Warriors want the edge
POSTED: Saturday, September 27, 2008
One thing about the Hawaii-San Jose State series, it's rarely boring.
Just once since 1988 has the winning team scored fewer than 34 points, and even the lone departure from the annual shootouts - a 13-10 Hawaii win in 2003 - provided a dramatic and controversial conclusion.
Since the Spartans held on for a 57-48 win at Aloha Stadium in 2000, Hawaii has claimed seven straight meetings, the latest a 42-35 overtime victory in which the Warriors scored twice in the final 4 minutes to force the extra period.
This time, though, the showdown could be defined by defense.
San Jose State comes to town with the top-rated defense in the Western Athletic Conference with the Warriors third after facing Florida and Oregon State in the season's first three weeks. Both offenses, meanwhile, have struggled to find the end zone, scraping bottom in the national rankings in scoring.
With the schools splitting the 31 games in the series 15-15-1, the following is a look at today's tie-breaking matchup:
When Hawaii has the ball: The Warriors will need to keep it longer than they have in their first three games.
Hawaii is last in the country in third-down conversion percentage and turnover ratio, contributing to the Warriors ranking 103rd nationally in scoring and total offense. The Warriors devoted their offense vs. defense periods during the bye week to third-down situations and will need to iron out the timing between the quarterbacks and receivers.
“;They just need to play together,”; offensive coordinator Ron Lee said. “;Now we're starting to get some continuity and I see us getting better. The last two weeks were really good for us.”;
Quarterback play has been a week-to-week issue, and the uncertainty continued as Tyler Graunke made his return from thumb and wrist injuries and shared repetitions with Inoke Funaki. Both are expected to see playing time tonight.
Led by an active front seven, the Spartans average 269.5 yards surrendered - best in the WAC so far. But SJSU coach Dick Tomey lamented a slew of missed tackles that contributed to last week's loss at Stanford.
When San Jose State has the ball: Suddenly, giving up 110 yards to Jacquizz Rodgers doesn't look so bad.
Two weeks after facing the 5-foot-7 Oregon State running back, who torched top-ranked USC for 186 on Thursday, the Warriors defense will try to contain another diminutive yet productive ballcarrier in 5-foot-8 Yonus Davis. The senior covers 6.8 yards per carry in SJSU's one-back spread offense.
“;He hits holes with power, and if he gets a crease on you he can take it to the house,”; UH head coach Greg McMackin said. “;He's a real offensive weapon.”;
But the story of the Spartans' offense so far has been the emergence of quarterback Kyle Reed. The Cal transfer was third on the depth chart in fall camp, but now leads the nation in completion percentage after going 23-for-26 against Stanford and is a threat as a runner as well.
Protecting Reed has been a concern for the Spartans, who gave up eight sacks last week, and SJSU will again be without its top receiver in Kevin Jurovich due to mononucleosis. The Spartans start a tall trio of receivers led by 6-foot-4 David Richmond (23 catches, 235 yards).
Special teams: Hawaii's struggles in kickoff and punt coverage have often led to the defense having to protect a short field.
“;We weren't doing well at all, so we moved some personnel around, changed schemes to make it a little simpler and we put a lot of time into it,”; special teams coach Ikaika Malloe said.
Several starters now have roles in the kicking game, including linebackers Adam Leonard and Brashton Satele and safety Erik Robinson. Satele is among Malloe's “;crazy guys”; who make up the wedge-buster group on the kickoff team.
Kicker Dan Kelly is coming off a 1-for-4 start and kicked well in practice this week.
Solid special teams play is among Tomey's trademarks throughout his tenures at Hawaii, Arizona and SJSU and nearly half of the Spartans' punts have pinned opponents inside their 20-yard line.
KEY MATCHUP
Hawaii tackles vs. San Jose State defensive ends
Holding the edge at the line of scrimmage could be the key to the Warriors maintaining their streak against the Spartans.
Hawaii's top three tackles have worked through various injuries lately and will be tested by SJSU ends Carl Ihenacho and Jeff Schweiger.
“;They're fast, they're athletic, they've been playing with this group for the last two years and they added a transfer from USC (Schweiger), so they're better up front than they were last year,”; UH offensive line coach Brian Smith said.
At 245 pounds, Ihenacho is the smallest of the Spartans linemen, but he leads the WAC with seven tackles for loss, including five sacks. Ihenacho and Schweiger will switch sides depending on which hash mark the ball rests on.
