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OVC Football Report - Nov. 2
Courtesy: Ohio Valley Conference
          Release: 11/02/2009
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Tennessee Tech safety Caleb Mitchell had 13 tackles, 2.0 sacks, an interception, forced fumble and fumble recovery in Tech's win over Tennessee State on Saturday.
View larger Courtesy: Tennessee Tech Sports Information

Tennessee Tech safety Caleb Mitchell had 13 tackles, 2.0 sacks, an interception, forced fumble and fumble recovery in Tech's win over Tennessee State on Saturday.
This Week's Schedule

Saturday, November 7
Tennessee Tech
at Georgia, 12:00 p.m. (ESPN360)
Eastern Kentucky
at Kentucky, 12:00 p.m. (ESPN360)
*Austin Peay at Murray State
, 1:00 p.m. (OVCSports.TV)
*#15 Jacksonville State at Southeast Missouri, 1:00 p.m. (OVCSports.TV)
*UT Martin at Tennessee State, 5:00 p.m. (OVCSports.TV)




This Week's OVC Highlights/Storylines
Following week nine of the regular season, Eastern Illinois is the only championship-eligible team in the OVC with one Conference loss...The Panthers are now 5-1 in OVC play (7-2 overall) and have a bye week this week...EIU’s only losses are at nationally-ranked FBS foe Penn State and by five points to nationally-ranked FCS foe Eastern Kentucky...Three teams are right behind EIU in the standings with two losses, Eastern Kentucky, Tennessee Tech and Tennessee State...Eastern Illinois moved up in the national polls and are now No. 13/14 while Jacksonville State also moved up to No. 15/17...Eastern Kentucky is nearing a move back into the Top 25 as they are receiving votes and are No. 28 unofficially in the polls...In Sgt. York Trophy competition last week, Tennessee Tech improved to 3-0 in Sgt. York games this season with a win over Tennessee State; that gave the Golden Eagles the trophy for the 2009 season after TSU had won it the first two years in its existence...This week’s games include two non-conference matchups with SEC foes, as Tennessee Tech plays at Georgia and Eastern Kentucky is at Kentucky...In OVC action, Austin Peay plays at Murray State, Jacksonville State is at Southeast Missouri and UT Martin travels to Tennessee State.


OVC Players of the Week

CO-OFFENSIVE
Ryan Perrilloux, QB • Sr., 6-3, 223 • LaPlace, La. • Jacksonville State
Perrilloux earned his fifth OVC Player of the Week honor of the season after throwing for 210 yards and a touchdown and rushing for another score in the 20th-ranked Gamecocks 28-10 road win over Austin Peay. Perrilloux completed 12-of-22 passes including a 34-yard touchdown to Calvin Middleton with 3:12 left in the first half to put JSU up 14-10 at halftime. In the third quarter he scrambled 15 yards for a score with 44 seconds left in the period to put his team up 21-10. During the game Perrilloux went over 4,000 career passing yards with Jax State, as he threw for 200-plus yards for the 15th time in his career. He has reached that mark in 10 of his last 11 starts and now has 36 career touchdowns, third in Gamecock history. Perrilloux leads all of Division I in passing efficiency (180.74).

CO-OFFENSIVE
Tim Benford, WR • So., 6-1, 195 • Chattanooga, Tenn. • Tennessee Tech
Benford accounted for 122 of Tennessee Tech’s 265 yards of total offense in the Golden Eagles 20-13 victory over Tennessee State on Saturday. Benford grabbed five catches for 122 yards, including the game-winner, a 28-yard touchdown in double coverage in the corner of the end zone with 3:08 to play in the game. It marked the third 100-yard receiving game of his career. Benford has now caught at least one pass in all 19 career games and moved up to ninth in TTU history for career receptions (93).

Others Nominated: C.J. Walker, Eastern Kentucky.

DEFENSIVE
Caleb Mitchell, S • R-Fr., 6-1, 190 • Russellville, Ala. • Tennessee Tech
Mitchell was all over the field in Tennessee Tech’s 20-13 victory over Tennessee State on Saturday, including forcing two turnovers in the first quarter which led to his team grabbing an early 13-0 lead. Mitchell finished the game with 13 tackles, 2.5 tackles-for-loss, 2.0 sacks, an interception, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and two pass break-ups. On the game’s first possession, he sacked TSU’s quarterback and knocked the ball loose, setting up the Golden Eagles at the Tiger 24-yard line. Later in that quarter he picked off a pass and returned it 15 yards to the TSU 28-yard line, setting up the second Tech score of the quarter.

