All Sports Schedule

NCAA FCS Second Round: No. 4 Seed Old Dominion vs. Coastal Carolina

Nov. 28, 2012

GAME 12:
Second Round of NCAA FCS Playoffs
Saturday, December 1, 2012 - 2 p.m. (EST)
Foreman Field at S.B. Ballard Stadium - Norfolk, Va.
No. 4 Seed Old Dominion Monarchs (10-1, 7-1 CAA) vs.
Coastal Carolina Chanticleers (8-4, 5-1 Big South)

TV: ESPN3

(John Sadak - Play-by-Play; Jay Walker - Color Analyst)

RADIO: ESPN Radio 94.1 FM (Hampton Roads);WZEZ-FM - EZ 100.5 FM (Richmond) 
(Ted Alexander - Play-by-Play; Andy Mashaw - Color Analyst; Rich Radford - Sideline)

LIVESTATS:ODU In-Game

VIDEO: ESPN3

CAA WEEKLY COACHES TELECONFERENCE AUDIO: 
- Old Dominion: Bobby Wilder


ODU WEEKLY PRESS CONFERENCE VIDEO: Available on Monarch Media

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OLD DOMINION                  Coastal Carolina
Head Coach Bobby WilderHead Coach Joe Moglia
RosterRoster
StatsStats
Schedule/ResultsSchedule/Results
Depth ChartDepth Chart
Game NotesGame Notes
CAA Notes CAA Notes
NCAA StatsNCAA Stats
Media GuideMedia Guide












THE QUICK HITS:

  • • Old Dominion finished the regular season winning five-straight games to finish in first place in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA).  

    • The Monarchs earned the No. 4 seed and a bye in the FCS Playoffs.  ODU plays Coastal Carolina, a 24-14 winner over Bethune-Cookman, on Saturday, Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. 

    • ODU defeated James Madison 38-28 Saturday night in Harrisonburg.  The Monarchs trailed 21-10 at halftime but outscored the Dukes 28-7 in the second half to finish 7-1 in the CAA.  ODU wins the league but is ineligible for the leagues automatic bid to the FCS playoffs.

    •  The Monarchs lead all FCS schools in Total Offense (538.27), and rank second in passing offense (382.00) and in scoring offense (44.45). 

    • Sophomore quarterback and Walter Payton candidate Taylor Heinicke leads the nation in passing yards per game with 378.00, passing yards, 4,158, total offense, 412.27, points responsible for, 24.18 and touchdown passes with 35.

    • With his 357 yards in the win at JMU, Heinicke became just the 18th quarterback in FCS history to throw for 4,000 yards in a season.  He is currently 13th with 4,158 yards in a season.  Just 10 yards away from passing Towson's Joe Lee for 12th.  He passed former NFL quarterbacks Jamie Martin (Weber State), Neil Lomax (Portland St.) and John Friesz (Idaho) on the list.  He broke the 4,000 yard mark with his 59-yard TD pass to Antonio Vaughan.


COMPARE & CONTRAST:

ODUTEAM Coastal Carolina

44.5

- SCORING - 34.2

28.4

- SCORING DEFENSE - 25.5

156.3

- RUSHING -200.2

161.4

- RUSHING DEFENSE -183.7

4.2

- AVG./RUSH -5.0

29

- RUSH TDs -26

340-498-13

- COMP-ATT-INT -232-362-7

382.0

- PASSING -229.1

228.5

- PASSING DEFENSE -

219.7

35

- PASS TD -

23

538.3

- TOTAL OFFENSE -

429.2

389.8

- TOTAL DEFENSE -

403.3

5921-912

- TOTAL OFFENSE/PLAYS -

5151-840

20.7

- KICKOFF RETURN AVG. -

21.9

13-82

- INTERCEPTIONS -

14-240

29:21

- TIME OF POSSESSION -

28:41

85-168 (51%) 

- 3RD DOWN CONV. 