UH right tackle Keoni Steinhoff is playing with his broken finger taped up, while left tackle will be split between Aaron Kia and Laupepa Letuli, who will see his first action since suffering a shoulder injury against Florida in the season opener.
The return of running back David Farmer, known as a solid blocker, figures to boost the protection scheme as well.
HOW THEY COMPARE
Other Key Statistics |
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Hawaii | Category | San Jose state |
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4.7 | Rushing first downs/game | 7.8 |
|
9.7 | Passing first downs/game | 8.5 |
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2.7 | First downs by penalty/game | 1.8 |
|
2-11 | Interceptions-return yards | 4-42 |
|
42.4 | Punting avg. | 33.6 | |
24-211 | Penalties-yards | 22-134 |
|
6-4 | Fumbles-lost | 4-3 |
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15% | Third-down conversion rate | 32% | |
50% | Fourth-down conversion rate | 86% |
|
39.3 | Pts. allowed/game | 19.5 |
|
150.7 | Rush. yds. allowed/game | 92.5 |
|
217.3 | Pass. yds. allowed/game | 177.0 |
|
368.0 | Total yards allowed/game | 269.5 |
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing | A | Yds | Avg | TD |
Yonus Davis, SJSU | 43 | 293 | 6.8 | 1 |
Brandon Rutley, SJSU | 21 | 138 | 6.6 | 1 |
Jayson Rego, UH | 13 | 71 | 5.5 | 0 |
Leon Wright-Jackson, UH | 13 | 67 | 5.2 | 1 |
Passing | A | C | I | Yds | TD |
|
Kyle Reed, SJSU | 97 | 77 | 2 | 662 | 2 |
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Myles Eden, SJSU | 21 | 12 | 2 | 146 | 0 |
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Tyler Graunke, UH | 47 | 25 | 2 | 336 | 3 | |
Inoke Funaki, UH | 33 | 19 | 2 | 233 | 1 |
Receiving | Rec | Yds | Avg | TD |
David Richmond, SJSU | 23 | 235 | 10.2 | 0 |
Kevin Jurovich, SJSU | 15 | 183 | 12.2 | 1 |
Mike Washington, UH | 16 | 198 | 12.4 | 0 |
Greg Salas, UH | 10 | 143 | 14.3 | 1 |
Tackles | S | A | Tot | FL/S |
Carl Ihenacho, SJSU | 19 | 8 | 27 | 7/5 |
Christopher Owens, SJSU | 13 | 13 | 26 | 0/0 |
Travis Jones, SJSU | 10 | 14 | 24 | 1.5/0 |
Devin Newsome, SJSU | 8 | 12 | 20 | 0/0 |
David Veikune, UH | 12 | 8 | 20 | 2/0 |
Solomon Elimimian, UH | 6 | 13 | 19 | 1.5/0 |
Brashton Satele, UH | 9 | 9 | 18 | 1.5/1 |
Erik Robinson, UH | 8 | 9 | 17 | 2.5/1
|
San Jose State
2-2 (0-0 WAC)
PROBABLE STARTERS
Offense |
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WR | 8 | David Richmond | 6-4 | 200 | Sr. |
LT | 66 | John Konye | 6-4 | 270 | So. |
LG | 72 | Isaac Leatiota | 6-4 | 295 | So. |
C | 70 | Robbie Reed | 6-3 | 290 | So. |
RG | 73 | Ailao Eliapo | 6-3 | 320 | So. |
RT | 59 | Jon Moreno | 6-4 | 280 | Jr. |
TE | 9 | Jeff Clark | 6-6 | 250 | Sr. |
QB | 7 | Kyle Reed | 6-3 | 215 | Jr. |
RB | 34 | Yonus Davis | 5-8 | 190 | Sr. |
WR | 3 | Terrance Williams | 6-5 | 225 | Jr. |
WR | 88 | Jalal Beauchman | 6-4 | 220 | Jr. |
Defense |
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DE | 17 | Jeff Schweiger | 6-5 | 280 | Sr. |
DT | 90 | Jarron Gilbert | 6-6 | 280 | Sr. |
DT | 96 | Adonis Davis | 6-2 | 295 | Jr. |
DE | 95 | Carl Ihenacho | 6-3 | 245 | Jr. |
LB | 2 | Duke Ihenacho | 6-1 | 200 | So. |
LB | 14 | Travis Jones | 6-1 | 220 | Jr. |
LB | 93 | Justin Cole | 6-3 | 240 | Jr. |
CB | 21 | Coye Francies | 6-1 | 185 | Sr. |
S | 8 | Kyle Flynn | 6-2 | 205 | Sr. |
S | 24 | Devin Newsome | 5-10 | 165 | So. |
