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1
YSU Penguin Athletics / 2024 football spring game
« on: April 09, 2024, 05:57:15 AM »
The spring game is scheduled for 11am this Saturday (4/13/24). I still can’t find any information on the game.
Does anyone have any information on the game ( cost, format, players….etc). I am surprised that there wasn’t any information on the practice so far.
Any comments?

4
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU new WBB head coach
« on: March 19, 2024, 07:57:25 AM »

5
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU Beeghly facilities upgrade
« on: February 12, 2024, 06:45:49 AM »
From today’s Tribune/Vindy on planned upgrades to Beeghly facilities

https://www.tribtoday.com/news/local-news/2024/02/ysu-center-gets-new-seats/


7
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU vs Purdue FW
« on: January 10, 2024, 07:21:56 PM »
Half time YSU leads by 15 (45-30)

8
YSU Penguin Athletics / Jaleel McLaughlin in Denver training camp
« on: August 01, 2023, 11:31:19 AM »
Jaleel McLaughlin was impressive in the training camp. The following is the write up on the Denver Broncos official website:

A YOUNG RUNNER
Behind Javonte Williams and Samaje Perine, undrafted rookie Jaleel McLaughlin may have a chance to make a name for himself.

The Youngstown State product showed off his speed on Monday and may have recorded a long carry under game conditions.
"He has a little burst, and there's some toughness to him," Payton said. "He's the first one here. I don't know what time he gets here in the morning, but it's pretty early. He's a guy you root for. He's shifty, and he has good change of direction. It's funny. When you put the pads on players for the first day, then you really get an appreciation of how they look in pads. It's hard to measure that when they're not in pads. Today was that day where you're just looking around at everyone and how they carry the pads. It'll be a good stretch for him, though. He's a guy that it's really important to."
McLaughlin carried the ball 227 times for 1,588 yards and 13 touchdowns in 2022, as he averaged more than 144 rushing yards per game.

10
YSU Penguin Athletics / NFL draft - Penguin
« on: April 30, 2023, 05:31:15 PM »
From Tribune/Vindy on Penguins signing free agents:

Youngstown State’s Jaleel McLaughlin, Mike McAllister ink as UDFAs

LOCAL SPORTS
APR 30, 2023

JOEL WHETZEL
Staff writer
jwhetzel@tribtoday.com
 
 

Correspondent photo / Robert Hayes Youngstown State tailback Jaleel McLaughlin sprints into the open field during YSU's win over Dayton. McLaughlin ran for 129 yards and a touchdown and also had a 52-yard touchdown reception.

YOUNGSTOWN — Youngstown State tailback Jaleel McLaughlin and center Mike McAllister signed with NFL teams as undrafted free agents over the weekend.


Late Saturday night, YSU’s program announced McAllister was joining the Los Angeles Rams. McAllister was a three-year starter at Youngstown State and started as the team’s center in his final 28 games. He earned All-Missouri Valley Second Team honors in 2022, having started all 11 games and grading as one of YSU’s top linemen.

Sunday morning, the program announced McLaughlin, the NCAA’s all-time leading rusher, 2022 MVFC Offensive Player of the Year and an FCS All-American, inked a UDFA deal with the Denver Broncos. He finished his career with 8,166 yards on 1,250 carries and 79 touchdowns. In 2022, he ran for 1,588 yards and 13 touchdowns on 227 carries.

11
YSU Penguin Athletics / Jaleel McLaughlin
« on: April 03, 2023, 07:17:32 AM »
An article from a sport writer on his potential draft in the NFL draft this month.

The article was written before the YSU pro day. The link is shown below.

https://www.profootballnetwork.com/jaleel-mclaughlin-the-greatest-collegiate-running-back-you-never-heard-of/


Sent from my iPad

12
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU football proday
« on: March 25, 2023, 10:36:46 AM »
Check up McLaughlin on this Video for the 2023 YSU football pro day

https://youtu.be/UhBZmEjCmRk


13
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU- Ohio
« on: December 11, 2022, 04:34:44 PM »
Ohio 81 YSU 79

Cohill drilled a 3 Points shot with 1.9 seconds left to tie the game. Ohio inbounded the ball to their guy under the basket who put it in as the time ran out for the win. YSU trailed as much as 16 points in the second half before taking the lead.
Couldn’t hold it at the end, too bad

14
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU MBB and WBB newspaper article
« on: November 01, 2022, 12:28:50 PM »
From Tribune/Vindy today


Men’s basketball

YSU finding roles as season arrives

LOCAL SPORTS
NOV 1, 2022

JOEL WHETZEL
Staff writer
jwhetzel@tribtoday.com
 
 

Correspondent file photo / Robert Hayes. YSU guard Dwayne Cohill drives and scores during the first half of a game against Morgan State last season.

