IUP Football - Indiana Gazette
Transcription
IUP Football - Indiana Gazette
New head coach Curt Cignetti hopes to build on his father’s legacy Special supplement to Thursday, September 8, 2011 Eye on the A Preview of the 2011 IUP Football Season 2 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 2011 IUP SCHEDULE MEET THE CRIMSON HAWKS vs. EAST STROUDSBURG 4 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 10 George P. Miller Stadium Series: IUP leads, 9-6 Last meeting: IUP, 23-17 (2010) vs. BLOOMSBURG 8 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 15 George P. Miller Stadium Series: IUP leads, 16-9 Last meeting: Bloomsburg, 47-20 (2010) at SLIPPERY ROCK 7 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 24 N.Kerr Thompson Stadium Series: IUP leads, 44-33-2 Last meeting: IUP, 17-0 (2010) vs. EDINBORO 2 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 1 George P. Miller Stadium Series: IUP leads, 53-21-4 Last meeting: IUP, 18-0 (2010) at MERCYHURST Noon, Saturday, Oct. 8 Tullio Field Series: Mercyhurst leads, 2-1 Last meeting: Mercyhurst, 28-27 (2010) at CLARION 3 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 15 Memorial Stadium Series: IUP leads, 55-23-3 Last meeting: Clarion, 21-14 (2010) vs. GANNON 1 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 22 George P. Miller Stadium Series: Gannon leads, 2-1 Last meeting: Gannon, 45-17 (2010) vs. CALIFORNIA 1 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29 George P. Miller Stadium Series: IUP leads, 55-21-2 Last meeting: California, 18-15 (2010) at LOCK HAVEN 3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 5 Hubert Jack Stadium Series: IUP leads, 53-15-3 Last meeting: IUP, 63-31 (2010) at WEST CHESTER 1 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 12 John A. Farrell Stadium Series: IUP leads, 11-6 Last meeting: IUP, 27-10 (2010) COACHING STAFF Head Coach: Curt Cignetti (first season) Defensive Coordinator.......................Paul Tortorella Linebackers............................................. Jim Smith Defensive Ends/Special Teams..... Bernie McQuown Defensive Line..................................Adam Schmidt Defensive Backs.................................Tyler Scudder Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks...... Luke Getsy Offensive Line................................... Mike Campolo Wide Receivers............................... Rod Rutherford Running Backs..........................................Tim Zetts Tight Ends.........................................Scott Kaniecki No. 1 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 10 12 13 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 34 35 36 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 57 58 60 61 62 63 64 68 69 70 72 73 74 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 85 88 90 92 93 96 97 98 99 Name Roy-al Edwards Randy Louis Daryl Jones Terrill Barnes Kevin Berry Mark Jackson Pat Brewer Javon Rowan Sean McVay Pat Smith Chris Brown Chris Gahagan Anthony Perna Andre Henderson Joe Scott Matteo Gazzalle Zach Severance Terrell Washington Jake Alberts Sam Gooden Harvie Tuck Ben Sasu Marvens Toussaint Mike Meriwether Johnny Franco Joey Mencer Teddy Blakeman Jake Campbell Montay Green James Johnson Mario Sanders Quentin Blackwell Dennis Kerstetter Jerrell McFadden Nick Dudukovich Tyler Dummermuth Dom Maggio Alex Berdahl Jordan Batts William McClure Austin Phillips Kole Kraut Chris Smallwood Mike Katch Lowen Johnson Matt Sasson Joey Walter Nick Carnicella Jermel Lee Maurice McKinney Conor Jackson Jacob Breakstone Eddie Gavett Cody Millett Louis Mobley James Heiss Chris Macellaro Carl Thornton Bruce Atkins Mike Charmo Dylan O'Donnell Greg Strauss Anthony DiPasquale Byron Dovales Jason Musselman Zach Wolfe Evan Battallio Matt Plautz Trey Campman Kyle Spencer Ben Simmen Jon Ditto Errol Brewster Larry Gooden Akeem Smith Brett Ullman Grant Schallock Javaughn Goree Stephen Meadows Pos. WR CB DB WR WR LB WR WR WR QB DB QB QB DB QB QB DB DB DB RB RB RB CB DB DB K RB DB DL RB DB DB DB DB RB TE FB LB LB LB LB S RB LB LB OL LB OL LB DL LS OL LS OL OL DE OL DL OL OL OL DL OL OL OL OL TE WR WR WR WR TE DL DL DL K P DL DE Class Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. Sr. So. Sr. Fr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Fr. So. So. Fr. Fr. Jr. Rf. Rf. So. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. Fr. So. Rf. So. Fr. Fr. Fr. Rf. Rf. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. Rf. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Sr. So. So. Jr. Rf. So. Rf. So. Sr. So. Jr. Rf. So. Jr. Rf. So. So. Sr. So. So. So. Rf. Sr. So. Sr. Ht. 6-1 5-10 5-11 6-2 5-7 6-0 5-11 6-0 5-10 6-5 5-11 6-3 6-2 6-0 6-2 5-11 5-11 6-1 6-0 5-9 5-10 5-11 5-8 5-8 5-9 5-10 5-10 6-0 5-10 5-10 6-1 5-8 5-9 5-9 6-0 6-1 5-6 5-11 6-0 6-2 5-9 5-11 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-0 5-11 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-4 6-2 5-11 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-6 6-7 6-3 6-5 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-4 6-2 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-7 5-8 6-4 Wt. 195 185 185 210 175 205 170 195 180 225 180 195 180 200 190 175 185 175 170 185 215 200 175 195 195 180 195 185 235 200 185 185 175 170 200 228 200 200 255 235 230 190 210 210 200 290 220 280 215 240 220 265 200 270 300 220 275 235 255 285 255 230 260 290 280 300 245 220 185 200 175 245 225 255 292 210 250 255 225 Hometown/High School Media/Strath Haven Washington, D.C./Quince Orchard Pittsburgh/Woodland Hills Gettysburg/Gettysburg Coatesville/Coatesville Canton, Ohio/McKinley Coatesville/Coatesville Erie/Cathedral Prep Miramar, Fla./Miramar Hollidaysburg/Hollidaysburg Altoona/Bishop Guilfoyle Penn Run/Penns Manor West Windsor, N.J./Notre Dame Erie/Strong Vincent Orlando, Fla./Dr. Phillips Key West, Fla./Key West Columbus, Ohio/Reynoldsburg Penn Hills/Penn Hills Pittsburgh/Mt. Lebanon McKeesport/McKeesport Akron, Ohio/St. Vincent-St. Mary ROY-AL EDWARDS Gaithersburg, Md./Quince Orchard Ft. Lauderdale, Fla./Port Charlotte Upper Marlboro, Md./DeMatha Tyrone/Tyrone Altoona/Altoona Penn Hills/Penn Hills Sarver/Freeport Pittsburgh/Fox Chapel Philadelphia/Glen Mills Erie/Cathedral Prep Scotch Plains, N.J./Fanwood Millersburg/Millersburg Manassas, Va./Osbourn Windber/Forest Hills New Phila., Ohio / New Phila. Pittsburgh/Central Catholic Ashburn, Va./Bishop O'Connell Jeannette/Jeannette Venetia/Peters Township Bowie, Md./DeMatha York/Dallastown Area Willow Grove/Upper Moreland Lansdale/North Penn Manheim/Manheim Central Pittsburgh/Fox Chapel Ashburn, Va./Broad Run Greensburg/Hempfield Bethlehem/Freedom Springfield, Va./West Springfield Venetia/Peters Township Erie/McDowell Pittsburgh/Mount Lebanon MARK JACKSON ANDRE HENDERSON New Market, Ontario/Huron Heights Philadelphia/St. John Neumann Mt. Lebanon/Mt. Lebanon Pittsburgh/Perry Beaver Falls/Beaver Falls Pittsburgh/Woodland Hills Hamilton, Va./Loundon Valley Butler/Butler Saxton/Tussey Mountain Pittsburgh/Pine-Richland Reading/Muhlenberg Alum Bank/Chestnut Ridge Greensburg/Greensburg Salem Norristown/Norristown Cranberry Twp./Seneca Valley Clearfield/Clearfield Alexandria, Va./Thomas Edison N.Fayette Twp./West Allegheny Monroeville/Gateway Washington, D.C./Springbrook McKeesport/McKeesport Philadelphia/Frankford Baltimore, Md./Perry Hall Webster, N.C./Smoky Mountain Bronx, N.Y./Glen Mills Spotsylvania/James Monroe LOUIS MOBLEY ANTHONY DiPASQUALE Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 3 Taking Over Cignetti planning to build on his father’s IUP legacy By MATTHEW BURGLUND mburglund@indianagazette.net Make no mistake about it: Curt Cignetti did not take the IUP job so he could replicate his father’s success. He’s setting his sights higher than winning 78 percent of his games, 14 division titles and respect across the country. He wants those achievements, for sure, plus one other. It’s the one thing Frank Cignetti strived for, but never could reach — a win in the NCAA Division II championship game, played every December in Florence, Ala. And on the day he was introduced to the public as IUP’s newest football coach, Curt Cignetti said as much. “I knew they