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1396
Nearly 100 female football fans took part in a second annual Women's Football Clinic held by the Youngstown State coaching staff on Thursday night at Stambaugh Stadium. All proceeds from the event go to the Rich Center for Autism.

Overall, the coaching staff had assistance from more than 30 volunteers in the crowd during a very face paced and entertaining evening and Mrs. Helen Stambaugh, who the Stadium is named after, was recognized for attending the event.

The first highlight of the night was the uniform demonstration. Youngstown State football players D.J. Main, Lamar Mady, John Sasson, Adaris Bellamy and Allen Jones all took part in the display and some showed better modeling skills then others.

Sasson hammed it up pretty good swinging his jacket over his shoulder and tossing his chin in the air. Bellamy and Jones received some nice applause showing off the Penguins' Under Armour compression gear.

The defense went first in giving the crowd insight into not only YSU football, but the game in general.

Defensive Coordinator Rick Kravitz opened by discussing defensive terms and talked about three and four-man fronts and well as nickel packages and some of YSU's philosophies.

Coach Rollen Smith followed by describing the duties of secondary. Smith selected four members from the audience to participate. He walked them through techniques and spacing and received some good laughs from the crowd.

Linebackers coach Frank Buffano started the contact portion of the evening. Buffano, who coaches YSU's middle and will linebackers had assistance from two volunteers in working on proper tackling form. YSU Ticket Office assistant Cheryl Traylor and Karen Cooper showed some solid form a Buffano held the bag and provided instruction.

Coach Ron Stoops, who works with outside linebackers (SAM), kept that position going. He joked about some of the questions his students at Boardman High School asked him and that got a good laugh. Stoops had assistance from YSU TE Carson Sharbaugh's mother and showed how a SAM linebacker reads the offensive line as to whether the offense is running or throwing the football. He showed how to fill a running lane or retreat on a passing attempt.

Defensive line Coach Tom Sims, always a crowd favorite, was the final defense coach to go. Sims had four helpers who were at last year's clinic. He lined up the four ladies and told them to step forward. Then he announced "That's what we do!" as the crowd roared. Then Sims brought out a tackling dummy to teach a pass rush move, slap and rip. He had one volunteer and told her that defensive linemen need swagger and are like tigers in a cage. Once he approved she slapped the bag over with her right hand.

Sims wasn't finished. He brought four mother's up whose son's play on the YSU defensive line for Sims. They worked on the pursuit drill. Sims told them to follow the football and then tossed it to YSU Athletics Administrative Assistant Cher Marshall. The four mom's ran to Cher, who tossed the ball away before changing directions to follow the ball.

The coaching staff broke the group up and took them on a tour of the facilities in the Stadium. Areas of note were the office suite, meeting rooms, locker room, training room and academics center.

The group then sat in the team meeting room as Melinda Wolford, wife of Head Coach Eric Wolford, took part in a question and answer session. Joining Melinda was Bonnie Stoops, wife of Ron Stoops, and Tracey Cochran, wife of strength consultant and former YSU football player Mike Cochran. They discussed what it is like being a coaches wife and shared some neat stories.

Once reconvening upstairs, the offense took over.

Offensive Coordinator Shane Montgomery took time discussing a variety of topics.

Montgomery brought up five volunteers to be his offensive line and then discussed the line of scrimmage. He added a tight end and wide receivers to the mix to talk about eligible receivers and talked about why ineligible receiver downfield is called. He made sure to mention that seven players on offense need to be at the line of scrimmage when the ball is snapped. He also moved the volunteers around to show them unbalanced formations.

Lastly, he talked about quarterback play. He discussed how to hold a football, spoke about arm technique, footwork and body positioning.

Offensive line coach Carmen Bricillo, who helped organize the clinic along with football secretary Lynn Cadle, talked about how his unit is a key part of the team. He had two volunteers and told them that offensive lineman move similar to dancers. He taught them a pass protection stance and when he pointed to the left, he had them shuffle left, when he pointed to the right, had them shuffle right.

Running backs coach Louie Matsakis had former YSU student assistant Jessica Giblin help him with some ball security drills. Giblin held a football and Matsakis showed the crowd how to protect it from the defense. Giblin then held a ball that was tied with a string and Matsakis tried to wrestle it away from her. Finally, Matsakis had Giblin work on footwork, but jumping over block pads that were placed on the floor.

Tight Ends Coach Mauro Monz, the newest member of the staff, had two volunteers involved in some receiving drills. He had one on offense and one defense. At first, his volunteer on offense jumped offside so she was assessed a five-yard penalty. That received a good laugh from the audience. Then she made up for the penalty with a nice catch. Finally, Monz got the crowd fired up for the final route and hit his receiver.

Wide receivers coach Andre Coleman kept the ball in the air. He worked with her on her stance and how to release from the line of scrimmage and come off the snap fast. He taught her a one step release and a two-step release. They then worked on a two-step fake out move before moving on to catching the football. He taught his volunteer how to look through her hands and keep her eye on the ball. Then he lofted a pass about five yards and she made the grab.

