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91
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU 62 Loyola 60 - on to the quarterfinals
« on: March 05, 2013, 09:10:37 PM »
DJ Cole's basket with 2.5 left gives YSU a 62-60 win over Loyola.  Penguins advance to play Wright State in the early game Friday night at Valpo.

I got to see the second half - longest stretch I have been able to watch in awhile.  DJ carried the team down the stretch - some big hoops in the second half.

Hopefully YSU can get KP back by Friday night.  Would be a big lift.

Joe Scalzo was  tweeting pregame that YSU is interested in playing in the CIT or CBI this year and they are ready to pony up the cash to get in and host a game.  Lets hope they can make it happen.

92
YSU Penguin Athletics / Indy Star article on football recruit Nate Cox
« on: February 07, 2013, 08:23:40 AM »
http://www.indystar.com/article/20130205/SPORTS02/302060343/Call-him-grandpa-Plainfield-s-Nate-Cox-25-signs-Division-program-after-five-years-Marines

Thousands of signatures whirred through fax machines to happy college football coaches on National Signing Day today. The large majority came from 17- and 18-year-old kids, just starting out on their own in the world.

Few likely share much in common with Nate Cox, other than the dream to play college football. Cox, 25, is a native of Plainfield who spent five years in the Marines, including a five-month deployment to Afghanistan. After two years of junior college football at Santa Ana (Calif.), Cox signed with Youngstown State on Wednesday.

"We affectionately call him Grandpa," Youngstown State coach Eric Wolford said. "He's a unique guy. Has tremendous leadership skills and likes to work hard. He is so much more mature than the majority of players we deal with. He's going to bring some leadership to our defensive line."

Cox was an admittedly immature teenager when he left the Midwest in 2005, turning to the military when he realized college life at Indiana State wouldn't be for him. Now he'll return to the Midwest as a war veteran with life experiences far beyond those of his college teammates.

"I've seen a lot of things most people probably haven't seen," said Cox, who was a sergeant in the Marines. "I was in charge of guys and had to put a foot in their butt once in a while. It was a brotherhood, a lot like football.

"I hear people compare football to battle or combat, but that's only because they haven't been there. It's not the same. But the camaraderie and leadership, those are things that apply from the military to football."

Cox was a good player in high school, named All-Mid-State Conference as a defensive end. But he wasn't recruited and, looking back now, realizes he was floating through life aimlessly. Though he was enrolled at Indiana State, he made what turned out to be a life-changing decision by signing up for basic training in San Diego.

"You knew if he could set his mind to something, he could get it done," said close friend Zach Jones, a former Plainfield teammate who started at Purdue as an offensive tackle. "School really wasn't his thing in high school. When he got to the military, it showed him some discipline. He's grown up. He's had people counting on him for their lives in the military. That'll change anybody."

Cox spent time in the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand training his own troops and foreign forces in two separate deployments. He returned from the second one late in 2010 and wasn't expected to make the trip to Afghanistan. But volunteers were needed, Cox said, so he shipped off again.

For five months, he was involved in casualty evacuation -- or "dustoff" -- flying into battlefields and loading the injured on to helicopters.

"They teach everybody the basics like putting in an IV or applying pressure to a wound," he said. "You just try to help out anyway that you can."

Cox made it back to Southern California safely and after his five-year stint in the Marines, decided once again to pursue his degree and give football a chance. He was encouraged after a meeting with Santa Ana coach Geoff Jones.

"He knew my background and seemed genuine that he wanted me there," said Cox, who will turn 26 in May. "I didn't know where it would take me, but I wanted to give football a shot."

The 6-5, 260-pound defensive end made the most of it, becoming team captain as a sophomore and making 51 tackles, 8 1/2 for loss, including a team-high 6 1/2 sacks. Youngstown State was the first school to offer a scholarship.

"I liked how they pursued me," he said. "They were loyal. When I came out there for an official visit, I knew it was the right place. I knew I could make a good home there."

Zach Jones said he's proud of Cox, who he's known since fourth grade. In some ways, he's even a bit envious.

"I think he's learned to appreciate things a lot more," Jones said. "When I started playing at Purdue as a young kid, I wasn't thinking much about anything except what was happening that day. It's only when you get out that you appreciate all the friendships and connections.

"At his age, he can appreciate those things now."

93
YSU Penguin Athletics / Baseball America Horizon League Preview
« on: February 04, 2013, 05:13:19 PM »
Baseball America is out with their Horizon League preview and projects a last place finish for YSU.  Not surprising given the records on the past few years.

YSU has two of the top three pro prospects.  This helps me believe the Guins will exceed these meager expectations.