82-166 (49%)

22-29 (76%) 

- 4TH DOWN CONV. -

4-13 (31%)

32-254

- SACKS BY YARDS -

18-111

10-12 (83%) 

- FIELD GOALS - ATT. -

10-14 (71%)

61-61 (100%) 

- PATs - ATT. -

45-47 (100%)

 INDIVIDUAL (2011)

Taylor Heinicke - 378.0

- PASSING YARDS -

Aramis Hillary - 210.3

Taylor Heinicke - 35

- PASSING TDs -

Aramis Hillary - 18

Tyree Lee - 68.3

- RUSHING YARDS -

Jeremy Height - 69.3

T. Heinicke/T. Lee - 8

- RUSHING TDs -

Jeremy Height - 10

Nick Mayers - 63

- RECEPTIONS -

Matt Hazel - 52  

Nick Mayers - 89.1

- RECEIVING YARDS

Matt Hazel - 53.7

Nick Mayers - 13

- RECEIVING TDs -

M. Hazel/D. Bennett - 6

Craig Wilkins - 77

- TACKLES -

Quinn Backus - 131

Craig Wilkins - 5.5

- SACKS -

Quinton Davis - 4.5

Craig Wilkins - 12.0

- TACKLES FOR LOSS -Q. Backus/M. McClure - 8.0

Three tied with two

- INTERCEPTIONS -

Dontavias Johnson - 4

Nick Mayers- 5.4

- PUNT RETURN AVG. -

Nic Mastromatteo - 12.1

Colby Goodwyn - 21.8

- KICK RETURN AVG.

Tre Henderson - 29.1

RISING UP THE RANKS:  

It took the ODU Football Monarchs until year three and 27 games to receive its first Top 25 ranking on October 3, 2011, coming in at No. 21 in The Sports Network Poll.  Looking at other recent start-up programs, it took Coastal Carolina 32 games to achieve a national ranking when they came in at No. 24 in The Sports Network Poll in their third year on Nov. 8, 2005.  That season the Chanticleers finished 9-2 and were the Big South co-champions.  The Monarchs enter Saturday ranked No. 3 in the FCS Coaches Poll and No. 3 in The Sports Network Poll.

WELCOME TO THE TOP 25:

The Football Monarch have been a member of the Top-25 for the last 18 weeks in the The Sports Network Poll and the last 17 weeks of the FCS Coaches Poll dating back to last season.  ODU has been a member of the Top-10 for the last 14 weeks dating back to last season.

ODU FOOTBALL IN THE POLLS

The Sports Network FCS Coaches

Week One: RV NR

Week Two: RV NR

Week Three: RV NR

Week Four: RV RV

Week Five: RV RV

Week Six: 21 RV

Week Seven: 18 22

Week Eight: 21 22

Week Nine: 15 16

Week Ten: 12 12

Week Eleven: 11 11

Week Twelve: 10 9

Post-Season/Final 10 10

2012 Preseason 8 6

Week Two: 7 5

Week Three: 6 4

Week Four: 5 5

Week Five: 4 4

Week Six: 4 4

Week Seven: 3 3

Week Eight: 7 8

Week Nine 6 7

Week 10 5 5

Week 11 4 4

Week 12 4 4

Week 13 3 3


Complete TSN Poll

Complete FCS Coaches Poll


Heinicke Named CAA Offensive Player of the Year

 ODU sophomore quarterback was named the CAA's Offensive Player of the Year.  Heinicke led the way for ODU as the Monarchs had 10 players on the all-conference squad.

• Heinicke was named first-team quarterback, while Nick Mayers joined him on the first-team as a wide receiver.  Defensive tackle Chris Burnette earned first-team accolades as did kicker Jarod Brown and punter Jonathan Plisco.

• Wide receiver Antonio Vaughan, offensive lineman David Born and linebacker Craig Wilkins earned second-team honors while left tackle Jack Lowney and defensive tackle Dominique Guinn-Bailey received third-team honors.