Others Nominated: Rashad Haynes, Eastern Illinois; Andrew Soucy, Eastern Kentucky; Josh Cain, Jacksonville State; Austen Lane, Murray State; Justin Woodlief, Southeast Missouri

SPECIALIST
Austin Signor, K • Sr., 6-4, 216 • Urbandale, Iowa • Eastern Illinois
Kevin Cook, P • Jr., 6-2, 201 • Libertyville, Ill. • Eastern Illinois
The Eastern Illinois kicking duo helped the No.19 ranked Panthers to a 16-10 road victory over Murray State on Saturday, as EIU improved its record to 7-2 overall, including 5-1 in road games. Signor hit all three of his field goal attempts, connecting from 37, 37 and 36 yards to move into sixth place on the Panther single-season list (13 made). He ranks 16 nationally in field goals made per game (1.44). Signor also averaged 65.8 yards per kickoff, including a touchdown. Cook averaged 46 yards per punt on eight attempts, including pinning the Racers inside their own 20-yard line five times and having three of his attempts go over 50 yards. Cook had a long punt of 57 yards and increased his season average to an OVC-best 41.5 yards/punt (12th nationally).

Others Nominated: Ryan Key, Austin Peay; Kienan Cullen, Murray State.

NEWCOMER
Caleb Mitchell, S • R-Fr., 6-1, 190 • Russellville, Ala. • Tennessee Tech
Mitchell was all over the field in Tennessee Tech’s 20-13 victory over Tennessee State on Saturday, including forcing two turnovers in the first quarter which led to his team grabbing an early 13-0 lead. Mitchell finished the game with 13 tackles, 2.5 tackles-for-loss, 2.0 sacks, an interception, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and two pass break-ups. On the game’s first possession, he sacked TSU’s quarterback and knocked the ball loose, setting up the Golden Eagles at the Tiger 24-yard line. Later in that quarter he picked off a pass and returned it 15 yards to the TSU 28-yard line, setting up the second Tech score of the quarter.

Others Nominated: Jamal Young, Jacksonville State; Justin Woodlief, Southeast Missouri


Notes From Around the Gridiron

Tennessee Tech Wins 2009 Sgt. York Trophy:
After going perfect in its three Sgt. York games this season, Tennessee Tech claimed the 2009 trophy, its first in the three-year history of the series. The Golden Eagles clinched the title with a 20-13 victory over Tennessee State on Oct. 31; TSU had won the previous two titles. The 2009 season marks the third season for the Sgt. York Trophy, a challenge trophy which will go to the annual winner of the quadrangular season series between the four OVC institutions in the state of Tennessee (Austin Peay, Tennessee State and Tennessee Tech and UT Martin). In July 2007, the Nashville Sports Council and the Ohio Valley Conference announced the creation of the trophy, which is only the second traveling trophy involving more than two schools nationwide (the other is the Commander in Chief’s Trophy). It is named after Sgt. Alvin C. York, a native of Pall Mall, Tenn. and a Soldier who was one of the most honored of World War I. He received the Congressional Medal of Honor after the war and returned to his home state to dedicate his life to improving education and facilitating educational opportunities for children in the state of Tennessee. The trophy goes to the team with the best record against the other schools, and in case of a tie there will be co-champions and the actual trophy will go to the institution that has gone the most seasons without winning the trophy. In 2007, Tennessee State and Austin Peay finished in a tie for the trophy with identical 2-1 records; both shared the award but Tennessee State went home with the hardware due to a 1-point win in the head-to-head meeting during the season. Tennessee State went 3-0 in Sgt. York play in 2008 to claim its second trophy.

OVC Schools and the National Polls: For five weeks during the 2009 season, the OVC had three teams ranked in the Top 25 polls. The streak ended on Oct. 26 when Eastern Kentucky fell out of the poll, leaving just Eastern Illinois (No. 13/14) and Jacksonville State (No. 15/17) ranked in the FCS Coaches and Sports Network polls respectively. On Oct. 12 and 19, Jacksonville State got to No. 12 in the national rankings, which matched the program’s highest ranking since joining the FCS/I-AA ranks in 1995. The Gamecocks were also ranked 12th on Oct. 18, 2004 (a year they went on to win the OVC Championship). It is the highest an OVC team has been ranked since Eastern Kentucky was No. 9 in the Nov. 19, 2007 Sports Network poll.

