The Citadel vs. Western Carolina, to be played at historic Johnson Hagood Stadium, with kickoff at 2:00 pm ET on November 4, 2017.
The game will be streamed on ESPN3.com. Kendall Lewis will handle play-by-play, while former Bulldogs linebacker James Riley supplies the analysis.
The contest can be heard on radio via the various affiliates of The Citadel Sports Network. WQNT-1450 AM [audio link], originating in Charleston, will be the flagship station.
Mike Legg (the “Voice of the Bulldogs”) will call the action alongside analyst Lee Glaze.
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The Citadel Sports Network — 2017 Affiliates
Charleston: WQNT 1450AM/92.1 FM/102.1 FM (Flagship)
Columbia: WQXL 1470AM/95.9FM
Greenville: WLFJ 92.9FM/660AM
Sumter: WDXY 1240AM/105.9FM
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Links of interest:
– Game preview, The Post and Courier
– The next two games for The Citadel are fairly important
– Aron Spann III was named SoCon Defensive Player of the Month for October
– Spann spent most of October intercepting passes and recovering fumbles
– Game notes from The Citadel and Western Carolina
– Preview on The Citadel’s website
– Preview on Western Carolina’s website
– FCS Coaches’ poll (The Citadel is receiving votes, and would be ranked #32 if the poll went that far)
– STATS FCS poll (The Citadel is receiving votes, and would be ranked #35 if the poll went that far)
– Brent Thompson’s 10/31 press conference, including comments from Cam Jackson and Aron Spann III (video)
– Brent Thompson’s 11/1 radio show (video)
– Promo for Western Carolina-The Citadel (video)
– Cam Jackson promo for Senior Day (video)
– ESPN3 replay of Furman-Western Carolina (video)
– Game story from Furman-Western Carolina
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– My review of last week’s game against VMI
– Link to ESPN3’s streaming coverage of Western Carolina-The Citadel
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Non-football links:
– The Citadel Basketball 2017-18 “Hype Video”
– The Citadel’s 2018 baseball schedule has been released
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In my review of the VMI game, I made an error. I make plenty of mistakes as it is, but this one was particularly dumb and needs to be corrected.
The record for most wins over a three-year period is held by the 1990-1991-1992 teams, not the 1959-1960-1961 squads (as I incorrectly stated in my post). Therefore, the current Bulldogs still need one victory to tie the mark for most victories over three consecutive seasons. The current mark is 25 (7 wins in 1990, 7 wins in 1991, and 11 victories in 1992).
Over a four-year period, the record for most wins is 30. That has happened twice, in two overlapping stretches — 1989-1990-1991-1992, and 1990-1991-1992-1993.
As of last week, The Citadel has won 29 games over the last four seasons, with three games left in the 2017 campaign.
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The Citadel needs one more victory this year to clinch a winning season. It would be the third straight winning campaign for the Bulldogs. There have been five previous occasions in which The Citadel strung together three consecutive winning seasons:
- 1923-1924-1925
- 1924-1925-1926
- 1959-1960-1961
- 1979-1980-1981
- 1990-1991-1992
You may have noticed the first couple of three-year runs above include some duplicate seasons. That is because The Citadel actually had four straight winning seasons from 1923 through 1926, the only time in school history that has happened.
The record for most consecutive non-losing campaigns is five, from 1988 through 1992. Four of those years resulted in winning seasons, while the 1989 team went 5-5-1. The Citadel won 38 games during that period, the most ever by the program over a five-year stretch.
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After reviewing the participation reports for the Bulldogs’ games so far this season, I believe that 15 “true” freshmen on the current roster have played in at least one game this season. The list:
- Jalen Barr
- Brandon Berry
- Lane Botkin
- Aaron Brawley
- Micah Byrd-Brown
- Jonathan Cole
- Willie Eubanks III
- Sean-Thomas Faulkner
- Collin Flanders
- Patrick Ivey
- Jon Barrett Lewis
- Keyonte Sessions
- Matthew Taylor
- John Wesley Whiteside
- Wally Wilmore
In addition, two freshmen who have since left the team took part in at least one game for The Citadel.
Of the original list of signees, it appears that eight have not yet seen the field for the Bulldogs this season. Presumably, those eight players are likely candidates to redshirt this season.
Three of the players listed above were not on the signee list from last January — Collin Flanders, Micah Byrd-Brown, and Patrick Ivey.
