Troy at FAU capsule

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Quick slant: By losing to Middle Tennessee 14-13 last Tuesday, FAU put itself in a must-win situation tonight. Troy is 4-1 all time vs. the Owls and brings another solid team to South Florida. The Owls were picked to win the Sun Belt title for the second consecutive season, but are off to a shaky start and need to turn things around in a hurry.

About Troy: The Trojans use a spread offense, and sophomore QB Jamie Hampton has been running it well in his first season as a starter. Hampton has completed 63.4 percent of his passes and is averaging 232.5 yards passing, with nine touchdowns and seven interceptions. The defense is led by LB Boris Lee, who has 56 tackles. The Trojans are weak at the corners, something FAU needs to exploit.

About FAU: The Owls have lost three in a row and scored one touchdown in those games. The defense, led by Frantz Joseph's 64 tackles, has improved against the spread but needs to force turnovers to help the offense. QB Rusty Smith has completed just 48.1 percent of his passes and needs to bump that up if the Owls are going to win. Expect FAU to try to run against Troy to take the burden off Smith and the drop-prone receiving corps.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Owls know they must cut down on turnovers to turn season around



- After searching for answers to what ails FAU's offense, the consensus is in turnovers have grounded the once high-flying Owls.

The Owls are a minus-9 in turnover ratio, having coughed the ball up 13 times and taken it away from opponents just four times.

"We have to take care of the football a lot better. That is the key part," said quarterback Rusty Smith.

Smith has thrown seven interceptions, including six in the last two games, and tossed just four touchdown passes after throwing 32 last season.

FAU now ranks No. 116 with a turnover ratio of minus-1.80 per game, after finishing 2007 third best in the nation, with plus-18, for a ration of plus-1.38 per game.

To gauge just how important turnovers are, take a look at how Minnesota and FAU have fared.

FAU went 8-5 last season helped by that positive turnover ratio. And one of those wins was over Minnesota.

The Golden Gophers turned the ball over five times in the FAU game, and ended the season at plus-15, which had them ranked No. 115 in the country. They finished the season at 1-11.

FAU and Minnesota met for a rematch this season on Sept. 20, and this time the Gophers whipped FAU 37-3, aided for four Owls turnovers.

Minnesota is now 5-1, thanks in large part to being able to hang onto the ball while stealing it away from opponents, and they are No. 2 in the country in turnover margin (plus-10, plus-1.67 per game).

FAU's minus-1.80 per game turnover ration is the main reason the Owls are at 1-4 and 0-1 in the conference, and facing an elimination game against the Trojans at Lockhart Stadium. Kickoff is at 8 p.m. and the game will be broadcast nationally on ESPN2.

"Not turning the ball over and getting some turnovers. That will straighten things out in a hurry," FAU coach Howard Schnellenberger said.

"Last year, one thing we didn't do was turn the ball over. This year, we turn the ball over, and it doesn't give you a chance to win," said offensive lineman Brandon Jackson.

You could feel it in the huddle when we are clicking some reason this year, we were clicking, clicking, clicking, then mistake here, penalty here, turnover here. Last year, one thing we didn't do was turn the ball over. This year, turn the ball over, it doesn't give you a chanc.e

FINDING THE CHEMISTRY: Losing to Minnesota did not hurt FAU as much as last Tuesday's loss to Middle Tennessee in the Owl's conference opener.

FAU had four turnovers in the game, including a fumble at the Blue Raiders goal line, and FAU lost 14-13 to a team they should have handled with little trouble.

"For a team as mature as we are, we have to be able to win a football game like that," Smith said.

But they didn't, and with Smith's completion rate at 48.1 percent (ranking 110th) and quarterback rating at 104.54 (ranking 102nd), have many wondering why he is struggling so much.

That answer is elusive. "It just seems we are not meshing like we were last year. The chemistry for some hasn't been there. There are a lot of things you can try and put your finger on but you can't really say that. Things obviously going through your mind that you think are the reason," Smith said.