OVC Ranked Foes Squaring Off Against Each Other: For the second time this season two nationally-ranked OVC foes squared off on the gridiron on Oct. 24. In that game No. 24 Eastern Illinois traveled to No. 12 Jacksonville State and pulled out a 28-20 victory. Earlier this season it was No. 18 Eastern Kentucky who went to Charleston, Ill. and topped No. 23 Eastern Illinois 36-31 on Oct. 3. Prior to this season two OVC ranked foes had not squared off against each other since Oct. 28, 2006 (when No. 12 UT Martin topped No. 14 Eastern Illinois 15-9).

OVC Teams Against FBS Opponents: OVC schools are 0-8 this season against Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS, formerly I-A) opponents, although two of those games went down to the wire with a chance for the OVC team to pull off a win. In week No. 1 Eastern Kentucky had the ball on Indiana’s 5-yard line before a fumble ended what looked like to be a for-sure scoring drive. IU held on for a 19-13 victory. During week No. 2 Jacksonville State led Florida State 9-7 for most of the contest before the Seminoles came up with two scores in the final 35 seconds to win 19-9. All-time the OVC is 17-128-1 against FBS opponents. The last time an OVC team knocked off a FBS school was during the 2004 season when Eastern Illinois beat Eastern Michigan 31-28. The next games (and final ones of the season) against an FBS school for an OVC team are this weekend when Eastern Kentucky is at Kentucky and Tennessee Tech is at Georgia.

JSU’s Perrilloux Remains on Updated Walter Payton Award Watch List: Jacksonville State senior quarterback Ryan Perrilloux was one of 20 players named to the updated Walter Payton Award Watch List released on Oct. 16. He was also on the preseason watch list for the award which is presented to the FCS Offensive Player of the Year. Perrilloux ranks first nationally in passing efficiency and fourth in points responsible for and has been named OVC Offensive Player of the Week four straight weeks in 2009 (and five total times), becoming the first player in OVC history to accomplish that feat. In 2008 Perrilloux completed 187-of-297 for 2,318 yards on his way to second-team All-OVC honors. The LaPlace, La, native was named OVC Player or Newcomer of the Week seven times during the 2008 season after he led the Gamecocks to an 8-3 record. The watch list will be revised again in November before the final ballot is announced. Voting from a panel of FCS sports information directors, writers, broadcasters and other football experts will be conducted after the regular season ends. Three finalists will be announced on Nov. 30 and will be invited to the 23rd annual Sports Network Awards banquet on Dec. 17 in Chattanooga, Tenn., the night prior to the NCAA Division I championship game. The Eddie Robinson Award (top FCS Coach) and Buck Buchanan Award (top FCS Defensive Player) will also be presented that night.

Murray State’s Lane Remains on Buck Buchanan Award Watch Lists: Murray State senior defensive end Austen Lane is one of 20 players named to the updated Buck Buchanan Award Watch List on Oct. 16. He was also on the preseason watch list for the award which honors the best defensive player in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). Lane ranks in the Top 10 nationally in both sacks and tackles-for-loss per game this season. Last season Lane has garnered national attention after putting together a 2008 campaign that consisted of school records in sacks (12.0) and tackles-for-loss (22.0), both of which ranked among the national leaders. The efforts earned him Sporting News Fabulous 50 All-America honors, as well as Third-Team All-America honors from the Associated Press. The award, established in 1995, is named after Junious "Buck" Buchanan, the NAIA All-American and Pro Football Hall of Fame, defensive lineman who played for Grambling State from 1959 through 1962. He was selected to the NFL’s All-Time Roster, indicative of his standing as one of the greatest football players of all time. Buchanan died of cancer July 16, 1992. His uniform number, 86, was retired by Kansas City in 1992. Voting from a panel of FCS sports information directors, writers, broadcasters and other football experts will be conducted after the regular season ends. Three finalists will be announced on Nov. 30 and will be invited to the 23rd annual Sports Network Awards banquet on Dec. 17 in Chattanooga, Tenn., the night before the NCAA Division I championship game. The Walter Payton Award and the Eddie Robinson Award will also be presented that night.

APSU’s White Nets Sixth and Ninth-Highest Rushing Games in FCS This Season: Austin Peay sophomore Ryan White rushed for a career-best 228 yards on 32 carries in the Governors win at Southeast Missouri on Oct. 10. The output was the second-highest in APSU history (trailing only a 244-yard effort by Floyd Jones in 1981) and is the sixth highest among Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) players in 2009. The top performances in FCS football this season is a 273-yard outing by Southern Illinois’ Deji Karim. White also rushed for 210 yards earlier this season against Newberry, the ninth-highest total among FCS players this year. White now has five 100-plus yard rushing games in his two-year career, tied for most among active OVC rushers.

Perrilloux Becomes Mr. Efficient: Jacksonville State quarterback Ryan Perrilloux has a 180.74 passing efficiency this season, which is tops at the Division I level (both FCS and FBS). In his seven starts he has completed 99-of-164 passes for 17 touchdowns and just two interceptions (he has also rushed for five additional touchdowns). His 277.63 passing efficiency rating against UT Martin on Oct. 3 was the highest in the OVC since Jax State joined the league in 2003 and fifth-highest in FCS football this season (and second-highest against FCS opponents this year).

NCAA Stat Leaders: In the latest set of NCAA statistical rankings Jacksonville State quarterback Ryan Perrilloux continues to rank first nationally in passing efficiency (180.74), a mark that leads all of Division I (FCS and FBS). He also ranks fourth in points responsible for (18.86/game) and 13th in total offense (278.57 yards/game). Austin Peay running back/return specialist Terrence Holt is first nationally in all-purpose yards (199.75/game). Holt’s teammate and backfield mate, sophomore running back Ryan White, is seventh nationally in rushing (108.63 yards/game). Jacksonville State defensive back T.J. Heath is first nationally in passes defended (2.00/game) and third nationally in interceptions (0.75/game). Eastern Kentucky defensive back Jeremy Caldwell is first nationally in interceptions (0.88 interceptions/game) and sixth in passes defended (1.63/game). Murray State’s Austen Lane is third nationally in tackles-for-loss (1.88/game), sixth in sacks (1.13/game) and ninth in forced fumbles (0.38/game). Racer teammate Marcus Harris is third in kickoffs (28.72 yards/return). In national team rankings Jacksonville State is 10th in scoring offense (34.00points/game), first in passing efficiency (166.04), first in kickoff returns (26.38 yards/return), third in turnover margin (+1.63/game), third in fumbles recovered (13), third in interceptions thrown (3) and seventh in turnovers gained (22). Eastern Illinois is ninth in kickoff returns (24.17 yards/return), third in fumbles recovered (13) and seventh in turnovers gained (22). Eastern Kentucky ranks seventh in passes intercepted (14) and ninth in tackles-for-loss (7.88/game). Murray State ranks first in red zone offense (94%), third in kick returns (25.88 yards/return) and seventh in punt returns (17.71 yards/game).

Spoo Now Fifth All-Time in OVC Wins: With a victory over Austin Peay on Sept. 26, Eastern Illinois head coach Bob Spoo moved into fifth place on the OVC all-time career Conference victory list. Spoo has now won 64 OVC games in his tenure at EIU, which has spanned the school’s entire time in the OVC (1996 through the present, although he was not on the sidelines for the 2006 season). Spoo trails only Roy Kidd (207 OVC wins at EKU), Boots Donnelly (102 wins at Austin Peay and Middle Tennessee), Charles Murphy (73 wins at Middle Tennessee) and Jimmy Feix (67 wins at Western Kentucky) on the all-time list.

EIU Retires Tony Romo’s No. 17: Eastern Illinois retired Tony Romo’s No. 17 jersey on Oct. 17 in a game against Tennessee Tech. Romo, the two-time All Pro quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, was on-hand in Charleston for the Hall of Fame weekend during his bye week with the Cowboys. He was the first EIU football player to have his number retired. Romo was the Panthers starting quarterback from 2000-02, leading the team to three straight FCS playoff berths and winning three straight OVC Player of the Year awards. In 2002 he was named the Walter Payton Award winner (top Offensive Player in FCS/I-AA) and finished his OVC career with 85 touchdown passes.

Crowd of 104,488 Witnesses Eastern Illinois/Penn State Game: When Eastern Illinois played at Penn State on Oct. 10, a crowd of 104,488 witnessed the game. That marked the largest crowd to ever see an OVC team play football besting the previous mark of 85,754 that saw Tennessee Tech play at Auburn during the 200 season. Several other OVC teams have played in front of big crowds this season, including Jacksonville State who played in front of 71,420 fans at Florida State on Sept. 12. That is the sixth largest crowd to ever see an OVC team play. On that same day Murray State played in front of 55,510 at N.C. State and on Sept. 26 Tennessee State played Florida A&M in front of 51,950 at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.

Two of the Longest Tenured Division I Coaches Meet: When Eastern Illinois played at Penn State on Oct. 10, the matchup showcased two of the top five longest tenured coaches with the same school at the Division I level. Penn State coach Joe Paterno is the longest tenured active coach in Division I (at the same school), having been at Penn State since 1966. Eastern Illinois coach Bob Spoo is the fifth longest tenured coach, having been at Eastern Illinois since 1987. The two coaches have combined for over 500 victories. Penn State won the game 52-3.

Ricks Named National Specialist of the Week (Oct. 26): Eastern Illinois sophomore Lorence Ricks was named National Specialist of the Week by the Sports Network and a National All-Star by the College Sporting News on Oct.26 after helping his team to a 28-20 road victory over No. 12 Jacksonville State. Ricks returned a kickoff 87 yards for a touchdown, blocked a punt that set up an Eastern Illinois score and forced a key fumble in the victory. Ricks had 165 yards of total offense on the afternoon (124 yards on kick returns, 26 yards on punt returns and 15 yards on receptions), including the long kickoff return touchdown that put EIU up 28-13 with 6:17 to play in the third quarter. It was the first kickoff return for a touchdown by a Panther since Nov. 10, 2007 (Quinten Ponius). Early in the second quarter he blocked the punt that was recovered at the Jax State 4-yard line and led to a touchdown two plays later as Eastern took a 14-0 lead. In the fourth quarter he forced JSU’s punt returner to fumble, as the Panthers recovered the ball with 5:30 to play.

EKU’s McClellan Named National Defensive Player of the Week (Oct. 19): Eastern Kentucky defensive back Patrick McClellan was named National Defensive Player of the Week by the Sports Network and a National All-Star by College Sporting News on Oct. 19 after his outing in the Colonels win over UT Martin. McClellan was involved in three of Eastern Kentucky’s five takeaways against the Skyhawks, including netting his first two collegiate interceptions. One pick came on his team’s own 14-yard line in the third quarter and the other interception came in the first quarter as EKU built a 14-0 advantage. Late in the fourth quarter McClellan recovered a fumble on a muffed Skyhawk punt, grabbing the ball at the UTM four-yard line and setting up the team’s final (and game-winning) score. McClellan also added a season-high seven tackles. It marks the third straight week the OVC has had the National Defensive Player of the Week.

Dillehay Named National Defensive Player of the Week (Oct. 12): Tennessee Tech junior defensive back Dustin Dillehay was named National Defensive Player of the Week by the Sports Network and a National All-Star by College Sporting News on Oct. 12 after his outing against UT Martin. Dillehay had 14 tackles (10 solo) and intercepted a pass that he returned 41 yards for what proved to be the game-winning touchdown in the Golden Eagles 35-28 road victory. With his team leading 28-21, Dillehay picked off UTM quarterback Cade Thompson and returned the ball 41 yards for a score to put the Golden Eagles up 35-21 with 8:11 to play. It marks the second straight week the OVC has had the National Defensive Player of the Week.

Heath Named National Defensive Player of the Week (Oct. 5): Jacksonville State defensive back T.J. Heath was named National Defensive Player of the Week by the Sports Network on Oct. 5 after a three interception performance against UT Martin. On the fourth play from scrimmage, the junior intercepted UT Martin quarterback Cade Thompson and returned it 26 yards for a touchdown. Just eight plays later Heath did the same thing, this time taking it 55 yards for a touchdown making the score 14-0 before Jacksonville State even ran an offensive play from scrimmage. He added his third interception in the fourth quarter and finished the game with three tackles and a pass break-up. The three interceptions was the most by a JSU player in the school’s Division I era.

Caldwell Named National All-Star By College Sporting News (Oct. 5): Eastern Kentucky defensive back Jeremy Caldwell was named a National All-Star (Defensive Player of the Week) after his performance in the Colonels road win over nationally-ranked Eastern Illinois. The sophomore intercepted two passes, including returning one for a touchdown in what proved to be the game-winning score, and forced a fumble at the end of the game to preserve the 36-31 victory. Caldwell picked off a pass in the third quarter, an interception that led to an EKU score as the Colonels trimmed the EIU lead to 24-23. With 11 minutes to play in the game, he picked off another pass and returned it 10 yards for a touchdown. With 12 seconds left in the game he forced Panther quarterback Jake Christensen to fumble as EKU recovered and took a knee to end the game. Caldwell added seven tackles, a pass break-up and 78 kickoff return yards in the game.

 

JSU’s Perrilloux Named National Weekly All-Star By College Sporting News (Sept. 28): Jacksonville State’s Ryan Perrilloux was named a National Weekly All-Star by the College Sporting News on Sept. 28. In the return to his native Louisiana, Perrilloux accounted for five touchdowns (four passing, one rushing) for the second straight week as Jacksonville State pounded Nicholls State 60-10. He finished the game 14-of-22 for 250 yards and four touchdowns (of 17, 44, 14 and 6 yards) and added 58 rushing yards and a score (38 yard rush) to account for 308 total yards of offense in just three quarters of play (he sat out the fourth quarter). He finished with a passing efficiency of 219.09, the third best total in school history. He became the first Gamecock to post back-to-back five-touchdown games in school history.

Murray State’s Harris Named National Specialist of the Week (Sept. 7): Murray State junior Marcus Harris was honored by The Sports Network on Sept. 7 as the FCS National Special Teams Player of the Week. Harris was honored after becoming the first Racer to return a kickoff and a punt for a touchdown in the same game. He accomplished the task by taking a kickoff back 86 yards with just over three minutes remaining in the third quarter to put the Racers ahead 52-10. After hauling in a 13-yard touchdown reception on the next Racers’ possession, Harris fielded a punt on his own 25 and raced untouched up the middle for the 75-yard touchdown. Harris finished the game with 83 yards on two punt returns and 125 yards on two kickoff returns. He added 17 yard receiving and finished the game with 225 all-purpose yards.

The Safety Dance: No we are not talking about the Men Without Hats song, but the Murray State defense. In the Racers season-opening victory over Kentucky Wesleyan, the defense recorded two safeties which tied the OVC (and Murray State) single-game record done three other times (most recently in 1996 by Middle Tennessee). To put it into perspective on how rare that is, only two OVC schools have had two safeties during an entire season over the last four years.

Three OVC Student-Athletes Named Semifinalists for Campbell Trophy: Three Ohio Valley Conference student-athletes were named semifinalists for the 20th Anniversary William V. Campbell Trophy, the National Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame (NFF). The three student-athletes are Daniel Becker (Austin Peay), Derek Hardman (Eastern Kentucky) and Josh Cain (Jacksonville State). The three are among 154 semifinals for the Campbell Trophy (formerly known as the Draddy Trophy), endowed by HealthSouth, and are three of just 37 candidates from the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). Nominated by their respective schools, which are limited to one nominee each, semifinalists must be a senior or graduate student in his final year of eligibility, have a GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale, have outstanding football ability as a first-team player or significant contributor, and have demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship. Renamed this fall in honor of Bill Campbell, the chairman of Intuit, former player and head coach at Columbia University and the 2004 recipient of the NFF’s Gold Medal, the award comes with a 25-pound bronze trophy and a $25,000 post- graduate scholarship.

From Navy Pilot to Assistant Coach: Austin Peay’s new offensive graduate assistant coach Craig Candeto has spent the last six years in the Navy as a fighter pilot, a member of Strike Fighter Squadron 106 "Gladiators" stationed in Virginia Beach, Va., flying T-34, T-45 and F/A-18 jets. The former lieutenant retired from the Navy earlier this year and now is going from piloting a $57 million Super Hornet aircraft to taking flight as the Governors quarterbacks coach. But before his military career, Candeto was a sports star in his own right who shares an NCAA record. The Deland, Fla., native was a two-sport prep star, earning the 1999 6A Florida State High School Player of the Year award. He earned an appointment to the Naval Academy, where he enjoyed a storied athletic career. It was at quarterback where Candeto achieved his greatest stardom. In 2002, he rushed for six touchdowns in Navy’s 58-12 win against Army—those six rushing TDs matched the NCAA record for rushing TDs by a quarterback. In total, he accounted for seven TDs in the game. Candeto is one of just 26 FBS quarterback to have rushed and pass for 1,000 or more yards, respectively. He earned the 2002 and 2003 Rubino Memorial Silver Helmet award as the Outstanding Football Player at the Naval Academy. As co-captain in 2003, he quarterbacked a Navy football team that won three games in the previous three seasons and guided it to an 8-5 record and its first bowl appearance in seven years. That same Navy team led the nation in rushing. Candeto also is a member of the Navy Athletic Hall of Fame.

Jacksonville State Ineligible for OVC Championship/Postseason Play: In May the NCAA announced the Jacksonville State University received a postseason ban due to an occasion three historic penalty of the APR (Academic Progress Rate). In accordance with OVC by-laws, since Jax State is not eligible for the NCAA postseason, they are also not eligible for the OVC Championship. Jacksonville State will still play a full Conference schedule in 2009 with wins and losses counting for both teams. They will just not be eligible for the title and will be listed at the bottom of the standings with an asterisk.

Eastern Kentucky Tabbed Preseason Favorite: In what was one of the most balanced votes in the history of preseason OVC balloting (five different teams got at least one first-place votes), defending champion Eastern Kentucky was tabbed the preseason favorite by the league head coaches and sports information directors. EKU received 10 of the 18 first-place votes followed by UT Martin (4 first-place votes), Eastern Illinois (2), Tennessee State (1) and Murray State (1). It marks the 17th time that the Colonels have been picked to win the OVC Championship in the preseason poll. But is being picked first in the preseason poll necessarily a good thing? In the past 30 years of preseason polls (all that were available), the preseason predicted champion has only gone on to win the OVC Championship 12 times (40.0%). In each of the last six years, the predicted champion has failed to claim the regular season title. The last time the preseason predicted champion went on to win the title was in 2002 when Eastern Illinois accomplished the feat (EIU also did that same thing in 2001).

Thompson and Lane Headline Preseason All-OVC Team: UT Martin senior quarterback Cade Thompson, the 2008 OVC Offensive Player, was tabbed the Preseason Player of the Year this season after throwing for 2,680 yards and 24 touchdowns as a junior. Murray State senior defensive end Austen Lane was picked as the Preseason Defensive Player of the Year after ranking fourth nationally in both sacks (1.0) and tackles-for-loss (1.83) per game last season. Those two players led the selections of this season’s Preseason All-OVC Teams. Murray State had six selections to the team, the most of any OVC school. The Racers were followed by UT Martin who had five selections and Jacksonville State who had four picks. Returning players who were first-team All-OVC picks last season (8 in total) were automatic selections to the preseason team this year. The squad also included nine players who were second-team selections in 2008. Of the 26 total selections, 21 were seniors (including the entire offensive unit), four were juniors and there was one sophomore pick. All nine teams had at least one player appear on the squad.

Head Coaches All Return: For the first time since the 2004 season, every head coach in the OVC returns to coach the same team they did last season. All nine coaches are back including the Dean of OVC Coaches, Bob Spoo of Eastern Illinois. Spoo is beginning his 22nd season on the sidelines with the Panthers in 2009 (23rd season overall after missing 2006 with an illness). Spoo is the fifth longest active tenured head coach at the Division I level (tied with Virginia Tech’s Frank Beamer) and trails only Joe Paterno (at Penn State since 1966), Bob Ford (at Albany since 1973), Bobby Bowden (at Florida State since 1976) and Andy Talley (at Villanova since 1985).

Six OVC Schools Have Former FBS Quarterbacks Under Center This Season: This season there are currently six OVC schools with at least one former Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) quarterback competing for the starting job. Three of the quarterbacks are for sure the starter, including Ryan Perrilloux (LSU) starting for the second year at Jacksonville State and 2008 OVC Player of the Year Cade Thompson (South Carolina) starting for the third year at UT Martin. Two other schools have a pair of former FBS signal callers on the depth chart. That includes Eastern Illinois who has Jake Christensen (Iowa) as the starter and Bodie Reeder (Wyoming) as the backup while Tennessee Tech who has Lee Sweeney (Louisville) as the starter with Clint Brewster (Minnesota) on the bench. At Tennessee State Dominic Grooms (Missouri) is in the mix at quarterback while T.C. Jennings (Arkansas State) is the backup at Austin Peay.

FCS Playoffs: For the 13th straight season, the FCS Championship game was held in Chattanooga, Tenn., this year on Friday, Dec. 18 at Finley Stadium/Davenport Field. The playoffs will begin on Saturday, Nov. 28 and continue with second round games on Dec. 5 and semifinal contests on Dec. 11/Dec. 12 before the title game. This will mark the final year under the 16-team playoff format. In April 2008 the NCAA Board of Directors approved a new budget for the Division I Football Championships, which allowed the postseason bracket to expand from 16 to 20 teams beginning in the 2010 season. It marks the first expansion since the playoff field grew from 12 to 16 in 1997. In 2010, the field will be comprised of 10 automatic bids (up from 8 now) and 10 at-large berths (up from 8 now).

FCS Playoffs - Part 2: The OVC will be looking to get multiple teams into the FCS Playoffs for the third time in four years this season. Last year marked the first time since 2005 that just one OVC team (league champion Eastern Kentucky) made the 16-team playoff field. Two other teams (Jacksonville State and Tennessee State) finished with eight Division I victories but did not receive an at-large bid. It marked the first time since the playoffs expanded to 16 teams in 1986 that an OVC team with eight Division I teams did not receive an at-large bid. EKU lost to eventual national champion Richmond in the first round last season.

Eastern Kentucky Searches For 32nd Consecutive Winning Season, 37th Consecutive Non-Losing Season: Eastern Kentucky enters the 2009 season looking for its 32nd consecutive winning season. The team’s current streak of 31 consecutive winning season is second in Division I only to the 32-straight by Florida State. Eastern has not had a non-winning season since finishing 5-5 in 1977. The Colonels also have now had 36 consecutive non-losing seasons, as you have to go back all the way to 1972 to find a year EKU had a losing season (they were 5-6 that year, the only time in the last 42 years they have had a losing season). That streak is currently the longest in all of Division I, as the team overtook Michigan who suffered a losing season for the first time in 41 years in 2008.

The 62nd Season of Football: The 62nd season of Ohio Valley Conference football is underway this season. The OVC is made up of nine football-playing schools in 2009. Since its beginning, 14 of the 18 total schools that have played football in the OVC have claimed at least one championship.

A Look Back at the 2008 Season: For the first time in 61 years of competition, the OVC finished the 2008 season with four teams with eight overall victories. The OVC was one of just two FCS conferences to have four or more teams with eight wins (the CAA was the other, who had five teams reach eight or more wins; each of those five CAA teams made the playoffs while only one OVC school made the field). Eastern Kentucky claimed its 20th OVC Championship (the second most crowns in FCS history trailing only the CAA’s UMass who has 21; however, EKU’s 16 outright conference crowns are the most in FCS history) and second in a row. The Colonels made their 19th FCS Playoff berth (tied for most all-time with Montana) and lost to eventual national champion Richmond in the first round.

I-AA No More: Although some people may accidentally still refer to it as I-AA football, the term that represents the level of Division I football in which the Ohio Valley Conference competes has been retired. Beginning with the 2006 National Championship game, the term Football Championship Subdivision (or FCS) is to be used. FCS is the only Division I football rank to host a NCAA-sponsored national championship (one of 88 championships the NCAA sponsors). The division formerly known as I-A was changed to Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and those teams compete for the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) national championship. Teams who play at the FCS level can offer a maximum of 63 scholarships (FBS teams can offer 85) and compete in a 16-team playoff at the end of the season to determine the national champion.

OVC and SportsUnlimited Announce Launch of OVC Football Magazine: The Ohio Valley Conference has announced the launch and production of "Ohio Valley Conference Football 2009" a full-color, limited edition football magazine that previews the 2009 football season. The venture with SportsUnlimited ships in late August. Detailed feature articles on all nine OVC teams are included in the publication. For the first time, OVC football will be featured in a full-color magazine dedicated to its nine schools and suitable for display on your coffee table year round. To order your copy log onto www.collegesportsmags.com. The cost of the publication is $4.99 plus tax and shipping.

OVCSports.TV: For the fourth consecutive year, fans can watch every Conference matchup and all non-conference home contests at OVCSports.TV. The venture with JumpTV Sports allows fans to access live and on-demand streaming video and audio of all conference matchups on their home computer. The premium Web site was launched in July 2006 and streamed over a thousand events in its first three seasons, including all Conference matchups in football and men’s and women’s basketball as well as select baseball, soccer, softball and volleyball games and OVC Championship events. Packages are available on a yearly, seasonally, monthly or per-event basis.

NFL Connections: As of the start of the 2009 season, 15 former Ohio Valley Conference football players are on NFL rosters for the season (12 active, 2 practice squad members, one IR). Those players include former Eastern Illinois standout Tony Romo, who is the starting quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys and two-time Pro Bowl pick, defensive back Cortland Finnegan (Samford) who was a Pro Bowl selection with the Tennessee Titans last year and Tennessee State’s Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, who was a starter with the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII in February. There is one player on a NFL roster who played in the OVC last season, Pierre Walters (Eastern Illinois) who is with the Kansas City Chiefs. Javarris Williams (Tennessee State) is also with the Chiefs but as a member of the practice squad to start the season, as is former Tennessee State offensive lineman Cecil Newton who is on the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad.. Six of nine current OVC schools have at least one player on a NFL roster with Southeast Missouri State leading the way with three. Several NFL coaches also have connections to OVC schools, including two current ones who played at Eastern Illinois - Brad Childress (Minnesota) and Sean Payton (New Orleans). Another EIU alumni - Mike Shanahan - is out of coaching this year but should be back with a team in 2010. UT Martin graduate and former assistant coach Jerry Reese made waves in 2007 when he led the New York Giants to the Super Bowl XLII Championship in his first season as General Manager with the franchise.

 


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