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Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 10 January 2009 17:36

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- Fitting that Rutgers would end the 2008 season with a come-from-behind win.

After winning only one of their first six games, Mike Teel and the Scarlet Knights erased an 11-point second half deficit to defeat North Carolina State 29-23 in the Papajohns.com Bowl on Monday.

"As the whole year went, we were able to fight through adversity and stick to it, stick to the plan," coach Greg Schiano said. "This game was very much indicative of our season. They stuck with it. You make your own breaks, and they did."

Leading the comeback -- as he did all season -- was Teel, who passed for 319 yards and two touchdowns, including a 42-yard scoring toss to Kenny Britt to give the Scarlet Knights (8 -5) the lead for good in the fourth quarter.

"We knew that somehow someway, we could get out of that hole. You looked around that locker room, there wasn't one ounce of panic or doubt," Teel said. "It was just a matter of continuing to do what we've done to get us into this position."

Teel's pass to Britt with 8:30 to play proved to be the winning touchdown. Britt, a third-team All-American, made a juggling catch as he crossed the goal line and finished with six catches for 119 yards.

Teel, a senior, was the game's most valuable player. He ended his career on a seven-game winning streak after being booed at home when he was struggling earlier in the season.

Schiano said he didn't have to give his team much of a pep talk at the half.

"I had to say very little about what we were going to do in the second half. Our seniors stepped up, really throughout the game. It was probably the most relaxed I've seen our guys as far as just playing football," Schiano said.

NC State (6-7) held a 17-6 halftime edge, led by quarterback Russell Wilson who was 11-for-23 for 186 yards and a score. But Wilson left the game with a strained knee late in the first half and did not return.

His replacements were mostly ineffective and threw three interceptions to aid the Rutgers comeback. Wilson threw one interception all season.

North Carolina State coach Tom O'Brien said doctors recommended that Wilson not play in the second half.

"There's no politicking when the doctor recommends you don't play," O'Brien said.

But O'Brien would not blame the loss on the injury.

"You can't blame it on injuries. We had our opportunities in the third quarter and couldn't seem to make a play," O'Brien said.

The Scarlet Knights scored 10 consecutive points in the third quarter on a 31-yard field goal by San San Te and an 11-yard pass from Teel to Tiquan Underwood.

Rutgers took a 19-17 lead with 13:31 to play on a 28-yard field by Te after a 10-play 70-yard drive.

The Wolfpack came right back as reserve quarterback Daniel Evans drove them 64 yards in eight plays and hit Anthony Hill with a 16-yard touchdown pass to give NC State a 23-19 lead.

But it was only two plays later when Teel hit Britt for the go-ahead score.

Rutgers got off to a fast start as cornerback Jason McCourty recovered a Wolfpack fumble on the first play from scrimmage. On the next play, Teel hit Underwood with a 22-yard pass and the Scarlet Knights drove to the NC State 6, where they lined up for a field goal.

The holder on the play, Rob Cervini, picked up the ball after the snap and scampered for the touchdown. The extra point attempt was blocked and Rutgers held an early 6-0 lead.

It was Cervini's first play of his career.

"We had worked a lot on the fake and felt highly confident that it would work. It's unique that on his first play in a varsity game he scores a touchdown. That's pretty neat for him, and for us, too," Schiano said.

But the Wolfpack dominated the rest of the first half behind Wilson passing and running. He had 46 yards rushing on eight carries before spraining his knee.

North Carolina State took the lead with 7:56 to play in the first quarter when Wilson completed a 44-yard touchdown pass to Owen Spencer, who broke free over the middle.

The Wolfpack stretched the lead to 10-6 on a 33-yard Josh Crajkowski field goal late in the first quarter. NC State finished the first half with a 13-play 80-yard drive that was capped with a 5-yard touchdown run by Andre Brown with 38 seconds to play in the half.

NC State turned the ball over four times, including one lost fumble and the three second-half interceptions.

"We certainly didn't play what we feel is our best game, but we played hard and overcame some things," O'Brien said.

 

 
Nebraska Set for Greater Success PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 10 January 2009 17:32

Courtesy of Rutger News

Nebraska’s football captains weren’t elected until after the regular season, and all four seniors are in agreement on one very important thing after the Huskers’ 26-21 win over Clemson in the Gator Bowl  . . . the foundation is set for even greater success in 2009.