Jackson also has noticed something missing on offense. "You could feel it in the huddle when we are clicking, and we did that a lot last season. For some reason this year, we were clicking, clicking, clicking, then mistake here, penalty here, turnover here," Jackson said.

Another problem has been FAU's role as favorite coming into the season, something they have had trouble handling.

"It is unchartered water for us. Something we haven't experienced before. Me, personally, I never experience being to top dog in high school or in college. We are still feeling it out. Everyone is going to bringing their A game when they play us," Smith said.

The loss to MTSU could haunt the Owls, since they had the game in hand but turnovers allowed the Blue Raiders to hang around and then win it 14-13 by scoring on their final two drives, including the final one on a Hail Mary pass with no time left.

"For a team as mature as we are, we have to be able to win a football game like that. We have to be. We have been on ESPN before, we have beaten that team before, we have everybody coming back [from last year] but a couple. You have to be able to win a football game like that. You have to be able to put the ball in when you are on the 1-yard line, you have to score when you are on their 5-yrd line. You have to be able to do things like that. I could go on, but I don't want to. Sorry," Smith said.

That sets up tonight's game against Troy, a team that is 4-1 all-time against the Owls, but that one loss was last season, which denied the Trojans their second straight Sun Belt title and trip to the New Orleans Bowl.

While FAU knows Troy will be looking for revenge, the Owls are staring at survival.

"We are just trying to get our season turned around right now. We are trying to get a victory as soon as possible," Smith said.

"We seniors are trying to tighten up. We know this is our last round. We don't want to go out like no chumps," Jackson said.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Trojans hit primetime


The last time the Troy Trojans and the Florida Atlantic Owls met was Dec. 1 of last year and the Owls walked away from Movie Gallery Veterans Stadium with a 38-32 victory and a trip to the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl.

The trip to New Orleans and the postseason is not yet in jeopardy for either team, but the Trojans will be looking for revenge for last year?s loss when the clash with the Owls tonight at 7 p.m. on ESPN2 from Boca Raton, Fla.

?We had our heads down after that FAU game last year,? Troy sophomore tailback DuJuan Harris said. ?We definitely made a comeback in that game, since we only lost by six after being down so much heading into the fourth, but this is definitely a rivalry game. We want to get a little payback from last year.?

Senior offensive lineman Chris Jamison is ready to get revenge on FAU.

?I don?t want to give them any bulletin board material, but we felt we should have won last year?s game,? Jamison said. ?They came in and they beat us fair and square and whooped us on our home field, but that is something we didn?t forget and they know we are not going to forget. So revenge is going to be a factor in this game.?

Harris said it is important for the Trojans to jump out to an early lead on the Owls.

?We, as an offense, have to get it up quick,? Harris said. ?I just look at it as ?If my name is called, I will do the best I can to help the team out. And if not then I hope someone else steps up.??

Jamison hopes the long break between games will be beneficial for the Trojans.

?It gives us some extra time to look at FAU,? Jamison said. ?They play(ed) Middle Tennessee Tuesday and I think it also gives us some time to rest.

Troy has not seen the playing field for nine days, their second long stretch in between games this year.

When Hurricane Gustav hit Baton Rouge, La., the Trojans? Sept. 6 matchup with the Bayou Bengals of LSU was postponed until Nov. 15. So the Trojans had a 15-day layoff from their season opener Aug. 28 until their home opener Sept. 13.

According to head coach Larry Blakeney, the rest will be good for Troy.

?We need some rest,? he said. ?We looked tired across the board at halftime last week. This was not necessarily on offense, but on defense because they were the ones getting challenged physically on every snap.?

Junior linebacker Bear Woods is ready to clip the Owls.

?It is going to be a heckuva football game and we will use every second of every day to prepare for them,? Woods said. ?It is a big-time conference game and you see every Saturday conference to conference that it doesn?t matter what your record is or what your ranking is when it comes to a conference game. A conference game is as big as any game on your schedule.?
 

