Ohio vs. Marshall – Position Battles in the Battle of the Bell

Marshall Week. The Battle of the Bell. If you’re an Ohio Bobcat or a member of The Herd, that’s all you have to say to stir up all sorts of feelings about this rivalry between these teams of green-and-white. Especially in recent years, it’s been pretty heated. The fires were stoked by a close game in 2010 when the ‘Cats lost by one after failing to convert a two-point conversion, then in 2011 (Ohio’s “revenge game”) when Marshall went down behind freshman QB Rakeem Cato 44-7.

Now it’s a new year and a whole slew of new story lines.

Ohio: 2-0 (W, 24-14 at Penn State. W, 51-24 vs. New Mexico St.). Marshall: 1-1 (L, 69-34 at West Virginia. W, 52-24 vs. Western Carolina).

QBOhio: Redshirt junior Tyler Tettleton (6′, 200 lbs.). Marshall: Sophomore Rakeem Cato (6′, 182 lbs.).

The Numbers: Tettleton: 46-64, 581 yards passing, 4 TD, 0 INT, 71.9 completion percentage, 290.5 YPG (yards per game). 16 rushing attempts, 65 yards, 2 TD. Cato: 70-96, 790 yards passing, 5 TD, 1 INT, 72.9 completion percentage, 395 YPG. 6 rushing att., 14 yds., 0 TD.

The Story: This game has the makings of an OK Corral duel between these QB’s. The Herd is sixth in total offense in the FBS with 580 yards per game and Cato leads the nation’s best passing offense with 421.5 yards per game. On the other sideline is Ohio with the 14th best offense in the country and (at least to Bobcat faithful), a dark horse Heisman candidate, Tyler Tettleton. Marshall head coach Doc Holliday spoke about TD Tettleton (© Maddie Kuhn) in his weekly press conference on Tuesday.

“There’s no doubt that he has all the intangibles…He’s what a quarterback is all about. He’s a winner…He’s an excellent player that brings a lot to the table…When you talk about (the) Ohio University football team you start with him because he’s the leader of that offense.”

As for his own man under center, Holliday said the most important thing for Cato in the team’s 52-24 drubbing of Western Carolina is that Cato didn’t commit any turnovers. Also, looking at the Herd’s season stats, they have only scored 3 points all season (2 games) in the first quarter, as opposed to 31 in the second, 31 in the third, and 21 in the fourth. Cato even said “my head wasn’t all in it in the beginning” of the game against Western Carolina. Based on these two observations, I think that if Ohio’s defense can get in his young head (he’s a true sophomore after all) at the start, he might crumble a la Mr. McGloin in the first game of the season.

With these two gunslingers, when they drop back and wind up to throw deep, I’ll be picturing the Clint Eastwood Western background. Now spit.

RB Ohio: Redshirt junior Beau Blankenship (5′ 9″, 202). Marshall: Redshirt sophomore Travon Van (5′ 10″, 193), Redshirt freshman Kevin Grooms (5′ 10″, 165), Redshirt freshman Steward Butler (5′ 9″, 165)

The Numbers: Blankenship: 58 rushes, 277 yards, 4.8 average, 2 TD, 138.5 YPG. 7 receptions, 72 yards, 0 TD. // Van: 26 rushes, 78 yards, 3.0 average, 2 TD, 39 YPG. 5 receptions, 17 yards, 0 TD. Grooms: 17 rushes, 85 yards, 5.0 average, 0 TD, 42.5 YPG. 1 reception, 20 yards, 0 TD. Butler: 18 rushes, 74 yards, 1 TD, 4.1 YPG. 1 reception, 10 yards, 0 TD.

It’s pretty clear that Ohio has the advantage when it comes to the run game. Blankenship has been better than I expected, but I mostly saw him in short-yardage situations as a backup to Donte Harden in 2011. It’s remarkable to see how close he is to his last year totals already (93 rushes, 462 yards, 4 TD). Van is the starter for Marshall, but doesn’t stand out stat-wise. With the Herd’s one-dimensional offense, it seems the Ohio linebackers and secondary will be tested more on Saturday than the defensive linemen. But, as I said earlier, if the D can rattle Cato’s cage at the start, Cato could be his own worst enemy.