had been there before and could get there again,” he said on Jan. 7, “and I would really like to take the program one step further so that we can raise the victory flag in Florence, Alabama, and that’s the goal of this program.” With those few words, Cignetti revealed everything he hopes to do. And in the nine months since then, he, his staff and players have been working toward that goal. But it’s one that won’t happen overnight, and it could take several years to achieve. Granted, the Division II landscape has changed quite a bit since Frank Cignetti took over the IUP program in 1986. Back then, most athletic departments in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference emphasized the “small school” aspect of sports and had little interest in becoming nationally known for college sports. But Cignetti, who was also the athletic director at IUP, had the vision to raise scholarship spending and improve the facilities to the point where IUP was the flagship for the PSAC, advancing to the playoffs more than a dozen times and twice playing in the national championship game. Eventually, the rest of the PSAC took notice and also began trying to raise the profile of their football programs. But the PSAC cut football scholarship spending from 36 (the NCAA max) to 25 in 1995 — the socalled “IUP rule” — to bring Cignetti’s program back to the pack. Although IUP had never been fully funded in terms of football scholarships (the high-water mark was 29 in 1993), the gap between the PSAC and IUP began to close. By the time Cignetti retired in 2005, IUP still had the most scholarships, but not that many more than the rest of the league. Things changed in 2008 when private schools Gannon, Mercyhurst and C.W. Post were admitted to the PSAC. And, as a stipulation in the deal, the 25-scholarship cap was eliminated. At the end of last season, four PSAC programs were at or near the 36-scholarship limit — California, C.W. Post, Gannon and Mercyhurst. And IUP, which was then under the guidance of Lou Tepper, was a good distance back, at 20 scholarships. Tepper, who won 36 of the 54 games he coached, was fired after the 2010 season and Curt Cignetti came over from Alabama, where he had been an assistant for Nick Saban. From the start, Cignetti said he wanted to raise scholarship funds. Because that money is raised through university fundraising, and not from taxpayer dollars, he needed the backing of the community. He got that, and the ball has started to roll. Continued on Page 11 FAMILY BUSINESS Some other notable father-son head coaching duos Son: Terry Career record: 131-59-2 Schools: Salem, Samford, Auburn, North Alabama THE HOLTZES Father: Lou Career record: 249-132-7 Schools: William & Mary, North Carolina State, Arkansas, Minnesota, Notre Dame, South Carolina Son: Skip Career record: 80-55 Schools: Connecticut, East Carolina, South Florida ▲ Son: Tommy Career record: 90-49 Schools: Tulane, Clemson ▲ ▲ THE BOWDENS Father: Bobby Career record: 377-129-4 Schools: South Carolina J.C., Samford, West Virginia, Florida State THE TRESSELS Father: Lee Career record: 155-52-6 School: Baldwin-Wallace Son: Jim Career record: 217-78-2 Schools: Youngstown State, Ohio State TERI ENCISO and JAMES J. NESTOR/Gazette FRANK CIGNETTI, top, won 182 games as IUP’s head coach from 1986 to 2005, and now his oldest son, Curt, bottom, runs the program. 4 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 EYE ON THE HAWKS: Offense Smith’s health is the key to lighting up scoreboard By MATTHEW BURGLUND mburglund@indianagazette.net MIKE WALKER/Gazette TEDDY BLAKEMAN is one of four tailbacks expected to carry the ball this season for IUP. It really is quite this simple: If IUP quarterback Pat Smith stays healthy, the Crimson Hawks have a good chance of being a good team this year. If Smith spends more time in the trainer’s room than the field, things will probably go badly. Just look at last season. Smith won the starting job last August from junior college transfer Bo Napoleon and led the Crimson Hawks to a win in the season opener. He then was having the best game of his short career the following week at East Stroudsburg when he hit his passing hand on a helmet and broke his thumb. Smith missed the rest of the season, and the Crimson Hawks slumped to a 6-5 finish with Napoleon under center. Things got so bad that IUP had become onedimensional by the end of the season, choosing to pass only when necessary. “It was tough,” Smith said. “But this is now. We’re ready to go play a new season. I feel like the attitude of the players is different. Everyone has a positive attitude.” Smith is the only thing the same on the IUP offense this year. Curt Cignetti, a Division I offensive assistant coach the last 29 seasons, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS How the IUP offense fared last season in the PSAC: Scoring 10th (23.4 ppg.) Rushing 2nd (189.5 ypg.) Passing 15th (108.8 ypg.) Total 11th (298.3 ypg.) Turnovers lost 10th (22) has taken over as head coach. Cignetti brought in two new assistants, including offensive coordinator Luke Getsy, and moved last year’s coordinator, Jim Smith, to defense. But there is Pat Smith, the starting quarterback, still around. And he’s happy. “Coach brought in a new environment,” he said. “Everything is up-tempo. There’s a good feeling about playing football.” There is a good feeling now, but that might not last if Smith gets hurt. The Crimson Hawks have four other quarterbacks on the roster, but none has ever taken a snap in a college game. “Pat just has to control what he can control,” Cignetti said. “He’s up to the challenge. This is his Now Serving On Sundays third year. He’s an older kid. I doubt he feels too much pressure. He’s feeling pretty confident that he can play and play well, and I think he’s excited about it.” Smith is particularly excited about the receivers around him. One of the changes Cignetti has made to the offense is its alignment, favoring three receivers and one running back to the traditional tailback-fullback set. So that means a rotation that includes seniors Javon Rowan (47 career catches, 548 yards, 5 touchdowns) and Roy-al Edwards (38-447-1), sophomores Ben Simmen (10-1121) and Pat Brewer (8-70-1), and newcomers Terrill Barnes (a junior college transfer), Matt Plautz (a transfer from Monmouth) and Sean McVay (a true freshman) will all have a chance to get in the action. “They all have great attitudes,” Smith said. “We’ve been working hard, and it seems like we’re on the same page. Having more receivers gives guys fresh legs and we can rotate better.” Throw in tight end Jon Ditto, a Penn State transfer, along with promising youngsters Evan Battalio and Tyler Dummermuth, and there’s enough pass-catching talent to make a difference. But there’s more to it than Continued on Page 5 • All Sports Packages! • Walls of TV’s All in HD! 1/2 Chicken de In Our Homema Honey BBQ Sauce $ 7.25 WEEKLY FOOD SPECIALS IUP.EDU/ LIVELYARTS 724-357-2547 MONDAY 5PM – MIDNIGHT PIZZAS TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY TACO SPAGHETTI 6PM – 9PM FISH TUESDAYS DINNERS WINGS FRIDAYS 5 1 $ FRIDAY $ BOGO 25 5 ¢ $ SATURDAY RIBS KENS FULL RACK SIZE 8 $13 $ 566 Philadelphia St., Indiana • 724-349-0372 • www.grubsportsbar.com Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 5 EYE ON THE HAWKS: Offense QB Smith’s health is the key to putting points on the board Continued from Page 4 “but there are things they need to improve on.” passing the ball. For his part, Tuck said he’s excit“Offensively, I want to be fast,” Cignetti said. “I want to be up- ed about the new look of the oftempo. But we’ve got to be bal- fense, along with the new attitude. anced. We have to be able to run it He said the 11-11 record the Crimson Hawks had over the last two and throw it.” The success of the ground game seasons has made change neceswill depend heavily on the offen- sary. “Eleven-and-eleven was kind of sive line, which has three starters back from last season: center An- like a bitter taste,” Tuck said. “I thony DiPasquale, tackle Byron came here just expecting to win. … Dovales and guard Nick Carnicella. (Cignetti) got us working a lot Adding to the mix is