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/college/season-preview/2013/2614637.html


HORIZON LEAGUE
HOW THEY'LL FINISH
    Conference   Overall
Team                        W   L   W   L
Wisconsin-Milwaukee   18   11   27   27
Wright State                   20   10   37   21
*Valparaiso                   22   8   35   25
Illinois-Chicago             12   17   23   34
Youngstown State       7   23   11   44
*2012 champion
Teams are listed by predicted order of finish with 2012 records listed.
2012 NCAA tournament teams in bold
Projected NCAA Teams (1): Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Conference Schedule: 24 games, begins March 15.
Conference Tournament: Five teams, May 22-26 at Niles, Ohio (Youngstown State).
Player of the Year: Drew Dosch, 3b, Youngstown State.
Pitcher of the Year: Cale Tassi, rhp, Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

TOP PROSPECTS, 2013-14 DRAFTS   
1.   Drew Dosch, 3b, Youngstown State
2.   Josh Uhen, rhp, Wisconsin-Milwaukee
3.   Nick Manuppelli, rhp, Youngstown State
4.   Joe Begel, rhp, Illinois-Chicago
5.   Sam Koenig, 3b, Wisconsin-Milwaukee

TOP NEWCOMERS   
1.   Chris DeBoo, rhp, Valparaiso (Tr.—Cal State Northridge)
2.   Pat Wilson, 1b, Wisconsin-Milwaukee (Tr.—CC of Lake County, Ill.)
3.   Kieston Green, of, Wright State (Tr.—Parkland, Ill., CC)

QUICK HITS
• Wisconsin-Milwaukee is the favorite in what should be a competitive Horizon League this spring. The Panthers have the league's hardest thrower in So. RHP Josh Uhen (0-0, 5.11, 12 IP/12 SO) and its fastest player in So. OF Luke Meeteer (.331/.414/.401, Horizon-best 16 SB). Uhen blew out his elbow after his first college game in 2011, requiring Tommy John surgery, and came back slowly last year. He sat at 93-96 mph and hit 98 on scout day during the fall. Wisconsin-Milwaukee also brings back the league's 2012 ERA leader in Sr. RHP Cale Tassi (6-5, 2.74, 95 IP/69 SO).

• Youngstown State has finished last or second-to-last in the last four years, but it has a new coach (former Jacksonville assistant Steve Gillispie takes over for the fired Rich Pasquale) and two of the Horizon's best prospects. Jr. 3B Drew Dosch (.353/.408/.527, 8 HR) starred in the Cape Cod League during the summer, showing pure hitting ability to all fields and some power potential. Jr. RHP Nick Manuppelli (1-4, 5.79, 37 IP/36 SO) took a huge step forward in the New England Collegiate League, where he showed a 90-94 mph fastball and a quality changeup with tumble.

• The Horizon finds itself in jeopardy of losing its NCAA playoff bid because it is one team short of the six required for automatic-qualifying status. Butler left for the Atlantic-10 a year earlier than expected, reacting to news that the Horizon didn't plan on allowing the Bulldogs to compete in any conference tournaments or for any league championships in their final year. Oakland, currently part of the Summit League, has expressed interested in joining the Horizon, which has two more seasons to add another team before losing its automatic bid.

94
The final Bracket Buster field will be unveield Monday night.  TV games will be disclosed at 6:30 p.m., remaining games at 7:00 p.m.

Using RDPi as a guide (and I  hate to do that, but it seems that is what the group will look at), YSU sits at 169.  Road teams in that range include Morehead State (162),  Bradley (168) and Charleston Southern (174). 

95
YSU Penguin Athletics / Biggest week of the season for Men's Basketball
« on: January 28, 2013, 06:27:15 PM »
YSU has two games this week:  Home on Wednesday to league leading Valparaiso and trip to Detroit on Friday to face a Titans team that embarassed YSU 101-60 at Beeghley earlier this month.

Valpo is currently 6-1 in the league, YSU 4-3.  A YSU win Wednesday night has them at 5-2, one game behind and in the thick of the race for a bye or two in the post-season tournament.  A loss and YSU will be three games back half way through the league schedule and behind enough teams that any hope of finishing first will effectively be lost.

The 3 main ratings systems I follow all make Valpo a slight favorite.  Pomeroy predicts 72-69 Valpo giving YSU a 38% chance of winning.  Massey says 71-68 Valpo, YSU with a 42% chance of winning. Sagarin's overall ratings lead to Valpo favored by 2 1/2, his predictor ratings say Valpo by 3.

YSU is a big underdog at Detroit (not unexpectedly).  Pomeroy gives YSU only a 13% chance of winning, calling for a 87-72 Detroit win.  Massey has it 82-73 Detroit with YSU's chances at 20%.  Sagarin has Detroit a 9 (overall) or 11 1/2 (predictor) point favorite.

A sweep this week and YSU is in great shape.

A split this week and YSU still has a chance for at least a first round bye and perhaps a two round bye with a great finish.

Get swept this week and YSU will fight to finish .500 in the league and to gain a first round home game.

After the Detroit game, YSU gets their most favorable stretch in the season, playing the next four games against the four teams behind them in the standings.  A trip to Cleveland State, followed by home games with the Chicago schools and Milwaukee.  A home game with Green Bay closes out the home portion of the schedule, before the season ends with games at Valpo and Wright State.


