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Marshall Football
College Football Hall of Fame Nominee Michael Payton
Many great athletes have donned the green and white at Marshall University before rising to NFL stardom. In recent years, names like Randy Moss, Chad Pennington and Byron Leftwich still elicit memories of bowl victories, conference titles and records broken. But football fans that have followed Marshall since the days before these great players are sure to remember another name with a less decorated professional career.
After four stellar seasons at Central Dauphin East High School in Harrisburg, PA, Michael Payton’s letter of intent was signed and delivered as he prepared to make the three-hour drive west to play for Coach George Chaump at Indiana University-Pennsylvania (IUP).
“To tell you the truth I had no intentions on going to Marshall University at all. I had a good friend going to IUP and we already had an apartment and everything,” Payton admitted.
Shortly after, as fate would have it, Coach Chaump accepted the head coaching position at Marshall University, and with him he took his most prized recruit.
“Chaump had called my father and said that he was going to Marshall and wanted me to come and visit the campus. Honestly, I told my dad I didn’t even want to go and he said, ‘No let’s go take a look at the campus. It’s DI-AA, a step up from D-II. You’re not going to know if you like it unless you go there and take a look at it.’
"So we went down there and we stayed four or five days. I absolutely fell in love with the people, the university, and the program itself.”
Chaump left after the 1989 season, but Payton would stay in Huntington to rewrite the record books.
While at Marshall, Payton broke every passing record in their program’s history while racking up numerous individual awards.
Those awards included: Two-time Consensus First Team All-American, Two-time Southern Conference (SoCon) Player-of-the-Year, Two-time First-Team All-SoCon, SoCon Male Athlete of the Year, West Virginia Amateur Athlete of Year, West Virginia Man of the Year and the prestigious Walter Payton Award, which is given to the most outstanding player in the Football Championship Subdivision.
Thanks to his success on the field, Payton attained “rock star” status in Huntington. Off the field, Payton always made sure he was doing the right things and keeping his life in perspective.
“Obviously I was in the limelight and people treated me like I was a rock star, but I also gave back to the community every way I could," he said. "I worked with D.A.R.E, M.A.D.D, and I did a lot of speaking at the schools to give back to the kids and the community. I kept myself out of trouble, got educated with two degrees, but I also served as a role model to a lot of kids because they tend to look up to us (athletes) as role models."
"I always signed autographs. I tried to give every kid an autograph because I know how it felt as a kid trying to get an autograph and a guy will not take five seconds to sign his name on a jersey or hat.”
Almost 19 years have passed since Payton laid claim to his last football award, but now, in 2011, Payton can find his name on the ballot for the College Football Hall of Fame.
“This is truly an honor to even be considered," he said. "The Walter Payton award will always be a part of me, but being in the College Football Hall of Fame would be above and beyond any expectations I had for myself. I don’t even have words to explain what an honor this would be.”
In many ways, Payton set the bar for quarterback greatness during his time at MU. Not only did Payton lead the Herd to two consecutive national championship games (1991-92), winning one (1992), but in the process he managed to set the career mark for passing yards and touchdowns, throwing for 9,411 yards and 69 touchdowns. His record for career passing yards surpassed the previous record by over 2,300 yards.
“I might have set the bar for those guys but there were plenty of guys before me who set the bar prior to my arrival like (Carl) Fodor, (Tony) Peterson and (John) Gregory,” he said.
“I look back and laugh because Coach Donnan used me to help recruit his son, Todd, who was also a QB. We ended up getting him and he played behind me. When we were winning, coach would ask me ‘Can I put Todd in there?’ Looking back there were several games were I only played one half. One game I only played one quarter."
"Chamup would play his starters until there was very little time left in the game, so I look at what my numbers could have been if I would have played entire games. I probably would have had well over 12,000 yards. I understand his decisions, he wasn’t trying to risk injury or run up the score, while at the same time letting his son play a little bit and that was fine with me.”
Payton also recalls a 1991 game vs. VMI in which he threw for 383 yards in the first half, a SoCon record. Coach Donnan replaced Payton with his son Todd midway through the third quarter. On Todd Donnan’s first play from scrimmage he completed a screen pass to current College Football Hall of Fame member Troy Brown, who went 99 yards for a touchdown, breaking the SoCon record for longest play from scrimmage.
During Marshall’s national championship season in 1992, Payton threw for an unprecedented 3,610 yards and 31 touchdowns while guiding Marshall to a 12-3 record. A favorite target of Payton’s that season was Brown. In 1992, he caught 101 passes from Payton for 1,654 yards and 16 touchdowns.
“Troy was unique in his style of play," Payton said. "He was one of the first guys I ever saw with what you would call ‘start-stop speed.’ When Troy started running, he was at full speed. When most guys start running it takes them about 10 to 15 yards to get to full speed."
"Troy would be running at full speed, stop, make a move on you and then start again at full speed. He also had the softest hands of any receiver I’ve ever thrown to. It was like throwing into tissue paper, no noise."
“When he came to Marshall from junior college he was a very nice young man, very athletic and we just took to each other. We stayed together for a while and discussed routes and packages; from there on we just bonded."
“Recently in an ESPN interview Troy mentioned me, among (Drew) Bledsoe and (Tom) Brady as the best quarterbacks he had ever played with. The reporter did a double take until Troy elaborated. He had that type of respect for me.”
During his junior campaign as Marshall’s signal caller, Payton had another remarkable season, throwing for 3,392 yards and 26 touchdowns. That season, Payton led Marshall to an 11-4 record before losing to a Jim Tressel-coached Youngstown State team in the national championship, 25-17.
The 1992 national championship meant a lot more to Payton than revenge on the same team that had beat him just one year prior.
“It was an array of emotions," he said. "Obviously when I was down there, there was still a lot of talk about the plane crash, and that’s something I held very near to me. One thing I told myself was that if I ever had the opportunity to bring a little justice back to the city of Huntington I would."
"I remember talking to Bart (Mike Bartrum) and Troy (Brown) as we got close to the championship game, and I said ‘this would really help give back to the city of Huntington, you can’t even put it into words what it would do for them.'
“So when we won the championship it was a feeling of awe. I was almost numb. I remember gazing into the crowd and seeing people up there hugging and crying, I can’t even put it into words. I was happy, I was sad, but I was proud that we could help bring the program to the pinnacle, coming from the worst possible position they could ever be in coming back from the plane crash.'
"I actually remember leaving the stadium about two-and-a-half hours after the end of the game and everybody was still in the stadium. It was completely amazing.”
After that season, Payton signed a free-agent deal with the Dallas Cowboys, before complications from compartment syndrome cut his NFL ambitions short.
“It was horrible,” Payton says now with a laugh. “It is a muscular disease and I didn’t even know I had it. When I was in Dallas (Cowboy’s training camp) my foot used to go numb, and I assumed that I was getting my ankles taped too tight, so I started getting my cleats spatted, but that still didn’t help."
“A couple months went by and one day I just collapsed. When they took me to the hospital, I had no feeling in my leg for about eight to ten hours. The doctors were concerned that the nerve running from my knee to my toes would become severed due to the grinding from the fluid buildup."
"If that were to happen then they would have to amputate my leg. That was Dallas’ main concern. Another three weeks went by and I returned to practice, a few more days went by, then after practice one day all my stuff was out of my locker.”
After numerous surgeries and procedures, Payton played three seasons with the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the CFL, and one with the Florida Bobcats of the Arena League before retiring from football in 1997. Today, Payton’s reflections on his playing days are both positive and without regret.
“I look at it like this," he said. "God has blessed me with a lot of talent, a lot of effort and a can-do personality. Life is very difficult. You’re going to get knocked down plenty of times in life, but you’re going to see the true character of a person by whether or not they stay down, or get back up and start fighting. I’ve always been a fighter."
“I always wanted to play in the NFL, but it didn’t happen the way I wanted it to. I don’t live life with any regrets and if I had it to do over again I wouldn’t change a thing.”
The 2011 Hall of Fame class will be inducted and enshrined on July 15th-16th in South Bend, Indiana.
Note: This interview was conducted by myself, Tony Sotelo, on 3/20/2011
Marshall Thundering Herd vs. Central Florida Knights Pick: October 13th 2010
Marshall Thundering Herd vs. Central Florida Knights
Pick: Under 45 Points
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Marshall has a big night planned getting ready to host Central Florida. The crowd is expected to be all dressed in white and Marshall is long known for having a tremendous home field edge, especially when it is a big game. The Thundering Herd were rounded up Southern Miss in there last outing, losing 41-16 and being outgained 369-180.
Central Florida was near perfect in crushing UAB last Wednesday 42-7, outgained the Blazers by a 379 to 269 margin. The Knights opened as 6.5-point favorites and have dropped a point to 5.5 and the total has also gone south from 46.5 to 44.
This sets up a total system for tonight that reads this way – Play Under on home teams where the total is between 42.5 and 49, after gaining 225 or less total yards in their previous game, against opponent after outgaining their opposition by 125 or more total yards in their last outing. Since 2006, this system is 25-4, 86.2 percent. -Doug Upstone
Related posts:
College Football Pick Central Florida at Marshall 10-13-10
UCF Knights (3-2) vs. Marshall Thundering Herd (1-4)
Wednesday, October 13, 2010, 8:00PM EST
Line: Central Florida (UCF) -5.5
The UCF Knights come into this game after one of their best performances of the season last week against UAB. The team defeated their conference rivals 7-42, with their running game doing most of the damage. Jeffrey Godfrey had a great game, running for 80 yards and passing for 137. The team’s running back, Ronnie Weaver sealed the deal with his rushing of 50 yards for two touchdowns. The Marshall Thundering Herd are coming off a bye week. Their last game was a 41 to 16 loss to Southern Miss. The team’s leading receiver, Antavious Wilson will look to rebound after his weak outing in his last game, consisting of only three catches for 59 yards.
Keys to the Game:
- The UCF Knights’ quarterback, Jeffrey Godfrey did a much better limiting his turnovers. His two interceptions against Kansas State three weeks ago had him sitting in the bench. It looks like he’s getting it together; he should be able to continue his careful play against a struggling Marshall defense.
- Brian Anderson needs to back to his comfort zone when airing the ball out. The 6’3’’ senior has passed for 880 yards and eight touchdowns this season. His final line read for 7/16, 30 yards and a touchdown, after sharing snaps with the second string quarterback.
- Marshall is having a terrible season thus far. They’re ranked 100th in the nation in scoring, averaging only 19.2 points per game. They’ve also been allowing opponents to average 35.4 points against their defense this season.
Central Florida are coming off a fiery win last weekend, they head to Edwards Stadium to thrash a struggling Marshall squad. UCF should continue to ride off their running game and they will have no problem finding the holes in this Marshall defense.
Free Pick: Central Florida (UCF) -5.5
West Virginia Comes Back On Marshall: The Feel-Good Story Was Not To Be
In this year of the 40th anniversary of the plane crash that claimed 75 people connected to the Marshall football team, the Thundering Herd faced in-state rival West Virginia for just the 10th time in school history. Marshall Coach Doc Holliday, formerly on staff at West Virginia, objected to being called West Virginia’s rival because "The Herd" has never beaten the Mountaineers.
However, tonight appeared to be the chance Marshall had been waiting for as the Herd led 21-6 midway through the fourth quarter and was threatening inside the 10-yard line of West Virginia.
That’s when the feel-good story began to fade away.
Freshman RB Tron Martinez fumbled the ball on the 4-yard line, and West Virginia recovered. The Mountaineers began a march down the field, which culminated in a touchdown scamper by RB Noel Devine. With that score and the PAT that followed, West Virginia closed the gap to eight points with just over five minutes left in the game.
Marshall, still feeling good about its lead, moved the ball into Mountaineer territory thanks to some excellent running by RB Martin Ward who finished with 101 yards on the night. Unfortunately, the drive stalled, and Marshall elected to punt the ball. Disciplined punt coverage pinned West Virginia within the 5-yard line.
But it would prove no matter to Geno Smith.
