Major Applewhite Officially Introduced As Head Coach

January 19, 2024 · Filed Under Football · Comments Off on Major Applewhite Officially Introduced As Head Coach 

The University of South Alabama officially introduced Major Applewhite as the fourth head football coach in Jaguar history on Friday in the Hargrove Club at Hancock Whitney Stadium.

Applewhite was hired by former head coach Kane Wommack when he was assembling his staff when he was hired in December 2020. He served as offensive coordinator all three seasons.

In the introductory press conference Athletics director Joel Erdmann explained the process that resulted in hiring Coach Applewhite. He made sure to stress that proximity was not the determining factor in their decision. But he did say that it factored in by getting to know him over the last three seasons.

“Major Applewhite obviously was a target, and I would be lying if when Major was hired three years ago as our offensive coordinator, that that did not enter my mind or anybody else’s mind,” Erdmann said.

“However, I want to be very clear about something. Major Applewhite is not our head football coach because he was here. Major Applewhite is not our head coach because he had an office up the hill for three years. That contributed to it, that influenced it. However, Major Applewhite is our head coach because he is incredibly capable, from his experiences that President Bonner talked about, to his mentors, to his influences in his life, learning more through this process about who influenced you in your childhood, who influenced you from a family perspective…And as we started to ask those questions and get those answers, what began as a ‘this might be a good thing,’ became very, very clear and crystalized this isn’t a good thing, this is a damn great thing.”

The choice of Applewhite for the position is a popular one. President Bonner noted that there were more people present for Applewhite than was at his own introduction just two years before. Erdmann also noted that the players gave him a standing ovation when the decision was announced in a team meeting.

“I give credit to the players,” Applewhite said during his speech. “They’re the ones that have held the roster together. They’re the ones that are responsible for our success. So they’ve done a great job of that on their own. There have been departures here and there, but that’s normal. Coaches, we’re the same way too. If you think the coaches weren’t looking for jobs too, while it was uncertain, you’re crazy. So everybody was looking and that’s just normal that you’re trying to protect yourself. It’s human nature. But that we have some stability and some more people will start coming in the building with jobs, it’ll slow down.”

Applewhite has a busy time ahead of him between filling out his staff, maintaining the current roster, and recruiting for signing day.

By all indications most if not all of the remaining staff will be retained if they want to stay. There were four positions that were let go by coach Wommack after the bowl game, he was in the midst of interviewing candidates, as well as one coach left to join Jon Sumrall’s staff at Tulane.

Corey Batoon will continue to serve as defensive coordinator and safeties coach. Applewhite indicated in the press conference and later confirmed that Rob Ezell will be offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Various online outlets have reported that former Michigan State running backs coach Effrem Reed is joining the staff, presumably to coach the same position for South Alabama. Additionally, it is rumored that former Idaho head coach Paul Petrino, the younger brother of Bobby Petrino, is expected to be hired as an on-field coaching position. Petrino was an off-field analyst in 2022 before joining Central Michigan in an on-field coaching position.

Applewhite still needs to fill or distribute duties for linebackers, defensive line, wide receivers, tight ends, offensive line, special teams, and strength & conditioning and will be making a public announcement on his full staff “in the near future.” But he said that, “We’re going to have coaches and staffs that are positive, energetic, and intense. I want intensity in our building, and a seriousness about our work each and every day. We’re going to have men that understand we’re changing lives. We’re changing lives each and every day in the classroom, off the field in the community, and obviously on the football field.”

After Wommack’s departure, it opened a 30-day window allowing players to enter into the transfer portal. After the regular season concluded, Caullin Lacy entered into the portal and committed to Louisville. After the bowl game Jaden Voisin, Marquise Robinson, Dontae Lucas and Yam Banks all entered into the portal. Voisin later withdrew his name and decided to stay while both Robinson and Banks have committed to other programs. Since Wommack’s announced resignation Khalil Jacobs and James Robinson have entered into the portal. However, others still have time to consider testing the waters.

Coach Applewhite stated that, while they may be shorthanded, they will be hitting the road recruiting again on Monday. The regular signing period starts on February 7th and the Jags now have additional positions open due to transfer portal losses in addition to the positions that were not filled in the early signing period in December.

As for his vision for the program, it didn’t sound like Applewhite was laying out any drastic changes from what he was a part of over the last three seasons. “I love the #OurCity, I want to put it into action,” he said. “I see the results that happen on this field and I just want to make this our city’s team. I want to create an atmosphere here in the stadium that is’ full, the people are here early, that they’re loud, that they stay late. I want to see 50-60 smokestacks (tailgating) coming up. I want to see the tops of RVs. I want to create a situation where this stadium represents our entire city.”

“I’m going to bring every single community in the city to the stadium – north, south, east, west, central. It doesn’t matter where you’re from, if you cross the bridge, I want everyone to be here on Saturday night and I want this thing to be loud and I want it to be rocking because these players are going to make it that way and I can promise you that.”

Applewhite was a key part in the record-setting performances over the last three seasons. Since they became a full FBS member in 2012, the Jags did not have a winning record until the 2022 season, which was also their first 10-win season in FBS play as well. While the 2023 was a bit of a regression, they still managed to get bowl eligible and got the program’s first postseason win with a 59-10 win over Eastern Michigan in the 68 Ventures Bowl played in Hancock Whitney Stadium. With the bowl win the Jags secured back-to-back winning seasons, another program first. Applewhite’s offense averaged 25 points per game in 2021 then improved to 31.2 and 33 points per game over the last two seasons.

Applewhite agreed to a 5-year contract with a base salary of $825k/year with increases in the salary pool for assistant coaches and off-field staff according to Erdmann.

Kane Wommack Resigns; Head Coaching Search Begins

January 16, 2024 · Filed Under Football · Comments Off on Kane Wommack Resigns; Head Coaching Search Begins 

After much speculation and rumor on Monday the news has been made official by the University of South Alabama and Athletics Director Joel Erdmann. Head coach Kane Wommack has resigned his position on Tuesday morning to accept the defensive coordinator position at the University of Alabama.

In three seasons at the helm of the Jaguars he led the team to a 22-16 record during his tenure. This includes a number of firsts in program history. Their first winning season at the FBS level, their winning record in back-to-back seasons, their first 10-win season in 2022, and their first bowl victory with their 59-10 win over Eastern Michigan in the 68 Ventures Bowl just a few weeks ago at Hancock Whitney Stadium.

“I deeply appreciate Kane’s service to our program, university and city,” said Erdmann. “His efforts propelled us forward and we wish him and Melissa the very best.”

The release by the school also said that a national search for the next head coach of the Jaguars will begin immediately.

The administration will look to hire someone quickly as the players now have a 30-day window to explore the transfer portal.

This developed quickly after newly hired head coach at Alabama, Kalen DeBoer, began assembling his staff to replaced Nick Saban. Saban announced his retirement on Wednesday and DeBoer was hired on Friday.

From within the staff, offensive coordinator Major Applewhite, will definitely be a consideration to keep player and staff continuity. He has previous head coaching experience and has a long track record in the coaching ranks. Defensive coordinator Corey Batoon may also be considered.

Preview: Battle for the Belt 2023

November 1, 2023 · Filed Under Battle For The Belt, Football · Comments Off on Preview: Battle for the Belt 2023 

Kickoff: Thursday, November 2, 6:30pm
Venue: Veterans Memorial Stadium, Troy, AL
TV/Streaming: ESPN2
Radio: 96.1 fm The Rocket, Sports Talk 99.5 fm, iHeartRadio App
Thunderjags on X (formerly known as Twitter): @USAThunderjags
#5 Jersey: Jamaal Pritchett


The 2023 edition of The Battle for the Belt is here.

South Alabama (4-4, 2-2 SBC) has come out on the wrong side of the scoreboard the last five meetings against troy (6-2, 3-1 SBC). Those five losses are the difference in the all-time record between the two teams, troy leads the series 8-3. The last time the Jags won, it was Joey Jones’ last season at the helm of the program and current head coach Kane Wommack was the defensive coordinator. That game was a 19-8 defensive struggle. Last year was another defensive struggle that finished with a low scoring 10-6 final.

In a short week after a 33-20 loss to Louisiana-Lafayette, the South Alabama players and coaches have to clear their minds, correct their issues, and treat their injuries for a 6:30 pm kickoff on Thursday night.

Some may think that’s a hard thing to do in such short time. Physically, that is true. Mentally, it may be easier that you think. Especially when you’re a talented team and you lose, you’re ready to get back on the field and prove yourself all over again.

They will have their opportunity Thursday night on national television.

South Alabama (4-4, 2-2 SBC)

As a team, the Jags have a -2 turnover margin. They have given the ball away 14 times in total, 8 passes intercepted and out of eight fumbles, they’ve lost 6 to their opponents.

Meanwhile the defense has forced nine fumbles, recovering 6 of them, and intercepted 6 passes.

South Alabama is averaging 7.125 penalties and 62.63 penalty yards per game. Their opponents are averaging 5.875 penalties and 50.88 penalty yards per game.

Offense

The Jaguars are averaging 33.5 points (31st nationally), 454.3 total offensive yards (20th nationally), 285.5 passing yards (25th), 168.8 rushing yards (50th), and 30:01 time of possession per game through eight games this season.

They are converting 52-of-108 on 3rd down and 9-of-16 on 4th down attempts.

The perfect run of red scoring came to an end against the Ragin’ Cajuns. After failing to score on two attempts, the Jags now have scored on 28 of their 30 trips into the red zone, with 23 of them being touchdowns. The Jags failed to score on their first red zone trip against the Cajuns when head coach Kane Wommack opted to keep the offense on the field for a 4th and 1 at the Cajuns 6-yard line. The other was an interception in the end zone in the fourth quarter.

Carter Bradley is 167-of-254 (65.75%) passing with 2,156 yards, 13 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. Gio Lopez is the only other Jags with passing stats, he is 10-of-15 (66.67%) for 128 yards, a touchdown and an interception in three appearances.

Caullin Lacy leads the team with 55 catches for 957 yards and 6 touchdowns. He ranks 2nd in the nation in receiving yards, trailing LSU’s Malik Nabers by only 24 yards on the season.

Jamaal Pritchett had a career game against the Cajuns. His season total is 35 catches and 541 yards with three touchdowns. Lincoln Sefcik has 17 catches for 165 yards and a touchdown. DJ Thomas-Jones has 14 catches for 150 yards. Kentrell Bullock has 13 catches for 106 yards and a touchdown. La’Damian Webb has 17 catches for 106 yards to round out the pass catchers with 100+ yards on the season.

Webb leads the team rushing with 674 yards on 119 carries and 13 touchdowns (tied for the most in a season and tied for first in the nation) with a 5.7 yards per carry average. Bullock has 375 yards on 74 carries and three touchdowns with a 5.1 yards per carry average. Marco Lee Jr has 186 yards on 39 carries with two touchdowns and a 4.8 yards per carry average.

Defense

The defense is allowing an average of 21.13 points (T38th nationally), 316.9 total yards of offense (22nd nationally), 191.5 passing yards (22nd nationally), 125.4 rushing yards (40th nationally), and 29:58 time of possession per game this season.

Opponents are converting 38-of-106 (35.85%) on 3rd down and 3-of-8 (37.5%) on 4th down attempts.

The defense has had opponents in the red zone 22 times and they have scored on 17 of those trips with 10 of them being touchdowns.

James Miller has moved back into the top spot with 51 total stops, 18 solo. Quentin Wilfawn, with his career game against the Cajuns, has moved into second place with 50 total stops, 27 solo, and he leads the team with 8.5 Tackles for Loss. Trey Kiser is now third on the team with 46 total stops, 20 solo, with six TFLs (second on the team).

Brock Higdon continues to lead the team with 3 sacks. Wilfawn, Khalil Jacobs, Jamie Sheriff, and Maurice Strong Jr are all tied for second with two sacks each.

Jaden Voisin continues to lead the team with two interceptions. Strong Jr, Yam Banks, Wesley Miller, and Marquise Robinson each have an interception.

Special Teams

Diego Guajardo is 9-of-12 (75%) on the season in field goals and is 30-of-32 on extra point attempts.

Jack Martin, after not seeing any action since September, is now averaging 39.41 yards per punt for his 22 attempts this season. His average took a plunge after the shanked punt from a bad snap and narrowly avoiding a block against the Cajuns.

troy (6-2, 3-1 SBC)

As a team, the Trojans have a turnover margin of +2 on the season. They have fumbled 15 time, losing possession on 9 of them, with 4 passes being intercepted. Defensively they have forced 13 fumbles and recovered 8 of them while also intercepting 7 passes.

Offense

The trojans are averaging 27.13 points (69th), 441.8 total yards of offense (31st), 275.88 passing yards (33rd), and 165.9 rushing yards (55th), and 32:14 time of possession per game.

They are converting 49-of-118 (41.53%) of their 3rd down attempts and 6-of-15 (40%) of their 4th down attempts on the season.

The Trojans are also doing well in the red zone. Out of their 30 trips, they have scored on 29 of them, however only 15 of them have resulted in touchdowns.

Gunnar Watson is 149-of-247 (60.32%) for 2,158 yards, 14 touchdowns and 4 interceptions on the season. Goose Crowder is 5-of-6 for 49 yards.

Jabre Barber leads the Trojans with 615 yards on 39 catches with three touchdowns. Chris Lewis has 415 yards on 18 catches with four touchdowns. Deshon Staudemire has 381 yards on 27 catches with a touchdown. Devonte Ross has 243 yards on 22 catches with two touchdowns. Finally, Kimani Vidal has 140 yards on 10 carries with a touchdown to round out the list of 100+ yard receivers.

Vidal leads the team with 994 rushing yards on 172 attempts with six touchdowns while averaging 5.8 yards per carry. Kamien Taylor has 247 yards on 45 carries with a touchdown and a 5.5 yard per carry average.

Defense

troy leans on their defense for their winning ways. They allow an average of 16.88 points (17th nationally), 301 total yards of offense (14th), 193.88 passing yards (28th), 107.1 rushing yards (20th), and 27:32 time of possession per game.

Opponents are converting 35-of-110 (31.82%) of their 3rd down attempts and 6-of-19 (31.58%) of their 4th down attempts.

Opponents have had the ball in the red zone 22 times and scored on 17 of those trips, with 10 of them being a touchdown.

Jayden McDonal leads the team with 52 total stops, 32 solo, with 7 tackles for loss. Dell Pettus is next in line with 43 stops, 26 solo, with a TFL. Caleb Ransaw has 34 total stops, 21 solo.

Javon Solomon leads the Trojans with 6 sacks. Richard Jibunor has 4.5 sacks for second place on the team.

Solomon and McDonald are tied for the lead with 7 TFLs. Jibunor has six. Ransaw has 4 TFLs.

Special Teams

Scott Taylor Renfroe is 16-of-19 (84.21%) on field goal attempts. His only misses have come from 40+ yards and his longest make of the season is 43 yards.

Robert Cole is averaging 39.71 yards per punt over 28 attempts. He’s had 9 downed inside the 20, 8 fair catches, 4 kicks of 50+ yards, and two touchbacks. 

Injuries

The most obvious injury from the game against the Cajuns was Carter Bradley. Bradley went down on the last offensive play of the game, a two-point conversion try, when he was tackled from behind just after he threw the ball. He was in obvious pain on the ground.

In the Jags Monday press conference, one of the first questions was about Bradley’s availability on Thursday. Coaches said that he has had a lingering issue with his left knee for a few weeks now. The first question to Bradley during the player portion of the press conference was about him playing against Troy. He had a sly grin on his face when he answered, “You’ll find out on Thursday.”

Bradley explained “I kind of tweaked it a little bit during the week of practice, I just landed on it weird, nothing crazy.”

Offensive coordinator Major Applewhite said that Bradley’s rehab efforts are going well. “He moved around pretty good out at practice [Monday],” Applewhite said. “…We’re going to rep all of them. Dez has played in that game before and we feel comfortable with him running the offense and Gio has gotten some reps throughout the year. He’s still young in his development but he’s come a long way and he’s doing great things as well.”

Lopez, a true freshman, has appeared in three games so far this season and is the only other player with passing statistics this season other than Bradley. However Trotter was the starter in the 2020 season and has filled in as starter in games over the last two seasons with the program. He has in-game experience and will likely be the starter if Bradley is unable to go or if Bradley has to come out early.

Keys to the Game

Offensive Line

The Jags got whipped in the trenches by Louisiana-Lafayette. They allowed Carter Bradley to be sacked five times, he fumbled on three of those sacks. The rushing attack wasn’t able to get established consistently either. The Cajuns were able to set the line of scrimmage in the Jaguar backfield.

After a failed two-point conversion, we are now waiting to hear if Bradley will even be able to play against troy. If not, will Desmond Trotter get the start or could they turn to Gio Lopez, the true freshman, who’s already shown he can also bring more of a running threat to the position.

But no matter who is back taking the snaps, they need to the offensive line to get back to the way they’ve played against Oklahoma State, ULM and Southern Miss (and quickly).

No matter who is taking snaps, troy will be looking to pressure them to see how they react. If it’s Bradley, how well can he move. If it’s Trotter, how can they pressure him into mistakes. But if it’s Lopez, how can they capitalize on this inexperience.

No matter how you slice it, the offensive line has a big test ahead of them on Thursday.

Establishing the Run

South Alabama’s offense is much more effective when they have established the run well on opponents.

It’s also very beneficial with the new clock rules this season. The new rule that is making the most impact in games is having the clock run after first downs, except for the last two minutes of each half. If you can keep the ball on the ground and churn out first downs, teams can really limit their opponents’ opportunities to possess the ball and score.

I’ll just reiterate it, the Jaguar offense simply runs much more efficiently and effectively if they can run the ball consistently.

Turnovers and Penalties

Five turnovers doomed the Jags against Louisiana-Lafayette. Five turnovers will doom you against any opponent though.

It was an uncharacteristically bad game for the Jags, they rarely turn the ball over that much under coach Wommack and they rarely are on the negative side of the turnover margin.

Coach Applewhite mentioned in the press conference that, whenever the quarterback is on the move, they have to have both hands on the ball. Bradley also mentioned that he needs to do better at picking up the backside pressure, like what the Cajuns did against him.

In order to win the game, the Jags need to be in the positive side of the turnover margin. The defense has not generated a lot of takeaways so far this season and they need to change that, starting this week.

But also, they cannot commit penalties and give their opponent free first downs to extend drives. Whenever you play, you have to play clean. You have to assume when you are playing on the road, the officials will be calling in favor of the home team.

You can almost guarantee that emotions will be running high in the game. troy will try to bait Jaguars into committing penalties. South Alabama players will have to keep cool heads and focus on the game from snap to whistle and anything outside of that has to be shrugged off.

Prediction

If this game had been swapped with the ULL game on the schedule, we would be saying that both teams were coming into the game playing their best football.

troy may be playing some of their best football coming into the game. But after the game on Saturday, where the Jags committed five turnovers, they don’t seem to be playing their best football coming into this game.

But that doesn’t mean the Jags can’t find their mojo again.

After dropping back-to-back games against Central Michigan and James Madison, the Jags rolled to back-to-back wins while scoring 55-points per game. Let’s hope they Jags don’t need two games to get that mojo back.

troy is going to go after Bradley if he plays. They know he has a questionable knee and the offensive line has had their issues this season.

It all depends which team gets off the bus at Veteran’s Memorial Stadium on Thursday.

The Jags are a 6.5-point underdog to troy. Let’s bring that Belt back to Mobile.

Go Jags!

South Alabama Commits Five Turnovers, Fall To The Cajuns 33-20

October 28, 2023 · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference · Comments Off on South Alabama Commits Five Turnovers, Fall To The Cajuns 33-20 

The South Alabama Jaguars fell back to earth on Saturday. Louisiana-Lafayette came into Hancock Whitney Stadium and forced five turnovers in route to a 33-20 defeat of the Jaguars. The Jags fall to 4-4 overall and 2-2 in conference play while the Cajuns improve to 5-3 overall, 2-2 in conference play.

Anything that could go wrong for the Jags, did go wrong.

Cater Bradley was sacked five times with three fumbles and threw two interceptions accounting for all of the Jags 5 turnovers. One of the Cajuns field goals hit the right upright and miraculously fell across the crossbar.

South Alabama had the opportunity to put the first points on the board. They had the ball 4th and 1 at the Cajuns 6 yard line. Opting to keep the offense on the field, La’Damian Webb’s run up the middle lost a yard against the Lafayette defensive push which resulted in a turnover on downs.

The Cajuns proceeded to drive 93 yards in 15 plays, which was capped off by a 33 yard touchdown pass by Zeon Chriss to Jacob Bernard with 12:58 left in the second quarter.

On the third play of the Jags ensuing possession Bradley was sacked and fumbled it away to the Cajuns at the Jags own 41 yard line. The Cajuns scored with a 3 yard touchdown pass to finish off the seven play drive.

The Jags offense went three-and-out on the next possession. The snap to Jack Brooks was very low, he was able to pick it up off the ground and was barely able to get it away and it only went 9 yards. The Jags defense kept them out of the end zone, but with a 20-yard field goal the Cajuns were able to take a 17-0 lead into the halftime locker room.

South Alabama started the second half with a quick score. Bradley connected with Jamaal Pritchett for a 6 yard touchdown with 11:53 left in the third quarter.

Louisiana-Lafayette answered with a 42-yard field goal. The kick high the right upright and somehow fell across the crossbar giving the Cajuns a 20-7 advantage.

South Alabama’s offense only needed three plays to answer. A two yard run by Webb set up Bradley to connect with Caullin Lacy for a 62 yard gain. Then La’Damian Webb went untouched for a 25 yard touchdown, which tied him for the season record for most rushing touchdowns.

The Jags were then trailing 20-14 with 6:09 left in the third quarter.

The Jags called a safety blitz while Zeon Chiss ran the zone-read perfectly. The defense bit on the quarterback letting Jacob Kibodi get through the defensive front and go for a 56 yard touchdown. The Cajuns lined up for a two-point conversion, but an offensive pass interference call negated a conversion. Then Kenneth Almendares’ long extra point missed wide left leaving the Cajuns with a 26-14 lead.

Another Jaguar drive ended with a sack fumble on Bradley. But this one was picked up and returned 45 yards for a scoop-and-score touchdown with 1:07 left in third quarter.

The first two possessions by the Jags in the fourth quarter both ended with interceptions. The first was tipped and intercepted by a diving, outstretched defender. The second was on a 3rd and 7 pass at the Cajun 9 yard line. Pritchett was crossing in the end zone but Tyrone Lewis jumped in front and took the ball away.

The Jags weren’t finished. They got the ball with 1:14 left in the game and quickly drove down the field. Bradley connected with Pritchett for a 39 yard touchdown down the left sideline with :16 left.

On the two point conversion, Bradley’s pass was low and fell incomplete. But he was hit and rolled on the floor clutching his left knee in pain. He was helped off the field and all the way to the trainer’s tent.

After the game head coach Kane Wommack said that the early report on Bradley’s injury was positive, but it’s too early to be certain.

“He tweaked his knee in the end there,” coach Wommack commented. “He’s such a competitor and he’s trying to make something happen…It’s going to be pretty sore. He got dinged up, similar to the injury he’s been dealing with all season, but it just got tweaked.”

If Bradley is unable to play on Thursday, Wommack and offensive coordinator Major Applewhite will have to choose between sixth-year senior Desmond Trotter or true freshman Gio Lopez. Trotter has experience starting for the Jags, he was the starter in the 2020 season. Lopez can play in one more game and still redshirt for the season.

Stats

South Alabama

The Jags finished with 498 total yards of offense, with 381 passing and 117 rushing. The Jags were 6-of-14 on 3rd down attempts and 2-of-4 on 4th down attempts. They were flagged eight times for 71 yards.

The big difference was the 5 turnovers. Bradley was sacked five times total, three of them resulted in fumbles lost to the Cajuns. Bradley also had a pair of interceptions.

The Cajuns dominated with a 34:44 to 25:16 time of possession.

Bradley finished the game 29-of-49 for 381 yards, his second most passing yard in his Jaguar career, with two touchdowns and two interceptions.

Jamaal Pritchett led all receivers with 168 yards on 11 catches with of the Jags passing touchdowns. Caullin Lacy continues his 100 yard receiving streak with 131 yards on 7 catches.

La’Damian Webb finished with 96 yards on 16 carries with a touchdown. Kentrel Bullock had 32 yards on 6 carries.

Quentin Wilfawn set a new record for most stops in a game. He had 15, 7 of them solo, with a sack and 4.5 tackles for loss. Jaden Voisin, James Miller and Khalil Jacobs all finished next in line with eight stops each.

Lafayette

The Cajuns finished with 348 total yards of offense, 145 passing and 203 rushing. They were also 6-of-14 on 3rd down attempts. They were flagged six times for 40 yards.

Zeon Chriss was 13-of-17 for 145 yards and two touchdowns.

Terrance Carter les the Cajuns with tree catches for 36 yards. Peter Leblanc had two catches for 37 yards.

Jacob Kibodi ran for 119 yards on 23 carries with a touchdown. Kre’lyn Washington finished with 52 yards on 12 carries. Zeon Chriss finished with 30 yards on 10 carries.

Jalen Clark led the Cajuns with 10 total stops, five solo. Cameron Whitfield was in the backfield the whole game, he finished with 3.5 sacks. Antoine Baylis had 1.5 sacks.

Next

The Jags have a short turnaround. They will travel to Troy for the Battle of the Belt in a Thursday night nationally televised game. The game is slated for a 6:30 pm kickoff at Veterans Memorial Stadium on ESPN2.

Preview: South Alabama Hosts Central Michigan For Homecoming, Final Non-Conference Game

September 22, 2023 · Filed Under Football · Comments Off on Preview: South Alabama Hosts Central Michigan For Homecoming, Final Non-Conference Game 

Kickoff: Saturday, September 23, 4pm
Venue: Hancock Whitney Stadium, Mobile, Alabama
TV/Streaming: ESPN+
Radio: 96.1 fm The Rocket, Sports Talk 99.5 fm, iHeartRadio App
Thunderjags on X (formerly known as Twitter): @USAThunderjags
#5 Jersey: Desmond Trotter


This is an important game for the South Alabama Jaguars.

No, it’s not a flashy game against another Power-5 program. It’s not a conference game. It may be homecoming, but that’s not the reason either.

It’s an important game for two reasons: one, it’s next game on the schedule, and two, we get to see how the team responds after the last game.

You may be reading this thinking “man, you make it sound like they lost last week. But they won arguably the biggest game in program history last week against Oklahoma State.” But that’s exactly it. They won the biggest game in program history, now how do they respond?

The Greek philosopher Epictetus wrote, “It’s not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters.”

Head Coach Kane Wommack took over the program in 2021 and he has consistently spoken about getting his players to have a neutral mindset. You cannot get too high on emotion, but you cannot get to low either. This week will be a big test for his team to see if they have that neutral mindset nailed down, at least from the emotional high that was last week.  

The Jags (2-1) earned a program-defining win last Saturday in dominating fashion. They took a 23-0 lead into halftime and by the time the final whistle blew, they posted a stunning 33-7 beat-down of a Power-5 program in their own stadium. One of the intriguing stats we noted was that the Jags rushed for more yards (248) than Oklahoma State gained in total offense (208) for the entire game.

South Alabama has been showered with praise since the game ended. They were named the Cheez-It’s team of the week (which brought them a big delivery of assorted boxes of Cheez-It’s on Monday). They were honorably mentioned in Matt Mitchell’s “SEC Roll Call”, a weekly comedy sketch he does recapping the previous weeks performances. But they also have Homecoming festivities this coming week.

How they turn around and respond in this game could really define the remainder of the season.

This paragraph may induce PTSD, so be warned. In 2016, South Alabama traveled to Starkville, MS and earned their first win over a Power-5 and SEC program with a 21-20 win. Coincidentally, it happened to be coach Wommack’s first game with the Jaguars as defensive coordinator too. However the Jags lost the following week to Georgia Southern 24-9 as well as the next week at Louisiana-Lafayette 28-23. Then they needed overtime to survive an upset bid by Nicholls 41-40. Similarly in the 2016 season, they were able to defeat the then #19 ranked San Diego State Aztecs 42-24, but lost back-to-back games to Arkansas State (17-7) and Troy (28-21) afterwards.

Coach Wommack keeps stressing “consistency.” This game will be a big measuring stick for how much consistency the coaching staff has been able to instill into this program.

South Alabama (2-1)

In a way the Oklahoma State game was a carry-over from the second half of the Southeastern Louisiana game. The Jaguar offense scored on their first three possessions and four of their six first-half possessions, not counting the last possession with a mere 18 seconds left before halftime.

The defense kept the Cowboys off the scoreboard until early in the fourth quarter, and the longest plays from scrimmage was a 21 yard quarterback run and a 15 yard pass completion.

The Jags are +1 in turnover margin for the season. They have thrown three interceptions and lost three of the four fumbles they’ve committed. Defensively the Jags have forced five fumbles and recovered all of them while also collecting a pair of interceptions.

Offense

South Alabama’s mantra ‘Run The Damn Ball’ was on full display in Stillwater. La’Damian Webb, even on a play-count, rolled up an impressive 151 yards rushing on 18 carries with a pair of touchdowns. It was highlighted by a 65 yard touchdown in the fourth quarter that put the final dagger in the Cowboy’s heart.

Kentrel Bullock also had 18 carries for 71 yards and Marco Lee Jr had 6 carries for 30 yards.

Carter Bradley was 10-of-16 for 152 yards and two touchdowns, including a beautify placed 57-yard strike to Caullin Lacy.

Lacy led the Jags receivers with 5 catches for 104 yards and both of Bradley’s touchdown passes. Lincoln Sefcik had three catches for 21 yards. Javon Ivory and Bullock had one catch each for 17 and 10 yards respectively.

Lacy has really elevated his play after Devin Voisin was lost for the season to a knee injury last week. He was already a big-time playmaker before!

Josh McColloch suffered a knee injury mid-week and did not play, however the offensive line had their best outing so far this season with Jordan Davis stepping up and starting in McCulloch’s place.

The Jags are averaging 389.7 total yards of offense, 201 yards passing and 188.7 yards rushing per game. The running back corps are averaging 5 yards per attempt through three games.

The offense is converting 20-of-39 (51%) of their 3rd down attempts and 3-of-4 (75%) of their 4th down attempts. In the red zone they have scored on all 9 of their trips, with seven of them being touchdowns.

However, Bradley has been sacked 7 times on the season for 50 yards, but only twice last week by the Cowboys.

Defense

Coach Wommack, defensive coordinator Corey Batoon, and assistant coach Jay Hopson seemed to have really turned around the secondary after Tulane exploited them for several explosive plays. They only allowed 208 total yards of offense, 114 passing yards and 94 rushing yards to the Cowboys.

Through three games the defense is allowing an average of 352 yards of total offense, 252.7 passing yards and 99.3 rushing yards per game.

Opponents are converting just 13-of-34 (38%) of their 3rd down attempts. Of the 11 trips into the red zone for opponents, they have scored on 8 of them with only 4 coming as touchdowns.

James Miller leads the defense with 19 total stops, 10 solo, with a fumble recovery. Jaden Voisin is next behind him with 16 total stops, nine solo, with a forced fumble. Trey Kiser is third with 15 total stops, eight solo, with a tackle for loss, a pass breakup, and a quarterback hurry.

Brock Higdon leads the defense with 2 sacks on the season. Jamie Sheriff, Quentin Wilfawn, Khalil Jacobs, and Maurice Strong Jr have one sack each.

Yam Banks and Marquise Robinson both have one interception each.

Special Teams

Diego Guajardo made good on both of his attempts against OSU last weekend and is 3-of-4 on the season with a long of 42. His only miss was from 52 in the season-opener against Tulane.

Jack Martin is averaging 43.4 yards per attempt, with a long of 53 yards. He has four fair catches, four downed inside the 20.

Central Michigan (1-2)

Despite the Chippewa’s record, they have been playing some pretty good football on the season. Both of their two losses come at the hands of Power-5 programs. The season opener was a 31-7 loss at Michigan State and last week they kept it close in the first half at Notre Dame before the Fighting Irish pulled away in the second half for a 41-17 win.

Between the two losses, the Chippewas earned a win against #11 ranked FCS New Hampshire 45-42 on a field goal as time expired. They led 42-28 with under six minutes left in the game. New Hampshire tied the game with a 71-yard catch-and-run with just over three-minutes left in the game.

Last week against Notre Dame, the Chippewas cut the lead to 7 before halftime before the Irish pulled away in the second half. The Irish, who put up 578 yards of total offense, took back any momentum with a 74 yard touchdown drive in only 7 plays to start the third quarter and never looked back.

Overall they are -1 on turnover margin. Offensively they have fumbled three times but recovered them all, however they have thrown three interceptions. Defensively they have one interception and a forced fumble that they’ve recovered.

Offense

The Chippewa offense is averaging 23 points, 309 yards of total offense, 145.7 passing yards, and 163.3 rushing yards per game. They are only converting 11-of-44 (25%) of their 3rd down attempts but they have converted 4-of-5 (80%) of their 4th down attempts.

Quarterback Bert Emanuel Jr missed the Notre Dame game with an illness but is expected to return and presumably start on Saturday. He is 18-of-36 (50%) for 280 yards, three touchdowns and three interceptions in those two games. Jase Bauer is 13-of-29 (44.9%) for 157 yards.

The top two receivers both have five catches. Chris Parker has 142 yards on his 5 catches with a touchdown. Tyson Davis has 92 yards with his five catches.

They have five players with three catches each. Jesse Prewitt III has 91 yards and a touchdown, Mitchel Collier has 30 yards, Marion Lukes has 28 yards, Myles Bailey has 11 yards, and Sam Hicks has 7 yards.

Myles Bailey leads the Central Michigan rushing attack with 186 yards on 38 carries with two touchdowns. Emanuel Jr is the next leading rusher, even with sack-adjusted yardage figured in, with 142 yards on 38 carries with two touchdowns in two games played. Marion Lukes has 75 yards on 19 carries. Quarterback Jase Bauer has 43 yards on 15 carries with a touchdown. BJ Harris has 11 carries for 32 yards, the last back with double-digit carries on the team.

Defense

Central Michigan runs multiple fronts. They will switch between 3 and 4 down linemen which give an even and odd look to the offensive line. So the Jaguar offensive line will need to stay on the same for their protection schemes. They have played pretty well against the run, but have been quite susceptible to explosive passing plays.

They are allowing an average of 38 points, 507.3 total yards of offense, 371.3 passing yards, and 136 rushing yards per game.

Opponents are converting 16-of-39 (41%) of their 3rd down attempts and 3-of-6 (50%) of their 4th down attempts.

Donte Kent leads the defense with 26 total stops, 18 of them solo, with a tackle for loss (TFL) from the secondary. Kyle Moretti is right behind him with 25 total stops, 14 solo, with two TFLs from his linebacker position. It drops off to 16 total, 7 solo, stops for Trey Jones from the secondary. Then Justin Whiteside has 13 total stops, 11 solo, for the highest ranking defensive lineman.

Jacques Bristol leads the team with three TFL’s with a sack, as part of his 11 total tackles. He is tied with Michael Heldman and Maurice White for sack leader. Heldman leads the team with 4 quarterback hurries.

Elijah Rikard is the only player on the defense with an interception.

Special Teams

Tristan Mattson, a redshirt-junior transfer from Arkansas State, is 2-of-3 on the season. His long is 47 yards, which was his first attempt of the season and came against New Hampshire as time expired. He also handles kickoff duty and has nine touchbacks on his 13 kickoff attempts.

Jake Walrath is averaging 45.1 yards across his 21 punt attempts. His longest kick was 63 yards. He has two touchbacks, five fair catches, five downed inside the 20 and seven kicks of 50+ yards. He can really flip field position in a hurry.

Keys to the Game

Neutral Mindset

The Jags will be coming off a big win over a Power-5 opponent. It’s also Homecoming week. This is a textbook upset script for the Chippawa’s. It also doesn’t help that they want revenge for last season and to get back to .500 on the season.

Coach Wommack speaks about having a neutral mindset.  There are several keys to the neutral mindset. He doesn’t want players to get too emotionally high nor too emotionally low after a game, or even after a play. The players need to approach each play as its own entity, when the play is over it’s time for the next play. It doesn’t matter if the previous play was a big loss or a huge gain; you have to line up for the next play just the same. Each time you line up for a play, just do your job and trust your teammate to do his.

Taking what the defense gives

The Chippewa defense has been quite good against the run. While their passing numbers aren’t that good to observe, they haven’t been that bad against the pass either. Their biggest problem is explosive plays through the air, similar to what the Jags had trouble with against Tulane. They will be working to make similar adjustments this week and hope they show on the field when they arrive in Mobile on Saturday.

Carter Bradley may have to put the ball in the air more than he did against Oklahoma State for the Jags to win. If the Chippewa’s continue to be susceptible to the pass, that’s what the Jags need to exploit.

But a productive running game will also help loosen up the secondary too.

Offensive Line

Last Saturday, the Jags offensive line played arguably the best game of football in program history. They opened running lanes for the Jaguar running backs and they were pretty good in pass protection. Bradley was sacked twice in the game, but did not have a single quarterback hurry on the stat sheet.

Consistency is stacking one good game after another. They could really use another outing like that this week.

Not to keep repeating it, but Central Michigan has been good against the run. If they are able to get success stopping the Jags rushing game, they will turn up the pressure on Bradley and try to get him to force the ball downfield. Two of his three interceptions this season can be contributed to him trying to force the ball under pressure.

Injuries

Reggie Smith was injured late in fall camp and will miss the season. Braylon McReynolds suffered a broken collarbone against Tulane and will likely miss the entire regular season.

Before the game last Saturday, we found out that both Devin Voisin and Keith Gallmon Jr will also miss the rest of the season as well.

Gallmon Jr suffered a torn pectoral muscle early in the game against Southeastern Louisiana. This is the second time in as many seasons he has suffered the same injury and missed an entire season. However this time it’s the opposite pectoral as the one injured in 2022.

Voisin suffered a knee injury in the second half against SLU.

Thankfully, the Jags stayed pretty healthy against Oklahoma State last week.

Prediction

The Jags are pretty much a 14.5 point favorite across the board on most odd-maker sites. I was glad my prediction last week was completely wrong. When I pick against the Jags, I’m more than happy to be wrong.

It may be early for the Chippewa’s to circle the wagons, but I’m sure they feel an urgency for a win before they start conference play. They had 12 players out with Covid last Saturday and was within one score of Notre Dame at halftime (21-14). Thankfully the game will be at Hancock Whitney Stadium.

The Jags offensive strengths play into some of the strengths of Central Michigan’s defense. It will be interesting to watch how it plays out.

I’m going with the Jags to win, but maybe they don’t cover the 14.5 spread but barely. I think a strong second half leads to a Jags win 31-17, just under the spread.

Go Jags!

Preview: South Alabama Opens Season At #24 Tulane

September 1, 2023 · Filed Under Football · Comments Off on Preview: South Alabama Opens Season At #24 Tulane 
South Alabama vs Tulane Green Wave

Kickoff: Saturday, September 2 7:00 PM
Venue: Yulman Stadium – New Orleans, LA
TV/Streaming: ESPNU
Radio: 96.1 fm The Rocket, Sports Talk 99.5 fm, iHeartRadio App
#5 Jersey: Devin Voisin
Thunderjags on X (Formerly Twitter): @USAThunderjags


Preface

The Thunderjags family have been going through a lot over the last few months and our coverage leading up to the season has been basically non-existent unfortunately. It’s been a struggle to get back into gear. We have and continue to be a partnership, but while my family life has calmed down a little bit lately and I am eager to get back to some normalcy, my partner is still going through his own family issues. However you send support, I would humbly ask you to keep my partner, his family (and also my family) in your thoughts, prayers, or however you support people in your personal belief system. Speaking for both Thunderjags, we appreciate it!

Now, on with the preview!


The Season Is Here

South Alabama will open their 2023 campaign with a top 25 matchup versus the Tulane Green Wave in New Orleans at Yulman Stadium.

Tulane was the darling of bowl season finishing with a 12-2 record, which included a win over UCF in the AAC championship game. That win vaulted Tulane into a New Years Day 6 bowl game as the top ranked team with the best record in the Group of Five conference. The Green Wave then defeated the top 10 ranked USC Trojans 46-45 in the Cotton Bowl.

South Alabama finished their 2022 campaign with a 10-3 record. Marking their best FBS season in program history with five straight wins to close out the regular season. However, their streak would come to an end in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl with a 23-44 loss and remain winless in three bowl game appearances over the program’s short history.

Between these two programs, there are lofty expectations for 2023.

But past performance does not guarantee future results, especially not in college football.

Tulane

Tulane finished 2022 ranked 9th in the nation in the AP poll. But you only have to look back to 2021 and the Green Wave’s 2-10 record to understand how preseason rankings don’t necessarily indicate how a new team and a new season will perform. But eighth-year head coach Willie Fritz hopes to maintain the standard set forth by the 2022 team.

Offense

The Green Wave returns three-year starter Michael Pratt who threw for 3,009 yards and 27 touchdowns last season. However, they have to replace running back Tyjae Spears, who was the Cotton Bowl MVP, that rushed for 1,581 yards and 19 touchdowns last season.

Coach Fritz has not said who will be replacing Spears, but that he had five good running backs and they will be testing them out over the first few games.

The likely starters on the offensive line are all senior or redshirt-seniors that have quite a bit of experience under their respective belts. They also weigh an average of 308lb.

At receiver they have a somewhat untested group of potential starters. A senior transfer from Notre Dame who only saw five snaps in the season opening game in 2021. His usage has trended down from 2019 when he played in 12 games with three starts until sitting out the remainder of the 2021 season.

Defense

The Tulane defense lines up in a base 4-2-5 package, similar to the Jags. The defensive line is experienced and deep but their likely starting linebackers seem to be less experienced.

The secondary is comprised of all upper classmen but the likely starters are mostly transfers into the program at one time or another.

Special Teams

Punter Casey Glover (R-Sr) returns from a season where he averaged over 41 yards per attempt with 20 fair catches, 20 downed inside the 20, 9 punts of 50+ yards and 0 blocks. His longest recorded punt was 65 yards. Glover is also the kickoff specialist and played in all 14 games last season with 45 touchbacks and only one kick out of bounds.

Also returning is placekicker Valentino Ambrosio (R-Sr). He transferred in from Rutgers last season. For the Green Wave he played in eight games going 10-of-11 with a long of 47 yards.

Ethan Hadak (R-Jr) played in 34 games over three seasons for the Green Wave, including all 13 last Fall.

South Alabama

The Jaguars enter the third season under the direction of head coach Kane Wommack with an unprecedented set of expectations. Despite the expectations from what some may consider a season where the Jags overachieved, the players and coaches, when they allow themselves to look back, they see both an amazing season with some undertones of slight underachievement.

They lost to UCLA on a last second field goal and lost to their rival Troy 6-10 in a defensive slug match. But many took the loss to Western Kentucky personal, include coach Wommack.

The Jags felt like they could have easily been in the Conference Championship game and could have been the Group of Five representative in the New Years Day 6 bowl games.

Offense

Coach Wommack and offensive coordinator Major Applewhite return nine starters on an offense that put up an average of over 31 points per game last season. Receiver Jalen Wayne was drafted by the Cleveland Browns but leaves a very talented and experienced pair of receivers for quarterback Carter Bradley to target.

