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Mike Perry

buffalohoops

 

The University of Buffalo is two games and 26 days away from the start of its Mid-American Conference schedule, a Jan. 8 home game against Bowling Green. And, of all the teams in the MAC, the Bulls have been the most overlooked thus far.

Buffalo was picked to finish last in the East Division in the preseason MAC Basketball Poll, but has charged out of the gate to a 6-3 record. The Bulls are a perfect 4-0 at home and, actually, are just 17 points away from an undefeated record. Their biggest loss of the season came at Youngstown State, a 64-53 decision in Buffalo’s second game of the season. Its other losses came on the road at St. Bonaventure (76-74) and at Indiana State (58-54).

It was fairly easy to write the Bulls off before the season started with no one on the preseason all-conference team and not much returning in terms of experience (Mitchell Watt, a 6-foot-10 junior forward, had the most career starts under his belt with 54 heading into this season). However, Buffalo head coach Reggie Witherspoon has been in charge of the program for a long time, this is his 12th season at the helm of the Bulls, and his system is very familiar to his returnees. Buffalo’s 78-64 victory over Wisconsin-Green Bay this weekend was his 150th career win at the school and he does not surprise anyone with radical defenses or crazy offensive sets, something that makes learning his system fairly simple provided the player puts in the work during training camp and practice.

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Mike Perry

doeren

Northern Illinois today ended the speculation about its next head football coach by hiring Wisconsin defensive coordinator Dave Doeren to replace Jerry Kill, who left the Huskies for Minnesota, as its new head football coach. But three coaching vacancies remain in the MAC, Kent State, Ball State and Temple.

The Kent State position has been vacant the longest, and quite a few names have been attached to it. Most are currently coordinators at big-time programs, so you would assume Kent is opening the checkbook a little bit for this hire. As of today Kent has not offered the position to any of its candidates.

Kent’s out-going coach, Doug Martin, had a base salary in the neighborhood of $200,000 that could increase if certain incentives were met. This is not enough to get a coordinator with a big-time program, so if Kent hopes to remain in that ballpark it will have to narrow its search to position coaches. However, with the names that have come out, it appears like Kent is going to spend some money.

West Virginia offensive coordinator Jeff Mullen is one name that has come out, and he is very familiar with Kent State athletic director Joel Nielsen and executive associate athletic director Tom Kleinlein, who are handling the search for the Golden Flashes’ next coach on their own. Mullen was a coach at Wake Forest when Nielsen and Kleinlein were there, and he currently recruits Ohio for the Mountaineers. Mullen has been reported to have already interviewed for the position.

Another name that has surfaced in numerous reports is someone football fans in Ohio are very familiar with, Ohio State assistant head coach and wide receivers coach Darrell Hazell. Hazell is a fiery, no-nonsense kind of coach that has done wonders with the Buckeyes’ receiving corps over the last few years. But is he going to leave his high-profile position at a national powerhouse like Ohio State to join Kent for $200,000 or so? I highly doubt it. Hazell is also fantastic with recruits. He has ties to Kleinlein…he was an assistant at Rutgers when Kleinlein was there. He has been at Ohio State since 2004.

Alabama wide receivers coach Curt Cignetti is also a candidate, and his name is gaining quite a bit of momentum. Cignetti was recommended by Kent State alumn, Nick Saban, who was one of the people Nielsen reached out to after Martin’s resignation.

Another prominent name that has been mentioned is Texas wide receivers coach Bobby Kennedy, who also worked as an assistant at Wake when Nielsen was there. Kennedy was the receivers coach for the Deamon Deacons and has quite a resume, including stops at Washington, Arizona, Wyoming, Penn State and Illinois and is a strong recruiter as well. In fact, he is Mack Brown’s recruiting coordinator at Texas.

Finally, Kent is said to have also interviewed current Golden Flashes defensive coordinator Pete Rekstis, who expressed interest in the position after Martin resigned in November.

It is this writer’s opinion that Hazell would be the best man for the job, but if forced to say who Kent would hire would tell you they will go with Cignetti.

 It looks like Ball State will take a different route than Kent in finding its next coach…especially if the Star Press in Muncie has anything to say about it. The paper is urging Ball State athletic director Tom Collins to take his time and do a lot of homework, as well as urging him to form a search committee made up of people from within the athletic department as well as non-university and non-athletic representatives.

One of the early names connected to the Cardinals came courtesy of Super Bowl-winning coach Sean Payton of the New Orleans Saints, who stated that former Ball State quarterback Mike Neu would be a good fit to run the program. Another name that has been thrown around is Oregon offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Mike Helfrich, who would cost a good chunk of change and is expected to receive interest from higher-profile programs once the Bowl Season is complete. Helfrich is one of those “hot coordinators” who turn up every year and is usually ticketed for a bigger program than can be found in the MAC.

The Cardinals are also rumored to be interested in two members of the Indiana State coaching staff, linebackers coach Rick Minter and head coach Trent Miles. Minter is a stronger possibility than Miles, who would probably consider the move from Indiana State to Ball State as a lateral move despite the step up in divisions.

Akron defensive coordinator Curt Mallory has already interviewed for the position, but one would assume he is not at the top of the Cardinals’ wish list. Former Ball State running back Bernie Parmalee, one of the best backs in BSU history and currently the tight ends coach for the Kansas City Chiefs, is a strong possibility. Michigan State offensive coordinator Dan Treadwell has also been mentioned, but, again, he is one of the hot names on the national scene and is probably headed to a higher-profile program.

Finally, current Ball State offensive coordinator Eddie Faulkner, the current interim head coach, has expressed interest in taking the job permanently. On the heels of giving up close to 60 points in the season finale he probably is a dark horse at this point.

One thing is for sure, when Brady Hoke left for San Diego State and the Cardinals brought Parrish in it was a big mistake. He never really fit in, and it showed on the field. My guess is that Ball State is going to bring in a name that will create some buzz around Muncie…and that would be Parmalee.

Temple just lost Golden to Miami, so it is very, very early in its coaching search. Although one name out there is New Hampshire head coach Sean McDonnell.

There is also interesting news involving a former MAC head coach. JD Brookhart, who formerly was the head coach at Akron, has been hired at the University of Colorado as the tight ends/passing game coordinator/special teams coordinator for the Buffaloes.

Mike Perry

cooper

With the 20010-11 college basketball season at or just past the quarter pole it is a good time to take a look at some of the Mid-American Conference Player of the Year candidates to see how things are shaking out.

There are no David Kools this season…players clearly dominating the conference statistically…and with conference play right around the corner the numbers could slide a touch as teams are more familiar with their competition, but a couple of players have put up huge numbers thus far. Here is how I have my player of the year candidates ranked, from fifth to the player I think would win the award were it handed out today.

5. Trey Zeigler, 6-foot-5 freshman guard, Central Michigan: Zeigler has been as advertised thus far. He came into the conference as one of the highest-rated recruits in conference history and has delivered on those expectations. Zeigler is averaging 15.9 points per game, second on the team behind senior Jalin Thomas. Zeigler has done a little bit of everything, pulling down 5.6 rebounds per game, shooting 89.1 percent from the free throw line, 47.4 percent from 3-point range and blocking one shot per contest. Zeigler is one of the better defensive rebounding guards in the conference, grabbing 4.3 defensive rebounds per game. He also has played big minutes for the Chips, averaging 32.6 minutes per contest. Zeigler’s Chippewas, however, have a disappointing 2-6 record this season.

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Mike Perry

harnishFour Mid-American Conference (MAC) teams will be playing in bowl games this year as invitations were extended Sunday afternoon. Miami (GoDaddy.com Bowl), Northern Illinois (uDrove Humanitarian Bowl), Toledo (Little Caesars Pizza Bowl) and Ohio (R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl) will represent the MAC in bowl games this season.


This year also marks the first time in conference history that the MAC will have at least four schools playing bowl games in three consecutive years. In addition the MAC has sent four or more teams to bowl games in five of the last seven years.
 
“We are extremely excited for the bowl invitations to our four MAC institutions,” said Dr. Jon Steinbrecher, commissioner of the MAC.  “Our conference placed three teams in our primary agreements with the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, GoDaddy.com Bowl and uDrove Humanitarian Bowl. We were also able to garner an at-large selection in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl. I strongly feel that this reflects on the competitive nature of our conference and I congratulate all of our universities, coaches and student-athletes for their efforts this year.”

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Mike Perry

Miami1The biggest turnaround in college football this season got even more impressive Friday night at Ford Field when Miami, a team that finished 1-11 last season, used a late Armand Robinson touchdown reception to slip past favored Northern Illinois in the Marathon MAC Championship Game.

The 26-21 win capped an amazing resurgence for the RedHawks (9-4), and most likely will land them back in Detroit Dec. 26 for the Little Caesar’s Pizza Bowl.

"What an outstanding accomplishment by these young men to overcome to adversity in which they were involved from going 1-11 to being 9-4 and winning a MAC Championship,” RedHawks coach Mike Haywood said after the game. “I'm so happy for them and all the adversity they have overcome and all the hard work they have done."

Miami trailed 21-20 after Willie Clark gave NIU the lead with a 39-yard touchdown reception from Chandler Harnish. But late in the game, after the RedHawks forced the Huskies to punt from their own end zone, it took Miami six plays to get the decisive touchdown. During the scoring drive Northern Illinois had a chance to put the game away. The RedHawks faced fourth-and-20 from their own 38-yard line and the Huskies defensive line was able to flush Miami freshman quarterback Austin Boucher out of the pocket. Boucher rolled to his left and threw the ball downfield towards wideout Chris Givens. Huskies linebacker Tyrone Clark stepped in front of the pass to pick it off, but it bounced off his hands and into the waiting arms of Givens, who grabbed it at the NIU 45 and took it to the Huskies 31.

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