Following the offense presentation, more than 30 prizes raffle winners were announced.

The evening concluded with Coach Wolford addressing the audience. He thanked them for their continued support in the program and said the future of the program is very strong. He said he had a first-class staff and that announcement received one of the loudest ovations of the evening.

Wolford said the third annual Women's Coaching Clinic will be held in the WATTS next spring and is looking forward to seeing the crowd grow even more. In year one, YSU had 25 participants to 90 in the second year.

He said he looks forward to seeing all the Penguins fans in the fall is excited to open fall camp, which starts on August 6.

1397
Another in YSU's video series featuring the football coaches. Stoops is in his second season with the program and also is the Director of High School Relations for YSU. Check back throughout the next month for more in-depth looks into the Penguins' coaching staff.

Click on Video below for Coach Stoops's video.




1398
YSU Penguin Athletics / Baseball Senior Day Video
« on: May 20, 2011, 06:22:51 AM »
Here is yesterday's senior day for 2011 baseball:



1399


Link to Hall of Fame Page is http://ohiohoopzone.com/?p=629



Columbus, Ohio -- Former Youngstown State men's basketball coach Dom Rosselli is among  19 men and women who have been chosen for the 2011 class of the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame, the hall of fame and musuem announced.

The Sixth Annual Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will be held at the Greater Columbus Convention Center, Saturday, May 21.

Youngstown State Head Coach Jerry Slocum said Rosselli's induction is a source of great pride for not only the basketball program but Youngstown State University as a whole.

"I'm proud to be part of a basketball program that he mentored for so many years," Slocum said. "We are all very happy for the entire Rosselli family. This is a very well-deserved honor.

"Coach Rosselli was a legend in the game of basketball, and a person that stood for the highest integrity in the game and life in general."

Rosselli, a charter member of the YSU Athletics Hall of Fame in 1985, was a fixture on the basketball bench from 1940-41 to 1981-82. He nurtured a program from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) to NCAA Division II and then to Division I. He was also instrumental in Youngstown State's rise as an independent to conference play, first in the original Mid-Continent Conference on the Division II level and the Ohio Valley Conference in Division I.

In his 38 years, Rosselli compiled a career record of 589-388 for a .604 winning percentage. He led his teams to eight 20-win seasons, including a 24-3 mark with an .889 winning percentage in 1963-64. Both are still school records for most wins and highest winning percentage in a season.

When he retired following the 1982 season, he was ranked 10th in NCAA history in lifetime collegiate victories. He recorded the second-most wins in NCAA Division II history in coaching 39 seasons.

During the 1956-57 season, Rosselli guided the Penguins to a 23-4 mark and an appearance in the NAIA Quarterfinals as the Penguins lost to Southeastern Oklahoma, 69-65. The following season, in 1957-58, Youngstown State finished 23-7 and advanced to the third round of the NAIA National Tournament before losing to Western Illinois, 70-67.

For the third time in as many seasons, Rosselli and the Penguins made an appearance in the NAIA National Tournament after a 19-9 mark in 1958-59. YSU defeated Baldwin Wallace, 97-77, in the championship game of the NAIA Ohio District and Northern (S.D.) State, 85-76, in the first round of the NAIA National Tournament. In the second round, the Penguins lost to Tennessee A&I State, 89-80. Members of those NAIA tournament teams included Youngstown State Hall of Fame members Bob Atterholt, Tony Knott, Herb Lake, Charles Moore, and Mickey Yugovich.

He coached the Penguins for two seasons before World War II duty as a Captain in the U.S. Air Force took him off the court and overseas.

Upon his return from the war, Rosselli was very involved in YSU athletics. Rosselli returned to full-time duty on the basketball court as soon as he returned from the war.

His many coaching honors include the NCAA's District IV Coach of the Year, and Ohio's College Coach of the Year, both in 1957 and 1964, and the Italian Coach of the Year.

Rosselli passed away at the age of 93 on Oct. 7, 2008.

Besides Rosselli, other college coaches inducted include Joe Campoli of Ohio Northern, Charlie Coles of Miami University, Jean Dowell of Mount St. Joseph's, and Pam Smith of Wittenberg. High school coaches Columbus Hines of Dixie, Gene Millard of Bexley and Gretchen Prichard of Lima Bath will also be honored.

1400
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 wide receivers coach Andre Coleman.

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

Click on Video below for Coach Coleman's video.




1401
A major upgrade in the facilities plus an increase in their budgets have raised the Penguins’ expectations for competing

By Joe Scalzo

scalzo@vindy.com

In mid-April, on the basement floor of Stambaugh Stadium, women’s soccer coach Will Lemke was sitting a big tan couch with Ashley Furniture tags still sticking out through the cushions, talking about a program that, over the past 15 years, hasn’t been worth talking about.

The overhauled locker room has a new flat-screen TV, a study area and new lockers. It looks — and smells — more like a doctor’s waiting room than what you’d find across the hall in the football locker room.

“You don’t really get that smell with girls,” said Lemke, smiling.

About two years ago, Lemke was hired to lead a program that — to put it in locker room terms — was a lot more like football than soccer. It stunk.

