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2019 Richmond Spiders Football - Opponents Countdown - Elon

mojo-spider

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tough CAA opener...but Spiders fans can take some solace from the Elon story...

three seasons ago the former Fighting Christians were 2-9, 1-7 CAA...in 2017 and 2018 they played for CAA Championships and made the FCS Playoffs...

maybe the Spiders can follow a similar blue print?...we should get a pretty good gauge on how far we have to go on September 14...I'd love to see a Brick House battle with these guys...

enjoy the Countdown...

Go Spiders!
 
Hero:

ELON (6-5 IN 2018)

CAA (ELON WAS 4TH IN CAA IN 2018)

COACH: Tony Trisciani - At School: 1st year (0-0 record), Overall: Same

LAST FCS POSTSEASON: 2018 (First Round loss to Wofford)

2018 OFFENSE: 24.4 ppg. (87th in FCS)

2018 DEFENSE: 23.6 ppg. (33rd in FCS)

KEY GAME: Nov. 23 - @ Towson: There's no question this game will have playoff implications when it rolls around in the regular season finale. Both these programs are playoff caliber and rankable, and last year the Tigers knocked injury-plagued Elon around late in the year. This should be a barn-burner and a factor in putting the top of the CAA standings in order.

SUM IT UP: How can you not be impressed with this Elon program the past two years? Last season, prior to key injuries on offense decimating the team, the Phoenix were 4-1 after knocking off James Madison on its home soil before key injuries on offense began taking their toll. And as anybody at the FCS level knows, this level doesn't have the luxury of depth that the P5s have. Four losses to eventual FCS playoff teams ensued. In the past two seasons, with Elon at full strength, the program is 12-5 and has made the playoffs two straight seasons after winning 12 total games in the five seasons prior (2012-16).

So head coach Curt Cignetti moved on to CAA foe James Madison, but left the program in fine hands with Tony Trisciani, who had been on staff both playoff seasons. Trisciani also brings back three assistants who have been on board for all of the success, but also has some fresh faces on staff. Also, he has 14 starters back to work with -- including one of the biggest sparks in the program's resurgence the past two years, quarterback Davis Cheek. He was injured in last year's Delaware game, but he'll be at full strength by this fall. There's a lot to smile about here, and that's why Elon holds the No. 12 spot in the HERO Sports preseason Top 25.

So what has made this program tick the past few years? Hard-nosed, no frills football -- that's what. It runs the ball well, plays tough defense in a conference known for tough defense, owns the turnover margin and led the nation last year in fewest penalties per game. When it is in the redzone, its offense gets it done. Put simply, this is a disciplined, hard-working, keep-your-ego-in-your-pocket, smart playing bunch -- and that pays off when the playoffs roll around. Cheek will have some nice weapons back on offense, but he will need some new linemen to step up as some good ones have graduated (Google Oli Udoh and you'll see a guy in an NFL uniform). On defense, the three-man front is completely intact and very mean. The secondary looks strong again too, but some new standouts will need to emerge at linebacker.

OUR TAKE: There's a reason we have this program at No. 12 in the preseason. Yes, there are FCS programs that return more than 14 starters, but we like the look and feel of this program and where it's heading -- and we like its leadership under center, which obviously is critical at any level of football. Cheek was a special recruiting victory when he chose Elon, and he's been effective from day one, and we think that's only going to progress. While games versus Wake Forest and James Madison will be immense challenges, there isn't another game on the schedule that feels like an "underdog" situation -- but of course several of them do have that 50/50 feel. That's the CAA for you. We think we're staring at a seven or eight-win type season for the Phoenix with another FCS playoff trip.

TOP RETURNEE: Jr./QB Davis Cheek (3,500 career passing yards through 2 seasons, true leader in the program)

THE FOUNDATION: Sr./DB Greg Liggs (2nd leading tackler last year, 65 tacklers, 4 INTs, 9 PBUs); Sr./DL Marcus Willoughby (58 tackles, 6.5 TFLs, 7 hurries); Soph./RB Jaylan Thomas (761 yds rushing, 4 TDs); Sr./WR Cole Taylor (524 yards receiving); Jr./WR Kortez Weeks (484 yards receiving); Sr./OL Matt Kowalewski (returning RG starter); Jr./OL Chad Nelson (returning LG starter); Soph./PK Skyler Davis (17 for 22 on field goals); Sr./DB Daniel Reid-Bennett (55 tackles, 7 passes defensed).

