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7 Turnovers, Missed FG Spoil Hofstra Homecoming





7 Turnovers, Missed FG Spoil Hofstra Homecoming
by Jon Wagner
Sr. Writer at Large-Football Reporters Online

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. – As fitting as the Hofstra football team’s nickname the “Pride” was last week after Hofstra upset then-seventh ranked, Colonial Athletic Association defending champion James Madison, is how much that same moniker is a mismatch this week, as pride turned to utter disappointment in the wake of Hofstra’s mistake-filled 16-14 homecoming loss to Maine, before 5,453 at James M. Shuart Stadium on Saturday.

If a nickname were given to the game played by the Pride, the title of the 1966 film starring Clint Eastwood, “The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly,” would be appropriate.

The good for Hofstra (3-3, 1-2 CAA)? Getting 32 first downs to Maine’s 11, outgaining the Black Bears 533 yards to 311, including 293-122 on the ground, and forcing three Maine turnovers.

The bad? Scoring just 14 points and losing a game at home that Hofstra was favored to win, despite all of the aforementioned numbers in the Pride’s favor.

And, the ugly? The biggest reasons that the bad outweighed the good for Hofstra: a short missed field goal attempt after a bad snap, and seven turnovers, including three apiece for two different quarterbacks who combined for five interceptions.

“The two biggest things we talk about in winning football games,” said Hofstra head coach Dave Cohen, “Are winning the turnover battle and outplaying the other team on special teams. Cleary today, the first one I talked about is the reason we’re sitting here as not victorious. To outgain an opponent by 220 yards and not win, as I said, it comes down to two things, winning on special teams and winning the turnover battle.”

On the interceptions, four of which were into a fairly strong breeze, Cohen said the wind was not that much of a factor, saying “We had a number of poor decisions… three of [the interceptions] were deflected passes.”

The game started looking like it might be a proverbial letdown game for Hofstra after last week’s big win. Maine returned the opening kickoff 33 yards to its own 40, and then went 60 yards on six plays, in just 2:43, to lead 6-0 (the PAT was missed off the left upright) on a 5-yard touchdown run by freshman Julian McCall. The score was set up by consecutive 10-yard runs by sophomore quarterback Warren Smith (team-high 82 yards on 16 carries) and a 36-yard pass by Smith to the Hofstra 5 yard-line to Tyrell Jones, who made a nice leaping catch, taking advantage of Hofstra cornerback, senior Leslie Jackman slipping on the play.

When asked if his players might have been flat after the JMU victory, Cohen said “I wouldn’t think so.” Cohen’s defense seemed to back him up on that assessment, allowing just ten points the rest of the way, despite the seven Pride turnovers yet to come and Maine starting in or entering Hofstra territory on another seven possessions.

The Black Bears were on the verge of extending their lead in the first quarter when they committed their first turnover, a fumble sophomore tailback Derek Session, recovered by Hofstra senior safety Ray McDonough at the Hofstra 1 yard-line.

But, after the Pride senior quarterback Cory Christopher (22-32, 223 yards, 1 TD, 3 INT) led the Hofstra to its own 48 yard-line, sophomore quarterback Steve Probst (2-8, 17 yards, 0 TD, 2 INT) came in and threw an incomplete pass on 2nd-and 7, before throwing his first interception at the Maine 39, returned by Maine sophomore linebacker Donte Dennis to the Hofstra 43. Dennis said the Maine’s ability to force so many Hofstra mistakes started earlier in the week, as he said “We had so many interceptions and fumbles in practice and it carried over to the game.”

Hofstra then forced a punt, but the next possession ended in a fumble by junior wide receiver Aaron Weaver, recovered by the Black Bears at the Pride 49.

Again, Hofstra held, but a 13-play, 77-yard, 6-minute drive led by Christopher, ended with his first interception at the Maine 6, returned 36 yards by sophomore safety Jerron McMillan, to the Maine 42.
The Hofstra defense forced a three-and-out, but Probst, inserted back into the lineup, ended the next Pride possession by throwing his second pick at the Black Bears’ 38.

That turnover, Maine did capitalize on, going 9 plays and 62 yards in 3:41, as Smith found senior wide receiver Landis Williams on an 18-yard touchdown pass, giving Maine a 13-0 lead with 1:17 left in the half.

