By Ryan Divish/Havre Daily News Sports Editor/rdivish@havredailynews.com
When you are in the midst of a losing streak, every break and every call
seems to go against you, even when you are playing at home.
At least it felt that way for the Montana State University-Northern football
team on Saturday in a 10-7 loss to the Southern Oregon Raiders at Blue Pony
Stadium.
Raider quarterback Brandon Griffith found reserve running back Jacobe Krizman open
for a 21-yard scoring pass with
"It was just supposed to be a flat route," said
Northern tried desperately to rally in the fourth quarter, but struggled
against a tough SOU defense. The Lights looked to have a prime opportunity when
safety Nate Walters intercepted a
Northern did get the ball one more time in the fourth quarter with only
Lights head coach Mark Samson couldn't
officially comment on the call or the officiating, but was less than pleased
after the game. But it paled in comparison to his displeasure at his team's inability
to capitalize in the red zone.
"How many times do we have to put the ball on the 5-yard line and not
score," Samson said with exasperation. "Twice we have just one yard
to go and we couldn't get one dang yard. What does that say about our offense?"
To be correct, Northern needed less than a yard. After SOU went up 3-0 on a
Ryan Baker 27-yard field goal in the second quarter, the Lights seemed primed
to take the lead early in the third quarter. Northern marched
the length of the field, getting first and goal on a Cody Nickel 11-yard run.
A pair of Don Saisbury runs put Northern on the
one-yard line. Nickel carried the ball on third down and goal from the one, but
came up just short. Referees spotted the ball just inches from the goal line,
and Samson's sneak attempt came up short again.
"Fourth and goal from the 1-inch line and we don't get in," Samson
said. "That's inexcusable."
Northern (0-5) also had three more drives stall inside the red zone. In the
second quarter, a 24-yard scramble, coupled with a face mask, put the Lights on
SOU's 17-yard line. The drive stalled shortly after
at the 10-yard line. On fourth down, kicker Chris Nagel's 27-yard field goal
attempt was wide right by inches.
Down 3-0, Northern got a big play late in the third quarter. Freshman Josh Glahn blocked a Baker punt attempt that gave the Lights
possession on the
Northern finally got on the scoreboard with 44 seconds remaining in the third
quarter. Samson cut back on an option play and broke free on a 49-yard
touchdown scamper. Nagel made the extra point to give the Lights a 7-3 lead.
After keeping
Griffith, who sat out the first half because of disciplinary reasons, completed
seven of 11 passes for 99 yards. Backup quarterback Boomer Marshall was 19-38
for 210 yards in the first half.
"Third down conversions killed us. Every time when they needed 12 the got
14, when they need eight, they got nine," Mark Samson said. "Their
offense started wearing us down in the second half. Our defense was on the
field way too much in the second half, because we couldn't get anything going
offensively."
Indeed, the vaunted Raider defense was as advertised, holding Northern to 241
yards of total offense and 12 first downs. With the exception of Samson's scoring
run, the Lights next longest play from scrimmage was 13 yards.
Kyle Samson led Northern with 91 yards rushing and 93 yards passing. Clint
Herrera and Nick Arnold had four catches each. Defensively, Marc Samson had a
solid game, registering 12 tackles, including eight solos. Joe Tusick also had a dozen tackles, while Walters and Dilan Saisbury had 11 each.
"That's a good defense," Mark Samson said. "They're pretty
talented. They're physical and they're fast. They really fly around to the
football. They're a senior-laden defensive team and our offensive is so young.
We just don't have enough playmakers right now that can stretch a defense or
break a big play."
After losing 51-10 to NCAA Division I-AA San Diego last week, Olson will gladly
take the win.
"We're just happy to play NAIA football," Olson said. "We didn't
get into the Frontier Conference like we hoped, so we have to schedule some
tough games. We're just trying to do the best we can against some tough
teams."
Olson counted Northern as one of those tough teams.
"Their record is certainly not indicative of what kind of team that
is," Olson said. "They are so much improve.
They played hard the whole game and didn't quit. They didn't bow down to us
whatsoever."
Olson's assessment still doesn't put the Lights any closer to getting that
first win of the season. And Samson admitted that things do not get easier with
each passing week.
"We're running out of time to win games," Samson said.
"Honestly, this is a game we should have won. We had some breaks that went
against us, but we didn't take advantage of the opportunities that we
had."
Northern will return to action on Saturday when it makes the long trip west to
face
Southern Oregon 0 3 0 7 - 10
MSU-Northern 0 0 7 0 - 7
Second Quarter
SOU - 27-yard FG Ryan Baker 2:43
Third Quarter
MSU-N - Kyle Samson 49-yard run (Chris Nagel kick) :44
Fourth Quarter
SOU - Jacob Krizman 21 yard pass from Brandon
Griffith (Baker kick) 10:39
SOU MSU-N
First downs 19 12
Rushing 34-62 35-148
Passing 26-49-1 11-19-1
Passing yards 309 93
Fumbles-lost 1-0 1-1
Time of Possession 25:09 22:00
Penalties 12-145 8-88
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing - SOU: Josh Kerley 13-46, Jacobe
Krizman 14-39, Brandon Griffith 1 (-7); MSU-N: Kyle
Samson 19-91, Don Saisbury 11-42, Cody Nickel 5-15.
Passing - SOU: Boomer Marshall 19-38-0-210; Brandon Griffith 7-11-0-99; MSU-N:
Samson 11-19-1-93
Receiving - SOU: Mike Olson 8-84, Bobby Poeltel
6-106, Jason Laban 4-43, Carl Dice 4-38; MSU-N: Clint
Herrera 4-40, Nick Arnold 4-35, Don Saisbury 2-14,
Cody Nickel 1-4.