Feeding The Fever Southern Miss Golden Eagles notes, observations, and commentary
Categories: Southern Miss Football

Virginia at Southern Miss

Thursday’s line: USM -15.5

First meeting: this one

At a particularly embarrassing 0-2, the Cavaliers limp into Hattiesburg as the final opponent in Southern Miss’ 3-game home stand to open the season after being doubled up by TCU last week and stunned by William and Mary the week before by nearly as bad a score. It’s been trying times in Charlottesville as the Cavs, much like USM last year, try to adjust to a wholly re-vamped spread offense with a lot of new personnel. Unfortunately for Virginia, their transition on that side of the ball has not gone as well as the Eagles’ did.

How bad is it for the Wahoos? Try 19 first downs in 2 games. USM had 23 vs. UCF last Saturday. Heck, Liberty High School in Virginia had 19 last Friday night. Things are so bad that 9th-year head coach Al Groh is grumbling about the negative effect home-crowd booing has on his team’s recruiting.

Surely, something must be going right, no? Well, Saturday’s presumptive starting QB Jameel Sewell, filling in for injured Vic Hall vs. TCU, finished hot, completing 4 of his last 5 passes, including 2 TDs. Granted, that was likely against the Horned Frogs’ defensive scrubs as the game was out of hand by that point, and Sewell had an otherwise mediocre day (8-for-18, 120 yards, 1 interception).

Elsewhere on offense, look for rushing and receiving by committee, as aside from Sewell, only one other back on the team–Mikell Simpson, last year’s 2nd-leading rusher–has double digits in carries, and only Simpson has more than 6 catches so far. Sewell has 138 yards rushing on the young season to lead the pack, and the team’s receiving yardage leader is sophomore WR Kris Burd with 54. Furthermore, last week’s 2 TD passes–the ‘Hoos only on the year, by the way–went to yet 2 more WRs, redshirt freshman Javaris Brown and true freshman Tim Smith. As you can tell from some of those stats, the big play threat has eluded U.Va. thus far.

On the other side of the ball, things aren’t going a whole lot better for the Cavaliers, as they currently sit at #91 in the nation in scoring defense and #71 in total defense. This is not aided by the grand total of 3 sacks Virginia has accumulated (2 vs. T.C.U., 1 vs. W. & M.). Those sacks belong to sophomore DE Matt Conrath, senior LB Denzell Burrell, and sophomore NT Nate Collins. Virginia’s lone interception of the season belongs to senior CB Chris Cook.

Even when it comes to USM’s glaring weakness so far, special teams, the Cavs don’t offer a whole lot of hope, as they have not even attempted a FG yet, and their longest kickoff return has been 28 yards (by Cook). Last week, pre-season All-ACC CB Ras-I Dowling did manage to pick up 34 yards on a punt return after a teammate caught the punt and handed it off, so keep an eye out for some trickeration in that phase.

Saturday’s game boils down to two teams headed in opposite directions: Southern Miss, winners of 7 straight, vs. Virginia, losers of 6 straight and for whom little has gone right in recent memory. Barring a complete collapse on the home side and a miraculous turnaround on the visitors’, the Golden Eagles should hit the road next weekend with 8 straight in their pocket.

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Categories: Southern Miss - Other Sports, Southern Miss Football

Mitch Vingle of the Charleston (WV) Gazette ponders Big East football expansion, suggests Southern Miss:

http://wvgazette.com/Sports/200909150378

Now, does the contemplation of one sports columnist in Charleston, WV, really mean anything at the end of the day?  By itself, of course not.  But the important thing at this stage is just being in the conversation.  That someone who actually knows the Big East is mentioning us as a candidate in a public forum is good.   Hopefully, we’ll be seeing more and more of this as the inevitable Big East football expansion nears.