TOP NEWCOMER: Fr./DB Omar Rogers (HERO Sports Top 200 signee -- reported a Virginia offer and 4 FBS offers overall)

THE QUOTE: "Overall as a football program, I like where we are. We have some real good players that aren't out here yet that we haven't had a chance to see but everyone who has been practicing this spring has really done a good job. They've practiced with a purpose, developed some skills and we have a better idea of where we are in the secondary with some of those skill positions. That was another area where we lost three seniors and you have to figure out where the pieces are going to fit and I'm happy there. Overall we're happy with what we've seen and we're excited for the future." -- Head Coach Tony Triscianisaid during spring ball
 
I have a relative that worked for Elon football. I once told him that the Spiders visit their stadium back in ancient times when we were talking about a on campus site. He told me he recalled that and when they wanted to build a powerhouse program they looked at our program. We do have a lot in common.
 
I have a relative that worked for Elon football. I once told him that the Spiders visit their stadium back in ancient times when we were talking about a on campus site. He told me he recalled that and when they wanted to build a powerhouse program they looked at our program. We do have a lot in common.

Now we need to look at their program. The circle of (football) life...
 
Is it just me, I know they were highlights, but I saw a number of breakdowns by Citidel, is this going to be a bad year for them?

Losing to Towson at home by 7 and then host Elon by 7.

Thought the exact same that Citadel defense gave Elon a ton of points yesterday by rudimentary lapses in coverage.

Elon 35, The Citadel 28
Box Score



Brelynd Cyphers' 30-yard touchdown run with 6:07 to play lifted Elon (1-1) to a 35-28 victory over The Citadel. The Phoenix had taken a 28-14 advantage late in the third quarter on Jaylan Thomas' second scoring run of the game, but the Bulldogs battled back to tie the contest at 28-28 with 9:10 left. The Phoenix answered with a 7-play, 75-yard drive capped by Cyphers run and then held on from there. Thomas finished with 135 yards and 2 TD's on 20 carries while Cyphers added 80 yards on 13 attempts. Elon quarterback Davis Cheek completed 14-of-23 passes for 226 yards, including a 27-yard TD strike to Kortez Weeks. Marcus Willoughby paced the Elon defense with 14 tackles, 2.0 TFL and a sack.

Braithwaite targets:

https://elonphoenix.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=5953

https://elonphoenix.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=5963

https://elonphoenix.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=6020
 
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FOOTBALL
9/9/2019 2:12:41 PM
ELON'S WILLOUGHBY HONORED AS STATS FCS NATIONAL DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK


Rob Washburn

RICHMOND, Va. (September 9, 2019) – Elon senior defensive end Marcus Willoughby has been selected as the STATS FCS National Defensive Player of the Week.

Willoughby contributed a career-high 14 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss and a sack as Elon defeated The Citadel, 35-28, last Saturday. The senior defensive end’s sack helped stop a Bulldogs’ drive late in the fourth quarter. Elon’s defense limited The Citadel’s triple-option offense to 156 yards rushing, which was its lowest total since facing Clemson in 2017, and to 225 yards overall.
 
encouraged by the way our offensive line is performing...the Spiders lead the CAA in average rushing yards per game and are 2nd in average yards per attempt...

the unit has given up no sacks...

job well done so far, hoping they saved some for the Fighting Christians...

Go Spiders!
FOOTBALL
9/9/2019 2:12:41 PM
ELON'S WILLOUGHBY HONORED AS STATS FCS NATIONAL DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK


Rob Washburn

RICHMOND, Va. (September 9, 2019) – Elon senior defensive end Marcus Willoughby has been selected as the STATS FCS National Defensive Player of the Week.

Willoughby contributed a career-high 14 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss and a sack as Elon defeated The Citadel, 35-28, last Saturday. The senior defensive end’s sack helped stop a Bulldogs’ drive late in the fourth quarter. Elon’s defense limited The Citadel’s triple-option offense to 156 yards rushing, which was its lowest total since facing Clemson in 2017, and to 225 yards overall.
 
Phoenix should load box and dare UR to pass. Potentially the game to find out which qb can pass effectively.
 
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No. 25 Elon Visits High Powered Richmond In Week 3
View Full 2019 Elon vs Richmond Coverage
Sep 9, 2019Kyle Kensing
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One week after running all over The Citadel, No. 25 Elon heads to Richmond to take on a Spiders team looking to bounce back in front of the home fans after a trip to Boston College.