Louis Mobley, harder than we had been, and I think we’ll be better on who missed last year offense because of it.” with a knee injury after But how good the ofstarting at guard in 2009, fense will be is based and redshirt freshman largely on Smith, the Mike Charmo, who is exHollidaysburg native pected to play one of the who will play with little guard positions. room for error. Should Also, freshman Matt he do something to get Sasson could see plenty hurt, the Crimson of playing time, along Hawks could be in a with junior Jason Musworld of trouble. selman. So Smith said he’s takThe issue with the of“COACH ing note of his place on fensive line is depth. BROUGHT the team, and Getsy’s “We can’t afford to coaching has made him have injuries,” Cignetti in a new aware of his responsibilsaid. “We don’t have that environment. ity. luxury. We’re too thin.” “He’s very demandThe front line will Everything ing,” Smith said. “He block for a talented is up-tempo. sets very high standards group of running backs for us. He expects you to There’s a that most teams would 100 percent in envy, good feeling give whatever you’re doing. Leading the group is about As a quarterback, you’re junior Harvie Tuck, who the leaders, so you can’t rushed for more than playing have a mistake because 1,100 yards last season. football.” a mistake for you is a He’ll be backed up by mistake for the team.” sophomores Teddy And if Smith stays Blakeman (502 yards) Pat Smith, healthy, the IUP offense and James Johnson IUP quarterback ought to be pretty good (246) and redshirt freshthis year, which would man Ben Sasu, all of go a long way toward whom could be counted changing the fortunes of a team on to shoulder the load if need be. Cignetti listed Tuck as the starter that hasn’t had much success the on the depth chart, but Blakeman, last two years. “We like to be the underdogs,” Johnson and Sasu are all named at Tuck said, “and coming off the seathe No. 2 slot. Training camp hasn’t cleared the son we had I feel like a lot of people don’t think we can be as good as picture much at all. “They’ve done some good we all think we can be. That’s OK. things,” Cignetti said of his backs, We like that.” www.indianagazette.com TERI ENCISO/Gazette QUARTERBACK PAT SMITH returns to the starting lineup after missing most of last season because of a broken hand that he suffered in the second game of the season. 6 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 EYE ON THE HAWKS: Defense Pressure to win falls squarely on Hawks’ ‘D’ By MATTHEW BURGLUND mburglund@indianagazette.net TERI ENCISO/Gazette PAUL TORTORELLA has been running IUP’s defense since 1995 and has guided some of the best defenses in school history. G OOD L UCK IUP F OOTBALL ! H AVE A G REAT S EASON ! If Curt Cignetti has his way, opposing quarterbacks will cringe when they look at the schedule and see IUP is next. He hopes they think to themselves, Oh no. Not them. He wants his defense to be fast and furious. To level big hits and cause frustration. “I want to be aggressive and I want to attack,” Cignetti said. “We have to be disruptive.” Crimson Hawks safety Johnny Franco’s eyes light up when he talks about the expectations leveled on the defense by the team’s new head coach. Franco likes the idea of being a dominant, disruptive defense, but he knows there is pressure that comes with that. “I love it,” Franco said. “If there’s pressure with saying that we’ll lead the team, that’s fine. I think we play better under pressure. Having that pressure is something we like. It’s a good challenge.” But it’s not an unrealistic challenge. If there’s one thing Cignetti is certain about, it’s that his defense will keep the Crimson Hawks in the game. Coordinator Paul Tortorella’s group has plenty of experience and talent up front and a deep secondary that can cover anything. The only issue is at linebacker, where depth is an issue. But Franco said he has no worries. “As long as we do our jobs, we can be good,” he said. “We just have to play defense as a team.” Last year, the pressure to keep games close was also on the defense, due to an offense that struggled once quarterback Pat Smith STATISTICAL ANALYSIS How the IUP defense fared last season in the PSAC: Scoring 4th (20.3 ppg.) Rushing 4th (111.4 ypg.) Passing 5th (180.5 ypg.) Total 3rd (291.8 ypg.) Turnovers gained 7th (25) went down for the season with a broken thumb in the second week of the season. The IUP defense did an admirable job, finishing fourth in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference in scoring defense and third in total defense, but the Crimson Hawks still stumbled to a 6-5 finish. That 6-5 finish cost head coach Lou Tepper his job, and Cignetti was brought in to breathe life into a proud program that had once been one of the nation’s elite. When Tortorella was the defensive coordinator for Frank Cignetti, he often used a base 4-3 defense with much success. When Tepper came aboard in 2006, Tortorella switched to Tepper’s 4-2-5 scheme. It seems there are concepts of both in this year’s defense, which will allow for flexibility in game situations. “It’s basically the same thing as last year,” said Franco, who had 47 tackles and four interceptions last season. “We switch around depending on the offense we face. But Coach Tort is doing a great job like he always has.” The strength of the IUP defense is likely going to be the front line, which features end Stephen Meadows, tackle Carl Thornton and nose guard Larry Gooden, plus outside (rush) linebacker Errol Brewster. Thornton has been a disruptive force the last two seasons, totaling 17 tackles for loss and six quarterback sacks despite being quite a bit lighter (235 pounds) than many of the offensive linemen he went against. Gooden and Brewster were contributors last season and have had solid fall camps. The wild card in the mix is Meadows, a transfer from Youngstown State who has one year of eligibility. An up-tempo end, Meadows will certainly improve a front line that will rely on quickness over brute strength when rushing the quarterback. The four linemen leave Cignetti feeling pretty good about what they can do. “We’ve got some guys on our Dline who can rush the passer,” Cignetti said. “I mean, when we want to be, we can be pretty darn good on the D-line. I think our defensive line can be a dominant force. I really believe that.” The secondary also ought to be pretty solid, especially at cornerback, where program newcomer Marvens Toussaint and redshirt freshman Jerrell McFadden have drawn starting jobs. “Those guys have done a great job,” Cignetti said. “They’re good. We play physical on the corners, and they do a great job, and that allows us to do some other things on defense. We have confidence in those guys that they can walk up in someone’s face and stop them.” Continued on Page 7 “I LOVE IT. If there’s pressure with saying that we’ll lead the team, that’s fine. I think we play better under pressure. Having that pressure is something we like. It’s a good challenge.” Johnny Franco, IUP safety Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 7 EYE ON THE HAWKS: Defense Time to pack the stands. TERI ENCISO/Gazette DEFENSIVE BACK Mike Meriweather, left, tried to shed a block from wide receiver Sean McVay during a practice last month. No one cheers louder for Western Pennsylvania high school athletics. That’s why we’re excited to support another season of great high school football across our region. Pressure to win falls squarely on defense Continued from Page 6 The rest of the secondary features Franco at free safety, Andre Henderson at strong safety, and Terrell Washington at drop safety. Henderson is an interesting story. He is the only player on the roster to have played for Frank Cignetti (2005), Tepper (2008-09) and now Curt Cignetti. He played in 2005 as a true freshman, then left school for two seasons before returning during Tepper’s third season. In 2009, he suffered a shoulder injury that kept him out of the rest of that season, plus all of last year. At 24, Henderson is trying to regain the form that made him one of the better safeties just a few years ago. “He was at about 80 percent in the spring, but I’m hoping he comes back and plays like the Andre of old,” Cignetti said. Cignetti’s main concern on defense is at linebacker, where Mark Jackson and Alex Berdahl are penciled in as the starters. Jackson, who was a safety last season, missed half of training camp with an ankle injury and is still working his way back into shape. Jackson and Berdahl, a former walk-on, are backed up by sophomore Jermel Lee and true freshman Will McClure, both of whom will see plenty of playing time. “We have some real questions at linebacker,” Cignetti said. “We have four or five young kids … at that position, and hopefully they can learn fast.” Should things come together on defense, the Crimson Hawks certainly should live up to Cignetti’s expectations. “We’ve got a great group out there,” Franco said. “We’re looking forward to playing together.” FCB Member FDIC. Equal Opportunity Lender. 