At his first press conference as The Citadel’s head coach, I remember that Mike Houston discussed a personal desire to field “older teams…guys who have been with us for three or four years.” I assume that Brent Thompson has a similar philosophy, but it may be that some of the turnover on the roster following last season, especially in certain positions, has led to more true freshmen playing than might have been expected – or wanted.
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Brent Thompson on what the team’s mindset needs to be in the red zone:
We’ve got to get off the football [line of scrimmage] and we’ve got to be able to grind out three or four yards at a time, no matter what the box looks like…
…maybe we need to come downhill more. Maybe we need to stop tricking them, and doing this and that, and let’s just line up and show them the whites of our eyes and let’s play football.
That’s a good line — “show them the whites of our eyes”. Part of Thompson’s education at Norwich obviously included a study of the battle tactics of William Prescott.
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On Friday, six new members of The Citadel’s Athletic Hall of Fame will be honored at the annual dinner (which had to be rescheduled after Hurricane Irma disrupted on-campus events earlier this year).
Reading through the bios of the inductees, I naturally learned a few things I didn’t know before. For one, baseball player Steve Arrington won an unusual triple crown in 1973, as he led all Southern Conference batters in home runs and RBI, and also led the league in strikeouts by a pitcher. You don’t see that combination every day.
Francis “Pete” Grant played both offense and defense for The Citadel’s football team in 1965, the only member of that squad to do so. Given that the restrictions on unlimited substitution had been lifted for good by then, I have to wonder if Grant was the last Bulldog to regularly play both ways.
I did know that during his time at The Citadel, Cliff Washburn was named the SoCon player of the week in both football and basketball, the first person to ever pull off that double. I also knew that Kris Kut could really sling the javelin (three league titles), and now helps current Bulldog athletes throw it even farther than he did.
The two honorary inductees are Gil Kirkman, impresario of The Citadel Sports Network, and Andy Clawson, head athletic trainer for The Citadel. When Clawson was hired by The Citadel, the #1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 was “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” by Jim Croce.
Yes, Clawson has been around for a while.
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As is almost necessary when discussing Western Carolina, the school must be harshly criticized for a decision made long ago that has had a lasting impact.
Back in 1933, the students and administration at the institution chose “Catamounts” as the official nickname for its varsity athletic teams. The runner-up choice was “Mountain Boomers”.
How in the world can you not pick “Mountain Boomers” as your nickname when you have a golden opportunity to do so? What a waste.
From reading between the lines in the school’s official account of how the nickname was chosen, it appears that the football coach at the time, a gentleman named C.C. Poindexter, influenced the final decision.
Poindexter wanted his players to have the “fierce spirit, savage attacks, and lightning quick moves” of a catamount. Alas, his football teams at the school compiled a record of 10-26-2 over four seasons.
I bet they would have won a lot more games as the Mountain Boomers.
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As far as this Saturday is concerned, Western Carolina head coach Mark Speir had this to say on the game’s importance to his program:
This is probably our biggest week…maybe since our staff has been here…to decide [if] the culture, the expectations, the standards of this program [have] changed.
…Now that [we’ve] been knocked down and had a disappointing loss, are we a different team this week because we have two losses, as we were last week. Are we going to be a front-running team, or are we going to be a team that’s satisfied and complacent, or is this a football team that has truly made a change — and not necessarily even how the scoreboard comes out. We can…play a whale of a game this Saturday, and lose…because we’re playing a good football team in The Citadel, and we can go play great football and still get beat.
What I’m saying is we’re going to see as a staff, how this team comes [to] practice this week. How are we going to compete this Saturday…this may be our biggest week since we’ve been here. That is the challenge. What is the character of the 2017 Cats…this will say a lot about where we are as a program.
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Western Carolina is 6-3 on the season, 4-2 in the SoCon.