“I’m not shy about it,” Lemke said. “We’ve been the dregs of humanity, basically.”

Youngstown State added women’s soccer in 1996-97 as part of its “Gender Equity plan,” which is a fancy way of saying it had to comply with Title IX.

Soccer was a logical addition since the team could play at Stambaugh (which — and this is a very important point financially — was already built) and could sport a big roster with a not-so-big budget. At the time, there were fewer than 100 Division I soccer teams nationally. YSU was just happy to be one of them.

“In hindsight, we could have considered waiting to add the sport while we accumulated the proper resources,” said YSU athletic director Ron Strollo, who was the department’s business manager at the time. “This would have placed the program in a more competitive position earlier.”

YSU won between three and six games in each of its first four years — with three different coaches — before bottoming out in 2000 with an 0-19 record.

The Penguins then joined the Horizon League in 2001 and, like many of their athletic teams, struggled to compete. They went 1-19 that first season and lost their conference games by an average of four goals.

Over the next seven years, those margins narrowed but the losses mounted. YSU won 10 games — total — in its first eight years in the league. Five of those wins came in non-conference games.

By the time Lemke was hired, the losing culture was ingrained. He was taking over a program with no tradition (YSU’s best record was 6-13 and that was in 1997), poor facilities (Stambaugh’s dimensions aren’t wide enough for Division I soccer and the field has a crown) in a poor recruiting area (no girls soccer team in the tri-county area has ever made it to the state semifinals, much less won a title) with little reason to believe things would change.

Oh, and one more thing. By 2009, there were now more than 320 Division I soccer teams.

Over the last decade, only four of YSU’s 18 teams have won Horizon League titles: women’s golf (2002 and 2008), women’s outdoor track (2004-06, 2008-09), women’s indoor track (2004-05, 2008) and men’s indoor track (2003). Not a single YSU team sport has a winning league record in head-to-head play, although the women’s tennis team is close at 33-33.

In 2010, YSU failed to win a single league title in any of its sports, with the six major team sports — men’s and women’s basketball, baseball, softball, women’s soccer and volleyball — all finishing either last or next-to-last. (The football team, which competes in the Missouri Valley Football Conference, also finished last.) Three teams — volleyball, men’s tennis and women’s basketball — failed to win a league game.

But this story is not about that.

This story is about what YSU is doing about that.

On the surface, Lemke was facing an impossible task. Below the surface, there was reason for hope. The Penguins went 4-14-2 in 2008 — Coach Anthony James’ last, and best, year — and the margin of defeat had started to shrink.

If the adage “Show me your checkbook and I’ll show you your priorities” is true, YSU started making women’s soccer more of a priority.

After joining the Horizon, the Penguins tripled their scholarship budget (adding nearly $170,000), doubled their operating budget (adding $21,000), tripled the recruiting budget (from $2,000 to $6,000) and, in 2005-06, added a full-time assistant coach.

Lemke, meanwhile, increased the expectations (and its conditioning level) and challenged his team to make the program’s limitations a strength, rather than an excuse.

“Youngstown is a tough place,” Lemke said. “So we said, ‘Let’s make that who we are as a team. Let’s be tougher mentally and physically.’”

He went 4-10-3 in his first season, then went 3-13-1 last year despite playing the whole year without five injured starters. Eight of the losses were by one goal, including what Lemke called (only half-jokingly) the program’s “signature loss.”

On Sept. 19, YSU played at nationally-ranked Michigan. With seven starters out, Lemke started six freshmen and lost 1-0 on an own-goal.

“That was the defining moment, where we were going to either stick together and do the best we can or fall apart,” Lemke said. “We held our own and that’s when I knew the girls were really buying into what we were doing.”

By then, the new locker room was already under construction. In June, the WATTS indoor facility will open, giving the soccer team a more flexible practice schedule. YSU is in the process of choosing an architect to build a new soccer complex across the street from Stambaugh (with a regulation turf field).

Lemke has also poured time and energy into the program’s summer camps, which are both a fund-raiser and a recruiting tool. He signed seven recruits in March and thinks the program can post its first winning season in the next two years.

“The hard part is sticking with what you’re doing,” Lemke said. “You’re going to have setbacks and there are going to be times when you have to see between the lines and understand that sometimes the progress doesn’t always show up in the win-loss column.

“But, ultimately, it has to show up in the win-loss column.”

Youngstown State’s annual athletic budget is about $12 million, with $4 million of that going toward scholarships. As the only Horizon League school with scholarship football, YSU is at a financial disadvantage in several sports — most notably, men’s basketball.

The Penguins fare better in women’s sports because the athletic department uses Gender Equity funds approved by the Board of Trustees. To help the men’s programs, the department has cut staff — YSU has six fewer administrative positions than it had in the 1990s — and increased those sports’ budgets.

Baseball, for instance, has added nearly $130,000 in scholarships, $60,000 in operating funds and the recruiting budget has gone from $2,500 in 2000-01 to $15,000. There have been similar (although not quite as drastic) increases in sports such as softball, tennis and volleyball.

