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Harry

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  1. I gave you a plus one because you had the guts to stick to your guns on the prediction. This is going to be a VERY tough road game for us. This sort of reminds me of Troy matchup in the bowl game. UAB seems to be coming into their own at the right time.
  2. Agreed it might be better to look at the percentage of jucos/transfers in the two deep.
  3. Agreed. I was a little surprised at how high our count was as well.
  4. Here's what I see, UAB looks very balanced in that they can run the ball effectively with RB Spencer Brown (6-0, 220) behind a big o-line, their QB is accurate but also a BIG threat to run the ball and they have a big time WR Xavier Ubosi (6-3 and can run). Not many defensive highlights but them holding La. Tech to 7 points is pretty telling. Against Rice their special teams shined.
  5. To put this into context, we have 34 on our roster (roughly half) by my count: Austin Aune - Arkansas transfer Tim Faison - Independence CC Anthony Wyche LA Valley CC Jalen Guyton Notre Dame/Trinity Valley Quenien Jackson DuPage DeAndre Torrey Miss Gulf Coast Kemon Hall Itawamba CC Keegan Brewer Kansas Chris Jackson Hadrin Simmons Quinn Shanbour OSU Josh Adebayo Howard EJ Ejiya North Dakota SCS Loren Easly SFA Cole Hedlund Arkansas Dennis Smith Sterling College Bryce English K-State Jack Giblin UTSA Alvin Kensworthy Kilgore JC Mike Linehan Idaho Christian Hosely Howard Payne Chaz Davis Midwestern State Jamie King College of the Desert Darrian McMillian Butler CC Sam Lucas Blinn Sosaia Mose Tyler JC Ted Fausak De Anza College Chad Hickson Panhandle State Jevin Pahinui College of the Siskiyous Thomas Preston Scottsdale CC Riley Mayfield Abilene Christian Cudjoe Young Scottsdale CC Tuluaa Saafi Mount San Antonio Caleb Colvin NEO CC Nicholas Pichon Texas Lutheran
  6. It does look like they lose a lot. They have 30 redshirt seniors and 5 regular seniors for a total of 35. 12 redshirt juniors, 9 juniors, 22 redshirt sophomores, 9 sophomores, 10 redshirt freshmen and 21 freshmen.
  7. I just went through their online roster and expected to see a high level of juco transfers but holy cow, this may be the most transfer laden program we have ever played. I counted 60 players on their active roster who are either juco or 4-year college transfers. Poor Rice with their high academic standards must have felt like they were playing an NFL team last weekend! I list the transfer or juco/community college for each transfer player listed on their official roster below. Arizona Iowa Western CC Montana State Trinity Valley JC Arkansas Baptist Ole Miss Copiah Lincoln CC Dodge City CC LA Pierce CC Louisville Galivan CC Tyler JC Miss Gulf Coast Buffalo Tyler JC Fresno City CC Fullerton CC Indiana Cisco JC Iowa Western CC Chaffey CC Scottsdale CC Troy Fresno City CC Jacksonville State Alabama A&M Arkansas State Itawamba CC Hutchison CC Butler CC Jones County CC Northeast Miss CC Auburn Miss Valley State CC San Francisco CC East Mississippi CC Navarro JC Glenville State CC Jones County CC Alabama A&M Trinity Valley JC Iowa Western JC University of Cumberlands Miss Gulf Coast CC Western Kentucky Northland C&T College Miss Gulf Coast CC Orange Coast CC Univ of West Alabama Fullerton CC Scottsdale CC Samford Wyoming/Mesa JC Iowa Western CC North East Miss CC Blinn JC USF Coffeyville CC Iowa Western CC Copiah Lincoln CC Eastern Arizona CC
  8. "This one has a lot of special implications. It is Homecoming, which sometimes, I think, gets a negative connotation of who you pick for your opponent. The history shows that we played Louisiana Tech last year for homecoming. That tells you that we're trying to pick our toughest opponent for Homecoming. We're playing for Children's Harbor and the recognition of the patients there with their names on the back. We're playing for more than ourselves, literally. We're going to be playing for the names on the back. Each player will receive a card in their locker today that talks about who their patient or former patient of Children's Harbor is. Last year, it was amazing to me how our players embraced that and got to know these stories. They knew who they were playing for. We're also going to have a former patient who is going to speak to the team for a few minutes today. That really just lets them know what they're playing for." "We've just got a great opponent coming here. They're really, really good. They had the one loss to Louisiana Tech on a blocked field goal. They beat a really good Southern Miss team. They have the MVP of our league at quarterback. He is phenomenal. They do a lot of great things offensively. Defensively, they improved during the offseason. They're a lot better defensively. You've seen what they do on special teams with the punt return that they had against Arkansas. They've thrown it all the way back across the field. Coach Litrell had done a terrific job. They're doing really great things there. It's one of the fastest-growing areas in the country