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Categories: Other Teams

[Note: Click on the scores for game stories via the universities' web sites]

Houston 45, #5/6 Oklahoma State 35 (Stillwater; 50,875). The big story of the week. UH jumped ahead 24-7, then fell behind twice, finally going ahead for good when a Bryce Beall snatched a deflected 4th down pass for a TD. Cougs’ QB Case Keenum earned National Offensive Player of the Week honors for his 32-of-46, 366 yard day.

#9/12 BYU 54, Tulane 3 (New Orleans; 26,224 [officially, though some reports claim little over 5K and this slide show looks kinda bleak). A laugher with little upside for the Green Wave, who failed to break double-digits in first downs while BYU never punted. The Cougars had two running back rush for over 60 yards each and passed for 321. For Tulane, QB Joe Kemp was 14-for-19 and 101 yards.

#14/15 Virginia Tech 52, Marshall 10 (Blacksburg; 66,233). 444 yards rushing for the Hokies, 171 in the 1st quarter alone. Herd QB Brian Anderson managed an OK outing, completing 15-for-31 for 116. Darius Marshall rushed for over 100. The Herd only mustered 14 return yards on the game via 3 Hokie punts.

#24/25 Kansas 34, UTEP 7 (El Paso; 31,885). The Jayhawks simply manhandled the Miners. UTEP allowed 5 sacks and was shut out until early in the 4th while Kansas scored in every quarter and piled up 576 yards of offense. Said UTEP head coach Mike Price, “They're a top 25 team, and it doesn't look like we are.”

West Virginia 35, East Carolina 20 (Morgantown; 59,216). WVU's defense kept the Pirates in check, but Mountaineer mistakes--including 2 muffed punts (sound familiar?)--kept ECU in it. ECU was shut out in the second half and their longest scoring drive was 31 yards. WVU QB and Pat White successor Jarrett Brown had a coming-out party, throwing for 334 yards and 4 TDs. Patrick Pinkney was sacked 4 times.

SMU 35, UAB 33 (Birmingham; 18,092). SMU dominated early, then gave up 20 3rd-quarter points to the Blazers before hanging on to win. The story of the game, both good and bad, was the QB play. For the Mustangs, B.L. Mitchell threw for 353 yards and 3 TDs, and for UAB, last week's one-man show Joe Webb threw 4 interceptions. UAB ran the ball well, with Webb rushing for 97 and Mark Ferrell adding 85.

Middle Tennessee 31, Memphis 14 (Murfreesboro; 28,105 [new stadium record]). Tied 7-7 after one quarter, MTSU rattled off 24 unanswered points before allowing Memphis a late TD. The Blue Raiders almost doubled Memphis’ total yards, 436 to 219. Scrub QB Tyler Bass led the final scoring drive for the Tigers, completing 4 of 4 for 33 yards. No one for Memphis rushed for over 50.

Texas Tech 55, Rice 10 (Lubbock; 48,124). The Rice defense held TTU to 14 first half points, but it got ugly from there as the Raiders rolled up 560 yards of offense against the Owls. For Rice, QB John Shepard went 14-for-19 for 109 yards and a TD to Taylor Dupree. Rice won the time of possession by a good 6 minutes, but since when does Texas Tech care about that?

Tulsa 44, New Mexico 10 (Albuquerque; 30,051). Tulsa opened the scoring early following a fumbled UNM punt return (noticing a theme?) and never looked back, leading 17-3 at the half and at one time 44-3. For the Hurricane, QB G.J. Kinne threw for 310 yards and 4 TDs, 2 each to Slick Shelley and Trae Johnson. Kinne also led Tulsa in rushing with 53 yards. New Mexico managed 5 sacks.

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Categories: Southern Miss Football
  • The DeAndre Brown Welcome Back party went well. You could see a little rust, and he and Austin
    Tim Isbell, Sun Herald

    Photo credit: Tim Isbell, Sun Herald

    Davis missed on what would have been a TD last season and probably will be again in another week or two, but Brown had a good night (7 catches for 75 yards), wasn’t afraid to take or lay a hit (he knocked a UCF safety halfway back to Orlando while blocking for Damion Fletcher late in the game) , and on a couple of occasions reclaimed his role as the 3rd-down go-to guy.