- WCU lost its opener 41-18 at Hawai’i, but actually outgained the Rainbow Warriors
- The Catamounts then dismantled Davidson 63-17; WCU had 778 yards of total offense in the contest
- Western Carolina won the next week at Gardner-Webb, 42-27; Detrez Newsome’s 146 yards lifted his career rushing yards total to over 3,000
- WCU opened SoCon play with a big home win over Samford, 38-34 (incidentally, the game took 4 hours and 10 minutes to play)
- At Chattanooga, the Catamounts bashed the Mocs 45-7
- Western Carolina lost a tough game in OT at Wofford, 35-28 (a game marred by shaky officiating in the extra session)
- In a 49-10 victory, WCU took care of business in the second half against East Tennessee State, scoring 21 points in both the third and fourth quarters
- The Catamounts got past a stubborn VMI in Lexington, 26-7
- Last week, Furman beat WCU in a rainstorm in Cullowhee, 28-6
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Statistics of interest for Western Carolina through nine games:
WCU | Opponents | |
Points per game | 35.0 | 22.9 |
Rushing yardage | 2239 | 1765 |
Average per rush | 5.4 | 4.6 |
Average per game | 248.8 | 196.1 |
TDs rushing | 22 | 14 |
Passing yardage | 1851 | 1504 |
Comp-Att-Int | 144-243-8 | 129-265-10 |
Average per pass | 7.6 | 5.7 |
TDs passing | 16 | 11 |
Total offense | 4090 | 3269 |
Total plays | 659 | 647 |
Yards per play | 6.2 | 5.1 |
Kick returns-yards | 28-541 | 49-827 |
Punt returns-yards | 20-135 | 13-94 |
Fumbles/lost | 11/6 | 9/7 |
Avg penalties/penalty yards per game | 7.3/69.6 | 6.9/62.1 |
Net punt average | 40.1 | 35.8 |
Time of possession/game | 27:49 | 32:11 |
3rd down conversions | 50/121 | 50/142 |
3rd down conversion rate | 41.3% | 35.2% |
Sacks by-yards | 19-135 | 22-129 |
Field goals-attempts | 7-14 | 8-9 |
Red Zone touchdown rate | (23-34) 67.6% | (19-32) 59.4% |
- Western Carolina is 7th nationally in rushing offense, but 97th in rushing defense
- WCU’s offense is 11th in yards per rush, while its defense is 89th in yards per rush allowed
- The Catamounts are 31st in offensive third down conversion rate, and 42nd on defensive third down conversion rate
- WCU is 19th in FCS in scoring offense, and 41st in scoring defense
- Western Carolina is 34th in offensive pass efficiency, and 6th in defensive pass efficiency
- The Catamounts have excellent special teams numbers, including 4th nationally in net punting and 8th in kick return defense
- With three defensive TDs, Western Carolina ranks 12th-best in that category
- WCU is one of the league’s more penalized teams, and ranks 49th in most penalties per game nationally
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Key stats for The Citadel through eight games:
The Citadel | Opponents | |
Points per game | 24.4 | 17.8 |
Rushing yardage | 2573 | 855 |
Average per rush | 5.3 | 3.5 |
Average per game | 321.6 | 106.9 |
TDs rushing | 20 | 12 |
Passing yardage | 705 | 1454 |
Comp-Att-Int | 41-104-3 | 128-215-11 |
Average per pass | 6.8 | 6.8 |
TDs passing | 6 | 7 |
Total offense | 3278 | 2309 |
Total plays | 590 | 456 |
Yards per play | 5.6 | 5.1 |
Kick returns-yards | 15-281 | 18-441 |
Punt returns-yards | 15-118 | 8-55 |
Fumbles/lost | 16/5 | 9/5 |
Avg penalties/penalty yards per game | 4.6/42.0 | 2.9/28.4 |
Net punt average | 36.1 | 36.2 |
Time of possession/game | 34:26 | 25:33 |
3rd down conversions | 57/126 | 29/89 |
3rd down conversion rate | 45.2% | 32.6% |
Sacks by-yards | 16-87 | 5-33 |
Field goals-attempts | 4-12 | 3-5 |
Red Zone touchdown rate | (19/34) 55.9% | (12/18) 66.7% |
- The Citadel is 14th in FCS in offensive third down conversion rate, and 18th in defensive third down conversion rate
- The Bulldogs are 2nd in rushing offense (behind only Kennesaw State), and 19th in rushing defense (which leads the SoCon)
- The Citadel is 14th nationally in yards per rush and 36th in yards per rush allowed
- Offensively, the Bulldogs are 48th in yards per play; on defense, The Citadel is 39th in yards per play allowed
- The Citadel is 2nd in FCS in time of possession (McNeese State leads in that category)
- The Bulldogs are 67th in scoring offense and 14th in scoring defense
- The Citadel has committed the 11th-fewest penalties per game in FCS
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When it comes to individual performers, much of the focus this week for the game at Johnson Hagood Stadium has been on one player, Western Carolina quarterback Tyrie Adams.