and they're taking advantage of it. We will have our hands full but this is why we play the game. We are really excited about the game. We are really excited about our crowd. I would love to see a tremendous turnout for all the many reasons. If our fans want to see a really good football game, they'll come out and support us and come see us Saturday night." On North Texas quarterback Mason Fine and the challenges that he presents: We got to see him last year. He's just not a really big guy. Their offensive coordinator, who was a Texas Tech quarterback, made a comment last year that he is the most accurate quarterback that he has ever seen. That's pretty high praise when you say that. He can literally throw it 70 yards. He has a cannon for an arm. He is unbelievably accurate. We know what kind of pass rush that Louisiana Tech has. They were all over him and he was making throws. We saw it last year in person. He's super accurate and they have a very innovative offense. They have a different run game with all the counters and reads. They get their backs out of the backfield. With the tight ends, it's a lot of block and release. They have a head coach who was a fullback at Oklahoma, so you have some of the tough run game in there. They have this Texas Tech offensive coordinator who has this mixture of run and throw. Balance is not how much you do of one or another. It's how well you can and they can do both. The quarterback is as good as advertised. read more: https://uabsports.com/news/2018/10/15/football-clark-previews-north-texas-homecoming-and-childrens-harbor.aspx
  9. "This one has a lot of special implications. It is Homecoming, which sometimes, I think, gets a negative connotation of who you pick for your opponent. The history shows that we played Louisiana Tech last year for homecoming. That tells you that we're trying to pick our toughest opponent for Homecoming. We're playing for Children's Harbor and the recognition of the patients there with their names on the back. We're playing for more than ourselves, literally. We're going to be playing for the names on the back. Each player will receive a card in their locker today that talks about who their patient or former patient of Children's Harbor is. Last year, it was amazing to me how our players embraced that and got to know these stories. They knew who they were playing for. We're also going to have a former patient who is going to speak to the team for a few minutes today. That really just lets them know what they're playing for." "We've just got a great opponent coming here. They're really, really good. They had the one loss to Louisiana Tech on a blocked field goal. They beat a really good Southern Miss team. They have the MVP of our league at quarterback. He is phenomenal. They do a lot of great things offensively. Defensively, they improved during the offseason. They're a lot better defensively. You've seen what they do on special teams with the punt return that they had against Arkansas. They've thrown it all the way back across the field. Coach Litrell had done a terrific job. They're doing really great things there. It's one of the fastest-growing areas in the country and they're taking advantage of it. We will have our hands full but this is why we play the game. We are really excited about the game. We are really excited about our crowd. I would love to see a tremendous turnout for all the many reasons. If our fans want to see a really good football game, they'll come out and support us and come see us Saturday night." On North Texas quarterback Mason Fine and the challenges that he presents: We got to see him last year. He's just not a really big guy. Their offensive coordinator, who was a Texas Tech quarterback, made a comment last year that he is the most accurate quarterback that he has ever seen. That's pretty high praise when you say that. He can literally throw it 70 yards. He has a cannon for an arm. He is unbelievably accurate. We know what kind of pass rush that Louisiana Tech has. They were all over him and he was making throws. We saw it last year in person. He's super accurate and they have a very innovative offense. They have a different run game with all the counters and reads. They get their backs out of the backfield. With the tight ends, it's a lot of block and release. They have a head coach who was a fullback at Oklahoma, so you have some of the tough run game in there. They have this Texas Tech offensive coordinator who has this mixture of run and throw. Balance is not how much you do of one or another. It's how well you can and they can do both. The quarterback is as good as advertised. read more: https://uabsports.com/news/2018/10/15/football-clark-previews-north-texas-homecoming-and-childrens-harbor.aspx View full article
  10. I really think we need him against UAB. He could be the difference.
  11. Everyone is talking about the defense and rightly so- but another big factor from the USM game is the re-emergence of Guyton. “Guyton — finished the evening with seven catches for 124 yards and one touchdown.”