ODU All-CAA Honorees

First-Team

QB - Taylor Heinicke

WR - Nick Mayers

DL - Chris Burnette

PK - Jarod Brown

P - Jonathan Plisco

Second-Team

WR - Antonio Vaughan

OL - David Born

LB - Craig Wilkins

Third-Team

OL - Jack Lowney

DL - Dominique Guinn-Bailey

Offensive Player of the Year

Taylor Heinicke

Heinicke Making History

• ODU quarterback Taylor Heinicke leads the nation in passing yards per game, passing yards, total offense, points responsible for and touchdown passes.

• His high accolades don't stop there, his 4,158 passing yards is the 13th most in a single-season by an FCS quarterback and his total offensive yards on the season is the fifth most in FCS history.

Single-Season Passing Yards

Player, Team year yards

1. Steve McNair, Alcorn State 1994 4,863

2. Dustin Long, Sam Houston St. 2004 4,588

3. Willie Totten, Miss. Valley St. 1984 4,557

4. Bruce Eugene, Grambling 2002 4,483

5. Cameron Higgins, Weber St. 2008 4,460

6. Chris Lum, Lehigh 2011 4,378

7. Bruce Eugene, Grambling 2005 4,360

8. Brett Gordon, Villanova 2002 4,305

9. Joe Flacco, Delaware 2007 4,264

10. Martin Hankins, SE Louisiana 2004 4,240

11. Dave Dickenson, Montana 1995 4,176

12. Joe Lee, Towson 1999 4,168

13. Taylor Heinicke, Old Dominion 2012 4,158

14. Jamie Martin, Weber St. 1991 4,125

15. Jeremy Moses, SF Austin 2009 4,124

16. Neil Lomax, Portland St. 1980 4,094

17. John Friesz, Idaho 1989 4,041

18. Jeremy Moses, SF Austin 2008 4,026

19. Bo Levi Mitchell 2011 4,009

20. Erik Meyer, Eastern Washington 2005 4,003

Single-Season Passing Yards Per Game

Player, Team year yards PER GAME

1. Willie Totten, Miss. Valley St. 1984 455.7

2. Steve McNair, Alcorn St. 1994 442.1

3. Martin Hankins, SE Louisiana 2004 385.5

4. Dave Dickenson, Montana 1995 379.6

5. Joe Lee, Towson 1999 378.9

6. Taylor Heinicke 2012 378.0

Single-Season Total Offense

Player, Team year yards

1. Steve McNair, Alcorn St. 1994 5,799

2. Bruce Eugene, Grambling 2002 5,018

3. Dustin Long, Sam Houston St. 2004 4,576

4. Willie Totten, Miss. Valley St. 1984 4,572

5. Taylor Heinicke, Old Dominion 2012 4,535

Single-Season Total Offense Yards Per Game

Player, Team year yards PER GAME

1. Steve McNair, Alcorn St. 1994 527.2

2. Willie Totten, Miss. Valley St. 1984 457.2

3. Taylor Heinicke, Old Dominion 2012 412.2

4. Jamie Martin, Weber St. 1991 394.3

5. Bruce Eugene, Grambling 2002 394.3


IN OPENERS:

Old Dominion improved to 3-1 all-time in season openers in week one:

Old Dominion In Season Openers:

9/5/2009 - vs. Chowan W, 36-21

9/4/2010 - vs. Jacksonville L, 25-35

9/3/2011 - vs. Campbell W, 41-14 

9/1/2012 - vs. Duquesne W, 57-23

Old Dominion is currently 4-0 all-time in road openers including the week two win at Hampton:

Old Dominion In Road Openers:

9/19/2009 - at Jacksonville W, 28-27

9/11/2010 - at Campbell W, 35-21

9/10/2011 - at Georgia State W, 40-17

9/8/2012 - at Hampton W, 45-7

Old Dominion improved to 1-1 in CAA Opener with the the week four win over New Hampshire:

Old Dominion In CAA Openers:

9/24/2011 - at #7/6 Delaware L, 17-27

9/22/2012 - vs. #18/19 New Hampshire W, 64-61

Old Dominion improved to 2-0 in CAA Home Openers with the week four win over New Hampshire:

Old Dominion In CAA Home Openers:

10/1/2011 - vs. #20 UMass W, 48-33

9/22/2012 - vs. #18/19 New Hampshire W, 64-61

Old Dominion improved to 1-1 in CAA Road Openers with the wek five win at Richmond:

Old Dominion In CAA Road Openers:

9/24/2011 - at #7/6 Delaware L, 17-27

9/29/2012 - at Richmond, W 45-37


BY THE QUARTERS:

Old Dominion is currently outscoring its opponents 489-312.  The Monarchs have outscored its opponents 127-61 in the first quarter, 125-65 in the third, 101-70 in the fourth and 136-116 in the second quarter.


ACTIVE TOUCHDOWN CAREER LEADERS:

With his 35 touchdowns on the year, sophomore Taylor Heinicke is currently 10th among active quarterbacks in career touchdowns.  Heinicke is the youngest member of the list.

Name, School: Year Career TDs

1. Mike Piatkowski, Drake Sr. 76

2. Zach Lewis, Morehead St. Sr. 72

3. Matt Brown, Illinois St.* Sr. 71

    Casey Brockman, Murray St. Sr. 71

5. DeNarius McGhee, Montana St.* Jr. 69

6. Derek Carr, Tenn.-Martin Sr. 69

7. Jimmy Garoppolo, Eastern Ill. Jr. 65

8. Sean Patterson, Duquesne Sr. 63

9. Brad Sorensen, Southern Utah Sr. 61

10. Taylor Heinicke, Old Dominion* So. 60

11. Mason Mills, San Diego Jr. 58

12. Jeff Sinclair, Robert Morris Sr. 57

13. Brad Attaway, Stephen F. Austin Jr. 57

14. Kurt Hess, Youngstown St. Jr. 53

15. T.J. Pryor, Eastern Ky. Sr. 51

* Team in FCS Playoffs

ACTIVE TACKLE CAREER LEADERS:

Redshirt senior linebacker Craig Wilkins captured 10 tackles in last weekend's victory over the Dukes and is ninth on the all-time active career tackle leaders list and 12th on the all-time active career solo tackles list.  

TOTAL TACKLE CAREER LEADERS

Name, School, Pos: Year Solo Tackles

1. Matt Evans, New Hampshire, LB* Sr. 449

2. Aaron Archie, Indiana St., LB Sr. 424

3. Jordan Ridley, Butler, LB Sr. 407

    Robert McCabe, Georgetown, LB Sr. 407

5. Jacolby Washington, Indiana St., LB Sr. 388

6. Paul Worrilow, Delaware, LB Sr. 377

7. Blake Peiffer, Southeast Mo. St., LB Sr. 359

8. Keith Pough, Howard, LB Sr. 349

9. Craig Wilkins, Old Dominion* Sr. 327

10. Jody Owens, Montana St., DB* Sr. 326

11. Darius McMillan, Richmond Sr. 325

12. Rock Williams, Western Carolina, LB Sr. 319

* Team in FCS Playoffs

ACTIVE SOLO TACKLE CAREER LEADERS:

Name, School, Pos: Year Solo Tackles

1. Matt Evans, New Hampshire, LB* Sr. 256

2. Darnell Taylor, Sam Houston St., DB* Sr. 210

3. Keith Pough, Howard, LB Sr. 209

4. Paul Worrilow, Delaware Sr. 195

5. Robert McCabe, Georgetown, LB SR 188

6. Michael Martin, Fordham, LB Sr. 182

7. Jody Owens, Montana St., DB* Sr. 180

8. Aaron Archie, Indiana St., LB Sr. 179

9. Derek Rose, Northwestern St., LB Sr. 178

10. Kenneth Jenkins, Sam Houston St., DB* Sr. 177

11. Jacolby Washington, Indiana State, LB Sr. 173    

12. Blake Peiffer, SE Mo. State Sr. 171

     Craig Wilkins, Old Dominion, LB* Sr. 171

* Team in FCS Playoffs

    

