No matter how much motivation or what the motivation is, Arkansas State will have its hands full with the Mean Green. North Texas (6-4, 6-0) has won six straight after opening the season with four consecutive losses.
UNT is powered by freshman tailback Jamario Thomas, who replaced Cobbs after the second game of the season when Cobbs was injured. In nine games, Thomas has plowed through and run away from opponents at a pace unparalleled by any other running back in the country.
Thomas, whose status has been uncertain this week because of a hamstring pull, leads the nation with 1,708 yards, averaging 6.7 a carry. He has run for over 200 yards in five straight games ? an NCAA record ? including a school-record 291 yards last week in a 51-29 victory over Idaho. He has broken UNT?s single-game rushing record three times this season.
ASU coach Steve Roberts compared Thomas? running style to Memphis tailback DeAngelo Williams. Roberts knows the Indians will have to slow Thomas down if he plays, but isn?t sure how.
?We?ve got some things planned and hopefully they will work,? Roberts said. ?We want to force them to do some things that maybe they don?t want to do. We don?t want them to sit there and hand him the ball 40 times and be successful. ... He is like a good scorer in basketball, he is going to get his points. You just have to make sure he doesn?t get completely unleashed on you.?
UNT quarterback Scott Hall has passed for 1,484 yards and 10 touchdowns while throwing just 2 interceptions. Hall?s favorite target is 6-foot sophomore Johnny Quinn, who has 33 catches for 629 yards and 6 TDs.
Roberts said although Thomas is the Mean Green?s workhorse, North Texas has other options, including pass plays to its tight ends and quarterback sprint-outs.
?They are not a one-dimensional team,? Roberts said. ?Their quarterback, Scott Hall, has really played well. They don?t drop-back pass a lot but they do pass the football very effectively out of play-action and the bootlegs.?
The Mean Green appear more vulnerable defensively this year than in the past. UNT has one of the lowest-rated defenses in the conference, allowing a league-worst 433 yards a game, including 255 through the air.
North Texas is allowing 32 points a game, but leads the Sun Belt in scoring at 26.8 points a game. UNT?s numbers are somewhat skewed by a 65-0 loss at Texas and a 52-21 defeat at Colorado.
ASU junior tailback Antonio Warren needs 8 yards tonight to reach 1,000 yards rushing this season. He has 1,930 yards for his career to rank No. 10 among the Indians? career rushing leaders.
For Arkansas State?s seniors, this will be their final game at Indian Stadium. ASU is 9-4 on its home field under Roberts the past three seasons, 10-5 when playing in its home state.
Emotions are mixed among Indian players as their careers come to an end.
?It?s a weird feeling, knowing this is the last game,? senior offensive tackle Matt Roth said. ?I haven?t tried to think about it too much because football is a big part of my life right now. I?m just trying to concentrate on these last couple of days of practice and get us a win.?
Peoples said he?s seen the ASU program change course in his four years of playing for the Indians. Peoples originally signed with Arkansas State when Joe Hollis was the football coach.
?When Coach Roberts got here, the attitude of the players got a lot better,? he explained. ?People started wanting to come out and play football. It seemed like when Coach Hollis was here, it was more of people going out there and going through the motions. Coach Hollis wasn?t really involved with the players and when Coach Roberts came here and interacted with the players I think it helped the chemistry of the team.?
The only chemistry that matters right now, though, is what the Indians can mix up this evening against North Texas according to senior defensive end Courtney Todd.
?We know that North Texas has a long winning streak. We look at it like it?s an opportunity for us to grow as a program. We know they will come hard and play hard every down. We have to come hard and play hard, too. When I walk off the field, I?m going to know that I gave it my all, my best, that I gave ASU all that I could give all four years here,? Todd said.