  12. Super big kudos to coach Ek for landing him. Guy is paying huge program dividends.
  13. With all due respect - screw the measurables. This cat can play at a very HIGH level. He may be better than Cody/Zach/Kassel and they were the best we ever had IMHO.
  14. We sometimes seem to get caught up the extra-curriculars and miss the main point. That was a very solid win, one of the best in the Littrell era in my opinion. Southern Miss is a proud program, has quality talent and are well coached. Not everything went our way but we found a way to win. The defense played big.
  15. Ole Miss just came back to score TD. Ark leads barely 33-31 with 4:15 left in 4th.
  16. DENTON, Texas — Mason Fine cooked the Golden Eagles again. And after Saturday's performance, he ought to have the recipe just right. North Texas pulled away late for a 30-7 win over Southern Miss, Fine's third win in as many seasons over the Golden Eagles. "At some point, you just have to give credit where credit is due," Southern Miss linebacker Jeremy Sangster said. "That guy is good. Really, really good." The senior threw for 292 yards and a touchdown. Statistically, it was an underwhelming performance for the Maxwell and Manning Award candidate. But what the stats don't show is Fine's ability to scramble — the way he avoids sacks and gets rid of the football or how he never pulls the ball and keeps his eyes down field. It also doesn't show how he kept getting back up after Sangster planted him in the ground twice in the first quarter and again in the third. read more: https://www.clarionledger.com/story/sports/college/southern-miss/2018/10/13/southern-miss-falls-north-texas-30-7/1630775002/
  17. DENTON - Saturday's game at Apogee Stadium bordered on an elimination game for the Mean Green in Conference USA's West Division. Lose and they'd be two games back of multiple teams, including the day's opponent, Southern Miss. In a meeting of two of the top-scoring offenses in C-USA, it was the North Texas defense that vaulted the Mean Green back into the thick of the division battle, highlighted by defensive back Khairi Muhammad ripping the ball from the grasp of a Golden Eagles receiver at the North Texas 11-yard line when Southern Miss was driving for the lead in the second half. The Mean Green defense forced turnovers in their own red zone, forced a turnover on downs with stops on third and fourth and 1 of USM's brace of bruising 240-plus-pound running backs, got two sacks each from E.J. Ejiya and LaDarius Hamilton, two pass breakups apiece from Jameel Moore and Cam Johnson, and held Southern Miss 25 points below their season-scoring average to lead the Mean Green to a 30-7 victory. "They have a tough, physical defense," North Texas coach Seth Littrell said of the Golden Eagles. "It was our mentality all week to challenge our defense this week. They heard a lot about their defense, and we have a great pride in what we do. When we play with all 11 focused, we've got a very special defense as well. "It starts up front," he added. "We did a great job of dominating the line of scrimmage, and that makes it hard to run the football. That makes it challenging when an offense gets behind the chains. We had some huge turnovers, some huge stops. It allowed our offense to regroup, and they were able to wear them down." The North Texas offense struggled for consistency but came up with big plays of its own to hand Southern Miss its first C-USA loss. Quarterback Mason Fine threw for 292 yards, running back DeAndre Torrey rushed for 95 yards and three touchdowns, and Jalen Guyton, who torched the Golden Eagles a year ago for 14 catches and 211 yards, again tormented USM with seven receptions for 124 yards and the Mean Green's first touchdown of the game. North Texas amassed 457 yards, the most Southern Miss (2-3, 1-1) has allowed all year. "We haven't reached our potential yet," Fine said. "Our defense has had our back. It's time for the offense to step up." The win lifts North Texas to 6-1, but more importantly it makes the Mean Green 2-1 in C-USA play, with the division's remaining undefeated leaders still ahead on the schedule. After a scoreless opening quarter, both teams struck on big plays. North Texas went up 7-0 when Fine rolled to his right and found Guyton behind the USM defense. Guyton stretched out for the pass and snared a 53-yard touchdown, the longest UNT completion of the season. But Southern Miss