• Hi Guest, want to participate in the discussions, keep track of read/unread posts, upgrade to remove ads and more? Create your free account and increase the benefits of your BigSkyFans.com experience today!

Cal Poly

bigskyconf

Active member
Looking forward,

Sandwiched between the two Montana schools, we now have to go to play at Cal Poly. Might as well start homecoming week with a homecoming of sorts for the football team, going against former coach Tim Walsh and former players Saga Tuitele, Juston Wood, and Jim Craft. The Mustangs have played a murderous schedule so far so their record is a bit misleading. They're coming off a bye week and know that they need to win out for any hope for the playoffs so they are going to be ready, no doubt. We will need to match their intensity and not get caught believing our own press clippings.
 
It seems like last time we played Calpoly they had a bye week the preceding week. Walsh will have this team prepared. They are always tough and if the Viks let down for a millisecond it might cost them. The defense will have to be ready for the option. If our defense brings it, PSU wins
 
Another tough one this Saturday down at San Luis Obispo:

Vikings Will Try To Maintain Momentum At Cal Poly

http://www.goviks.com/news/2015/10/19/FB_1019152502.aspx" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
Cal Poly football turns its attention to Portland State Vikings

For the seventh consecutive week, the Cal Poly football team is preparing to play a top-25 team.

The Mustangs are coming off a welcome bye week following their 42-41 overtime loss at then-No. 7-ranked Eastern Washington. Cal Poly (2-4, 1-2 Big Sky Conference) returns to Alex G. Spanos Stadium at 6:05 p.m. Saturday to resume the second of its schedule against a resurgent Portland State team.

The 14th-ranked Vikings are 5-1 overall and 2-1 in the Big Sky, having defeated FBS-level opponents Washington State and North Texas on the road this season. Portland State has experienced a major turnaround under new head coach Bruce Barnum, whose interim tag was removed earlier this month in favor of a five-year contract.

Mustangs head coach Tim Walsh, who spent 14 seasons at Portland State from 1993 to 2006, said he’s happy for Barnum and the entire Vikings athletic department.

“That program needed to have the season that they’re having,” Walsh said. “With where they were and the criticisms they’ve had the last couple years, I think they needed some positive things to happen.”

More than half of the Cal Poly coaching staff has ties to Portland State.

Offensive coordinator Saga Tuitele was an All-American offensive lineman for the Vikings before graduating in 2002. He spent four seasons coaching at Portland State and eventually left with Walsh to coach at Army in 2007.

Wide receivers coach Jim Craft, a 1998 Portland State graduate, spent nearly a decade on the Vikings’ coaching staff. Quarterbacks coach Juston Wood was a first-team all-Big Sky performer during his playing career under Walsh and graduated as the sixth-leading passer in Portland State history with more than 5,600 yards and 37 touchdowns.

Running backs coach Aristotle Thompson did not play or coach for the Vikings, but he graduated from Portland’s Jesuit High in 1996 and later coached at Portland’s Grant High.

“Like I said before, I had 14 years of my life there and these coaches played there,” Walsh said. “But starting last Monday they were the enemy. That kindness only goes so far. Now it’s time to play football.”

Key Mustangs nursing injuries

A week of rest is always welcomed seven weeks into the college football season.

Cal Poly practiced for three days during the bye week and took the weekend off, with hopes to regroup physically and mentally before hosting Portland State.

Asked to gauge the team’s overall health to this point, Walsh said “we’ve got some guys that are going to have to play banged up, but most teams do at this point in the season.”

Ten days removed from losing at Eastern Washington, senior quarterback Chris Brown still was not practicing Tuesday morning at the Upper Sports Complex. He watched closely from the sideline in sweats and his practice jersey, while Andrew Barna and Kahleel Jenkins split the practice reps.

Brown leads the Big Sky in rushing with 117 yards per game and nine touchdowns. His 127 carries rank third in the conference, trailing North Dakota’s John Santiago (132) and teammate Joe Protheroe (128).