  • The offense did not have a great game. The yards were there, but too much of the ball movement was between the 20s. Too many drives stalled and the big play eluded the team most of the night. To get nearly 400 yards against what the preseason mags had dubbed a pretty top-notch defensive front is good, but as was the case last week, far too many opportunities were squandered.
  • It’s hard to make a call on Saturday’s defense. UCF couldn’t get much done (held under 200 total yards), but nor did they vs. Samford. The Eagles D-line stuffed the running game, but the backfield performance was more hit-and-miss. A few times, there were flashbacks of recent defenses that allowed nothing on 1st and 2nd down, but allowed a conversion on 3rd. To have zero interceptions was a disappointment. Still, the bottom line was good, and there was a TD scored off of a fumble, so there’s not much room to complain. One just has to wonder what’ll happen when this D faces a more formidable opponent.
  • The special teams performance was downright embarrassing. FOUR mishandled punts?!? Even in the rain, that is unacceptable. As is the inability to hit a 26-yard field goal. There was also a bad snap on a PAT (followed by a hell of an effort to run it in by holder Kane Wommack), which is going to happen every now and then, but it looked more like part of a pattern than an aberration Saturday night. In the wake of UCF’s big return game vs. Samford, the Eagles’ kick coverage was fine up until after the presumptive game-icing touchdown, at which point it allowed an 89-yard return to the 5 which allowed the Knights to cut the lead to 7 with under 2 minutes left. Even a perfectly average performance on special teams would’ve made this game a blowout. If this isn’t fixed, it’s going to start costing USM some wins.
  • All in all, Coach Fedora put it best on his twitter: “Great to get our 2nd win. Got to play better next week.”
  • Saturday’s win was the 7th straight for USM dating back to the middle of last season. That’s the team’s longest win streak since 1988.
  • On a non-football note, during the drive up Hwy. 49, I saw what had to be the most redneck thing this side of the wedding at the Waffle House. Someone just south of Perkinston was holding a yard sale inside a school bus. I regret not stopping to get a photo.
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Categories: Southern Miss Football

Via the Hattiesburg American:

“We’re excited obviously,” Fedora said. “We’ve been practicing with that in mind, hoping it was going to happen.”


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Categories: Southern Miss Football

UCF at Southern Miss

Thursday’s line: USM -14.5

First meeting: 2005 in Hattiesburg

Last meeting: 2008 in Orlando (USM won 17-6)

USM leads the series 3-1

CUSA play starts early for the Golden Eagles as the Knights come to town in Game 2. UCF, which has at times seemed poised for greatness after winning CUSA’s Eastern Division and posting the best record in the conference twice since joining the league in 2005 and claiming a championship in 2007, limped to a 4-8 (3-5) record in 2008, continuing O’Leary’s alternating winning season/losing season streak in Orlando. The Eagles are comfortably favored at The Rock on the heels of their smackdown of Alcorn and the Knights’ struggles against FCS Samford.

Particularly disappointing vs. Samford was UCF’s offense, which only compiled 282 total yards. UCF returned 10 starters from last year, but they only continued the Knights’ struggles from 2008, when they ranked dead last in the nation in total offense as they struggled to settle on a starting QB. That particular issue also continued, as sophomore QB Rob Calabrese started vs. Samford after starting the final 4 games of 2008 only to be replaced in the game by redshirt senior and Wake Forest transfer Brett Hodges, who tossed what turned out to be the game-winning TD to Jamar Newsome with 11 minutes left. Hodges completed 10-of-17 for 129 yards off the bench compared to Calabrese’s 3-for-7 for 28, though Hodges also threw an interception that Samford ran 67 yards the other way for a score. O’Leary is expected to use the same plan on Saturday vs. USM, with Calabrese getting the start but both expected to play. Aside from Hodges’ late heroics, another (the other?) bright spot for UCF’s offense was Brynn Harvey’s 111 yards rushing on 33 carries.

