i think the defense as a whole is going to step up and play lights out for the 1st time this year. on the defense i think grant fleming will have a huge week getting his 1st start. i also look for D-MO to bounce back and have a huge week. obviously we need abdul levier to step up and have a good week but i think Matt Dupre is going to have a breakout game. He looked pretty good in the spring and fall drills.
Props for that.
Thanks for saying what needed to be said.
I've had about enough of these "fans" who are in the single digits in post counts with their "cure alls."
As for Hundley, he's a student and a young man, and his decision to leave is just that, HIS. Whatever his motivation, if he was not happy, I respect his decision and wish him well.
IHate,
I'm pretty sure that I said the crowd was out of it even before the outcome of the game was evident. Admittedly, that became evident very early, but I disagree that atmosphere has to wait until the game is on the line.
I've said this before: it's about the fans being proactive, not reactive. Why wait for something good to happen?
And, I might add, my opinion is based on more than just the McNeese, or similar, fiascoes. Its' based on most games--wins, losses, blowouts, nailbiters--I've been to over the past few years.
I just think, and apparently some agree with me, that there is a culture of passivity among the fans.
Is it wrong to expect more? Why? Why settle for a Curley-Hallman-era Tiger Stadium?
Via preferences menu, you can tell your browser to "disallow sites to move or resize windows". That's what I did and this site became lot more pleasant to visit.
I always come here first so the rest of my internet day is seen full screen.
KingFish you are right on man we might need a written script to get this atmosphere thing off the ground.
Lessons Ragin' Cajuns should have learned long ago (9/17)
Multimedia
By GARY LANEY
AMERICAN PRESS
Back in the old days, Ernie Duplechin used to motivate his McNeese State troops during the week of the Louisiana-Lafayette game by telling them how the Cajuns coaches didn't think the Cowboys players were good enough to play for the Cajuns.
That was a genius motivation tactic and it's no wonder the Cowboys were 3-0 against their hated rival.
The old tactic still works.
"All week, the coaches were telling us this is the school that passed us up," said Cowboys linebacker Allen Nelson after Saturday's 38-17 win over ULL at Cajun field in the first meeting between the two teams in 21 years. "We weren't good enough to play for them. They still don't think we are good enough to play for them."
And so, like the old days, McNeese was the more inspired team this season and it showed, especially in the second half.
If the McNeese players weren't feeling slighted, at the very least they were feeling a sense of relief about the decision they made after high school.
"I made the right choice," said Cowboys quarterback Derrick Fourroux, who was recruited by both McNeese and ULL while he was at Erath High School. "I'm glad I made the decision I made."
That sentiment shows why McNeese is a dominant program in the championship subdivision of Division I football and why ULL has been languishing for more than 30 years playing at the game's highest level.
Look at the postseason record of the two programs if you don't believe it.
McNeese played in three bowl games after it moved up from the college division in the mid 1970s. Since it moved to the championship subdivision in 1982, the Cowboys have been in the postseason 12 times, including two trips to the division's championship game.
That's 15 postseason appearances.
ULL? Try zero postseason appearances as a member of Division I.
And the words of Nelson and Fourroux are all you need to know as to why it's been that way.
McNeese is a model for how to run a football program at a smaller, regional university. And for that matter, how to win at a larger level. And it boils down to this:
Own your backyard.
Long before I ever started watching McNeese football in the mid-80s, the Cowboys coaching staff had established truPleasel relationships with high school coaches throughout Louisiana and Southeast Texas.
Ever since, McNeese coaches have carefully cared for, expanded on and nurtured those relationships. Whether the coach was Bobby Keasler, Kirby Bruchhaus, Tommy Tate or, now, Matt Viator, McNeese has always had a head coach acutely aware of where McNeese's bread is buttered.
You build trust in the area you recruit the most and those folks will be good to you in return. When you walk into a high school field house and everyone knows you, respects you and has had good dealings working with you, that goes a long way.
You wonder how McNeese can win despite a shoestring budget? That's how. You wonder how it wins with a second-rate, but soon to be replaced, field house? That's how.
McNeese is a local team. Most of its players come from the Interstate-10/12 corridor from New Orleans to the west Houston suburbs, with some coming from central and north Louisiana and a rare smattering from anywhere else.
Very rarely do talented football players in that I-10 corridor escape the Cowboys' radar and McNeese coaches, because of their relationship with high school coaches, are more likely to get an accurate assessment of a prospect, both the strengths and weaknesses.
If you don't believe that is the best formula for success, look at what Nick Saban did at LSU. As slick and big-time as Nick "Satan" (as he may be called now in Louisiana) was, he understood that to become a national program, LSU must first win the state of Louisiana.
And that's why LSU won a national championship and has remained a power since. Few Louisiana players escape the LSU net. The days of New Orleans metro players getting away to the Miamis and the Ohio States are, with the rare Joe McKnight exceptions, over.
ULL should look at these examples.
It was way back in the mid-70s when you first started hearing about McNeese coaches using the "they passed you over" line with its players and 30-something years later, it's still relevant.
It's not like ULL ignores Louisiana. Certainly, the Cajuns have had some great homegrown talent like Brian Mitchell, Jake Delhomme and Brandon Stokley.
But the bottom line is it appears that in all those years, ULL has never been consistent in securing the backyard and it's no coincidence that the Cowboys have thrived during the same period.
I was shocked this week when Kyle Link and David Ballard, two talented offensive tackles for McNeese who are from Lake Charles and whose fathers played at ULL, both told me they were never seriously recruited by ULL.
Maybe they came out of high school in a year when ULL was already loaded with offensive linemen and tight ends (Link was a prep tight end who started at that position last year). Maybe there were better players in the area ULL was eyeing.
I can't say.
But what I can say is these two guys whose fathers once wore the vermilion and white were blowing gaping holes in the ULL line, parting the red sea for Jamie Leonard and Kris Bush as McNeese piled up 276 rushing yards.
I don't know why ULL never seems to recruit its home area consistently well. Maybe it's because there's a Virginia Tech guy coaching the team who did not have the pre-existing relationships in the state McNeese has. Maybe it's because the university is so caught up on being bigger and better, it's forgetting the basics.
What I do know is McNeese showed Saturday that, regardless of the subdivision label, that it has a better football team.
And may the Cowboys never forget why.
Well since this is a game thread, I'll make my prediction: Cajuns 27, Troy 24.
Now, I have no valid reason whatsoever to predict such a score. I don't know how we hold them to only 24 without some "help", i.e. turnovers. I did see on their site where Cattouse (sp?) might be out. Regardless, that's my call.
Shof
P.S. I have not started drinking (yet) today. I wanted to ; but it will just have to wait until I get home!
obviously he really didn't want to be on this team. And players don't dictate what happens on a football team the coaches do. It is not just bustles decision. Obviously bustle and blake anderson agree that mike is the best QB we have. You don't think bustle would have put john in if he thought it would save him the all this trouble he is in. And your right he is not the god of football but right he is our football god.i'm not whining about quitters. He is gone move on. And if he was the better QB he has had the last 2 years to prove it and he didn't. iF JOHN REALLY WANTED A CHANCE TO START I THINK THE WEEK AFTER A BAD GAME FOR MIKE WOULD HAVE BEEN THE PERFECT TIME TO TRY BUT NO HE QUIT. there is a huge difference between thinking your the best QB and proving it. I wish the kid all the luck in the world with whatever he does but he quit on his teammates at the toughest time. i just don't have any respect for that. so you stop being rediculous! i geuss your not being biassed at all since you watched john in high scool?
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