With Christopher back in through the quarterback revolving door, Hofstra drove into field goal range, but after a personal foul penalty on junior running back Everette Benjamin pushed the Pride back, Christopher tossed his second interception at the Maine 24 with 9 seconds left in the half, before the Black Bears ran out the clock to take a 13-0 lead into the locker room.

More of the same continued as the third quarter started. Christopher drove Hofstra to the Maine 32, but was intercepted for a third time.

Although he was surprised with the yardage his team allowed, asking “[533 yards?] We gave up that much? Wow!” Maine head coach Jack Cosgrove said his team was ready to be as opportunistic it was, saying “That’s the key to the whole thing, is the turnovers. We felt like there were some late throws by their quarterbacks, occasionally some risky throws, we saw it in tape. [They had a] low elbow at times and getting the ball batted a bit. We were talking about it all week long, watching it on the tape… they did what we expected them to do.” That despite, his team being short-handed, as Cosgrove added, “We had four guys that we left at home and we had redshirt freshman out there, and sophomores. It was just special to see them persevere. We made plays when we had to.”

Finally, things started to break right for the Pride though. A Session fumble recovered by Hofstra at its own 35 with 11:17 left to the Pride’s first score. First, freshman Miguel Maysonet, who had an earlier rush for 28 yards, and a career and game-high of 95 yards on just 7 carries, sprung for a 19-yard run.

Later on the sane drive, Probst ran for 9, 21, 9, and 3 yards on successive four carries, to get Hofstra to the Maine 1. That set up a one-yard touchdown run for Benjamin, trimming Maine’s lead to 13-7 with 8:18 left in the third quarter.

Cohen defended the two-quarterback system Hofstra employs, saying “I think it’s obvious, the strength of the two quarterbacks… how Cory throws the ball down the field a little bit stronger, and… how Steven runs the ball better and put the defense in a dilemma as far as the option game is concerned.”

Still, the turnovers caused Cohen to consider a change to using one quarterback, as Cohen admitted “That’s something we’ll decide… when we watch the film and [I] discuss it with the staff.”

Hofstra stopped Maine again, and had a good chance to take the lead, with Probst (12 carries for 91 yards) again running well, leading the Pride to a 1st-and-goal at the Black Bears’ 6. But, two rushes that netted only a yard, followed by an incomplete pass led to another missed opportunity for Hofstra. Senior kicker Henry Greco, rushed by a bad snap and Maine freshman Darlos James extending for a block attempt from the left side, pushed a chip shot 22-yard field goal which would have cut the Black Bear lead to 13-10, wide right with 14:51 left in the game, thus wasting a 13-play, 70-yard drive that ate up 6:46 on the clock.

Smith (15-25, 189 yards, 2 TS, 1 INT) was then intercepted on the next Maine possession at the Hofstra 11, by sophomore linebacker Gregory Melendez.

Hofstra opted to stick with Probst, who had a pair of 10-yard rushes on the next drive, but Probst fumbled, and Dennis recovered at the Hofstra 46.

The Black Bears then drove 35 yards on 11 plays in 3:51, and extended their lead to 16-7 on a 28-yard field goal by Jordan Waxman with 5:37 left.

Down two scores, with time running out, the Pride went away from their running quarterback in Probst, and back to their throwing signal caller, Christopher, completed 7 of 9 passes on 10-play, 72-yard drive in 3:15, scoring on a 4-yard touchdown pass from Christopher to Weaver, who made a very nice leaping catch, getting his feet down in the back of the end zone, to pull Hofstra to within 16-14, with 2:22 remaining.

Down to only one timeout, the Prided tried an onside kick, which was recovered by Maine. The Pride forced another three-and-out though, and still had life –- even after the seven turnovers.

Christopher completed three straight passes, taking Hofstra from its own 15 with 38 seconds left, to the Maine 48 with 25 seconds left. Christopher then looked for sophomore Brock Jacklowski, who plays several different positions in all three phases. Jacklowski, normally very reliable, and one of Cohen’s favorite players on the team, dropped what would have been a drive-sustaining first down inside the Maine 40, with 15 seconds left. It was just that kind of day for Hofstra. Christopher was then sacked to seal the win for Maine.

