Monday, November 18, 2013

From the Booth: Week Eleven Edition

If what happened in week 11's 48-14 loss to California is the future of Millersville football, get excited. In another example of "the score does not dictate the game," the Marauders put on an entertaining show for their loyal fans on Saturday, putting a serious scare into the Vulcans, who were picked as a West favorite.

Congratulations to a marvelous bookend to senior RB Ian Sadon's Millersville career. Sadon rushed for 187 yards, a career high, as well as eclipsed 1,000 yards in a season early in the third quarter. Sadon scored one of two Millersville touchdowns in his final game.

Senior LB Jordan Rigby also had a rather nice performance, totaling 12 tackles, including 1.5 tackles for a loss for seven total yards. Rigby will also end his Millersville career on a high note.

Now, to the game.

California scored on their first possession. Responding to that score took 10 plays and 75 yards, culminating in an entertaining moment. Saturday's referees used a very strange arm position to call for second down, and touchdown. The crowd, as well as the marching band (and yours truly) were swayed by this strange arm signal that looked eerily similar to touchdown.

One play later, Sadon rushed it into the end zone in a way we've all seen so many times this year.

The Vulcans scored twice more and added a field goal from Cody Nuzzo to take a 24-7 lead at the half. More of the same? Not so.

Corey Unger's one yard run cut the deficit to 10 early in the second half. Fans remained raucous as head coach Greg Breitbach's adage came to life—give yourself a chance to win in the fourth quarter. It seemed so tangible at that time. Millersville came alive. Chryst Field rocked.

Evan Stahl could have cut the lead to 7 points after a 32 yard fumble recovery by Rasheed Johnson, but failed to stick the 24 yard field goal due to excellent pressure and an ill-timed wind gust. Millersville also had the ball deep in California territory after a California punt.

However, California's Jordan Bowman, who ended up with PSAC West Defensive Player of the Week honors, recovered an ill-fated handoff and returned a fumble 80 yards for a touchdown. Unger also threw an interception to Dewey McDonald just a minute later whose 20 yard return extended California's once-tense lead to 41-14.

Nick Grissom added one more score late to make it 48-14, and thus, the game.

Turnovers kill. All three interceptions and the one fumble on Saturday resulted in points. In fact, 24 of California's 48 points came from turnovers. Those get cleaned up, and the game looks so much different. Every Millersville turnover in this game, against East Stroudsburg, Kutztown and Lock Haven except for one, resulted in points.

You erase those points, and again, each game looks different. Turnovers are inevitable, that's just football, but multiple interceptions and fumbles taken for points every time will destroy chances to win. They kill momentum. No doubt over the final games this season was this more evident. Opponents scored 83 total points off of turnovers in the last four weeks.

Millersville ended the season with 17 interceptions and 32 fumbles, of which 15 were lost to the opposition. The next post will take a look at the numbers and the season recap. They may not be pretty numbers, but improvement takes time. To say no strides were taken this year would be foolhardy. Many strides occurred on Saturday.

On a more positive note, Millersville's offensive line played exceptionally well on Saturday. 224 of Millersville's 289 total yards of offense came on the ground. 43 of the rest of those yards came on a spectacular pitch and catch to David Coates for a huge gain. If that offensive line can continue to develop under Jeff Richter, life will be much easier for the offense as a whole.

California gained 369 total yards with 233 coming through the air. Cal totaled 106 yards off of two turnover returns which may not count against the total yards gained, but they sure help in the long run. Again, clean them up, the score comes down considerably. It just goes to show that Breitbach's insistence on clean football will make a gargantuan difference in these tightly contested games in the PSAC.

My thanks and gratitude go out to the entire football coaching staff. It was a whirlwind of change for many of them, and for them to handle this situation with so much grace and professionalism meant a ton towards presenting a quality broadcast on MSBN.

