2007 Navy vs.orthern Illinois

<p>Northern Illinois (2-8) at Navy (6-4) 3:30 PM CSTV</p>

<p>Why to watch: Navy is already going to the Poinsettia Bowl, but it's looking for a strong end of the season with the softest finishing kick of anyone in the nation. After losing to FCS Delaware and beating Notre Dame, the Midshipmen won one of the wildest games in college football history beating North Texas 74-62. With the Army showdown in two weeks, the a win over the woeful Huskies is a must. NIU beat Kent State last week to help ease the pain of a brutal year, and a win over Navy would help turn things around before closing up at home against Ball State.</p>

<p>Why Northern Illinois might win: The Northern Illinois offense has been lousy, but it picked up last week with 275 passing yards and two touchdowns, and now QB Dan Nicholson should go ballistic on a Navy defense that can't stop anyone but Notre Dame. Navy is dead last in America in pass efficiency defense after giving up over 400 yards in two of the last three games. How bad has the Midshipmen secondary been? It has allowed 16 touchdown passes in the last four games.</p>

<p>Why Navy might win: Mainly because of injuries, the NIU run defense has gone into the tank allowing 331 yards and four touchdowns to Wisconsin, 382 yards and six scores to Toledo, and 204 yards and a touchdown to Kent State over the last three weeks. By the way, Navy likes to run the ball a little bit. Rolling all year long with 300 yards of more against everyone but Rutgers and Notre Dame, the Midshipman running attack came up with its magnum opus last week against North Texas with 572 yards and eight touchdowns. Eight different players got carries, two players went over 100 yards, and six players ran for 53 yards or more.</p>

<p>Who to watch: Top tackling linebackers and safeties put up huge numbers against Navy, just because of the nature of the Midshipmen offense, and this week, NIU's Alex Kube should go ballistic. The freshman star is the team's leading tackler, and has more stops than any freshman in America, with 96 so far. He was great against the Kent State running game last week, and he might hover around 15 tackles this week. What will happen: Navy's defense is horrible, but NIU's D is way too banged up to slow down the Navy offensive machine.</p>

<p>CFN Prediction: Navy 45 ... Northern Illinois 38 ... Line: Navy -15</p>

<p>Points onslaught makes mincemeat of national defense</p>

<p>By Dennis Dodd
CBSSports.com Senior Writer</p>

<p>It was bad. Real bad for Ron Mendoza.</p>

<p>At the end of The Week That Defense Died, North Texas' defensive coordinator was searching for answers. Along with perhaps a shot of Jack. Mendoza and his players were on the losing end of the highest scoring I-A regulation game in history, contributing to one of the highest scoring weeks in the sport in recent memory.</p>

<p>Still, Navy only squeaked out a 74-62 victory. That's because Navy's porous defense was almost as bad as North Texas'. Almost.</p>

<p>"On the record or off?" Mendoza said when asked what he did Saturday after his defense surrendered 70 for the second time this season.</p>

<p>We told you it was bad.</p>

<p>The offensive revolution that has taken over college football since roughly the beginning of this decade has been well chronicled. Another set of national records is being established this season in scoring, passing yards and total yards. Last week, more than a quarter of I-A teams scored at least 40 points. North Texas was one of 11 that scored at least 50. It was the only one of the group that lost.</p>

<p>CBSSports.com decided to look at this scoring explosion from the other side of the ball. What is happening to defenses that are at such a disadvantage these days that games probably feel like ambushes? For those who love defense, will it ever be like 2001 again? That's the last year a defense (Miami) allowed less than 10 points per game.</p>

<p>"We'll probably never see somebody holding people to nine points a game, 10 points a game," San Jose State coach Dick Tomey said.</p>

<p>Never? Only 10 years ago, Michigan won a share of a national championship limiting teams to 8.9 points. If current leader Ohio State holds limiting opponents to 11.4 points, it would be the second-highest average to lead the country since 1995.</p>

<p>"I will never fail to believe that you can't play good defense against somebody," said Tomey, whose 1993 Arizona "Desert Swarm" defense allowed 331 rushing yards in a season. "I believe you can, but obviously it's much, much tougher."</p>

