years and got a journalism degree, they have my respect and write some intriguing pieces. Should they be allowed to have websites? Do they have programming certification and/or even know what a widget is?
I will continue to seek media credentials for any event I feel will generate this site more hits. I will also be as diligent and prompt as I can be to ensure exposure of a positive nature to the group or organization who issued a credential to me. Thanks to those who have said yes!
To those who will only cater to traditional media: Welcome to the future where typewriter ink rolls are going through the roof and black and white film is getting harder to come by.
Mahoning Valley Thunder Future Looking Doubtful
Things do not look very promising for a 2010 Mahoning Valley Thunder season. All office positions were laid off this past week and the word I have received is that the only way the Youngstown-based AF2 franchise will return is if they are sold.
I started questioning the future before the last game when I saw a 50% off of all Thunder merchandise. I was told by everyone I asked that the 50% off merchandise was standard for the last home game every year since the team started. Having attended last years final game, I distinctly remember only certain items being 50% off, whereas other items were either discounted less or even full price. Foam fingers do not deteriorate in the offseason.
The ownership trio comprised of Dr. Michael Slyk, Tim Chesney, and Dr. Jon Saadey have yet to come forward and officially announce whether or not the team will be back or not. These three guys are respectable Youngstown-area businessmen who were passionate about their product. The product lacked several things over the past couple of seasons including two key ingredients – wins and profit.
The lack of wins were accounted to several factors including injuries, poor coaching, and the lack of one quarterback to lead the team. Look at a successful program like Wilkes-Barre in AF2. Ryan Vena has been there, they have chemistry without shuttling guys on and off the roster hoping to strike lightning in a bottle. The combination of Chris MacKeown and Tom Zetts could work over time. Mad respect for MacKeown, I never met a coach who was so hell-bent on winning. Zetts is wrapped up in his real-life world of teaching and coaching to consider making AF2 money, and I can’t blame him.
The pay structure of AF2 is pretty bad. A player can make $250 if their team wins or $200 if they lose. No PERS, no cable at the apartment, and no cell phone allowance. Don’t blame Thunder ownership, it’s not their scale, it is the league’s.
The lack of a profit can be attributed to a few obvious factors. Winning creates a better opportunity to draw more fans. I always felt that the early Thunder teams, which featured a local player or two, would draw you 1,000 more fans a game. Mike Stanec, former Thunder linbacker and YSU alum, had friends and family at every game that first season, I sat near them once. Tom Zetts brought in at least 1,000 fans to the last game who probably would not have shown up had he not been suited up. Coach MacKeown and I had the talk about local talent versus trying to win as to what would draw fans. He seemed to think winning would be the better cure. I think its an infusion of both. Hell, let’s face it, I could have kicked better than Derek Shorejs did this season. Why not sign a local kicker like Brian Palmer at the beginning of the season?
The other factor I thought that killed the Thunder was parking and concessions. Granted, the Covelli Centre had the contract drawn up and management knew their hands were tied on promotions. People paying $6 for a beer and $10 to park does not cut it. A Scrappers Thursday game takes the same $16 and parks four cars and buys six beers. Do the math. It is not financially sound to have a sports team play at the Covelli Centre if they will not bend on parking and concessions. I am curious to see if the Youngstown Phantoms will have the same problems with the “pricey” costs involved.
I’m not sure if, but rather when, the ownership group will announce the end of arena football in Youngstown.
Thank You Mahoning Valley Thunder For Not Quitting
The Mahoning Valley Thunder closed out their season Saturday night. Unfortunately, the home team was unable to end on a high note losing 63-43 to the playoff-bound Green Bay Blizzard. The 2-14 record posted by the Thunder does not even come close to the spirit and competitive fire I saw all year. This team was in more than half of the games they lost.
Personnel changes make a difference whether dealing with a band, a sports franchise, or the office. Team chemistry needs to develop, it can’t just be inserted and plugged in. With a high number of coaching changes and team philosophies, the odds of success increase greatly. The Thunder endured three coaching changes in 2009. Mike Hold started the season as the head coach. He was terminated and replaced by Brennan Booth. Andy Kelly was brought in to run an offense struggling to score. Eight weeks in, Booth gets knocked down to defensive coordinator, Andy Kelly goes away without ever seeing a steel mill, and Chris MacKeown, the Bill Parcells of arena ball is hired to run things. Mackeown has the reputation of making bad teams good, “We want to build on guys that have character like this and play hard every snap. I have always had an offseason to work on things and this was a new challenge. I have taken bad teams and turned them around, which I was unable to do here. We have to get better on offense. We have to stay healthy to put more points on the board, and we will. We scored 50 points once while I was here, and that will not happen next year.”
Problems at QB have been there all year. Davon Vinson was pegged to start but was replaced, Blake Powers took over for the Thunder and played respectably until breaking his collar bone and landing on IR. When Powers couldn’t play, Vinson was rewarded the starting job back and was yanked after being ineffective. Brad Roach was brought in to learn fast and thrown into the fire even faster. Tom Zetts was a season-ending addition who took over for the injured Roach. Three coaches + four quarterbacks = mess.
Quorey Payne should add the words “instant offense” to his name. Payne was exciting to watch all season catching passes and returning kickoffs. He made it through most of the year until knee problems ended his season. Payne told me his agent is working on a highlight film to send out to UFL teams. CJ Brewer missed the last couple of games with a broken hand. Brewer had the best end zone celebrations I have ever seen with the exception of Jermaine Moye’s display Saturday. On a Moye from Zetts TD reception, Jermaine mocked The Rock and gave the ball “the people’s elbow“. I asked Moye about the celebration, “I’m not really a celebration type dude, but I am a fan of The Rock.” Moye said he is looking forward to playing football and thinks Ohio is the advertised hotbed it has come to be known as. He also said, as did Quorey Payne, they would love to play here again if there is a team and they don’t end up playing on Sundays.
Tom Zetts enjoyed his brief stint with the Thunder. “We had a good crowd. I was happy to see family, friends, teachers basketball players [that he coached], it was great to see everybody. I wish we would have pulled that win out for these fans. We put on a little show for the hometown crowd.” When asked about his future, Zetts simply said, “You never know, I never thought I would play these three games so you just never know.”
Frashon McGee showed his adaptability by switching to receiver for the last game and had a couple of big catches. McGee had a tryout with the Buffalo Bills a few weeks back and has the size that Quorey Payne lacks to be a Sunday guy.
I will miss looking forward to Thunder games. The question has been kicked around locally of whether this team will return to play in Youngstown next year. I asked one of the owners, Tim Chesney, what the future prospectus of the team were. ” We [the three owners] will sit down next week and evaluate everything. I cannot say whether next year will happen yet or not until everything is assessed and looked over.” I also asked Chesney what he thought of the crowd, “It was encouraging to have a good sized crowd and we thank the fans for their support” The crowd of almost 4,000 proved that arena football in Youngstown is marketable.
So, before closing the book on 2009, and hopefully looking forward to 2010, there are some thanks to be given. Thank you to Anthony Farris for always being accomodating and positive. (The Farris – Aleshere broadcast team feature piece will be up in the next week). Thanks to coaches Chris MacKeown and Brennan Booth. They were also very generous with their time and deserve praise for their efforts. Thanks to Blake Powers, Brad Roach, Davon Vinson, and Tom Zetts, for the constant effort at quarterback. Thanks to Larry Harrison, the Reggie White of arena ball, for always having a smile and caring about the game results with all of his heart. Quorey Payne and Jermaine Moye are two very special guys. They were always polite, always had a smile on their faces, were thankful and praiseworthy of their profiles, and earned my respect as people. Thank you to the girl who would burn 1,000 calories a night running scoring summaries all over the press area. Thanks to the stats guys, the television broadcast team, and Scott Jones. Carlos Spinner, put that camera down and heal up.
I really hope this team comes back next season because these games are an event and those who attended appreciated the promos and dancers and watching a guy pick his nose on a big screen for a whole minute. There were memories attached to anyone who attended. Owners, if you are reading this, the demand is there, the right people are in place, and next year will be a playoff year.
Mahoning Valley Thunder Finish Season At 2-14
Some things in life never seem to materialize. With all of the factors working against the Mahoning Valley Thunder, their 2009 season came to an end on the wrong side of a 63-43 score against the Green Bay Blizzard. When you add up all of the season-ending injuries, coaching changes, and constant roster moves, it seemed like a nearly impossible task put in front of coaches Chris MacKeown and Brennan Booth. This game typified what things could have been, as well as, what never materialized.
The Thunder took the opening kickoff and marched 38 yards capitalized by a Tom Zetts to Jermaine Moye 9-yard TD pass for a 7-0 lead, the only score by either team in the first quarter. Zetts found Pat Clark for a 36-yard TD putting the Thunder up 14-0.
After a Green Bay TD to cut the lead to 14-7, Mahoning Valley’s offense took the field on their own 5-yard line. Zetts fumbled while eluding a furious Green Bay rush and had the ball jarred in the end zone. Green Bay pounced on the loose pigskin to tie the game at 14-14.
YSU Alum and Mineral Ridge graduate Brian Palmer kicked a 45-yard FG tying a franchise record to give the Thunder a 17-14 lead. Palmer had three FG’s on the night (45, 35, 22) and made all but one extra point. He also had a great night kicking the ball off.
On the very next possession, Green Bay QB and former Cincinnati Bearcat, Gino Guidugli found his favorite target Nate Forse for a 47-yard touchdown putting the Blizzard back on top 21-17.
Mahoning Valley responded as Moye caught a pass from Zetts and made a great run-after-catch to slip into the end zone and put Mahoning Valley back on top 24-21.
After another Green Bay drive and TD, Palmer kicked a 35-yarder to cut the Green Bay halftime lead to just one point at 28-27. The first half was a perfect example of what could have been for the Thunder’s 2009 season. They played with fire and intensity, minimized mistakes, and were playing dead even with a 9-6 team.
Unfortunately, any level of American football plays two halves. The Thunder jumped on top riding another Palmer kick from 22 yards to take a 30-28 lead. Green Bay scored the next two TD’s and had a 42-30 lead in the fourth quarter. The Thunder tried to battle back as Zetts found wide receiver convert Frashon McGee for a 27-yard TD to cut the lead to 42-36. Unfortunately, the Thunder got no closer than the six-point deficit and went on to lose 63-43. The last Thunder TD came on a 31-yard pass from Zetts to McGee.
Tom Zetts finished the game 20-43 for 272 yards and five TD’s. Jermaine Moye led Mahoning Valley with 8 catches for 108 yards and two TD’s. Gino Guidugli was 23-32 for 271 yards and 4 TD’s for Green Bay. Turnovers played a big role in this game as Mahoning Valley coughed it up three times compared to Green Bay’s one.
There will be plenty more Thunder coverage over the next couple of weeks including a season summary I will be compiling. There will also be a feature on Christian Aleshere and Anthony Farris, the voices of the Thunder. I interviewed seven people including an owner, Tim Chesney, after the game about the future of this team playing in Youngstown again next season – look for bits and pieces coming soon!
Mahoning Valley Thunder To Close Season Saturday
The Mahoning Valley Thunder will close out their 2009 season at home this Saturday when they take on 9-6 Green Bay. Mahoning Valley is coming off of their second win of the 2009 season, a 41-39 victory over Albany. The win broke a two-plus year road losing streak and snapped a 13-game losing streak for Mahoning Valley. What made the win so improbable was losing CJ Brewer on the opening kickoff. Brewer was going to be the guy who picked up the slack for injured leader Quorey Payne.
Coach Chris MacKeown was pleased with the effort of his team. “We started the game with one healthy receiver, CJ breaks his hand on the opening kickoff, Moye is forced to play a position he had never played before. We played the game with two defensive backs at receiver, we’ve got a quarterback who is making his first start ever, we’re on the road against a team fighting for a playoff spot, and we end up getting a victory on the road. It was huge. I’m excited about how we did it under those circumstances. We eliminated mistakes and won using our formula.”
Frashon McGee will get the call at receiver this week. “The H is an important spot which CJ was going to fill. You have to be intelligent and read the defensive coverages, the H has to get us into good situations. McGee will play there for us this week”, commented MacKeown.
Should be a good crowd this week with hometown favorite, Tom Zetts, making his first home start at quarterback, reduced beer prices, and coming off of a big win. MacKeown commented on the potential crowd, “I will be disappointed if we see less than 5000 people here Saturday. Although people might look at the record and say, I’m not going. Tom Zetts is starting at quarterback, got a win in his first start, and I hope Youngstown comes out and supports one of their native sons.”
Zetts was not as optimistic about 5000 fans. “I wouldn’t be disappointed, 5000 is alot of people. That would be a huge boost and I hope we have a good crowd, I’m looking forward to it.” Zetts also commented on his future in football when asked if this was it, “I couldn’t tell you. I thought I was done when I left YSU, and then I thought I was done when I played in Italy, who knows, maybe this is it, maybe it isn’t. It’s too soon to tell. I am going to try to keep myself in shape in case anything ever comes up.”
The Mahoning Valley – Green Bay contest is Saturday night at The Covelli Centre. Beer is selling at a greatly reduced price, Tom Zetts will want to put on a show for family and friends, Coach MacKeown wants the second consecutive win, and the Thunder want to deliver against a playoff team to prove their underachievements this season. Come and watch!
Mahoning Valley Thunder Snap Two-Year Road Losing Streak
June 2, 2007 was the last time the Mahoning Valley Thunder won a road game. July 17, 2009 will go down as the beginning of a new streak, a road winning streak as the Thunder upset the Manchester Wolves, 41-39 in front of nearly 5,000 fans hoping to see their Wolves clinch a playoff spot. The Thunder also canned a 13-game losing streak to pick up their second win of the season.
Tom Zetts, making his first start, was voted the Russell Offensive Player of the game on 12-24 passing for 236 yards with five TD’s and just one INT. Manchester QB Mike Potts had better numbers on 31-48 for 337 yardswith four TD’s and one pick. Zetts, however, continually made the big play when he had to in leading the Thunder upset of the Wolves.
Remember four short weeks ago when the Thunder had a 20-0 lead on the Wolves at the Covelli Centre? They had a 19-0 lead in this contest, and actually trailed 39-35 with :53 left in the game. Zetts found Pat Clark for a 34-yard TD lifting the Thunder to a 41-39 lead with ten seconds left. Mahoning Valley unsuccessfully attempted a two-point conversion. Mike Alston blocked a 27-yard game-winning field goal attempt to secure the victory for the Thunder. Alston finished the game with that blocked kick, four tackles, a sack, and a broken-up pass.
Jermaine Moye caught 5 passes for 93 yards and two TD’s. CJ Brewer injured himself (dislocated finger) on the opening kickoff and never returned. The Thunder were already playing the game without their biggest weapon, Quorey Payne, who was placed on IR earlier in the week.
The Thunder close out the year against Green Bay at home this weekend. Can Zetts lead the team to a two-game season-ending winning streak? Should be a good week to catch the game.