CB | 29 | Christopher Owens | 5-10 | 170 | Sr. |
Specialists |
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K | 10 | Jared Strubeck | 5-8 | 182 | Sr. |
P | 35 | Philip Zavala | 6-1 | 200 | Jr. |
KR | 15 | Brandon Rutley | 5-10 | 190 | Fr. |
PR | 15 | Brandon Rutley | 5-10 | 190 | Fr. |
H | 35 | Philip Zavala | 6-1 | 200 | Jr. |
LS | 51 | Matt Wigley | 6-2 | 230 | Jr. |
Schedule
DATE | OPP. | RESULT |
Aug. 30 | UC Davis | W, 13-10 |
Sept. 6 | at Nebraska | L, 35-12 |
Sept. 13 | San Diego State | W, 35-10 |
Sept. 20 | at Stanford | L, 23-10 |
Today | at Hawaii | |
Oct. 11 | Utah State | |
Oct. 18 | at New Mexico State | |
Oct. 24 | Boise State | |
Nov. 1 | at Idaho | |
Nov. 8 | Louisiana Tech |
|
Nov. 15 | at Nevada | |
Nov. 21 | Fresno State |
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Hawaii
1-2 (0-0 WAC)
PROBABLE STARTERS
Offense |
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Z | 89 | Malcolm Lane | 6-1 | 180 | Jr. |
H | 5 | Mike Washington | 5-9 | 170 | Sr. |
LT | 77 | Aaron Kia | 6-5 | 290 | Jr. |
LG | 63 | Brysen Ginlack | 6-2 | 310 | So. |
C | 55 | John Estes | 6-2 | 295 | Jr. |
RG | 51 | Lafu Tuioti-Mariner | 6-0 | 300 | Sr. |
RT | 78 | Keoni Steinhoff | 6-3 | 295 | Sr. |
Y | 85 | Aaron Bain | 5-8 | 190 | Sr. |
X | 1 | Greg Salas | 6-2 | 200 | So. |
QB | 6 | Tyler Graunke | 6-0 | 185 | Sr. |
or | 11 | Inoke Funaki | 5-11 | 190 | Jr. |
RB | 21 | Kealoha Pilares | 5-11 | 190 | So. |
Defense |
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DE | 94 | David Veikune | 6-3 | 265 | Sr. |
DT | 93 | Keala Watson | 6-3 | 320 | Sr. |
DT | 99 | Josh Leonard | 6-3 | 305 | Sr. |
DE | 58 | John Fonoti | 6-2 | 255 | Jr. |
STUB | 44 | Adam Leonard | 6-0 | 235 | Sr. |
MLB | 13 | Brashton Satele | 6-1 | 255 | Jr. |
BUCK | 17 | Solomon Elimimian | 6-0 | 225 | Sr. |
CB | 2 | Ryan Mouton | 5-10 | 175 | Sr. |
FS | 35 | Keao Monteilh | 5-11 | 200 | Sr. |
SS | 7 | Erik Robinson | 5-10 | 200 | Sr. |
CB | 23 | Calvin Roberts | 5-11 | 175 | Sr. |
Specialists |
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K | 86 | Dan Kelly | 6-3 | 225 | Sr. |
P | 49 | Tim Grasso | 5-11 | 210 | Sr. |
KR | 2 | Ryan Mouton | 5-10 | 175 | Sr. |
89 | Malcolm Lane | 6-1 | 180 | Jr. |
|
PR | 5 | Mike Washington | 5-9 | 170 | Sr. |
LS | 57 | Jake Ingram | 6-4 | 235 | Sr. |
H | 49 | Tim Grasso | 5-11 | 210 | Sr. |
SCHEDULE |
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DATE | OPP. | RESULT |
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Aug. 30 | at Florida | L, 56-10 |
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Sept. 6 | Weber State | W, 36-17 |
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Sept. 13 | at Oregon State | L, 45-7 | |
Today | San Jose State | ||
Oct. 4 | at Fresno State |
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Oct. 11 | Louisiana Tech |
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Oct. 17 | at Boise State |
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Oct. 25 | Nevada |
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Nov. 1 | at Utah State |
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Nov. 8 | at New Mexico State |
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Nov. 22 | Idaho |
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Nov. 29 | Washington State |
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Dec. 6 | Cincinnati |