<p>Almost impossible for North Texas, which regularly plays I-A non-conference heavyweights (Oklahoma and Arkansas this season) in guarantee games. In the 916 games North Texas has played in its history, it has given up 70 points only four times. Two of those games have come in the past 11 weeks.</p>

<p>The season started with a 79-10 loss to Oklahoma and went South from there. Mendoza soldiered on as the guy in charge of (statistically) the worst defense in the country. Worst, at least, in scoring D (almost 50 points per game). Second-worst in yards surrendered per game (518.2).</p>

<p>"I got with my family, and my grandson, and they consoled me," Mendoza said, his only on-the-record comment regarding his Navy postgame depression. "It all falls back on me ... I'm ultimately responsible."</p>

<p>A year ago, Mendoza was coaching in high school at powerful Southlake (Texas) Carroll. In fact, the past quarter century of his career has been in the preps. This is his first college since a year spent as a grad assistant with New Mexico Highlands in 1980.</p>

<p>There have been better times to jump up into the big time. For this man of 51, 30 is the new 20. That is, 30 points per game, which is roughly the average points per team this season (28.4 points, up four from 2006).</p>

<p>"It's tough," Mendoza said. "The offenses have gotten a lot better, a lot faster. You're having 6-6 receivers and 6-5 receivers who run like deer. That kid at Oklahoma makes a lot of folks look silly. The running backs at Arkansas? Gosh almighty."</p>

<p>That exclamation would be in reference to Oklahoma's gifted receiver Malcolm Kelly and Arkansas tailbacks Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. The trio accounted for six touchdowns against the Mean Green, which is four fewer than what Navy put up in North Texas on Saturday.</p>

<p>Mendoza is not a lone victim. Even grizzled veteran coaches feel like they're chipping out of pot bunkers on most Saturdays. The NCAA rules committee has been passing rules in favor of the offense for years. The rise of the spread offense has taken advantage of one of the most difficult defensive skills to perfect: tackling in space.</p>

<p>"You can catch a guy out of position a yard or two down the field," West Virginia's Rich Rodriguez said. "The hardest thing to do on defense is tackle in the open field."</p>

<p>De facto holding has been legal for offensive linemen for years.</p>

<p>"They acknowledge that if you have your hands inside (the shoulders) and are holding onto the jersey, it's OK," Oklahoma's Bob Stoops said. "I don't see it changing."</p>

<p>Michael Clark, chairman of the NCAA football rules committee, is hesitant to do anything at the moment. In 2006, timing rules cut down the number of plays. Coaches howled and the rules were re-adjusted for this season. Game length is up 14 minutes from 2006 to 3:21. The average offense runs 72 plays, up an average of eight from last season.</p>

<p>"You don't want to be reactionary," said Clark, the coach at Division III Bridgewater. "I thought two years ago we were reacting to game length. (But) competitive balance is always on the table. We always try to look for trends. Is this just a spoke in the road that is going to sustain itself?"</p>

<p>Every coach talks about evolution. The defenses will eventually catch up, but how? Cornerback might be the loneliest position in football considering the height and speed of the modern receiver. Defensive linemen are harder to find than cheap gas. Linebackers are less likely to even play when coaches are forced to play more defensive backs to combat four- and five-receiver sets.</p>

<p>"Defense is recognition," Tomey said. "The biggest thing is you've got to believe you can stop people. You've got to go in feeling like you're not going to give up touchdown after touchdown after touchdown."</p>

<p>There already is a league like that. It's called Arena Football. One stop during the game by a defense can literally be the difference between winning and losing. Sometimes it seems that all college football needs is a roof to join the AFL.</p>

<p>Tomey's old Arizona defense was in the top two in rushing defense three consecutive years from 1992-94. Now if a team is good against the run, it usually means the opponent is having an easy time passing. Currently, Oregon State is No. 1 in rush defense but 82nd in pass defense.</p>

<p>It's depressing to learn the old tenet: Things will change because they always do.</p>