The Knights’ pass defense didn’t fare a whole lot better than the offense, allowing Samford, led by 2008 Southern Conference Freshman of the Year QB Dustin Taliaferro, 208 yards through the air on 60% completions. Taliaferro himself threw for 141 of those yards, nearing his 2008 season average of 158.6, not good considering Samford only played one game vs. an FBS foe in ‘08. Taliaferro was also only sacked once. UCF fared better against the run, only allowing 78 yards on the ground. Leading the defensive effort for the Knights was DB Darin Baldwin, who claimed 7 tackles and 3 pass break-ups, and DE Jarvis Geathers, who recorded the lone sack. Should DeAndre Brown play for Southern Miss on Saturday, expect Baldwin to be the primary back charged with containing him.

Baldwin also played a big role in UCF’s high point of the day: kick returns. The Knights piled up 289 return yards on Samford, 190 on kickoffs and 99 on punts, for their best performance in that category since joining Divison I-A/the FBS. Baldwin returned a kickoff 72 yards to the Samford 11 late in the 3rd quarter, but UCF squandered the opportunity by stalling and eventually getting a Jamie Boyle FG blocked. Leading the return game for the Knights was WR Rocky Ross, who compiled 91 yards on 6 returns, including a long of 39.

All in all, UCF was much less impressive in their opening game than Southern Miss, even after accounting for the different levels of competition. Given the fact that the Knights’ woes are the same ones they had last year, the safe assumption is that the Samford performance wasn’t just a one-game hiccup. It’s said that teams make their most improvement from Week 1 to Week 2 of a football season, and UCF better hope that’s true in their case and not so much in USM’s. While those kick returns should be of particular concern for the Golden Eagles, nothing much else should scare USM fans as long as the team shows up ready to play.

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Categories: Southern Miss Football

http://twitter.com/CoachFedora

The NCAA had been weighing whether or not to allow the Alabama DB transfer to play right away since the Crimson Tide had released him from his scholarship.

Once again, not being Notre Dame or Southern Cal comes back to bite us in the butt.

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Categories: Uncategorized

Details here:  http://southernmiss.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/090609aaa.html

Smart move on the part of the athletic department on the heels of the record-breaking crowd and good showing on Saturday.  Strike while the iron’s hot and woo some of the folks who had to get up early and stand in line at the ticket booths this weekend.

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Categories: Southern Miss Football
  • Legit record crowd of 36,232 on hand yesterday. Even the drive up was encouraging for attendance, as there were quite a few Eagle fans headed up Highways 67 & 49 in the early afternoon. When I really knew something was up, though, was when I headed to the stadium and hour before kickoff thinking I was “beating the rush.” Think again:

    This is the line at Gate 2 an hour before kickoff. An hour before kickoff. What you can’t even see in this pic is how far the line bends back around the corner of the ramp. Yes, Alcorn brought a nice crowd, probably nicer than we can expect from any visiting team the rest of the way, but to that same end, the combination of Labor Day weekend and a glorified scrimmage kept some of our own students and alumni away. Whether or not Larry Fedora’s prediction of a new record being set next week comes true or not will have to be seen, but it’s certainly possible.
  • Stats and competition level aside, the offense looked particularly sharp for its first outing. Austin Davis’ accuracy was particularly impressive, as was the stable of running backs. Fletch was his usual self, racking up 126 rushing yards by early in the 3rd quarter en route to becoming USM’s all-time all-purpose yardage leader. V.J. Floyd displayed a nice power-running game, and Tracey Lampley was quite Fletcher-like in his ability to shoot through a hole and juke tackles in more open field.
  • The secondary is much improved. While Alcorn did gain over 100 yards through the air, the Braves receivers made a few great plays, and some catches came after what looked to be a sure sack. Getting the QB down when the chance is there is something that will have to be addressed in practice the next few weeks.
  • As expected, the growth of the defense overall since last season was quite apparent. While last year’s rookie-loaded D ran vanilla–practically middle-schoolish–schemes, there was a lot of shifting and re-aligning going on last night throughout the game, and one can safely assume we weren’t letting it all hang out against Alcorn. Having the basics under the players’ collective belt now and being able to mix things up and be more complex this season is going to be a huge help in slowing down opposing offenses.
  • Kudos to both schools on the pre-game Steve McNair tribute. I was concerned USM officials would forget that he actually played elsewhere and go overboard with it, but it was very nicely done. Not too much, and not too little.
  • For those of you fortunate enough to miss it, during the pregame coin toss, referee Steve LaMantia of Laredo, Texas, like the 2007 PapaJohns.com Bowl official before him, referred to the Golden Eagles as “Mississippi State” and got himself vociferously booed for it. Unlike the bowl official, though, LaMantia did it twice: once to being with, and then again when trying to correct himself. I hope the coaches scratched him from covering a game in Hattiesburg again based upon that alone. The next time a ref goofs up the name, I won’t be upset if one of our players “accidentally” “bumps” into him as a reminder on the next play. Yeah, that’s an ugly thing to say, but as the saying goes, I’ll try to be nicer if you try to be smarter.
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Categories: Other Teams

[Note: Click on the scores for game stories via the universities' web sites. Memphis-Ole Miss game will be added when available]

Tulsa 37, Tulane 13 (Friday; New Orleans; 27,638 [yeah, right...]). Hurricane cruises after jumping ahead 17-0 in the opening 9 minutes. For Tulsa, Demaris Johnson 252 all-purpose yards including a 66-yard punt return for TD; G.J. Kinne 15-for-20, 211 yards, 1 TD, no INTs.

UCF 28, Samford 24 (Orlando; 34,486). 7-7 at halftime, UCF trailed 24-21 until scoring on a TD pass with just under 6 minutes left in the game. Samford outgained the Knights 286 yards to 282, UCF’s Brynn Harvey 111 yard on 31 carries and 2 TDs.

East Carolina 29, Appalachian State 24 (Greenville; 43,279). 320 yards for the Pirates, with only 58 in the 2nd half. Appy State had 17 unanswered points in the 4th quarter. For ECU, Pinkney 12-for-27 for 131 yards, 1 TD and 1 INT. Dominique Lindsay 111 yards on 15 carries with 1 TD.

Marshall 31, Southern Illinois 28 (Huntington; 24,012). Southern Illinois cut the lead to 3 with 1:40 left, then held Marshall to a 3 and out to get the ball back with 26 seconds left to no avail. The teams combined for 5 turnovers. For MU, Brian Anderson 27-for-36 for 316 yards and 3 TDs. Chuck Walker 10 rec for 119 yards in his debut.

UAB 44, Rice 24 (Birmingham; 14,316). UAB’s Joe Webb set a CUSA QB record with 194 yards rushing, passed for another 221, and had a hand in four TDs. The rest of the team contributed another 98 yards.

Houston 55, Northwestern (La.) St. 7 (Houston; 22,043). 538 yards of offense for UH. Case Keenum 23-for-30 for 359 yards and 4 TDs in a little over a half of work.

SMU 31, Stephen F. Austin 23 (Dallas; 34,749 [a new stadium record as 19 supporters bought and distributed 1,000 tickets each]). Mustangs rally from 9 down in the 4th. SFA piled up 460 yards of offense, 391 passing. For SMU, Shawnbrey McNeal 158 yards on 19 carries.

Buffalo 23, UTEP 17 (El Paso; 35,213). UTEP fell behind 23-7 and had their comeback fall short. Miners hit with 101 penalty yards. UTEP’s Trevor Vittatoe 27-for-45 passing for 233 yards, Donald Buckram 108 yards rushing. Buffalo averaged 34 yards per kickoff return.

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