While recognizing that Maine didn’t see the same Hofstra team that showed up against JMU, Cosgrove wasn’t shocked by his team’s ability to upset the team that upset one of the stronger CAA teams a week prior, saying “It doesn’t surprise me ever to see somebody step up [in the CAA.] It’s just human nature. [Hofstra] certainly [was] an outstanding team last week, I’m sure they weren’t near as good today, and that helped us.”

Meanwhile, a very disappointed Cohen, will try to get Hofstra on track while keeping his team together after the tough loss. “There’s not going to be any finger pointing,” he said. “There’s many things I can point to from the first drive of their offense, to the turnovers of our offense, to having a poor snap on a bad field goal. And, any three of those situations could have helped to win the football game, and we are a team that’s a hundred of us together, and we’re gonna win football games like we did last week together, but we’re gonna lose football games like we did today, together. And, there will be no finger pointing because there [are] many examples as we’ll see… in the film that all three aspects could have helped us win that football game. It’s not just the turnovers. Obviously, that’s the main story of today’s game, but at the same point, that first drive, our defense could have stopped them, and we could have made that field goal. We’re gonna stay together through this, and we’re not gonna point fingers.”

Cohen added that although his defense stopped Maine most of the day, he thought that unit could have played harder. “I thought they were resilient,” he said, “But, I do not think we played as physical or as hard as we’re capable on defense. We didn’t tackle as nearly as well as we did the last two weeks… and, just in general, I don’t think we were swarming to the ball as much as we’re capable.”

In the tough CAA, Maine gets no reward for beating Hofstra. Next up is undefeated, top-ranked, defending FCS national champion Richmond (5-0, 3-0 CAA) on Saturday. However, the Black Bears are not backing down. Smith said, the win over Hofstra “Gives us a lot of confidence… we expect to win the [Richmond] game.” Dennis added, “They’re just another football team.’

To which Cosgrove reflected for a few seconds before saying, “A pretty good one though,” which brought laughter from nearly everyone in the room, including Smith and Dennis.

Cohen meanwhile, will prepare his team to travel to Rhode Island (1-4, 0-2 CAA), also on Saturday. He said, “That’s my job… it’s not gonna be easy, it’s not gonna be fun, but we’ve been in this situation before, and we’ll get them going for the Rhode Island game.”

Complete Performance powers Fordham over Bryant


Complete Performance powers Fordham over Bryant

John Kelly
Football Reporters Online
Senior Writer
Midwest/Northeast Correspondent
Photo: Rams Head Coach Tom Massella by A.F. Chachkes

Nothing makes Tom Masella breathe easier than an all-around performance before a road trip. While Michael Douglas and Shia Labeouf performed under one set of lights on campus and the Rams followed suit under another trouncing Bryant 35-7.

Fordham’s Offense put on a clinic a week ago, shattering school records in total yards. This week it was the defense that stole headlines. The Rams held Bryant to 219 yards of offense without two key starters.

The Fordham Offense strung together its most balanced attack of the year, with 244 yards on the ground and 183 through the air. The Rams racked up 400 yards in total offense for the fourth time this season.

"We finally played a complete game," said Fordham head coach Tom Masella. "I thought we played well on offense, defense and special teams. The kids played hard and it was nice to see that hard work pay off. Hopefully this is something we can build on for next week."

Senior quarterback John Skelton piloted the Ram’s aerial assault, completing 18 of 32 passes for the 183 yards and two touchdowns. Both were caught by his brother Stephen Skelton.

Junior running back Xavier Martin kept up his excellent 2009 campaign with his second straight 100-yard rushing game and tenth of his career. Martin rushed for 122 yards on 19 carries and a score.

Quarterback John Skelton didn’t mind the extra help. "Having the running game get going really helps our offense," said Skelton. "The offensive line did a good job blocking, especially setting the edge so the backs could get outside."

After the Fordham defense forced the Bulldogs on a three-and-out to open the first quarter, the Rams took over on their own 45. Fordham’s two stars in the backfield got down to business.

