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NCAA College Football
Week 7
Texas A M vs Kansas St
Match schedule
Date : October 17th,2009
Time: 7:00pm
Competition: NCAA College Football
Live / Repeat:Live
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Texas A&M Team Report
The first time Texas A&M ventured from home, the experience was painful.
Arkansas administered a 47-19 defeat. And that game was played on a neutral field in Texas at the new Cowboys Stadium.
The Aggies may be fortunate to draw Kansas State for their first true road appearance. The Wildcats are coming off a humiliating 66-14 loss at Texas Tech, which probably underscored just how big an undertaking Bill Snyder confronted in his second tour as Kansas State coach.
Still, the road is never friendly within the Big 12. Texas A&M (3-2, 0-1 Big 12) has lost five of its last six conference road games, and will field five or six freshman starters at Kansas State. Several additional first-year players will also be used as backups.
Quarterback Jerrod Johnson, who serves as an elder statesman for the squad because he’s a junior, downplayed the inexperience while attempting to keep his teammates from fretting about travel.
“Our freshmen aren’t really freshmen anymore,” Johnson said. “They’ve got a couple of games under their belt. Nothing is going to be more of a spectacle than Cowboys Stadium.”
Probably not. But Kansas State isn’t going to make things easy. One of the traditions at Snyder Family Stadium is Harley Day, and riders will rev their bikes during pregame while staging outside the Aggies’ locker room during the team’s final instructions.
Remembering what made them competitive in a 36-31 loss against Oklahoma State in the Oct. 10 conference opener might be the best thing for the Aggies to contemplate at that point, especially if they can’t hear themselves.
Drowning out the crowd during the game will take some big plays from Johnson, who has accurately attacking any defense he’s faced so far this season. His streak of 228 attempts without an interception is a Big 12 record.
NOTES, QUOTES
• Expect TE Jamie McCoy to continue seeing double duty. He was moved into the backfield on some snaps against Oklahoma State last week and responded with 24 yards rushing on four carries in the 36-31 defeat. A better answer, however, for the Texas A&M run game may be to develop more experience up front. The Aggies started two freshman linemen against Oklahoma State, but they weren’t ready.
• Use of freshmen by Texas A&M extends into the special teams … all the way to deep snapper. Walk-on Ben Bredthauer will continue to handle snaps after replacing C Kevin Matthews, a senior who was off target on two snaps against Oklahoma State.
• SERIES HISTORY: Texas A&M leads Kansas State 8-5 (last meeting, 2008, 44-30 KSU).
Scouting The Offense: A key reason Texas A&M didn’t come close to meeting the 545-yard offensive average it carried into last week’s 36-31 loss against Oklahoma State was an inordinate number of unproductive plays. In addition to 20 incomplete passes, the Aggies failed to gain more than 1 yard on 13 rushing attempts. Twice, Texas A&M was thwarted after driving into the red zone, including once when it failed to punch the ball in from the 1-yard line. The Aggies have improved offensively, but wasted opportunities are costly.
Kansas State Team Report
It’s only midseason, but this week is a must-win for K-State if it hopes to become bowl-eligible.
Having played a schedule that includes two lower-division teams, and having a 3-3 record after six games, K-State needs to complete the rest of the season with a 4-2 record to reach the necessary seven wins.
The most realistic victories come in the next two weeks when the Wildcats will host Texas A&M and Colorado. Win those two somewhat toss-up games, and then K-State must pull two monster upsets in the final month of the season—at Oklahoma, home for Missouri and Kansas, and a road finale at Nebraska.
Perhaps not likely, but it has to start this week.
In part, the leadership will have to come from coaching. But in part, it will come from the players.
“I think that’s always been a significant role of the seniors in your program. We strive to enhance our leadership throughout the course of the season,” said coach Bill Snyder. “It’s been an uphill battle, but we’ll see. They’re in a position right now where either somebody steps up, or we take a deeper dive in the tank. We’ll see how they respond.
“I’d like to think that we have some young people that truly are pained by this and certainly don’t want it to happen again and who want us to continue to improve as we had previously,” Snyder said after the 66-14 loss at Texas Tech.
“We’ll make an attempt to display the leadership that would help guide our football team in that direction.”
Left guard Zach Kendall said that fans will be seeing a team “… prepared to play angry.”
• It has come in backup duty, but RB Keithen Valentine has averaged 8.8 rushing yards on his 30 carries this season.
• Since the start of the Big 12, K-State is 21-19 against teams from the South division.
• TE Jeron Mastrud has caught passes in 22 straight games. Mastrud has 1,130 yards in receptions to rank third all-time in KSU history behind Russ Campbell (1,150) and Henry Childs (1,365).
• Regarding DE Jeffrey Fitzgerald, coach Bill Snyder said, “He’s one of a few guys who have consistently played better week in and week out. Other guys have made improvements, but in an up-and-down mode. But I like the way he practices and then how he takes it to the field.”
Series History: Texas A&M leads Kansas State 8-5 (last meeting, 2008, 44-40 K-State)
Scouting The Offense: Who will start at quarterback—Grant Gregory, who has started the last two games or Carson Coffman, who started the first four games? Take your own guess because coach Bill Snyder is not saying. Each QB played one half in the fiasco at Texas Tech with miniscule results. “I’m preparing to be the starter, but that’s the decision of the coach,” said Gregory, who has started both Big 12 games but did not play in the second half at Tech. “Coach said we would split reps and whomever plays the best during the week would play.”
Scouting The Defense: The Wildcats are happy that Texas A&M won’t be hurling the ball down the field like Texas Tech did. But K-State has to contend with Aggies QB Jerrod Johnson, who passed for 419 yards and rushed for 68 in a loss last week to Oklahoma State. He has 228 passing attempts without an interception, which is a Big 12 record. Defensively, the theme of the week has been tackling better in open space. “If we made a mistake early in the year it was spending too much time working on our tackling in close quarters rather than spread out on the field,” coach Bill Snyder said.
Quote To Note: “I think we have to do some soul searching first. (We need to) start our soul searching and go out and give it all we’ve got from now on. Every time we get a chance to get out on the field we need to do the best that we can.”—WR Brandon Banks, on rebounding from the loss to Texas Tech.