Speaking of Carter Bradley (Sr) he set school records in passing yards (3,326), completions (276), and touchdowns (28) in his first season at USA. He ranked in the top 50 nationally in 11 different categories. He has been named to at least five different watch lists this season including: Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award, the Manning Award, the Davey O’Brien Award, The Wuerffel Trophy, and the Maxwell Award Watch Lists.

Veteran Desmond Trotter will back up Carter and freshman Gio Lopez is listed as 3rd string, seemingly beating out redshirt-freshman Bishop Davenport, a Utah State transfer.

La’Damian Webb (R-Sr) returns after setting the regular season rushing yard mark with 1,015 yards in his first regular season with the program. He saw action in 12 games, missing only one with an injury but was held to minimal carries in two others due to injury. He ran for 152 yards and three touchdowns against Arkansas State and then for 247 yards and four touchdowns (both school records) against Georgia Southern in a game where he willed his team to victory. He ranked in the top 50 in seven categories nationally including 13th in rushing touchdowns and 10th in total touchdowns.

Webb is backed up by Braylon McReynolds (So) who played in 11 games as a true freshman with 326 yards on 59 carries. He was able to show his speed and explosiveness only a few times last season, but look for him to get more opportunities this season.

The staff added Kentrell Bullock (Jr), an Ole Miss transfer, and he will also factor into the rotation with McReynolds.

Marco Lee (Sr) returns after his first season with the Jags where he had 67 carries for 247 yards and four touchdowns, including a pair of touchdowns against UCLA. He will be the bruiser back they can send in for those tough goal line and short yardage situations.

Replacing Wayne as the starter in week one is Jamaal Pritchett (So). He saw action in eight games last fall but only has two catches to his resume. On the other side is Devin Voisin (R-Jr) who played in all 13 games. He was named an honorable mention All-SBC team and All-Conference by Phil Steele. He had 64 catches for 867 yards and five touchdowns on the season, including a season-high 11 catches and 153 yards in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl against Western Kentucky.

Caullin Lacy (Jr) started all 13 games last season in the slot with a team-high 65 catches for 816 yards and six touchdowns with a career high 12 catches for 133 yards against Louisiana-Monroe. He also serves as the primary punt returner with 21 returns for 189 yards and a touchdown return against Louisiana Tech.

What may be one of the more underrated positions of strength on the offense is at tight end. The Jags return five seasoned and talented players in Lincoln Sefcik (Sr), DJ Thomas-Jones (Sr), Brandon Crum (Sr), Jacob Hopper (Jr), and Todd Justice (R-Jr). While they haven’t been featured pass receivers over the last few seasons, they are excellent possession receivers and tend to come through when the ball is thrown their way and a catch is needed.

Sefcik and Thomas-Jones will likely split starting duties again this season.

But what allows the offense to do what it does, the offensive line returns all but one starter from last year. James Jackson is gone since his eligibility was exhausted. But Josh McCulloch (Sr), Dontae Lucas (Sr), Reggie Smith (Sr), and Adrein Strickland (So) all return. Reggie Smith will move over to center and James Robinson (R-Jr) will start at left guard. Robinson transferred in from Tennessee and saw action in eight games last year as a backup guard and also on special teams.

Defense

The defense returns their own fair share of starters from last year while returning some talented players from injury too.

Jamie Sheriff (R-Sr), Wy’Kevious Thomas (R-Jr), and Charles Coleman (Sr) all return as starters on the defensive line. Brock Higdon (R-Jr), Jamall Hickbottom (Sr), and Carlos Johnson (Jr), Nathan Rawlins-Kibonge (R-So), and Maurice Strong Jr. (Sr) all return with game experience from last season. Unfortunately it seems that Ed Smith (So) will miss this game and possibly the season with an injury in the last practice of fall camp.

James Miller (Sr), Trey Kiser (Sr), and Quentin Wilfawn (R-Jr) all return as starters at linebacker. Ke’Shun Brown (R-Jr) also has starting experience and returns to bolster the group as a reserve along with Khalil Jacobs (So) and LaMondre Brooks (So) are both listed on the two-deep with game experience from last season.

The coaching staff added Gavin Forsha (Jr) from Kansas State, Taylor Milton (Jr) from Texas A&M, Emauri Sibley (So) from JuCo ranks, and Eli Webb (So) from Belhaven to add some additional depth at linebacker.

Ricky Fletcher (So) and Marquise Robinson (Jr) return as starting corners with Reggie Neely (Jr) and Dallas Gamble (R-Jr) both return with game experience as reserves.

Keith Gallmon (R-Sr) returns at free safety after missing all of 2022 with an injury. He is backed up by Rickey Hyatt (R-Jr). Jaden Voisin (R-Jr) or Jalen Jordan (Jr) are listed as the starter at Rover. Yam Banks (Jr) is back to start at Husky after leading the team with six interceptions last season.

The coaching staff added a long list of players in the offseason to add quality depth in the secondary. Reggie Neely (Jr Juco), Eli Ntsasa (Jr community college), Cameron Rutledge (Jr Division II transfer), Wesley Miller (R-Fr Mississippi State), Jordon Buchanan (R-Fr Purdue), Jamarrien Burt (R-Fr Oklahoma), Brian Dillart (R-So West Georgia), and Mike Harris (R-Jr Baylor) all transferred.

Coach Wommack also hired former Southern Miss head coach Jay Hopson, who previously served two years as Director of High School Relations at Mississippi State to coach the cornerbacks along with defensive coordinator Corey Batoon, who coaches the safeties, but calls plays from the press box during games.

Special Teams

Diego Guajardo (Sr) will handle placekicking duties, his fourth season as the starter. Desmond Trotter or Jack Martin are listed as serving as the holder. Jacob Meeks (Sr) will return to serve as kickoff specialist. With Jack Brooks deciding to depart the team, Jack Martin (Sr) who transferred from Alabama but didn’t see any action in 2022, is listed along with true freshman Aleksi Pulkkinen from Helsinki Finland as the punter.

Travis Drosos (Jr) will handle the long snapping duties with Anthony Zaccaro (Jr) backing him up.

Caullin Lacy will handle punt returns and Braylon McReynolds and Caullin Lacy will line up for kickoff returns.

Keys to the Game

Consistency

More often than not, the team that executes more consistently in the first game of the season tends to win the game.

Over the last two seasons with Coach Wommack and his staff, they have been pretty consistent in the early games of the season. In 2021 they defeated Southern Miss, now a fellow conference member, in the season opener. Then in 2022 they handled FCS Nicholls as expected, but they also went to Central Michigan and defeated the Jim McElwain coached Chippewas with consistent execution.

Quarterback Pressure

South Alabama was picked apart by a very talented and experienced quarterback at Western Kentucky. It really exposed and exploited the secondary as the weak point of the Jaguars defense.

Tulane is returning a three-year starter at quarterback who completed 62% of his passes last season for 2,684 yards while also rushing for 494 yards. They may not set off alarm bells, but Pratt has shown that he a player.

He is regarded enough to be named to the Maxwell Award Watch List in 2022 and again for this season.

Tulane will definitely test all aspects of the Jaguar defense. If the Jags defensive front can’t get pressure on Pratt and the Jag secondary struggles against the pass, it could be another long game in New Orleans.

Running Backs

The edited mantra for the Jags last season was “Run the Dang ball.” It was such a thing that strength and conditioning coach Matt Shadeed was, I believe, the first one to have a shirt made to wear at practice with….a version….of the saying prominently displayed on it.

And La’Damian Webb sure did his part!

This may be the deepest and most talented group of running backs, from top to bottom, that have all suited up for the Jags in one season. They may only be three listed on the two-deep chart, but there are five running backs who could easily be put in to start.

Last season the Jags averaged just over 155 yards per game rushing. They have a good opportunity with the talent they have to improve on that this season.

Meanwhile Tulane averaged just under 205 yards rushing per game. Their leading rusher, Tyjae Spears, is gone this season which leaves their top returning rusher as quarterback Michael Pratt.

Coach Fitz and his staff will undoubtedly find someone who fill Spears’ cleats.

The Jags defense held opponents to just over 92 yards rushing per game last season. So this could be a very interesting matchup on the field Saturday night.

Prediction

South Alabama is a 6.5 point underdog to Tulane in New Orleans.

The first game of a new season is often a tricky one. It can set the tone for the entire season to come. You find out quickly where you need to improve and likely where your strengths lie.

This couldn’t be truer than this season opener.

Two teams who exceeded expectations last season who now have higher expectations for this season. But we also have two teams that couldn’t be more opposite once the final whistle sounded last season.

Tulane held off a top 10 ranked USC, while the Jaguars suffered their worst loss of the season in their bowl game. Coach Wommack, his staff and the players all looked back at what the season could have been. A one-point loss on the road at UCLA on a field goal as time expired, a four-point loss at home against Troy in their lowest offensive output of the season, but then the 21-point loss to Western Kentucky in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl

South Alabama still has the bitter taste of defeat fresh in their mouth. But they are also going back to the same city where that bitterness originated.

I can’t help but think that’s some extra motivation.

While I may be looking at this through my red, white and blue glasses, I think the Jags not only cover the spread, but they win outright 38-34.

Preview: South Alabama Goes For Ninth Win Of The Season At Southern Miss

November 18, 2022 · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference · Comments Off on Preview: South Alabama Goes For Ninth Win Of The Season At Southern Miss 

Kickoff: Saturday, November 19, 2:30pm
Venue: M. M. Roberts Stadium, Hattiesburg, Mississippi
TV/Streaming: ESPNU
Radio: 96.1 fm The Rocket, Sports Talk 99.5 fm, iHeartRadio App
Thunderjags Twitter: @USAThunderjags
#5 Jersey: Jamie Sheriff


South Alabama is in new, uncharted territory for the football program.

After the win over Georgia Southern two weeks ago, every new win they notch they break the previous record for wins they themselves set just the week prior. In 2014 and 2016 the program achieved six wins and earned bowl berths. But both times they came up on the losing end in the bowl game and finished with six wins and seven loses. In 2013 the program earned finished 6-6 and were not invited to go bowling.

This season, the second under head coach Kane Wommack, the program has smashed that glass ceiling.

They guaranteed themselves a winning regular season record when they defeated Georgia Southern for the program record seventh win of the season. Just one week later, this past Saturday, they guaranteed themselves an overall winning season by setting the bar one rung higher with eight regular season wins.

This Saturday they travel to Hattiesburg, Mississippi with an opportunity to set that bar one rung higher with a ninth regular-season victory with a win over Southern Miss.

In order to earn win number eight, the script from the previous two wins had to be flipped. It wasn’t the La’Damian Webb show this time. It wasn’t even a dominant rushing attack that gave the Jags the win.

The Jags offense took to the air to topple Texas State.

Carter Bradley tied a single-game record with a career-high four touchdown passes as he threw for 274 yards in the 38-21 win. It wasn’t Jalen Wayne who stepped up big for the Jags, he was kept as mostly a non-factor with only three catches for 27 yards in the game. Neither was it Caullin Lacy, though he did catch three passes for 58 yards and a touchdown.