96
Cutting and pasting here to have as a reference point the next time someone says that YSU should recruit more local basketball players.  The lack of Division I talent produced in the last decade is just astonishing.  7 boys in 12 years, with Harding producing 4 of them (and 2 of them ending up at YSU).

http://www.vindy.com/news/2013/jan/27/varsity-blues/?newswatch

http://www.vindy.com/news/2013/jan/27/best-of-the-best-valley-basketball-playe/?newswatch

BEST OF THE BEST Valley basketball players to earn Division I scholarships since 2000

Published: Sun, January 27, 2013 @ 12:00 a.m.
BOYS

Boardman: Terence Dials (Ohio State)

Cardinal Mooney: Curtis Ingram (Wofford)

Ursuline: D’Aundray Brown (Cleveland State)

Warren Harding: Desmar Jackson (Wyoming, SIU), Damian Eargle (UNC-Greensboro, YSU), Sheldon Brogdon (YSU); Rashid Gaston (Norfolk State)

GIRLS

Boardman: Courtney Schiffauer (Michigan State), Amber Bland (Penn State/North Carolina A&T), Darryce Moore (Ohio State), Ashlee Russo (YSU), Monica Touvelle (YSU), Celeste Hlebovy (Indiana State)

Canfield: Erin Martin (Cleveland State), Kate Popovec (Pitt/Northwestern), Jillian Halfhill (Bowling Green), Kristy Booms (Akron).

Crestview: Chelsea Bowker (St. Bonaventure)

East/Rayen: Tieara Jones (Buffalo/YSU), Brittney Taylor (Providence)

Howland: Ellie Shields (Kent State), Darcy Quinlan (Ohio), Alexa Williams (Lehigh), Taylor Williams (Princeton), Angela Cape (Dayton)

Poland: Kristy Gaudiose (YSU), Candace Bates (Ohio), Maggie Slosser (Clemson)

Salem: Amy Scullion (Ohio State)

Ursuline: Tyra Grant (Penn State), Courtney Davidson (Michigan State); Courtney Powell (Memphis)

Warren Harding: Anita Brown (Akron), Kourtney Williams (South Carolina State)

West Branch: Tori Arndt (Illinois), Ashley Armstrong (Dayton)

Note: Must have appeared in one game; walk-ons not included.

Varsity Blues: Have Valley hoops hit a low point?


Published: Sun, January 27, 2013 @ 12:09 a.m.
With a 19-year state title drought in boys and a nine-year spell in girls, the area’s basketball fortunes are trending down.

Have Valley hoops hit a low point?

By Joe Scalzo

scalzo@vindy.com

In the late 1980s, when Brian Danilov was just a lowly junior-varsity basketball coach at Campbell, a group of his players would routinely wake up early, jump into an old, beat-up Cadillac (“There was smoke coming out, and I think the axles were sideways,” Danilov said) and drive around the city looking for games.

“They knew who was good, and they knew what was going on, and they’d just find the best games that day, whether it was in the city or Boardman or McDonald or wherever,” he said.

Football was king in Youngstown — same as always — but Rayen’s high fliers were in the regionals every year, Liberty’s “lunatics” were helping the Leopards extend Trumbull County’s longest win streak and girls basketball fans were seeing what happens when the area’s best athletes focused on hoops.

Basketball was in bloom in the Mahoning Valley.

Twenty-five years later, winter has arrived.

Statistical STRUGGLES

It’s been 20 years since Danilov led Campbell to the Division III state title, one of three won by Mahoning Valley teams in 1993 and 1994.

It was the high point of the Valley’s basketball history. And it may never happen again.

Since an underdog Ursuline team won the 1994 title, just seven area boys teams have advanced to the Final Four. All seven lost in the semifinals.

Warren Harding was the last area boys basketball team to make it to Columbus, in 2009, and over the past three years, Valley boys teams have gone 4-12 in regional games.

Meanwhile, teams from Akron, Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and Dayton — six of Ohio’s eight major population centers — have won state titles since 2010. Only Youngstown/Warren and Toledo have fallen short, but at least Toledo Whitmer made it to last year’s Division I state final.

Things aren’t any better in girls basketball. The Valley went 0-3 in regional games last season and area teams have gone 2-13 in regional play the last four years.

Since Boardman’s girls advanced to Columbus in 2008 — the Valley’s last state qualifier — teams from Akron, Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and Toledo have won state titles while Dayton had a runner-up in last year’s Division I state final.

Not a single Valley girls team was ranked in this week’s Associated Press state poll and just one boys team (Bristol, which was ranked 12th in Division IV) made the list.

All of this begs the question: Is this the worst it’s ever been?

SO, IS IT?

Danilov is a coach’s son — his father, Eli, preceded him at Campbell — and he looks a little like Bruce Springsteen. (Sounds like him, too, at least when he’s not singing.) Like Springsteen, Danilov grew up in a Rust Belt town. And, like Springsteen, he tends to romanticize his blue-collar roots.

“Kids don’t get out on the playground as much anymore,” Danilov said on a phone call in mid-January, where he used a rare Tuesday night off to take in the Wisconsin-Indiana game. “They used to travel all over the place to play. Now kids are more prone to travel to buy the newest video game. They’re more excited to camp out at midnight to pick up the new [Call of Duty] ‘Black Ops’ and sit on their a-- all day long.”

After advancing to five district finals (and winning two) in his second stint at Campbell, Danilov took a year off, then took the Cardinal Mooney job in the offseason. On Dec. 14, the Cardinals played their second game of the season, against Youngstown Christian. Both programs were district finalists as recently as 2010 but, on that night, neither team looked like it had picked up a basketball since then.

The halftime score was 10-9 and, after winning 40-24, Danilov said his team must have gone to the “Stevie Wonder school of layups.”

