Posts Tagged ‘Ty Gangi’

We started as the proverbial house afire.  Two sustained drives of 12 plays and 75 yards followed by 8 plays and 80 yards.  14 points.  I’m thinking the offense finally arrives.

Not so.

Yet, the Aztecs were seemingly dominant.  24 first downs to Nevada’s 14.  173 yards rushing to their mere 62.  Even Ryan Agnew posted better numbers than Ty Gangi:  283 passing yards and 3 tds compared to 235 yards and 2 tds.  Tell me those facts before the game and I’m looking at win number 7, not loss number 2.

Chance Bell (5.2 ypc) continues to impress.  He makes Chase Jasmin (5.3 ypc) a better runner.  Nothing like competition to fan the flames of playing time.  Congrats to Kahale Warring for an evening of 6/95 and 2 tds.  Brandon Heicklen punted the air out of the football.  6 punts for an average of 44.8 including one at the Wolf Pack 4 yard line.

Jordan Byrd dropping the punt and returning all punts for 4 lousy yards needs to be fixed.  Now.

A by and large lucky season to date given the number of freshmen and redshirt freshmen on the field at the skill positions of wide receiver and running back.  The kids have logged major minutes during the course of the season.  Granted, when Juwan Washington returns, the march of underclassmen at the running back spot stops.  While Ryan Agnew has performed admirably, I want Christian Chapman to start against UNM.  Work out the rust long before the Fresno State game.

6-2/3-1.

Go, Aztecs.

 

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Did Ty Gangi beat our defensive backs like a rug on a line?  Yes, yes he did.  Mr. Gangi was 33/54 with 3 touchdowns.  Mr. Gangi, no doubt, wrapped his throwing arm in ice after the game.  He offered the baseball equivalent of a complete game loss.  414 total passing yards will impact the elbow.  His primary wide receivers, Mr. O’Leary-Orange and Mr. Demps, ran wild among our defensive back field.  Respectively, these two enjoyed evenings of 11/214 and 5/110.  Mr. O’Leary-Orange scored not once, not twice, but on three occasions as the fog slowly drifted into the stadium.

Yet, given the incredible game offered by Rashaad Penny, the game was never in doubt.  What did Rashaad not do?  Very little.  Why not let him punt or kickoff at least once during the New Mexico game next week.  Just to see.  To sum his performance, as my cousin in Rhode Island would say, wicked good.  Each time he ran out of the Aztec backfield he averaged 9.2 yards.  Phenomenal to say nothing of the kickoff return and punt return for touchdowns.  Hats off to the offense for exceptional blocking to accompany Mr. Penny’s substantial skill.

Christian Chapman had a solid line of 15/23/0 and one touchdown for 205 yards.  He suffered the spectacle of three drops during the first half, yet his body language never betrays the shouting in his skull.  Those 15 completions were shared with nine different receivers.

Returning to the defense, specifically the backs, the second half was a great improvement upon the first half debacle whereupon time and again, Mr. O’Leary-Orange and Mr. Demps were at least three steps closer to the end zone than the Aztec dbs.  Giving up long passes of 82 and 53 yards offers plenty of opportunity for in-game improvement.  That punctuation was delivered by Trey Lomax finally holding on to an intercepted pass (he should have had at least two, probably three).

Why did Jeff Horton pull Christian Chapman for Ryan Agnew with nine minutes remaining in the second quarter?  I was full of questions.  All of which were answered when Mr. Horton returned Mr. Chapman to the field after a penalty gift of a first down.  However, the offense did reestablish momentum and self-induced disaster was avoided.  Just like the Aztec defense.

Congrats and recognition to the 29,000+ at the game.  A loud bunch.  Sounded like a few thousand more.

Finally, the penalty line of 7/75 was excessive.  We do not need to revisit that challenge with one MWC game remaining along with whichever bowl we play.  Keep our hands and emotions to ourselves.

9-2/5-2.  Here’s hoping for another double-digit win season.