Also, Holliday said in his press conference that his defensive line has “guys that haven’t played a lot and still have some growing up to do.” I count that as an advantage for Ohio’s offensive line, which means more yards on the ground and more time for Tettleton to find the open man.

This kid’s name is Blankenship too. Jackson Blankenship. Fun fact: He hates Nickelback.

WR/TEOhio:  Redshirt junior Donte Foster (6′ 1″, 193), Sophomore Landon Smith (5′ 11″, 180), Redshirt senior TE Jordan Thompson (6′ 4″, 248), Redshirt senior Tyler Futrell (6′, 179), Redshirt senior Bakari Bussey (6′ 2″, 205), Redshirt senior Ryan Clark (listed as a cornerback on team’s official roster) (5′ 9″, 169). Marshall: Senior Aaron Dobson (6′ 3″, 200), Sophomore Tommy Shuler (5′ 8″, 187), Redshirt senior Antavious Wilson (6′ 1″, 196), Sophomore TE Eric Frohnapfel (6′ 6″, 227)

The Numbers: Foster: 10 rec., 89 yds., 2 TD. Smith: 4 rec., 122 yds., 2 TD. Thompson: 3 rec., 40 yds., 0 TD. Futrell: 3 rec., 70 yds., 0 TD. Bussey: 6 rec., 40 yds., 0 TD. Clark: 5 rec., 64 yds., 0 TD. // Dobson: 13 rec., 153 yds., 1 TD. Shuler: 11 rec., 126 yds., 1 TD. Wilson: 9 rec., 138 yds., 0 TD. Frohnapfel: 8 rec., 95 yds. 2 TD.

The Story: Looking at the numbers, it’s very evident that Marshall is a throwing team. They’ve got four receivers above or around 100 yards to Ohio’s two. But, the ‘Cats have a ton of experience and leadership at those positions. They’ll need that if they are down in the game, especially considering that OU has never won at Marshall’s home field Joan C. Edwards Stadium, nicknamed “The Joan.”

There was some worry earlier in the week about Foster playing Saturday. Bobcats’ beat writer Jason Arkley tweeted that Foster didn’t practice Wednesday, sitting out with a wrap on his thumb. There haven’t been any reports listed since, but I know Mr. Arkley will have a full injury report on his Bobcat Blog Friday (which you should be reading already).

As I wrote earlier, Marshall’s receivers may have flashier numbers, but I think Ohio has the advantage of the multidimensional offensive attack, including the fact that Tettleton is highly mobile out of the pocket. But, if Cato can keep finding the open man and wearing down the young Bobcat cornerbacks, the (hunter) green and white team could be digging itself out of a hole or fighting to say on top. (MU: Kelly green, OU: Hunter green)

Not nearly as fun as Shades of Grey…so I’m told.

Defense – A big storyline for the Bobcats this season is the loss of 2012 captain and 2011 All-MAC Second Team cornerback & redshirt senior Travis Carrie to shoulder surgery. Not only is he out for the entire season, redshirt junior corner Jamil Shaw didn’t play against NMSU because of a shoulder problem. Arkley said that Shaw is still questionable, but did participate in practice on Tuesday.

Even though the young guys in the secondary are stepping up a little earlier than they might have anticipated, they’re settling in well. If I were them, after playing at Penn State the first week, I’d feel like I could take on anything. Redshirt freshman CB Ian Wells is tied for fifth on the team in total tackles with 8, and sophomore corner Larenzo Fisher has 6 tackles and a broken up pass so far. Redshirt freshman Devin Bass has also stepped up with 4 total tackles, 1 for loss.

