Marshall has proven to be a second half team under coach Doc Holliday.
Not the last 30 minutes of a game. Rather, the final six games of a season.
Just as they were at this point last season, the Thundering Herd are 2-4 through the first half of 2012. That includes a 1-1 record in Conference USA — just like last year.
But each of Holliday’s first two seasons saw Marshall finish with four wins in its final six regular season games. The Herd finished 5-7 in 2010, but improved to 7-6 last year, earning a bowl bid that turned out to be a win over Florida International in the St. Petersburg Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl.
To hear quarterback Rakeem Cato talk, nothing short of a 6-0 run will be acceptable.
“It’s very frustrating,” he said. “I’ve never been a loser in my life. I’ve always had the passion for winning and I know all the players on our team do.
“We have to stop saying that we will get them next series or on the next drive. It’s time right now. We have to start winning now.
“We have no more room for losing at all.”
The Herd has a well-placed bye week before visiting Southern Miss on Oct. 20. Holliday said he will give the players a few days off before getting back to work.
There will be plenty of time to focus on the Golden Eagles, who have struggled to an 0-5 start under first-year coach Ellis Johnson. More pressing for now, however, will be working on finding a way to improve a few areas that have contributed to the Herd’s two-win start.
n Stopping the run. Marshall is 10th in C-USA against the run, allowing 229 rushing yards per game. Tulsa ran for 250 against the Herd, carrying on 53 of 70 total offensive plays.
n Turnovers. The Herd has turned the ball over 12 times — six fumbles, six interceptions — and has gained just five. The turnovers have often proved deadly — two interceptions and a pair of fumble recoveries have been returned for touchdowns.
n Finishing. In order to be taken seriously as a true conference contender, Marshall has to win the close games. True, the Herd did survive an overtime shootout at Rice, but the loss to Ohio was decided by a Bobcat interception in the end zone, and the Herd could have tied the game against Tulsa but turned the ball over on downs twice in the final 3:32.
“(The players) fight and get after it, but it’s all about winning football games,” Holliday said. “Here at Marshall, we expect to win those games. We have to find a way to finish games and find a way to win in the end. We didn’t do that today.”
Cato, only a sophomore, is taking it upon himself to get the players all on the same page.
“We have to win not only for ourselves, but for the (fans),” Cato said. Win for the people in the stands. They don’t have to come to our games. We are doing this for them. I don’t think people realize that. We play for the ‘M’ on the side of our helmets. Sooner or later we have to win. We have to win for those people or they aren’t going to come to our games.”
“Our whole side (East Division) is still wide open,” Holliday said. “We start with Southern Miss in two weeks and go right down the line. These are good kids. They are going to come back, they are going to go to work and work extremely hard. We’ve got a lot of football left to play.”
— E-mail: gfauber@
register-herald.com
Today's Sports Front
After bye, Herd looks for another late surge
- Today's Sports Front
-
-
A dream start, nightmare end
Lightning on the horizon brought Wednesday's final game of the state softball tournament to an end.
The James Monroe Lady Mavericks had felt a shock long before that. -
One step away from Charleston
A trip to Charleston — with a lot more on the agenda than a tour of the capitol building and a shopping spree at Charleston Town Center — will be up for grabs tonight for three area teams that are one win away from punching their ticket to the WVSSAC State Baseball Tournament at Appalachian Power Park.
-
Tanner is Summers County coach
After weeks of controversy, it appears Summers County High School officially has a new football coach.
-
WVU baseball changes up pitching lineup for Big 12 Championship
Randy Mazey’s attention has been on everything but baseball in recent days, as the West Virginia University coach has been out in front of his team’s effort to help the tornado victims in Oklahoma, where his team has been this week preparing for the Big 12 Baseball Championships, which begin today at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Okla.
-
Woodrow downs defending AAA champs
It’s a play that Woodrow Wilson has practiced everyday this season and has rarely had to utilize.
It’s a good thing the Flying Eagles did practice it; it saved their season and led to a 2-1 victory over defending state champion Princeton. -
No repeat for Warriors
Independence has been on a tear offensively the entire month of May. It didn’t stop Tuesday, even against Wyoming East ace Derek Thornton.
The Patriots led 5-0 after two innings, and Brian Sexton — backed by that very offense and some sparkling defense — gutted out a complete game in a 7-5 win in the Class AA Region 3 semifinals Tuesday night. -
’Hounds hold off upset bid from Man Hillbillies
Valley’s potent offense never came to life, but the Greyhounds are still alive.
Valley (22-7) — with several players hitting .400 or better this season — could muster just three singles against underdog Man (6-20-1) in one of two Class A Region 3 baseball semifinals Tuesday, but the ’Hounds manufactured two runs in the crucial fifth inning to finally go ahead of the stubborn Hillbillies and escape with a 3-2 victory. -
WVU baseball team helps tornado victims
West Virginia University head baseball coach Randy Mazey was having lunch at an Oklahoma City restaurant Monday afternoon, keeping a close watch on the television set.
With every passing minute, the tornado that devastated the Oklahoma town of Moore, was moving closer and closer to his location and its path was being documented by a local television station. At one point, the coach even looked out the window to see if he could see the approaching funnel. -
Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship Format Changed
In the wake of this week’s devastating storm in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, the Big 12 Conference is postponing the start of the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship. No. 3 seeded WVU scheduled to take on Kansas at 4 p.m. (Central) on Thursday.
-
Patriots, Warriors meet in anticipated matchup
The matchup many people expected will take place today.
- More Today's Sports Front Headlines
-



