Date and time: Saturday, October 30, at 1:30 pm ET
Television: SportSouth and FCS-Central; Tom Werme and Sam Wyche on the call from Spartanburg
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This, somewhat amazingly, is going to be the fifth year in a row the game between Wofford and The Citadel has been televised. I believe it’s the third consecutive time Werme and Wyche have called the game; in 2006 the game was televised by South Carolina ETV, while the last three (and Saturday’s game) have all been carried by SportSouth.
Tangent: The Citadel doesn’t appear on television that often, which is understandable, but this week there are two Big XII matchups that won’t be televised, which is less understandable. One reason for this is the Big XII has a poor TV contract, and the other is that one of the matchups is a Texas A&M home game.
Aggies AD Bill Byrne is well-known for his aversion to pay-per-view telecasts, or regional broadcasts where the school doesn’t receive a payout. He apparently believes televising home games hurts attendance. He is almost certainly wrong about that, at least in the long term. I actually wrote a little bit about this subject in last year’s Wofford preview.
A school with a tradition as grand as that of Texas A&M should have no trouble with home attendance in the first place. At any rate, television is a great promotional tool for a school’s football program and the university in general, and it’s very surprising that in 2010, there is still someone in a position of authority who doesn’t believe that.
Byrne may be the final holdout, after the 2007 death of longtime Chicago Blackhawks owner “Dollar Bill” Wirtz. As a result, Texas A&M was the last FBS team to appear on TV this season, when it finally had a game against Oklahoma State televised.
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When I initially started writing this post, my idea was to use the bulk of it to discuss Kevin Higgins’ status as head coach of The Citadel. However, I changed my mind about one-third of the way through it, for a couple of reasons.
One is that I felt I had not had time to thoroughly research a couple of points I wanted to make. I didn’t want to write some hurried screed lacking proper foundation, particularly on this issue. Also, I’m not sure writing about a coach’s tenure immediately after his team commits nine turnovers lends itself to treating things with proper perspective.
It’s just a blog, but I do have some standards…
What I’m going to do, I think, is wait until The Citadel’s bye week, and then in lieu of a normal preview (since there won’t be a game to write about) I’ll post my thoughts on the coaching situation.
Because of the last-minute change in approach, this preview is going to be shorter than normal. That is probably just as well, because to be perfectly honest I’m not quite sure what to say about Saturday’s game against the Terriers, other than the Bulldogs can’t possibly play worse on offense than they did against Georgia Southern. At least, I hope not.
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Wofford was 3-8 last season, as it struggled with a lot of injuries and what was considered a bad case of fumbleitis, although not as bad as the Bulldogs’ fumbling problems this year. The Citadel has fumbled 33 times, losing 19. Through eight games last season, Wofford had fumbled 19 times, losing 13.
Wofford lost one fumble in its ninth game, against The Citadel, but unfortunately that didn’t keep the Terriers from scoring 43 points.
Last season one of Wofford’s key injuries was to fullback Eric Breitenstein. He’s back this season, and leading the nation in scoring, averaging just over two touchdowns per game (he scored four times against Furman while rushing for 234 yards). Breitenstein has scored at least two touchdowns in his last six games.
Mitch Allen struggled last year for the Terriers, but the quarterback has been much improved this season. Allen had a season-high 178 yards rushing against Western Carolina (one of three Terriers to rush for over 100 yards in that game). He also has a 3.9 GPA in Physics, which a professor at another Southern Conference school once told me would be the equivalent of a 2.9 GPA at The Citadel. (Hey, I’m just reporting the facts here.)
While perusing the statistics, I was surprised to see that Wofford’s opponents actually have had a slight edge in time of possession. Wofford is converting 43% of its third down attempts, which is a little lower than what the Terriers would like but better than last season. Wofford as usual has not shied away from going for it on 4th down, and the Terriers are 8 for 11 in that category.
Mike Niam is a 6’3″, 245 lb. linebacker for Wofford. He played in two games last season for the Terriers, leading the team in tackles both times, before tearing his ACL. He returned for spring practice, then had to have surgery on his knee in the fall, when it was discovered he had torn his ACL again. He missed the first five games of the season, but returned two weeks ago — and has led the team in tackles in both games since returning.
Wofford’s best defensive player, though, is DE Ameet Pall, a Canadian who leads the nation in sacks per game (1.5). He has 10.5 sacks total on the season (3 of those against Furman — boy, that was a tough game for the Paladins, wasn’t it?). Peet has 15 tackles for loss overall. At least one observer rates him ahead of GSU defensive tackle Brent Russell, which is really saying something.
Wofford placekicker Christian Reed is 8-10 on FG attempts but has missed four PATs this season (including a stretch of three misses in a row). The Terriers have only punted 25 times in seven games; just five of those have been returned (although for a 13-yard average that probably concerns Terrier coaches).
Wofford games don’t feature a lot of penalties. The Terriers are being flagged about five times per game. Wofford opponents are only averaging three penalties per contest, which I find a bit curious.
One injury of note for Wofford: center Trey Johnson broke his arm in last week’s game against Elon. He will be replaced by redshirt freshman Jared Singleton, who played most of that contest after Johnson got hurt.
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Last season’s game against Wofford was one of the more disappointing games I’ve seen at Johnson Hagood Stadium. (Unfortunately, this year I’ve seen two games at JHS that were even more disappointing.) The Bulldogs played poorly in all aspects of the game, and the score reflected that.
Kevin Higgins thinks that the matchup with Wofford on Saturday will be “a great football game“. I’m glad he thinks it will be, since he’s the head coach. Of course, last season he thought the Bulldogs were “going to war“. That wasn’t quite the case.
I just watch the games from a safe distance, and from what I’ve seen, I don’t think it’s going to be a great game. Wofford has confidence, experience, and is at home. The Citadel (at least offensively) lacks confidence, experience, and is on the road. The Bulldogs have lost 11 straight SoCon games away from home, and most of them weren’t close losses.
I would like to be wrong on Saturday. Very wrong.
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Final note: Jean Marshall, who for many years was the ticket manager for The Citadel’s department of athletics, died last week at the age of 80. I was just one of many people who had the chance to interact with Ms. Marshall over the years. As was stated in The Blue and White (probably by Andy Solomon), “She was a favorite of many and will be missed.” Condolences to her family.
Filed under: Football, The Citadel | Tagged: Ameet Pall, Andy Solomon, Big XII, Bill Byrne, Bill Wirtz, Brent Russell, Chicago Blackhawks, Christian Reed, Elon, Eric Breitenstein, FCS-Central, Furman, Georgia Southern, Jared Singleton, Johnson Hagood Stadium, Kevin Higgins, Mike Niam, Mitch Allen, Sam Wyche, SC ETV, Southern Conference, SportSouth, Texas A&M, The Blue and White, The Citadel, Tom Werme, Trey Johnson, Western Carolina, Wofford |
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