Grizincatland
Well-known member
I am wondering if the wide out that was inserted into the game last year to chop down Severin Campbell is still on the roster. Did he even play another down for PSU?
I thought they played dirty the whole game, late hits, leading with the helmet, ect: I hope you kick there ass bad!!!!!BWahlberg said:The guy wasn't even a wideout, I think he was a backup safety.
Montana suffered a big injury hit in its 23-21 win at Portland State when Severin Campbell was double-teamed and suffered a broken kneecap.
The key hit came from a Viking receiver who went in motion toward the left tackle; at the snap he veered left and hit Campbell at more or less full speed, while Campbell was engaged with the PSU tackle.
It's a rare technique; nobody canvassed at UM the last couple days could remember seeing it before. The receiver - reportedly a backup defensive back - hit Campbell above the waste, so it didn't qualify as a "chop block." But the element of surprise was apparent.
"I really don't want to go there, on how the plays were," said Pflugrad. "Ethically, I just don't want to go there on what they were doing to us. Don't agree with it, so that's the end of that comment. But that's a huge hit."
Read more: http://missoulian.com/divisions/article_4c5a1be6-dd9d-11df-bd3b-001cc4c002e0.html#ixzz1aJzdeNcq" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Grizmayor said:The kid's name is Justin Lilley, freshman, 5-11, 205. He nailed Sev right in the rib cage, then about 2-3 plays later, leveled Alt the same way on a pass into the left flats. He was ticketed for clipping on Alt, but it was very close. Hermes even caught it as soon as it happened. Lilley, who looked like he was padded up pretty good, had a helluva a run at both our guys. Sev was locked up by the TE, and Alt was just about to engage the tackle when he got knocked on his side.
Pflu's right, it's legal... and an established practice. One thing for sure, it makes your DE's real leary about getting blind-sided. Watching Pierson, he actually showed damn good agility and quickness. A couple of our blitzes had the DE's fall off with the TE's and blitzed the corners. You could see that Pierson still had some safety in him, doing a good job in coverage.
albinogriz said:I'd almost forgotten how dirty the Vikings play until watching them against the cats. Only watched the first half and was reminded of it almost at the start. Chop blocking is such a dirty assed, chicken shit way to play the game and PSU is the "Master" of "Dirty".
Total Disgrace :wtf:
BWahlberg said:Portland State has 591 penalty yards after 5 games and has been flagged 62 times!
Their running back McCafferey, the leading rusher in the Big Sky and one of the best in the FCS has only 40 more rushing yards this season than the team has penalty yards!
With that kind of stat, I sure hope soilovethecats said:i'm curious if the league looks into this at all. psu is blatantly dirty. they've had what....nearly FORTY penalties in 2 games?! :shock:
and how many of those were personal fouls? we're lucky to have come away with no major injuries yesterday, but it's only a matter of time. i just hope that someone who actually matters is aware of what is going on before someones career ends because psu can't figure out how to beat teams by playing football, so they have to resort to this kind of crap.
that was a complete embarrassment yesterday. :x
Flgrizzfan said:Wasnt it these guys who sprayed their uniforms with cooking spray a few years ago too?
Flgrizzfan said:Wasnt it these guys who sprayed their uniforms with cooking spray a few years ago too?
:thumb:grizhunter said:I thought they played dirty the whole game, late hits, leading with the helmet, ect: I hope you kick there ass bad!!!!!BWahlberg said:The guy wasn't even a wideout, I think he was a backup safety.
wow that is low-down-dirty-shameSacramento St. in hot water for nonstick cooking spray on jerseys
November 15, 2002|Daily News Wire Services
Some Sacramento State football players greased their jerseys with nonstick cooking spray during their 31-24 loss at Montana last weekend, the Big Sky Conference said yesterday.
Before determining a punishment, the league and Sacramento State are trying to figure out how many players used the spray and whether coaches knew.
"We'll decide the penalty, depending upon who we find at the bottom of the pile," said Big Sky commissioner Doug Fullerton, who expected to announce his decision today. "I think it's a serious ethical breach."