<p>When?</p>

<p>In general, most coordinators still haven't figured out how to account for the quarterback being a runner. UCLA quarterback Patrick Cowan rushed for 108 yards last season, 55 of them in the upset of USC. The Trojans completely disregarded Cowan as a running threat during the afternoon that knocked them out of the national championship race.</p>

<p>Ten years ago, a defense could dismiss most quarterbacks as runners. Now Tim Tebow dominates games because he has a rocket arm and the body of a linebacker.</p>

<p>There are only a handful of defenses that can generate a consistent pass rush with four players. Once a coordinator starts blitzing to compensate, he leaves himself open to the big play in the secondary. Defensive masterminds Nick Saban of Alabama and Bo Pelini of LSU try to mix up their blitzes, playing a game of cat-and-mouse, gambling that their defenders can reach the quarterback before he can throw.</p>

<p>Defensive linemen are still the rarest commodity in the sport. Unless some coach taps into a gusher on the recruiting trail, it's going to stay that way.</p>

<p>Normally we would look at the defense-rich SEC to show us the way, but as of this week, the league is the second-highest scoring in the country (30.7 points per team).</p>

<p>Until something changes, guys like Mendoza will need more than a hug on most Saturdays. They'll need a therapist.</p>

<p>"We told our kids it was going to be a high-scoring affair," Mendoza said, Navy still on his mind. "We made them punt two times. That's something other people haven't done."</p>

<p>Scout.com:</a> Key Match-ups for Northern Illinois at Navy</p>

<p>
[quote]
The hangover from the Notre Dame victory lasted into the second quarter against North Texas. Then the ibuprofen must have kicked in as the Midshipmen rallied from five separate 18-point deficits to defeat the Mean Green 74-62. Now at 6-4, Navy returns home for the seniors’ last game at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium....

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<p>*Veteran coach nears end of stellar career *</p>

<p>Novak</a> with Northern Illinois for long haul - Navy Sports - (HometownAnnapolis.com)</p>

<p>
[quote]
There's a retirement home in the St. James Plantation community of Southport, N.C., waiting for Joe Novak. The choice is up to Novak when he wants to take up permanent residence there.</p>

<p>With what Novak has accomplished during his 12-year tenure as head coach at Northern Illinois, he has earned him that right. He's 62 years old and has made it known the end of the road is near. Athletic director Dr. Jim Phillips has said publicly that he will let Novak make the call on whether to step down this season, next season or later....

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<p>Mids</a> revel in senior moment behind scene - Navy Sports - (HometownAnnapolis.com)</p>

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[quote]
Navy will honor 24 seniors during an on-field ceremony prior to tomorrow's home finale against Northern Illinois.</p>

<p>Some of the loudest ovations from the crowd at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium will be for such standouts as Reggie Campbell, Adam Ballard, Antron Harper and Irv Spencer....

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<p>Football</a> Huskies attempt to slow down Navy - Rockford, IL - Rockford Register Star</p>

<p>
[quote]
The NIU Huskies were able to keep Kent State to less than 400 yards of offense and 20 points last weekend as they notched their second win of the season.</p>

<p>They will be hard-pressed to hold down Saturday’s opponent, Navy, in Annapolis, Md. Instead, they hope to keep up with the Midshipmen and finish their injury-marred season with a strong push.</p>

<p>“That was a great win last week, but we’ve got a great opponent coming up. Nobody stops them. You just can’t get in their way enough,” NIU head coach Joe Novak said during Tuesday’s news conference. “This is the kind of offense that runs you out of coaching.”...

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<p>Congrats Monken Family</p>

<p>Congratulations are in order for Navy slot backs coach Jeff Monken and his
wife Beth, who welcomed their second child into the world last Friday.</p>

<p>Amelia Monken was born Friday afternoon at Anne Arundel Medical Center and
both mother and daughter are happy and healthy. Jeff Monken did not make the
road trip to North Texas at the instruction of head coach Paul Johnson and
appreciated that decision by his boss.</p>

<p>"Coach said 'Don't go.' My wife went into labor and Coach Johnson said 'You
need to stay.' I'm very grateful for that. Football is very important in my
life, but not more important than my family, not more important than seeing
my daughter being born. I was thrilled to be there."</p>

