Lights football turned a major corner in 2005
George Ferguson
Havre Daily News sports editor
It may seem to many that the Montana State
University-Northern football team has been in a rebuilding mode since the
program was reinstated nearly eight years ago.
However, after a 5-5 season and a solo third-place finish in the 2005
Frontier Conference standings, it is clear that the Lights have finally arrived
as a team that needs to be dealt with on the NAIA football landscape.
Combine the successes of 2005 with the fact that Northern only loses nine
seniors from its roster and you have a recipe for a program that is heading for
bigger and better things.
“We just had our final team meetings before the holiday break,” MSU-N head
coach Mark Samson said. “And the kids are very excited about getting back here
after the break and preparing for next season. All the guys we have coming back
are really looking forward to next year and we have a very good core group
coming back.”
While Samson knows that the future could be very bright for the Lights in
2006 and beyond, he also knows that 2005 could have been much better as well.
Northern knocked off two nationally ranked teams in
But Samson can't help think what might have been.
Northern let late leads slip away at UM-Western in September and twice
against playoff-bound Montana Tech.
“We had a great season and the kids did very well this year. I definitely
think we turned a corner,” Samson said. “But I make no bones about the fact
that there were two or three games we should have won.
“When you think about that, you can't help but wonder: If we were the ones
who went 7-3, we might have been in the playoffs,” he added. “Maybe we wouldn't
have and who really knows, but we definitely could have won a couple of more
games this season.”
Wins might not be as hard to come by for Northern next year.
The Lights have fewer holes to fill than ever before. This recruiting season
will be more about improving the level of talent in specific areas and
replacing starters who are leaving the program than about just trying to fill
out the roster.
Northern's biggest losses come at wide receiver
and offensive line. The starting trio of Nick Arnold, Danny Wirtzberger
and Clint Herrera are all graduating after distinguished careers. The Lights
also lose several key offensive linemen.
“In order to improve next year we need to go get some guys that will have an
immediate impact on our team,” Samson said. “One of the biggest areas
offensively that we need to get better at is wide receiver.
“We had some great guys that we are losing but we just didn't have the big
playmakers or speed guys that can break a game open,” he added. “We are looking
at bringing in some transfers that hopefully will help us out with that right
away. We have to do the same thing on the offensive line.”
Northern was one of the top-rated offensive teams in the Frontier Conference
this past season. The Lights finished second in every offensive category next
to four-time NAIA national champion
Second-year quarterback Kyle Samson could have easily been considered the
league's most outstanding player if he didn't play in the same league as
two-time NAIA player of the year Tyler Emmert. Samson
was second in the league in passing and third in rushing, and led the league in
total offense. Samson hurt his knee in the Lights' season finale against Tech,
but should be more than ready to go next August.
Offensively, Mark Samson said that few changes will need to be made, but that
the coaching staff can't afford to let up in trying to improve.
“I think for the most part we were a very good offensive team,” Samson said.
“Our passing game was pretty good and I really like the running backs that we
have.
“But we are going to continue to work hard to get better,” he added. “Spring
ball should be a lot of fun because we have a lot of young guys on offense that
are going to get a chance to step up and show what they can do.”
If the Lights were a highly improved team on offense in 2005, then they
reached the upper stratosphere on defense. Northern's
stout defense was second in the league in almost every statistical category,
and they led the league in takeaways for much of the season.
The Lights will lose one major component of the defense in
“I think we are really solid on the defensive line and we are really good in
the secondary,” Samson said. “I was really pleased with how we played
defensively this season. And, if these kids really dedicate themselves in the offseason, I think we can be even better next year.”
Of course, the next big step in the Lights' continuing maturation process is
recruiting. While Samson cannot publicly comment on recruits until they have
officially signed a letter of intent to play for MSU-N, he did say that he is
making good strides in the recruiting department this year.
“We have as many as five quality transfers that hopefully will be coming in
to help us out immediately,” he said. “With transfers, you want to only take
guys that are going to be impact players, and I think we are going to get a few
of those guys.”
Winter conditioning will start after the holiday break and spring practice
is just three months away, so it is never too early to start looking ahead at
the 2006 Frontier Conference season. And when Samson dares to take a peak into
the future, he is highly optimistic about what he sees.
“We'll know a lot more about it when we come out of spring ball,” Samson
said. “But with the core of guys we have coming back and all that we
accomplished last season, I really think next year could be something special.
“Carroll has some holes to fill but they are still going to be Carroll,” he
added. “Tech has some rebuilding to do as well. So if we can work hard and
continue to improve, I don't see any reason why we can't set a goal of
competing for a conference championship.”
Those are highly optimistic words, but Samson is a highly motivated and
optimistic coach. And with what the Lights showed on the field in 2005, and the
quality personnel, coaches and players combined, there is no reason to doubt
that the Lights will be in the title hunt in 2006.