Who: No. 25 Elon (1-1, 0-0 CAA) at Richmond (1-1, 0-0 CAA)

When: Saturday, Sept. 14, 6 p.m. ET

Where: Robins Stadium; Richmond, Virginia

Watch: LIVE on FloFootball

The depth of this year’s Colonial Athletic Association places particular importance on starting strong. To that end, expect Richmond and Elon to come out with midseason intensity when they meet Week 3 in the CAA opener for both.

Elon visits Richmond back in the Top 25 after rebounding emphatically from a Week 1 heartbreaker at North Carolina A&T. The Phoenix played a solid all-around game to beat The Citadel, 35-28, showing off a diverse offensive attack and stingy rushing defense.

Richmond’s back at home following its trip to ACC Country to face Boston College. The Spiders aim to rebound from the loss in their return home, and begin the process of proving doubters wrong in the conference race, as standout defensive end Maurice Jackson described.

Backfield Nightmares

Two of the premier defensive ends in the Football Championship Subdivision headline both defenses on Saturday night. Richmond’s Jackson came into 2019 a well-known commodity, named Preseason CAA Defensive Player of the Year and an All-American.

He hasn’t disappointed, either: He has nine tackles, two tackles for loss, a sack and two quarterback hurries through two games.

Elon has its own stellar defensive end in Marcus Willoughby, the STATS FCS National Defensive Player of Week 2. Willoughby’s 14 tackles were crucial in Elon shutting down The Citadel’s triple-option rushing attack, and on the season, he’s made three tackles for loss.

The opposing offensive lines will have their hands full in this one.

Change of Pace

Elon and Richmond have both mixed up their rushing looks through two weeks, with positive results. Four Spiders — Joe Mancuso, Xavier Goodall, Savon Smith and Aaron Dykes — have carried at least 11 times. All four have produced at a clip of 6.2 yards per carry or better.

The trio of the quarterback Mancuso and running backs Smith and Goodall combined for 172 of Richmond’s 215 rushing yards against a good Boston College defense, averaging between 5.1 and 7 yards per carry.

Richmond’s is the second straight prolific and multifaceted run game the Elon defense faces, but it’s a much different look than the triple option the Phoenix stymied Week 2 vs. The Citadel. Offensive coordinator Jeff Durden has an impressive resume working with dual-threat quarterbacks; Jacob Huesman passed for 64 touchdowns and rushed for 43 in his time under Durden at Chattanooga, and CAA legend Rodney Landers was electric as a two-way star for Durden at James Madison.

The Phoenix bring to Robins Stadium their own multi-dimensional offensive look, which shined in Week 2’s win. Running backs Jaylan Thomas and Brelynd Cyphers both broke off explosive runs and combined for three touchdowns, while short-yardage back De’Sean McNair ran for his third touchdown on the season.

“Real impressed with how we were able to put together the game plan and really make a big jump and improvement from Week 1 to Week 2,” said Elon coach Tony Trisciani. “We need to continue to get all three kids carries. When you can continue to rotate in fresh legs at that position, when it comes down to the end of the game in the fourth quarter and you’ve got a running back with some fresh legs who can bounce plays like that…is a big piece of that.”

In last year’s meeting, three Phoenix scored rushing touchdowns and Thomas went off for 150 yards.

Explosive Plays

When Elon beat Richmond last October, 38-28, the Phoenix scored touchdowns on runs of 18 and 22 yards, as well as passes of 60 and 30. The Phoenix averaged a whopping 29.3 yards per completion, which is 10 more than Richmond gave up last week at Boston College.

The return of a healthy Davis Cheek to the Elon lineup gives the Phoenix a varied look that can be taxing for an opposing defensive coordinator. The Spiders can sell out on the run, which North Carolina A&T did effectively in Week 1, holding Elon to less than a yard per carry.

The difficulty then becomes mitigating the damage done on explosive passing plays. Elon averaged 12.6 yards per completion, which is still a somewhat high number – that would rank about 50th in the nation currently among FCS teams. But if the rush is slowed, that’s the kind of figure that plays to the defense’s favor: More passes being thrown, more opportunities for takeaways, limiting time-consuming drives.

How much pressure Richmond can generate on Cheek is a factor. The Citadel was unable to get into the Phoenix backfield, giving Cheek time to operate. With Jackson, Colby Ritten and Caleb Brooks on the line, the Spiders have the playmakers.