“The ultimate goal of all of our programs is to compete for championships on a regular basis,” Strollo said. “At this point, some programs are in different stages of budgetary and facility enhancements needed to maintain those expectations.”

Like soccer, the softball team just got a new locker room and there are plans to build a stadium across from Stambaugh, but the biggest addition will be the WATTS, softball coach Brian Campbell said.

“That’s the game-changer,” he said. “We’ll be able to bring teams on campus and offer clinics and show people what YSU has to offer. That helps our future recruiting because we’ll be able to offer the same things that schools like Kent and Akron already have.

“And we’ll be able to work out no matter what the weather, which makes such a huge impact, particularly in the offseason when we can’t get outside on the [Stambaugh Stadium] turf.”

The WATTS owes its existence to the football program — no other sport garners even a fraction of the interest or income — but sports such as track (which buses to Kent State’s indoor facility several times a week), baseball and softball and golf stand to benefit just as much, if not more.

The golf teams, for instance, practice at Mill Creek and Youngstown Country Club in the spring, summer and fall, but they have to spend a lot of time hitting into nets during the winter. The players sometimes practice at the Golf Dome in Girard during the offseason to practice, “but that gets cost-prohibitive,” said men’s golf coach Tony Joy.

The WATTS will have a putting surface and former assistant football coach Sam Eddy is helping to raise money for a swing analyzer. That should make already strong programs even better.

“Recruiting-wise, it’s going to be a big help,” Joy said. “The rest of the Horizon League won’t have anything near as good as us.”

YSU spent much of its first 10 years in the league trying to close the gap — both in budgets and facilities — between it and the rest of the league. Strollo believes the Penguins have made significant strides.

As proof, he points to adding $1 million in scholarship budgets — more than double — for non-revenue (i.e. not football or basketball) programs over the last decade. YSU has added seven full-time assistants, doubled its recruiting budgets and made locker room renovations to baseball, softball, soccer, volleyball and swimming. Further renovations are planned for golf, tennis and track.

The school is planning office renovations for track, softball, soccer and volleyball and plans to add renovated tennis courts next to the new softball and soccer complexes.

But finances and facilities are just two ways of showing support. The athletic department does a lot more, men’s tennis coach Mark Klysner said.

“One of the things I love about YSU is the athletic department doesn’t make you feel like one of the smaller sports,” Klysner said. “From the administrators to the athletic director to the associate athletic director, they all come out and watch our matches. And I’ve been at many schools were that’s not the case.

“They put their trust in the coaches and let us do what we do best. From the administrative side of things, they’ve given us everything they can give to try to make us successful. And that’s all you can ask.”

1402
YOUNGSTOWN

Since Youngstown State entered the Horizon League in 2001, the school has boosted the volleyball program by adding nearly $125,000 in volleyball scholarships, $9,000 in operating funds and $3,500 for recruiting.

In 2005-06, YSU added a full-time assistant coach. In 2006, the school renovated the locker room. In 2009, it replaced the court in Beeghly Center.

And in 2010, the Penguins went 2-27 with an 0-16 record in the conference — their fourth winless season over the last decade and their first since 2005. Only one of the 16 losses went five sets and 12 were 3-0 losses.

“Of all our programs, including basketball, this program has had the biggest competitive challenge since entering the league,” said YSU athletic director Ron Strollo.

The previous coach, Joe Bonner, was fired after going 47-100 in five seasons, including 15-47 in the Horizon. The Penguins hired his replacement, Chad Esposito, in December, 2009. He left almost immediately, returning to his family in Charlotte, N.C., which wasn’t exactly a vote of confidence for the program.

 

So YSU turned to Krista Burrows, a former four-year starter at Auburn who was coming off a successful six-year run at Walsh University. She knew the challenges when she took the job and also knew that, while facilities help, YSU had bigger issues.

“Let’s get real — it has nothing to do with facilities,” she said of the team’s struggles. “It doesn’t matter what facility we’re in.

“We’ve got to get better in the gym and it doesn’t matter what gym we’re in.”

Volleyball has a lot of the same challenges as men’s basketball — a poor recruiting area (no team in the tri-county area has won a state title and only one, Jackson-Milton in 1989, has made it to the state final), no recent success (arguably no YSU sport faced a bigger step up from the Mid-Continent Conference) and significant recruiting competition (Ohio is dominated by Mid-American Conference schools and YSU lags far behind Horizon-member Cleveland State in volleyball).

The difference is, men’s basketball has Butler. And Butler doesn’t help the volleyball team.

“Butler at least helps kids know what conference we’re in,” said Burrows, who was an assistant at Cleveland State when Vikings coach Chuck Voss was starting to turn around the program. “Our goal is to start taking some of those kids that are going to MAC schools. That’s how we get better.

“Cleveland State got there in 2000. They’re 10 years ahead of where we’re at.”

YSU plans to add a graduate assistant and further upgrade the offices and locker rooms over the next few years, but Burrows knows there’s only so much the school can do. For now, she’s placing a bigger emphasis on academics — “That translates to the court,” she said — and hopes to field a .500 team by 2012.

