Win over Hawaii was key to Utah State’s turnaround
BOISE, Idaho » Running back Robert Turbin knows exactly when and how the season turned for Utah State.
It was early November, the week before a road trip to Hawaii. The Aggies were 2-5, had lost a heartbreaker in the opener to defending national champion Auburn, were fresh off two straight defeats and seemingly on the verge of yet another disappointing season.
That’s when Turbin and a handful of other Aggies veterans decided to take matters into their own hands.
“We had a players-only meeting that week,” said Turbin, a junior and Western Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year.
“What happened was for the first time really since I’ve been at Utah State, players were kind of calling out each other. We decided during that meeting to really take accountability for our own actions, for everything that we were doing on and off the field,” Turbin said.
The collective gut check worked.
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Despite falling behind 28-7 early at Aloha Stadium, the Aggies rallied for a 35-31 win, and Turbin and his teammates haven’t lost since.
The Aggies compiled a 7-5 record, finished second in the WAC and earned the right to play Ohio in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl — the school’s first bowl appearance since 1997.
The Aggies take on Ohio today at 12:30 p.m., with an ESPN telecast.
“It’s been a great feeling ever since,” said Turbin. “We really turned it around and turned it into success. So this is just a very special moment for us.”
For Ohio, a victory today would also be special.
In five trips to the postseason, the Bobcats (9-4) have never managed to come out on top in a bowl game. Ohio was blown out by Troy last year in the New Orleans Bowl and beaten by Southern Mississippi 21-17 in the 2009 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl.
The Bobcats also have a chance to become the first team in school history to win 10 games in a season, a goal established by the team back in the early days of fall camp.
“I do know that 10 is a magic number for the program,” said coach Frank Solich, who has compiled a 49-40 record in seven seasons in Athens, Ohio. “We wanted to break down barriers this season. We wanted to be a team that doesn’t just get to bowl games, we want to win bowl games. We decided at the beginning of the year we wanted to zero in on some of the things nobody has been able to do at Ohio.”
So there is plenty at stake for the Aggies and Bobcats in a game that helps kick off college football’s bowl season.
For Utah State, it may be hard to ignore the significance the team meeting in November had on the second-half resurgence. But it would also be hard to overlook the importance of Turbin and the Aggies rushing attack.
Turbin finished the regular season with 1,416 yards and 19 touchdowns on 229 carries. He also had 16 catches for 164 yards and four touchdowns, giving him 138 points this season, seventh most all-time in the WAC.
New Mexico Bowl
Today, 9:30 a.m. (ESPN)
Bernard Pierce can’t say whether today’s New Mexico Bowl against Wyoming in Albuquerque, N.M., will be his final college game before he makes a bid for the NFL.
Either way, Temple’s junior running back is determined to make the game a special one.
“It’s not about me,” said Pierce, who totaled 1,381 yards and a school-record 25 touchdowns this season. “It’s about the team. I don’t have to impress anybody. A win is a win no matter how many points or how you win. It’s just a win.”
Pierce is part of a backfield tandem with Matt Brown that finished seventh in the country in rushing for Temple (8-4).
That’s what Wyoming (8-4) is determined to stop, said Cowboys coach Dave Christensen.
“They want to establish the run first,” he said. “I understand that. They have two backs who are very good, then they want to work in the play action.”
New Orleans Bowl
Today, 4 p.m. (ESPN)
Rocky Long and Mark Hudspeth have enjoyed charmed first seasons in their new head coaching jobs.
Long’s San Diego State and Hudspeth’s Louisiana-Lafayette each won eight games and fittingly collide in the New Orleans Bowl.
The foundation each team started the season with, however, was entirely different.
The Ragin’ Cajuns (8-4) weren’t predicted to be anywhere near bowl contention.
Instead they won eight games for the first time since Jake Delhomme was a freshman quarterback in 1993 to qualify for their first bowl game in 41 years and first ever as a Division I FBS program.
The Aztecs (8-4) are in their second straight bowl and seeking a second straight nine-win season. Long was part of last year’s SDSU staff, taking over after Brady Hoke left for Michigan.