Skelton completed two straight passes for 15 yards, including two to Xavier Martin and the Rams drove down to the Bryant 28. After an incomplete pass Martin finished off the drive by darting 28 yards for the score and the early 7-0 lead.
After Chris Bird missed a 44-yard field goal, Fordham drove 73 yards on eight plays and Darryl Whiting punched it in from 6 yards out for a 14-0 advantage.

Fordham took over following a punt early in the second quarter on its own 35 they only needed 1:34 to put the ball in the end zone for a 21-0 lead. John Skelton added to Fordham’s lead with a 34 yard TD run. Skelton scampered around the left side and down the sideline, going into the end zone untouched with 10:12 left in the first half.

Bryant gave the Rams a scare later in the half after a Samad Wagstaff interception at the Fordham 45. After the ball was advanced to Fordham’s 15-yard line the Bulldogs went to work and were unsuccessful. A fourth down Croce pass to Kahel Pritchard fell short and the Rams held.

The Rams then hit Bryant where it hurt driving 85 yards on ten plays and ending it with a one yard Skelton to Skelton connection for a 28-0 halftime lead.

A promising opening possession of the second half stalled for Fordham after an incompletion on fourth down.
Bryant appeared ready to get on the scoreboard for the first time but a Jerrell Smith fumble ended those hopes.

Bryant was not denied the second time. After Patrick Murray blocked a Ram punt, the Bulldogs moved it to the Fordham 11 and cashed in from 28 yards out courtesy of a Gross to Isaiah Leake touchdown pass in the right corner of the end zone.

After cutting the Fordham lead to 28-7 the Rams didn’t take long to answer. On the ensuing kickoff Zach Crosby darted 57 yards to the Bryant 29. This time John Skelton went to his brother again from 18 yards out to put Fordham back up 35-7.

The Bulldogs had one last harrah on offense late in the fourth but were denied when Fordham’s Jay Jackson sacked Croce on fourth down at Fordham’s 42.

Both Skelton’s controlled the skies for Fordham with John leading all throwers and Stephen leading all receivers with 8 catches for 74 yards and two touchdowns.

David Moore finished with four catches for 53 yards and Running Back Daryl Whiting gained 56 yards on eight carries with the one score.

Defensively Jamal Haruna and Cliff Stuckey led the Rams. Haruna finished with eleven tackles, four solo. Stuckey added ten stops, including six solo and one for loss.
With the win, the Rams improve to 2-3 and Bryant drops to 3-2.

The Rams will begin a two game road trip up in Ithaca, N.Y. Saturday October 17th versus Cornell University at 12:30 p.m. The game will be Fordham’s final non-conference duel of the season.

Back to back wins are an encouraging sign as the Rams play the remainder of October away from Rose Hill.

SEC Wrap Up Week 6

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                                                      SEC Wrap Up Week 6
 
By Rafael Garcia
Sr. Contributing Writer-Football Reporters Online
Southeast Region
 
 
 Tennessee 45 Georgia 19
Well, an all points bulletin has been put out to find the real Jonathan Crompton, because someone had to be impersonating him Saturday. If this Is the real one, then all Volunteer fans want to keep him. Crompton showed up and had a career day going 20-27 for 310 yards with four touchdowns. He did have an interception run back for a score but that was on a tipped pass and It never hurt the team. He hit receivers short and long. His passes were dead on for the most part and he had three of those touchdown passes by halftime. When Georgia looked like they might get the momentum back, the Vols took It back. When Crompton’s pass was picked off Crompton came right back to lead his team on an eight-play 80-yard drive. The defense was outstanding allowing only a 52-yard field goal. The other two Georgia scores were from a 100-yard kickoff return and a safety. Georgia quarterback Joe Cox could not buy a chance to get the ball out of his hands. When he had a receiver the ball was jarred loosed or tipped away. On three straight possessions in the second half the Vols held the Bulldogs to -1 yard each time. Head coach Lane Kiffin got his first SEC win after he stressed all week that his team had to beat Georgia. There was a pep talk by one of the coaches about how the staff believed in the team and It hit home with most of the players. Montario Hardesty had another good showing running 20 times for 97 well earned yards. Receivers held on to the football. Mistakes were held to a minimum and they played with an energy not seen in Knoxville in quite some time. The fans still believe In their team as they came out 103,261 strong. Something good may have happened to this team in the past week but I would hold out before the celebrations start. The Volunteers have had a knack for letting their fans down. They will come up big one week and stink the joint up the next. They will come out of the shadows of adversity only to go into the depths of ineptitude. Just because they showed all this heart doesn’t mean they won’t break a few next time up. For now, It was an impressive game for a team in need of one. They looked like a team that believed in each other and played with confidence. They did It against an SEC foe, which Is a step in the right direction. Now let’s see what they come up with next.
 