Adams (6’2″, 180 lbs.), a dynamic dual-threat QB, was injured last week in the Catamounts’ loss to Furman. The redshirt sophomore from St. Petersburg was sacked early in the second quarter and appeared to suffer a lower leg injury (on the ESPN3 broadcast, the play occurs at the 57:10 mark).
Despite what looked to be a potentially serious injury, Adams is still listed as the starter on the WCU two-deep. There are other indications that he may in fact play on Saturday. Brent Thompson stated during his radio show that the Bulldogs would certainly prepare for the game with the assumption that Adams would start.
If Adams does not play, Ray Smith (6’1″, 190 lbs.) will likely start. Smith, a redshirt junior who began his college career at East Carolina, entered the game against Furman after Adams went out.
Adams’ status is one thing, but Western Carolina has another impact player in the backfield, preseason all-SoCon selection Detrez Newsome (5’10”, 210 lbs.). Over the last decade, Newsome is the only Catamount running back to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season — and the native of Raeford, North Carolina has done so each of the last two years.
Despite missing three games this season, Newsome still has a chance at another 1,000-yard campaign, as the senior has amassed 736 yards in just six contests. Newsome is averaging 6.8 yards per carry.
Newsome is also a threat as a kick returner, and leads the Catamounts in returns. However, he is not listed in that role on this week’s two-deep.
Western Carolina’s all-time leading receiver is redshirt senior Terryon Robinson (5’11”, 190 lbs.). The preseason all-league pick has 45 receptions this season, averaging 15 yards per catch, and has seven TD receptions.
In the 2014 game between WCU and The Citadel, Robinson caught 10 passes for 183 yards.
The average size of Western Carolina’s projected starters on the offensive line: 6’4″, 298 lbs. The tallest and heaviest member of that group is Nathan Dalton (6’7″, 315 lbs.). The redshirt junior from East Flat Rock, North Carolina was a preseason second-team all-conference choice.
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Outside linebacker Tahjai Watt (6’5″, 215 lbs.) leads the Catamounts in tackles for loss (8) and sacks (6). The redshirt senior from Charlotte had only one career start before this season, but is clearly making the most of his final collegiate campaign.
The leading tackler for Western Carolina to this point in the season has been safety Marvin Tillman (6’1″, 195 lbs.). The native of Durham has 77 stops, and also shares the team lead in interceptions with three.
Keion Crossen (5’10”, 180 lbs.) was a preseason second-team All-SoCon pick. The senior cornerback is also a track star, as he won the league title in the 100-meter dash last year.
Redshirt junior Ian Berryman (6’0″, 205 lbs.) is one of the nation’s best punters. This season, Berryman has boomed 14 of his 44 punts for 50 yards or more, and has landed 20 of them inside the 20-yard line.
Berryman has also kicked off at times for Western Carolina, and is one of four different Catamounts to attempt field goals this season. Joshua Gibson (5’8″, 163 lbs.), the listed starter at the position, is 4 for 5 on field goal attempts this season, with a long of 43 yards.
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Odds and ends:
– The weather forecast for Saturday in Charleston, per the National Weather Service: sunny, with an expected high of 78 degrees. The low on Saturday night will be 61 degrees.
– Per one source that deals in such matters, Western Carolina is a 1 1/2 point favorite over The Citadel. The over/under is 50 1/2.
– Other lines involving SoCon teams: Mercer is a 2-point favorite over Samford; Wofford is a 12-point favorite over Chattanooga; and East Tennessee State is a 17 1/2 point favorite over VMI. Furman is off this week.
Around the Palmetto State, Clemson is a 7 1/2 point favorite at North Carolina State; South Carolina is a 24 1/2 point underdog at Georgia; Coastal Carolina is a 23 1/2 point underdog at Arkansas; Presbyterian is 17 1/2 point underdog at Monmouth; and Charleston Southern (ravenous for a league win) is a 10 1/2 point favorite at Gardner-Webb. South Carolina State is off this week.
– Massey Ratings: The Citadel is ranked 47th in FCS (out of 124 teams), a drop of one spot from last week.
Western Carolina is ranked 35th in FCS, falling three places from last week. Overall (all college teams ranked), The Citadel is 197th, while Western Carolina is 177th.
Massey projects a final score of Western Carolina 26, The Citadel 24. The Bulldogs are given a 47% chance of winning.