“The smaller your area, the more your talent goes in cycles,” Danilov said. “A lot of schools — I don’t want to say they’re rebuilding, but maybe the talent cycle isn’t at its apex as it was a couple years ago.”

Ken Grisdale wasn’t as diplomatic. Grisdale is in his 20th season as Poland’s boys basketball coach. He has a 334-122 (the best record in school history) and has advanced to the state tournament three times — 2002, 2007 and 2008.

His Bulldogs are 13-1 this season and, at times, look capable of winning Poland’s seventh district title in nine years.

But Grisdale knows it’s not one of his best teams. He also knows it may not matter, at least not this year.

“Top to bottom, it’s probably as low as it’s been [in the Valley],” he said. “I thought football was down this year, too. I just think the level of athletes is down. It’s just a down cycle right now.”

Ursuline coach Keith Gunther, who has won three district titles and came within a game of the state tournament in 2011, actually started chuckling when he heard what this story was about.

“There’s no question about it, it’s down,” he said. “I mean, I think that’s obvious to anybody who really knows the game of basketball.”

And it’s not just in boys basketball.

Howland girls coach John Diehl, whose team lost to Boardman in the 2008 regional final, has sent five players to Division I schools since 2000. This is his 19th year and he’s 10 wins from 300.


“It is down a little bit this year,” Diehl said. “I just think the area is lacking a little in talent right now. I don’t want to make anyone mad but I don’t think there are any Division I players out there right now.”

He paused, listened to a voice in the background and chuckled.

“My wife says, ‘Please don’t say that,’” he said. “I don’t know if you can word that nicely or not.”

Minutes later, Diehl came up with one — Fitch junior Megan Sefcik — but his point stands. This area has produced eight Big Ten girls basketball players since 2000 alone, but right now, the Valley is a little bit dry.

NO OASIS IN SIGHT

Thing is, when it comes to basketball, the Valley has always been a little bit dry. Asking if 2012-13 is the worst in the Valley’s basketball history is like asking if “Transformers 2” is Michael Bay’s worst movie.

This area is good in a lot of sports — football, obviously, but also baseball, softball, track and cross country — but it typically struggles in the winter.

“It’s like in Massillon,” Gunther said. “What do the kids get in their cribs? Footballs. It’s the same mentality in this area.

“It doesn’t mean we can’t be good at basketball at times, I just think we’re primarily big on football. And I don’t think that’s ever going to change.”

The current 19-year state championship drought in boys basketball is only half as long as the area’s longest, a 38-year span that started after Columbiana’s 1947 title and ended with Rayen cutting down the nets in 1985.

That three-title stretch in the 1990s? Well, it took two high-profile transfers from the Bahamas (Girard and Campbell had one each, which is still a sore subject 20 years later) and a team that went 10-10 in the regular season (Ursuline) to do so.

In fact, since the boys tournament started in 1923, only six Valley teams have won state titles and 10 others finished second.

By contrast, since Ohio began the football playoffs in 1972, the Valley has won 20 state titles and played for 16 others. The area routinely produces NFL players — two were drafted last April and two others made NFL teams — it hasn’t had an NBA draft pick since Rayen’s Greg Jones in 1983, who was cut by the Indiana Pacers and wound up in the CBA. Heck, the Valley hasn’t even had a boys basketball player earn a scholarship to a BCS conference school since Terence Dials in 2001.

No one expects the area to go another 19 years without a basketball title, but when Grisdale was asked if he thought a Valley team would win a state championship in the next 10 years, he said, “Um, you never say never, but I don’t think the odds are great.

“But I don’t think you can always judge an area by state titles. It’s not easy to win a state championship. A lot of things have to fall in line. The urban areas [in Ohio] and parochials play a different level of basketball.”

Meanwhile, no area girls team has been in a state final since Ursuline in 2006 and no one has won it since Ursuline and West Branch both did so in 1994.

That streak probably won’t end this year. The area’s best teams are all in Division II, where Shaker Heights Hathaway Brown has won the last four state titles and returns four starters from last year’s team.

DOWN, BUT NOT OUT

Still, there’s hope. (Hopefully.)

All of the coaches contacted for this story talked about how talent comes in cycles — “It’s down, but I don’t think it’s a trend,” Diehl said — and one girls coach, Canfield’s Pat Pavlansky, even thinks this year’s crop is pretty good.

“You might say I’m sort of skewed, but girls basketball, to me, is pretty good in the area,” Pavlansky said. “I like my team and I think there’s a lot of good teams.”

Declining population and a lack of tradition puts Youngstown and Warren at a disadvantage compared to other parts of Ohio. — “We do a good job around here and the kids work their tails off,” said Danilov, “but when you get to the big ponds ...” — and, yes, a down cycle can spell doom for even the best programs. For instance, Warren JFK’s girls lost in the district final in each of the last two years but were forced to cancel the rest of this season after 0-6 start due to a lack of players.

But not having one great team doesn’t mean there aren’t a lot of good teams.

“Great’s always a tough one,” said Niles coach Ron Price, who has been an assistant or a head coach in the Valley for 20 years. “I think everybody is OK/good, and we’re going to find out who becomes real good.”

Just because it’s hard to build a great team in the Valley doesn’t mean it’s impossible, Gunther said.

This area may never become a hoops haven like, say, Dayton or Columbus, but it can still hold its own, even on the highest level.