Smith is the QB for West Virginia, a sophomore and first-year starter for the Mountaineers, but his lack of experience was not evident as he showed only calm and comfort on the field. He led his team down the field with only two minutes to play, even recognizing when there was space for him to pull the ball down and run, picking up valuable yardage in the process.
Getting a little help from a pass interference call, Smith found Will Johnson in the back of the end zone for a touchdown and maintained his composure to convert the 2-point conversion to tie the game with only 12 seconds remaining.
West Virginia began overtime with the ball, but nearly gave it away on the first play. Smith ran a bootleg to the right but lost the ball as he attempted to hit Devine in the flat. He fell on the ball just in the nick of time before a Marshall defender could reach it.
The Mountaineers kicked a field goal to take a three point lead before Marshall had its chance.
Marshall lined up for a tying field goal without converting a first down. Even as kicker Tyler Warner stepped on the field, the commentators raised doubts of his ability to have the accuracy. His career long was only 37 yards, and he needed 40 to keep their hopes alive.
The kick would stay just right. Warner held his hands in the air in disbelief.
Marshall will have to wait until next season to become “rivals” with West Virginia when the teams are set to play each other in the season opener. For now, West Virginia’s dreams of a Big East Championship remain intact while Marshall will continue to play in remembrance of the men that went before them whose lives were ended too soon.
Buckeye faithful optimistic after Marshall Blowout
Oddly, Ohio State took care of business against an inferior opponent the week before a big game. Over 500 yards of offense, touchdowns before field goals and passing before running. The Buckeye faithful are quietly thinking…who kidnapped Jim Tressel, and how much money will it take for them to keep him all season long?
All kidding aside, was the offensive firepower a sign of things to come in 2010, or were the Thundering Herd so bad that almost any play would have worked? A little bit of both, but there are legitimate reasons to be excited.
First, the offensive line looked mature and dominating. Led by the Killer B’s – Brewster, Boren and Browning, the line pushed Marshall’s defense around the entire game. Adams and Shugarts played well, and now appear ready to go the distance. Additionally, Zach Boren’s play at full back is outstanding.
The big uglies are ready to open holes and max protect all year long. The key is keeping them healthy.
Second, the skilled positions took control early in the game. Posey, Sanzenbacher, Saine, Herron and Stoneburner were all legitimate threats that kept the Thundering Herd defense off balance.
The depth on offense looked good too. This is an area that Tressel may not have had in the past, or was less confident in the past. Hall and Berry looked explosive coming out of the backfield, and Brown, Schwartz, Fields and Washington were solid at WR. They’re playing time will obviously diminish as the season progresses, but it is nice to know they can provide good relief to the starters when needed.
Third, Pryor has command of the offense. Last year, he cut his teeth with his skill players. Last night, Pryor was playing ahead of the game. His confidence in the line was evident, and he was patient in his reads and distribution.
All of this was against a defense that was vastly undermanned, but the small things were there. No turnovers, dominant blocking, attitude, scoring when it mattered, speed and a sense of urgency. In previous seasons, the offense did not look this efficient so early in the season. All looks promising…but
History suggests that Tressel’s offense will not be extraordinarily productive. Coach Tressel has never had a top twenty offense in his tenure. In fact, the Buckeyes have only been in the Top 50 in total offense just twice under Tressel, 32nd in 2005 and 26th in 2006. Considering the Big Ten titles and BCS Bowl games that the Buckeyes have won/played in over the last nine seasons, the lack of offense is pretty astonishing.
Additionally, the Big Ten is loaded with defensive talent. Iowa and Wisconsin have elite level defenses that will pose problems for the Buckeyes. Purdue and Penn State will also have stingy defenses. It is reasonable to assume that these games will be challenging, and the offense will not be so explosive.
Fortunately, the Buckeyes will likely get a stiff test next weekend against Miami. No one really knows if the U is back to their old form yet, but if the Buckeyes put up the same kind of numbers against the Hurricanes as they did last night, OSU fans can be certain the team is ready for another championship run.
Ohio State Football: Buckeyes Stomp Thundering Herd, Show Offensive Firepower
From the opening kickoff Marshall was playing catch up. Dorian Bell lit up Andre Booker, forcing and fumble that would be recovered by Nate Oliver. Four plays later, Pryor connected with DeVier Posey for a 6 yard touchdown pass, and the Buckeyes never looked back. When the dust settled, the offense had accumulated 529 total yards on the way to a 45-7 route of the Thundering Herd.
Here were storylines from tonight:
1) Terrelle Pryor, was obviously the big news of the night. Pryor picked up where he left off on Jan. 1 in the Rose Bowl, and showcased his ability to be a pocket passer. He looked comfortable, displayed improved mechanics and footwork, and for the most part was very accurate. Early on he lacked some touch on a few dump off passes and would later he have two arm punts that were begging to be intercepted, but besides that he was completely in rhythm. He completed 17 of his 25 passes for 247 yards and three touchdowns.
2) Brandon Saine showed that he will be the man at running back this year, despite all the talent behind him. He had 103 yards (11.4 avg) and two touchdowns tonight, despite only getting nine carries. At the end of last year he really started to come into his own, and like Pryor, he picked up right where he left off. Early in his career Saine struggled with dancing in the backfield and lacking the vision to hit the hole, but as he showcased tonight that is no longer the case. He hits the hole fast, and when he gets through he has the top end speed to take it to the house. Tonight he had two runs over 40 yards, one of which went for a touchdown. I expect big things from him this year.
3) Tyler Moeller made his comeback tonight, and was arguably the best defensive player on the field. The guy just goes after it on every play and doesn't seem to make many mistakes. Tonight he showed how completed his game really is. He displayed great pursuit sideline to sideline, he wraps up guys and doesn't miss tackles, and of course he flat brings it when he blitzes. His hit on Marshall quarterback Brain Anderson was just plain sick, and maybe the highlight of the night. With the Buckeyes thin at DE and the pass rush appearing to be a bit weak, Moeller's comeback could be huge!
5) The one real negative tonight was the special teams, especially the blunders in the first quarter. There were three to be exact: 1) a partially block extra point, 2) a big kickoff return, 3) and a block field goal returned for a TD all happened in the first quarter. Obviously, you can't have three special teams blunders in a game, much less a quarter against quality opponents. From Tressel's tone at halftime, it will be a focus over the next week.
6) Finally, Brian Rolle showed off his skills again. His interception and touchdown return was my favorite play of the game, showing the leader he has become on the field. He was playing like it was the super bowl tonight, gotta love his heart!
Well, there is a quick summary of tonight. Check us out tomorrow as my dad posts a much more thorough breakdown of the players and game in the morning. As for tonight, sleep well my friends. Football season is back, and the Buckeyes look sharp.
Know the Opposition: Marshall
Stadium: Joan C. Edwards Stadium (38,019)
2009 Record: 7-6 (Defeated Ohio 21-17 in Little Caesar's Pizza Bowl)
Head Coach: Doc Holliday (First Season)
Letterman Returning: 45 (15 lost)
Returning Starters: Offense - 7; Defense - 7; Specialists - 1
Base Defense: 4-3
Base Offense: Ace (3 Wideouts)
Returning Stars: WR Antavious Wilson, LB Mario Harvey
Notable Alumni:
Randy Moss - NFL star
Billy Crystal - Actor and comedian
Hal Greer - NBA Hall of Famer
Michael W. Smith - Grammy winning recording artist
Mark D'Antoni - NBA head coach and former player
Soupy Sales - TV star of the 50's and 60's
Verna LeMasters Gibson - First female CEO of Fortune 500 company (The Limited)
Cheerleading Scouting Report:
The one and only time the Buckeyes have ever faced the Thundering Herd was back in 2004, and the results were not pretty. After having four costly turnovers in the game, Nugent kicked a 55 yard field goal as time expired to lift the Buckeyes to a 24-21 victory.
The 2010 edition of the Buckeyes enter the season with much higher aspirations than the one who played Marshall in 2004. Not only that, but Marshall is in a much different place as it takes the field under first time head coach Doc Holliday. He brings lots of experience from being on staff at schools like West Virginia and Florida, but has his work cut out for him in year one.
