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Fighting Scots know a thing about rhythm and blues Release Date:
September 11, 2007
MONMOUTH, Ill.
— During
Monmouth College’s 35-7 season-opening loss to Wartburg on Sept. 1,
it might have been said that the Fighting Scots’ offense could not
find its rhythm. That wasn’t entirely true, however, as a steady
beat was established. The trouble was, Monmouth’s "1-2-3, Punt,"
which was repeated seven times to start the game, was not music to
coach Steve Bell’s ears, and it didn’t exactly have the large
contingent of Fighting Scots faithful on its feet.
A week later at Lawrence, a much more pleasing rhythm developed
during Monmouth’s 44-7 conference-opening triumph. It came from
quarterback Alex Tanney, whose "Drop-Set-Throw" number quickly moved
up the MC record charts as a smash hit. Tanney misfired just seven
times while throwing 24 completions, which checks in this week at
No. 4 in the Scots’ record book. His 306 passing yards rank eighth
on Monmouth’s single-game honor roll.
"Alex threw some balls that were on time, and he was very
accurate," said Bell. "Geez, he threw some pinpoint passes. He was
releasing the ball on time, right as the receivers were coming out
of their breaks, and giving them time to adjust."
Down 35-0 at one point in their opener, the Scots’ defense was
also singing the blues. But at Lawrence, Monmouth’s unit did a great
rendition of Wartburg’s "Nowhere to Run," and they added their own
special twist –
turnovers. The Vikings’ first 23 plays totaled just three yards and
also included two interceptions by Cole Norman and a fumble, which
was recovered by Danny Weiden.
"Defensively, we played much smarter this week," said Bell. "We
saw the ball and reacted to it as it was coming out of the
quarterback’s hand, rather than waiting until he had already thrown
it. We were much faster, and it was a good jump from Game One to
Game Two. That jump has to happen every week for us. We can’t settle
with where we’re at."
By the time the Vikings finally moved the first down chains, they
were behind 34-0, and Monmouth had posted four scoring drives of 20
yards or less. Tanney had all three of his touchdown passes by that
point, using three different receivers
– Mike Blodgett,
Matt Shepherd and Nick Wright. Two other wideouts, Bobby Gibbs and
Kyle Wantland, were Tanney’s prime targets throughout the day,
combining to catch 15 passes for 223 yards.
"Our receivers made some tremendous catches," said Bell. "Nick
Wright’s in the end zone was a great, great grab. You could tell our
receivers were much more confident. They weren’t hesitant like the
week before, and we played much faster."
Not to be overlooked was Monmouth’s strong kicking game. Nate
Palkovic opened the scoring with a 32-yard field goal, and he added
a 30-yarder later in the first quarter for a 13-0 lead. He was
perfect on his PATs, pushing his career point total to 201. That
puts him in second place on Monmouth’s all-time scoring list, seven
behind Hall of Famer Mark Reed.
For those fearing the Scots’ kicking game will take a big hit
when Palkovic plays his final game later this fall, sophomore Kyle
Tuor showed he is more than ready to take over. Tuor had punts of 48
and 42 yards and also booted a 41-yard field goal to put Monmouth
ahead 44-0 early in the fourth quarter.
With its offense, defense and special teams play operating at
highly effective levels, was there anything for Bell not to like
about Monmouth’s first win?
"Our defense did a tremendous job of getting us the ball in good
field position, but we left points out on the field," said Bell.
"Points are points, but you want to get touchdowns in those
situations. We’ve got to learn how to finish."
The Scots will get their first chance to improve on that this
Saturday at Bobby Woll Memorial Field, as Beloit comes to town for a
1:30 p.m. game. The Bucs are 0-2 on the year, losing 34-21 to
Macalester and 35-6 to Carroll.
"Schematically, they run a very nice system," said Bell. "Their
quarterback is a nice athlete, and they look very athletic on
defense, also."
Beloit returns no All-Midwest Conference players from last
season, with their biggest loss to graduation being two-time
1,000-yard rusher Lee Rankinen. So far, quarterback Joe Davis’ 102
rushing yards leads the Bucs. He has also thrown for 339 yards and
one TD. Despite the lopsided loss vs. Carroll, Beloit was able to
move the ball, gaining 257 yards through the air.
On defense, Beloit’s Tony Baratti and Sam Bauman have been
active, each posting more than 20 tackles. Baratti has a sack and
two other stops behind the line of scrimmage and Bauman has one of
Beloit’s two interceptions.
If turnovers are a factor, that should benefit Monmouth. The
Scots are already plus-eight in the takeaway department, and Beloit
is averaging two turnovers per game.
"Beloit has a new coaching staff and a lot of younger players,"
said Bell. "They’re going to get better every week. They’re going to
make a jump, and we have to make sure that we match that jump or
exceed it."
With a Monmouth offense in rhythm and a defense causing the
blues, the Fighting Scots hope their new "R&B" beat goes on.
Football
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