Other FCS rankings in Massey of note: Furman is 16th (up seven places), Wofford is 21st (unchanged from last week), Samford is 31st (down nine spots), Mercer is 34th (up six spots), Charleston Southern is 49th, Chattanooga is 66th (up nine spots), East Tennessee State is 72nd (down five places), Presbyterian is 88th, South Carolina State is 100th, and VMI is 115th (down one spot).
The FCS top five in Massey’s rankings, in order: North Dakota State, James Madison, South Dakota, South Dakota State, and Northern Iowa.
– Since 1911, The Citadel has an ominously poor 4-11 record in games played on November 4.
The last time the Bulldogs won a game on that date, it was in 1989 against Samford. The Citadel won 35-16 in the first home game played at Johnson Hagood Stadium after Hurricane Hugo.
The Citadel’s offense only attempted two passes during that contest, completing one (the QB in question was Speizio Stowers). While starting QB Jack Douglas did not complete a pass in the game, he did rush for 105 yards and a touchdown.
Douglas, Tom Frooman, and Raymond Mazyck combined for 310 yards and five TDs (three by Frooman). Alfred Williams added 55 yards to a potent ground attack.
That 1989 game is The Citadel’s only November 4 home victory in the modern history of Johnson Hagood Stadium. Indeed, the Bulldogs have only won twice on that date since World War II, once at home and once on the road.
The November 4 road triumph was a big one, though. It was the 14-8 victory at VMI in 1961 that clinched The Citadel’s first Southern Conference title. Bill Whaley’s 22-yard touchdown pass to Henry Mura with 2:29 to play proved to be the difference. Earlier in the game, Whaley had scored from one yard out on a quarterback sneak.
You can watch video highlights of that 1961 contest on YouTube. The game-winning TD pass comes at the 1:36 mark of the clip. I’m not completely sure, but I believe Mura’s catch was his only career TD reception. He picked a great time for it.
– The Citadel’s two-deep for the Western Carolina game includes no changes on offense or defense, the fourth consecutive week that has been the case. On special teams, there are now no listed backups at placekicker or punter.
It should be noted that there will be one new starter on defense this Saturday, regardless of the depth chart listing, as Ben Roberts will be suspended for the first half after being called for targeting in the second half of the VMI game.
– Jacob Godek has had touchbacks on 19 of his 37 kickoffs this season. As a result, The Citadel’s touchback rate of 51.4% ranks 11th-best in FCS.
– Among Western Carolina’s notable graduates are comedian Rich Hall, former NFL referee/current ESPN officiating consultant Gerry Austin, and actor Sean Bridgers.
– The roster for Western Carolina (per its website) includes 58 players from the State of North Carolina. Other states represented: Georgia (22 players), South Carolina (8), Tennessee (4), Florida (4), and one each from Alabama, California, Kentucky, Louisiana, Ohio, and Virginia.
The eight Catamounts from the Palmetto State attended the following high schools: Blythewood (two), Spartanburg (two), T.L. Hanna (two), St. Joseph’s, and Rock Hill. Surprisingly, none of WCU’s South Carolina-based players attended historic gridiron superpower Orangeburg-Wilkinson High School. Ronnie Carr would be very disappointed.
– The Citadel’s geographic roster breakdown (per the school’s website) is as follows: South Carolina (47 players), Georgia (29), Florida (6), North Carolina (5), Alabama (4), Texas (4), Pennsylvania (3), Tennessee (2), New York (2), and one each from Louisiana, Michigan, Virginia, and West Virginia.
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Saturday’s game will mark the end of The Citadel’s home slate. Will the final game of the season at Johnson Hagood Stadium provide a happy result for the home fans?
It’s possible, but there is a surprising amount of opaqueness when it comes to this matchup, despite the fact we are now in the month of November. I don’t have a very good read on what might happen. (Of course, that is arguably the case for every game.)
At any rate, there is quite a lot riding on this contest for the Bulldogs. That includes a possible winning season and a chance to make a late-season playoff push.
It’s time to start the stretch run of the 2017 season.
Filed under: Football, The Citadel | Tagged: Andy Clawson, Aron Spann III, Brent Thompson, Cam Jackson, Cliff Washburn, Detrez Newsome, Ian Berryman, Jacob Godek, Joshua Gibson, Keion Crossen, Kris Kut, Mark Speir, Marvin Tillman, Nathan Dalton, Ray Smith, SoCon, Steve Arrington, Tahjai Watt, Terryon Robinson, The Citadel, Tyrie Adams, VMI, Western Carolina | Leave a comment »