Monday, September 17, 2007

Southern defense gets 'moral shutout' against PVAMU


Photo: Southern’s Jarmal George (2) leaps over Prairie View’s Chris Gibson (10) during Southern’s 12-2 victory.











By JOE SCHIEFELBEIN, The Advocate

Do they have things called “moral shutouts?”

That’s what Southern’s defense scored in a 12-2 Southwestern Athletic Conference victory over Prairie View on Saturday.

Prairie View’s only score came when Southern was called for holding in the end zone while attempting a punt in the fourth quarter.

“We had a shutout defensively,” said senior free safety Jarmaul George, the SWAC’s preseason defensive player of the year.

George’s interception at the Southern 15-yard line with 4:41 to play ended the Panthers’ last good chance to score. SU’s last shutout came in September 2005, 38-0 over Prairie View.

“We expect bigger things out of the defense. That’s just the beginning of what we want to do right there,” George said.

After giving up what SU head coach Pete Richardson called two “cheap” touchdowns in the second quarter of the season opener against Florida A&M (a 45-yard touchdown run and a 40-yard TD pass), Southern’s defense has been crazy good.

In the last 10 quarters, Southern (3-0, 2-0 SWAC) has allowed just two touchdowns. One of those came with 16 seconds left against FAMU, when the Jaguars were more concerned with time, and the other came with 6 seconds to go in the first half of a 23-6 win over Mississippi Valley State.

Saturday, unlike the previous two games when the offense got on a roll after slow starts, Saturday’s defensive effort was so crucial because this was a defensive battle.

For the second straight season, Prairie View defensive coordinator Heisma Northern has kept Southern from finding any offensive continuity. Last season, PV headed off SU’s passing game and kept the Panthers in the game to make an amazing comeback in the final five minutes. This time, the Panthers (2-1, 1-1) took away the running game — just 67 yards on the ground after SU had totaled 293 the week before.

SU’s defense answered the challenge.

“We wanted to bring the pressure to (PV quarterback Chris Gibson),” George said. “We knew the defense would step up to the challenge if we went man-to-man on the defense.”

A year ago, PV had 251 rushing yards. This time, the Panthers had 52 (suffering 61 yards in losses after gaining 113).

Prairie View hadn’t given up a sack this season, but SU got to the Panthers for three, including 2.5 from defensive end Vince Lands.

Southern came up with three interceptions and twice made fourth-down stops deep in Jaguars territory.

“I can’t say enough about our defense,” senior wide receiver Gerard Landry said.

Do more of this
SU defensive coordinator Terrence Graves has been making all the right moves. Down 20-12 at halftime to FAMU, Southern’s defense rallied in the second half, paving the way for a 33-27 victory. Burned by the late TD to Valley, the Jaguars stoned the Delta Devils in the second half (9 yards of offense after halftime). And after Prairie View totaled 88 yards in the first quarter, Graves’ adjustments kept the Panthers to 109 yards in the rest of the game.

Work more on this
Again, Southern needs to find a rhythm on offense more quickly. Saturday was the Jaguars’ worst start of the season: three three-and-outs and minus-6 yards (on 10 plays) in the first quarter. SU didn’t have its initial first down until 12:38 before halftime. By that time, SU’s defense had already held twice in its territory (at the SU 17-yard line and 38) and made an interception.

Quick hits
SU has not trailed in its last two games or its last nine quarters. SU’s four-game winning streak, dating to the Bayou Classic last season, is its longest since a six-win run in 2004, when the Jaguars were 8-4 and won the Western Division. Prairie View has scored two points total in its last two trips to Mumford Stadium — losing 12-2 Saturday and 38-0 in 2005. SU won 62-7 in ’03, but that game was held in Shreveport.

Up next
Southern hosts Tennessee State (2-1) of the Ohio Valley Conference at 6 p.m. Saturday in Mumford Stadium. TSU has won two straight games on thrillers, with the same key players coming up big each time. Saturday, in a 33-32 OVC win over Austin Peay, Eric Benson scored the game-winner on his PAT in overtime after he kicked a 43-yard field goal with 9 seconds left to tie the game in regulation. Cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie blocked a PAT after Austin Peay scored a touchdown on its possession. A week earlier, Benson made a 35-yarder with no time left to beat Jackson State 16-13 (after TSU trailed 13-6 heading into the final quarter). Rodgers-Cromartie blocked a 22-yard Eric Perri field-goal attempt just moments earlier.

The teams have not played since 1996, when SU won 19-18. TSU has played two SWAC teams so far this season, losing 49-23 to defending SWAC champ Alabama A&M in the season opener and beating Jackson State.

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