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Posted on September 23, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Ypsilanti Water Tower

I hate these stupid early season “tune-up” games. I hate writing about them. This mental block has kept me from writing about Temple, which has kept me from writing about Eastern Michigan, which has kept me from writing about anything else out of guilt for not writing anything about Temple.  Now, I’m writing from a sense of last minute obligation, a modicum of counterprocrastination, as it were. So, this article will suck. It will be a combination of a rant about the Temple game and a look forward to tomorrow’s Beaver Stadium clash with the mighty Eagles of Directionality. Go ahead and read it. I dare you.

I mentioned last week that Temple would be the quintessential trap game. You know, noon start, big spread, team just coming off a hard fought loss, Temple with a new coach and unbridled optimism, Temple with nothing to lose and everything to gain, etc. It kind of played out that way, giving Temple fans hope until hope finally ran out on them. The mood among Penn State fans, however, was glum, prompting Jay Paterno to state on Facebook, “I didn’t see the last few minutes, but I thought we won.” It sucked that the Nittany Lions needed to score a touchdown halfway through the fourth period to overcome a 10-7 deficit and beat Temple, which was in the game until the final minute. So, it didn’t feel like much of a win.

Jay’s point is well taken. A win is a win is a win. He added that “we have many things to work on.” Yes, like field goal kicking. Between their two kickers, PSU was 0-3 in field goal tries. They were fortunate to make two PATs the old fashioned way. I’m actually somewhat surprised that Paterno didn’t attempt two-point conversions. How could he have any confidence at all in kickers at this point? The offensive line is still a shambles, too, and with the exception of Derek Moye, who suddenly learned to catch, notching seven receptions, and Justin Brown, with six, receivers still can’t catch. The quarterback wars persist, but neither quarterback is inspiring great confidence. The running game is good, not great. Silas Redd didn’t top 100 yards against Temple.

But the big story is that Penn State still cannot do its job of scoring touchdowns once inside the opponent’s thirty. The Lions had the edge over Temple in time of possession, first downs, total yards, and turnovers, yet they barely beat the Owls. It used to be that the Lions having to settle for three because of conservative play calling inside the thirty used to piss me off; now, we cannot even count on the three due to the aforementioned kicking morass. As Joe Paterno says, “Make it look like you’ve been there before!” Well, we have, and it sucks.

This Turkey predicted a somewhat higher scoring game than it actually was. I suppose that I thought the Lions were farther along than they actually are. I correctly predicted that they would have to come from behind to beat the Owls, my feeling having been that Penn State rarely does very well early in away games with noon starts. Having not seen a breakout game for this team yet, I cannot make very optimistic predictions. The problem as I see it is not that they need to improve — that is obvious — but whether they can improve. I’m not certain that this team has the wherewithal to accomplish that.

Moving along to this week’s noon start — ahem! — the Nittany Lions (2-1) square off with the high-flying Eastern Michigan Eagles (2-1), who are just coming off a 31-3 loss to their non-directional cousins from Ann Arbor. The Yinzers from Ypsilanti were never really in that game, in which Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson ran roughshod over the Iggle defense for 198 yards and three touchdowns. Robinson has the capability of being a one-man wrecking crew against a sloppy defense. Surprisingly, though, this week’s Mid-American Conference foe ranks 29th in total defense.

Run, run, run. See the eagle run. Eagle have clipped wings. Not much of a passing threat at all. Instead, they hand the ball off to sophomore scat back Javonti Greene, who has piled up 358 yards in his three games this season. Of these, 85 were earned against the Wolverines. Junior quarterback Alex Gillett tucks the ball away and runs, too. He’s got 211 net yards thus far. So, it’s really up to the Penn State front seven to contain these two. I think you’ll see a lot of eight and maybe nine in the box against the witheringly slippery running attack. Against Michigan, there was barely a passing attack, but the Eagles ran for 207 yards, mostly on the legs of the aforementioned backs. Even being behind by big numbers most of the game, EMU attempted only six passes. (Why aren’t they called the Emus?)

Meanwhile, the Penn State rushing offense is somewhat hampered by the non-game injury to Brandon Beachum, who has been Silas Redd’s backup. Beachum, who sprained his ankle, will not play, opening the door to someone farther down the depth chart. Will it be Curtis Dukes? That’s an interesting proposition, inasmuch as we haven’t seen Stephfon Green play yet this season, and Dukes was one of Green’s customers in Statestoregate. If Green is in Paterno’s doghouse, then surely Dukes must be, too, right? I mean, which is the worse offense, buying a cold one for a minor or drinking one as a minor?

Inasmuch as the unconfirmed rumor that Kerry Collins would be leaving the Colts and coming back as a Penn State graduate assistant with a special year of playing eligibility granted to him by the NCAA (inspired by a payoff  from Indianapolis fans) turned out to be false, the quarterback tag team continues with no clear winner in sight. Doesn’t this suck? This Turkey thinks it bites the big one and JJ (JoeJay) better shit or get off the damn pot.

Speaking of the pot, we all know that Penn State’s field goal kicking is for shit. So, they stall inside the opponent’s 30 and run draws on third and long to position the ball for kickers who have about as much chance of putting one through the uprights as I have getting a job in the Obama Administration. Why not unleash shock and awe instead of playing analball if you’re going to come away with no points doing the latter? Huh? Huh? I don’t think kickers can improve from a nofer game to be anything resembling a weapon in a week. Throw the damn ball! At least Lion receivers catch the ball sometimes and Lion quarterbacks are on target sometimes.

Ypsilanti Water Tower
Ypsilanti Water Tower

So, here we go again. Noon start, lackluster opponent from a lesser conference, the quarterback do-si-do, semi-competent offensive line that can’t hold blocks long enough to effectively protect whichever quarterback is in there, and little or no production from the kicking game — a veritable can’t-miss game! On the scale of 0-to-10, where ten is Must See TV and zero is I Wish I Had Another Heart Walk This Week, this one is dropping like a NASA satellite that has fallen out of orbit, having a one in 3600 chance of mortally wounding a human. This is a tune-up for the big showdown next week in Bloomington, where the Big Ten season commences. OMG WTF, are they ready? We better see significant improvements across the board this week, or the big, bad Hoosiers will whoop the Lions. That would truly suck.

Dann Florek
Dann Florek

As always, we conclude with the Shameless, but Official, Turkey Poop Prediction. But first, what do we know about Ypsilanti? Weird name, no? The city got its name from a hero in the Greek War of Independence, Demetrius Ypsilanti. If it weren’t for Ypsilanti, Greece would be part of the Ottoman Empire and Greeks would be vassals of Allah, much like many of the citizens of Ypsilanti, Michigan. Oh, and did you know that Tom Monaghan opened the very first Domino’s Pizza in Ypsilanti in 1960? One more amaaaaaaaaaaazing fact: Ypsilanti is home to the world’s most phallic building, the Ypsilanti Water Tower, which is referred to locally as “the brick dick”.  In the picture at right, the brick dick is shown dwarfing a bust of poor old Taki Ypsilanti, who now must persevere in pedastalar perpetuity in the penumbra of the lithophallus, ruing his penuriously puny penile endowment. So sad. Another fact: Dann Florek, the hardass captain from Law & Order: SVU, is a famous graduate of the prestigious institution. Other than that, Ypsilanti is merely a little town between Detroit and Ann Arbor, but I digress. Penn State is favored by 29, but with an over/under of only 44, meaning that the punters and their customers don’t think much of either team’s ability to score points. I’m going to have to agree with the gamblers on that one. I’m also going to tell you that the Penn State defense will largely contain Greene and Gillett, leaving only an inept passing game for the Eagles. Disaster for the Eagles is what that spells, already. Penn State 3o (that’s four touchdowns, one of two extra points, and one of two two-point conversions), Ypsilanti Polyphallic 6.

 

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: brick dick, college football, Eagles, Eastern Michigan, most phallic building, Nittany Lions, Penn State, Ypsilanti Water Tower

Alabama Lowlights

Posted on September 13, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Bolden Gets Creamed

What did you think of that game, eh? That first Penn State drive was a hopeful thing, give or take a time out or three. Lawdie, lawdie, Mike’s Garage was replete with unbridled optimism along with a modicum of bemusement over the clock management or lack of same. The much maligned Nittany Lions, from whom nothing much was expected in this matchup, were marching down the field against the vaunted Crimson Tide defense.

“Do you want to revise your forecast now?” asked Jackstand and zbeard, almost in unison. When I told them I was sticking to my guns, they both looked at me like I was crazy. Jackstand is too new a Nittany Lions fan to know how recent history paints an unkind picture of non-performance in big games. Meanwhile, zbeard is a crusty old fan like me, but with a vastly differing outlook at the start of each season. Zbeard is a perennial optimist who expects big things from the Nits until they prove they’re unworthy; on the other hand, I maintain an annual fecal impaction of the optic nerve — you don’t have to be Dr. Todd Sponsler, ophthalmic proprietor of The Lion’s Den, to deduce that the aforementioned condition translates to a shitty outlook — in that I want to see something from the team before declaring that they have even a chance at a distinguished winning record. (And if you’re a fan of the Nittany Lions as well as long sentences, you’re in the right place. After all, why use a sentence when a paragraph will do? But I digress.) So, no. I wouldn’t change my forecast, which you should know was Alabama 35, Penn State 10.

As I am always running late with my post-game recaps, by this time you are well aware that the #3 Crimson Tide (2-0) defeated the #23 Lions (1-1) 27-11. I should have given the Penn State defense more credit. They even looked competent at times out there. I obviously thought Alabama would put more points on the board, so with the over/under at 42, I told you to take the over. Mah bad! But if you took Alabama and gave 10 points, you would have nailed it.

The Penn State defense really did keep the meanies from giving us a good, old fashioned, behind the woodshed lickin’. I have to give some credit to the D-boys before I light into the offense and the coaches. Holding Alabama to under 30 points might sound like a consolation prize to be stuffed into a dusty closet, but it seems to me as if this defense might actually be competent.

