Pirates get midweek exposure

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If the East Carolina football team can treat a Tuesday game day like a normal work day, a commanding lead in Conference USA East could be the result.

Playing on a Tuesday for the first time since a 2003 home loss to Houston, the Pirates will be in search of a 4-1 record in C-USA when they kick off tonight at 8 against Memphis. A win would mean a perfect 3-0 mark against division opponents for defending league champion ECU (4-3).

With virtually every other team in the division still in the hunt, it will be the Tigers (2-5, 1-3 C-USA) trying to climb out of the cellar tonight inside the Liberty Bowl.

Fifth-year ECU coach Skip Holtz has won three straight against Memphis, but admits he's not wild about playing a Tuesday game, which begins a long, strange stretch of the schedule for ECU, but one that includes three straight appearances on national television.

?I love the exposure, and I enjoy going home on a Tuesday night when there's a college game and having the opportunity to sit down and eat dinner and watch the second half, but now that I have to go be part of it, I don't know that I'm as excited about it,? Holtz said of the game, the first of three consecutive games on ESPN networks for ECU.

After tonight, the Pirates are off until they host Virginia Tech next Thursday night, Nov. 5. After that, ECU plays on Nov. 15 at Tulsa in a rematch of last year's C-USA title game.

In order to earn a second straight championship game berth, the Pirates will have to recreate some of the dominance they enjoyed in last weekend's 49-13 rout of winless Rice.

The ECU offense rolled behind senior quarterback Patrick Pinkney (231 pass yards, three touchdowns), junior wide receiver/returner Dwayne Harris (nine catches, 128 yards, two TD, 92-yard kickoff return touchdown) and senior running back Dominique Lindsay (78 yards).

The Pirates could be without Lindsay tonight after he injured his ankle against Rice and sat out Wednesday's practice last week before returning to the field Thursday.

Harris has been electric for the Pirates in recent weeks, scoring five touchdowns in two games, including two straight games with kickoff return TDs. He leads ECU in receptions (42), receiving yards (465), touchdowns (eight) and all-purpose yards (1,073).

?He's starting to really understand the offense,? Holtz said of Harris, who has scored on a reception, a rush and a return this season, and who has also thrown an 80-yard touchdown pass in his career. ?That has given us the ability to move Dwayne around. Dwayne is no longer a stationary target. People have to know where he is.?

The Memphis defense has fallen to seventh in C-USA, allowing 405 yards a game after the Tigers lost three of their last four games. ECU could get a boost in its red zone offense tonight, as Memphis is the most porous team in the league inside its own 20-yard line, allowing points 92.6 percent of the time.

Senior linebacker Greg Jackson leads the Tigers with 31 tackles, an average of 7.1 per game, while senior defensive back Deante Lamar has 26 and junior DB Darius Davis 20. Defensive lineman Mike McDonald leads the Memphis defense with three sacks.

On offense, the Tigers will go to battle behind quarterback Will Hudgens, the third man to take snaps for Memphis this season and one of two passers hurt in last year's 30-10 loss to the Pirates. He'll undoubtedly be looking for his biggest targets, 6-foot-9 receiver Carlos Singleton and counterpart Duke Calhoun.

With running back Curtis Steele still in the Memphis backfield, head coach Tommy West's team has a slew of familiar faces.

?It seems like when you pull the Memphis file out, it's the same names,? Holtz said. ?It's (quarterback Arkelon) Hall, it's Hudgens, it's Steele, it's Singleton, it's Calhoun. All of a sudden, they're seniors and they're playing really well as an offense right now.?

Calhoun is third in C-USA with his 95.1 reception yards per game, and has rolled up 40 catches for 666 yards and five touchdowns this season.

West's offense is fifth in the league with an average of 362.1 yards per game, but it will be tested by a surging ECU defense now fourth in C-USA, allowing exactly 10 fewer yards than the Tigers are gaining.

Against Calhoun and Singleton, it will be a day of big assignments for the ECU secondary, which is led by senior free safety Van Eskridge (52 tackles, two interceptions). Corners Travis Simmons (25 tackles, INT, two pass breakups), Dekota Marshall (20 tackles), Emanuel Davis (17 tackles, INT, three PBs) and Darryl Reynolds (21 tackles) will all be employed in trying to slow the Memphis pass game, as will middle linebacker Nick Johnson (team-high 53 tackles, two INT).

?The thing that's most impressive about this duo is Calhoun is averaging 16.6 yards a reception and Singleton is averaging 16.3,? Holtz said of the Memphis receivers. ?They're not catching the bubble screens and the hitches and the curls, but they're making a lot of big plays.?

The big pass has remained the weak link in the Pirate defense, but Holtz said there were improvements against Rice despite one 80-yard scoring strike by the Owls.

?Overall, I thought the secondary did a nice job,? Holtz said. ?It's nice that Travis Simmons and Darryl Reynolds stepped back into the situation because they really did not play well the week before (a loss at SMU).?

In addition to Lindsay, senior outside linebacker Jeremy Chambliss (38 tackles, INT, sack) is a question mark for tonight's game due to a nagging back injury. Sophomore receiver Michael Bowman is still making his full return from a broken arm in August camp, and senior running back J.R. Rogers appears to be ready to go after his preseason knee injury.