<p>Monken admitted he tried to listen to the Navy-North Texas game on the radio
while his wife was going through labor.</p>

<p>"I was wearing a path back and forth from her hospital room to the waiting
area and catching bits and pieces of the game," he admitted.
Amelia is the second child for the Monkens, who have a 4-year-old daughter
named Isabelle. Beth Monken is the Navy cheerleading coach.</p>

<p>*Kaheaku-Enhada of Kapolei is at the controls for the Midshipmen
*</p>

<p>starbulletin.com</a> | Sports | /2007/11/16/</p>

<p>
[quote]
There was a time early in Kaipo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada's career when he had a chance to win a big game.</p>

<p>The Kapolei junior varsity team was 11-0 when it played Kahuku for the OIA title in 2002. </p>

<p>Kapolei had only been open a couple of years, and it was the first game with a championship-like atmosphere that Kaheaku-Enhada had been a part of. </p>

<p>The Hurricanes lost that day.</p>

<p>Two weeks ago, playing for Navy against Notre Dame, Kaheaku-Enhada's name immediately became synonymous with one of the greatest moments in the history of Navy football....

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<p>While Mids score more and more, opponents find reaching end zone easier and easier</p>

<p>Navy's</a> offense, defense on seesaw -- baltimoresun.com</p>

<p>
[quote]
Northern Illinois coach Joe Novak said when he saw the score of last week's Navy football game scroll across the bottom of his television screen, he thought there had been a mix-up.</p>

<p>"I was sure it was the score from their basketball team's game," Novak said during a conference call this week. "But it wasn't a mistake."</p>

<p>The score was Navy 74, North Texas 62....

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<p>Johnson</a> seeking 'normal' victory - - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper</p>

<p>
[quote]
At first glance, it appears Navy's football team has had a fairly uneventful season.</p>

<p>The 6-4 Midshipmen are headed back to the Poinsettia Bowl in San Diego. They beat Air Force for the fifth straight time, and dropped games to bigger, faster BCS teams Wake Forest and Rutgers.</p>

<p>But the Mids' season has been far from ordinary....

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<p>Mids</a> host Northern Illinois in home finale - Examiner.com</p>

<p>
[quote]
It’s a play that Chris Kuhar-Pitters will never forget. On second-and-10 from Notre Dame’s 29-yard line, Michael Walsh sacked quarterback Evan Sharpley, causing him to fumble. The 6-foot-2, 258-pound defensive end scooped up the loose ball and ran 16-yards for the go-ahead touchdown. The game went to overtime, where Navy stopped Notre Dame on a two-point conversion to end a 43-year losing streak to the Fighting Irish with a 46-44 win. </p>

<p>“It's just unreal that I was able to get in that situation against Notre Dame,” Kuhar-Pitters said. “It's the type of situation that every player dreams of to make big plays in big games. When you look to the things we did against Notre Dame the potential is there to make big plays. There weren't any new players out there and we didn't do anything magical. If we just continue to work hard in practice we'll be able to make plays the rest of the way.” ...

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<p>After</a> all the excitement, Navy seeks return to normal - Navy Sports - (HometownAnnapolis.com)</p>

<p>
[quote]
It's Senior Day in Annapolis and Navy head coach Paul Johnson would like to play a "normal" football game for once.</p>

<p>Navy has played a steady stream of unusual games this season, most recently beating Notre Dame 46-44 in three overtimes, then outlasting North Texas 74-62 in a Wild West shootout. One week, the Midshipmen are playing the first triple-overtime game in program history, the next they are involved in the highest-scoring regulation game in NCAA Division I-A history....

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<p>NIU</a> latest to try to stop Navy's run on ChicagoSports.com</p>

<p>
[quote]
Northern Illinois coach Joe Novak did a double-take last weekend when the crawl of scores across the bottom of his TV screen showed the Navy result vs. North Texas.</p>

<p>Navy 74 North Texas 62....

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<p>Navy 21 - Northern Illinois 14</p>

<p>Navy 35 - Northern Illinois 24</p>

<p>woo hoo go navy! what a great "senior day" game!</p>

<p>It was the third straight win for Navy, who have already accepted a bid from the Poinsettia Bowl.</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Zerbin Singleton scored three touchdowns, backup quarterback Jarod Bryant ran for 139 yards and a score, and Navy got a solid performance from its defense in a 35-24 victory over Northern Illinois on Saturday.</p>

<p>It was the third straight win for the Midshipmen (7-4), who have already accepted a bid from the Poinsettia Bowl.</p>

<p>After surrendering 45, 44, 59, 44 and 62 points in its last five games, Navy forced a season-high four punts and allowed only 10 points after halftime.</p>

<p>Playing in place of injured quarterback Kaipo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada, Bryant carried 27 times and was 3-for-6 for 60 yards. Singleton finished with 101 yards rushing, and his three TDs gave him six in two games.</p>

<p>Justin Anderson carried 39 times for 140 yards and a touchdown for Northern Illinois (2-9). Ryan Morris went 21-for-35 for 206 yards and threw two touchdown passes to Matt Simon.</p>

<p>Navy went 80 yards on 14 plays to open the second half, using a 1-yard touchdown run by Bryant to take a 28-14 lead.</p>

<p>The Huskies responded with a 24-yard touchdown pass from Morris to Simon. Then, after stopping the Midshipmen on downs, Northern Illinois closed to 28-24 when Chris Nendick kicked a 42-yard field goal with 11:53 remaining.</p>

<p>But Singleton scored on a 12-yard run with 7:51 to go for an 11-point cushion.</p>

<p>The final minute of the first half featured two straight calls overturned by replay, the second providing Northern Illinois a touchdown that shaved Navy's lead to 21-14.</p>

<p>After a replay reversed a touchdown by Anderson on a third-and-goal screen pass, he was stuffed at the line on fourth down from the 1. But a replay determined he got into the end zone.</p>

<p>It was a fitting end to a wild half in which the teams combined for 417 yards and five touchdowns.</p>

<p>The Huskies took a 7-0 lead when Simon caught a short pass from Morris, shook off an arm tackle by Kevin Edwards and scored a 46-yard touchdown.</p>

<p>Navy answered with a 1-yard TD run by Singleton. Then, after a Northern Illinois punt, Singleton scored on a 26-yard run down the right sideline. It was Navy's 11th touchdown in 12 possessions, a streak that began against North Texas.</p>

<p>The Midshipmen punted on their next possession but returned to form on their next drive, moving 92 yards on eight plays to take a 21-7 lead.</p>

<p>Thrasher interception is turning point vs. N. Illinois</p>

<p>Defense</a> sparks Navy to win -- baltimoresun.com</p>

<p>
[quote]
The Navy defense had been pushed around all season, giving up points with abandon, including 209 in its past five games.</p>

<p>But yesterday, with the Midshipmen's starting quarterback sidelined, the defense pushed back and anchored Navy's 35-24 victory over Northern Illinois.</p>

<p>"We've been simplifying our defense a lot, and today we just applied the package," said sophomore linebacker Ross Pospisil, who made a career-high 20 tackles. "We didn't think. We just came out and played....

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<p>Navy 35, Northern Illinois 24</p>

<p>[url=<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/17/AR2007111701612.html%5Dwashingtonpost.com%5B/url"&gt;http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/17/AR2007111701612.html]washingtonpost.com[/url&lt;/a&gt;]&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
Navy slotback Zerbin Singleton could tell things might go his way against Northern Illinois yesterday when his cousins arrived from a vacation in Mexico just a couple minutes before he was to take the field with them for Senior Day. </p>

<p>Formalities complete, Singleton rushed for 101 yards and three touchdowns in a 35-24 victory before 34,517 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. The Midshipmen (7-4) ensured their fifth straight winning season; it is the first time the program has accomplished that since 1978-82....

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<p>Defense</a> stands tall in Mids' win - - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper</p>

<p>
[quote]
For the first time in nearly two months, Navy defensive coordinator Buddy Green won't have to wonder why his defense played so poorly.</p>

<p>With a solid defensive effort their usual offensive firepower, the Midshipmen put together one of their most complete games of the season on Senior Day yesterday to down Northern Illinois 35-24 before 34,517 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium....

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