struck back on its next possession. Golden Eagle wide receiver Quez Watkins took a pass over the middle and wove his way back and forth through the UNT secondary, shedding would-be tacklers for a 44-yard score and a 7-7 game. From there, each team made penetrations across midfield, but North Texas made two big plays to take a 10-7 lead to halftime. Guyton hauled in a pass from Fine and escaped a tackler up the sidelines for 32 yards on second and 18, which led to a 41-yard field goal from Cole Hedlund, his 13th of the season. Southern Miss responded with a drive to the edge of scoring territory, where it faced third and one from the North Texas 44. Ejiya and Tyreke Davis stopped a third-down run for no gain, then Ejiya stuffed a fourth-down plunge for a one-yard loss to turn the ball over on downs. The Mean Green defense kept swarming the Golden Eagles coming out of halftime, holding them to 125 yards in the second half. But despite its offensive struggles, Southern Miss had a chance to take the lead in the third quarter when it drove deep into North Texas territory. Trailing 10-7, USM was about the go in for a touchdown when it hit a pass at the North Texas 11-yard line. But Muhammad, not satisfied with making the tackle, ripped the ball from the receiver's hands. "When he caught it, it was on his shoulder," Muhammad said. "I thought I could get my hand on the ball, and I just stripped it out. It was just trying to make a play." "That was a huge momentum play," Littrell said. The takeaway snuffed out the last Southern Miss' last scoring threat, while North Texas got its offense moving the rest of the half. Michael Lawrence pulled in a 33-yard pass to ignite a drive late in the third quarter, and Torrey capped the march with 6-yard run, squirming through the middle of the Golden Eagle defense for a 16-7 lead. North Texas finished off the win with a pair of fourth-quarter scoring drives, finished off by Torrey TDs. "He ran the ball very hard today," Littrell said. "They load the box, so running backs have to run through tackles." The win makes North Texas bowl eligible with six wins, not that the Mean Green - having been to a bowl two-straight years and with significantly elevated goals this year - were particularly interested in that little nugget. "I told them congratulations on being bowl eligible," Littrell said. "Not one of them cheered or anything. It's all about being focused and going 1-0 next week." Quick Hits The start of Saturday's game was delayed 30 minutes by lightning storms in the Denton area during pre-game. The Mean Green's 6-1 start is their best since 1988, and it's the 10th time in program history to start 6-1 or better. Junior defensive end LaDarius Hamilton recorded his third sack of the season in flying fashion. Hamilton dove over a Southern Miss offensive lineman and landed on the back of USM quarterback Jack Abraham, crumpling him for an 11-yard loss. Hamilton had two sacks Saturday, his second multi-sack game of the year. Junior defensive back Khairi Muhammad's theft of a pass from the hands of a USM receiver was his first forced fumble of the season and second of his career. Redshirt junior wide receiver Jalen Guyton's 53-yard touchdown reception in the second quarter was the Mean Green's longest pass of the season. Redshirt junior defensive back Taylor Robinson stopped a USM drive late in the first half with his second interception of the season. Junior quarterback Mason Fine (Peggs, Okla.) became UNT's all-time leader in completions, slipping past Derek Thompson (2009-13) and Mitch Maher (1991-94). Fine has 653 career completions. The gap between Fine and Maher for the all-time career passing lead is down to 685 yards. Maher finished his career with 8,519 yards and Fine is at 7,834. Fine also took over third place in career pass attempts with 1053, moving ahead of Steve Ramsey (1967-69). Fine's 292-yard performance Saturday ties him for the most 200-yard passing games in his career. Fine and Maher each have 23. The senior linebacking duo of E.J. Ejiya (Blaine, Minn.) and Brandon Garner (Mansfield, Texas) continue to climb the school record book in tackles for loss. Ejiya had three tackles for loss, giving him 29.5 for his career and moving him into fourth place all-time at North Texas ahead of Brandon Akpunku (2008-11). Ejiya has 14.0 for the season, tied for fifth best in program history with Adrian Awasom (2004). Garner, meanwhile, had