Cal Poly – South Dakota State – Fansmanship https://www.fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Fri, 12 Mar 2021 03:58:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.29 For the fans by the fans Cal Poly – South Dakota State – Fansmanship fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Cal Poly – South Dakota State – Fansmanship http://www.fansmanship.com/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/Favicon1400x1400-1.jpg https://www.fansmanship.com San Luis Obispo, CA Weekly-ish Cal Poly vs. South Dakota State: What to look for https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-vs-south-dakota-state-what-to-look-for/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-vs-south-dakota-state-what-to-look-for/#respond Sat, 06 Sep 2014 02:25:40 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=15431 When Cal Poly plays South Dakota State on Saturday in Brookings, SD, there’s going to be a lot to look out for. Can the Mustangs bounce back from a flat-out disappointing opening-game defeat? Can they get a win and take a little pressure off themselves, proving that they can win without playmakers like Kristaan Ivory […]]]>
Sophomore Kori Garcia has a real chance to prove he can make big plays on Saturday in South Dakota. The Mustangs will need him to do so if they are to have a chance on the road. By Owen Main

Sophomore Kori Garcia has a real chance to prove he can make big plays on Saturday in South Dakota. The Mustangs will need him to do so if they are to have a chance on the road. By Owen Main

When Cal Poly plays South Dakota State on Saturday in Brookings, SD, there’s going to be a lot to look out for. Can the Mustangs bounce back from a flat-out disappointing opening-game defeat? Can they get a win and take a little pressure off themselves, proving that they can win without playmakers like Kristaan Ivory and Cam Akins?

Here are a few things to look for on Saturday.

Who’s healthy?

Last season, the Mustangs were decimated early-on. After games at Fresno State and Colorado State, they had lost a starting quarterback for the season, which is bad enough. On top of that, offensive linemen started to go down, defensive linemen played the rest of the season with injuries, and really the team was never again at full-strength.

Perhaps that’s the way a football season goes, but it doesn’t have to be like that.

This year, instead of playing two solid FBS teams, Cal Poly kicked-off their season against a lower-tier FBS team in New Mexico State in their only FBS matchup this season.

The Mustangs seem to have come out of the game relatively healthy — especially at skill positions. This could bode well for this week. The bye week is next week for the Mustangs, but the health of players at thin positions like running back, offensive line, etc… will be things to keep an eye on this week.

Quarterback

Cal Poly’s offense seemed predictable last week — something the triple option doesn’t have to be. Head coach Tim Walsh didn’t take quarterback Chris Brown out of the game until midway through the fourth quarter, presumably because he still had confidence that it wasn’t Brown’s fault that the offense wasn’t moving.

So, how effective will Brown be? If he isn’t, how quickly will Walsh go to Graves. Mustang fans are sick of the revolving door, but unlike last year, it has potential to be a positive this year if everyone can get the mixture just right.

Will the offense be effective?

Which brings us to the offense at-large. In the second half against New Mexico State, things looked really, really bad. The inability for the Mustangs to put any real drive together had to be a little disheartening.

This week they have a new opportunity to move the ball again. They learned last week that they can’t hang their hats on a good first half. Everyone at this level makes adjustments and Cal Poly will have to do so as well.

I’m a big fullback dive guy — probably too much so. I believe that in order to run a triple option effectively over the course of an entire game or season, the fullback dive has to be functional and has to be utilized early and often. As far as I can remember or see from the play-by-play chart from the last game, the Mustangs managed zero such plays in the second half last week. Will they stick with it this week and will that parlay into more consistent movement of the ball on offense.

Turnovers

For all the ineptitude the Cal Poly offense showed in the second half, there was a single play that killed the only spark they had. After the Mustangs defense drew an Aggie turnover, Chris Brown threw an errant pitch on the ensuing play, giving New Mexico State the ball back right away.

At whatever level, turnovers in football are killers. Brown committed two last week and I wonder if Walsh will even give him the opportunity to commit more than one against South Dakota State on Saturday.

Crunch Time

In the end, I think Cal Poly plays a decent game tomorrow, keeping themselves in the game against a really good South Dakota State team. The Jackrabbits stayed with top-25 and SEC opponent Missouri last week before losing 38-18. Cal Poly will do well to keep them under 30 points, which means the offense will have to come out of hibernation and then some.

