The Vanguard Blogzone
September 19th, 2008
Insider’s perspective
http://blogs.dailyvanguard.com/2008/09/19/insider%E2%80%99s-perspective/
This story is part of an exchange conducted with the Washington State Daily Evergreen, the student newspaper at WSU. Nathan Hellman previewed the game in an article for their paper, and their insider, Mike Baldwin, did the same for us. Nate’s article can be viewed in PDF form here: Daily Evergreen Page 1 Daily Evergreen Page 2
Also check out our podcast preview of the game here http://media-convert.com/convert/?xid=16-pnztjyuc. You can also subscribe via Itunes. Lucky for you, we fixed the volume this week. Thanks for your patience.
Insider’s perspective
A Washington State insider gives the Vanguard insight on the Vikings- Cougars matchup
Mike Baldwin of the Washington State Daily Evergreen staff
There might not be a better time for the WSU football team to pick up its first victory of the season than Saturday against Portland State University at Martin Stadium.
The Cougars (0-3, 0-1 Pac-10) host the PSU Vikings in the first ever meeting between the two schools, but it’s not WSU Head Coach Paul Wulff’s first encounter with the Big Sky Conference school.
The Vikings (1-1) upset Wulff’s Eastern Washington squad 28-21 last season and the WSU coach could avenge the loss Saturday and earn his first victory with the Cougars to avoid an 0-4 start. Wulff is 4-4 all-time against Portland State.
“It’s no foregone conclusion that we are going to win,” Wulff said. “We’ve got to play a lot better football.”
The Vikings aren’t exactly a school to overlook or take for granted. The team, from the Football Championship Subdivision, formerly known as the Div. I-AA, is the Cougars’ final nonconference game.
PSU Head Coach Jerry Glanville, in his second season with the Vikings, has molded a top-ranked offense which averages nearly 400 yards per game.
“They’re a good team and anybody can win on any given day,” WSU starting quarterback Kevin Lopina said. “We’ve just got to prepare, they’re (Div. I-AA), but that means nothing.”
“They’re all college athletes and they all have scholarships and so do we, so we’ve just got to go out there and play hard and win,” Lopina said.
Lopina will make his second straight start Saturday after throwing 17-of-26 for 174 yards and two interceptions against Baylor University this past Friday. Reserve quarterback Gary Rogers tallied reps in practice this week, but will back up Lopina against the Vikings.
Lopina knows that a misstep along the way could lead to Rogers earning his starting role back. This week’s practice has been a little easier for Lopina to handle as the starting job had been named prior to the first whistle on Saturday.
“It’s good to know that I’m the starter, but at the same time, maybe last week was better in pushing me to do better,” Lopina said. “I just can’t get complacent; I’ve just got to keep working hard every day.”
This season has brought a string of defensive struggles for the Cougars, who have been outscored 150-33 and averaged 50 points allowed per game. The Cougars have never lost to a FCS school in 13 games, but the team will have its hands full Saturday against Glanville’s offense.
“They can definitely throw the ball,” WSU safety Alfonso Jackson said. “They do a good job of spreading the ball out and getting to the receivers, but if we play like we’re coached to do, it should be a pretty easy game for us.”
Safety Xavier Hicks returns to the Cougars this week following a 3-game suspension. Jackson will also join him at safety to help combat PSU’s passing arsenal. Hicks’ return is crucial for a WSU defense that has yet to complete a solid performance this season.
“Xavier does a good job of making sure everyone has their plays, and it’s another helping hand back there,” Jackson said. “It’s a big plus for this defense.”