8 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 PSAC PREVIEW NEW BOSSES Other than IUP’s Curt Cignetti, there are three new head coaches in the PSAC, each with a different challenge. The toughest tasks belong to Lock Haven’s John Allen and Cheyney’s Kenneth Lockard, who inherit teams with little to boast. Lock Haven has lost 32 games in a row and 42 of its last 43, while Cheyney has won only once in the last three seasons. What’s more, JOHN Cheyney has not ALLEN had a winning season since 1979; Lock Haven has not had one since 1981. “The past is the past; I wasn’t here,” Allen said. “I look at (the players) like they weren’t here.” At Shippensburg, longtime assistant coach Mark Maciejewski was promoted during the offseason to head coach following the retirement of Rocky Rees, who coached the Red Raiders for 20 years and led them to several NCAA Division II playoff berths. Indiana Pipeline Clarion stocks roster with former IHS players I COACHES’ SALARIES Name (School) Salary John Luckhardt (California) $136,837 George Mihalik (SRU) $134,971 Curt Cignetti (IUP) $120,000 Bill Zwaan (West Chester) $110,718 Danny Hale (Bloomsburg) $108,300 Denny Douds (E.Stroud.) $98,120 Greg Colby (Millersville) $93,015 Scott Browning (Edinboro) $89,838 Ray Monica (Kutztown) $82,221 Mark Maciejewski (Shipp.) $81,800 Jay Foster (Clarion) $79,909 John Allen (Lock Haven) $78,000 Kenneth Lockard (Cheyney) $50,000 Note: Mihalik and Douds are under faculty contracts and earn salaries as professors as well as coaches. The number listed is for the two jobs combined. ... C.W. Post, Gannon and Mercyhurst are private schools and do not make public their coaches’ salaries. “THEY’RE THE KIND of kids you can build a football team around. There’s something inside them that if they’re given the right opportunity, they blossom.” Jay Foster, Clarion head coach t’s pretty rare to find two football players from the same high school on the same college team. But at Clarion, there seems to be a common thread as you read down the roster. Five of the players listed are from Indiana High School: defensive backs Kwaku Asamoah and Kyle Edgar, quarterback Ben Fiscus, defensive lineman Zach Newquist and safety Jay Pettina. So how did this happen? Clarion coach Jay Foster says it’s an easy thing to understand. He says IHS coach Mark Zilinskas has made a mold of tough kids who can adapt well to the Clarion schemes. “(Zilinskas) does a great job down there,” Foster said. “He has tough, hard-nosed players, good kids who seem like they have found a home at Clarion. ... All of those kids are kids who don’t come in and wow you right off the bat. But the thing is they’re the kind of kids you can build a football team around. There’s something inside them that if they’re given the right opportunity, they blossom. Those guys seem to have found the right fit, and it’s with us.” Fiscus, left, enters the season as the Golden Eagles’ JAY starting quarterback, a position he took over last year as a PETTINA redshirt freshman midway through the season. At the time, Clarion was 0-5 and going nowhere. Fiscus took over and won four of the six games he started, including a 21-14 victory over his hometown IUP Crimson Hawks. Fiscus ended up throwing for 713 yards and seven touchdowns while rushing for 582 yards and six scores. Pettina missed three games but still managed to finish ninth on the team in tackles, with 37. He also had two sacks. He’ll start at safety this fall. As for this season, Newquist is expected to compete for playing time along the Golden Eagles’ defensive line, while JAY the two freshmen, Asamoah and Edgar, could be given a FOSTER redshirt to preserve their four years of eligibility and then earn playing time next season. Because Clarion offers far fewer scholarships than most schools in the PSAC, Foster said he doesn’t have the luxury to recruit the best players possible, but rather to find good players he can shape into better ones over the years. In Indiana, he has found a handful of such players already. “We go out and find football players,” Foster said. “And if they’re good football players and good people, they’ll figure out where they fit. We have to adjust to what we have.” Northern Cambria’s Andrew Paronish is also a Clarion recruit. He has started the last two seasons in the secondary, and last year he was fourth on the team with 54 tackles. Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 9 PSAC PREVIEW SCHOLARSHIP NUMBERS Back for More League loaded with talented rushers T ry this on for size: Last season, Bloomsburg’s Franklyn Quiteh gained more yards on the ground (2,015) than any other running back in the country, at any level of college football. And by the way, Quiteh was a freshman. That ought to be enough to keep PSAC defensive coaches awake at night, but the nightmare doesn’t end there. Of the top 10 leading rushers from last season, seven are back this fall. Quiteh, right, leads the group. A year ago, he was third on the Huskies’ depth chart and going nowhere. But because of an injury to one tailback and the departure of another because of a suspension, Quiteh found himself the Huskies’ openingday starter. He gained 140 yards against Ashland that day, and took off from there, rushing for more than 200 yards three times en route to just the fourth 2,000-yard season by a PSAC running back. Two other players are also back in the fold after standout freshman seasons. Cheyney’s Marcus Jones (917) yards and Edinboro’s Drew Herrell (682) hope to pick up where they left off last AKEEM year and be their team’s dominant rusher. SATTERFIELD Also back this year is Slippery Rock’s Akeem Satterfield, who led the PSAC West with 1,352 yards during his sophomore season; California’s Lamont Smith, who gained 1,165 yards for the Vulcans; and IUP’s Harvie Tuck, who amassed 1,134 yards in 10 games. Tuck is one of four running backs who will shoulder the load this season for the Crimson Hawks. Sophomores Teddy Blakeman and James Johnson, both of whom saw playing time last year, as well as redshirt freshman Ben Sasu, hope to get some carries as the Curt Cignetti era opens at IUP. As a side note, three of the four leading rushers in the PSAC played against IUP last season, and none of them reached the 100-yard mark. Quiteh totaled 91 yards on 22 carries in a 47-20 win over IUP, while California’s Smith totaled 55 yards on 20 carries in an 18-15 overtime win. Slippery Rock’s Satterfield mustered only 56 yards on 27 carries in a 17-0 loss to the Crimson Hawks. 