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Post by hchoops on Sept 4, 2016 11:12:27 GMT -5
True, but the question is "how hurt is he ?"
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Sept 4, 2016 21:52:10 GMT -5
On the Morgan State website, the report on the game refers to our receiver by the name Flaherty Brend. I kid you not
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Post by rgs318 on Sept 5, 2016 7:57:53 GMT -5
Here is the story from the Morgan State website:
BALTIMORE, Md. -- The debut game of Morgan State interim head coach Fred T. Farrier wasn't what he hoped for. The Bears hung in there early and often in the first half. But the mistakes Morgan State made multiplied in their 51-24 loss to Holy Cross at Hughes Stadium this afternoon. "It's always tough to lose the first game of the season," said Farrier. "There are some good things that we did. Some things we definitely have to clean up. We had way too many pre-snap penalties. There were too many unforced errors. We had way too many penalties to have a chance to beat a good football team."
It was a back and forth affair early. Holy Cross (1-0) got on the board first on Gabe Guild's five yard touchdown run to get on top 7-0 with 11:22 remaining in the first quarter. The Bears answered back with Alex Raya's 22-yard field goal to cut the deficit to 7-3 with 4:45 left. Then Orlando Johnson scored the first of his two touchdowns on the day with a 13-yard run up the middle with 29 seconds left. That run gave Morgan State the lead at 10-7.
It didn't take long for the Crusaders to fight back as quarterback Peter Pujals threw the first of his three touchdowns to Flaherty Brend for a 17-yard score with 13:33 remaining in the second quarter. That score helped give Holy Cross a 14-10 advantage. Pujals completed 22 of 38 passes for 240 yards, three touchdowns and two interceptions on the day.
Morgan struck back by ending a 12-play drive with a one yard touchdown run by Orlando Johnson with 9:28 left in the first half to give the Bears a 17-14 lead. "Orlando Johnson did some really good things," said Farrier about his senior running back. "We were excited to get Herb [Walker] back, and one of the good things for us is we have three running backs that are pretty good. They're all pushing each other. They're really good friends with each other. As coaches, we have to find a way to mix it up and get all those guys touches. The guy who has the hot hand may change from game to game. Orlando did a phenomenal job stepping in." Johnson carried the ball 10 times for 72 yards and two touchdowns on the day, including 209 all-purpose yards for Morgan State (0-1).
It got ugly from there as Holy Cross scored 30 unanswered points. It started with a botched snap at the Morgan 8 yard line that sailed out of the endzone for a safety, cutting the Bears' advantage to 17-16 with five minutes left in the first half. The Bears turned the ball over twice in the game. But it was the penalties that hurt the Bears the most as they were called for 14 of them for 115 yards compared to only five for 50 yards for Holy Cross.
The Bears pressured Pujals for most of the first half forcing those two interceptions. "Pujals is one of the premier quarterbacks in this level," Farrier said. "I thought our defensive coaches had a really good game plan in terms of identifying what we thought he would do. A lot of the things we wanted to keep in front [of us] and tackle. When we were tackling, we had it under control. When we got a little bit fatigued, or whatever happened, we started missing tackles and it became a little more explosive."
The run ended when Ladarious Spearman (5 rec., 83 yds) caught a 25-yard touchdown pass from Chris Andrews with 9:10 remaining in the game to cut the deficit to 44-24. Andrews completed his quarterback debut for the Bears by completing 21-of-34 passes for 228 yards, including a TD and an interception.
Diquan Walker ended the scoring with a 61-yard TD run 15 seconds later on the first play of Holy Cross' drive.
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Post by nycrusader2010 on Sept 5, 2016 8:02:07 GMT -5
Any video highlights?
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Post by rgs318 on Sept 5, 2016 8:05:38 GMT -5
I hoped we could get some on the HC website, but so far no luck.
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Post by hc6774 on Sept 5, 2016 9:51:37 GMT -5
Any sense of who played, seniors/juniors v sophs/frosh?
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Post by breezy on Sept 5, 2016 10:07:51 GMT -5
Go to the Final Statistics in the box in the HC web site story about the game, or go to the Football Schedule and click on "Stats" for the MS game --
Then scroll down to the Participation Report, where it lists the starters and all the other players who played in the game.
My recollection is that the only freshmen who played were Miles Alexander, Dominic Cozier and Alex Johnson. (I consider this to be a good thing -- it means we have upperclassmen playing at every position, and do not have to depend on inexperienced freshmen to filll any gaps. I suspect that more freshmen will get opportunities to play as the season progresses.)
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Sept 5, 2016 10:37:28 GMT -5
Go to the Final Statistics in the box in the HC web site story about the game, or go to the Football Schedule and click on "Stats" for the MS game -- Then scroll down to the Participation Report, where it lists the starters and all the other players who played in the game. My recollection is that the only freshmen who played were Miles Alexander, Dominic Cozier and Alex Johnson. (I consider this to be a good thing -- it means we have upperclassmen playing at every position, and do not have to depend on inexperienced freshmen to filll any gaps. I suspect that more freshmen will get opportunities to play as the season progresses.) I'm really interested in Miles. He got 5 carries towards the end of the game--if anyone who was at the game has any insights into how he looked we'd love to hear them
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Post by Sons of Vaval on Sept 6, 2016 12:12:31 GMT -5
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Post by rgs318 on Sept 6, 2016 15:36:15 GMT -5
Thanks, SoV. Impressive. I wonder why no highlights from HC on the college site???