“You’re not going to turn a program around in one year,” she said. “It’s a progressive thing.

“We’re just getting better every day in the gym and trying to make some strides every year. By the 2012, I think we’ll really try to make that move.”

1403
YSU Penguin Athletics / MVFC Top Returning Players
« on: May 13, 2011, 06:02:59 PM »
I was checking to see how we stand up in certain areas going into 2012. I included the rank from the end of 2011. By the way ...the class rank is from last year ...so add a year for 2012.





Top Runners (overall)

1. Jamaine Cook, Youngstown St.                       RB SO 11 1276 219   0 393 1888  171.64  287    6.58
 2. Carlos Anderson, UNI                               RB SO 12  974 122  34 680 1810  150.83  215    8.42
 3. D.J. McNorton, North Dakota St.                    RB JR 14 1559 433   0  27 2019  144.21  306    6.60
 7. Chris Douglas, Missouri St.                        RB JR 11 1051 108   0  34 1193  108.45  171    6.98
 8. Tirrell Rennie, UNI                                QB JR 12 1291   0   0   0 1291  107.58  232    5.56
 9. Bryce Flowers, Western Ill.                        RB FR 13  804 332   0 257 1393  107.15  182    7.65
10. Jermaine Saffold, Missouri St.                     WR JR 11    4 869   0 254 1127  102.45   65   17.34
12. Tyrone Walker, Illinois St.                        WR SO 11    0 974   0   0  974   88.55   59   16.51
13. Caulton Ray, Western Ill.                          RB SO 13 1075  65   0   0 1140   87.69  254    4.49
15. Stephen Johnston, Missouri St.                     RB JR 11  752 180   0   0  932   84.73  164    5.68
16. Steve Strother, Southern Ill.                      RB SO 11  467 124   0 339  930   84.55  109    8.53

Top Rusher (position)
 
Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm  Rush  Yds TD Avg Yds/gm
 2. Jamaine Cook, Youngstown St.                       RB SO 11 241 1276  11   5  116.00
 3. D.J. McNorton, North Dakota St.                    RB JR 14 280 1559  15   5  111.36
 4. Tirrell Rennie, UNI                                QB JR 12 232 1291  15   5  107.58
 6. Chris Douglas, Missouri St.                        RB JR 11 152 1051  11   6   95.55
 7. Caulton Ray, Western Ill.                          RB SO 13 246 1075   9   4   82.69
 8. Carlos Anderson, UNI                               RB SO 12 172  974   2   5   81.17
 9. Stephen Johnston, Missouri St.                     RB JR 11 147  752   5   5   68.36
10. Bryce Flowers, Western Ill.                        RB FR 13 150  804   8   5   61.85
11. Erik Smith, Illinois St.                           RB SO 11 142  656   4   4   59.64
12. Shakir Bell, Indiana St.                           RB FR 11  95  649   2   6   59.00

Scorers (non-QB, non-kicker)
Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm  TD  Okm Oka FGM FGA Pts PtsGm
 2. D.J. McNorton, North Dakota St.                    RB JR 14  19   0   0   0   0 114   8.14
 9. Jamaine Cook, Youngstown St.                       RB SO 11  12   0   0   0   0  72   6.55
 9. Chris Douglas, Missouri St.                        RB JR 11  12   0   0   0   0  72   6.55
 9. Tyrone Walker, Illinois St.                        WR SO 11  12   0   0   0   0  72   6.55
13. Adaris Bellamy, Youngstown St.                     RB FR 11  11   0   0   0   0  66   6.00
16. Ashton Leggett, Illinois St.                       RB JR 11   9   0   0   0   0  56   5.09
18. Shariff Harris, Southern Ill.                      RB JR 11   8   0   0   0   0  48   4.36
18. Justin Hilton, Indiana St.                         WR JR 11   8   0   0   0   0  48   4.36
21. Bryce Flowers, Western Ill.                        RB FR 13   9   0   0   0   0  54   4.15
21. Caulton Ray, Western Ill.                          RB SO 13   9   0   0   0   0  54   4.15


Top Kickers (only 4 schools return starters)

4. Ryan Jastram, North Dakota St.                     K  JR 14  23  14   .609  1.00
 6. Austin Witmer, Missouri St.                        K  FR 11   9   6   .667   .55
 7. Cory Little, Indiana St.                           K  FR 11   7   5   .714   .45
 7. Jordan Chiles, Missouri St.                        P  JR 11  13   5   .385   .45
 9. Kyle Harris, South Dakota St.                      K  JR  9   8   2   .250   .22

Top PUNTING (only 4 returning starters)
 
Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm Punt Yds   Avg   PuntGm
 2. Nick Liste, Youngstown St.                         K  FR 11  41 1698  41.41   3.73
 4. Austin Pucylowski, Southern Ill.                   P  FR 11  40 1592  39.80   3.64
 6. Jordan Chiles, Missouri St.                        P  JR 11  56 2147  38.34   5.09
 7. Steven Fetzer, Illinois St.                        K  SR 11  47 1751  37.26   4.27