We’re just waiting for someone to prove it.

“I promise you this — when Ursuline won it in 1994, no one thought they would,” Gunther said. “We already know it’s possible to get to the regional. And if you’re good enough to get out of the regional in northeast Ohio, you’re probably good enough to play with anyone. You just need a team that has some size and some athleticism and really believes they can do it.

“Because once you get to Columbus, anything can happen.”

97
https://twitter.com/oakclubhouse/status/295641204677292032/photo/1

Good luck to Justin - hope he has a great spring and earns a job in the A's bullpen.

98
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU women featured on NCAA.com
« on: January 16, 2013, 01:45:18 PM »
Below is a link to the article

http://www.ncaa.com/news/basketball-women/article/2013-01-15/unlikely-suspects

You can see the picture on the front page of the website if you click on the WBK notebook in the window (I am sure it rolls off at some time).

http://www.ncaa.com/

99
The men open their Horizon League home schedule Thursday night against Detroit.

This is a huge game against one of the top teams in the league.  Only 3 road teams have won thus far in Horizon League play.  The other two teams with road wins (Loyola and Valpo) have each lost at home - a YSU win would effectively put them one up in a league where road wins figure to scarce.

Detroit comes in at 10-5, 2-0 in the league.  The Titans opened with home wins over Milwaukee (74-59) and Green Bay (84-76).  Detroit is only 1-5 on the road this year.  Titans lost to St Johns (77-74), Miami FL (77-62), Bowling Green (70-65), Pitt (74-61) and Syracuse (72-68) before winning 74-58 at Alcorn State.

Pomeroy gives YSU a 58% chance of winning, projecting a 77-75 YSU win.  Pomeroy currently projecting YSU to finish 10-6 in the league, which he has as a tie for second with Valpo behind Detorit at 11-5.

Massey gives YSU a 51% chance of winning, projecting a 76-75 YSU win.  Massey has YSU finishing 11-5 in the league.

Sagarin's overall ratings make YSU a 1 1/2 point favorite, his predictor ratings favor YSU by 2 1/2.

All the computers say a close, high scoring game. 

Detroit is a team that usually gives YSU fits.  Ray McCallum is deservedly very highly regarded.  Doug Anderson is one man highlight show - lets hope he has no highlight dunks.

I will miss the webcast of the game.  Have a college reception to attend with my son.  Hopefully all of you back in the Valley will be at the game cheering on the Guins while I try to check Twitter as much as possible on my phone.   ::)

100
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU at Illinois-Chicago - 8 pm Wednesday
« on: January 02, 2013, 03:57:07 PM »
The men open Horizon League play tonight at UIC.

The Flames enter with a 9-4 record.  UIC opened at 9-1 before losing their last 3.  They opened the season with a 59-52 win over UC Riverside, before losing to New Mexico 66-59 in the first round of the Virgin Islands Paradise Jam.  UIC finished the Paradise Jam with wins over Mercer 62-36 and Iona 86-81.

UIC ran off six more wins in a row:  SE Missouri State 56-45, at Northern Illinois 58-46, at Northwestern 50-44, Roosevelt 81-43, Colorado State (now 11-2) 64-55 and Eastern Michigan 74-48.

The three game losing streak has been on the road:  Western Illinois 70-54, Miami Ohio 82-70 and Toledo 74-55.

The Flames are very comfortable at home at 5-0.

Pomeroy has YSU 125th overall and gives YSU a 39% chance of winning.  Projection is a 66-63 UIC win.

Massey has YSU 143rd overall and gives YSU a 30% chance of winning.  Projection is 67-61 UIC win.

Both Pomeroy and Massey have YSU at 9-7 in the Horizon, 17-12 overall with the Bracket Buster game pending.

Sagarin rates UIC 84 and YSU 123.  His overall ratings makes UIC as 7 point favorite, Predictor ratings a 6 1/2 point favorite.  Both include the 4.15 home court advantage.

At the start of the season, this looked like the easiest road trip of the season.  UIC and Loyola have exceeded expectations and this trip will be a stern test for the Penguins.  Sign me up for 1-1 right now.  :)

101
YSU Penguin Athletics / Football recruiting thread
« on: January 01, 2013, 10:59:11 PM »
There are a bunch of reports of YSU football offers out there.

I wanted to start a thread to post some of the links we might find.

I found this one interesting - Naples (FL) Daily News Most Outstanding Player Manny Morgan, a RB who rushed for over 2,000 yards, will visit YSU this month

http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2012/dec/25/2012-ndn-broxson-award-winner-manny-morgan-high/

When Manny Morgan sets his mind to something, he gets it done.

After leading the area in rushing two straight years, the Naples High back had bigger visions for his senior season. Morgan wanted to make sure he was remembered as one of the best running backs in Golden Eagles history.

With the second-most rushing yards in a single season, which put him second on Naples' all-time list, Morgan achieved his goal. By running for 2,069 yards for the regional champion Eagles, Morgan also earned the Daily News Broxson Award as the area's most outstanding football player.

"I was hoping to break 2,000 yards," the senior said. "I set that as my goal before the year. It took a lot of hard work."

Morgan's assault on the Naples record book began shortly after his junior year. The 5-foot-9, 190-pound back knew if he wasn't going to be big, he would have to be fast.