‘Bama QB AJ McCarron probably won their version of the two-headed quarterback competition with a 19-31, 163 yard performance with one touchdown and no interceptions. Alabama head football coach Nick Saban had the sense to play just McCarron in this game, which turned out to be a wise move, unlike whatever the hell is happening at Penn State with the offensive brain trust. Phillip Sims appears to be the odd man out in this quarterback battle, and pretty clearly so.

For some ungodly reason, PSU head coach Joe Paterno has stubbornly clung to his stance that the quarterback competition (aka controversy) is not over at Penn State despite this Turkey’s exhortations to shit or get off the pot. Oh yeah, a few others besides me have been on his case about picking a quarterback and moving forward. In spite of all the flack he has been getting (or maybe to show that he’s still the same stubborn old Joe), he split the quarterbacking chores for the Alabama game — to the detriment of the offense — and maintained afterward that the competition between quarterbacks Rob Bolden and Matt McGloin is not over. Good old stubborn Joe.

As it turns out, Bolden has won the competition in everyone’s mind but Joe’s. We fans know best, as you well know. But look at the stats for Saturday: Bolden, 11-29 for 144 yards with no touchdowns and one interception; McGloin, 1-10 for no net yards and nothing else. McGloin never got into a rhythm, while Bolden had his rhythm interrupted like a Catholic couple trying to get pregnant. The gods were not kind to Bolden, either, as at least four catchable balls were dropped by Penn State receivers. Furthermore, each time the brain trust made a quarterback change, the linemen had to get used to new snap vocals, the receivers had to get used to different ball feel and timing, and running backs have to be aware of the myriad little differences brought by a change in quarterbacks. A different personality changes the atmosphere in the huddle, too. With one quarterback for the game, Alabama was out on a smooth cruise down a wide boulevard, whereas Penn State’s quarterback switching shenanigans put it  in stop-and-go traffic on a choked freeway.

Penn State averaged 3.6 yards rushing for a game total of 107 yards — not what we expect of a Penn State offense. I did tell you that Silas Redd was not going to have anything like the productive game he played against Indiana State and — Duh! — I was right. Although he looked great on that first drive, he wound up with only 65 yards on 22 carries, for a measly 3.0 yard average, with a long run of only eight yards. He did score a touchdown, though, but that occurred with 1:53 left in the game and meant only some infinitesimally reduced embarrassment for the Nittany Lions.

Showing his versatility, Bolden capped off that Redd touchdown with a two-point conversion he ran in himself.

The only other Penn State score of the game was an Evan Lewis 43 yard field goal with 7:26 left in the first quarter, after the Nittany Lions stalled at the 26 yard-line during that masterful opening drive to which I heretofore alluded. What happened there? Why did they start looking so good and then broke down in the almost red zone yet, which is a famous Nittany trick? Well, as usual, the play calling became very conservative. Very conservative. Foolishly so. They had squandered three time outs due to poor communications during the drive. (More on that bullshit later.) Perhaps they thought that calling anything more complex than a fullback dive would result in a delay of game penalty as players scratched their heads while Bolden reviewed their responsibilities in the huddle. Who knows? After a brilliant fourth down conversion to the Alabama 29, Brandon Beachum ran for two yards and Silas Redd for one yard to bring up third and seven at the Alabama 26. Bolden tried to convert on third down but Justin Brown dropped the ball, another thing that has plagued the Lions at this early juncture. In any case — heaven be praised — the field goal was good from 43.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Alabama, college football, Crimson Tide, Joe Paterno, Nittany Lions, Penn State

Tide Competent; Lions Not

Posted on September 11, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Just a quick post to reiterate what Frank Gifford might say:

“Turnovers will kill ya.”

“Mistakes will kill ya.”

“Dropped passes will kill ya.”

“Penalties will kill ya.”

The worst mistake was communication failure. Using up all three first half time-outs during the first possession of the game was bad, very bad. ???? ????? Ridiculous, too. Ludicrous, even. It just might have cost the game, as the absence of timeouts later precluded a challenge to an Alabama first down on a crappy spot by the officials after a faked punt. As anyone who watched the game on TV will tell you (Alabama folks, too, if they’re honest), the Smelley runner was stopped short of the first down. Penn State would have had the ball with great field position.

Not getting plays in on time will kill ya. ??? ???? ?? ?????

By the way, were you surprised by the first play of the game (long pass play to Moye, incomplete)? I wasn’t . What is it with Paterno? In the 1980s, passing on first down was a novelty, an unusual departure from Penn State’s typical staid, run oriented game plan. Through the 1990s, employing the long pass early to stretch the defense was very effective. ????? ???? ???? ????? However, seeing this type of play implemented as the first play of the game is no longer a surprise. Even I, the perpetually neophytic pigskin pundit, said hey, how about a long one to Moye, when the Lions lined up for the first play from scrimmage. So, there are two problems with it now. First, no one is surprised; second, someone’s got to catch the pass.

I’ll be back later with further voluminously bombastic thoughts on this abomination of a game. Penn State just cannot win big games anymore.

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