TontoKowalski

BoomOuttaHere
Forum Member
Apr 26, 2008
1,927
0
0
U.S. American
Troy vs. FAU - Sun Belt Fearless Predictions
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Staff
CollegeFootballNews.com Oct 6, 2008

Previews and Predictions for the Week 7 Sun Belt Games


Sun Belt
Arkansas State | Florida Atlantic | Florida International | MTSU
North Texas | Troy | UL Lafayette | UL Monroe

Sun Belt Fearless Predictions Aug. 30 | Sept. 6 | Sept. 13 | Sept. 20
- Sept. 27

How are the picks so far? SU: 28-4 ... ATS: 19-9

Sun Belt Game of the Week

Troy (2-2) at Florida Atlantic (1-4), 8 EST
Why to watch: This is supposed to be the Sun Belt Game of the Year with the last two conference champions battling it out for the title. Last year, Florida Atlantic stunned Troy with a 38-32 road win in the regular-season finale. The Trojans sat at home during the bowl season while the Owls went on to win the New Orleans Bowl. This year, Troy survived its two-game stretch against Ohio State and Oklahoma State, and it beat Middle Tennessee in the opener. A win in Boca Raton would set the tone for the rest of the Sun Belt season and would be a big lift during a stretch of five road dates in six games. FAU was supposed to make some noise as the king of the Sun Belt, but it got whacked by Texas, Michigan State and Middle Tennessee before losing last week to Middle Tennessee on a last-second Hail Mary. The league has gotten better so if FAU goes 0-2 in conference play, it'll probably be time to give up the title.
Why Troy might win: The team is rested and ready after getting two weeks off to prepare. FAU's offense is having a nightmare of a time scoring. It couldn't produce against Texas, it came up with three in the Dome against Minnesota, it got shut out in the rain against Michigan State, and it struggled last week against Middle Tennessee. There's no running game and QB Rusty Smith isn't carrying the team. Despite a tough schedule and a blasting from Oklahoma State, Troy's defense is the best in the Sun Belt. It'll stop the FAU ground game cold and the secondary should handle the Owl receiving corps without a problem.
Why Florida Atlantic might win: FAU is playing one of the few teams having as many problems with turnovers as it is. The Owls aren't generating enough turnovers, and there will be some mistakes, but Troy will be happy to give a few away, too. Considering Troy's defense is ultra-aggressive, it's not doing much to get to the quarterback. There should be time to work, which means its time for ...
Who to watch: ... Rusty Smith to be Rusty Smith. So brilliant at the end of last year, Smith got on the lists of hot pro quarterback prospects to watch out for. However, after doing a good job last year of protecting the ball, he's throwing more picks and the yards aren't there. Four picks and just 153 yards against Minnesota was bad, while two interceptions and just 208 yards against Middle Tennessee were a killer. Smith hasn't thrown a touchdown pass in his last three games. FAU is 9-2 when Smith throws two or more touchdown passes, but one of those losses was to Troy two years ago.
What will happen: The offenses will struggle. Smith and the passing game will rebound, but the FAU passing game will be held to well under 100 yards. Troy will get just enough balance, and a good day on the ground from DuJuan Harris, to pull off a statement road win.
CFN Prediction: Troy 17 ... Florida Atlantic 13 ... Line: Troy -3.5
Must See Rating: (5 The Girls Next Door: Season 5 - 1 2008 Chicago Cub Playoff Highlights) ? 2.5
-********** please no promotion of tout scammers on the handicapping forums:admin

The Rest To Come Thursday








--------------------------------------------------------------
 

TontoKowalski

BoomOuttaHere
Forum Member
Apr 26, 2008
1,927
0
0
U.S. American
And collegefootballpoll.com has the spread as dead on:

Score Favorite Line Computer Underdog Score
Tuesday, October 7
Troy -3.5 -4.13 FAU
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top