Devin Voisin was the one who . He caught six passes for 118 yards and two touchdowns, both career highs.

The diversity that the Jags have shown throughout the season as they have navigated their schedule and sit here with eight wins is a testament to all the hard work that has been put into this program. When a good Texas State defense limited the rushing attack and then neutralized Wayne and kept Lacy mostly at bay, it was Devin Voisin who stepped up and made the plays that mattered.

South Alabama remains tied atop the Sun Belt Conference West Division standings. Troy holds the tiebreaker for winning the head-to-head meeting between the two. In order for the Jags to overtake them they need to win both of their remaining games against Southern Miss and Old Dominion. They also need either Louisiana-Monroe or Arkansas State to pull an upset on Troy in the final two weeks of play.

But the Jags can only control what’s in their path.

In their path this week is Southern Miss.

Southern Miss (5-5, 3-3 SBC)

The Golden Eagles have been an up and down team this season. They began the year two-consecutive losses. A 29-27 4OT loss at home to Liberty and a 30-7 loss at Miami (FL).

The Golden Eagles got back to .500 with a 64-10 win over Northwestern State and upset a strong Tulane team (who are currently 8-2 and ranked #21 in the latest AP Poll). 

They then lost a 27-10 decision in Troy before three consecutive wins over Sun Belt foes Arkansas State (20-19), Texas State (20-14), and Louisiana-Lafayette (39-24).

The Golden Eagles are riding a two-game losing streak coming into this matchup with a 42-14 home loss to another up-and-down team in Georgia State and a 26-23 loss to Eastern Division Champs Coastal Carolina in Conway, South Carolina.

Offense

Southern Miss is averaging 25.1 points, 324.6 total yards, 213.2 passing yards, 111.4 rushing yards, and 28:40 time of possession per game. They are converting 51-of-144 (35.4%) on 3rd down and 10-of-16 (62.5%) on 4th down.

They have scored 22 times out of their 29 trips into their opponents red zone, with only 12 of them being touchdowns.

Head coach Will Hall has been playing musical quarterbacks with at least four different quarterbacks seeing playing time with at least two running backs throwing passes as well.

Freshman Zach Wilcke is the team’s leading quarterback statistically. He’s played in eight games and is 100-for-175 (57.1%) for 1,151 yards, eight touchdowns and nine interceptions on the season. Trey Lowe, a redshirt junior, is 27-of-54 for 458 yards, two touchdowns and an interception in four games played. Sophomore Jake Lange is 11-of-21 for 110 yards, with an interception and no touchdowns.

Jason Brownlee, a senior, leads the receiving corps with 44 catches for 687 yards with six touchdowns. Freshman Tiaquelin Mims has 23 catches for 361 yards and two touchdowns in six games played. Junior Jakarius Caston adds 22 catches for 272 yards with three touchdowns in seven games played. Sophomore running back Frank Gore Jr. has 16 catches for 177 yards. Cole Cavallo, a redshirt junior tight end, is next with 15 catches for 145 yards and a touchdown. Then 15 other players have caught passes, none with double-digit receptions nor over 87 yards receiving.

Frank Gore Jr. leads the team rushing with 788 yards on 163 carries with five touchdowns. Janari Dean has 134 yards on 48 carries and three touchdowns in eight games played. Out of 13 runners with carries, none have netted over 69 yards rushing with only four of them logging game time in all 10 games.

Defense

The Golden Eagle defense is allowing an averaging of 24.5 points, 377.0 total yards, 236.2 passing yards, 140.8 rushing yards, and 31:20 time of possession per game.

Opponents are converting 55-of-152 (36.2%) on 3rd down and 3-of-18 (16.7%) on 4th down attempts for the season.

When teams get into the red zone, they have scored 27 times out of the 31 trips with 19 of them being touchdowns.

Malik Shorts leads the team with 74 total stops, 43 of them solo, with a team co-leading three interceptions. Averie Habas and Dominic Quewon co-lead the team with 9.5 sacks each, Quewon leads the team with 8.5 sacks a full five sacks more than the next defender. Jay Stanley is the other co-leader with three interceptions while adding five pass breakups, three forced fumbles and a fumble recovery.

Special Teams

Briggs Bourgeois is 13-of-14 placekicking this season with a long of 53 yards. He’s also 27-of-28 on extra points.

Mason Hunt is averaging 42.8 yards per punt with a long of 59 yards, 15 kicks of 50+ yards, 23 downed inside the 20, 22 fair catches, and only eight touchbacks.

South Alabama (8-2, 5-1 SBC)

Offense

The Jags offense is averaging 32.9 points, 427.6 total yards, 266.3 passing yards, 161.3 rushing yards, and 32:29 time of possession per game. They are converting 63-of-148 (42.6%) on 3rd down and 12-of-19 (63.2%) on 4th down for the season. They converted all six 4th down attempts against Texas State.

Out of 43 trips into the red zone, the Jags have scored 36 times with 27 of them being touchdowns.

Carter Bradley’s numbers are now 208-of-323 (64.4%) for 2,555 yards, 19 touchdowns, and seven interceptions for the season.

The top three receivers stay bunched up with very similar numbers. Jalen Wayne has 49 catches for 697 yards and 7 touchdowns. Caullin Lacy has 51 catches for 673 yards and 4 touchdowns. Devin Voisin has 44 catches for 585 yards and three touchdowns.

La’Damian Webb has 941 yards on 179 carries with 13 touchdowns for the season. Marco Lee adds 214 yards on 58 carries with four touchdowns. Omni Wells has 180 yards on 41 carries and Braylon McReynolds has 155 yards on 30 carries.

Defense

The Jags allow an average of 19.3 points, 295.2 total yards, 209.9 passing yards, 85.3 rushing yards, and 27:01 time of possession per game through ten games this season. They are allowing opponents to convert a mere 36-of-134 (26.9%) on 3rd down and 12-of-21 (57.1%) on 4th down attempts.

Opponents have had the ball in the red zone 29 times this season and came away with points on 22 of those trips with only 15 of them being touchdowns.

James Miller (58 total stops, 35 solo) continues to hold onto a narrow lead over Trey Kiser (57 total stops, 43 solo) in tackles. Kiser is the team co-lead with CJ Rias in tackles for loss with nine each. Jamie Sheriff holds onto the team lead in sacks with 5, but Rias is right behind him with four on the season. Yam Banks leads the team with five interceptions. Ke’Shun Brown has two, including a game-sealing pick-six against Texas State.

Special Teams

Diego Guajardo saw his first missed field goal of the season. He is now 13-of-14 on the season with a long of 48. He’s only missed one of his 39 extra point attempts on the season as well.

Jack Brooks is averaging 42.2 yards per punt on 49 punts this season. He has a long of 58 yards with 16 kicks downed inside the 20, 10 fair caught, 7 kicks of 50+ yards, and only two touchbacks.

Keys to the Game

Quick Start

When the Jags jump out with a quick start to the game, they have performed exceptionally well this season. Last week was no exception with a 41-yard touchdown pass on the fourth play of the game. The defense also got onto the early jump bandwagon when James Miller sacked quarterback Layne Hatcher on the first defensive play.

They worked up a 17-0 lead at halftime, which they needed as the Jags went score for score against the Bobcats in the second half to win by that margin, 38-21.

If the Bobcats had discovered Josh Berry’s running ability earlier in the game we may have been talking about a much closer game on the scoreboard.

That fast start was the difference and has been a big help in most games this season.

Adjusting To Whichever USM Team Shows Up

There’s no way around it, Southern Miss has been a bit of Jekyll and Hyde this year. Just look at their win over Tulane and contrast it will their whipping they suffered at the hands of Georgia State.

Head coach Will Hall has played four or five different quarterbacks on the year. Frank Gore Jr. has more passing attempts than all of South Alabama’s quarterbacks not named Carter Bradley.

Only 5 receivers out of the 20 receivers on the squad with a reception on the season have played all 10 games.

Additionally, only 5 players out of the 15 players on the team with a rushing attempt on the season have played in all 10 games this season as well.

Despite all of this coach Hall has his team one win away from bowl eligibility with an even mark overall on the season and in conference play.

While the Jaguar defense has made some great adjustments this season (hello second half against Georgia Southern), they have also shown they aren’t flawless (hello second half against Texas State).

But throughout it all the defense has remained elite.

This team has lived the mantra of LEO, Love Each Other, every step of the way. When the defense had it’s struggles, the offense kept scoring. When the offense couldn’t close out the game, the defense stepped in.

Stay Healthy (and leaning on more than one running back)

This keeps cropping up in my list as it stays in my mind as one of the top three keys to Jaguar victories. If they stay healthy, there’s not many teams on the schedule that can beat them.

I was concerned about the spike in La’Damian Webb’s usage over the previous two weeks just from a wear and tear angle. The coaches don’t seem too concerned about the injury that had them keep him out of the remainder of the game last week. But I feel it underscores the urgency of developing a clear #2 back that can pick up where Webb leaves off with little dropoff.

We saw a flash of potential against Louisiana-Monroe when Marco Lee and Omni Wells rushed for 93 and 85 yards respectively after Webb left the game on the first drive with an injury. But we have not seen that kind of rushing productivity out of the pair since. We haven’t seen it from Braylon McReynolds either, though he missed a few games with injuries himself.

The closest we have seen has been 57 yards from Marco Lee last week against Texas State, then McReynolds with 42 against Georgia Southern before that.

I have no doubt that coach Wommack, offensive coordinator Major Applewhite, and the rest of the staff have detailed plans to work into the overall gameplan if Webb is limited or additional injuries occur. But, on the outside looking in, boy would I like to have see more in the stat logs and in game play in case that was to happen.

Prediction

Which Southern Miss team do you get on Saturday will be key. The Jags hold a 2-0 advantage over Southern Miss. They completed a home-and-home series last season before the Golden Eagles flew the coup from Conference USA to the Sun Belt.

Coach Will Hall is leaving no stone unturned in his quest to turn the USM program around. He’s making progress too.

But Hall’s progress is nowhere near the progress that coach Wommack has made.

South Alabama is favored by 7.5 points according to handicapping websites. I think the Jags win and also cover the spread.

South Alabama Earns Bowl Eligibility With 31-3 Win Over Arkansas State

October 29, 2022 · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference · Comments Off on South Alabama Earns Bowl Eligibility With 31-3 Win Over Arkansas State 
Photo credit: South Alabama Football, @southalabamafb twitter

South Alabama is bowl eligible!

On a rainy afternoon in Jonesboro, the Jags (6-2, 3-1 SBC) put up a dominating 31-3 win over Arkansas State (2-7, 1-5) behind La’Damian Webb’s 162 yards, three touchdown performance. The win extends the Jags winning streak to four games against the Red Wolves.

The game opened with a 69-yard run by Webb on the first offensive snap, then four plays later Webb punched it in to give the Jags a 7-0 lead less than three minutes into the game.

The Jags got excellent field possession after a blocked punt careens out of bounds at the Jags 46-yard line. On the second snap, Bradley connected with a wide-open Jalen Wayne for a 49-yard touchdown to go up 14-0.