He ran track as a junior, focusing on the sprints and the jumps. Morgan also put in extra work over the summer. In addition to lifting weights with his team, Morgan would get up early and run on the beach — against the wind — to improve his leg strength and quickness.

The results were visible right away. Morgan jump-started his senior season with 351 total yards and four touchdowns in Week 1 against North Miami. It was one of three 200-yard rushing games for him. Morgan ran for more than 100 yards in 10 of his 13 games, and the other three he had at least 91 yards.

"The biggest difference was his speed," Naples coach Bill Kramer said. "He worked really, really hard. He was diligent in the offseason about improving his speed. He was very technical about it. That's the difference between rushing for 1,300 yards (as a junior) and going over 2,000."

Following three straight 1,000-yard seasons and 4,546 career rushing yards, Morgan is rivaled only by Duane Coleman in his production at Naples High School. Morgan's senior year ranks behind Coleman's 2,814 yards in 2001 as the second-best single season. Coleman, also a three-time 1,000-yard rusher, is the only back with more career yards than Morgan.

Morgan still is waiting to pick a college program. He hasn't gotten any Division I offers, Kramer said, largely because teams have just seen highlights from Morgan's junior year when he was a step slower.

Youngstown State has shown interest, and Morgan has an official visit planned for the Football Championship Subdivision school in January.

Morgan has been obsessed with improvement since he started the sport. As a youth football player, he would go over technique and details with his father, Tyrone, a 1995 Lely graduate and former Trojans running back.

"He gives me advice," Morgan said of his father. "He's worked with me since I was young. He would record my Pop Warner games and we'd watch film on Sunday mornings. Ever since then I've been a workhorse."

102
YSU Penguin Athletics / Men's Basketball at South Florida (Tuesday night)
« on: December 17, 2012, 02:06:48 PM »
YSU men will make a two game trip to Florida this week, playing at South Florida (Tampa) and Bethune-Cookman (Daytona Beach) in a trip home for Kendrick Perry, Blake Allen and Bobby Hain.

South Florida is 5-3 on the season, having wins over Maryland Eastern Shore (78-59), Loyola Chicago (68-50), Bradley (82-63), at Stetson (63-54) and Georgia (64-53).  Losses have been against Central Florida (74-56), Western Michigan (58-53) and at Oklahoma State (61-49).  The Bulls have not played since that December 5 loss to Oklahoma State.

The rating systems I follow all forecast a narrow USF win.

Pomeroy gives YSU a 30% chance of winning, forecasting a 66-60 USF win.  Pomeroy has YSU 129th overall, 4th in the Horizon League.  Pomeroy is projecting a 17-12, 9-7 YSU record.

Sagarin has YSU rated ahead of USF, but the 4.12 point home court advantage makes USF a 3 1/2 point favorite on Sagarin's ratings.  Sagarin has YSU 132nd overall.

Massey gives YSU a 28% chance of winning, forecasting a 67-61 USF win.  Massey has YSU 166th overall and projects a 16-13, 8-8 YSU finish.

Game is on ESPN3 tomorrow night.

103
YSU Penguin Athletics / BracketBusters to end after this season
« on: December 11, 2012, 12:15:43 PM »

As a YSU program improves, sad to see this go.

http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/blog/_/name/katz_andy/id/8735873/bracketbusters-final-season-gave-unique-opportunities-smaller-schools-college-basketball

George Mason's historic run to the Final Four in 2006 started with a road win at Wichita State in the BracketBusters weekend in late February.

Jim Larranaga said BracketBusters was key to George Mason's Final Four run.
"It created a tremendous opportunity for outstanding mid-major teams looking to secure an at-large bid to get the exposure needed,'' said former Mason coach and current Miami head coach Jim Larranaga. "Without it, our George Mason run to the Final Four would never have happened.''

That may have been the high point of the event mutually created by ESPN and a number of conferences outside the power six in the fall of 2002-03.

But the last season of the BracketBusters is at hand, as the event in its current form of forced matchups between conference teams outside the power six will end after the this season. The event will be held Feb. 22-23 with 13 games televised on ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN3 while other matchups not on television will also occur. Teams that have played in the BracketBusters have received a return game the following year, and that will/should likely continue to conclude this event.

There are 122 teams from 13 conferences represented that are participating in this year's event, leaving a hole on the schedule for a game that would be determined in January based on power-rating and competitive matchups.

An ESPN spokesperson issued this statement late Monday night about the decision to pull out of the event:

"BracketBusters has been a unique event for 11 years, producing memorable games and moments while generating national exposure for the participating schools and conferences," the statement read. "Given the evolving college landscape, we felt the event in its present form has run its course. We'll continue to work with our conference partners to develop new, creative events to further grow the sport. Our goal is to maintain the BracketBusters brand in some fashion in the future."

In April, the Wichita Eagle quoted Missouri Valley Conference commissioner Doug Elgin saying the end was near for the event after it was revealed the Colonial Athletic Association would no longer participate. The CAA, which lost member VCU in the spring, also had a deal with the NBC Sports Network and not with ESPN. That meant George Mason, a mainstay in the event, was no longer participating.

Elgin said in the story that "if it doesn't continue to work well for everyone, chances are it will go away.''