YOUNGSTOWN — By his own admission, Dwayne Cohill doesn’t pay much mind to preseason polls or honors.


“I don’t really pay attention to it. … It doesn’t really matter to me. It’s just about what happens when we get between those lines,” Youngstown State’s All-Horizon League Preseason First Team selection said.

What happens between those lines is swiftly approaching, as Youngstown State begins its campaign at Canisius on Monday. That sets off a busy November slate in which the Penguins will be on the road a fair amount. The month includes home games against UT-Martin (Nov. 9) and Grace Christian (Nov. 15), and road swings at Canisius, Notre Dame (Nov. 13), the Navy MTE (vs. UC San Diego on Nov. 19 and vs. Navy on Nov. 20) and Western Illinois (Nov. 26).

YSU gets its first shot at Horizon League play Dec. 1 at Northern Kentucky, then visits Wright State Dec. 4.

After an offseason that saw YSU graduate Michael Akuchie, Tevin Olison and others, and add quite a few replacements via the transfer portal, the Penguins were selected fifth in the conference preseason poll, but are considered a contender for this year’s Horizon crown.


In the early goings, things are still a work in progress, head coach Jerrod Calhoun says.

“I think anytime you’re trying to blend five new players with returnees, it’s definitely a process,” Calhoun said. “I think the guys have done a good job of trying to get better each and every day. We’re certainly not there, and have a big week in front of us. We (had) one more scrimmage Sunday, and then we have to clean up our final week to see where we’re at.”

In addition to Akuchie and Olison, YSU also graduated forward Jamir Thomas, while guards Luke Chicone and Owen Long each hit the transfer portal and now are at the Division II level.

The Penguins welcomed forwards Adrian Nelson (Northern Kentucky) and Malek Green (Canisius) via the portal, as well as guards Brandon Rush (Fairleigh Dickinson) and Bryce McBride (Eastern Michigan). Sixth-year senior Garrett Covington entered the portal this offseason before returning to YSU, and the Penguins also picked up freshman recruit John Lovelace Jr. from Milwaukee.

They join returning guards Shemar Rathan-Mayes, Cohill, Myles Hunter and Chris Shelton, and forwards Will Dunn, Jacori Owens and Josh Irwin, who redshirted last season.

In YSU’s first scrimmage, the Penguins rotated a large number of players in and out of action as Calhoun continues to tinker with combinations.

“We’re still in the process of figuring out who’s going to start, who’s going to come off the bench,” he said ahead of the Penguins’ second scrimmage. “We have to continue to work on that as we get closer to that first game, but I think we certainly have depth. Which direction we go with that, I still honestly don’t know.”

Cohill added, “I’m not really sure if we have a schedule, because every team has its own schedule. I just think we’re getting better day in and day out. … At this point, everybody has a complete understanding about what we’re looking for offensively and defensively, how we want to play and just understanding how to play to strengths.

“I think last year we struggled at times to have guys doing things they’re capable of doing, whereas they were trying to do things that they might not have been as strong at. This year, guys are just buying into whatever it is that they do best, trying to do it to the best of their capabilities.”

Calhoun estimates that YSU can have between five and seven players scoring in double figures on a given night, which will give the team “good balance.”

On the other end, Calhoun says YSU will need to protect the rim, “whether that’s guarding the ball better, or whether that’s weak-side defense.”

He added, “I think that’s got to be a big emphasis — to continue to keep people out of the paint and protect that rim area and be a really good two-point field goal percentage team.”

In the team’s second scrimmage, Calhoun said he was planning to whittle down who gets how many minutes, and see which players can provide “execution on both sides.”

And the biggest thing he wants to accomplish?

“Really just stay healthy,” Calhoun said. “I think that’s the most important thing this time of year is not overdoing it and keeping healthy. I really want to see some momentum coming out of this second scrimmage.”



Women’ Basketball

Penguins looking to meet lofty expectations

YSU picked 1st in Horizon League preseason poll
LOCAL SPORTS
NOV 1, 2022

JOEL WHETZEL
Staff writer
jwhetzel@tribtoday.com
 
 

Correspondent file photo / Robert Hayes. YSU’s Mady Aulbach, right, forces IUPUI’s Rachel McLimore, left, into a traveling call during a game last season.