(25) South Carolina 28 Kentucky 26
Kentucky scored and then South Carolina scored and then Kentucky scored and then, the story. It was a seesaw battle that wasn’t decided until the final minutes when the Wildcats failed on a two-point conversion that would have tied It at 28. Gamecocks quarterback Stephen Garcia may have finally come into his own, as he was spectacular. He was 16-23 for 233 yards, three touchdowns passing, one rushing and one pick. He controlled the offense all day and impressed his coaches. Freshman wide receiver Alshon Jeffery had his best game with seven catches for 138 yards and touchdown catches of 10, 28 and 22 yards. Before the Gamecocks get to feeling too good they gave up 205 yards rushing and must face an Alabama team that can run a whole lot better than Kentucky. The Wildcats showed signs that their team Is getting to where It wants be but after they lost QB Mark Hartline to a knee injury they lost their rhythm. With both their starting cornerbacks out they looked weak on the secondary. There were scoring opportunities and mistakes that also cost them points. These are the things that Kentucky must improve on to take that next step up In the East.
 
(1) Florida 13 (4) LSU 3
Well It was the return of AT&Tebow and the Gators didn’t even have to use all of their weapons because they knew that LSU would have a problem throwing against them. All the talk was about the concussion suffered by Tebow and how It would affect him. Well I saw him lower his shoulder on one run. He was knocked to the ground, slightly hitting his head, while trying to pass. So if the Tigers were hoping to put a scare into the kid It didn’t work and Florida Is basically In the drivers seat now in the SEC East. Tebow avoided oncoming rushers and dodged them when he had to. He and the Gators played a bit conservative to protect their quarterback. Still he went 11-16 for 134 yards a touchdown pass and a pick. He also ran the ball 17 times for 38 yards. Hey those are not the stats of a player playing scared. LSU could not generate offense as Jordan Jefferson was sacked five times by a savage Florida defense. The Tigers got only 162 yards of offense when they weren’t making mistake after mistake. They came In ranked last in the SEC in total offense and it got so bad that fans were headed to the door with over two minutes left in the game. So once again the offense of LSU gets exposed and the Gators find another way to win. It sounds like two teams headed in different directions. The Gators hope that direction takes them to Atlanta for the SEC championship game and then the BCS title. LSU is just not sure which direction they are headed in at this time. 
 
(3) Alabama 22 (20) Ole Miss 3
Now here Is an argument as to who should be the real number one. Some experts feel that the Tide should be the top ranked team in the country and they played like It, sacking Jevon Snead four times. They were relentless all game as they applied pressure to the Rebels offensive line until they gave. They took advantage of mistakes and scored off of them and head coach Nick Saban said” This was the most complete win we’ve had all year, in a difficult situation”. Ole Miss is losing some of that steam It started the season with and Is now 1-2 in the west. Alabama Is alone atop the West at 3-0 thanks to the LSU loss. Running back Mark Ingram was all the offense they needed as he ran over and around the Rebels for 172 yards on 28 carries. The Rebels offense could not surpass 200 total yards of offense and they had the ball for less than 22 minutes. Next week Alabama has another big one at home against South Carolina. As for Ole Miss, they will host UAB in a game they can win and need to win.
 
Arkansas 44 (17) Auburn 23
Wow was this a surprise on a day the SEC was full of surprises. The Razorbacks held the Tigers scoreless in the first quarter for the first time all season and never looked back. By halftime it was 27-3 and by the time Auburn scored three times in the third quarter the lead was too big to overcome. Michael Smith ran for 145 yards and a touchdown and quarterback Ryan Mallett continued to shine going 24-37 for 274 yards two scores and one pick. This was the Tiger’s first loss of the season leaving Florida and LSU as the only unbeaten now.
 
Houston 31 Miss. St. 24
Army 16 Vanderbilt 13 OT
 

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