Lights hit the road to face No. 1-ranked Saints
Ryan Divish
Havre Daily News Sports Editor
rdivish@havredailynews.com
For all of the talk surrounding the Montana State University-Northern football
team and its recent success, the true measure of that improvement will come on
Saturday when the Lights face the No.1-ranked Carroll College Fighting Saints
at 1 p.m. at Nelson Stadium in Helena.
"This is the game where we see how much better we really are," said
Lights head coach Mark Samson. "Carroll is the measuring stick for
programs and we'll see how we stack up."
With their recent success under head coach Mike Van Diest,
the Saints are the premiere program in NAIA, having won the last three NAIA
national championships. They are the program that all other schools, not just
Northern, measure themselves against."
Carroll has won its last eight games, including
a 27-7 handling over then No. 4 Azusa Pacific last weekend in
"They're good. There's no doubt about that," Samson said. "They
return just about everybody from a team that won the national championship."
Well, not quite everybody, it just feels that way to Samson. Carroll did lose
did lose all-conference receiver Kevin McCutcheon and fellow receiver Justin Wigen, along with all-conference linemen Paul Barnett on
offense. On defense, the Saints lost Chinook's Mike Maddox, who was an
all-conference player, along with all-conference nose guard Kevin Cicero - not
exactly wholesale losses on either side of the ball.
Offensively, Carroll returns All-American quarterback Tyler Emmert,
who is the reigning conference offensive MVP. Emmert
is wrapping up a brilliant college career and is considered one of the most
prolific passers in Frontier history. If it seems like he's been in college for
14 years, think about how Samson feels.
"
In his fourth year as the Saints starting quarterback, Emmert
just doesn't get rattled. This season he has already completed 34 of 53 passes
for 473 yards and five touchdowns. He's also ran for a
score.
He is surrounded by weapons with all-conference running backs Ryan Grosulak and Jed Thomas and receivers Tyler Peterson, Zach Bumgarner, Dustin Michaelis and
KG's Casey Crites.
Grosulak and Thomas form a punishing duo of running
backs. In last week's win, they combined for 197 yards on the ground.
"People still think that Carroll wants to throw the ball all over the
field," Samson said. "But they've been a very balanced team the last
few years. I really think that they to want to hurt you up front with the run
first and get you on your heels, and then, throw the ball."
Emmert is only averaging a little more than 25 pass
attempts per game, but when he does throw, he's amazingly efficient. Despite
the loss of two starting receivers, the Saints receiving corp
has been good early, particularly Peterson.
Peterson played for the
"It seems like we have to prepare for a play-making receiver every week,"
Samson said. "
Bumgarner and Michaelis are
more possession-type receivers, while Crites caught a 37-yard touchdown pass
against
However, what really makes Carroll so effective offensively is its offensive
line. Led by center Kyle Baker and seniors Nick Hammons, Dan Mazurek and Jason Ostler and
sophomores Bryson Pelc, Scott Holbrook and Bryan
Camino, the Saints line is the best in the Frontier.
"They just give Emmert so much time to
pass," Samson said. "He can sit back there all day and pick teams
apart. Baker is the best linemen in the conference,
they use him to really set up the run."
While Emmert, Grosulak,
Peterson and the Carroll offense garner much of the headlines, the Saints'
defense is still going about its work in its usual efficient, workman-like
manner. Carroll has surrendered a total of 21 points this season. Last year,
the Saints limited teams to 9.1 points and 236 yards of total offense per game
- the best in the conference.
"I wouldn't say that their defense is overlooked," Samson said.
"Maybe the better word is overshadowed. I guarantee you, no coach overlooks
their defense."
The defense is led by the reigning conference defensive player of the year in
linebacker Gary Cooper and returns all but three starters.
"They have speed everywhere on their defense," Samson said.
"They aren't the biggest team, but they run to the football and tackle
well."
The defensive line lost
The secondary is just as strong with three-year starting safeties and
all-conference players A.J. Porrini and Regan Mack
returning, along with all-conference cornerback Matt Thomas. Talented sophomore
Nick Milodragovich will play the other corner.
"They're so experienced that it allows them to do a lot of different
things defensively," Samson said. "They're just solid."
Northern got crushed 65-3 in the first meeting last year, but lost the second
game just 28-6. The Lights never could get much going offensively in either
game, but it was a common occurrence for most of Carroll's opponents.
"No one else in the league did much against their defense, especially in
the second half of the season," he said.
With all that talent returning, it seems that the youthful Lights are
outmatched, at least on paper. But Samson knows football games aren't played on
paper.
Still, Northern has been much more efficient offensively this season. The
Lights are averaging 32.5 points and 366.5 yards per game. They will be without
starting wide receiver Clint Herrera, who suffered a nasty ankle sprain last
weekend in the loss to UM-Western.
It will take a near-perfect effort from both Northern's
offense and defense for a Light win, but it is something that Samson believes
is possible.
"I'm going with the attitude that we can win," he said. "I
talked to the kids about shocking the state and opening some eyes. Last year, a
lot of our kids didn't believe they could beat them before we even stepped on
the field. They need to believe that if they play hard for 60 minutes, good
things will happen."
The game can be heard on 92.5 KPQX-FM or at www.msun.edu/athletics.
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