ACTIVE TACKLES FOR LOSS CAREER LEADERS:

1. Keith Pough, Howard, LB Sr. 72.0

2. Brent Russell, Ga. Southern, DL* Sr. 53.0

3. Joseph Lebeau, Jackson St., DL Sr. 45.0

4. Ben Obaseki, Indiana St., DL Sr. 40.0

5. Jody Owens, Montana St., DB* Sr. 39.5

6. Craig Wilkins, Old Dominion, LB* Sr. 38.5

7. Artavious Dowdell, Eastern Illinois Sr. 38.0

8. Frank Beltre, Towson, DL Sr. 37.5

9. Nolan Nearhoof, Robert Morris, DL Sr. 36.5

    Jayson DiManche, Southern Illinois, LB Sr. 36.5  

* Team in FCS Playoffs

REWRITING THE RECORD BOOKS:

Taylor Heinicke put his name all over the game passing records in the week one win over Duquesne.

- Heinicke's 492 yards passed the previous high of 407 yards by Thomas DeMarco at Monmouth on September 25, 2010 and his previous high of 373 against Richmond back on November 5, 2011.

- Heinicke's 41 completions passed the previous high of 34 which he had set against Richmond on November 5, 2011.

- Heinicke's 63 attempts replaced the previous high of 57 attempts made by Thomas DeMarco against Cal Poly in 2010 and his own previous high of 47 against Richmond on November 5, 2011.

- Henicke also set school mark with 530 yards of total offense (492 pass, 38 rush)  with a record 74 plays.  He surpasses his previous record of 421 yards of total offense against Richmond back on November 5, 2011 and the previous high of 73 plays set by former Monarch Thomas DeMarco against Cal Poly on October 9, 2010.

In week three against Campbell, Heinicke found another place to put his name.

- Heinicke reset his own school record for touchdown passes in a game with seven in the victory over Campbell. Heinicke surpassed the previous record of five TD passes in both of last year's playoff games vs. Norfolk State on Nov. 26, 2011 and at Georgia Southern on Dec. 3, 2011. 

- The quarterback's passing yards were the 10th-highest total in CAA Football history, while his seven TD-passes were one shy from equaling the league mark last done in 2004.

Then in week four against New Hampshire in the CAA Opener, the ODU, FCS, and Division I record books blew up.

PASSING YARDS IN A QUARTER: Heinicke’s 293-yard fourth quarter eclipsed the FCS record of 284 set by Western Illinois’ Sam Clemons in the second quarter versus Indiana State in 2001.

PASSING YARDS IN A HALF: Heinicke’s 480-yard second half dismantled the FCS record of 383 set by Marshall’s Michael Payton in the first half against VMI in 1991. The Division I record is 517 by Houston’s Andre Ware against SMU in 1989.

PASSING YARDS IN A GAME: As noted Saturday, Heinicke’s 730 yards bests the Division I record of Houston’s David Klingler, who threw for 716 against Arizona State in 1990, but just misses the all-division record of 736 by Sam Durley of Eureka College (DII) in a 62-55 comeback win over Knox College earlier this season. The FCS record was 624 by Weber State’s Jamie Martin against Idaho State in 1991.   

PASSES IN A GAME WITHOUT AN INTERCEPTION: Heinicke’s 79 breaks the all-division record of 77 set by Justin Peery of Division III Westminster of Missouri against MacMurray in 1998. The Division I record of 76 was shared by Eastern Michigan’s Andy Schmitt (versus Temple in 2008) and Houston’s Case Keenum (against UTEP in 2009).