Running back Jonathan Williams (knee), defensive lineman Antonio Allison (broken ankle), linebacker Matt Thompson (elbow) and A.J. Johnson (knee surgery) remain sidelined.

The Pirates will be trying to erase memories of the last game they played in Memphis, a loss to Kentucky at the Liberty Bowl on Jan. 2.

Against the Tigers, the Pirates have dominated, leading the all-time series by an 11-6 count.
 

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Tigers' special teams getting extra work
West redoubles efforts to solve Memphis' troubles


Maybe it has something to do with the seventh game of the season.

Perhaps that would explain -- in a non-analytical way -- why the University of Memphis special teams have struggled.It was in the seventh game of the 2008 season that the Tigers allowed former Conference USA member Louisville, in a nationally televised game at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, to score twice in the second quarter on special teams breakdowns. The Cardinals returned a kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown to tie the game at 14 and, on the final play of the half, they returned a blocked field goal 60 yards to grab a 28-14 lead en route to a 35-28 victory.

It happened again last weekend, in, coincidentally, the seventh game of the season. Battling C-USA member Southern Miss yard for yard and punishing tackle for punishing tackle for slightly more than two quarters in Hattiesburg, Miss., the Tigers eventually self-destructed behind their poor special teams play.

Early in the third quarter, the Tigers allowed Southern Miss' Tracy Lampley to return a low line-drive punt 50 yards for a touchdown and a 17-6 lead. And late in the same quarter, the U of M allowed Freddie Parham to return a kickoff 78 yards to the Memphis 21 to set up a short touchdown run for a 30-9 advantage. The Golden Eagles eventually won, 36-16.

''We really put our defense in a bad situation as far as field position,'' said defensive lineman Steven Turner, who plays on three special teams.

As the Tigers (2-5, 1-3 C-USA) prepare for Tuesday's nationally televised C-USA game against defending league champion East Carolina, improving special teams play will be a priority for U of M coach Tommy West.

''We do a lot of special teams work (in practice) and I'm not real pleased with what's going on right now with special teams,'' West said. ''I'm not pleased at all because we put a lot into it. And we put some good players into it.''

Southern Miss averaged 33 yards on five kickoff returns. The Golden Eagles averaged 26.5 yards on two punt returns.

''It was basically an even game at the half,'' West said. ''You had two teams that were getting after each other really good. Then we fall apart ... they run the punt back for a touchdown and it's 17-6. We were kind of scrambling from then on. Our special teams took us out of it.''

While he's been disappointed with several low line-drive punts this year that have resulted in huge returns -- along with some errant field goal attempts -- West said he's not trying to single out kicker/punter Matt Reagan. Reagan rebounded after an early miss to kick a career-long 48-yarder followed by conversions from 18 and 28 yards.

What he'd like to see is Reagan -- a senior in his first season punting -- adding hang time to his punts. In the past, West has instructed his punters to boot their kicks high enough to clear an observation tower on the U of M's practice fields.

''You punt the ball in a way that you get fair catches,'' West said. ''That's the punter's job to start with.''

As for the breakdowns on the coverage units, West said he'll likely get more involved and said there could be some changes in personnel, but added those special teams have been hampered by an inordinate amount of injuries at defensive back.

''I've got (receiver) Carlos Singleton on the punt team, I've got (defensive back) Marcus Ball, I've got some pretty good players,'' West said. ''But for whatever reason we've lost a lot of guys that would be on those teams. We've got four safeties that are out and can't play that would be involved in special teams and were involved at one point.''

As a result, the Tigers rank 108th nationally in punt return yardage defense (14.8 yards per game) and 96th in kick return yardage defnse (24.1).

East Carolina's Dwayne Harris likely is aware of those numbers. He has returned kickoffs for touchdowns in each of the past two games, giving special teams improvement an even greater urgency.

Tiger linebacker Winston Bowens, who starts on several special teams including the punt team, said the frustrating part is putting so much practice time into that phase of the game and then have ''it not come out the way you want it.''

''Right now we are in a position where we've just got to stay together as a unit,'' Bowens said. ''It's on the players to take pride in each special team. We have to be good there.''
 

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University of Memphis targets red-zone touchdowns
Just kicking field goals isn't enough to win



University of Memphis football coach Tommy West considers it a somewhat deceiving statistic.

When the Tigers play host to defending Conference USA champion East Carolina at 7 tonight at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, the U o fM will enter the nationally televised game as one of the league's best red-zone offenses. The Tigers have scored on 20-of-23 trips upon reaching opponents' 20-yard line, a respectable 87 percent.

But, as West has lamented repeatedly in the past week, only 13 of those red-zone visits have resulted in touchdowns. And that percentage rate of 56.5 is not only lackluster, but a contributing factor to the team's 2-5 start.

''Statistically, we're at the top of our league in the red zone offensively and I would guess we're somewhere pretty close to the top 25 or 30 nationally,'' West said. ''But we've got to get better scoring touchdowns.''