After allowing a 42-yard pass completion, the Jags defense drew a line in the sand and would not budge. Arkansas State got their only points of the game with a 32-yard field goal.

The Jags defense kept getting to James Blackman and with 2:45 left in the first half, James Miller and Jamie Sheriff sack him for a safety and a 16-3 lead at halftime.

Webb earned his second touchdown of the game with a leap over the line from the 1-yard line with 5:18 left in the third quarter. Head coach Kane Wommack opted for a two-point try and Bradley connected with DJ Thomas-Jones to go up 24-3.

Close to the middle of the fourth quarter, the Jags forced a turnover when Lamondre Brooks knocked the ball loose from Johnnie Lang’s grip then Gi’Narious Johnson covered it up at the Jags 48-yard line with 8:50 left.

The final drive was all La’Damian Webb. Offensive coordinator Major Applewhite kept calling his number and Web kept delivering. He carried the ball on all 11 plays of the drive and finished with a 1-yard plunge for his third and final touchdown of the game as they melted 7:16 off the clock.

Stats

Webb ran for 162 yards on 28 carries with the three touchdowns while averaging 5.8 yards per carry. Bradley added 17 yards on four carries as the next closest rusher.

Carter Bradley was 17-of-24 for 179 yards and a touchdown.

DJ Thomas-Jones, his second game back after his scary incident on the sideline several weeks ago now, led the Jags with four catches with 48 yards. Jalen Wayne led the team with 83 yards on three catches with the only receiving touchdown. Lacy caught three passes for 29 yards. Lincoln Sefcik also caught three passes for only 8 yards.

James Miller led the defense with eight stops, three solo, 1.5 tackles for loss and a half sack. Jamie Sheriff led the Jags with 1.5 sacks for the game. Wy’Kevious Thomas also logged a sack in the game.

Diego Guajardo was a perfect 4-for-4 on extra point attempts. Jack Brooks averaged 42.8 yards per punt wearing the honorary number 5 jersey.

James Blackman was 22-of-39 for 177 yards. Seydou Traore was the leading receiver with eight receptions for 47 yards. Jeff Foreman led the way with 98 receiving yards on six catches.

Only two Red Wolves rusher ended the game in positive numbers. Marcel Murray led the Red Wolves rushing attack with 15 yards on four carries. Johnnie Lang added 14 yards on nine carries.

Blackman was sacked four times for -43 yards then Mike Sharpe had -5 yards on his two carries. Four other runners combined for -19 yards.

Arkansas State punters kept the Jags pinned back with six punts downed inside the 20, and it seemed like every one was down inside the 5 yard line too.

The Jags dominated the team stats with 362 total yards of offense, 183 yards rushing and 179 passing yards. The Red Wolves only managed 158 total yards, 177 yards passing and -19 yards rushing. If you factor out the sack yardage, the Red Wolves had 24 yards rushing.

That final drive helped the Jags take a dominant edge in time of possession too, 35:59 to 24:01.

There were some not so good stats for the Jags though. Eight penalties for 35 yards were called on the Jags, seven of them in the first half. They at least cleaned it up after the break. Also, the Jags were a mere 3-of-15 on 3rd down attempts.

Arkansas State wasn’t any better on 3rd down, going 2-of-14 in the game but they were only flagged for twice for 25 yards.

Next

The Jags will travel to Statesboro, Georgia to face off against Georgia Southern. South Alabama earned their first win against the Eagles last year, 41-14. The Eagles have the weekend off. The game kicks off at 3pm on Saturday, November 5.

Jags Hold Off ULM For 41-34 Win

October 16, 2022 · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference · Comments Off on Jags Hold Off ULM For 41-34 Win 

South Alabama dominated the third quarter with 17 points and added another touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter allowed the Jags to withstand a late charge by Louisiana-Monroe for a 41-34 win.

The Jags (5-1, 2-0 Sun Belt Conference) scored on their first four possessions of the second half to take a 41-20 advantage with 14:55 left in the fourth quarter after trailing 17-20 at halftime.

South Alabama took the opening possession of the second half and only needed five plays to drive 75 yards. The drive was capped off by quarterback Carter Bradley connecting with Jalen Wayne for a 20 yard touchdown for a 24-20 advantage.

On the ensuing possession, a tipped pass was intercepted by Yam Banks, who wore the honorary #5 jersey in the game. It only took two plays for the Jags to cash in on the turnover. A 17 yard pass to Devin Voisin set up a 24 yard touchdown pass to Caullin Lacy to put the Jags up 31-20 at the 10:29 mark.

The Jags defense forced the Warhawks to punt after four plays. Bradley connected with Lacy for a 44 yard gain to the Warhawks 18 yard line. A few plays later head coach Kane Wommack settled for a 29 yard field goal by Diego Guajardo for a 34-20 lead at the 3:51 mark.

The Swarm D forced a three-and-out, Lacy returned the punt 26 yards to their own 45 yard line. Marco Lee carried the ball the final four plays of the drive and scored on the first play of the fourth quarter from 5 yards out to put the Jags up 41-20 and seemingly cruising to victory.

Two possessions later, the Warhawks took advantage of a coverage mixup by the Jags for touchdown pass. Tyrone Howell caught it one yard past the line of scrimmage and outraced the Jags defenders for an 83 yard touchdown to cut the lead to two scores with 9:47 left in the game.

USA’s offense was only able to get one first down before being forced to punt on the ensuing possession. The Warhawks took advantage of another mistake in coverage for a 41 yard gain on their first offensive play from scrimmage. Five plays later the Warhawks converted a 4th and 1 at the Jags 7 yard line with a 7 yard touchdown pass to Zach Rasmussen to cut the Jags lead to 41-34 with just 5:00 left in the game.

Offensive coordinator Major Applewhite leaned on Marco Lee and he came through each time with clutch runs on key 3rd down situations. He carried the ball six times for 57 yards on the 10 play drive, but his final carry for 7 yards sealed the game when he got a first down after ULM had used their final time out. Bradley was able to kneel twice to preserve the win.

Stats

A number of records were broken in the game. Carter Bradley threw for 420 yards, breaking the record previously held by Jake Bentley. Caullin Lacy had 12 receptions, a new single-game record. Devin Voisin, Jalen Wayne and Lacy each had over 100 yards receiving, a first in South Alabama program history.

Carter Bradley was 25-of-33 passing with three touchdowns with the 420 passing yards.

Lacy finished with 133 yards on his 12 receptions with a touchdown. Voisin caught seven passes for 141 yards. Jalen Wayne added 127 yards and two touchdowns on five receptions. Lincoln Sefcik was the only other Jaguar to catch a pass in the game.

La’Damian Webb only had one carry for 7 yards before leaving the game with a rib injury in the first quarter. Marco Lee had 15 carries for 93 yards and two touchdowns. Omni Wells added 17 carries 85 yards.

Chandler Rogers was 20-of-27 for 371 yards, four touchdowns and an interception with three sacks.

Tyrone Howell torched the Jags defense for 244 receiving yards on 9 receptions with three touchdowns. Jevin Frett had three receptions for 83 yards and Bug Mortimer also had three receptions for 28 yards.

Malik Jackson rushed for 39 yards on 13 carries as the Warhawks leading rusher.

The Jags put up 615 yards of total offense, 420 yards passing and 195 rushing. They were 6-of-13 on 3rd down attempts and did not convert their only 4th down attempt. According to the final stats, ULM possessed the ball for 28:18 while the Jags possessed the ball 26:42, which is exactly five minutes short of a full 60 minutes so we guess the missing five minutes belong to the Jags on the final drive to boost their TOP to 31:42.

ULM put up 438 yards of total offense, with 371 passing yards and 67 rushing yards. The Warhawks only converted 3-of-12 of their 3rd down attempts but converted both of their 4th down attempts against the Jags.

Quentin Wilfawn and Dontae Lucas both sat out the game while Jamar Richardson and Brandon Crum both returned to play for the first time since getting injured against UCLA on September 24th.

Next

The Jags will host Troy (5-2, 3-1 SBC) for the annual Battle for the Belt on Thursday, October 20th at Hancock Whitney Stadium with kickoff scheduled for 6:30pm on ESPNU.

Preview: South Alabama Opens Conference Play At Louisiana

September 30, 2022 · Filed Under Football, Sun Belt Conference · Comments Off on Preview: South Alabama Opens Conference Play At Louisiana 

Kickoff: Saturday October 1, 4:00pm
Venue: Cajun Field, Lafayette, LA
TV/Streaming: ESPN+
Radio: 96.1 fm The Rocket, Sports Talk 99.5 fm, iHeartRadio App
#5 Jersey: Desmond Trotter
Thunderjags Twitter: @USAThunderjags


South Alabama (3-1) took another big step forward last Saturday against Louisiana Tech (1-3). Though they opened the game with a big play, it was called back due to a penalty. But they didn’t let the adversity affect them.

If anything, they used it as motivation.

They took the opening possession and marched 80 yards over six plays in just over two minutes to put the points back on the board. Then after the defense held La. Tech to a 3-and-out, Caullin Lacy returned the punt 57 yards for a touchdown. He was also named the Sun Belt Conference Specials Teams Player of the week for that. From there, they mostly cruised to a 38-14 win.  

Yet the game was still full of adversity.

The Jags were flagged for 14 penalties, totaling 131 penalty yards. It also saw a targeting penalty called down from the press box when Brock Higdon was seemingly pushed into the quarterback. Head coach Kane Wommack appealed the subsequent disqualification in the first half of the next game, however his appeal was denied.

That game is now behind them, as is their non-conference slate of game. Now they face the next test of their season: conference play.

What better way to start your conference schedule than to begin with the perennial powerhouse in your division. The Louisiana-Lafayette Ragin’ Cajuns have won the Sun Belt Conference Western Division championship the last four years (2018-2021), they shared the 2020 conference championship with Coastal Carolina due to Covid cancellation of the championship game, and they won the 2021 conference championship game versus Appalachian State in Billy Napier’s final game as head coach before leaving for the University of Florida.

Louisiana-Lafayette (2-2, 0-1 SBC)

The Ragin’ Cajuns are led by first year head coach Michael Desormeaux. He played college football for the Cajuns before a short-lived career with the Jacksonville Jaguars and Calgary Stampeders. He spent six seasons in the high school coaching ranks, three of them as a head coach, before making the jump to collegiate coaching.

He joins the Cajuns in 2016 as running backs coach, then served as tight ends coach for four seasons. Last year he was co-offensive coordinator and tight ends coach before being selected as head coach.

The Cajuns opened the season with a pair of wins over Southeastern Louisiana (24-7) and Eastern Michigan (49-21), both at home. However, they’ve come up short the last two contests against Rice (21-33) and Louisiana-Monroe (17-21), both on the road.

Offense

The Cajuns aren’t the Cajuns of the last few years. Quarterback Levi Lewis is gone and they return only one major contributing running back from a year ago.  Chris Smith led the team rushing last season with 855 yards on 153 attempts. He had a career outing against Arkansas State when he ran for 238 yards on 24 carries with two touchdowns.