TOTAL OFFENSE IN A QUARTER: Heinicke’s 293 yards in the fourth, all through the air, breaks the FCS record of 278 set by Mississippi Valley State’s Willie Totten in the second quarter against Kentucky State in 1984.

TOTAL OFFENSE IN A HALF: Heinicke had 496 after intermission (480 passing, 16 rushing), lapping the FCS record of 404 set by Stephen F. Austin’s Todd Hammel in the first quarter against Louisiana-Monroe in 1989.

TOTAL OFFENSE IN A GAME: Also as noted Saturday, Heinicke’s 791 yards (730 passing, 61 rushing) are an NCAA record, besting Klingler’s 732 (716 passing, 16 rushing) versus Arizona State in 1990. The FCS record was 668 by Jackson State’s Robert Kent (595 passing, 73 rushing) against Alabama State in 2001.

Keeping Pace: If the season were to end today, Heinicke would finish third on the all-time single-season FCS charts for passing yards per game with 390.00 and in total offense per game with 428.22


BLOCK THAT KICK:

Special teams has 25 blocks to its credit in its four seasons, including a pair of blocked PATs this season.

The first of the 2012 campaign was a blocked PAT by senior Erik Saylor in the season opener with Duquesne.  It was Saylor's second blocked PAT of his career.

Chris Burnette captured a blocked extra point attempt at Richmond in week five mid-way through the fourth quarter.  It was the first blocked PAT for Burnette who previously had denied five field goal attemps during his Monarch career.

OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN:

The captains for the Football Monarchs for the 2012 season are senior linebacker Craig Wilkins, senior defensive lineman Chris Burnette, and sophomore quarterback Taylor Heinicke. A fourth captain will be named each week during the season selected based on his leadership skills displayed leading up to each game.

Game One - Duquesne - Alex Arain
Game Two - Hampton - Devon Simmons
Game Three - Campbell - Nick Mayers
Game Four - New Hampshire - Robbie Duncan
Game Five - Richmond - none
Game Six - Villanova - Carvin Powell
Game Seven - Towson - Erik Saylor
Game Eight - Delaware - Kai Blanco
Game Nine - Georgia State - Fred Credle 
Game 10 - William and Mary - Michael Colbert 
Game 11 - James Madison - Brandon Carr 

12th MONARCH MOMENTS:

There may be 11 Monarchs on the field, but the 12th Monarch is in the stands. Thanks to all the noise of being "Loud and Proud" from the 12th Monarchs at Foreman Field at S.B. Ballard Stadium, the opposition was charged with 15 penalties so far this season, 58 in 2011, 51 in 2010, and 41 in 2009 for a total of 165 penalties.

2012 12th Monarch Stats:

Duquesne: Six Penalties
Campbell: Three Penalties
New Hampshire: Six Penalties
Villanova: Three Penalties
Delaware: Four Penalties 
William and Mary: Five Penalties 

2011 12th Monarch Stats:

Campbell: Six Penalties
Hampton: Ten Penalties
UMass: Eleven Penalties
Towson: Three Penalties

James Madison: Six Penalties
Richmond: Four Penalties
Norfolk State: Eighteen Penalties

2010 12th Monarch Stats:
Jacksonville: Seven Penalties
William & Mary: Eight Penalties 
Gardner-Webb: Five Penalties
Cal Poly: Seven Penalties
Georgia State: Nine Penalties

2009 12th Monarch Stats:
Chowan: Seven Penalties
Virginia Union: Eight Penalties
Monmouth: Three Penalties
Presbyterian: Four Penalties
Campbell: Eight Penalties
Georgetown: Five Penalties
N.C. Central: Six Penalties

2012 CAA FOOTBALL PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH (first-place votes)
1.  Towson (12)     
2.  Old Dominion (7)     
3.  James Madison (1)     
4.  New Hampshire (2)     
5.  Delaware     
6.  Maine     
7.  William and Mary     
8.  Villanova     
9.  Richmond     
10.  Rhode Island     
11.  Georgia State