The Marauder Touchdown Club has raised over $16,000 for operational costs. The Marauder Scholar Program put forth over 500 hours of community service. The amount of change in just seven short months has been remarkable. Here's to the future.

The season recap post will be coming likely next week. Until then.

Monday, November 11, 2013

From the Booth: Week Ten Edition

Calling it now: East Stroudsburg will win the PSAC East next year. This team is scary. The Warriors used a methodical offense and timely defense to unrelentingly defeat Millersville 66-7.

19 seconds is all it took for East Stroudsburg to score on their first possession. Robert Healy put on a Marshawn Lynch type show, pushing away several defenders to scamper in for the 58 yard score. That touchdown was East Stroudsburg's fastest since 1994.

ESU racked up 20 points in just six minutes on consecutive possessions. Robert Bleiler, ESU's top wideout, caught two for touchdowns, and Gerald Van De Cruz finished things off for the first quarter scoring.

The Warriors equaled their first quarter output by doing it again. 27 more points, 54 total points at the half. East Stroudsburg essentially dominated every single statistical category. Unfortunately, this was no contest.

It begins and ends with the play of Matt Soltes. The redshirt sophomore QB threw for 197 yards, which is awfully low for him, but he economically threw for six touchdowns on Saturday. His runners tallied three more.

To be fair, Millersville's defense fared a ton better against East Stroudsburg last week than Lock Haven did. The Bald Eagles allowed 696 total yards of offense to Millersville's 462, and Soltes threw for 462 yards by himself last week, and rushed for another 74 yards. So, in terms of a percentage, Soltes accounted for 77% of East Stroudsburg's offense against Lock Haven.

Soltes has already accounted for several PSAC and national records so far. He will be spectacular for two years to come.

In terms of positives for the Marauders, unfortunately there are not many to draw from this contest. Ian Sadon found a lot more openings in the second half. He finished his day with another solid 96 yard performance. Brent Collins returned five kickoffs for 147 yards, including a spectacular 65 yard return in the second half as well.

Of all players to throw a touchdown, who else than running back David Coates? Coates became the fourth player to throw for a touchdown this season. He found a wide open Kevin Porter on a trick play to put Millersville on the scoreboard.

As of the time of this blog, the team has already forgotten about this game and will have to look forward to next week's season conclusion.

In a sort of deja vu scheduling quirk, Millersville will play California on Saturday to end the 2013 campaign. Head Coach Greg Breitbach and the rest of the staff have continued to keep this season positive. Many aspects of Millersville's game have been radically changed. New plays, new players, new techniques, new mindset, and a lot more attention to certain details have all been instituted.

California lost to Mercyhurst last week 23-20. Anyone who isn't Bloomsburg or Slippery Rock will have to play out the final game and look forward to next season. It's a rather cutthroat playoff system, but you must be the best in an insanely competitive PSAC.

Cal has had a baffling season. They played so well against the East, including almost upsetting West Chester 38-31, but have played inconsistently against West opponents. Losses to IUP, Mercyhurst and Slippery Rock all show that they aren't a top team yet.

Last time Millersville played California, they scored 28 points, including 21 fourth quarter points. Laying it all on the line for one final game on senior day would mean a ton to the departing seniors. Those seniors include LB Jordan Rigby, WR Dominic Sanders, S David Rene, S Dan Miller, RV Dean May, DE Gilbert Ramos, C Alex Schwendeman, WR David Barnes and DT Doug Henninger.

They, along with the 1993 PSAC East champion football team, will be honored at home for a 4 p.m. start. Hope you can join us on MSBN then. www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn

The PSAC Title Game has been decided after all this time. Bloomsburg upended West Chester in one final matchup to win the division by virtue of a tiebreak. All three top teams ended with a 7-1 record in conference. Seems complicated because Bloom beat West Chester, but West Chester beat Shippensburg, and Shippensburg beat Bloomsburg, but somehow, Bloomsburg won the conference.

Slippery Rock turned it up late in the season to pick up wins with regularity. Slight edge goes to Slippery Rock. They are hot, hot, hot!

