It isn't No. 1 vs. No. 2, but in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision, No. 2 vs. No. 3 ain't bad.
The stage is set for the second-ranked Montana Grizzlies to battle the No. 3 Massachusetts Minutemen Friday at 5:35 p.m. at Washington-Grizzly Stadium. The temporary lights are up and aimed. The ESPN2 crew, presumably, has brushed up on the pronunciations of ?Ihedigbo (ee-HEAD-dee-BOO)? and ?Beaudin (BOW-den).?
The teams are primed. The stadium will be packed.The winner of the first semifinal, in what can be called the Division I-AA playoffs for a few more days, earns a trip to the Division I Football Championship next Friday in Chattanooga, Tenn.
?I think it'll be a great game,? fourth-year Grizzlies' coach Bobby Hauck said. ?Probably, like most of them, down to the wire.?
The teams match excellent defenses and balanced offenses. Both teams have had one less day to game-plan, Montana for Massachusetts' gambling, pressure D and the Minutemen for the Grizzlies' gap-sound, run-conscious 4-3.
?They'll be all over the place,? Hauck said of the Minutemen defenders, who line up 4-3, then 3-4, and keep changing things up from there. ?They'll be even, they'll be odd (up front), lots of line games. There will be guys running all over the place, is what they'll be.?
?Their two defensive ends, I really love their foot speed,? UMass coach Don Brown said of the Grizzlies, who haven't allowed a playoff touchdown. ?They are very solid inside. Their three linebackers all can run and cover. I really like both the safeties. I think they have good coverage skills and are great tacklers.
?And their corners, again, complement their safeties extremely well.?
But Brown's biggest concern seems to be the play of Montana quarterback Josh Swogger, who has gotten healthy and been on target down the stretch.
?They're playing very, very good defense right now,? Brown said. ?But we're easily as concerned about the matchup of their offense against our defense. It looks like they're kind of functioning on all cylinders.
?I don't know if there's a throw that Josh can't make.?
Swogger, the Washington State transfer, has six touchdown passes in two playoff games after throwing for eight TDs in the Grizzlies' previous eight outings. The Griz lost junior receiver Mike Ferriter to a broken arm early in the McNeese State game; Craig Chambers, Ryan Bagley and Eric Allen have kept it dangerous for opponents to blitz.
Balancing them is a run game that is currently led by redshirt freshman Thomas Brooks-Fletcher, averaging 5.6 yards a carry. One telling statistic may be who has the most yards by the final gun Friday - Brooks-Fletcher or UMass tailback Steve Baylark, a 220-pound senior.
?It's December, you've got to stop the run,? Hauck said. ?And you've got to run it. That's the way of the world.?
Baylark has 5,030 career rushing yards, 1,658 of those coming this season. He's a load, though he is impressed by the Griz, who held down Payton Award finalist Arkee Whitlock of Southern Illinois last week.
?There's some big boys out there,? Baylark said. ?I didn't know they had such big boys out there in Montana.?
Baylark figures to be the key, since UMass likes the play-action pass. Yet when he's been slowed, the Minutemen have won. Mostly, he hasn't been; he ran for 198 yards against New Hampshire last week.
Maine did the best job, holding him to 50 yards on 17 carries.
?Maine knows what they're doing,? Hauck said Thursday. ?They're solid. But they didn't beat 'em (UMass won 10-9). It's one of those deals where they couldn't get it done.?
Add in super sophomore Liam Coen at quarterback, a trio of receivers that UM defensive coordinator Kraig Paulson really likes and another all-world tight end (Brad Listorti), and the Minutemen are a handful. Much more so than SIU, which found little room to operate in a 20-3 loss to Griz last week.
The Minutemen won't have a fullback out there all the time.
?They do a little more,? said Paulson. ?They're not so dead-set on staying two-back until they have to go one-back. They can switch gears.
?They're the best team we've seen. They just are.?
Baylark is confident.
?If the run game doesn't work out, I know the receivers will step up,? he said. ?Once they start making plays, I just know I have to be patient, and the run game will open up.?
A sellout crowd figures to have more of an impact than the usual December weather in western Montana.
?I've been hearing a lot about Montana's crowd out there, and the stadium and how loud it gets,? Baylark said. ?You've got to try to drown out all that stuff and stay focused. It's win or go home. Right now we just want to get that win.?
Of course, so do the Grizzlies.
?Regardless of what happens this will be our last game here,? said defensive end Dustin Dlouhy, one of eight seniors winding up their Griz careers. ?This is something you think about, and you do want to take everything in this week and next week, and make the most of it. And pray that everything is positive.?