1. California 2. Gannon 3. C.W. Post 4. Mercyhurst 5. IUP 6. Slippery Rock 7. Clarion 8. Edinboro 9. West Chester 10. East Stroudsburg 11. Bloomsburg 12. Lock Haven 13. Millersville 14. Shippensburg 15. Kutztown 16. Cheyney 35.58 35.46 34.80 33.35 20.10 17.33 12.82 12.27 11.74 9.45 9.26 7.82 6.98 6.58 6.14 5.00 Note: Numbers are for the 2010-11 school year. Numbers for current season are not released until end of school year. Scholarships are accumulated through school fundraising, not through tax dollars. AREA PLAYERS IN THE PSAC Clarion Kwaku Asamoah, DB, Indiana Kyle Edgar, DB, Indiana Ben Fiscus, QB, Indiana Zach Newquist, DL, Indiana Andrew Paronish, DB, N.Cambria Jay Pettina, DB, Indiana Eli Rupert, OL, Apollo-Ridge Lock Haven Jeremiah Dunchack, RB, N.Cambria Bobby Shorthouse, WR, Derry IUP Chris Gahagan, QB, Penns Manor Mercyhurst Devon Luzell, DL, Punxsutawney Ian Weaver, LB, Punxsutawney KEY GAMES ON THE PSAC SCHEDULE Bloomsburg at IUP California at Slippery Rock Bloomsburg at Kutztown 8 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 15 Five days after opening his first season as head coach, IUP’s Curt Cignetti will find out just where his team stands when it welcomes perennial power Bloombsurg for a Thursday night game to be televised on national TV. The Huskies are looking to defend their PSAC East crown and have plenty of talent and experience returning from last year. Cignetti’s Crimson Hawks could score major points with an upset win. 2 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 15 It’s no surprise the high-spending Vulcans are the favorites (again) to win the PSAC West. But Slippery Rock is the dark horse, thanks to the addition of quarterback Cody Endres, a transfer from UConn. The Rock has the most experience of any team in the West, but California will likely have the most talent. This Week 7 game will go a long way in deciding who wins the division. 1 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 5 It’s a safe bet that Kutztown already has this game circled on its calendar. Last year, the Golden Bears went 10-1, with their lone loss coming at the hands of the Huskies, 56-37. With a reloaded roster, Kutztown has designs on winning the East for the first time in school history, but to do so the Golden Bears will have to get past Bloomsburg. That this game is in the final week of division play gives it even more weight. 10 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 PRESEASON POLLS AMERICAN FOOTBALL COACHES ASSOC. TOP 25 Record 1. Minnesota-Duluth (28) 15-0 2. Delta State 11-4 3. NW Missouri State (1) 12-2 4. Abilene Christian 11-1 5. Grand Valley St. 11-2 6. North Alabama 9-4 7. Texas A&M-Kingsville 10-2 8. Augustana 11-2 9. (tie) Albany State 11-1 Bloomsburg 10-3 11. Shepherd 12-2 12. California 10-2 13. St. Cloud State 10-3 14. Wingate 9-3 15. Central Missouri 11-3 16. Nebraska-Kearney 9-2 17. Mercyhurst 10-3 18. Washburn 8-4 19. West Texas A&M 8-4 20. Valdosta State 8-3 21. Wayne State 9-2 22. Central Washington 8-3 23. Kutztown 10-2 24. Henderson State 7-4 25. Hillsdale 9-3 Pts 724 657 624 607 579 468 437 426 379 379 377 369 346 284 270 242 207 201 186 184 177 164 144 139 91 D2FOOTBALL.COM TOP 25 2010 Record 1. Minnesota-Duluth 15-0 2. Delta State 11-4 3. Abilene Christian 11-1 4. Grand Valley State 11-2 5. Northwest Missouri 12-2 6. Texas A&M-Kingsville 10-2 7. Shepherd 12-2 8. Central Missouri 11-3 9. Augustana 11-2 10. Albany State 11-1 11. California 10-2 12. North Alabama 9-4 13. St. Cloud State 10-3 14. Valdosta State 8-3 15. Bloomsburg 10-3 16. West Texas A&M 8-4 17. Mercyhurst 10-3 18. Hillsdale 9-3 19. Wingate 9-3 20. Kutztown 10-2 21. Missouri Western 8-4 22. Washburn 8-4 23. Colorado Mines 9-3 24. Wayne State 9-2 25. Nebraska-Kearney 9-2 PSAC COACHES’ POLL West Team 2010 record 1. California 10-2 2. Mercyhurst 10-3 3. IUP 6-5 (tie) Slippery Rock 6-5 5. Gannon 6-5 6. Edinboro 7-4 7. Clarion 4-7 8. Lock Haven 0-11 East Team 2010 record 1. Bloomsburg 10-3 2. Kutztown 10-2 3. West Chester 4-7 4. C.W. Post 7-4 5. East Stroudsburg 3-8 6. Shippensburg 5-6 7. Millersville 2-9 8. Cheyney 1-10 Leadership, And Professionalism... Visit www.ruddock2012.com to learn about your Indiana County Commissioner, ROD RUDDOCK! EYE ON THE HAWKS: Special Teams Hawks’ new kickers already showing promise By MATTHEW BURGLUND mburglund@indianagazette.net All football coaches know the importance of special teams, but few spend the time necessary to build strong special teams. IUP’s Curt Cignetti isn’t following that path. During most practices, Cignetti would order his players to take a break from the grind of blocking and tackling to work on things such as punt returns and extra points, drills some players might find mundane. But Cignetti knows that if his team can win the special teams battle every week, it will be in good shape. “We’ve put a lot of time into special teams in camp,” Cignetti said. “I want to be sound. I want it to be an edge for us.” But after spring drills concluded in April, Cignetti had no punter on his roster, nor did he have a kicker who had tried an extra point or a field goal in a game. Last year’s starters, Jared Kaufmann and Craig Burgess, graduated. That changed over the summer. The Crimson Hawks brought in Grant Schallock, a 6-foot-7 punter who transferred from North Carolina, and Brett Ullman, a placekicker who spent one year, but did not play, at Morgan State. Both have already wowed Cignetti. At North Carolina, Schallock was a walk-on who won the starting job as a sophomore in 2009. But after last season, when he lost the starting nod, he chose to transfer. It was through an exchange of emails that Schallock ended up at IUP. So far, Schallock has shown the ability to put kicks high in the air and also far downfield. On several kicks during scrimmages last month, he booted the ball well over 50 yards, with a tight spiral. “Nowadays,” Cignetti said with a smile, “when you get an email, you respond to it.” EDDIE GAVETT GRANT SCHALLOCK BRETT ULLMAN Ullman, a 6-foot-1 freshman, beat out lefty Joey Mencer, a holdover from the last two seasons, for the placekicking job. He solidified the decision at the team’s final scrimmage, when he drilled a 53-yard field goal, which probably had enough on it to be good from 58 yards. The longest field goal in IUP history is 52 yards, by Jon Ruff, in 1995. “He’s got a nice, strong leg,” Cignetti said. “I really like him. I’m excited about our kicking game.” At IUP, Ullman joins his sister, Arika, who is a member of the Crimson Hawks’ women’s basketball team. One part of the punting and kicking game is the long snapper, and the Crimson Hawks welcome back one so good in Eddie Gavett that he largely goes unnoticed. A junior from Mount Lebanon, Gavett took over during the second game of his true freshman season and has held down the job since. He’ll be backed up by freshman recruit Conor Jackson. As for returns, several players have been used in practice on punts and kickoffs, including wide receivers Kevin Berry, Javon Rowan, Ben Simmen and Sean McVay, running back James Johnson and defensive back Mike Meriweather. SUPPORTS family business owners through educational seminars and peer networking events that contribute to the strength, growth, and longevity of the businesses. RECOGNIZES family-owned businesses at the annual Family Business Award Program for their excellence in performance and contribution to community. Go to www.iup.edu/centerforfamilybusiness to see area family business owners honored by the CFB! Center for Family Business 324 Eberly College of Business and Information Technology 664 Pratt Drive, Indiana, PA 15705-1036 DID YOU KNOW? IUP has been playing 4-year college football since 1927 (84 seasons), but 44 percent (218) of the program’s wins have come since Frank Cignetti took over, in 1986. IUP’s third win this season will be the 500th in the program’s history. Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 11 Cignetti planning Don’t Let Your FINANCIAL GOALS Become Long Shots to build off his father’s IUP legacy . Continued from Page 3 “We’ve had a tremendous response from the community,” he said. “I think there’s excitement about it. I think people understand that Rome wasn’t built in a day, they know that regardless of how this season turns out, there will be progress. I mean internally, externally, structurally, financially. That’s why I am here. Our community has been awesome. The alums have been awesome, and the businesses inside and outside the community have been great.” Cignetti has said the financial goal is to reach 36 scholarships, which could lead to a resurgence for the program, which has won only 11 of its last 22 games. But the rest of the PSAC has taken notice of what’s happening here in Indiana. “I thought it was a great hire,” said Edinboro coach Scott Browning. “I love Frank, and when I was an assistant here for all those years, Frank gave me the time of the day and he gave me more than he’ll ever know. I have great respect for him because of that. But hiring Curt kind of came out of the woods, though. It’s a great, great hire.” “I don’t think there’s any question,” California coach John Luckhardt said, “Curt is going to have an immediate impact at IUP.” So far, he has had an impact. The players say they like the up-tempo attitude and sense of accountability that Cignetti has brought. “I was real excited when I heard he got the job,” said running back Harvie Tuck. “With his father being here, this would be a good fit. We like having him here; we love him.” With the plan in place, Cignetti hopes his team will make quick progress. He has overhauled the team, with only about three dozen players, out of the roughly 80 on the roster, who have ever played a game for IUP. He brought in a group of talented freshmen and transfers who have already made an impact. The work Cignetti has done in the offseason has already paid off in one sense. The rest of the PSAC In football, the closer you are to the goal, the easier it is to succeed. In life, the sooner we start planning for our financial goals the easier it is to succeed. CURT CIGNETTI Age: 50 College: West Virginia, Class of 1982 Family: Wife, Manette; children, Curtis, Carly and Natalie. Previous experience: Alabama, wide receivers coach/ recruiting coordinator, 2007-10; North Carolina State, quarterbacks and wide receivers coach/recruiting coordinator, 2000-06; Pittsburgh, quarterbacks and tight ends coach/recruiting coordinator, 1993-99; Temple, quarterbacks coach 1989-92; Rice, quarterbacks coach, 1986-88; Davidson, quarterbacks and wide receivers coach, 1985; Pittsburgh, graduate assistant, 1983-84. coaches picked the Crimson Hawks third in the division in the preseason poll, one year after they finished 3-4 in PSAC West games. “We can be as good as we decide every single day in practice and games to be,” Cignetti said. “It’s about focus. It’s about doing your job; about being committed and being tough. I don’t set any ceiling on how good we can be. I don’t think anybody knows how good we can be.” It will be a climb to get back to the top, Cignetti admits. But with a goal in place to bring home IUP’s first NCAA team championship, he believes good days are ahead. “We have a lot of work to do at IUP,” he said, “and I’m excited about the challenge.” www.indianagazette.com Your Ameritas representative is available to help put together a game plan to help you have a better shot at making your goal. 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Additional products and services may be available through Ameritas Financial Services of WPA or Upstreet Financial that are not offered through AIC. 12 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 PSAC WEST NOTEBOOK Wide-open division has many stories to tell CLARION By MATTHEW BURGLUND mburglund@indianagazette.net When the eight head coaches got together for the annual Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference West Division media luncheon on Aug. 1, there was a sense of familiarity despite a number of changes. Edinboro was pinning its hopes on a quarterback named Harris. IUP was being led by a coach named Cignetti. Mercyhurst was still looking for respect, and Lock Haven was starting over at the bottom, And California was still looking for the right formula to get to the NCAA Division II championship game. As much as things change in the PSAC West, things are also the same. And like nearly every other season, this one ought to be a dogfight to the top. “Any team, one through eight, can win each week,” said Mercyhurst coach Marty Schaetzle. “There aren’t many easy games.” CALIFORNIA Since head coach John Luckhardt took over the program in 2002, the Vulcans have reached their highest point while also drawing the most criticism for the way they got there — by using Division I transfers. But Luckhardt said any venom sent his way is unwarranted. Although the perception is that his program has become a haven for second-chancers, Luckhardt said he doesn’t take on players who are not willing to change the things that made them a Division I castoff. “Have we made a mistake or two? Maybe,” he said. “But 99 percent of our kids have been good. I can tell you that a lot of our kids have turned their lives around.” Luckhardt points to the fact there is so JOHN LUCKHARDT JIM KIERNAN much competition for recruits in western Pennsylvania as the reason for his reliance on transfers. He said many of the players he brought in were ones the Vulcans had originally recruited out of high school, and then later came to California after their time at Division I ended. “Those guys aren’t coming to us right out of high school,” Luckhardt said. “Now, in Duluth, Minnesota, you can either go ice fishing or go to Minnesota-Duluth. So you can win out there with high school recruits. But in western Pennsylvania, you’ve got to compete against so many schools for recruits. So I’m not gonna apologize for it. If you’re not doing it, you can scare some people locally, but you won’t scare anybody nationally.” The Vulcans, who have advanced to the national semifinals three of the last four seasons, are hoping they finally have the right mix to get to the next level. “We’ve been working awfully hard to find the right formula to win at the national level,” Luckhardt said. “We think we’ve put the ingredients together, and I think we’re closer, on paper, than we’ve ever been.” Unlike California, which is fully funded, head coach Jay Foster’s Golden Eagles are near the bottom of the division in terms of scholarship spending, with a little more than a third of the money California has. Foster said the difference might not be noticeable at first. But over the course of the season, as injuries mount, the inequality becomes evident because schools like Clarion must rely on walk-ons to fill the gaps. “It comes back to a depth thing,” Foster said. “People don’t realize that before the second game was over last year, we had lost seven projected starters. We’re not deep enough to lose seven starters. I believe we can always put 22 kids out there who can compete on a weekly basis. But can we come up with 30? That’s the challenge. That’s what the scholarship does: It just buys you insurance if you get an injury. That’s a battle we’ll always be in.” As for this season, Foster is searching for another offensive weapon to go with multitalented quarterback Ben Fiscus, an Indiana High School graduate. And Foster knows if he can find a player good enough to make defenses also have to scheme for, things will open up for the Golden Eagles. “This isn’t rocket science,” he said. “If you become one-dimensional, it doesn’t matter how good that one dimension is, you won’t get far. We know everybody is going to chase (Fiscus). So the challenge for us is to come up with another weapon.” EDINBORO Maybe on the surface, Cody Harris’ first season as the Fighting Scots’ quarterback didn’t measure up to the standard set by his older brother, Trevor, who owns every meaningful school passing record. But head coach Scott Browning throws out one key statistic that means more than passing yards or touchdowns thrown. “You have to remember,” he said, “that Trevor won six games as a freshman; Cody won seven.” That might point to good days ahead for Edinboro, which went 31-14 with Trevor Harris under center from 2006 to 2009. But in his first season, Cody Harris didn’t exactly light up the sky like his brother did, throwing for a pedestrian 1,811 yards and 11 touchdowns in 11 starts. Browning knows his quarterback must play better this season for the Fighting Scots to make any noise in the division. It’s the most important position on the field, a fact Browning readily agrees with. “If you go back through the history of any league, the team with the elite quarterback is gonna be near the top,” Browning said. “The quarterback gives you a chance. Everything begins with the quarterback, from leadership to execution.” And just like the days when Edinboro put its hopes in the hands of Trevor Harris, this year’s team is relying on Cody Harris to lead the way back to the NCAA Division II playoffs. “He’s a gamer,” Browning said. “I think it’s gonna be fun now to see where our team goes. I think as Cody goes, our team will go.” GANNON The Golden Knights have been, historically, one of the last teams to take a transfer. Head coach Jim Kiernan said it’s because taking a Division I castoff is a huge gamble. “Every school has a way of going about getting your players,” he said. “For us, building through the high school ranks fits Continued on Page 13 BON-TON - BIG KMART - JC PENNEY - SEARS OVER 50 STORES & SERVICES UNDER 1 ROOF • Aeropostale • American Eagle Outfitters • Auntie Anne’s Pretzels • Bath & Body Works • Bo-Rics Hair Care • Bon Worth • Capri Pizza • Cinemas IV • Claire’s Boutique • Dingbats Restaurant & Sports Bar • Finish Line • Freedom Wireless Verizon • FYE Music • Game Stop • Gardners Candies • General Nutrition Center • H&R Block • Indiana Co. Tourist Bureau • Jewelry Junction • Kay Jewelers • King’s Jewelry • Kitchen Collection • Lorelli’s Jewelry • Luxenberg’s Jewelers • Matthew’s Hallmark • Maurices • Mobile Phone Pros • Old Navy • Pacific Sunwear • Pa. Drivers License Center • Pa. Lottery Booth • Pearle Vision Express • Pittsburgh Sports Connection 2334 Oakland Ave., Indiana 724-349-6110 www.indianamallpa.com • Radio Shack • Regis Salon • Rue 21 • Shoe Dept. • Sinobi Japanese Restaurant • Spencer Gifts • Subway • Style Nails & II • Things Remembered • United Vending Arcade • Windgate Wines www.indianamallpa.com Shop Monday-Saturday 10a.m. to 9p.m.,Sundays 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. DID YOU KNOW? HEAVY DUTY LIGHT & MEDIUM • • • • UNDERLIFT TOWING RECOVERY WINCHING ROAD SERVICE • • • • INDIANA, PA 724-349-8778 KITTANNING, PA 724-545-1577 WHEEL LIFT FLAT BED 4X4 OFF ROAD LOCK OUT IUP has earned 14 NCAA Division II playoff berths. The other seven teams in the PSAC West have earned a combined 20 playoff berths. ❒❒❒ Combined playoff berths for Cheyney, Gannon and Lock Haven: 0. Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 13 PSAC WEST NOTEBOOK 2010 PSAC STANDINGS Wide-open West has stories to tell WEST DIVISION Continued from Page 12 Gannon. But if you look at other schools, you see they have found their niché. The question is if it fits your program. Recruiting can be such an inaccurate science. You wonder why a guy is leaving the school he’s at and how well he’ll fit in your program. It’s a big adjustment for a player to make.” This season, Gannon is rebuilding with some big holes to fill, mainly at quarterback and skill positions. But the way the Golden Knights have been progressing each year gives Kiernan reason to think his team is one that can fly under the radar. Gannon has, after all, beaten IUP and Slippery Rock the last two seasons and also dealt PSAC West champ Mercyhurst its only divisional loss last year. “We’re hoping to take another step,” Kiernan said. “We’ve had a degree of success the last few years. We’d like to build off that and go a little further. This is a whole new season. Everyone starts fresh. We’ve got to show that we’ve learned from what we’ve done before.” LOCK HAVEN “I’ve heard that before,” new Lock Haven coach John Allen says with a laugh. The question: “Are you crazy?” Allen insists he is not, despite the daunting task he faces as the next man in line trying to make something out of nothing at Lock Haven. The Bald Eagles haven’t had a winning season since 1981, and they haven’t won a game since 2007, a losing streak that sits at 32 games. So why did Allen seek out and accept this job? “I’ve always felt like this program could be one of the premier programs in the conference,” said Allen, who was an assistant at Lock Haven in the late 1990s. “This has the foundation to be something special, and I’m just excited to have the opportunity to push it forward. It’s no different than any other program in the conference. Fundraising is always a challenge. But I think there are some things we can do to help us move forward. It’s not going to happen overnight.” Allen replaces John Klacik, who left to be the offensive coordinator at Miami of Ohio after going just 5-60 in six seasons. Allen admits he has inherited a losing streak, but said it means nothing in terms of the program’s future. “The past is the past,” Allen said. “I wasn’t here. I look at (the players) like they weren’t here. Everything we’re doing here is new. We’re trying to bring a new energy to the program.” MERCYHURST His team is coming off a dream season, with a division and conference title and a trip to the Super Region One final, and yet Mercyhurst head coach Marty Schaetzle is left feeling like the Rodney Dangerfield of the PSAC — he can’t get any respect. In the preseason coaches’ poll, the Lakers were picked second in the West, behind California. But Schaetzle said his players don’t care. “They’d rather see where they finish,” he said. “But I don’t think we’ll ever be picked first in our conference. … Look around our league, and some of these schools have great athletes. We don’t have those guys. We’re a small school up in Erie, and we have great kids who play hard. We have to work our tails off to hang with these other guys. There are just so many good teams in this league.” Schaetzle hopes winning titles becomes as much a tradition at Mercyhurst as the one the Lakers have now, when Schaetzle does one “down-up” — going from a standing position to prone on the ground, then back to his feet — for every point his team scores in a win. Last year, he did a painful number of them, 316, including 56 after the Lakers’ win over Bloomsburg in the PSAC State Game. “The guys like it, which is a good thing,” Schaetzle said. “And I don’t mind doing them, either, to be honest with you.” SLIPPERY ROCK Longtime coach George Mihalik insists he hasn’t thought about retiring, and the last time he checked he certainly had a pulse, so he admits it’s a bit embarrassing to have his name placed on Slippery Rock’s football stadium. Yet the university Mihalik has devoted most of the last 41 years to will change the name of the building to Mihalik-Thompson Stadium. “It’s kind of funny,” Mihalik said. “(This happens when) you are either retired or dead. I don’t have any plans to retire, and I sure am not dead. It was a total shock. I didn’t know it was even a consideration. I’m humbled by it. It’s quite an honor.” Mihalik, Slippery Rock’s quarterback in the early 1970s, became an assistant coach at his alma mater in 1977 and has been there since. He was named the head coach in 1988 and has gone on to become the school’s all-time winningest coach, with 153 career victories. “My whole life, since 1970, every year but one has been here,” he said. “This has been a great place for my two daughters, and I love the university.” As for this season, Mihalik is pinning his hopes on quarterback Cody Endres, a transfer from Connecticut who gives the offense an immediate boost. “This gives us a legitimate opportunity to keep our opponents off balance,” he said. “We’ve always had a string running game, and hopefully now we can throw the ball. … You go back to the ’09 season, when we did have a quarterback, we could run and throw. Then the last two years we struggled, especially last season. If we could have thrown the ball, our season might have gone a lot different.” Mercyhurst* California Gannon Edinboro Slippery Rock IUP Clarion Lock Haven Div. All PF PA 6-1 10-3 354 265 6-1 10-2 417 173 4-3 6-5 240 207 3-4 7-4 200 207 3-4 6-5 282 226 3-4 6-5 257 223 3-4 4-7 233 245 0-7 0-11 137 501 EAST DIVISION Bloomsburg Kutztown C.W. Post West Chester Shippensburg E.Stroudsburg Cheyney Millersville Div. All PF PA 7-0 10-3 486 276 6-1 10-2 466 321 7-4 5-2 369 320 4-3 4-7 304 358 3-4 5-6 288 260 2-5 3-8 351 271 1-6 1-10 151 466 0-7 2-9 217 409 * — Won division title via first tie-breaker: head-to-head result. STATE GAME Mercyhurst 28, Bloomsburg 14 PSAC AWARDS WEST DIVISION Offensive Player of the Year Trevor Kennedy, WR, Mercyhurst Defensive Player of the Year Bryan Boyce, LB, Mercyhurst Rookie of the Year Darnell Harding, DE, California Coach of the Year Marty Schaetzle, Mercyhurst EAST DIVISION Offensive Player of the Year Kevin Morton, QB, Kutztown Defensive Player of the Year Mike Varanavage, LB, Bloomsburg Rookie of the Year Franklyn Quiteh, RB, Bloomsburg Coach of the Year Ray Monica, Kutztown Welcome IUP Students! WORSHIP AND CELEBRATE with us RQ6XQGD\VDWRUDPDW*UD\VWRQH DQGVWD\DIWHUZDUGIRUDKRPHPDGHOXQFKDWQRRQ For more information, contact: Suzanne Coccagna $JHVWRDQG DOOFROOHJHHQUROOHG FIND US ON FACEBOOK search /LEHUWL$W*UD\VWRQH WORSHIP WITH US ON SUNDAYS Rev. Richard Hurley, Senior Pastor Rev. Bill Milligan, Interim Associate Pastor 640 Church Street, Indiana, PA 15701 3KRQHvZZZJUD\VWRQHSFRUJ Everyone Is Welcome. 