Monday, November 4, 2013

From the Booth: Week Nine Edition

It was a homecoming of sorts for Kutztown Golden Bear coaches Drew Folmar, Ross Pennypacker, Jim Ketner and Dan Csencsitz, all former Millersville Marauder football players. Them, along with their players, showcased a fantastic game plan resulting in a 45-9 victory over Millersville on Saturday.

Coming into the game, it was a battle of two 1-7 teams searching for that next win. Kutztown did not wait offensively, scoring early and often. On Kutztown's first drive, QB Josh Luckenbaugh and company trucked down the field, ending in a Darrell Scott goal line run that resulted in a touchdown. They scored points on their next two drives as well.

Curtis Wortham finished his day nicely with three rushing touchdowns. He had torched Millersville in the past as well.

Worse, Millersville turned the ball over with two interceptions and a fumble. Kutztown paid them back in kind by scoring 21 points in total off of those three turnovers. Turnovers kill. It's that simple.

It could be said that Kutztown was opportunistic on this day. They only gained 338 offensive yards on Saturday. That's a far cry from the 624 given up against West Chester, or 521 against IUP, or 515 against LIU Post. Defense on head coach Greg Breitbach's and defensive coordinator Ron Rankin's has been cleaned up significantly as the weeks go by.

I asked Breitbach about third downs on Saturday's pregame show after noticing a trend. They had been a significant point of contention in the early part of the season. Millersville's 3rd down conversion rate has increased from 25% to 34.35%, and the opposition has dropped from 75% to 48.25%. Breitbach put ones on ones in meaningful drills, and they are paying off tremendously.

The next step is 4th down conversion, which teams don't appear afraid to go for it (50%).

RB Ian Sadon wrecked the field unlike he has at any point this season. Sure, it happened to be his fourth 100+ yard rushing game this season (Millersville outgained Kutztown 184-97 on the ground), but Sadon rushed for 168 of those yards, a touchdown (his team-leading 5th), averaging 5.7 yards per carry. Kutztown did not have an answer for Sadon.

That being the case, freshman QB Corey Unger struggled against a significant pass rush in his first start. Unger (10-21-2) threw for just 82 yards, and was sacked five times. Time did not present itself to find anyone open, and it showed. Unger had to use his legs to avoid situations, and his most popular play was a play action rollout that failed to find anyone open more often than not.

I would imagine that now that Unger has burned his what-would-be redshirt, he will likely get the start next Saturday against East Stroudsburg (6-3, 3-3) as well as in the season finale against California (6-3, 4-2). Last week was likely his first set of practices as a starter, so next week should hold a better result for him.

East Stroudsburg has been stuck in the PSAC East's middle ground for what seems like a few years now. They are led by one heck of a young quarterback named Matt Soltes. Soltes has completed almost 61% of his passes, and has thrown for an insane 28 touchdowns. Runners have rushed for 10 fewer.

As a result of this insane offense, opposing offenses are being outgained by 1,400 yards throughout the year. Perhaps one of ESU's problems happened to be a problem of IUP's—discipline. Warriors have taken a staggering 86 penalties for 687 total yards against.

Let's take a look around.

It looks pretty set in stone now that now-nationally ranked Slippery Rock will be the West's representative in the PSAC title game. The East isn't so set just yet. West Chester (6-0) has the division lead, but they must win an absolutely crucial game against Bloomsburg (5-1) this Saturday at home.

Unfortunately for the Golden Rams, they may have swept their home schedule so far, but they battled in some close games to Kutztown (22-21), California (38-31) and East Stroudsburg (34-20). Anything can happen in this game. If Franklin Quiteh is healthy, he will match up against his largest competition, Rondell White.

That will be fun to look out for.