If the Tigers are to rebound from the team's worst start since 2006, they must find a way to score touchdowns when they get inside the opponent's 20-yard line. It's going to be a challenge, beginning tonight on what could be a rain-soaked Rex Dockery Field. East Carolina is the league's second-best red-zone defense and has forced three fumbles in the red zone. Nationally ranked Houston, a future road opponent for the Tigers, has the league's top-rated red-zone defense.

''We've got to get better inside the 20s,'' Tiger quarterback Will Hudgens said. ''When we're in the open field, we're great. We've moved the ball, we've had great tempo. You can kick as many field goals as you want, but when it comes down to it, four field goals is still less than two touchdowns.''

In the UofM's 36-16 loss at Southern Miss Oct. 17, the Tigers reached the red zone on four occasions and scored three times. But two of the scores were field goals, including an 18-yarder when the Tigers were unable to punch it in from the Southern Miss 2. Memphis had a first-and-goal from the 6, but running back Curtis Steele was denied the end zone on three consecutive carries and the Tigers summoned kicker Matt Reagan on fourth-and-goal from the 2.

Late in the third quarter, the Tigers had a first-and-goal from the Southern Miss 9 after a 26-yard rush by Steele, but could advance no farther and called upon Reagan again.

''I felt like, offensively, we gave ourselves a chance to win the game,'' West said. ''But, again, we've got to score touchdowns.''

Part of the UofM's struggles inside the 20 are a result of being a spread offense, an attack that relies more on speed than power.

''When you're a spread team it makes it harder when you do get inside the 5-yard line,'' West said.

The Tigers attempted to counter their lack of power by running Steele out of the Wildcat formation inside the 10-yard line, but it was unsuccessful. West also said there was a mental mistake committed by a running back on a ''stretch'' play that kept the UofM out of the end zone.

''Sometimes it's easier for us to throw it in than it is to run it, but now we've got our (starting tailback) back and we're making progress every week in the offensive line,'' West said. ''There was a point in time where we couldn't run the ball at all. We were a terrible offensive team.''

Steele returned at full speed two games ago after suffering a bone bruise in the team's second game of the season. He missed games against UT Martin and Marshall, but has gained 240 and 136 yards in the team's past two outings and is averaging nearly 6 yards per carry during the stretch.

East Carolina (4-3, 3-1 C-USA) enters the game having won three of its past four, including a 49-13 victory over Rice. ECU coach Skip Holtz said his chief concern with Memphis is that the Tigers have the ability to be an explosive offense. He said the senior-laden unit includes veteran receivers Duke Calhoun and Carlos Singleton, in addition to Steele and sixth-year quarterback Hudgens.

''This is a very talented offensive team,'' Holtz said. ''They outgained Southern Miss by about 100 yards (425-360). It's not like they're getting beat up. They're one of the better looking football teams we're going to play.''

FOUR THINGS TO WATCH

1. Rece, Mark and Lou: This may fall under the category of 1 Thing to Hear. ESPN's Rece Davis and Mark May will be joined in the booth at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium tonight by analyst Lou Holtz, whom Davis and May may have to filter. It could be difficult for Lou to suppress his emotions as he analyzes the performance of the East Carolina coach. Of course, that would be Lou's son, Skip.

2. Memphis' special teams: Here's a group that must elevate its play. Two weeks ago at Southern Miss, the UofM allowed a 50-yard punt return for a touchdown and a 78-yard kickoff return that led to a TD. ECU will be as strong, if not stronger. Return specialist Dwayne Harris has returned kickoffs for touchdowns in each of the past two games. And the Pirates lead the nation in punt returns (a 20-yard average).

3. East Carolina run game: The Pirates have averaged 153 yards on the ground with nine touchdowns in their past four games. Much of the credit goes to a veteran offensive line, led by guards Terence Campbell (6-5, 318) and Cory Dowless (6-5, 309) and center Sean Allen (6-3, 310).

4. Tiger RB Curtis Steele: Steele will attempt to rush for 100 or more yards for the third straight game against one of the league's top rush defenses. Steele gained 136 against a similarly stout Southern Miss defense two weeks ago, but the Pirates have allowed an average of 53 rushing yards in their past two games (against the not-so-run-oriented offenses of Rice and SMU).
 

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High Scoring Affairs
In recent years when the Tigers and Pirates played, the scoreboards lit up. Since 2003 (six games), the winner of the Memphis-East Carolina encounter scored 30 or more points five times. But, the losing team's offense didn't disappoint either, scoring 24 or more points four times.

The combined total points scored in the last six games is 380, and the combined average per game in that stretch is 31.7 points. The two squads combined for 96 points (56-40 East Carolina win) in 2007. It was the most points combined in the 17-game series. It was also the most points combined in a Tiger game since Memphis' 2004 encounter against Louisville. The Tigers and Cardinals combined for 105 points (56-49 Louisville win) in that game.


total is easing down to 48, most likely because of close to 100% chance of rain tonight. however, little or no wind expected so it looks like a nice opportunity to wait to see if total drops further and then catch a bargain over play closer to gametime.


ie, kudos as always.
 
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