|
|

History repeats itself as Scots
record second straight shutout
Release Date: October 13, 2004
MONMOUTH, Ill. — Several members of
Monmouth College’s Class of 1974 were back on campus last weekend to
celebrate their 30th reunion during Homecoming Weekend. They
observed several new facilities and hundreds of new faces at
Monmouth, but as for the football team, it probably didn’t seem like
anything had changed at all.
In 1974, the Fighting Scots closed their season with two straight
shutout victories. In one of the games, a 56-0 pasting of
Northeastern, Hall of Fame running back Ron Baker rushed for 172
yards and Mike Schumacher added 146 (for good measure, Lou Vitali
totaled 103 yards). That is believed to be the last time two
Monmouth backs each gained more than 100 yards and combined for at
least 300 yards in the same game.
Flash forward to 2004, and the Fighting Scots are enjoying exactly
the same type of success. Monmouth’s 24-0 Homecoming victory over
Grinnell was the team’s second straight shutout and the first time
they had recorded back-to-back goose eggs since 1974. Additionally,
running backs Ed McCracken (172 yards, one TD) and Todd Sabean (128
yards, two TDs) hit the 300-yard mark right on the button.
The accomplishments came despite the fact that Grinnell entered the
game with a potent offense featuring the conference’s leading
running back and quarterback and also despite the Pioneers’
anticipation of Monmouth’s running attack.
“We knew going into this game that we had to play the run well,”
Grinnell coach Greg Wallace told a reporter following the game. “And
run the ball is exactly what Monmouth did. They ran straight ahead
power all day long. We switched to a five-man front to be ready for
it. But we just couldn’t stop it. I think Monmouth just wore us
down.”
Thankfully, McCracken was ready to play Saturday, or Sabean might
have been the one who wore down. While McCracken rested an injury,
Sabean got 34 carries on Oct. 2 in a 14-0 win over Lake Forest, but
he only had to tote the ball 20 times vs. the Pioneers while a much
healthier McCracken had 22 carries.
“Ed was really running extremely well,” said MC coach Steve Bell,
who saw his team improve to 5-1 with the win. “The week off
obviously helped him. He wasn’t going down on the first contact.
There were very few times he was tackled by the first guy. In the
second half, we did a better job of getting him into the second
level untouched and making Grinnell’s linebackers have to tackle
him.”
The other half of the Scots’ victory equation was defense, and Sean
Pfalzer would be a good one to ask about what wrong for Grinnell.
Pfalzer entered the contest averaging a league-best 263.8 passing
yards per game, but the sophomore would not even reach 63.8 yards on
the day, as Monmouth held him to five completions in 24 attempts for
just 32 yards.
“Our defense is just playing with a lot of energy and emotion,” said
Bell. “They’re flying around and making plays. If a guy misses a
tackle, there’s a guy right there to get his back.”
When asked about Grinnell’s difficulty through the air, Bell said,
“We got into the quarterback’s face early. It wasn’t always a sack
(although Monmouth did have three for negative 28 yards), but we
made him throw the ball quicker than he wanted. (Defensive
coordinator Chad Braun) did a good job of mixing it up with some
different pass rushes and zone coverages. Grinnell just wasn’t able
to get off.”
Nor was Grinnell able to rack up much possession time. In keeping
with Monmouth’s game plan, the Pioneers had the ball for just 23:58,
while the Scots’ methodical ground game resulted in possession time
of 36:02.
“We didn’t want to get into a passing shootout with them,” said
Bell. “We wanted to try to keep them off the field as much as we
could.”
With the defense on such a roll, Bell was asked if the Scots could
record their third straight shutout when they travel to Appleton,
Wis., this weekend to meet Lawrence University.
“It would a nice feather in your cap if you could do it again,” said
Bell, who quickly added, “I don’t know how Lawrence hasn’t won more
games than they have. They’re tough to defend. They run a lot of
different things.”
The Vikings looked like they might be on to something when they
opened the season with a 30-7 victory over Knox. However, that
remains Lawrence’s only win, and the Vikings have been held to 12
points or less in three of their five losses, including Saturday’s
52-7 setback against St. Norbert, which remains atop the conference
standings at 5-0.
Gone from the LU attack are two first team All-MWC selections –
running back Justin Behrens and wide receiver Zach Michael – but
Bell is still concerned about the personnel that remains, including
running back Adrell Bullock, who has run for 429 yards and six TDs.
Other Lawrence leaders include quarterback Eric Aspenson (786 yards,
seven TDs) and receiver Nick Korn (20 catches, 274 yards, three TDs).
The Monmouth coach is even more concerned about Lawrence’s defense,
which he said “is playing faster” than the Vikings have in the past.
The Vikings’ lone returning All-MWC player on that side of the ball
is defensive back Tyler Krzewina, who is tops on the team in tackles
with 50. He also leads LU in interceptions with three.
Football Homepage
|