Next week's broadcast will be from Eller-Martin Stadium in East Stroudsburg. The Marauder Pride Pregame Show presented by Homewood Suites by Hilton Lancaster will start at 12:30 p.m. for a 1:05 p.m. kickoff. You can listen here: www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn

Sunday, October 27, 2013

From the Booth: Week Eight Edition

First of all, I hope everyone had a very happy and safe Homecoming at Millersville University this year. It is always an honor to be a part of the festivities every season. I am always proud to be a Marauder, and the day becomes more special the farther away from my college graduation I get.

Anyway, to business.

Millersville dropped a PSAC East contest to the Lock Haven Bald Eagles on Saturday 26-14 on Homecoming Saturday. A ten point swing in just six seconds of game time proved to be an almost insurmountable hill for the Marauders to overcome. After this loss, Millersville is 1-4 in the PSAC East.

Starting with positives: once again, a sparkling Millersville defense held its opposition to under 300 yards once more. This number standing for three weeks will have been for the first time since 2006. Defense against running plays has improved greatly. After IUP gashed this defense for 303 rushing yards, Millersville held Bloomsburg to 208 yards, Cheyney to 109 yards, and Lock Haven to 77 yards.

Linebackers and defensive tackles have played leagues better in recent weeks due to better direction and increased instinctual play. Marvin Gaskill, after being moved to defensive line, has proved to be a stalwart wall, difficult to break through. Additionally, Reggie Slaton, Jordan Rigby and especially Rasheed Johnson, have played well lately.

Now, the negatives.

A six second stretch decided this game pretty handily. After Connor Casey's injury at the end of the first half, third string backup Jared Pierce took over. Pierce completed a quick shovel pass to David Coates (who played his best game by far this season), but then threw into double coverage for an interception. 

Two plays later, with six seconds remaining, local product QB Caleb Walton (Manheim Central) completed an 18 yard bullet to David Cook to score.

One play later for Millersville, Pierce bobbled a snap which would have resulted in a knee ending the half. Lock Haven recovered that ill-fated football, and on one final play, Alex Boumerhi rocketed a 40 yard field goal to complete a ten point swing in six seconds. It turned what would have been a 3-0 halftime score to 13-0 in mere moments.

That series of mistakes led to an opportunity for true freshman QB Corey Unger. Unger finished Saturday throwing 8 of 20 with a pick, and a TD strike to TE Trenton Petrovich in beautiful fashion. Unger showed quick legs if on the run, but it appears he will have to work on his accuracy. It wasn't a Casey-caliber first game, but Unger played well in relief on Saturday.

What do we take from this game?

This offense continues to improve. Once again, after only gaining 180 yards against IUP, Millersville has accomplished gains of 232, 265 and 307 yards. This latest effort was the first 300+ yard game of the season, and the first under head coach Greg Breitbach.

Many critical offensive players this season, including Brent Collins, Ian Sadon and Kevin Porter, especially, did not play a gigantic role in past seasons. Offensive duties hinged on Dominic Sanders, Mike Jones, Matt Egenrieder, among others. Growing pains are understandable. Steady improvement is a great sign.

Millersville has a chance to put this steady improvement to the test against Kutztown, who comes to town with just one win this year as well. KU has played some good teams close, including losing a last-minute lead against nationally-ranked West Chester 22-21, and posting 30 points against Shippensburg, who used their offense to outslug the Golden Bears 55-30.

As an additional incentive, newly-inducted Millersville Hall of Fame QB Drew Folmar, Kutztown's head coach, will make his return to the Ville for the first time as a head coach. Not to mention, Millersville/Kutztown has always been a tremendous rivalry across all sports.

Let's take a look around the PSAC.

The biggest game of the week, West Chester vs. Shippensburg, did not disappoint. A last second West Chester field goal decided not only the game, but likely the playoff picture barring a miracle. What a game. It wasn't the offensive insanity that was predicted, but 32-29 is a pretty good score too.

Bloomsburg scored 35 first half points, including 4 Franklin Quiteh rushing TDs, to win 35-7 over Cheyney on Saturday. They hold serve going into week nine by remaining undefeated.

