Bulldogs bite
Lights
(Created:
Monday, September 17, 2007 12:22 PM MDT)
George
Ferguson Havre Daily News sports editor gferguson@havredailynews.com
The Montana State University- Northern Lights staged a comeback for the ages
against the UM-Western Bulldogs in a game where two young offenses did a lot of
growing up. But, in one of the wildest games in recent Frontier Conference
history at Blue Pony Stadium on Saturday, it was the No. 7 Lights who fell
agonizingly short, losing to the Bulldogs 45-38 in a crazy shootout. After
MSU-N fell behind by 21 points in the second half of Saturday’s game, the
Lights, behind true f reshman quar terback Gar ren Hammons, rallied to tie the
game at 38-38 midway through the fourth quarter. Hammons scored three straight
3-yard touchdowns to bring the Lights back from the dead. But the Bulldogs, who
torched MSUN’s vaunted defense all day long, weren't done, and they went ahead
again on a 65-yard touchdown pass from Keali’i Perbera to Craigh Cornelius with
less than two minutes remaining in the game. Hammons rallied MSU-N one more
time, driving the Lights all the way down to the 6-yard line in under a minute.
But three straight pass attempts failed, and on fourth down, Hammons connected
wi th Jake Eldridge, but the ball never broke the plane, leaving the Lights
short of victory as the Bulldogs handed the Lights their first home loss in
over a year. “Neither team quit,” Western head coach Tommy Lee said. “You have
to give a lot of credit to Northern. We got up big on them and they never gave
up and we knew they wouldn’t. This was a great game, and unfortunately, there
had to be a loser today. But both teams fought hard and I’m just really proud
of our players for that.” The fact that MSU-N was ranked seventh in the country
made the upset stunning enough, but the mere fact that the Bulldogs scored 45
points and rolled up 610 yards of offense on a MSU-N defense that was
surrendering just f ive points per game was downright shocking. “It’s
disappointing that our defense didn’t play better,” MSU-N head coach Mark
Samson said. “We just made some really simple and fundamental mistakes that
hurt us. Not to take anything from Western because what they were doing on
offense, it might not have mattered, but we just didn’t play as well or as hard
as we have on defense as we did in the first two games.” “We knew the matchup
was there,” Lee said. “We thought and still do think very highly of Northern’s
defense. But we also think very highly of our offense and we issued a challenge
to our players today. We challenged them to go out there and move the ball, and
we were able to do that against a great defense.” Indeed, things looked good
for the Bulldogs early on, even after Perbera threw an early interception to
Marc McBryan. Western answered Hammons’ first career touchdown pass, a 17-yard
strike to Coda Tchida, with a 65-yard hookup between Perbera and Cornelius that
tied the game at 7-7 in the first quarter. And from there, the Bulldogs never
slowed down. Western scored twice in the second quarter to take a 21-17 lead at
halftime. And then the Bulldogs unleashed a scoring whirlwind on the Lights in
the third period, scoring 17 points on three straight possessions to lead 38-17
with 4:37 remaining the quarter. In all, Western’s offensive explosion came by
way of ground and air. Perbera threw for an astonishing 382 yards and Cornelius
caught 10 passes for 257 yards. Western’s ground game was equally effective as
running back Derrick Pluff rushed right at the MSU-N defense to the tune of 134
yards on 21 carriers and a touchdown. But as difficult a day as it was for
MSU-N’s defense, the Lights were nowhere near done, even down 21 points.
Hammons was thrust into action early in the first quarter when starter Jeff Van
Nest went down with an ankle injury, and Hammons delivered in a big way. Just
two minutes after Pluff plunged into the endzone to put the Bulldogs up 21
points, Hammons connected with Tchida on a 50-yard pass and catch that set up
his first of three straight rushing touchdowns, making the score 38-24 late in
the third quarter. Then, just minutes later, something good finally happened to
MSU-N's defense, as Perbera was drilled by Josh Glaun and MSU-N recovered the
fumble setting up the Lights deep in Western territory. And just three seconds
into the final stanza, Hammons scored again to cut the deficit to seven points.
Hammons' third straight TD came six minutes later and was set up a by a pair of
great scrambles, and a miraculous throw to Kelly McBryan on a long third down
that put the Lights near the goal line. On the next play, Hammons found the
endzone for the game-tying score. In all, Hammons accounted for 35 of MSU-N's
38 points. He threw two Tds including a 10-yard strike to Zach Wermers in the
second quarter. He completed 13-of-28 passes for 223 yards and no turnovers.
The freshman from Coeur d' Alene, Idaho also led the Lights in rushing with 112
yards on 25 carries. "I thought Green did a great job," Samson said.
"I mean that's a true freshman in there in a game with a lot happening out
there. "But that's why I recruited him here," he added. "I
watched him on film in high school and I knew he was a tough competitor, and
I'll tell you what, he made some big time plays out there in some really
high-pressure situations." And despite coming up short of winning its
eighth straight game at home dating back to last season, the Lights' offense
grew up fast on Saturday. Northern gained 502 yards of total offense and rushed
for 263 yards, by far its biggest output of the young season. "I thought
we did a lot of good things on offense," Samson said. "It's a tough
loss and it's one where I just felt like we let that game slip through our
hands. But our offense really stepped up big when we needed it most, and I'm
proud of that fact. Getting down 21 points, a lot of teams would have folded up
their tent, and we didn't do that." But in the end, the day belonged to
the Bulldogs, who after suffering to straight two-win seasons, are now tied
atop the Frontier standings at 2-0. "Last year, we were a young team and
we were green," Lee said. "This year, we're still young, but those
tough seasons taught these kids a lot. And they are really coming of age right
now. To come up here and beat a great team like Northern, who we have so much
respect for, just gives us a lot of confidence right now. Every game in this
league is a battle for us. But this win does a lot for these great kids on this
team." Things won't get any easier for the Lights (2-1, 1-1) as they
prepare to welcome No. 4 Carroll College to Blue Pony Stadium on Saturday. And
if Northern wants to stay in the Frontier title chase, Samson knows that
Saturday's game at home with the Saints is critical. "We just have to go
back to work and get ready for a really tough Carroll team," Samson said.
"I don't think this changes anything, and I still believe we have a good
chance of doing everything we want to do this season. I think you'll see our
defense have a little bit different mind-set this week, and we just need to
really prepare hard and be ready to play on Saturday." Saturday's game
between MSU-N and Carroll will begin at 1 p.m. at Blue Pony Stadium in Havre.