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Messages - IAA Fan

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5716
During the spring, YSUsports.com used a wireless microphone to go inside the Penguins' football program. Each assistant coach wore a microphone to give fans the inside scoop into their personality during a practice. Check out this piece on offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Shane Montgomery.

Montgomery is in his second season with the program. Check back throughout the next month for more in depth looks into the Penguins' coaching staff.

Click on Video below for Shane Montgomery video.



5717
Looks as though he will be a real asset on D when we are in half-court (which will be quite a bit in the HL). Coach seems very high on this class.

5718
YSU Penguin Athletics / Re: Former Warren Harding star DJ Williamson
« on: April 27, 2011, 02:20:41 PM »
The Trib is reporting that this is a grades issue, and Williamson will be attending prep school.

http://www.tribtoday.com/page/content.detail/id/556127/WGH-wideout-headed-for-prep-school.html?nav=5024

I never understand people that think attending a small college will be the solution. The bottom line is that small public schools (like YSU) do not have the funds for "fluff" programs. We are ahead of many our size with GE programs and such. A large school has hundreds of majors ...not just reading, writing, and arithmetic.


Article is about Edward Killingsworth and not Williamson.  At least I don't see Williamson mentioned

Good catch. I really thought the article was about him. I will delete that thread.

5719
YSU Penguin Athletics / Vindy: Morrone anxious for WATTS
« on: April 27, 2011, 06:26:47 AM »
By Jon Moffett

jmoffett@vindy.com

YOUNGSTOWN

Matt Morrone has got to feel like a student trying to make his choice for college right about now — it’s kind of a combination of anxiousness, hesitation, nerves and obvious excitement. All for a huge commitment that will potentially change his life.

Only Morrone, the athletic business manager for Youngstown State, is less concerned with going to school. Rather, he’s hopeful his major commitment will help make the choosing process a little bit easier for others.

Morrone can’t help but have those feelings as the deadline draws closer for the completion of the Watson and Tressel Training Site. The WATTS has a deadline of mid-June, and Morrone said everything is right on schedule. And he admits, he’s just a little bit excited.

“Oh yeah, absolutely,” he said. “There is anxiety to get it done, and there is the anxiousness of wanting to use it. But there is also the hesitation of what we got into. It’s a very exciting time.”

The facility’s structure is almost complete. Siding is still being placed, but soon it will be a matter of touch-ups and aesthetic work.

The artificial turf playing surface was laid on the football field this week. And the asphalt for the track was put down a couple of weeks ago. Morrone said it takes roughly 30 or 40 days to cure before the final surface can be placed.

That surface was ordered from the Mondo company, and is the same material used in the last Olympic games, Morrone said.

“It’s the Cadillac of track surfaces,” he said.

After the surfaces are taken care of, it’s a matter of painting and doing some other small jobs, Morrone said. Then, it’s time to open the doors for good.

And it’s been a long time coming, too.

Like many construction projects, the WATTS project has seen its share of delays. The facility, which the school hopes will act as a major recruiting tool, was originally supposed to be completed by the close of 2010.

But construction issues as well as Mother Nature pushed back the deadline to this past February. More delays moved that date to June. And this time, it’s hopefully going to stick, Morrone said.

“If you had been in that building a month and a half ago, and then walked through today you’d be amazed,” he said. “It really has come a long way in the last month and a half.

“It’s not a building where you can just put all the siding up in a day. It’s a 125,000 square-foot building,” he added.

For Morrone, it’s worth the wait.

If finished on schedule, the facility will be open and on display during the heart summer workouts. That, Morrone hopes, will be incentive enough to make up those uncertain minds when it comes time to choosing YSU or a similar school.

“To me, I hate to say it, but it’s not even going to be a competition,” he said. “Students are coming on campus to look at the facilities and when they see that they’re impressed.”

5720
YSU Penguin Athletics / Re: Watts Center
« on: April 26, 2011, 10:39:03 PM »
Here is a shot of the turf going down:


5721
YSU Penguin Athletics / Re: Former Warren Harding star DJ Williamson
« on: April 26, 2011, 07:37:03 AM »
May be a better defensive prospect. Lot's of speed. He will be all conference in special teams his first year. Did they say how many years he has left?

5722
During the spring, YSUsports.com used a wireless microphone to go inside the Penguins' football program. Each assistant coach wore a microphone to give fans the inside scoop into their personality during a practice. Check out this piece on assistant coach Carmen Bricillo.

Bricillo is in his second season with the program and is YSU's offensive line coach. It looks like they covered several coaches, so we will try to post them all here:



5723
When they first put the rules in place, the NCAA gave the IA schools a moratorium. Then by doing nothing since, they have admitted they will do nothing. Then making the schools sell certain numbers of tickets to meet the requirements, I would say the NCAA is been quite lenient, but far from enforcing their own rules.

5724
The NCAA admitted they will do nothing to an individual established MAC school, as long as the conference meets the requirements ...I think 15,118 was last year's average attendance. This is why they accepted Temple

5725
2011 Youngstown State Football Season Tickets Commercial




5726
General BS / Re: Facebook?
« on: April 23, 2011, 07:01:39 PM »
I'm working on it :)

5727
Niles -- The Youngstown State baseball team rode a strong pitching performance by Robert Switka to a 6-3 win over Cleveland State in the opener and then Armani Johnson's bases-loaded walk in the bottom of the ninth lifted YSU to a 3-2 game two win at Eastwood Field.