Bloomsburg vs. Shippensburg will be telecast on the CBS Sports Network and PCN this Thursday at 8 p.m. I know I will be watching this high-octane game for certain. Should be fun.

Millersville vs. Kutztown will be at Chryst Field at Biemesderfer Stadium for the second to last home game this season. Broadcast will start at 11:30 a.m., and the game starts at noon. Broadcast can be heard here: www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn

Sunday, October 20, 2013

From the Booth: Week Seven Edition

The first one may have taken a while, but the deed is done. Millersville defeated Cheyney 30-12 on Saturday for win number one on the year, win number one in conference, and win number one for head coach Greg Breitbach and much of his new staff.

This win truly was six weeks in the making, including an intense month of elite-caliber opponents. Defensively, the Marauders stopped the run (109 total yards against), held an opponent to under 300 yards for the second consecutive week (263 total yards), and scored a season-high 30 points.

In fact, this offensive explosion almost doubled the amount of touchdowns this team had previously scored. Five touchdowns became nine, as Ian Sadon stole the show early with two goal line vaults, Mike Reichenbach hauled in his second career TD catch, and David Coates pulled off a spin cycle off of a defender to go in for the score.

Connor Casey looked much more comfortable in this game than in previous contests. He completed eleven passes for 84 total yards. Nothing truly spectacular, but as this offense has shown, it needs to be methodical. Casey's longest pass of 20 yards was to Reichenbach. 

Also, this defense forced more turnovers. Doug Henninger and Rasheed Johnson picked off passes, and Millersville also forced two official fumbles. However, Reggie Slaton perfectly created and picked up another fumble that did not happen due to a penalty after the fact.

Those interceptions now mark three straight weeks forcing at least one pick.

Problem was, Millersville also fumbled the ball three times in this game as well, and gave two away to Cheyney. That will be costly against more talented teams in the future. The new coaching staff is preaching a new way to carry the ball, and perfecting said technique will take time. This ball security effort has gotten strides better after some shaky control in the first two weeks.

Coming into this game, Cheyney's passing attack had suffered for far too long. Adler Thony (14-27-2) threw two great passes to Khalif Dandy and Marquis Garcia-Palmer for scores. Those were the first two passing touchdowns for the Wolves all season. They both came in the fourth quarter when the game was pretty much out of reach.

Cheyney failed to accomplish anything after said touchdowns. Dean May, after a blocked kick, returned the ball 98 yards for a two point conversion. Admittedly, I did not know this rule, and I called it a touchdown. Forgive me! Always happy to have my listeners correct me, and especially tactfully. That helps.

Cheyney's head coach Ken Lockard decided to go for two with the game way out of reach on the second touchdown, and Thony's pass failed to keep Cheyney at 12 points. Lockard also called for two consecutive fourth down offensive plays, and both succeeded.

His first fourth down came towards the conclusion of the first half. On the two yard line, Millersville's defense stuffed a run by RB Marcus Jones, and turned it back over. That play signified how far this defense has come from week one until today. Playing nationally ranked opponents forces teams to play a great brand of football, according to Breitbach, so that's exactly what is continuing to happen on the gridiron.

All in all, great step forward for the Ville. First win done, and a chance to get it done against Lock Haven (2-5, 1-3 PSAC) on Homecoming. Lock Haven's offense sputtered early, but it came to life against Shippensburg, putting a scare into those Red Raiders. Lock Haven will ride a four-game losing streak into this upcoming game.

My only, honest request...get loud and stay loud!

Let's take a look around.

#6 Bloomsburg, #15 West Chester and Shippensburg all held serve atop the East standings after Saturday's games. All of them hold undefeated records. One of them will not be come Saturday, as Ship plays West Chester on Saturday.

Bloomsburg should pick up a win this weekend against Cheyney, but they will have a significant test on Halloween against Shippensburg. That game will be televised on CBS Sports Network. Pretty awesome.