YOUNGSTOWN — A year ago, Mady Aulbach says, Youngstown State women’s basketball was out to prove others wrong for selecting the Penguins seventh in the Horizon League preseason poll.


Now, she notes, the Penguins are out to prove people right.

After another busy offseason in the transfer portal, YSU enters the 2022-23 season with sky-high expectations, as the Penguins were selected first in the Horizon League preseason poll for the first time in program history.

“I think the mindset lately has been proving people right and just focusing on us, doing what we know how to do,” Aulbach said. “There’s going to be a target on our back, and we have to bring our best every single day in practice, game in and game out every time we step on the court.”

The Penguins welcomed a bevy of transfers. At guard, YSU added Shay-Lee Kirby (Austin Peay) and Dena Jarrells (Chattanooga), and at forward, the Penguins picked up Emily Saunders (Tennessee).


Those three and returning guard Paige Shy all played AAU basketball together in West Virginia.

Now reunited, they’ll be joining a team that returns All-Horizon League forward Lily Ritz and other forwards Lindsey Linard and Jen Wendler, as well as guards Aulbach, Malia Magestro, Megan Callahan and Lindsey Mack. Forward Tenleigh Phelps could factor in this year after sitting a season ago with an injury, and guard Haley Thierry is back, too. The Penguins also added one freshman recruit, guard Mackenzie Hurd.

Thus far, head coach John Barnes says things are still a work in progress, due in part to minor injuries that have nagged the team during preseason practices.

“We’ve had a lot of little injuries here and there and haven’t … (been able) to go five-on-five as much as we would like, so my evaluation of where we’re at isn’t quite where it should be,” Barnes said.

But, he added, the roster is getting each of those players back, and now has had two scrimmages to begin sorting out a lineup.

In the first scrimmage, Barnes said, the Penguins threw a bunch of different lineup combinations into the mix, while in the second, he expected to be more specific and judicious in determining playing time.

As the season opener approaches, Barnes says the emphasis is on the finer details.

“We want to be really detail-oriented,” he said. “We didn’t do a lot of the detailed things that we like to do defensively, and it cost us in our (first) scrimmage. So just doing the little things and executing all those little details. That’s going to be the difference between us being good this year and now.

“Right now, we’re average at those details, and we have to get really good at them.”

And, of course, the largest question remains finding a replacement to Chelsea Olson, something Barnes says will be a group effort both offensively and defensively.

“It’s more of a lot of people stepping up and trying to be a leader, and everyone talking and having good energy and feeding off each other and not there just being one person we’re always trying to look to, because this team is full of a bunch of all-stars that could all be a really good leader and player,” Aulbach said. “I think this year, it’s more of a committee thing, everyone joining together and feeding off each other.”

The season begins Nov. 7 at home against Wofford, which begins a challenging month of November that also includes games at Penn State (Nov. 15), Akron (Nov. 18) and Western Michigan (Nov. 22) along with a home contest against St. Francis Brooklyn (Nov. 26).

Then, the Penguins get their first taste of Horizon League action with a road trip to Northern Kentucky and Wright State to begin the month of December.

“I think we’re trying to develop a really high sense of urgency,” Aulbach said. “I think we know what needs to be there, and I think we can definitely improve upon it. We really need to remember that last year, it was a lot of hard work to get to where we got, so just remembering that and keeping that chip on our shoulder will help us further develop that sense of urgency.”

15
YSU Penguin Athletics / UND week
« on: October 06, 2022, 06:21:07 AM »
Today’s article from Tribune/Vindy on the YSU-UND game:


YSU Scouting Report: North Dakota

LOCAL SPORTS
OCT 6, 2022

JOEL WHETZEL
Staff writer
jwhetzel@tribtoday.com
 
 

Correspondent photo / Robert Hayes Youngstown State SAM linebacker D’Marco Augustin keys in on Kentucky quarterback Will Levis. The Penguins host No. 22 North Dakota on Saturday at Stambaugh Stadium.

YOUNGSTOWN — Since the summer, this upcoming stretch in Youngstown State’s season has been looked at as the definining point.

So much so, that the Penguins had a sit-down with university president and one-time YSU coach Jim Tressel back in July to highlight these very weeks, beginning this week with Saturday’s contest against North Dakota.


