Daily Press

CCU wants to avoid Trojan trap

- By John Zenor

The Coastal Carolina Chanticlee­rs are fresh from their first win over a top-10 team, with a shot at a Sun Belt Conference championsh­ip awaiting.

In b e t we e n , the 11th-ranked Chanticlee­rs (10-0, 7-0 Sun Belt) visit Troy (5-5, 3-3) in Alabama, trying to avoid their first slip-up of the season. It’s a sandwich game between a 22-17 win over then-No. 8 Brigham Young and the league title game versus No. 17 Louisiana-Lafayette.

Coastal Carolina coach Jamey Chadwell said managing that combinatio­n of potential distractio­ns might be the coaching staff ’s biggest challenge of the season.

“We’ve got a big challenge this week,” Chadwell said. “One with our opponent, they’re highly skilled. We’re coming off a big win and know the championsh­ip game’s ahead as well. There’s a lot we’re dealing with as well. We’re going to have to be focused.”

The Trojans are hoping to pull off a double whammy: A significan­t upset and securing a winning regular season. They’ve never hosted a team this highly ranked, and the Chanticlee­rs are just the fourth Top 25 team to visit Veterans Memorial Stadium.

Troy was blown out the past two seasons by No. 22 Boise State (56-20) and No. 22 Appalachia­n State (48-13). But they did knock off No. 17 Missouri 24-14 in 2004.

“This week is a great opportunit­y to play one of the best teams in the country at home in Coastal Carolina,” Trojans coach Chip Lindsey said. “Jamey Chadwell does a great job, and in year three you can really see the difference.

“They’ve gone f rom winning three games his first year to being undefeated this year. You can see them growing up.”

Chadwell’s complaints

The Chanticlee­rs’ coach isn’t happy that his team is having to make up the game against the Trojans while Louisiana-Lafayette enjoys a week off. Chadwell said that’s “definitely a competitiv­e advantage for them.”

“We all know Louisiana is getting a great opportunit­y to be sitting at home resting,” he said. “We’ve got to go play a game that means nothing to anybody, except us. It can only hurt us. So that was the frustratio­n from my point. At the end of the day, our job is we got to go win the game.

“It’s a respect thing, to be honest with you. Our players see who respects us and who doesn’t.”

Storming the field

Some Coastal Carolina fans celebrated on the field after the BYU game, raising concerns about heightened coronaviru­s risks.

“There was a lot of excitement,” Chadwell said. “We’ve done a good job up to this point, but that was a unique situation and circumstan­ce on Saturday, but hopefully we’ll be OK.”

Built to last

One perception about Coastal Carolina that Chadwell is eager to shoot down is that this team is a good story for pandemic times, but won’t last once college football goes back to normal.

Chadwell said he and his staff are building a program that can compete in the Sun Belt Conference year in and year out. “We don’t want to be a one-hit wonder,” he said.

Takeaways vs. BYU

Chadwell saw plenty of things for his team to correct in the win over BYU, but he was proudest of the effort his players gave against their biggest challenge of the year in the Cougars.

“If you watched, our guys laid it on the line out there and left it on the field,” Chadwell said. “That’s what we want to be known about.”

Gunnar fires away

Troy quarterbac­k Gunnar Watson is coming off one of his better games. He completed 34 of 41 passes for 297 yards and three touchdowns in a 29-0 win over South Alabama.

“Gunnar played probably as well as he has all year on Saturday,” Lindsey said.

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