Top Kick-off return men
 
Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm KRet Yds  TD   Avg   RetGm
 1. Carlos Anderson, UNI                               RB SO 12  25  680   2  27.20   2.08
 2. Cameron Hunt, Illinois St.                         RB FR 11  14  351   0  25.07   1.27
 4. Brian Berry, Missouri St.                          DB FR 11  15  353   0  23.53   1.36
 5. Dominique Clare, South Dakota St.                  RB JR  9  13  296   0  22.77   1.44
 6. Justin Howard, North Dakota St.                    WR SO 14  20  454   0  22.70   1.43
  8. Jamaine Cook, Youngstown St.                       RB SO 11  21  393   0  18.71   1.91
 9. Jamarious Boatwright, Youngstown St.               DB FR 11  16  253   0  15.81   1.45
10. George Cheeseborough, Indiana St.                  RB SO  9  18  250   0  13.89   2.00



Secondary

Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm Int Yds  TD IntPgm
 2. Calvin Burnett, Indiana St.                        DB FR 11   6  39   0   .55
 4. Jimmie Strong, Missouri St.                        DB JR  9   4  75   1   .44
 5. Andre Martin, UNI                                  DB SO 12   5  66   1   .42
 7. Marcus Williams, North Dakota St.                  DB FR 14   4  93   1   .29
  8. Larry King, Indiana St.                            DB FR 11   3  26   0   .27
11. L.J. Fort, UNI                                     LB JR 12   3   4   0   .25
12. Tyler West, Western Ill.                           DB JR 13   3  70   0   .23
13. Boo Rodgers, Southern Ill.                         DB FR  9   2   3   0   .22
14. Daniel Eaves, North Dakota St.                     DB JR 14   3  53   1   .21
15. Dirk Kool, South Dakota St.                        LB JR 11   2   7   0   .18

Pass efficiency (defense)
 
Rank           Team                      Gm  Att Cmp PPct   Int  IPct Yds  YdAtt  TD   TDPct Rating  Win Loss Tie
  1. North Dakota St.                    14 435 234  53.79  18   4.14 2645   6.08  12   2.76  105.70   9   5   0
  2. South Dakota St.                    11 333 180  54.05   9   2.70 2037   6.12  14   4.20  113.95   5   6   0
  3. Western Ill.                        13 337 188  55.79  11   3.26 2257   6.70  10   2.97  115.32   8   5   0
  4. Southern Ill.                       11 277 155  55.96  11   3.97 1967   7.10  15   5.42  125.58   5   6   0
  5. UNI                                 12 384 227  59.11  15   3.91 2895   7.54  17   4.43  129.23   7   5   0
  6. Indiana St.                         11 248 135  54.44  13   5.24 2031   8.19  15   6.05  132.67   5   5   0
  7. Missouri St.                        11 360 215  59.72  11   3.06 3097   8.60  22   6.11  146.02   5   6   0
  8. Illinois St.                        11 317 196  61.83  13   4.10 2711   8.55  26   8.20  152.50   6   5   0
  9. Youngstown St.                      11 328 209  63.72   7   2.13 2796   8.52  26   7.93  157.20   3   8   0





Top passers
 
Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm Att Cmp  Int   CPct  Yds Yds/Att Yds/Cmp TD CmpGm
 1. Matt Brown, Illinois St.                           QB SO 34   0 222  11   64.35 2670   7.74  12.03  22  20.18
 2. Thomas O'Brien, South Dakota St.                   QB JR 37   0 201  15   53.60 2236   5.96  11.12  10  18.27
 4. Kurt Hess, Youngstown St.                          QB FR 30   0 179   8   58.88 2117   6.96  11.83  12  16.27
 6. Ronnie Fouch, Indiana St.                          QB JR 28   0 168   5   58.13 2252   7.79  13.40  20  15.27
 8. Jose Mohler, North Dakota St.                      QB SO 17   0 101   6   58.72 1181   6.87  11.69   5   8.42
 9. Tirrell Rennie, UNI                                QB JR 16   0  94  11   55.95 1526   9.08  16.23   8   7.83
10. Paul McIntosh, Southern Ill.                       QB SO 30   0  15   2   50.00  231   7.70  15.40   3   1.67
11. Coy Glass, Indiana St.                             QB JR 25   0  11   2   44.00  116   4.64  10.55   1   1.00
12. Matt Lancaster, Illinois St.                       QB SO 15   0   9   0   60.00  128   8.53  14.22   1    .82
16. Trevor Wooden, Missouri St.                        QB FR  2   0   1   0   50.00   17   8.50  17.00   0    .09