In the West, it's a three-horse race for the playoff spots, unless IUP gets something going soon. After defeating Millersville, the Crimson Hawks have dropped two straight. Edinboro handed them their latest defeat.

Slippery Rock, Gannon and Cal all hold 3-1 conference records. That Western division proves to be extremely tough year in and year out. Should be a fun finish.

Four more games remain on the docket, including three home games. Come on out and see the Millersville Marauders continue the journey back to the top. If you can't make it to Homecoming, you'll feel right at home on MSBN. Broadcast starts at 12:30 on Saturday. www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn

Additionally, congratulations to the entire men's golf team, including head coach Scott Vandegrift and individual champion Connor Gilbert for capturing the 2013 PSAC Championship! The first of many to come at Millersville. Should be a fun year.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

From the Booth - Week Six Edition

The gamut of nationally ranked opponents is over. #9 Bloomsburg (6-0, 3-0 PSAC) used quick strikes and opportunistic offense to defeat Millersville (0-6, 0-3 PSAC) by a score of 45-7.

The good news is this, and this humongous progress in one statement: Millersville's defense kept a furious Bloomsburg offense to just 292 total yards. It kept the second-ranked rushing attack to 208 yards. Up until that point, Bloomsburg rushers averaged almost 368 yards per game in that respect. They also only passed for 84 yards and had a success of about 50%.

Credit to defensive coordinator Ron Rankin and his strategy against a high-powered offense. This is a huge step in the right direction. The coaching staff wanted more size up front, inserted more size into the lineup, and it paid instant dividends. I would be surprised to see that personnel change for next week's game.

Now where it gets fuzzy: offense was extremely hard to come by in this game. Redshirt Freshman QB Curtis Frye started his first game, and to his credit, was very accurate with his passes (16-24-1, 98 yds), but he could not break past what has been a dead zone at midfield while driving down the field.

Frye was knocked out with what looked like a knee injury. His status is still unknown to this point. In his stead, veteran Connor Casey (5-10-0, 56 yds, 1 TD) admirably stepped in and showed a ton of rejuvenated moxie in his return. During a 4th quarter drive, Casey unloaded a 56 yard bomb to Kevin Porter which set Millersville up perfectly for a score.

It was then, on a 4th and Goal, head coach Greg Breitbach pulled the trigger on a bold decision. Go for it. Why not?

Why not, indeed. Casey unloaded a bullet to Porter for the score. It was monumental for the offense's confidence. They perfectly executed a drive down the field with a big play. It was the longest play of the season. Casey's TD pass was also his first since week one against LIU Post.

It solved a lot of things. Credit Breitbach for a gutsy decision.

This result was the perfect time to not only give offensive players confidence, but defensive players too. The schedule gets incredibly easier against a winless Cheyney team, a 2-4 Lock Haven team, an East Stroudsburg team without its star quarterback Matt Soltes (at least for now) and a Kutztown team with just one victory against Cheyney.

This back half of the schedule looks more than perfect for the Millersville Marauders to take advantage of. They could sweep the rest of their eastern schedule and end 4-3 in the East, which is a remarkable improvement over past years' one victory. This is a huge opportunity to seize. It likely won't be enough for playoffs, as West Chester, Bloomsburg and Shippensburg lead the way with a 3-0 mark in the East.

Let's take a look around the PSAC.

In perhaps the most stunning upset ever, unranked (and quite dangerous) Slippery Rock crushed rival #7 IUP 42-16. That will likely set IUP's national ranking back quite a bit. The Rock should get instant consideration to get into that conversation.

West Chester, down 20-10 at the half, scored 24 second half points and shut out the Warriors in that half as well to win 34-20. ESU lost Matt Soltes to an undisclosed injury. If Soltes is out a long time, that's good news for the rest of the conference. He's dangerous.