“I predict our next team will be playing in a bigger bowl game this same time next year,” offered defensive end Zach Potter. “I see Nebraska being the favorite to win the North Division, and who knows what can happen after that? If (Ndamukong) Suh comes back, anything is possible, even a national championship game in the Fiesta Bowl.”

Potter’s senior captain teammates might have the same thoughts in the backs of their minds, but they choose to be more guarded.

“I don’t want to be too bold in making predictions, but if the pieces fall into the right spots, we could definitely be playing in a BSC bowl game next year,” said wide receiver Nate Swift, who called his 17-yard touchdown catch in the third quarter of the Gator Bowl “my favorite of all time because it was a tough catch on a third down in a huge game, and we needed to get the momentum going our way again.”

“I don’t want to put any more pressure on next year’s team than they already have, but if Suh stays, that defense is going to be awfully tough on all those offensive explosion teams in the Big 12,” quarterback Joe Ganz said. “In the Gator Bowl, we put our defense in a lot of bad spots, and they still had their best game of the season. Defense wins big games, and if next year’s team can get to the Big 12 championship, it can be a one-game playoff after that for the BCS.”

Defensive tackle Ty Steinkuhler, who had an eight-yard quarterback sack and two more tackles for losses against Clemson, issues more of a challenge to the ’09 team than a prediction about where it can or should be.

Huskers Had Two Ways to Go, and They Went Up

“When we started the season 3-3, we could have gone downhill like we did the year before, but senior leadership kept us from falling off the cliff,” Steinkuhler said. “We worked our rears off. We stayed together, and we played for each other, not ourselves. If next year’s team has the same work ethic and the same chemistry we had, it can easily have more success than we did and get to a BSC bowl game. It all starts in the next couple weeks with winter conditioning. I’m counting on this team approaching winter conditioning and spring practice like we did – all out, all the time.”

The ’08 Huskers took to Nebraska Strength and Conditioning Coach James Dobson like book lovers to Oprah.

“The legacy of this senior class started exactly one year ago,” said the high-spirited Potter, who had two tackles for losses and one pass break-up against Clemson. “We learned from what the previous seniors did and did not do. We got together before Coach Pelini ever got here and agreed that we wanted to get back to physical football and be remembered as the class that rebuilt the foundation and got this big ship turned around and going in the right direction again. We set the goals we wanted to accomplish early, and we stuck with them, even when things didn’t always go our way.

“It all started in winter conditioning with Coach Dobson. He has a unique way of teaching the physicality of football,” Potter said. “He’s been a blessing for everyone on this team because he changed the environment in the weight room, and I can’t tell you how much that translates on the field. We definitely all benefited from this new coaching staff, technique-wise and otherwise. But it all started in the strength and conditioning program. We all wish we could have had this kind of leadership for four or five years instead of just one.”

As one who bettered several of Johnny Rodgers’ receiving records, Swift credits Dobson’s focus on flexibility over strength as pivotal. “It was a completely different way to go about strength training,” he said. “It starts with an attitude. I’ve maybe weighed more and been stronger, but I’m more flexible and in the best condition I’ve ever been in. That was a factor for most of us in winning six of our last seven games.”

Ganz always has considered himself to be tough, but Dobson made him tougher. “We all worked hard to get better,” he said. “Coach Dobson’s style of leadership is so motivating. We worked our tails off, but for good reason. We were all sick of hearing how Nebraska isn’t physical anymore, isn’t tough anymore and isn’t passionate anymore. So we all came together in winter conditioning to prove a point. We kept going as hard as ever in spring ball and then continued that mindset into fall camp. Our conditioning definitely paid off through the season.”

The ultimate result was “Nebraska becoming more like Nebraska again,” said Steinkuhler, the “quiet warrior” son of former Husker Outland Trophy winner Dean Steinkuhler and older brother of freshman defensive lineman Baker Steinkuhler.

Steinkuhler: Blackshirts Well Worth Waiting For

“Coach Dobson knows how to make a workout challenging,” Steinkuhler said. “We got better as the season wore on and played our best defensive game – by far – in the Gator Bowl. I’m glad Coach Pelini waited so long to hand out Blackshirts. No question that we had to earn them. That’s the only way it should be, and it’s the only way it will be from now on.”

Potter and Steinkuhler had to “get on” their defensive teammates during Saturday’s Gator Bowl practice in Jacksonville when Bo and his brother, defensive coordinator Carl Pelini, were still in Youngstown, Ohio, for their father’s funeral.