“We talked in the summertime. We had a little seminar with President Tressel, and we talked about this point of the year, being possibly are we going to be 3-1, are we going to be 4-0, are we going to be 2-2, knowing that we have a homestand coming,” said YSU coach Doug Phillips. “So it wasn’t like this wasn’t discussed in July and in August. Knowing that, to climb to the top of the mountain, it takes one step. … So for us, it’s that process, and all that matters is taking that first step.”

That proverbial first step represents a big one. The Fighting Hawks come to Stambaugh Stadium ranked No. 22 in the latest StatsPerform FCS Top 25, and are fresh off an impressive 48-31 win over then-No. 7 Missouri State. The Fighting Hawks trailed 21-10 early on in that game before rallying to within 21-20 at halftime and then pulling away in the second half.

YSU, meanwhile, enters off of two straight losses and a big question mark under center. At halftime of last week’s game at No. 1 North Dakota State, Phillips pulled starting QB Demeatric Crenshaw, who was struggling to move the offense, and played Mitch Davidson during the second half.

Who starts Saturday is a “game-time decision,” according to Phillips.


Regardless of who starts, getting the pass game going is a must if the Penguins are to take any steps forward from last year’s 3-7 mark, and this Fighting Hawks team represents a good opportunity to do so.

UND’s pass defense gives up 286.4 yards per game, ranking it 104th out of 123 FCS defenses.

Then, too, the North Dakota run defense has allowed 149.8 yards per game, giving Jaleel McLaughlin and the rest of the Penguin tailbacks plenty of opportunity to make plays.

For his part, McLaughlin is coming off an impressive performance at NDSU. The senior rushed for 150 yards, by far his highest total against the Bison.

Phillips is expecting plenty of activity from the Fighting Hawks’ front seven.

“They have a lot of movement with their defensive front seven,” he noted. “They blitz, they come from all over the place, and they play hard.”

Receiver Latrell Fordham added, “They show different things up front, and they have really good corners out there.”

On the other side of the ball, the Fighting Hawks feature one of the most balanced offenses YSU will face this season. UND has run the ball 166 times and thrown it 160.

On the ground, North Dakota was tasked this offseason with replacing former All-American Otis Weah, who initially transferred to Missouri State before allegations of sexual assault from his time at UND reportedly caused MSU to rescind the offer.

UND replaced him with another Missouri Valley tailback, as they added Tyler Hoosman as a graduate transfer from Northern Iowa. So far, the senior has paced North Dakota’s run game with 422 yards and five touchdowns on 62 carries.

“He’s a physical back,” YSU linebacker Greg Benton Jr. said. “He runs behind his pads, and he’s definitely a good player. They’re utilizing him the same as they did at UNI. He’s a good back, so we have to put a body on him and no arm tackles.”

Isaiah Smith has shared the workload as a spell back for Hoosman. He’s racked up 223 yards and a score on 34 carries.

In the air game, junior Tommy Schuster is back under center for UND.

He’s been efficient to date, completing nearly 70 percent of his passes (107-for-154). He’s got 1,133 yards, seven touchdowns and has been picked off just twice.

His favorite target, to nobody’s surprise, has been Preseason All-MVFC second teamer Bo Belquist, who has 29 receptions for 314 yards and two touchdowns.

What makes UND’s pass attack difficult to defend, though, is once again its balance. The Fighting Hawks have five receivers with at least 10 receptions this season, and four have scored.

Garett Maag has 18 catches for 257 yards and two scores, while Smith has 12 receptions out of hte backfield for 143 yards.

“He knows how to deliver the football, and he’s poised,” Phillips said of Schuster. “If you don’t affect him — I can remember the spring season and last year, I remember you weren’t getting to him and that he gets rid of the ball. (It’s) almost like we saw game one (against Duquesne) where you weren’t going to get pressure and the ball comes out quick. We have to make sure somehow we affect him. We can’t allow him to just sit back there and pick us apart.”

But, Phillips added, the Penguins also can’t defend every single thing UND will try to do, as it will cause the YSU defense to over-extend itself.

“One thing you cannot try to do — and if you do, they’re going to put 500 yards of offense up — is try to defend everything,” he noted. “We have to always go into a game and stop the run. That’s always going to be critical for us is to stop the run, and we have to eliminate the big plays, because they can put points on the board very quickly like you saw against Missouri State.”

PREDICTION

This game could go either way, but the Youngstown State defense and run game should do just enough to give the Penguins the edge.

Youngstown State wins, 27-24.

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