The ‘Cats are solid on defensive line and linebacker. The team’s allowed just 81 yards rushing and under 200 yards passing per game. They also had 6 sacks against the Aggies last week.

Marshall’s D has been racking up the tackles with eight guys who have over ten on the year, led by grad student safety Dominick Legrande with 20. The Herd has 2 sacks, 10 tackles for loss, 2 INT and 2 forced fumbles. The Bobbies have 6 sacks, 10 tackles for loss, 2 INT (one for a TD) and one FF.

I think this Ohio team will succeed by sticking with the plan that worked last year, which is allowing Cato to beat himself. In 2011, Cato was 9-for-21, 121 yards and 4 picks. This Ohio defense is going to do what they can to force him into pressure and, thus, make mistakes.

He rocks some sweet face salad though.

Special TeamsOhio: K redshirt senior Matt Weller, P redshirt freshman Grant Venham (pronounced ‘venom’, which is awesome). Marshall: K redshirt sophomore Justin Haig, redshirt freshman Trent Martin, P freshman Tyler Williams

The Stats: Weller: 4-7 FG, 3-4 on 20-29 yds., 1-2 on 30-39 yds., 0-1 on 40-49 yds. Long: 37. 9-9 PAT. 15 kickoffs, 64 yards per kickoff, 4 touchbacks. Venham: 5 punts, 38 yards per punt, 1 touchback, 3 inside the 20. Long: 53. // Haig: 3-4 FG, 2-2 on 20-29 yds., 1-2 on 30-39 yds. Long: 34. 11-11 PAT. 6 kickoffs, 55 yards per kickoff, 1 touchback. Martin: 9 kickoffs, 59 yards per kickoff, 1 touchback. Williams: 5 punts, 48 yards per punt, 0 touchbacks, 2 inside the 20. Long: 59.

After a Week One that left Ohio fans shaking their heads in confusion (1-3 FG, misses from 44, 39 yds.), Bobcat placekicker Matt Weller was back to his old self last week. He was 3-4 in field goals (a 22-yarder was blocked) and knocked through all six PAT. For the icing on the cake (more like a cake on top of the cake), he became Ohio Football’s all-time leading scorer. For the icing on top of those two cakes, Weller was named the MAC East Special Teams Player of the Week. Start eatin’.

Or some cake pops. I know it’s midseason, gotta watch your figure.

To be honest, I know nil about the Marshall special teams, but it looks like they can get the job done. I don’t have much faith to have in Haig’s leg, since he’s young. All he did last year was a 24-yarder against Louisville and his longest FG in high school was 49 yards.

As for the return games for each of these teams, two things stand out. One is that Marshall senior wide receiver Andre Snipes-Booker and redshirt freshman running back Steward Butler grab up decent yards on kick returns, averaging 21 and 25 yards per return, respectively. They could have a field day against OU’s return D because (and here’s the second thing) the ‘Cats have allowed 24 yards per KR this year, including a TD.

Prediction – With all of this being said, I think Cato has improved a little from last year and gets some good looks on Ohio’s young, but steadily improving, defense. However, Ohio has a huge advantage with Tettleton as well as Blankenship and the fact that their high-octane offense will be lining up against a young Marshall D-line. The ‘Cats put up 559 offensive yards on this team last season! The Bobcats will find their rhythm on both sides, even in such a hostile atmosphere, and stay undefeated in 2012. Ohio – 38, Marshall – 17.

P. S.  – The game is Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Edwards Stadium in Huntington. It’s not on TV or ESPN3 because Marshall is in Conference – USA and CUSA doesn’t have a deal with ESPN, so Marshall is charging $9.99 to stream the game on their website.

P. P. S. – More national coverage for Ohio via Yahoo! Sports. (no Jim Schnaus mention this time *sad face*)

P. P. P. S. – Reaction by @bustedcoverage to that article. (Maybe he’s a Redhawks fan).

Aaaand one more thing. Looking at Marshall’s website, they have ads saying people can download a MU toolbar that links to news about them as well as a theme. Even though they’re for Internet Explorer, that’s still pretty sweet.