a tackle for loss to lift his career total to 26.0, tying him with Corbin Montgomery (1996-99) for sixth on the all-time list. Sophomore running back DeAndre Torrey (Gautier, Miss.) has two games this year with three touchdowns - but without rushing for 100 yards in either game. He had 95 Saturday. Junior wide receiver Michael Lawrence topped 1,000 receiving yards for his career. Lawrence had two catches for 44 yards Saturday. Junior wide receiver Rico Bussey, Jr. (Lawton, Okla.) had his 100th career reception. Redshirt junior tight end Caleb Chumley had his first reception of the season, a 5-yard catch on the Mean Green's opening possession of the game. This was the first game this year in which neither team scored in the opening period. Link: https://meangreensports.com/news/2018/10/13/football-defense-leads-north-texas-to-23-7-win.aspx
  18. Courtesy UNT Athletics DENTON - Saturday's game at Apogee Stadium bordered on an elimination game for the Mean Green in Conference USA's West Division. Lose and they'd be two games back of multiple teams, including the day's opponent, Southern Miss. In a meeting of two of the top-scoring offenses in C-USA, it was the North Texas defense that vaulted the Mean Green back into the thick of the division battle, highlighted by defensive back Khairi Muhammad ripping the ball from the grasp of a Golden Eagles receiver at the North Texas 11-yard line when Southern Miss was driving for the lead in the second half. The Mean Green defense forced turnovers in their own red zone, forced a turnover on downs with stops on third and fourth and 1 of USM's brace of bruising 240-plus-pound running backs, got two sacks each from E.J. Ejiya and LaDarius Hamilton, two pass breakups apiece from Jameel Moore and Cam Johnson, and held Southern Miss 25 points below their season-scoring average to lead the Mean Green to a 30-7 victory. "They have a tough, physical defense," North Texas coach Seth Littrell said of the Golden Eagles. "It was our mentality all week to challenge our defense this week. They heard a lot about their defense, and we have a great pride in what we do. When we play with all 11 focused, we've got a very special defense as well. "It starts up front," he added. "We did a great job of dominating the line of scrimmage, and that makes it hard to run the football. That makes it challenging when an offense gets behind the chains. We had some huge turnovers, some huge stops. It allowed our offense to regroup, and they were able to wear them down." The North Texas offense struggled for consistency but came up with big plays of its own to hand Southern Miss its first C-USA loss. Quarterback Mason Fine threw for 292 yards, running back DeAndre Torrey rushed for 95 yards and three touchdowns, and Jalen Guyton, who torched the Golden Eagles a year ago for 14 catches and 211 yards, again tormented USM with seven receptions for 124 yards and the Mean Green's first touchdown of the game. North Texas amassed 457 yards, the most Southern Miss (2-3, 1-1) has allowed all year. "We haven't reached our potential yet," Fine said. "Our defense has had our back. It's time for the offense to step up." The win lifts North Texas to 6-1, but more importantly it makes the Mean Green 2-1 in C-USA play, with the division's remaining undefeated leaders still ahead on the schedule. After a scoreless opening quarter, both teams struck on big plays. North Texas went up 7-0 when Fine rolled to his right and found Guyton behind the USM defense. Guyton stretched out for the pass and snared a 53-yard touchdown, the longest UNT completion of the season. But Southern Miss struck back on its next possession. Golden Eagle wide receiver Quez Watkins took a pass over the middle and wove his way back and forth through the UNT secondary, shedding would-be tacklers for a 44-yard score and a 7-7 game. From there, each team made penetrations across midfield, but North Texas made two big plays to take a 10-7 lead to halftime. Guyton hauled in a pass from Fine and escaped a tackler up the sidelines for 32 yards on second and 18, which led to a 41-yard field goal from Cole Hedlund, his 13th of the season. Southern Miss responded with a drive to the edge of scoring territory, where it faced third and one from the North Texas 44. Ejiya and Tyreke Davis stopped a third-down run for no gain, then Ejiya stuffed a fourth-down plunge for a one-yard loss to turn the ball over on