The stage is set for the second-ranked Montana Grizzlies to battle the No. 3 Massachusetts Minutemen Friday at 5:35 p.m. at Washington-Grizzly Stadium. The temporary lights are up and aimed. The ESPN2 crew, presumably, has brushed up on the pronunciations of ?Ihedigbo (ee-HEAD-dee-BOO)? and ?Beaudin (BOW-den).?
The teams are primed. The stadium will be packed.The winner of the first semifinal, in what can be called the Division I-AA playoffs for a few more days, earns a trip to the Division I Football Championship next Friday in Chattanooga, Tenn.
?I think it'll be a great game,? fourth-year Grizzlies' coach Bobby Hauck said. ?Probably, like most of them, down to the wire.?
The teams match excellent defenses and balanced offenses. Both teams have had one less day to game-plan, Montana for Massachusetts' gambling, pressure D and the Minutemen for the Grizzlies' gap-sound, run-conscious 4-3.
?They'll be all over the place,? Hauck said of the Minutemen defenders, who line up 4-3, then 3-4, and keep changing things up from there. ?They'll be even, they'll be odd (up front), lots of line games. There will be guys running all over the place, is what they'll be.?
?Their two defensive ends, I really love their foot speed,? UMass coach Don Brown said of the Grizzlies, who haven't allowed a playoff touchdown. ?They are very solid inside. Their three linebackers all can run and cover. I really like both the safeties. I think they have good coverage skills and are great tacklers.
?And their corners, again, complement their safeties extremely well.?
But Brown's biggest concern seems to be the play of Montana quarterback Josh Swogger, who has gotten healthy and been on target down the stretch.
?They're playing very, very good defense right now,? Brown said. ?But we're easily as concerned about the matchup of their offense against our defense. It looks like they're kind of functioning on all cylinders.
?I don't know if there's a throw that Josh can't make.?
Swogger, the Washington State transfer, has six touchdown passes in two playoff games after throwing for eight TDs in the Grizzlies' previous eight outings. The Griz lost junior receiver Mike Ferriter to a broken arm early in the McNeese State game; Craig Chambers, Ryan Bagley and Eric Allen have kept it dangerous for opponents to blitz.
Balancing them is a run game that is currently led by redshirt freshman Thomas Brooks-Fletcher, averaging 5.6 yards a carry. One telling statistic may be who has the most yards by the final gun Friday - Brooks-Fletcher or UMass tailback Steve Baylark, a 220-pound senior.
?It's December, you've got to stop the run,? Hauck said. ?And you've got to run it. That's the way of the world.?
Baylark has 5,030 career rushing yards, 1,658 of those coming this season. He's a load, though he is impressed by the Griz, who held down Payton Award finalist Arkee Whitlock of Southern Illinois last week.
?There's some big boys out there,? Baylark said. ?I didn't know they had such big boys out there in Montana.?
Baylark figures to be the key, since UMass likes the play-action pass. Yet when he's been slowed, the Minutemen have won. Mostly, he hasn't been; he ran for 198 yards against New Hampshire last week.
Maine did the best job, holding him to 50 yards on 17 carries.
?Maine knows what they're doing,? Hauck said Thursday. ?They're solid. But they didn't beat 'em (UMass won 10-9). It's one of those deals where they couldn't get it done.?
Add in super sophomore Liam Coen at quarterback, a trio of receivers that UM defensive coordinator Kraig Paulson really likes and another all-world tight end (Brad Listorti), and the Minutemen are a handful. Much more so than SIU, which found little room to operate in a 20-3 loss to Griz last week.
The Minutemen won't have a fullback out there all the time.
?They do a little more,? said Paulson. ?They're not so dead-set on staying two-back until they have to go one-back. They can switch gears.
?They're the best team we've seen. They just are.?
Baylark is confident.
?If the run game doesn't work out, I know the receivers will step up,? he said. ?Once they start making plays, I just know I have to be patient, and the run game will open up.?
A sellout crowd figures to have more of an impact than the usual December weather in western Montana.
?I've been hearing a lot about Montana's crowd out there, and the stadium and how loud it gets,? Baylark said. ?You've got to try to drown out all that stuff and stay focused. It's win or go home. Right now we just want to get that win.?
Of course, so do the Grizzlies.
?Regardless of what happens this will be our last game here,? said defensive end Dustin Dlouhy, one of eight seniors winding up their Griz careers. ?This is something you think about, and you do want to take everything in this week and next week, and make the most of it. And pray that everything is positive.?