After Smith, they only return one other running back who saw action last season. He only had eight carries for 14 yards though.

As a team the Cajuns are averaging 27.75 points, 340.5 total yards, 233.25 passing yards, and only 107.3 rushing yards and 27:48 time of possession per game.

They are converting 40% of their 3rd down attempts (22-of-55) and 25% of their 4th down attempts (2-of-8). They are winning big in the turnover margin so far with a +9 turnover margin (3 turnovers to 12 takeaways). They have already logged nine interceptions through four games this season.

Of their 13 trips into opponents red zone, they have scored on 10 of those trips, with eight of them being touchdowns.

Chandler Fields leads the quarterback duo going 50-of-88 for seven touchdowns, and two interceptions. Ben Wooldridge is 30-of-45 for 350 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions.

Michael Jefferson leads the receiving corps with 17 catches for 259 yards and two touchdowns. Johnny Lumpkin and Chris Smith are the only other players to log double digit receptions (10). Lumpkin has 99 yards and three touchdowns while Smith has 91 yards. John Stephens Jr is the only other receiver with over 100 yards receiving (103 to be exact) with one touchdown.

Chris Smith leads the rushing attack with 157 yards on 35 carries with two touchdowns. Terrence Williams is the only other rusher over the century mark with 104 yards on 29 carries. Three other players have double-digit carries, Jocob Kibodi (19 for 96 yards), Dre’lyn Washington (17 for 65 yards and a touchdown), and Chandler Fields with 16.

Defense

Opponents are averaging 20.5 points, 372.3 total yards of offense, 241 passing yards, 131.3 rushing yards and 31:58 time of possession per game against the Cajuns.

They are converting just over 44% of their 3rd down attempts (26-of-59) and just under 43% of their 4th down attempts (3-of-7). The defense has taken the ball away from their opponents 12 times, nine of them interceptions and three fumbles.

Opponents have been in the red zone 13 times and came away with scores 12 of those trips, ten of them coming as touchdowns.

Jourdan Quibodeaux is the leading tackler with 31 total stops, 12 of them solo from his linebacker position. Kam Pedescleaux is right behind him with 30 total stops, 18 solo with a forced fumble and an interception. No player on defense has more than one interception on the season.

Special Teams

Preston Safford is 2-of-4 on the season on field goals, his longest make is 36 yards. His two missing came from a 50+ yard attempt and a 40+ yard attempt.

Rhys Byrns has punted 19 times with an average of 45.3 yards per punt with two touchbacks, five fair catches, 6 downed inside the 20 and four kicks of 50+ yards.

Eric Garror has returned 9 punts, one of them for a touchdown.

South Alabama (3-1, 0-0 SBC)

For the second-consecutive season the Jags have started the year 3-1. However the one loss last season was to the very opponent they face this weekend, Louisiana-Lafayette.

In that game the Cajuns jumped out to a 20-0 lead before the Jags began their rally. They shut out the Cajuns in the second half. Diego Guajardo has his worst outing at a Jag that night with a blocked extra point, missing a second extra point, and missing a 37-yard field goal with 1:06 left in the game to take the lead and possibly win.

The Jags may have lost 18-20, but they made a statement to the Cajuns and to the Sun Belt Conference that they were ready to play.

Offense

In only his second season at the helm, coach Wommack and offensive coordinator Major Applewhite have transformed the Jaguar offense into something powerful.

The Jags rank 44th nationally in total offense, 61st nationally in rushing offense, and 35th in passing offense. But most of all they are tied for 29th nationally in scoring offense, something that Jag fans would not have believe two years ago.

On the season the Jags are averaging 38.75 points, 449.5 total yards, 284.25 passing yards, and 165.3 rushing yards, and 33:39 time of possession per game.

They are converting just over 46% of their 3rd down attempts (25-of-54) and 33% of their 4th down attempts (1-of-3). They have turned the ball over 4 times, three of them interceptions and only one fumble, which places them at +6 turnover margin on the season.

Of their 19 trips into the red zone, the offense has scored 16 times, only three of them being field goals.

Carter Bradley is 83-of-124 for 1,029 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions on the season. Desmond Trotter, in only two games of action, is 12-of-14 for 108 yards.

Jalen Wayne leads the receiving corps with 22 catches for 309 yards and three touchdowns after being held mostly in check by Louisiana Tech last week. Caullin Lacy has 18 catches for 258 yards and two touchdowns. Devin Voisin, who has come on of late, has 16 catches for 152 yards and a touchdown. La’Damian Webb has 11 catches for 118 yards and a touchdown, some of those come by a jet sweep like play that counts as a forward pass.

Webb leads the rushing attack with 388 yards on 68 carries with five touchdowns. Terrion Avery currently resides as second on the team in rushing with 82 yards on 21 carries. Braylon McReynolds has 79 yards on 15 carries. Omni Wells has 46 yards on 12 carries. Marco Lee adds 39 yards on 15 carries with two touchdowns.

However it was released this week that Avery is no longer on the team. Additionally offensive linemen Antawn Lewis and Anterrious Gray are both no longer with the team. How much that affect the team down the stretch will remain to be seen. Both Lewis and Gray both have experience as starters in 2021 but were beat out at their positions to begin the season. Both came to USA as Division I transfers and are fifth-year seniors.

But the offensive line group started the season with 21 players, so they should have enough bodies but will the loss of experience come back to haunt them some? We’ll have to wait and see.

Defense

The Jags defense is picking up from where they left off last season. They rank 27th nationally in total defense, 67th nationally in passing yards allowed, and 17th nationally in rushing defense, and are tied for 37th nationally in scoring defense.

Jaden Voisin leads the defense with 20 total stops, 11 solo, with three tackles for loss, two pass breakups and a quarterback hurry. Jalen Jordan is right behind him with 19 stops, 10 solo. Trey Kiser is next with 18 stops, 14 solo, a sack and a fumble recovery. Quentin Wilfawn, who missed last weeks game due to injury, comes in 4th with 17 stops, 13 solo, with 1.5 tackles for loss. CJ Rias leads the team with two sacks.

Despite only recording one tackle last week, Yam Banks was a huge force for the defense against La. Tech. He accounted for three of the five takeaways. He picked off two passes, returning one for a touchdown, and recovered a fumble.

Special Teams

Diego Guajardo is a perfect 5-for-5 on field goal attempts on the season with a season long 48 yarder, has only missed one of his 19 extra point attempts.

Jack Brooks has punted 17 times this season with an average of 43.4 yards per kick. He has a long of 58 yards, four punts of 50+ yards, one touchback, one fair catch, seven downed inside the 20 yard line.

Braylon McReynolds has returned 6 kickoffs for an average of 21.5 yards per return.

Lacy has fielded six punts with one returned 57 yards for a touchdown last week against La. Tech.

Keys to the Game

Establishing the run

The Cajuns have had a lot of success making teams lean towards the pass over the run. They have been able to pick off nine passes through four games, which is worth noting for sure.

The Jags have had a lot of success this season running the ball. This has really helped the offense be more balanced and more efficient in across the board.

It all starts with the offensive line though. But it also helps a lot to have a dynamic running back like La’Damian Webb who manages to seemingly never go down on the first hit.

Cleaning up the mistakes

Last week the Jags were hit with 14 penalties. They were flagged for 10 against Nicholls to start the season and they had nine against Central Michigan the week after that. But then two weeks ago in their last second loss to UCLA the Jags only committed four penalties.

In a close game, penalties can mean a win or a loss. A poorly timed flag can move you out of field goal range or make a 3rd or 4th and short into a 3rd or 4th and long for the offense. A 3rd and long can turn into a 3rd and short, or a 3rd down stop can turn into a 1st down for your opponent, all by the drop of a yellow hanky.

I tend to think of penalties in four categories: strategy, mental mistakes, aggressive play, and frustration. Strategic penalties are like taking a delay of game before a punt or a defender committing pass interference when they would have been beat for a touchdown.

Sometimes you’re going to get a penalty from aggressive play, they just happen sometimes. You don’t want them to, but sometimes they come with the game. Mental mistakes, or lack of good execution, should only happen occasionally but they can and should be worked on and corrected. Penalties out of frustration are the worst in my book. They are overly aggressive play, they are taking pot shots when its just not needed. These can escalate quickly and can rob you of your players and lead to a string of penalties.

In the end, you strive to commit zero penalties but you particularly want to avoid penalties in key situations. When you are averaging almost 10 flags per game, at some point it’s going to bite you in the rear if you don’t get it cleaned up.

Winning On the Road

Last year the Jags were 1-5 on the road. From 2018 through 2020 the Jags road records were 0-6, 0-6, and 2-3. South Alabama has not won three games on the road in a single season since 2014.

It’s time to get that monkey off the back.

This team has the feel of something special. They’ve already gone on the road once and won against a fellow Group of 5 school in Central Michigan. They also went across the country and went toe-to-toe with a Power 5 school in UCLA and outplayed them for the majority of the game only to lose on a field goal as time expired.

The culture is different. The play is different.

It takes a different mentality to win on the road. You’re out of your normal routine and out of your comfort zone. You’re in a stadium with mostly fans cheering against you. It takes extra focus to tune out all of the distractions and to focus on the fundamentals of your assignments each play.

It seems that this team has that about them. They have the talent, they have the focus, and they have the preparation and gameplan each and every week.

But they also have a swagger about them too. Not a pompous air, but they exude that they know they have a winning gameplan, that they feel that they have out worked their opponent all week and are ready to execute at a high level each and every play. They have an air about them that they are ready for that next step.

Now is the time to take that next step forward for the program.

Prediction

This Jags team has a different feel about them. They don’t let their emotions get too high and they don’t let them get too low. They know they have business to take care of and winning one game is not the goal.

They wanted to win against UCLA but they didn’t let the loss affect them. They came back the next week and was quick to jump on La Tech from the opening kick.

But there’s more to Louisiana-Lafayette. It’s a big personal. They have been the western division champ for the last four seasons. They are the bar in the West, even if coach Napier is no longer there.

The Cajuns lead the series 8-2 with wins in the last six consecutive meetings. The Jags are also 0-5 at Cajun Field in Lafayette.

What better way to signal to the west and the entire Sun Belt Conference that the Jaguars of South Alabama are here and ready to play. This could be the win that, when we write the season retrospective to close the book on the 2022 season, we point to this game and say “that was the changing of the guard.”

Last season was very nearly a Jags win. Some unfortunate plays on special teams in wet conditions was the difference between a loss and a win.

Cajun fans have their hands hovering over the panic button after dropping games to Rice and Louisiana-Monroe. As we have seen many times the scripted quarterback rotation just doesn’t seem to work as well as some coaches tend to think it will.

I think the Cajuns will compete hard to keep from dropping three consecutive games. The loss to Rice ended the national longest active winning streak. The loss to ULM snapped a 16-game winning streak against Sun Belt Conference West Division opponents and the back-to-back losses are the first since the final two games of the 2018 season. Plus it’s their homecoming game.

The Jags are an 8.5 point favorite on the road against the Cajuns. I think South Alabama will win and cover, 31-21.

Go Jags!

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