Northern Illinois provides challenge to No. 19 San Diego State
Send a link to a friend
[September 27, 2017]
By Kyle Kensing, The Sports Xchange
SAN DIEGO -- Northern Illinois head coach Rod Carey remembers the
play well, citing it first when listing the challenges his Huskies
face defending 19th-ranked San Diego State on Saturday at SDCCU
Stadium in San Diego.
Late in the first quarter a season ago, San Diego State running back
Rashaad Penny broke down the right sideline, well past the Northern
Illinois coverage, and quarterback Christian Chapman hit him in
stride for a 28-yard touchdown pass.
Executing a wheel route any more perfectly would be tough duty. A
repeat Saturday night seems unlikely, based on Penny's assessment of
its use a season ago in DeKalb, Illinois.
"That was a special play," he said.
But given how San Diego State (4-0) ranks No. 5 nationally in
rushing plays of 20-plus yards -- and three of Chapman's five
touchdown passes are from 21 yards or more -- Northern Illinois
(2-1) needs to be ready for a different selection of big plays.
Penny said the entire process of mapping out and executing explosive
plays is a central part of the San Diego State offense.
"Coaches calling the right plays in the right situations (based on)
formations, where we are on the field," he said. "The coaches do a
great job drawing them up on Sundays so we can run them in practice
then call them in the games."
Long-yardage plays fueled San Diego State its last time out, in a
28-24 road win against Mountain West Conference counterpart Air
Force.
The Aztecs fell behind in the second quarter 9-0, unable to mount
much offense due to wind gusts and torrential rain. San Diego State
returned to the field after a 90-minute lightning delay and, on its
first play from scrimmage, Chapman tossed a 42-yard completion to
tight end Kahale Warring.
"I thought we were going to be all right when we came out at
halftime, and the weather was good, because that allowed us to use
play-action pass," said San Diego State head coach Rocky Long.
"Which we did the first play after the break. Play-action pass
allows us to run the ball better."
Chapman completed another long throw set up off play-action, finding
tight end David Wells for a 28-yard touchdown pass in the fourth
quarter.
And, indeed, the threat of an accurate passing attack opened the
field for Penny. He rushed for 2.9 yards per carry before the delay,
and 9.9 following it.
"After the weather delay, San Diego State came out, and I thought,
did a great job of handling some adversity," Carey said.
[to top of second column] |
Fittingly, the game-winning score came on another explosive play:
Penny's 53-yard touchdown run. It was his third score of the game,
helping him earn Mountain West Offensive Player of the Week honors
for a fourth consecutive time in 2017.
"I have teammates that say I can win it 12 straight weeks, and I
laugh about it. I wasn't expecting this," Penny said.
For Penny to make it a fifth straight, the nation's No. 2 rusher
(179.0 yards per game) will have to find new ways to make explosive
plays against a stout Northern Illinois defense.
Northern Illinois is coming off a bye that followed its 21-17 road
win against Nebraska on Sept. 16. And the Huskies have proved to be
adept at limiting big-yardage plays through three games. They rank
No. 8 in runs of 10 or more yards allowed, with just nine. They have
surrendered just two rushes of 20-plus yards, and none of 30 or
more.
Northern Illinois' first three opponents -- Boston College, Eastern
Illinois and Nebraska -- averaged 2.96, 1.33 and 2.36 yards per
carry against the Huskies.
Much in the same manner that San Diego State's ability to run feeds
its pass -- and vice versa -- Northern Illinois thrives defensively,
turning its stinginess against the rush into turnover opportunities
via the pass.
The Huskies have six interceptions through three games. Cornerback
Shawun Lurry proved he can be one of the best cover men in the
nation, intercepting nine passes in 2015. But the distribution of
takeaways this year is spread among six players, one of whom is
linebacker Jawuan Johnson.
Johnson earned Mid-American Conference West Division Defensive
Player of the Week following the Nebraska win, racking up nine
tackles, a tackle for loss, and returning an interception for a
touchdown.
Long said Northern Illinois comes in "fresh, healthy, and with a lot
of confidence."
"The rest was needed," Carey said of the bye week. "As far as
getting bumps and bruises healed up, they took advantage."
The Huskies could have also used the bye week to prepare for Penny
breaking off another one of those "special" plays.
-----------------------------------------------
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |