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Kieran McDonagh

Gilbert.points said:
Some elusive writing on your message board. Really eclipsed me with your knowledge and ability to bastardize me, impressive and offensive. Heck I would say you might want to wipe your mouth but, it kind of looks good on you at this point. Elusive in the sense commanding a retort but still shying away from the bottom line and headlines. Savory stats on a down team makes for great and soaring confidence for us all :D But doesn't MAGICALLY CHANGE THE WIN COLUMN NOW DOES IT? Keep winning sunshine, with the rest of them.

Impressed with your linguistic acumen, but unfortunately it is mostly incomprehensible. The bottom line is the offense isn't playing bad. And savory stats on a JUCO team does not make for great and soaring confidence for us all.

Done with this, GO VIKS!
 
Great endorsement. The offense is amazing'. Not widely popular though and Tebow is a freak athlete. Not something anyone and everyone has success for a very long time. The offense before Tebow wasn't highly touted and again after he left wasn't a huge hit. A measure of success of the scheme is more about the composition of athletes involved. Its either Feast or Famine. Not really my argument...

You didn't bother to point out successful offenses with two QB's?
Collin Kapernick shares time with Alex Smith...

You could easily make a package with McD and Ram. I can't imagine what fresh look will do> Since its out of our circle of thinking...
 
I'm surprised this pointless conversation is still going.

Kieran is the QB, and he's doing a good job at QB. Maybe not perfect, but hey, he's a freshman. End of story.
 
Kieran has been very impressive for true freshman. It is remarkable that he could come in and win the starting QB spot. Like any player, there are facets of his game that can improve. Being a freshman, that is both understandable and exciting because PSU has three more years to see his upside after further development. I hope the coaching staff is up to the challenge to develop him to his fullest potential. For example, I think he can and will be able to improve and make his passing touch more consistent.

I had hoped Colin Ramirez would have seen some more time on the field during game situations. Plenty of great quarterbacks simply don't practice well and I would like to see him in a real game. Apparently the coaches don't have much confidence in him. And if that is the case, why did we waste a scholarship on him? They hyped him up that I think everyone had big expectations. When you bring in a JC transfer, you better be damn certain that he can start. This tells me that someone really screwed up on the recruiting analysis.

At the end of the day, we are sitting at 2-4 after having been forced to start a true freshman which means missing out on the opportunity to be able to red-shirt him and allow him to develop for an extra year. We have a JC scholarship QB sitting on the sidelines so we burned a scholarship on a JC QB who was brought in to start. We could have used that schollie elsewhere.
 
VikThunderous said:
Kieran has been very impressive for true freshman. It is remarkable that he could come in and win the starting QB spot. Like any player, there are facets of his game that can improve. Being a freshman, that is both understandable and exciting because PSU has three more years to see his upside after further development. I hope the coaching staff is up to the challenge to develop him to his fullest potential. For example, I think he can and will be able to improve and make his passing touch more consistent.

I had hoped Colin Ramirez would have seen some more time on the field during game situations. Plenty of great quarterbacks simply don't practice well and I would like to see him in a real game. Apparently the coaches don't have much confidence in him. And if that is the case, why did we waste a scholarship on him? They hyped him up that I think everyone had big expectations. When you bring in a JC transfer, you better be damn certain that he can start. This tells me that someone really screwed up on the recruiting analysis.

At the end of the day, we are sitting at 2-4 after having been forced to start a true freshman which means missing out on the opportunity to be able to red-shirt him and allow him to develop for an extra year. We have a JC scholarship QB sitting on the sidelines so we burned a scholarship on a JC QB who was brought in to start. We could have used that schollie elsewhere.

I understand the point you are making, but the way I see it is after last season, they knew they were going to be in trouble at QB. They were doing what they had to do to get the cupboard full. Ramirez may be a fine QB, especially given the time, but nothing is a given maybe he believed his own press clippings. I just think the Freshman earned the job.
 
Tebow is a freak athlete... He is like no other... Don't expect their team to dominate before or since him... Great ideas though... Just not widely popular...for any length of time..the duration of success falls on recruiting and the caliber of athlete... I was just saying use your depth to your advantage... Not really into decoder rings or measuring chest hair... Losing your ring might be a habit you'll want to break... Losing in general. :thumb:
 
From the Oregonian:

"The Vikings also had a big day from quarterback Kieran McDonagh, who threw for 250 yards, giving him 1,846 for the season, a PSU freshman passing record. He broke Neil Lomax's mark of 1,670 set in 1970, a fact that caught McDonagh off guard."

Not a bad record for a kid that was said to be grey shirting this season.
 
McDonagh making big strides at PSU
Skyview grad steps into starting role as freshman

http://www.columbian.com/news/2012/nov/02/mcdonagh-making-big-strides-at-psu/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
Congrats to our young QB. He placed in eighth in the balloting for the 2012 Jerry Rice Award, given to the nation's top freshman football player at the NCAA I FCS level. Huge honor to be ranked as one of the top freshman in the country. I am excited to see his growth over the next three years.

http://goviks.com/news/2012/12/17/FB_1217123423.aspx" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
Catching up with Kieran McDonagh

http://blogs.columbian.com/tailgate-talk/2013/08/08/catching-up-with-kieran-mcdonagh/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

I stopped by Portland State’s practice Wednesday evening to chat with sophomore quarterback Kieran McDonagh.

Clark County football fans remember McDonagh from Skyview High School. As a senior, he threw for 2,637 yards and 24 touchdowns. He was named second team All-State.

Portland State fans know him as the true freshman who led an offense that averaged 438.7 yards and 34.8 points per game last season. In starting all 11 games, McDonagh threw for 2,187 yards and 14 touchdowns, and ran for 406 yards and nine touchdowns.

Here are highlights from one of McDonagh’s best games last season.

The Vikings, however, stumbled to a 3-8 record. Entering his sophomore season, McDonagh is vying with senior Collin Ramirez and redshirt freshman Paris Penn to be the starting quarterback.

In this interview, McDonagh talks about his growth as a leader and what he hopes to accomplish this season. (Please excuse some shakiness in the video. I’m in preseason form myself).

Click here to watch an excerpt from the interview.

The interview is part of a larger story I’m writing on McDonagh that will appear in The Columbian this
weekend.
 
Portland State quarterback Kieran McDonagh

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCY_nm5vbhQ" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
Viking Quest: Skyview grad McDonagh aims to lead Portland State at QB

PORTLAND — Hip-hop music echoed off the buildings surrounding Portland State's football practice field.

Occasionally, a coach's whistle pierced the baseline's din. Staccato clapping from players added a layer to the steady drumbeat.

As the sun set behind the West Hills during the twilight of a recent Vikings practice, quarterback Kieran McDonagh got his message across without cranking up the volume.

After leading his unit in a game simulation, the sophomore went player to player. With a fist-bump here, an instructional hand motion there, McDonagh — a Skyview High grad — showed how leadership can take on a calm, subtle identity.

"In the end, what people respect is the work he puts in and being a playmaker," Vikings coach Nigel Burton said. "If you can do those, it doesn't matter whether you're a rah-rah guy or a guy who's pretty quiet."

McDonagh made plenty of noise around the Big Sky Conference as a true freshman. Winning the starting job in fall practice, he oversaw an offense that averaged 438.7 yards and 34.8 points per game. In starting all 11 games, McDonagh threw for 2,187 yards and 14 touchdowns. He ran for 406 yards and nine touchdowns in the Vikings' pistol offense.

But McDonagh also had 13 interceptions as the Vikings stumbled to a 3-8 record. McDonagh, senior Collin Ramirez and redshirt freshman Paris Penn are vying to start the season opener Aug. 29 against Eastern Oregon.

"Those statistics are great and all, but what we really want to do is win games," McDonagh said.

His senior year at Skyview, McDonagh threw for 2,637 yards and 24 touchdowns while leading the Storm to the Class 4A state title game. He was named second team All-State.

At 6-foot-1, 240 pounds, McDonagh was scouted as a linebacker by most college coaches who recruited him. But Portland State offensive coordinator Bruce Barnum saw him as a dual-threat -- a strong-armed passer and physical runner who could flourish in the pistol, where the quarterback starts each play about four yards behind the center (think of it as an abbreviated version of the shotgun formation).

This season, McDonagh says he feels more comfortable in his role. He expects to show more versatility.

"There are still some things we haven't pulled out of the closet," Burton said.

With a linebacker's body, McDonagh proved himself a tough rusher to tackle. But he plans on expanding his passing prowess in pursuit of Portland State's self-proclaimed goal of averaging 40 points per game this season. The Vikings averaged 35 points per game last season.

"This year I'll probably throw the ball a bit more," McDonagh said. "Last year I could have completed more of those passes and avoided those turnovers. That's the biggest thing you'll probably see."

Coach Burton ticked off a long list of areas his team needs to improve in order to challenge in the Big Sky, which saw Eastern Washington reach the semifinals and Montana State reach the quarterfinals in last year's FCS playoffs.

"Everything has to be better," Burton said. "Reads have to be better, production has to be better, touchdowns have to be better, we have to tackle better, play better defense and be better on special teams. It's across the board. With the amount of experience coming back, that's our expectation."

McDonagh hopes to play a key role in any resurgence at Portland State, which won seven games as recently as 2011. Just don't expect him to crow about it.

• Portland State held its first scrimmage of the fall on Saturday.

McDonagh was 11-17 for 165 yards passing. In one drive, McDonagh got into a rhythm, completing five straight for 66 yards.

Penn was 10-16 for 111 yards, one interception, and a 39-yard touchdown pass.
 
Kieran McDonagh Named Big Sky Offensive Player of the Week

http://www.goviks.com/news/2013/9/9/FB_0909133402.aspx" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 

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