By THOMAS GRANT JR., T&D Senior Sports Writer
RAMS vs. BULLDOGS
WHO: Winston-Salem State (2-1) at South Carolina State (1-2, 1-0)
WHEN: Saturday, Sept. 22 at 6 p.m.
WHERE: Oliver C. Dawson Stadium
RADIO: WQKI 93.5 FM in Orangeburg, ESPN 93.1 FM in Columbia
The foul sheet detailing the 10 penalties South Carolina State received during Saturday’s historic game at Williams-Brice Stadium was not the only two-page document getting head coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough’s attention.
SCSU’s injury list was just as long following the 38-3 loss to the University of South Carolina. Along with season-ending knee injuries suffered prior to the game to wide receiver Tron Jackson and linebacker David Erby, wide receiver Tre’ Young is expected to miss Saturday’s game against Winston-Salem State with a thigh contusion and quarterback Cleveland McCoy and running back Will Ford were among several of the Bulldogs’ "walking wounded" being treated Sunday for various bumps and bruises.
"Both Cleve and Will Ford both look like they went through an 18-round bout with (Muhammad) Ali and Ali was mad," said Pough at Monday’s press conference. "Both of those guys yesterday couldn’t hardly walk just from soreness."
Yet despite the toll taken from playing three straight road games, Pough said he would still open the season against two Football Bowl Subdivision games if given the opportunity again. If anything, he believes the experience will give the Bulldogs confidence going against Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference teams.
"We’re beat up and bloodied, but I think we’re better off for the experience," he said. "I feel like we will continue to improve to match up to these football games. The only way we can get better is to compete with better. If we can get to the point where we get a little bit better understanding and get a little better feel, then I think that will be us getting better as a team also.
"We now know that we can compete with these kind of guys. We understand now that we can tackle, we can block them and at certain points, we can scheme with them. It gives us some confidence in the fact that if we are to really clean our mistakes up and refine some of the things that we do to the point where we execute better, we have a chance to be okay."
Compounding SCSU’s effort to get healthy is facing a Rams’ team which is coming off a 19-17 road victory over Morgan State. Although this contest does not count in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference standings (WSSU is in the second year of a transitional period to obtain full membership), the last thing Pough wants to dwell on during the ‘bye’ week is a loss.
"It would be awful," he said. "We would be back to where we were last year as far as record is concerned. The fact that we’ve beaten our only conference opponent (Bethune-Cookman) so far means a world of difference. We will at some point maybe try to get some of our guys healthy. We haven’t exactly figured out how we do that. I don’t know if we sacrifice say the Winston-Salem State game for the overall season with our injury situation as it is and I’m awfully, awfully concerned about that situation and whether we can get back to full speed by the Norfolk (State) game. We’ve got some thoughts to put together there to figure out how we handle this week."
Pough does plan to play more freshmen like offensive linemen Johnny Culbreath and Josh Harrison, mostly due to merit. The two showed they belonged this past Saturday against USC, according to Pough, and he’s looking forward to seeing their progress.
The Bulldogs will also get back place-kicker Stephen Grantham, wide receivers Terrance Smith and Phillip Morris and defensive lineman Patrick Brooks following their one-game suspension for team rules violations.
SCSU has won four of the five meetings with Winston-Salem State, including last year’s 35-6 win at Winston-Salem. This time around, Pough expects a more spirited effort from the Rams, coached by former SCSU assistant coach Kermit Blount.
"Winston’s got a good team and a large portion of what they’re about is that they hired (former SCSU running backs coach) Nick Calcutta...as their offensive coordinator and if you remember seeing Howard last year and what Howard put us through last year at ‘Homecoming’ which was a tough football game, that’s what you’ll see with Winston-Salem."
If there’s one lesson Pough said his team learned from the games against Air Force and USC is to be more consistent on offense. The Bulldogs are ranked near the both of the MEAC in points scored, although Pough said that has more to do with the competition level.
"Go check Norfolk’s stats and see where they’re at because they’ve played the same people we played," he said. "Go check some of the other (MEAC) teams and see who they played. I can throw the football against Savannah State. I’ve got a problem throwing the football against Air Force and South Carolina. We’ve had a problem protecting against those guys sometimes because of the fact they gave us some things that stressed us out some that we didn’t get in other instances. I think it’s more the people we’ve played. Our stats will come up as we get into our schedule."
No ‘Spy-gate’ around here
The recent controversy surrounding the New England Patriots violating NFL rules when it was caught videotaping the New York Jets’ sidelines has spurred talk about coaching ethics and cheating.
According to Pough, he does not see such practices as a major issue among MEAC teams as he relies mostly on scouting, knowing team tendences and watching game film.
"Most of the people that I play can’t afford enough cameras to film the sidelines and end zone shot, much less cameras to put on our coaches," he said. "There’s a little gamesmanship there. You kind of look at a guy, kind of see if you can tell, but that’s as far as we go. We don’t have the resources to do that like the NFL."
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