“We got a little undisciplined when they weren’t there,” Potter said. “Our thoughts and prayers were with them, but we had to buckle down and get to work. The coaches had our backs all year, and this was one time when we had to have theirs. When we put AP (for Anthony Pelini) on our helmets, it was out of respect for the entire Pelini family. We sent flowers and our condolences to Ohio, and we thought this was another way we could celebrate his father’s life.”

The strength to overcome, as usual, was acquired. “We learned a lot about ourselves, and the coaches learned a lot about themselves when everything fell apart in the Missouri game,” Potter said. “We all took a step back and recommitted ourselves to each other. That never changed, not even when things blew up on us again in the first quarter at Oklahoma. We all bought in to the coaching, the training, the conditioning, the unity – everything – and it paid off.”

Swift attributes the Huskers’ transformation to “Coach Pelini and his entire staff. They’ve been very energetic since day one,” he said. “They’re always working their tails off and getting us to work our tails off, too. We hadn’t been around something like that in a long time. When we simplified everything after the Missouri game, it was the turning point of the season. These guys can coach. I don’t think our production will go down, even though we have some very big shoes to fill. Everybody will be focusing in on the quarterback battle, but we have some well-rounded receivers who can block and catch just as well as Todd (Peterson) and me.”

Senior ’09 leaders will be crucial, and if they’re like ‘08’s captains, they will expect greater success to emerge from the program’s more solidified base.

Potter: Being a Captain Second to No Other Honor

“I wouldn’t trade being a captain or being on the Unity Council for a first-team All-America honor,” Potter said. “Nothing’s more important than having the trust of your teammates. Selecting captains after the season was a great idea. We all loved the way Coach Pelini handled everything all season long. The most special feeling of all was when he decided to make all 21 seniors captains for the Colorado game. We’d been through a lot over the last four or five years, but walking out there for our last game together, holding hands down the tunnel and on to the field     . . .  that was just something we’ll never forget.”

Such moments are priceless, and Potter sees that influencing Suh’s decision of whether to declare for the NFL draft or come back for one final year. “He’s a special talent, a special player and a special person,” Potter said. “His family is so dedicated to academics. It goes beyond football and money.”

The last time Nebraska had two sure-fire, first-round NFL draft choices faced with the same decision, defensive linemen Grant Wistrom and Jason Peter surprised then coach and now athletic director Tom Osborne by deciding to return for their senior season in ‘97. Wistrom and Peter already had won national championships in ’94 and ’95 and felt the ’96 season created “unfinished business.”

“They really set the tone for that ‘97 team,” Osborne said, adding that the talent level on that team was “obviously pretty good, but the dedication and commitment was exceptional.”

Osborne, like Pelini, would be the last to try and convince Suh to stay at Nebraska, if the first-team All-Big 12 defensive lineman felt his circumstances were right for the NFL.

The Huskers’ four captains are equally respectful and supportive of whatever decision Suh will make. “He might go, but I think he’ll stay,” Steinkuhler said. “He’s really grown as a leader and has an opportunity to keep growing and become an even better player – and a better leader – than he is now.”

In one year, Suh and his teammates have seen the differences between leadership styles.

“I loved being a captain with Nate, Zach and Ty,” Ganz said. “We reinforced each other all season long, and we had plenty of others right in there with us, including Suh. We all had to come together and make sure that the same cancerous attitude didn’t eat our football team up again.

“All of us, players and coaches alike, want what’s best for Suh,” Ganz said, adding that regardless of his decision, “this program’s back on a solid foundation, and it will continue to take everyone pulling in the same direction, every day, year-round.”

In college football, that’s never going to change.

Maybe that’s why even the most seasoned pros relish their college experience the most

Last Updated on Saturday, 10 January 2009 18:46
 
Bringing the Slapdown in Team Rivalry PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Web Master   
Friday, 12 December 2008 03:54
Nemesis Inc - brings the slapdown in Team Rivalry ! 

Ever wanted to slap down those trash talking fans? Well, now you can. Slap'Em is your solution.

Slap'Em down without saying a word. Whether you're a college football fan, NFL, NHL, NBA, or MLB fan, just pick your sport and your rival and give them a good slappin'!

Slap'Em is a vehicle mounted device that slips over your window just like the team flag you've used. Put your stickers on, roll up your window and drive off! A great addition to your team flag, Slap'Em lets you go one step further and show them your true team spirit. Give your opponent a good slappin' on game day!

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 13 January 2009 22:41