GAME NOTES: The great Greg Paulus experiment heads to Happy Valley this
weekend as the Syracuse Orange confront the seventh-ranked Penn State Nittany
Lions in a non-conference showdown at Beaver Stadium.
The Orange gave themselves a fighting chance in their opener against Minnesota
last weekend at home, but new head coach Doug Marrone had to have known it was
going to be a long day after the first snap from center, in the 23-20 overtime
loss, sailed over the head of Paulus, the former Duke basketball guard.
As for the Nittany Lions, they wasted little time in separating themselves
from the Akron Zips as they tallied 31 points in the first half against the
visitors and then cruised to the 31-7 win. The victory for legendary head
coach Joe Paterno, now in his 44th season with the Lions, was his 384th as he
continues to rank first in Football Bowl Subdivision history in that
department.
In terms of the all-time series, the Nittany Lions are 41-23-5 versus Syracuse
over the years. PSU has won two in a row in the series, with the last SU win
coming in 1988 by a final of 24-10. Last year, Penn State dropped into the
Carrier Dome and delivered a 55-13 thrashing to the ailing Orange, recording
the largest margin of victory between the teams in the process. This marks the
first Syracuse visit to Beaver Stadium since 1990.
"We got into the play a little bit late and I rushed it a little bit," Paulus
said after the game when referring to the snap that sailed over his head on
the first offensive play of the game. "The communication on my part wasn't
very good. I will take the blame for that. After that, we settled down so
maybe that was a blessing."
Paulus finished the outing, his first as a quarterback since guiding Christian
Brothers Academy, hitting 19-of-31 passes for 167 yards and a touchdown, but
he also tossed an interception in the overtime period which allowed Minnesota
to ease into the win column knowing that the pressure was off. Receiver Mike
Williams collected seven receptions for 94 yards and a score as well.
For a team that ranked 55th in the nation last year in rushing with 148.7 ypg
on the ground, the Orange followed Delone Carter and his 88 yards on 23
carries. The feeling in the Carrier Dome was something that hadn't been there
in several years and Carter was excited to be a part of it.
"I have never felt the Dome like that since I have been here. I just hope the
support stays with us and we can show and give the crowd what they deserve."
As long as the Orange offense doesn't fall flat on its face as it did last
season when it averaged just 270.2 ypg in total offense, there should be more
positive outcomes on the horizon.
Aside from the untimely pick in OT, Paulus should easily be able to play above
the performance of 2008 Syracuse QBs who had a pass efficiency rating of just
94.95, ranking them 113th in the nation.
The defense for the Orange was exposed right away in the first frame as Duane
Bennett made his way into the end zone on a 16-yard run to put the visitors on
top. It also didn't help that the Gophers logged a second touchdown barely
three minutes into the contest. However, from then on the defense held strong
and allowed just a pair of 26-yard field goals in the third and fourth
quarters before bowing in overtime.
Mike Holmes was responsible for a team-best eight tackles and an interception,
while Ryan Gillum posted six stops and two tackles for loss.
"I went out there did the best I could to help this team win, we had a great
crowd," Gillum said after the game. "They executed and that's what happened.
Minnesota did a good job at executing."
Last season the Orange had several problems trying to slow down the Nittany
Lions, coming up with just a single sack and four TFLs, while allowing a hefty
216 yards rushing and another 344 yards through the air. The 82 offensive
plays and 560 yards of offense by PSU were the most of any Syracuse opponent
in '08.
"The positives are that we caught the ball really well and pass protected
really well," Daryll Clark said of the PSU performance against Akron. "We had
a couple misses run blocking, myself making a couple bad reads and having a
pick early in the game on a very stupid throw. You tally all that up and you
see that in film and make the corrections next week."
Clark was being somewhat modest given that he was named the Big Ten Offensive
Player of the Week on Sunday after he set a new school record with 254 yards
passing in the first half alone. Clark finished the outing 29-of-40 for a
career-high 353 yards and three touchdowns. Running back Evan Royster stepped
up with 61 yards and a score on 14 carries as well.
Last season the offense again leaned on the running game a lot, the Lions
averaging 205.9 ypg to rank second in the conference and 17th in the nation,
but this time around Clark has to be excited about the prospects of opening up
the offense more.
A year ago Clark threw for 2,592 yards and 19 touchdowns, against just six
interceptions, but what makes him so dangerous is that, over the course of 28
career games, he also has 15 rushing touchdowns.
From a defensive standpoint, Penn State held the visitors without a single
first down in the opening half, permitting the Zips just eight for the game
overall. Akron posted only 28 yards rushing on 30 attempts and 158 yards
through the air. Nathan Stupar logged a game-high 10 tackles and had one of
the team's four sacks. Ollis Ogbu made 2.5 of his four total stops behind the
line of scrimmage for the Nittany Lions.
"We were feeling good, we were running making tackles," Stupar said of the
unit's feelings at the break. "The defensive line-Jared Odrick-was just
dominating the line. We were just playing well. You're going to get mistakes,
but we rallied through that and kept playing."
Four times last season the PSU defense held an opponent to single-digit
scoring and that is what earned the team the label of third-best scoring
defense in the Big Ten, giving up just 14.4 ppg. Even though the Lions were
third in their own conference, they were in fact eighth in the nation overall.
In terms of total defense, Penn State was tops in the league and eighth in the
country with a mere 280.1 ypg allowed. Against Syracuse a year ago, the
Nittany Lions held to a mere 159 yards, all while making just a single sack
and two TFLs.
Against Minnesota, Paulus didn't face quite the intensity that he will see
coming at him from the Nittany Lions this weekend. Add to that a deafening
home crowd that would like nothing more than to see this former Duke player
fall on his face, and it has all the makings of another lopsided decision.