6XQGD\VDP&RQWHPSRUDU\:RUVKLSvDP7UDGLWLRQDO:RUVKLS Sunday School For All Ages 9:45 am 17 Maple Avenue, Suite C, Blairsville, PA 15717 Office: 724-459-4325 Fax: 724-459-4931 American Family Life Assurance Company of Columbus (Aflac) Worldwide Headquarters 1932 Wynnton Road • Columbus, GA 31999 Aflac insurance policies are sold on a voluntary basis at the worksite aflac.com 14 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 RECAPPING THE 2010 SEASON GAME ONE GAME THREE GAME FIVE GAME SEVEN GAME NINE IUP 16, S. CONNECTICUT ST. 6 BLOOMSBURG 47, IUP 20 IUP 18, EDINBORO 0 CLARION 21, IUP 14 CALIFORNIA 18, IUP 15 (OT) 1 2 3 4 F SCSU 0 0 0 6 — 6 IUP 10 0 0 6 — 16 Craig Burgess kicked three field goals and Roy-al Edwards scored on an end-around as the Crimson Hawks won their season opener. Southern Connecticut outgained IUP, 290-266, but reached the red zone only once. Harvie Tuck rushed for 98 yards, and Nate Morrow caught three passes to lead IUP. Mike Scott and Mark Jackson had interceptions. 1 2 3 4 F IUP 10 3 0 7 — 20 Bloomsburg 7 14 10 16 — 47 Bo Napoleon threw five interceptions, one of which was returned for a touchdown, as the Huskies won easily. Bloomsburg outgained IUP, 391-262, but the Crimson Hawks had seven turnovers. Burgess kicked two field goals for IUP. Bloomsburg’s Franklyn Quieteh, who would go on to lead the NCAA in rushing, was held to his season low, 91 yards. 1 2 3 4 F IUP 6 3 3 6 — 18 Edinboro 0 0 0 0 — 0 Against one of the top defenses in the country, IUP ground out 303 rushing yards, led by Tuck’s 168, and scored its second straight shutout win. Tuck and Blakeman scored touchdowns, and Burgess kicked two field goals for the Crimson Hawks. IUP didn’t attempt a pass in the second half. The Scots had only 179 yards of offense. 1 2 3 4 F Clarion 7 0 0 14 — 21 IUP 0 0 0 14 — 14 Alfonso Hoggard scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to lift visiting Clarion. Napoleon threw touchdown passes to Pat Brewer and Ben Simmen and finished a seasonbest 16-for-26 for 169 yards. Hoggard finished with 179 yards to lead the Eagles, who rolled up 354 total yards behind quarterback Ben Fiscus, an Indiana High School graduate. 1 2 3 4 OT F IUP 0 6 9 0 0 — 15 California 0 0 0 15 3 — 18 Josh Portis threw two touchdown passes in the fourth quarter, and the first-place Vulcans narrowly avoided a loss. In overtime, California scored on a 17-yard field goal, but Burgess missed from 42 to give the Vulcans the win. Tuck rushed for 112 yards and a touchdown, and Terrell Washington returned a blocked punt for a score. GAME TWO GAME FOUR GAME SIX GAME EIGHT GAME TEN IUP 23, EAST STROUDSBURG 17 IUP 17, SLIPPERY ROCK 0 MERCYHURST 28, IUP 27 GANNON 45, IUP 17 IUP 63, LOCK HAVEN 31 1 2 3 4 F IUP 0 13 3 7 — 23 ESU 10 0 0 7 — 17 Burgess kicked three more field goals, and Tuck and Morrow scored as IUP won a narrow one. The Warriors led 10-0 barely eight minutes into the game but didn’t score again until there were 32 seconds left in the game. The Crimson Hawks lost quarterback Pat Smith for the season with a hand injury early in the third quarter. 1 2 3 4 F Slippery Rock 0 0 0 0 — 0 IUP 7 0 0 10 — 17 Tobias Robinson put an exclamation point on a solid win over thenunbeaten Slippery Rock with a 75-yard interception return for a score. Teddy Blakeman scored a touchdown and Burgess kicked a field goal in the first quarter. The Rock had only 143 yards of offense, including just 24 on the ground, and advanced inside the red zone only once. 1 2 3 4 F Mercyhurst 7 7 7 7 — 28 IUP 10 7 7 3 — 27 Travis Rearick threw a 28-yard scoring pass to Trevor Kennedy with 26 seconds left to lift the visiting Lakers. IUP held Mercyhurst to just 35 rushing yards, but Rearick shreded the Crimson Hawks’ defense for 344 passing yards and three touchdowns. Mychal Skinner caught a 68-yard touchdown pass on IUP’s first offensive play from scrimmage. 1 2 3 4 F IUP 10 0 7 0 — 17 Gannon 0 21 14 10 — 45 The host Golden Knights forced five turnovers and handed head coach Lou Tepper his most-lopsided loss with IUP. Napoleon was picked off four times, one of which was returned for a touchdown. Skinner and Darryl Herrod scored touchdowns for IUP, which mustered only 219 yards of offense. The loss was the Crimson Hawks’ third in a row. 1 2 3 4 F Lock Haven 7 2 7 15 — 31 IUP 21 0 21 21 — 63 The Crimson Hawks snapped a four-game losing streak in a big way, pounding winless Lock Haven for their 29th straight win over the Bald Eagles. IUP rushed for 278 yards, including 190 by Tuck. Washington intercepted two passes and returned both for touchdowns. Blakeman rushed for two scores, and James Johnson, Edwards and Tuck had one each. GAME ELEVEN • Fraternity/Sorority • Team Items • Corporate Gifts • Awards • Wearables • Trade Shows • Customer Appreciation • Fulfillment Programs • MORE! IUP 27, WEST CHESTER 10 1 2 3 4 F West Chester 0 3 7 0 — 10 IUP 6 7 0 14 — 27 The Crimson Hawks wrapped up their season with an easier-thanexpected win over the visiting Rams. Brewer, Herod and Blakeman rushed for touchdowns, and Burgess booted two field goals for IUP. West Chester gained only 174 yards of offense and lost three turnovers. The Crimson Hawks rushed for 307 yards, led by 132 from Tuck and 118 from Blakeman. Follow IUP in The Indiana Gazette Get NOTICED. www.kerrpromotions.com Toll free 866.501.6727 Phone 724.465.6446 Fax 724.465.8647 Monday: Follow-up report from Saturday’s game Wednesday: Midweek update Thursday: Live online chat with the Gazette’s Matthew Burglund (7 p.m., www.indianagazette.com) Friday: Preview of Saturday’s game Sunday: Complete coverage of every game Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011— 15 IUP DEPTH CHART Offense WR TE LT LG C RG RT WR WR QB TB Roy-al Edwards Matt Plautz Jon Ditto Evan Battalio Byron Dovales Bruce Atkins Nick Carnicella Dylan O’Donnell Anthony DiPasquale Matt Sasson Mike Charmo Chris Macellaro Louis Mobley Jason Musselman Ben Simmen Terrill Barnes Javon Rowan Sean McVay Pat Smith Anthony Perna Harvie Tuck James Johnson 6-1, 195, Sr. 6-5, 220 Jr. 6-4, 245, Sr. 6-3, 245 So. 6-3, 290, So. 6-4, 255, Fr. 6-1, 280, So. 5-11, 255, Fr. 6-2, 260, Sr. 6-1, 290, Fr. 6-2, 285, So. 6-1, 275, So. 6-1, 300, Sr. 6-6, 280, Jr. 6-4, 175, So. 6-2, 210, So. 6-0, 195, Sr. 5-10, 180, Fr. 6-5, 225, So. 6-2, 180, Fr. 5-10, 215, Jr. 5-10, 200, So. STRENGTH AND DETERMINATION. Defense DE NG DT OLB ILB ILB DB CB SS FS CB Stephen Meadows Montay Green Larry Gooden Akeem Smith Carl Thornton Javaughn Goree Errol Brewster Maurice McKinney Mark Jackson Jermel Lee Alex Berdahl Will McClure 6-4, 225, Sr. 5-10, 235, Fr. 5-11, 255, So. 6-3, 292, So. 6-2, 235, Jr. 5-8, 255, So. 6-2, 225, So. 5-11, 240, Fr. 6-0, 205, Sr. 6-0, 215, So. 5-11, 200, So. 6-2, 235, Fr. We know what it takes to reach your goals. Terrell Washington Randy Louis Jerrell McFadden Zach Severance Andre Henderson Jake Alberts Johnny Franco Jake Alberts Marvens Toussaint Mike Meriweather 6-1, 175, So. 5-10, 185, Sr. 5-9, 170, So. 5-11, 185, So. 6-0, 200, Sr. 6-0, 170, Fr. 5-9, 195, Sr. 6-0, 170, Fr. 5-8, 175, Fr. 5-8, 195, So. PROUD SUPPORTER OF OUR HOMETOWN TEAMS! Special Teams PK P LS Brett Ullman Grant Schallock Eddie Gavett 6-1, 210, Fr. 6-7, 250, Sr. 6-3, 200, Jr. Nobody becomes a champion without support. S&T Bank is here to help you reach your goals. For the champion in all of us. We believe in Relationship Banking… One Customer at a time. %$1.VWEDQNFRP MEMBER FDIC 16 — Indiana Gazette IUP Football Preview, Thursday, September 8, 2011 GO HAWKS! WE ARE THE LARGEST SUPPLIER OF CRIMSON HAWK MERCHANDISE! WWW.IUPSTORE.COM 1-800-537-7916 • 724-357-3145 Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday 12 p.m.-4:00 p.m. Corner of 8th and Washington