The effect of BracketBusters over the years is muted. There were plenty of quality, important games like George Mason-Wichita State or Utah State-Saint Mary's. The exposure was meaningful amidst the clutter of power-six games on television in late February.

BracketBusters didn't help Drexel and Bruiser Flint get into last season's NCAA tourney.
"I thought it gave great exposure to the CAA,'' said Drexel coach Bruiser Flint. "We played a lot of TV games and represented well. But in terms of helping with tourney bids, it didn't.''

Drexel won at Cleveland State last season in BracketBusters, but the Dragons were held out of the NCAAs after finishing 16-2 in the CAA, 27-6 overall.

Iona coach Tim Cluess disagrees. The Gaels beat Nevada in BracketBusters last season and finished 25-7, 15-3 in the MAAC and did receive an at-large berth.

"I have enjoyed the Bracketbuster games,'' said Cluess. "I thought it may have helped us with our tournament bid last year.''

The exposure may have been the biggest benefit.

"We were presented with the opportunity to play outstanding teams in exciting environments and had the bonus of playing on ESPN or ESPN2 on several occasions,'' said Davidson coach Bob McKillop.

But the guaranteed home-and-home series for these teams was one of the biggest benefits.

MAAC commissioner Rich Ensor tweeted that the end of BracketBusters would create openings for MAAC schools on the 2014 schedule. This is one less game for Bracketbusters teams guaranteed on the schedule. They now will have to go out and find another quality series. Although, the argument can be made that there is no excuse if these same teams don't schedule each other.

"The timing of Bracketbusters was difficult, but it was almost always an exciting game for our fans with March implications tied to it,'' said Butler coach Brad Stevens.

In an era with constant conference affiliation changes, it became harder to figure out who would be in which conference to set up a set schedule. The graduation of teams like VCU and Butler to conferences that don't participate, like the A-10, took away some of the luster.

The same could be said for Old Dominion moving to CUSA, the CAA not participating anymore, high-profile schools like Gonzaga or BYU not in the event, and it's inability to lure Mountain West schools, as well.

The key will be for these conferences to create challenge-like series in the future and attempt to market them to networks like ESPN, NBC Sports and CBS Sports.

Getting into the tournament still requires quality non-conference scheduling, regardless of when or where it occurs on the schedule. That charge hasn't changed for all of these schools previously involved in the event.

"BracketBusters was clearly beneficial to teams like us over the years,'' said VCU coach Shaka Smart, whose Rams won at Wichita State in 2011 en route to gaining an at-large berth before their Final Four run and then again beat Northern Iowa last season, although VCU won the CAA tournament for the automatic bid. "It allowed us to play a top 50 or 100 game and gave us the opportunity to gain an additional high-quality win, that may not have otherwise been available.''

104
YSU Penguin Athletics / 2013 Football Schedule Released (well most of it)
« on: December 10, 2012, 02:56:35 PM »
YSU has released the 2013 home football schedule as well as the league road games.

It seems the only game not yet released in the September 14 game at Michigan State.  Don't know if there is potentially an issue with the game or if Sparty just isn't ready to release it yet (for what they should be paying YSU, I am sure YSU will release the info whenever and however Sparty says to).

YSU once again skips Missouri State in the league.  It makes sense to make the "off teams" for two years at a time to keep the home and road splits the same.  I am guessing it is possible that 2014 could see YSU either host or play at a league team for the second year in a row.

August 29 vs. Dayton
Sept. 7 vs. Morehead State
Sept. 21 vs. Duquesne
Sept 28 at Southern Illinois
October 5 at Indiana State
Oct. 12 vs. Illinois State
Oct. 19 vs. Western Illinois
Nov 2 at South Dakota
Nov 9 at Northern Iowa
Nov. 16 vs. North Dakota State
Nov. 23 vs. South Dakota State


http://www.ysusports.com/sports/fball/2012-13/releases/2013-home-game-schedule


The Youngstown State football team will play seven home regular-season games next season, including three against FCS playoff teams the Athletic Department announced on Monday. It is just the second seven-game home regular-season slate in school history.

The only other time YSU played seven regular-season home games was in 2003. Highlighting the conference portion of the slate are 2012 playoff participants North Dakota State, Illinois State and South Dakota State.

The September non-conference slate features two old acquaintances and a new, but geographically close foe.

YSU plays Dayton in the home opener on August 29 for the first time since 1977. In a twist, the Penguins have never defeated the Flyers losing all nine previous meetings, including three in Youngstown. The Flyers are coming off a 6-5 campaign in 2012 and are members of the Pioneer Football League.

The contest against the Flyers will be on a Thursday night marking the Penguins' first weekday night home tilt since 2006. It also marks the first time in seven seasons that the Guins do not open at a BCS foe.

The second game on the home slate is Sept. 7 against Morehead State, also a member of the Pioneer Football League. This marks the 15th all-time meeting between the Eagles and YSU. The Penguins hold a slight 8-6 edge in the all-time series with a 38-14 win coming in the last meeting in 1987. Both teams were members of the Ohio Valley Conference and one point in their histories.

The first-ever meeting with Duquesne is set for Sept. 21. The Dukes, from nearby Pittsburgh, are members of the Northeast Conference. Duquesne posted a 5-6 record in 2012. However, five of the six losses were by a combined total of 25 points.