The Fantasy Football Frustration Fe-gins

It’s like begins, but with an F. I did it because I like alliteration. Maybe too much.

See? Alliteration is cool. Everyone’s doing it.

My first year seriously doing fantasy football was in 2009 when my friends in college made a 12-person group. Naturally, I was the only girl, so I wanted to make a good impression. Despite those desires, I guess I had better things to do because I showed up to the draft at Buffalo Wild Wings with no materials. None. Not even a list of top players so I could cross out the names of the people who had already been picked. So, on a series of whims, I took Adrian Peterson with the first overall pick, then Peyton Manning with the second-rounder (everyone is still baffled how that happened). Somewhere down the line I got Ryan Grant as my second RB, Hines Ward and Derrick Mason at wide receiver, then Heath Miller at tight end. In the middle of the season, I took Sidney Rice off of waivers (my friend Grant, the commissioner of the league and expert in all things sports thought he was ahead of me on the waiver list and still has no idea how he didn’t get him.) As it turned out, all of those guys had career years and I lost the league championship (and a sweet glass mug) by three points.

My main men 3 years ago. *Hums All in the Family theme “Those Were the Days”*

Since then, I haven’t had much luck in that league, which is the only one I care about since we had a $20 buy-in and it’s actually with people I know. I can’t exactly remember my finishes because I blocked them out. 2010’s ExtenZe the Lead (joke on Jimmy Johnson’s male enhancement ads), and 2011’s The Real McCoys (I had LeSean McCoy and Colt McCoy) couldn’t live up to Make Me a Leftwich in ’09.

But, it’s a new year and everyone is undefeated again! My team, Arrelious on Both Counts (play on Vince Vaughn’s “erroneous on both counts!” line in Wedding Crashers & TB wide receiver Arrelious Benn), is ready to show the boys I can bring it once more. Here’s my team (14-team league, points per reception):

QB – Philip Rivers (SD), Josh Freeman (TB)

RB – Matt Forte (CHI), Michael Turner (ATL), Michael Bush (CHI), Pierre Thomas (NO)

WR – Torrey Smith (BAL), Wes Welker (NE), Marques Colston (NO), Kendall Wright (TEN)

TE – Fred Davis (WAS), Martellus Bennett (NYG)

DEF – Green Bay

K – Nate Kaeding (SD)

As soon as I finished drafting them, I began agonizing over who would play when. I figured, it’s the first week, unless they’re out, let’s see what they’ve got. So, and guess who I DIDN’T play last night? There’s only one guy on my team who has played so far, so yes, Martellus Bennett sat on my bench as he earned14 points on 4 catches for 40 yards and a touchdown. He was projected for 3. 14 points isn’t extraordinarily high, but Freddie D. isn’t expected to do much this week since it’s RG3’s first NFL game. But, that’s why they play the games.

I plan on venting my pleasures and frustrations with this team (1 out of 3 I’ve got this year via ESPN) on this blog, so let’s get ready for Fantasy Football Fun!

Let’s crash this league! Woo!

My Very Belated, Concise Reaction to Ohio’s Win Over Penn State

Clock 0:00

Score: Ohio – 24, Penn State – 14

Me (on the outside, gets up from chair, says to dad): Well, that was a good game. I always thought they had it in them.

Me (on the inside, heart racing, palms sweaty): WOOOOOOO! HOLY CRAP WE JUST BEAT PENN STATE! I KNEW WE WERE GONNA KICK THEIR *butts*. THIS YEAR JUST KEEPS GETTING BETTER AND BETTER. GO BOBCATS BABY! YEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHH! MACTION IN YO FACE PENN STATE! 12 AND 0! TYLER TETTLETON FOR HEISMAN *bleep* YOU MATT BARKLEY. I LOVE THIS TEAM!

I’m happier about this win than a panda bear on a rocking horse.