UR must also limit Kortez Weeks, who is fast becoming a favorite big-play target for Cheek. Weeks has touchdown receptions of 14 and 21 yards in the first two contests.
 
What position do you play? What number are you? Tricky questions for Spider freshman Ryan Coll.

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As a tight end, 6-5, 300-pound true freshman Ryan Coll (90) usually lines up in a wing position, off the line. He also plays offensive tackle, wearing No. 72.

  • UR ATHLETICS



Ryan Coll

Simple questions require complex answers from University of Richmond freshman football player Ryan Coll.

“What position do you play?”

“What number are you?”

The 6-foot-5, 300-pound Coll is a tight end, and also an offensive tackle. He may play both when the Spiders (1-1) open CAA competition Saturday evening against visiting Elon (1-1). Coll, the tight end, wears No. 90. Coll, the tackle, wears No. 72. On the Richmond roster, Coll is listed with two numbers.

By NCAA rules, players wearing jersey numbers 50 to 79 are ineligible receivers. When Coll enters the game as a tight end, which he has done frequently so far this season, he usually sets up as a wing, a couple of yards off the line.

Coll begins game day by wearing No. 90, but jersey No. 72 waits in the Spiders’ bench area.

“Just in case,” he said.

Coll’s position-switching game plan, which he has not yet needed to execute, is to remove the No. 90 jersey and put on the No. 72 jersey if he's called upon to play offensive line. This might take a minute or two, and cause curiosity among fans who notice. But it beats wearing one jersey over another, Coll learned.

During one of UR’s scrimmages, he played some tight end and some tackle, and was going back and forth. Coll didn’t have time to switch jerseys.

“I had to just throw on 72 over 90,” said Coll. “I could barely move.”

His tight-end role, as you might surmise, is primarily as a blocking force in Richmond’s “heavy” package, though Coll played tight end at Battlefield High School in Haymarket. Catching passes for UR may be in his future, this year and beyond.

“Before I got here, (coaches) said, ‘You still might be able to play tight end,’” Coll said. “I had never played tackle. They wanted me to play tackle. That’s what I came in as, with that mindset that I was playing offensive line.”

Richmond’s top two tight ends, 6-2 redshirt junior Andrew Tsangeos and 6-3 redshirt sophomore Anthonie Powell, weigh 225 pound and 223 pounds, respectively. That's relatively light for CAA tight ends. The Spiders benefit from Coll's extra oomph.

It’s difficult to determine the quality of Richmond’s team at this stage of the season. The Spiders handled non-scholarship Jacksonville 38-19 before losing 45-13 at Boston College last Saturday.

In part because of Coll’s “heavy” contributions, UR has shown consistent ability to move the ball on the ground. The Spiders against Jacksonville ran for 320 yards (8.6 yards per attempt), their most since 2007. At BC, Richmond gained 215 rushing yards (4.9 yards per attempt).

“That’s a good sign, because we need to run the football to win this year,” said UR coach Russ Huesman.

Virginia Tech fell 35-28 at BC two weeks ago. The Hokies gained 98 rushing yards (2.3 yards per attempt).
 
Big game coming up on Saturday that will give us a great idea of where we are as a program. We are going to have to play well to beat Elon...they are a well coached group that has been a really fundamentally sound the past few seasons. I.E. we will have to earn this one. Big opportunity to start off conference play. I hope we see an organized, focused, and crisp Spider team on Saturday night (Limited penalties, good tackling, etc).
 
The line movement is a bit encouraging.

We need to win this game. Our program needs a big win and Russ needs a big win. It's been too long since we had a win of any merit.

Absolutely. If we are going to have even a decent season we have to have this game. The schedule is a gauntlet to end the season.
 
Not sure how many people actually read this board anymore since there are about ten people that actively post but wanted to share something I just read on the Richmondspiders.com game preview. Give yourself extra time to get to campus tomorrow.....

Spider fans should take note for this game. An event on Bandy Field Saturday September 14, 2019, will cause the closure of Three Chopt Road between Kensington Avenue and Honaker Road from 8 AM until 10 PM. Fans coming to campus for the football game are encouraged to use alternate routes to enter campus (River Road entrance best option). Additional police officers and detour signs will be in place to assist with accessing campus during the road closure. Traffic delays along Patterson Avenue and Three Chopt Road are expected.
 
So I guess the word is out that we found Paul Blake to takeover at QB for this game
 
The positive thing today going into this game is that we think we have a great chance to win
This is a big step up from last year when we just showed up and hoped for a win
Go Spiders
 
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