The league portion of the home schedule begins against Illinois State on Oct. 12. The Penguins dropped a 35-28 contest to the Redbirds in 2012, a contest YSU led 28-7 in the second quarter. In the FCS playoffs, Illinois State won at Appalachian State, 38-37 in overtime before falling in the quarterfinals to Eastern Washington.

Western Illinois makes a visit to the Ice Castle on Oct. 19. The Penguins have beaten the Leathernecks the past two seasons and have won eight of the past nine meetings with WIU.

The final two games of the season could hold have playoff implications for all teams involved. YSU takes on North Dakota State on Nov. 16. The Penguins had to play two consecutive games against the Bison in Fargo, but will get the Bison at home in 2013. NDSU, the defending 2011 FCS Champion, has advanced to the semifinals this year.

The final contest of the regular season is against South Dakota State on Nov. 23. The Jackrabbits went 9-4 in 2012 advancing the the second round of the FCS playoffs.

YSU's conference road games are against Southern Illinois (Sept. 28), Indiana State (Oct. 5), South Dakota (Nov. 2) and UNI (Nov. 9).

YSU went 7-4 in 2012, including a 4-4 mark in the MVFC. The Penguins' victory total has increased each of the past three seasons under Head Coach Eric Wolford.

The FCS playoffs, which for the first time in history will feature 24 teams in 2013, begin on Nov. 30.

2013 Home Football Schedule

August 29 vs. Dayton
Sept. 7 vs. Morehead State
Sept. 21 vs. Duquesne
Oct. 12 vs. Illinois State
Oct. 19 vs. Western Illinois
Nov. 16 vs. North Dakota State
Nov. 23 vs. South Dakota State

105
YSU Penguin Athletics / Somewhat OT - App State Coach Jerry Moore "fired"
« on: December 04, 2012, 08:54:41 PM »
IAA Fan - feel free to move off the YSU board if you wish - but I thought this was big FCS news that I had missed over the weekend.  And its clear some people are not happy about.

http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20121204/COLUMNISTS12/312040013/Jarrett-When-Moore-not-enough?odyssey=mod%7Cnewswell%7Ctext%7CFrontpage%7Cp&nclick_check=1

Graceful coaching exits appear to have gone the way of the phone booth and correct spelling.

In the “wht hve u dun 4 me ltely” world in Boone, Jerry Moore’s departure as a football legend was as clumsy as it was predictable.

After a 215-87 record, 10 Southern Conference titles and three straight national championships among 18 seasons in the playoffs on a 24-year resume that Mountaineers’ fans will likely never come close to seeing again, Moore made two mistakes — he got old and couldn’t maintain impossible expectations he created with his previous successes.

The announcement came via e-mail and teleconference on Sunday in the politically correct language of the times, where “will not return” and “we came to the decision” supposedly creates a softer landing than “fired.”

Sorry, but when you show up for work wanting and expecting to stay employed and are told by your bosses that you are no longer welcome, that’s fired.

Moore wanted one more year, and he should have gotten it.

The firing came one day after a one-point loss in overtime in the second round of the FCS playoffs, the defeat clinched by a blocked extra-point attempt.

Funny how life works. One day you are making about $200,000 a year, then a freshman from Ashe County or Etowah misses a block and it’s time to make a coaching change.

At age 73, Moore’s last team was 8-4, won the SoCon for the seventh time in eight years and made the playoffs for the eighth straight season.

What a bum — sure sounds like “it’s just time, and we’ll move forward,” as ASU athletic director Charlie Cobb said.

Enough of that winning and competing for championships, let’s replace a legend with a guy who has never been a head coach, and see where Scott Satterfield can take us.

No doubt the ASU dynasty is waning — from the heyday of 39-5 and three straight national titles from 2005-07, which started a run of six straight seasons of 10 or more wins, this was the second straight 8-4, lose in their opening playoff game season.

Most programs would kill for that kind of decline, but in Boone it meant let’s make a move.

There were some off-field incidents with players and a huge turnover in assistant coaches after last season, but 2012 sure appeared to be a strong rebound and answer to those problems.

From the time of his official retirement age of 65 to today, Moore posted an 87-23 record (53-8 and seven championships in the SoCon) and was 15-6 in the playoffs, with three national titles, a last-second loss in a semifinal round and a quarterfinal appearance.

Can’t believe they let grandpa hang around as long as they did.

There are those in the ASU community who are aiming higher in the High Country, where competing for conference crowns and FCS national titles isn’t enough.

Despite all available evidence that there isn’t an attractive Division I conference interested or offering an invitation to join, the school has decided it is ready for the move up.

Hello Sun Belt, good-bye SoCon.

Under Moore, ASU grew from a solid, successful program to the best in the FCS. He beat Michigan at Michigan, created a game-day atmosphere better than some ACC schools, doubled attendance, spearheaded with his on-field success stadium renovations, an indoor practice facility and incredible fund-raising numbers, all of which benefited the entire university.

And he stuck around, choosing loyalty when better financial offers at bigger schools came calling in years past.

Look where that got him.

Moore did it all with class and a humble presence, proud and firm in his strong faith that never got in the way of a fierce competitive nature that allowed him to build a powerhouse he leaves infinitely better than he found.

Which cannot be said for those who chose to let him go.

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