South Alabama Hosts 21st Ranked Appalachian State For Homecoming

October 25, 2019 · By · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference 

The South Alabama Jaguar football team finally returns to play on a Saturday after playing a pair of midweek, nationally televised games against Georgia Southern and rival Troy and losing both.

After another long layover, the Jags look to tame the hotest team in the Sun Belt Conference, Appalachian State who’s ranked 21st in the nation, in South Alabama’s annual homecoming game. The schedule does not bode well for the homecoming court.

USA enters as a 25.5 point underdog at home. Oh and have we mentioned they are ranked 21st in the nation? Well they are and that ranking has set a Conference record too.

The Mountaineers are averaging 42.8 points per game, however their defense is allowing an average of 21.7 points per game themselves. But that does not help when the Jags offense averages a mere 16.3 points per game, their largest output was 37 points against an FCS school.

South Alabama, glaringly, left points on the field against Troy. In the first quarter trailing the Trojans 3-0 and facing 4th and goal at the 1 (after being stopped on back-to-back plays) head coach Steve Campbell settled for a field goal to tie the game.

Then in the second quarter facing fourth and goal on the 3 (after having it 1st and goal at the 3, Tra Minter gained 2, then Cephus Johnson running from the shotgun lost 2) Campbell opted to go for the touchdown and the pass flew with no chance of a catch.

Coach Campbell pointed that the issue is execution. “It’s not a scheme deal or a play-calling deal, we have to grow up and then make the play,” Campbell said. Which is quite funny to hear when you hear fans groan when the Jags have the ball at their own 25 yard line with 1:08 left in the game and they actually call the three plays before the offense even gets set for the 1st down snap.

Two passes, both incomplete, then a draw play up the middle that maybe gets one yard.

Can you guess what happened after those three plays? A punt and then Troy driving down for a field goal going into the half.

On the season the Jags have only converted 4 of 13 fourth down attempts and 31 of 96 attempts on 3rd down. All very pitiful numbers which leads to this fact, the Jaguar opponents have held the ball more than the Jags.

I know, shocker there.

But go back and look at time of possession in the Georgia Southern game. GSU: 40:38 to South Alabama’s 19:22. That’s not even an episode of Friends or Modern Family.

All this talk about how bad the team is performing glosses over the fact that these guys are actually talented, but all you see is Tra Minter, Kawaan Baker and Cephus Johnson as the three big spotlight players. Yes, we’ve seen a flash from others like Jalen Wayne, Jalen Tolbert, and Davyn Flenord on offense.

But where once USA was becoming Tight End U, now there has only been two catches from the tight end position and one touchdown. Actually only one touchdown last season as well. Overall the offense ranks 9th in the 10 team league.

So for Appalachian State, they enter the game bowl eligible at 6-0, ranked 21st in the nation and looking to continue making more noise nationally. The high-scoring offense has kept them going and now the defense seems to be catching up as they have only allowed one touchdown in both of their last two games and forced three turnovers against Louisiana-Monroe last weekend.

On one had the Mountaineers are licking their chops when sizing up the Jaguars. Then on the other hand they want to get through the game without any injuries as they gear up for a run against Georgia Southern (short turnaround for Thursday night game), at South Carolina and at Georgia State after their trip to Mobile.

Running back Darrynton Evans rushed for 136 yards, 130 of them in the first half, against ULM. That gives him 676 yards on the season with 10 touchdowns. Meanwhile Zach Thomas is completing 68.5% of his passes for 1,163 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions.

Mountaineer head coach Eliah Drinkwitz is making sure to remind his team that they need to come ready when they play at Ladd-Peebles Stadium. “They’re backed into a corner so they’re going to have a ton of fight,” he said. “They’ve got a great defensive front, and they’ve got a solid running game, and that’s a recipe for an upset if we don’t take care of business and focus on what we need to do.

“We’re not trying to climb higher in the rankings. We’re just trying to beat South Alabama.”

With an 11am kickoff time, these games can be a bit unpredictable. USA could come out on fire and “pissed off” as Campbell put earlier this week. But do they have what it takes to beat the 21st ranked team in the nation?

Unfortunately I don’t see a win happening for the home team. I think we’ll be officially eliminated from bowl eligibility with our sixth consecutive loss by convincing margin. Now with the spread at 25.5, that’s a lot of points. I think the Jags will have to try to keep up scoring wise, which puts a lot of pressure on an offense that’s been struggling all season. I’m going to take the Mountaineers to cover, but maybe because I’ve been wrong just about all season it won’t work out.

The Jags and the Mountaineers kickoff at 11am on Saturday, October 26th. The game will be televised on ESPNU and radio coverage locally in the Mobile area on 99.5 The Jag and online through the iHeartMedia app worldwide.

Go Jags!

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