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Post by sarasota on Sept 6, 2016 16:33:00 GMT -5
What was the source of this video? If there was a video feed of the game we could have picked it up. Strange that the HC game website showed that there would be a video and then--during the game--that was removed. Strange.
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Post by Ray on Sept 6, 2016 16:51:52 GMT -5
That doesn't look like a video feed. Maybe a local tv news-type on the sidelines?
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Post by sarasota on Sept 6, 2016 23:29:02 GMT -5
Then why was the audio synced with the video on the touchdown play? And the camera angle was from elevation. So didn't look like a news clip.
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Sept 7, 2016 7:43:20 GMT -5
Morgan State highlights.
These appear to have been from the video broadcast feed (that never aired).
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Post by JRGNYR on Sept 7, 2016 7:56:22 GMT -5
What was the source of this video? If there was a video feed of the game we could have picked it up. Strange that the HC game website showed that there would be a video and then--during the game--that was removed. Strange. Very easily could have been a technical issue that prevented the video presentation of the game. And you can't just "pick up" a video feed, you have to have permission. It was likely removed for a reason. You have to understand that when HC is on the road, HC has ZERO control over the video feed unless they pay to provide one themselves - and they aren't going to do that. That's not the industry standard.
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Post by JRGNYR on Sept 7, 2016 7:57:01 GMT -5
Then why was the audio synced with the video on the touchdown play? And the camera angle was from elevation. So didn't look like a news clip. That's easy to do with the right software. Import the video, import the audio, match them up on tracks. Done.
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Post by sader1970 on Sept 7, 2016 8:09:14 GMT -5
Haven't we seen videos of the hockey win against Minnesota with a dubbed audio from the WCHC or local Worcester radio? While I could not do it, I know people who could without difficulty.
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Post by JRGNYR on Sept 7, 2016 8:14:06 GMT -5
Haven't we seen videos of the hockey win against Minnesota with a dubbed audio from the WCHC or local Worcester radio? While I could not do it, I know people who could without difficulty. Precisely.
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Post by sarasota on Sept 7, 2016 10:27:49 GMT -5
JRGNYR said: "You have to understand that when HC is on the road, HC has ZERO control over the video feed unless they pay to provide one themselves - and they aren't going to do that. That's not the industry standard."
I believe there is a contract between the two schools for every game. It is within that contract that there could be a provision requiring the home school to provide a working video feed along with a financial penalty for non compliance.
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Post by JRGNYR on Sept 7, 2016 12:05:21 GMT -5
JRGNYR said: "You have to understand that when HC is on the road, HC has ZERO control over the video feed unless they pay to provide one themselves - and they aren't going to do that. That's not the industry standard." I believe there is a contract between the two schools for every game. It is within that contract that there could be a provision requiring the home school to provide a working video feed along with a financial penalty for non compliance. Theoretically that "could" happen but it never will. Do you see Holy Cross making that ask of UConn, BC, Syracuse or Navy?
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Post by sarasota on Sept 7, 2016 12:37:26 GMT -5
Why not? I see that becoming a standard provision in such contracts. The constituency for such a provision is the players' parents, relatives, friends, coaches as well as alums, fans, etc., who may live hundreds or thousands of miles away from the game's location. My guess is now most schools have potential feeds produced by their conference, their local TV station, a cable or broadcast network or an outsource individually contracted.
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Sept 7, 2016 17:36:49 GMT -5
Why not? I see that becoming a standard provision in such contracts. The constituency for such a provision is the players' parents, relatives, friends, coaches as well as alums, fans, etc., who may live hundreds or thousands of miles away from the game's location. My guess is now most schools have potential feeds produced by their conference, their local TV station, a cable or broadcast network or an outsource individually contracted. Yes, but you overlook that rights are often exclusive. For example, a UNH game broadcast by NESN, and if there is no streaming, and you don't get NESN in FL:you are plain out of luck. If I pay through the nose for an expanded sports bundle, which gives me the Big Ten network, then the Big Ten network doesn't live-stream Michigan's game with Eastern Michigan for free. The Big Ten network charges an average of 0.39 cents a month, has 79 million subscribers, and annual revenue of $370 million. The SEC network has annual revenue of $546 million.
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Post by sarasota on Sept 7, 2016 18:11:46 GMT -5
#1 All contracts are negotiable. #2 The schools have to value streaming and factor that into their negotiating, although smaller programs don't have much leverage with the media.
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Sept 7, 2016 18:18:54 GMT -5
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Post by sarasota on Sept 7, 2016 19:58:44 GMT -5
PP- irrelevant
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