Brown ran the ball a season-high 31 times against the Eagles, 10 more attempts than his season average. He’s on pace to finish the season with fewer carries than 2014, when he ran the ball 249 times and was physically worn down by the end of November.

“I think the break coming at week six helps a little bit,” Walsh said. “But he’s going to get nicked up, he’s going to be sore and I think he realizes that. I think that’s the other thing. I think last year prepared him for this year.”

Protheore also carried the ball 30 times at Eastern Washington, marking the fourth time in five games he’s accounted for at least 27 rushing attempts. The sophomore fullback was practicing Tuesday after dealing with ankle and hamstring injuries against the Eagles.

“My ankle’s 100 now, I’m just a little sore in my hamstring which is why I was limping, too,” said Protheroe, who missed the Idaho State game Oct. 3 with a concussion.

“But I’ll be good though.”

Read more here: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/2015/10/20/3863173/cal-poly-football-turns-its-attention.html#storylink=cpy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
No-frills Portland State Vikings embark on another marathon bus trip as season rolls on

http://www.oregonlive.com/collegefootball/index.ssf/2015/10/the_portland_state_vikings_emb.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
scooter said:
Stanger said:
Anyone notice coach Barnum does not wear any PSU gear? Anyone know why?

Can only surmise that they don't make anything in his size !

:rofl:
Hey now. As a former O-lineman I don't think that is all that funny. Well, maybe a little, but it hits close to home. ;)

He may not wear the gear, but he doing a lot to bring attention to the school and team. I just didn't know if there was a story behind him not wearing the gear.
 
Stanger said:
scooter said:
Stanger said:
Anyone notice coach Barnum does not wear any PSU gear? Anyone know why?

Can only surmise that they don't make anything in his size !

:rofl:
Hey now. As a former O-lineman I don't that all that funny. Well, maybe a little, but it hits close to home. ;)

He may not wear the gear, but he doing a lot to bring attention to the school and team. I just didn't know if there was a story behind him not wearing the gear.

Geez, he could wear a black negligee with heals for all I care. It is all about winning.
 
Cal Poly trying to put it all together

http://portlandtribune.com/pt/12-sports/278176-154066-cal-poly-trying-to-put-it-all-together" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Cal Poly goes into Saturday’s Big Sky home game against Portland State as something of an enigma.

When the Mustangs have been good, they’ve been very good. When they haven’t, they've blown leads or played themselves out of games, all to the tune of a 2-4 record (1-2 in the conference).

Now, coming off a bye as well as a hugely disappointing 42-41, overtime loss at defending Big Sky champion Eastern Washington, Cal Poly coach Tim Walsh is interested to see what he has for the second half of the season.

“I think it was a good week (off) for us, but we’ll see,” Walsh says. “Offensively, we’ve played really well, and sometimes you lose your timing by not playing.”

But, after an extremely challenging first six weeks against assorted top-25 teams and Big Sky rivals, some time off was welcomed at San Luis Obispo.

“The schedule for our players is somewhat ridiculous, because school is so competitive and almost every class has group projects and labs the players have to participate in,” says Walsh, a former PSU head coach. “The kids get here at 5:30 in the morning and are doing things till 10. That grind is tough on your players. And some of our games have been really emotional. So the bye has been a plus, I think.”

• Cal Poly was in position to win a couple of other games this season, especially the Eastern Washington encounter, in which the Mustangs had a 15-point lead in the fourth quarter.

Defensive breakdowns have been a culprit.

“Our immaturity on defense has showed a little,” Walsh says. “We have four or five guys starting for the first time this season, and when their eyes get bad, bad things happen. We have given away some touchdowns just from being positioned wrong with our eyes. Just terrible mistakes.

“Defensively, we’ve always prided ourselves on being aggressive and keeping the ball in front of us, and we’ve not always done those things this year.

“And, against Eastern Washington, when the momentum changed, we didn’t respond as well as we should have.”

But, Walsh says, “we can no longer use the experience thing as an excuse. Our players have played six games now.”

