With five of eight defensive linemen not returning from last year's squad, there were concerns about how the line would perform. Well rushing yardage allowed was exactly the same as 2013 and West Chester was second in the PSAC in sacks, so the front seven did their job. Passing yards allowed fell about 20 yards from last year, which was good enough to lead the entire PSAC, but that is most likely attributed to West Chester's opponents. Mercyhurst, Shippensburg, East Stroudsburg, Indiana and Slippery Rock all had winning records for the season, and the Golden Rams defeated them all, but none had their best signal caller in action when facing West Chester.
Statistically, the best game for the defense was Cheyney which managed only three first downs and 47 total yards, setting new school records in both of those categories. But fans were most impressed with the effort against Slippery Rock in the first round of the NCAA playoffs. The PSAC champions entered the game boasting 231 yards and 27 touchdowns on the ground, but were held to just 31 yards and no touchdowns rushing. And the Rock gained 99 of their 158 total yards on their final two possessions after West Chester held a 46-6 lead.
Defensive Line
Sophomore Shaquil Ryder (54 total tackles, 8.0 tackles for loss, 3 QB hurries) and junior Barry Lyons (31 total tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss) held the starting defensive tackle positions while graduate student Jamiel Sims (12 total tackles in 6 games) and redshirt freshman Josh Ganzelli (19 total tackles, 3.0 tackles for loss) provided backup.
Linebackers
Providing backup at linebacker were Ralph Reeves (28 total tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss) and redshirt freshman Dan Sherry (20 total tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss) . When Williams suffered a brutal leg injury at Seton Hill, true freshman Sean Steinmetz (18 total tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss) was pressed into action as well.
Secondary
Although tackling isn't his favorite part of the game, free safety Brandon Pepper (39 total tackles, 4 pass breakups) was tied for seventh on the team. Sophomore Pete Galiano (37 total tackles, 3.0 tackles for loss) was one of the team's top special teams players, but was also very valuable in nickel and dime packages. Speedy sophomore Kyle Keyser (24 total tackles) contributed primarily on special teams as he learns coverage responsibilities in the secondary.
Cornerback Al-Hajj Shabazz (39 total tackles, team high 5 interceptions, team high 11 pass breakups) had a season that met everyone's expectations. The co-captain was often called on to cover the opponent's best receiver one-on-one and did so quite well. He finished the season third in the PSAC in interceptions (5), seventh in pass breakups (11) and third in passes defended (16). Shabazz was named first team All-PSAC East, first team Daktronics All-Super Region 1, first team Beyond Sports Network All-Super Region 1, second team Beyond Sports Network All-American, ECAC Division II All-Star and a finalist for the Cliff Harris Award.
The other corner was manned by Blaise Schieler (23 total tackles, 2 interceptions, 5 pass breakups). Also contributing in the secondary was Lafayette transfer DeOliver Davis (16 total tackles, 4 pass breakups).
No comments:
Post a Comment