Two teams certainly made it close this weekend. Shippensburg barely held off Lock Haven's furious push, winning 30-24, and Kutztown defeated winless Cheyney 35-19. That Kutztown victory is the first under their new head coach and Millersville Hall of Fame QB Drew Folmar. Well-deserved congratulations go his way.

Up next for the Ville, it's Cheyney, during its homecoming. Sound familiar? Millersville will have to deal with one more away homecoming before hosting their own the week after against Lock Haven. Four homecomings in a row. Too many people, not enough parking spaces...

Historically, Millersville has dominated Cheyney 56-5-1 since 1951. If memory serves, Millersville's last loss to Cheyney was in 2010, and it was the first loss against Cheyney since the mid-1980s. This is a chance to reassert that dominance and pick up the first win of the year, and the first for coach Breitbach.

Game starts at 1. Pregame show at 12:30. Tune in here. www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn

Sunday, October 6, 2013

From the Booth: Week Five Edition

#7 Indiana University of Pennsylvania (5-0) was the best opponent Millersville (0-5) would see all season. They showed it. A humbling 62-3 loss at the hands of the Crimson Hawks sends the Ville back to the drawing board. What will be the next move as #9 Bloomsburg looms next Saturday?

Before we get into that, time to dissect this last game.

As many points as the offense put up on the board, IUP's offense did not blow anyone away coming into this week. They accomplished very little in the creative sense. They played two creative reverse bootleg runs that caught the Marauder secondary off guard. Otherwise, RB De'Antwan Williams did not blow anyone away with just 98 yards on the day and a touchdown run.

In fact, backup Israel Green arguably played better by recording 103 yards on 16 carries. He showed more explosiveness than Williams, but both played pretty well, but not extremely well.

Millersville forced its first interception of the year, as Rasheed Johnson hauled down a Mike Box throw intended for the end zone, returning it 17 yards. In terms of breaking up passes and applying tackles directly after pass receptions, the Marauders were on point. In that sense, it's getting better.

After some down weeks, RB Ian Sadon burst back onto the scene with another sensational day. He did his best work in the first half, racking up a total of 124 yards on 20 carries. His longest run of 40 yards towards the beginning of the game charged up the sideline. Sadon stomped on IUP's parade Saturday, and he will look to continue that success.

As rushing was a success, passing was not. Connor Casey and Curtis Frye combined for 6 of 18 and 65 yards, along with two interceptions. That seriously hampered Millersville's offense and only allowed for Evan Stahl to boot his second career field goal. Coach Greg Breitbach spoke about needing improved quarterback play in the weeks to come during the pregame show on Saturday.

It looks like it will be a competition for that number one spot from here on out.

Saturday marked IUP's homecoming. They renamed their field after former coach Frank Cignetti, who was also inducted into the College Hall of Fame. Congratulations to him and his family, including incumbent coach, and Cignetti's son, Curt.

Up next for Millersville is Bloomsburg (5-0), who will also be celebrating its homecoming.

Bloomsburg employs the PSAC's best running back, by far. Millersville has seen Mercyhurst's Brandon Brown-Dukes and West Chester's Rondell White, but Franklin Quiteh will by far be the Marauder defense's most challenging adversary. Quiteh has already rushed for 1,055 yards on 110 carries along with 13 TDs. Simple division shows that Quiteh rushes for about a first down every single run.

He is currently the reigning PSAC Athlete of the Week. It will be an extreme challenge for Millersville to stop him.

It was the week of the blowout in the PSAC, it appeared. Shippensburg obliterated Seton Hill 73-27, Mercyhurst crushed Cheyney 63-14, Slippery Rock trashed Kutztown 58-10, ESU dispatched Clarion 48-28, Bloomsburg dealt with Gannon 35-14, and Edinboro took care of Lock Haven 31-6.

Next week, it's back to East vs. West. Millersville vs. Bloomsburg will take to the air at 3:00 p.m. on MSBN. www.millersvilleathletics.com/msbn