On the positive side for Anderson, Marshall does return three of their top four receivers from last year, including their leading receiver Antavious Wilson. He missed the last three games of the season with a torn ACL ('09), but still managed 724 yards and three touchdowns as a freshman. Obviously, those in Huntington have high hopes for the 6'0" 196 pound sophomore.
Other wideouts who might have their names called Thursday night include Aaron Dobson (362 yards, 4 TD), Chuck Walker (350 yards, 3 TD), and Wayne Bonner (89 yards, 0 TD). The biggest target outside of Wilson though, is tight end Lee Smith. He had 335 receiving yards a season ago, and many expect him to be the best TE in Conference USA in his senior season.
At running back, the Herd have to replace Darius Marshall who rushed for 1,131 yards and 11 touchdowns last year. The starter named for Thursday is Andre Booker, a 5-10 178 pound sophomore. Booker saw limited touches in '09 and had just 73 yards. Behind him on the depth chart is Martin Ward (5-9 201 pounds). Ward was the second leading rusher last season with 393 yards and three touchdowns. Both guys will run behind an experienced line as the Herd return six guys with starting experience this season.
On defense, Marshall is looking to improve on what was a frustrating campaign a season ago. They gave up 372 yards and 24.3 points a game, but do bring back a lot of experienced players. The guy to watch is WLB Mario Harvey, a 1st Team C-USA player a year ago when he totaled 117 tackles and seven sacks. He is joined in the linebacking core by MLB Kellen Harris, who had a solid season last year as a sophomore.
The secondary could really struggle Thursday night, even more than it did at times last season. Their best player, cornerback DeQuan Bembry (2nd Team C-USA in '09) was kicked off the team by Holliday earlier this year after his third arrest in two years.
Game Outlook:
It's hard to know what to expect from Holliday in his first game with Marshall or even how the Buckeyes will come out on a Thursday night as a heavy favorite. Our guess is that it is a slow first quarter. The offense will put together some exciting plays, but won't get into a rhythm until the mid-2nd quarter. We all know Tressel won't fully unveil the offense in week one, especially with a showdown with the Hurricanes looming. He will give Pryor the chance to make some confidence throws to help with his comfort, but outside of that we expect a lot of carries from the stable of backs the Buckeyes have this season. So overall, just don't expect to wowed by the offense tomorrow night due to play calling.
On defense, the Buckeyes are banged up. With Nathan Williams sidelined and Chimdi Chekwa limited, it will be interesting to see how cohesive this unit is in week one. We do know that Marshall probably won't be running the ball with any consistency. The Buckeyes have strong DT's in Larimore and Simon, and behind them sits the strength of the defense in linebackers Homan, Rolle, and Sweat. So Marshall's best bet is to air it out and test the very banged up and unproven Buckeye secondary. Our prediction is that Marshall will put up a surprise score early on, but won't score again until the second team defense is on the field.
Let's hope we get to see some of the youngsters in the 4th quarter...
Father vs. Son Prediction Battle:
Dave: OSU 34-13
Drew: OSU 31-9
They Are Marshall - A Preview
On Thursday night, the Ohio State Buckeyes will embark on the journey that is the 2010 season. The Buckeyes take on Marshall out of Conference USA, a team most remembered for a plane crash, a broken shin, and a Mike-Nugent-field-goal shy of upsetting the Buckeyes in 2004. Things are a little different this time, as the Buckeyes return a majority of starters from last season and will hope to be playing for the MNC in January. But before the Scarlet and Gray start thinking about bowls played next year, they’ll have to get past a new look Marshall team lead by first year head coach Doc Holliday.
On Thursday night, the Ohio State Buckeyes will embark on the journey that is the 2010 season. The Buckeyes take on
Thursday Nights Are For Contenders
As Jim Tressel likes to say, “September is for pretenders, and November is for contenders”. For Ohio State, they’ll hope Thursdays are for contenders, as the Buckeyes open their season at home, under the lights, on a Thursday night for the first time in recent memory. This will mark the first time since 1997 that the Buckeyes played a Thursday night game, a slot typically reserved for Big East and lower division teams.