Most productive receivers

Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm  Rec Yds  TD  RecGm YdsCat  Yds/gm
 1. Tyrone Walker, Illinois St.                        WR SO 11  59  974  12   5.36  16.51   88.55
 4. Jermaine Saffold, Missouri St.                     WR JR 11  53  869   5   4.82  16.40   79.00
 5. Tyrel Kool, South Dakota St.                       WR SO 11  64  808   2   5.82  12.63   73.45
 6. Marvon Sanders, Illinois St.                       WR JR 11  73  754   2   6.64  10.33   68.55
 7. Terriun Crump, Western Ill.                        WR JR 13  56  888   5   4.31  15.86   68.31
 8. Justin Hilton, Indiana St.                         WR JR 11  40  684   7   3.64  17.10   62.18
 9. Jeff Evans, Southern Ill.                          WR SR 10  40  576   3   4.00  14.40   57.60
11. Warren Holloway, North Dakota St.                  WR JR 14  49  698   5   3.50  14.24   49.86
12. Alex Jones, Indiana St.                            TE JR 11  30  545   4   2.73  18.17   49.55
14. Jarred Herring, UNI                                WR JR 12  31  549   5   2.58  17.71   45.75
15. Cadarrius Dotson, Missouri St.                     WR SO 11  38  495   1   3.45  13.03   45.00
16. Brandon Hubert, South Dakota St.                   WR FR 11  32  375   1   2.91  11.72   34.09


Pass Efficiency (offense)

Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm Att Cmp    CPct  Int   IPct PYds YdsAtt  TD  TdPct Rating
 1. Matt Barr, Western Ill.                            QB SR 13 393 229   58.27  10    2.54 3410   8.68  27   6.87  148.74
 2. Matt Brown, Illinois St.                           QB SO 11 345 222   64.35  11    3.19 2670   7.74  22   6.38  144.02
 3. Ronnie Fouch, Indiana St.                          QB JR 11 289 168   58.13   5    1.73 2252   7.79  20   6.92  142.96
 4. Tirrell Rennie, UNI                                QB JR 12 168  94   55.95  11    6.55 1526   9.08   8   4.76  134.87
 5. Chris Dieker, Southern Ill.                        QB SR 11 256 158   61.72  11    4.30 1816   7.09  15   5.86  132.05
 6. Cody Kirby, Missouri St.                           QB SR 11 313 179   57.19   6    1.92 2307   7.37  10   3.19  125.81
 7. Kurt Hess, Youngstown St.                          QB FR 11 304 179   58.88   8    2.63 2117   6.96  12   3.95  125.14
 8. Jose Mohler, North Dakota St.                      QB SO 12 172 101   58.72   6    3.49 1181   6.87   5   2.91  119.01
 9. Thomas O'Brien, South Dakota St.                   QB JR 11 375 201   53.60  15    4.00 2236   5.96  10   2.67  104.49




TACKLES

Rank           Player                                 Pos Cl Gm  Solo   Assist  PerGm
 2. Josh Howe, Illinois St.                            LB JR 11  49  63  10.18
 5. Mike Lien, South Dakota St.                        LB JR 11  37  61   8.91
 6. Jacolby Washington, Indiana St.                    LB SO 11  59  33   8.36
 8. John Sasson, Youngstown St.                        LB JR 11  44  45   8.09
 9. L.J. Fort, UNI                                     LB JR 12  37  55   7.67
13. Anthony Wise, South Dakota St.                     DB JR 11  28  48   6.91
15. Austin Davis, Illinois St.                         DB SO 11  35  40   6.82
17. Preston Evans, North Dakota St.                    LB JR 14  37  58   6.79
18. Chad Willson, North Dakota St.                     LB JR 11  32  42   6.73
19. Joe Okon, Southern Ill.                            LB SO 11  33  39   6.55
20. Andre Martin, UNI                                  DB SO 12  33  44   6.42

1404
YSU Penguin Athletics / Baseball Drops a Pair
« on: May 13, 2011, 05:30:45 PM »
Baseball falls to Butler:

1-2
6-8

We are still a conference win away to clinch a tourney spot.

1405
YSU Penguin Athletics / 2011 MVFC qb Sack Totals
« on: May 13, 2011, 11:03:41 AM »
I am gathering some stats together for a post on returning 2012 conference leaders, and one thing stuck out more than anything else on defense:

We had only one player in the top-25 in sack totals ...that was Danny Stewart at #25. Only three player in the top-50. We were also last in turn-over's gained. I understand we were playing a great deal of coverage, but this style of defense is not going to win the MVFC. We need to get back to some Penguin D.

Anyway, I will have that post with the returning players later today. I think you will all be shocked at what we return, and what we do not.


1406
The Youngstown State baseball team will play Akron in a special day game at Eastwood Field on Wednesday, May 18.

First pitch between the Penguins and Zips will be at 11 a.m., and gates will open at 10:30 a.m. The game is presented by Akron Children's Hospital in conjunction with the Mahoning Valley Scrappers.

Approximately 2,000 students from area schools are expected to attend. The $5 package for students includes a game ticket, lunch and an educational curriculum. Individual tickets for those not taking part in a group package are $3.

For more information, contact the Scrappers Front Office at (330) 505-0000.

1407
Indianapolis, Ind. -- Youngstown State junior Jordan Ingalls has been to the All-Horizon League First-Team and senior Kim Klonowski was named to the second-team after a vote by the Horizon League head softball coaches, the league announced on Tuesday (May 10).