I don’t know whether Cal Poly has enough playmakers left to put up big points on the road, but that’s why they play the game. This should at least be a fun game to watch until the end.

]]>
https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-vs-south-dakota-state-what-to-look-for/feed/ 0
Mustangs’ First Win Important On and Off the Field https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-first-win-important-on-and-off-the-field/ https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-first-win-important-on-and-off-the-field/#respond Sun, 18 Sep 2011 17:14:52 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=3827 If you’re a Cal Poly alum (and I am), or if you grew up on the Central Coast (and I did) you probably remember your first Cal Poly football game.

On Saturday afternoon Cal Poly Football hosted its first home game of the season at Alex G. Spanos Stadium. And, with a gaggle of freshmen rounding out the stadium’s fifth-ever sellout, the Mustangs put on a show. On what was a stereotypically beautiful San Luis Obispo afternoon, Cal Poly used big plays to run away from the South Dakota State Jackrabbits for a 48-14 victory.

The Cal Poly Student Section was in full effect on Saturday afternoon

After losses to San Diego State and Montana, the football team needed a win. But the first home game of the season, on the heels of Week of Welcome, and in front of a growing community fan base, the importance is greater than you might think.

For a team with a non conference schedule that includes FBS teams Northern Illinois  and San Diego State, games like Saturday’s are ones that the Mustangs have to win to continue to build the program.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_uIVtQbPTc

________________________________________________________________________

Big plays get a home crowd fired up in college football. On Saturday, Cal Poly, whose offense typically features a bruising ground game, provided big play after big play. The Mustangs’ first touchdown came on a 29-yard pass from Andre Broadous to Jarred Houston that Houston caught in the back of the end zone. The second was on a Broadous scramble that was one of the more odd and exciting plays of the day. Broadous dropped back to pass, found nobody open, and scrambled to his left where there was no defensive containment. A quarterback scramble for a 23-yard touchdown always gets a student section going. So does a quarterback who throws for a career-high in yardage (213), which is what Broadous also did on Saturday.

Later in the game, the Mustangs defense backfield provided the big plays. Bijon Samoodi ran back an interception 46 yards for a touchdown in the 2nd quarter to extend the Cal Poly lead to 27-7. Not to be out-done, cornerback Asa Jackson one-upped him in the 3rd quarter picking off a pass in the end zone and racing down the sideline (in front of the student section) for what was officially a 100 yard interception return. To have the most touted player on the team come up with the biggest play at the most crucial time makes for a positively entertaining football experience for anyone in the home crowd.

And the fans responded by showing some energetic fansmanship throughout the game. All shades of green were represented, there were dudes in speedos, painted chests and faces, and tons of crowd noise and energy. Everything you would want in a fun and rowdy college football atmosphere.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fowd29dOyh0

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTJMtZWx29s&feature=related

 

You gotta support your team, ya know?

Additionally, the new quirk of a no-huddle offense added to the fun. Using Oregon-like “play cards” from the sidelines, Cal Poly instituted a no-huddle offense that moved the ball down the field throughout the game with efficiency and poise. Running a no-huddle offense effectively can eliminate lag-time between plays and makes for a more enjoyable fan experience. With 522 yards of total offense, the Mustangs showed on Saturday that it can put the opposition’s defense on their heels and dominate for portions of a game. Watching a home football team dominate is a great time for home fans.

________________________________________________________________________

Put yourself in the shoes of an 18-year old Cal Poly Freshman. You’ve just finished your Week of Welcome. You are getting your bearings in San Luis Obispo, trying to figure out what will be fun and what won’t be.

Enter the first home football game of the season. You walk down to the stadium with a group of kids from your dorms, walk through the gate, and one of two things happens:

You enjoy yourself or you don’t. You have something to root for and get behind or you don’t. In the end, you are entertained, or you aren’t, and probably sometime during that first game, you make a decision about how excited you should be about Cal Poly Athletics.

Which is why Saturday night’s big win was a big deal. The Mustangs and coach Tim Walsh should be pleased with their victory on the field. And everyone involved with Mustangs athletics should be pleased about a solid first impression.

]]>
https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-first-win-important-on-and-off-the-field/feed/ 0