Thursday night games are an interesting proposition, but typically to media deprived teams and conferences, as previously stated. Gene Smith had the idea to grab the ESPN opening day slot and put his Buckeyes in the spotlight. A funny thing happened when 16 matchups were also announced for Thursday night and ESPN picked up the Southern Miss at South Carolina hum-dinger instead. That left the Buckeyes with a Big Ten Network slot in addition to the game being played while Fall Quarter isn’t in session and most people in attendance will be working the next day, let alone the visitors who typically travel 2.5 hours or more to see a game in the Shoe.
Fortunately, the Thursday time slot means you don’t have to wait 2 more days to start the football season. So there’s that.
Been Herd Before
West Virginia Buffaloes
For those complaining about opening against 1-AA (FCS) and MAC teams, they will be happy to hear that Marshall has made the jump…or drop…to Conference USA since their last visit to Columbus. They’ve also seen Bob Pruett retire, Mark Snyder get fired, and the hiring of John “Doc” Holliday.
Mark Snyder rings a bell? He was the Ohio State defensive coordinator in 2004 (yes, that 2004) only to ‘move on’ to Marshall after 1 season of firing the Silver Bullets. That whole ‘moving on’ didn’t work as well as hoped for the Herd, and announced Doc Holliday as the head coach on December 17, 2009. He brings 31 years of coaching experience to his first head coaching position, including assistant positions at Marshall, West Virginia, NC State, and Florida. That Florida stop just happened to be as an associate head coach and safeties coach between 2005 and 2007, and those historians among us might be able to piece together some events that transpired on January 8, 2007 between Florida and Ohio State. However, unless Doc is bringing some evil mojo (or Gatorade) and Ron-Zook-recruited players from Florida, this should have little affect on Thursday night’s game.
Marshall does return Senior Brian Anderson from last season to run Marshall’s spread attack. Anderson isn’t afraid to take to the air, passing for 2,646 yards and 14 TDs in 2009, but the Buckeye defense should be on its toes as he also threw 13 balls to wrong team. Unless the Ghost of Anderson Russell starts haunting the safeties, the combination of a strong Buckeye defensive line and an experienced secondary should lead to a turnover or 3. Ohio State starts and ends with its defense, and Marshall just won’t have the firepower to exploit the Buckeyes.
On defense, Doc Holliday sums up Marshall’s game plan as “hope and pray”, in regards to corralling Terrelle Pryor. While “hope and pray” sounds good to Buckeye fans who like offensive fireworks, expect Holliday and his defensive coordinator Chris Rippon to have a real, live plan. A detractor would say “pop in the Purdue tape”, but Marshall doesn’t have the defensive line of Purdue and if Marshall’s defensive line looks like it is playing on par with Ryan Kerrigan, start with your prayers on your holy rosary. Marshall should look to, and may successfully, shut down the Ohio State power plays, but there will be no answer for an improved Terrelle Pryor, running and passing. Marshall did have a Top 4 defense last season…in Conference USA. While the Marshall defense should be able to pressure Pryor and make tackles, it won’t be for the full 60 minutes, and the Buckeyes should be able to take advantage.
The All Americans
“For us to mimic Ohio State is very hard. They’ve got All-Americans at every position,” Holliday said. “The speed is a little different.”
While not entirely true (Doc may not have a real Ph.D) but he is on to something. It would be hard for Marshall to replicate the speed of Terrelle Pryor and the power of Cameron Heyward. (I won’t mention the nastiness of Justin Boren, in fear of Justin Boren) Sprinkle in other future NFL draftees among the 15 starters back from last year’s Rose Bowl winning team and, well, you get the point. There’s a reason Ohio State is carrying the #2 ranking into their opening game.
As Matt Hinton of Dr Saturday points out, “But as of the start of this season, this is the only team that checks off virtually all the boxes on the “preseason favorite” checklist.” There aren’t a bunch of unknowns with this bunch. With most Tressel coached teams, there are and will be few surprises. For this Tressel coached team, the key to the National Championship is big time plays by its veteran players. Consistency is important in title runs, but you don’t become a champion without some luck, as the 2002 team, nicknamed for better or worse The Luckeyes, will tell you.
Buckeye Newcomers
It wouldn’t be college football without the addition of impact freshman (true or redshirt). If they’re going to bite, they’re going to bite as a pup. The Buckeyes feature 3 true freshman on the two deep including Jonathan “Big Hank” Hankins at NT/DT, Christian Bryant at the Star, and Corey “Philly” Brown as the ‘OR’ 3rd or 4th receiver with Chris Fields (in addition to punt returns). Drew Basil, also a true frosh, will be handling kick offs and backing up Senior Devin Barclay on field goals.
But you don’t have to be a freshman to make an impact, as Solomon Thomas, Andrew Sweat, and CJ Barnett hope to prove. Andrew Sweat beat out Etienne Sabino in a high contested battle for the open linebacker spot vacated by Austin Spitler. In the end, Sweat’s instincts are believed to have sealed the deal, but expect both to see the field often. CJ Barnett came out of figurative nowhere to be listed as the starting strong safety over spring favorite and the team’s best athlete, Orhian Johnson. Johnson has been limited in practice due to a hamstring issue and while Tressel stated that Barnett won the job outright, Johnson is expected to fight for a starting spot when healed. Solomon Thomas, a RS junior is looking to make his first start and see his first significant playing time. The junior is filling in for an injured Nathan Williams and has packed on the weight to translate his spring production to games that count.
Sure, Sure, Unsure
There are things that OSU does well, there are things that OSU does not so well, and then there is scoring touchdowns in red zone. A conservative Jim Tressel, working with an inexperienced offense, will always play for the guaranteed points and the +4 differential on a touchdown is merely icing on the cake. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that the Buckeyes converted 25 of their 48 red zone possessions for 7 points in 2009 (roughly 50%) while settling for 3 points 13 of the remaining 23 tries. In total, the Bucks were 38/48 in the red zone, for a 79.2% conversion rate. Not bad for a Big Ten Championship winning , Rose Bowl winning team.
But the Buckeyes have their sights set on running the table, and the best way to ensure that the ball bounces their way is by converting opportunities for points. For example, Wisconsin scored on 54/58 (93.10%) attempts in the red zone, including 40 touchdowns and 11 field goals. Texas scored on 53/58 (91.38%) attempts in the red zone, including 42 touchdowns and 14 field goals. Alabama scored on 51/59 (86.44%) attempts in the red zone, including 28 touchdowns and 23 field goals. The random sampling of 3 teams, chosen because they had high percentages than the Buckeyes, doesn’t mean that more conversion equal appearances in the National Championship game (just ask Wisconsin, undone by its defense and Scott Tolzien’s pick-6-fest).
For reference, Ohio State converted 85.19% of red zone trips into points in its 2006 championship run and 87.23% in its 2007 championship run. Florida converted 91.18% in 2008. LSU converted 93.33% in 2007.
Buffaloes Don’t Roam
Poe’s Prediction: Ohio State over Marshall - 38-6
This game should play out like the typical MAC outing, where the opponent puts up some points (6-10) and doesn’t let Ohio State score over 40. Could Marshall call up the spirits of 2004 and hang with the Buckeyes? Absolutely, but Terrelle Pryor and whoever is the RB are upgrades from Justin Zwick and Lydell Ross. Heacock and Fickell are calling the shots on defense. If you think Marshall has a shot, Vegas would like to disagree with you to the tune of 28.5 points. Marshall was actually one of the more successful teams in college football in the 1990’s and they hope to be born again under Doc Holliday. Unfortunately for the Herd, their rebirth, and brutal baptism, starts in front of 105,000 scarlet and gray clad fans and 22 of the best football players they will see the rest of the season.
The real story line will be what Terrelle Pryor brings to the table and whether or not he is able to build on his Rose Bowl MVP performance and not revert back to the beginning of the 2009 season. From most accounts, Pryor is throwing the ball as well as he ever has in Columbus and the addition of the backs and TE (I said it) in the passing game should help him make better decisions. There shouldn’t be any surprises on defense, but the Buckeyes may miss playmaker Kurt Coleman calling the shots from safety. There’s no such thing as a warm-up game when you’re gunning for a championship, but this should be as close as it could come to one.