Ingalls becomes the first YSU player to earn first-team honors since McKenzie Bedra in 2008, and Klonowski is the first multi-year honoree since Bedra was a back-to-back first-team choice in 2007 and 2008. Klonowski was also named All-Horizon League Second-Team in 2009.

This season, Ingalls led the team and the Horizon League with a .385 batting average and ranked tied for second in the league with 40 runs batted in. Ingalls also ranked second in the league with four triples, fifth with 55 hits and tied for fifth with 87 total bases.

Ingalls set career highs in hits, triples, runs batted in, home runs (five) and slugging percentage (.608).

Ingalls was also the first YSU player to win consecutive Horizon League Player-of-the-Week Awards when she caputred the award on March 14 and 21.

Klonowski is just the fifth YSU player to earn All-Horizon League honors in multiple years and lead the Guins with a .400 batting average against league opponents.

Overall, Klonowski batted .319 with nine doubles, two home runs and 18 runs batted in.

Over the last 19 games she appeared, Klonowski batted an impressive .451 (23-for-51) with five doubles, two home runs, eight runs batted in and scored five times. She also owned a .667 slugging percentage during that time.

1408
YSU Penguin Athletics / HL Track and Field Championships
« on: May 08, 2011, 06:51:33 PM »
Well, if the scores are final, Men and Women both came in second. The ladies were behind UWM by only 3 points ...174 to 171 (men were second but not very close, also to UWM). I tell you what, that 3 points is a single win, 2 place, or 3 shows. What a heart-breaker. On a positive note, some freshman and sophs did very well for us. Butler an UDM did better than expected, so some points were probably lost there. So, another good season by coach G and staff.

1409
YSU Penguin Athletics / YSU Football Alumni Golf Outing
« on: May 07, 2011, 09:35:50 AM »
The Youngstown State Football Alumni Group held their annual Golf Outing on Friday at the Youngstown Country Club. More than 90 former Penguins turned out to take part in the event, which allowed former players of all generations to gather for a fun afternoon.

Winning the four-person best-ball scramble was the grouping of Randy Barker (1980-81), Ray Briya (1965-67), Pete Brittain and Frank Pokorny (1982-84) who carded the low-round of 63. Finishing second was Joey Briganti (1968-71), Mike Roman, Marty Willmitch and Vince Chianese with a 64. Placing third with a 65 was Ray DiDonato, Tom Meola (1977-79), Carey Orosz (1976-79) and Tom Orosz carding a 65.

Skill prize winners Zach Underhill who made the longest putt on No. 3, YSU offensive coordinator Shane Montgomery who was closest to the pin on No. 6, former YSU quarterback Jeff Ryan (1998-01) who had the longest drives on holes No. 7 and No. 10 and Don McCloud (1973-77) who was closest to the pin on No. 16 and drained the longest putt on No. 18.

The major contributing sponsor was Ford Office Machine. Additional sponsors for the event were Columbiana Buick Oldsmobile Cadillac, Pennsylvania Coach Lines, Huntington National Bank, Quench Bar & Grill, Taco Bell/Semrick Inc., ms consultants inc.

Raffle prizes included a set of Adams Golf Insight Irons, Maxfli Golf Bag, Coors Golf Bag, Miller Lite Golf Bag, New Taylor Made R11 Driver, four Pittsburgh Pirates tickets, YSU autographed football and jersey, two game tickets to Penguin Club Loge.

The evening was capped by a special Spaghetti Dinner, which had more than 100 in attendance.

The next YSU Football Alumni Group event is a Bocce Social which is being held at the MVR in July. For more information contact Tom Morella at (330) 941-2351.

Skill Prize Winners
No. 3 - Longest Putt: Zach Underhill
No. 6 - Closest to Pin: Shane Montgomery
No. 7  - Longest Drive in Fairway: Jeff Ryan
No. 10 - Longest Drive in Fairway: Jeff Ryan
No. 16 - Closest to Pin: Don McCloud
No. 18 - Longest Putt: Don McCloud

1410
Indianapolis, Ind. -- Youngstown State sophomore  Alison Roth won the discus on the first day of the Horizon League Track and Field Outdoor Championships to headline the Penguins' efforts. YSU took three of the top four spots in the women's discus while in the men's event, Bobby Grace was second at IUPUI's Michael J. Carroll Stadium on Friday.

Roth had toss of 45.91 meters to take the top spot. Penguins also finished third and fourth as KaiCee Kubicina had toss of 43.67 meters and sophomore Kailtyn Griffith had a throw of 43.56 meters. It was the first Horizon League title for Roth who was second in the discus last year. Her toss is the third-best mark in school history.

Grace was second with a throw of 49.13 meters finishing behind Milwaukee's Scott Erickson. Also for YSU, Sam Cassano was fourth and George Thomas was fifth.

In the 10,000 meters, the men's top finisher was Joe Copploe who was eighth while on the women's side freshman Anna Pompeo was ninth.

After two completed events, the YSU women own a 20-18 lead over Milwaukee, while on the men's side Butler is in first with 17 points, Milwaukee is second with 16 points and the Penguins are third with 14 points.

Day two of the track and field championships is scheduled to get underway at 1:30 p.m.

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