• The Mustangs will give Portland State a steady dose of their triple-option when the teams meet at 6 p.m. Saturday.

“We are who we are,” Walsh says.

Cal Poly hasn’t had as many breakaway plays as Walsh would like, but the Mustangs have had numerous long drives. Senior Chris Brown, who has been banged up, is the key to the attack and the main running threat.

“Offensively, we’d like to make some more big plays, either through the pass or the run,” Walsh says. “It’s tough sometimes to go consistently 15 plays for 75 yards, though that’s a good thing, too.”

• Special teams have been important to both teams this season, and Portland State (5-1, 2-1 Big Sky) has had more early success on special teams than Cal Poly.

“We’ve made one big mistake on special teams in all four of our losses,” Walsh says.

• Which team will win Saturday?

“The team that plays the hardest and can run the ball the best, and not give up,” Walsh says.

• Walsh and several members of his staff have PDX and Portland State ties. Assistant coaches Saga Tuitele, Juston Wood and Jim Craft coached with Walsh on the Park Blocks. Assistant coach Aristotle Thompson played for Jesuit High and coached under Diallo Lewis at Grant.

“I spent 14 years of my life up there, and Portland State was important to Saga, Juston and Jim, too,” Walsh says.

• Two of Walsh’s four children, all grown, live in Portland, and all the kids visit Walsh and wife Jody on occasion, usually coming to San Luis Obispo for one game a year.

Daughters Casey, 33, and Megan, 26, work in Portland. Casey plans to be married in Colton in July. Son Sean, 31, is an outdoors type who works in sales in Bend, and eldest son Luke, 34, is in Chicago and also is in sales.

• Cal Poly has beaten Portland State the past three seasons, and the Mustangs dominated last year, winning 42-14 after leading 35-0 in the fourth quarter.

PSU coach Bruce Barnum, who was the Vikings’ offensive coordinator last year, says that Cal Poly team gave Portland State a physical beating the likes of which he has seen only a couple of other times.

“We’d throw a five-yard hitch and there’d be six guys teeing off on our guy before he turned around,” Barnum says, recalling the 2014 loss at Cal Poly. “I told our offense, ‘You’re playing a violent game, and right now you guys are getting hit so hard and are not responding.’ It was bad. They embarrassed us.”

The only other times Barnum says he has experienced anything like that as a coach was one year when he was at Idaho State and the Bengals lost to one of Boise State’s top teams, and when Portland State faced Oregon at Autzen Stadium in 2010, the year the Ducks first went to the national championship game. Oregon won that game 69-0.

“We couldn’t move the ball on the Ducks,” he says. “After they went up on us about 35-goose or whatever, I’m calling the plays and I said to myself, ‘You know what? Let’s go to all these packed formations and run the ball and run our plays real slow.’ … I wouldn’t call a play until right at the end, to make sure the clock went down as far as possible. I didn’t want that scoreboard looking like a Las Vegas slot machine.”

• Cal Poly took advantage a year ago of a Portland State defense that was not nearly as solid as it is now.

“Last year, what I saw was that their offensive plan was better than our defensive plan,” Barnum says.

• Barnum predicted before this season that Cal Poly could win the Big Sky championship.

“This is the most dangerous game we will play, in my opinion,” he says.

Defending the triple-option presents a unique challenge to the PSU defense, and Barnum says he understands why the Mustangs use that offense.

“Their school is known for engineering, and they probably can’t get the guys everybody else can get,” Barnum says. “But Tim is a tough football coach, and the guys there play hard for him.”

• The triple-option is based on running similar plays over and over, forcing the defense to make decisions and cover multiple possible ball carriers. The offense hopes to turn a mistake here or there into a big play.

“They’re going to run for two yards, four yards, eight yards, and then pop one,” Barnum says. “We just have to make sure we’re in position, defensively, and rally to the football.”
 
There are only a few posters on the CP board but if you take what they say to heart, they are growing a little weary of coach Walsh. His team's are always tough, he seems to find good QBs year after year. Getting nervous about this one.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top