This may sound crazy but I think we will be competitive next time we play.
This may sound crazy but I think we will be competitive next time we play.
10 carries, 61 yds
Yes, you are sounding arrogant. Luckily we met some real nice folks that treated us well. No arrogance just amicable folks that hoped we would have a good game and that both teams would suffer no major injuries. So don't worry about us. We will be okay in a couple of years.
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hmmmmmmmm
with 6.1 yperc I wonder why just 10 carries?
Is that the same as YPC?Originally posted by Chuck
6.1 yperc
Just the Cajuns’ luck — FIU hits its stride
LOUISIANA La. — Just their luck.
Louisiana's Ragin’ Cajuns have had a hard enough time of things this season, falling to 2-8 on the year with last Saturday’s 48-3 thumping at Southern Mississippi.
Now comes Florida International, a Sun Belt Conference member competing in Division 1-AA in football which has caught fire just in time for next Saturday’s visit to Cajun Field.
True, the Golden Panthers are 2-7 on the campaign, but they hammered Jacksonville 55-12 last Thursday night and the Cajuns haven’t hammered anyone in a long time.
It was 41-0 at halftime before FIU pulled back on the reins, but the Panthers still finished with 391 yards rushing and 642 yards of total offense.
Both Adam Gorman (19-138-1) and Diamante Demerritt (9-121-1) rushed for over 100 yards, while Josh Padrick hit 10-of-14 passes for 232 yards and three scores to Cory McKinney (3-90-1) and Harold Leath (3-69-2).
Jacksonville had 303 total yards, but much of that came after the issue was decided.
Coach Rickey Bustle’s Cajuns, on the other hand, are anything but hot. They played the Jacksonville role for Southern Mississippi, falling behind 24-0 and generally failing to compete with the Golden Eagles.
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
LOUISIANA La. -- The very thing Rickey Bustle hoped would not happen Saturday did.
Bustle's University of Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns turned the football over on only their third offensive play of the game, giving Southern Mississippi an early scoring opportunity and igniting a 21-point first-quarter onslaught by the Golden Eagles.
Sparked by the early success, the Eagles went on to a 48-3 victory.
"The very thing we didn't want to happen happened on that first series," said Bustle, whose team (2-8) saw its two-game winning streak snapped by the lopsided loss. "We knew we couldn't give them turnovers.
"They're a very good football team and when we spotted them 21 points, we knew it was going to be a tough night."
Tough indeed.
The Cajuns, now 1-21 in games against the Eagles in Hattiesburg, were outgained 550-200 in total offense and 26-8 in first downs. In addition, the Cajuns converted only 3 of 16 on third-down attempts.
"It looked pretty darn bad Saturday out on the field and the film wasn't much different today," said Bustle. "We just left our defense out on the field too long, we allowed too many big plays and we missed a lot of tackles.
The rest of the story
By GLENN QUEBEDEAUX
Special to The Advocate
that's what happens when you fall behind early big guy.
Louisiana's 2003 Seniors
No. Name Pos. Exp. Hometown 93 Darryl Blappert DT 1L Slidell, LA 79 Chris Perrone OL 1L Covington, LA 23 Jamaal Sanders LB 2L Bradenton, FL 27 Patrick Lamy WS 2L New Orleans, LA 50 Shawn Williams OL 2L St. Martinville, LA 44 Wayne Stein FB 3L Garyville, LA 54 Dallas Charles DE 3L Lake Charles, LA 55 Derace James DE 3L Patterson, LA 2 Frederick Stamps WR 4L New Orleans, LA 8 Ricky Calais LB 4L Lafayette, LA 39 Grant Autrey P 4L Morgan City, LA 47 Antonio Floyd DE 4L St. Francisville, LA 59 Ross Brupbacher LB 4L Lafayette, LA 61 D'Anthony Batiste OT 4L Marksville, LA 63 Daniel Taylor DT 4L Sulphur, LA 87 Josh Joerg TE 4L Ruston, LA 22 Eric Bartel WR 4L Friendswood, TX
LOUISIANA La. — With the 2003 football season entering the final stages, the Sun Belt Conference still looks like it did in August.
North Texas remains the banner carrier for the league at 6-3, ready for a third straight title and another spot in the New Orleans Bowl.
After that, UL and the other SBC members are a combined 15-49. No team has a winning record, and five schools have two or fewer victories apiece.
“North Texas is at the pinnacle of our conference,” Ragin’ Cajun coach Rickey Bustle said on Monday. “I do believe we will continue to close that gap, and that we will be able to compete at the top level in our conference.
“Next year we’ll have eight conference games, instead of having six big ones where you get beat down. I want to play in games we have a chance to win, and then see where we stack up.”
Bustle’s Cajuns, 2-8 after last Saturday’s 48-3 loss at Southern Mississippi, earlier played South Carolina, La. Tech, Houston, Minnesota and Oklahoma State in non-league games.
They played within seven points of USC (14-7) and Houston (21-14), but lost to the others (including USM) by a combined 186-to-23.
“In the Mid-America Conference, they play one or two of those big games, and anything can happen,” Bustle said. “But when you have to do it six times, it’s tougher.”
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
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