downs. The Mean Green defense kept swarming the Golden Eagles coming out of halftime, holding them to 125 yards in the second half. But despite its offensive struggles, Southern Miss had a chance to take the lead in the third quarter when it drove deep into North Texas territory. Trailing 10-7, USM was about the go in for a touchdown when it hit a pass at the North Texas 11-yard line. But Muhammad, not satisfied with making the tackle, ripped the ball from the receiver's hands. "When he caught it, it was on his shoulder," Muhammad said. "I thought I could get my hand on the ball, and I just stripped it out. It was just trying to make a play." "That was a huge momentum play," Littrell said. The takeaway snuffed out the last Southern Miss' last scoring threat, while North Texas got its offense moving the rest of the half. Michael Lawrence pulled in a 33-yard pass to ignite a drive late in the third quarter, and Torrey capped the march with 6-yard run, squirming through the middle of the Golden Eagle defense for a 16-7 lead. North Texas finished off the win with a pair of fourth-quarter scoring drives, finished off by Torrey TDs. "He ran the ball very hard today," Littrell said. "They load the box, so running backs have to run through tackles." The win makes North Texas bowl eligible with six wins, not that the Mean Green - having been to a bowl two-straight years and with significantly elevated goals this year - were particularly interested in that little nugget. "I told them congratulations on being bowl eligible," Littrell said. "Not one of them cheered or anything. It's all about being focused and going 1-0 next week." Quick Hits The start of Saturday's game was delayed 30 minutes by lightning storms in the Denton area during pre-game. The Mean Green's 6-1 start is their best since 1988, and it's the 10th time in program history to start 6-1 or better. Junior defensive end LaDarius Hamilton recorded his third sack of the season in flying fashion. Hamilton dove over a Southern Miss offensive lineman and landed on the back of USM quarterback Jack Abraham, crumpling him for an 11-yard loss. Hamilton had two sacks Saturday, his second multi-sack game of the year. Junior defensive back Khairi Muhammad's theft of a pass from the hands of a USM receiver was his first forced fumble of the season and second of his career. Redshirt junior wide receiver Jalen Guyton's 53-yard touchdown reception in the second quarter was the Mean Green's longest pass of the season. Redshirt junior defensive back Taylor Robinson stopped a USM drive late in the first half with his second interception of the season. Junior quarterback Mason Fine (Peggs, Okla.) became UNT's all-time leader in completions, slipping past Derek Thompson (2009-13) and Mitch Maher (1991-94). Fine has 653 career completions. The gap between Fine and Maher for the all-time career passing lead is down to 685 yards. Maher finished his career with 8,519 yards and Fine is at 7,834. Fine also took over third place in career pass attempts with 1053, moving ahead of Steve Ramsey (1967-69). Fine's 292-yard performance Saturday ties him for the most 200-yard passing games in his career. Fine and Maher each have 23. The senior linebacking duo of E.J. Ejiya (Blaine, Minn.) and Brandon Garner (Mansfield, Texas) continue to climb the school record book in tackles for loss. Ejiya had three tackles for loss, giving him 29.5 for his career and moving him into fourth place all-time at North Texas ahead of Brandon Akpunku (2008-11). Ejiya has 14.0 for the season, tied for fifth best in program history with Adrian Awasom (2004). Garner, meanwhile, had a tackle for loss to lift his career total to 26.0, tying him with Corbin Montgomery (1996-99) for sixth on the all-time list. Sophomore running back DeAndre Torrey (Gautier, Miss.) has two games this year with three touchdowns - but without rushing for 100 yards in either game. He had 95 Saturday. Junior wide receiver Michael Lawrence topped 1,000 receiving yards for his career. Lawrence had two catches for 44 yards Saturday. Junior wide receiver Rico Bussey, Jr. (Lawton, Okla.) had his 100th career reception. Redshirt junior tight end Caleb Chumley had his first reception of the season, a 5-yard catch on the Mean Green's opening possession of the game. This was the first game this year in which neither team scored in the opening period.
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