In game one, Switka (2-5) pitched seven strong innings scattering four hits while striking out eight. In game two, senior Phil Klein battled for 6.1 innings to keep the Penguins in the contest. Kevin McCulloh (3-6) finished both games up. In game one, he tossed two innings of one-hit relief. In the second game, he went 2.2 innings working around three hits to pick up the win.

Youngstown State (10-27 overall and 5-6 in the Horizon League) trailed 2-0 in game two after the first inning. Cleveland State picked up its first run when Alex Gnezda singled home John Calhoun and Matt Kirkwood plated Zach Thompson.

In game two, CSU had 11 hits, while the Guins had two. YSU was hitless for 5.2 innings before a single by Drew Dosch broke up the no-hit bid by Viking starter Cody Bates.

The Guins scored two runs in the third tying the contest. Phil Lipari opened the inning with a walk and Padraic Williams was hit by a pitch. Lipari came around to score when Johnson reached on a two-base error by CSU third baseman John Calhoun. Williams came home on a sacrifice fly by David Leon.

McCulloh worked out of a jam in the eighth. CSU loaded the bases with no outs but a failed squeeze attempt and two ground outs to shortstop kept the Vikes off the board.

In the bottom of the ninth, Dosch walked to lead off the inning. Craig Goubeaux sacrficed him to second and then YSU caught a break. Lipari hit a comebacker to the mound, but CSU pitcher Brandon Cooper threw the ball to third and Dosch held at second. Williams walked to load the bases and after sidearmer Clayton Ruch entered the game, Johnson plated the game winner when he walked on five pitches.

In the opener, Switka cruised pitching seven scoreless innings. YSU had a run in the second, one in the third, two in the fifth and two in the sixth. CSU broke through scoring three runs off reliever Cody Dearth, however McCulloh righted the ship as the Penguins held on.

Leon and Goubeaux had two each in the first game. CSU outhit the Penguins 18-11 in the doubleheader, but dropped both games. The Vikings committed three errors in the first game, including two on one play that allowed two Penguins to score.

The Penguins and Vikings conclude the series on Sunday at 3 p.m.

5728
U Mass averaged 13,000 a game last year.  I guess they will have to import a bunch of fans to meet 1A attendance
requirments 

That won't be a problem for them.  Akron and Kent seem to do it somehow.  By lying probably.  Or giving tickets away?

Kent and Akron are grandfathered in. All they have to do is meet the previous standards ...30k+ stadium or 15k+ in attendance.

5729
Howie-In-The-Hills, Fla. -- Youngstown State junior Samantha Formeck leads the Horizon League Women's Golf Championships following the first round of action on Friday after carding a one-over-par 74 at the Mission Inn Resort Golf Course.

As team, the Penguins will have some work ahead of them after carding a 346 following the first 18 holes. Detroit, the 2010 HL Champion, carded a low of 326 to hold a three-stroke lead over Loyola following day one.

Formeck, who placed first at the event as a freshman and third as a sophomore, had three birdies on her first nine holes to offset three bogeys. Formeck birdied holes one, seven and nine for an even-par 36 on the front nine. She was one over on the back nine with a 38.

She leads Detroit's Alianna Stefan by one shot entering Saturday's second round. Formeck is set to tee off at 8:10 a.m., 50 minutes before Stefan. Loyola's April Ohlendorf is third with a 77.

Sophomore Sarah Heimlich had a solid outing firing an opening-round 82. Heimlich sits in seventh place following a round that featured a birdie and nine pars. She tees off at 8 a.m. on Saturday.

Senior Katie Rogner had eagle on par-5 seventh hole, however she could never find a rhythm on her way to carding an 87th. Rogner resides in 20th place after Friday's round.

A pair of freshmen also tried to find their shot on day one. Sarah Scheidmantel carded a 103 and is 33rd while Angela Molaskey had a 105 and is 35th.

Teams
1. Detroit - 326
2. Loyola - 329
3. Butler - 333
3. Cleveland State - 338
5. Valparaiso - 343
6. YSU - 346
7. Green Bay - 356

YSU Totals:
Formeck - 74
Heimlich - 82
Rogner - 87
Scheidemantel - 103
Molaskey - 105

5730
The Youngstown State men's basketball program will host four boys' basketball camp this summer. The coaching staff will offer two team shootout camps, June 5 and June 11. There will also be two individiual camps, June 13-16, and June 20-23.

The team shootout camps (June 5 and June 11) are targeted for varsity and JV high school teams and cost $275 per varsity team and $210 per junior varsity squad. There is also a two-day option which costs $475 for varsity and $350 for junior varisty. The team shootouts run from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on each day.

The Full-Court Camp is an individual camp that runs from June 13-16, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. This camp is aimed at kids entering fifth through 12th grade in the fall of 2011. Early registration cost of the Full-Court Camp is $130 and has deadline of June 6. Late registration for the Full-Court Camp is $145.

The Half-Court Camp, June 20-23, is another individual camp that is geared toward kids entering grades second through ninth in the fall of 2011. This camp runs from 8:30 a.m. to Noon. Early registration costs $85 and has a deadline of June 13. Registrations after June 13 cost $95.

For more information, contact the YSU men's basketball office at (330) 941-3004.

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