Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Resilient defense helps Sacred Hdeart to NEC final

NEC Football Championsh­ip

- By Michael Fornabaio mfornabaio @ ctpost. com; @ fornabaioc­tp

One bad week in a normal football season can spell disaster, and when that season is cut by more than half, a series of errors in Game 1 can end things before they even really start.

What Sacred Heart defensive coordinato­r Mike Cooke saw from his players instead was resilience.

“The players did a great job not panicking,” Cooke said. “They realized a lot of the mistakes were selfinflic­ted, especially thirddown situations. Third downs were very poor for us that first game.”

The Pioneers ( 2- 1) have a chance to redeem themselves against the same opponent that victimized them in the opener. They’ll visit Duquesne ( 4- 0) on Sunday at 2 p. m. ( ESPN3) in the Northeast Conference championsh­ip game with an FCS playoff spot on the line.

After Duquesne was 10- for- 15 on third down in the season opener Sacred Heart held Merrimack and LIU to a combined 3- for- 22, plus 0- for- 3 on fourth down, in the next two games ( COVID- 19 protocols at Wagner canceled a fourth game). Duquesne took that first game 30- 27, but Sacred Heart has allowed 16 points in two games since, holding both opponents to 181 yards’ offense.

“Being brutally honest, there hasn’t been one particular person standing out. It has been the entire defense,” Cooke said. “It’s been a one- game playoff every week. The guys are dedicated.” He ran through practicall­y the whole defense one- by- one. “They’ve elevated their game. They didn’t point fingers, not one person.”

Head coach Mark Nofri said not to pin that loss only on the defense. Penalties played a factor: The defense took four for 50 yards, but the rest of the

WHO: Sacred Heart at Duquesne

WHEN: Sunday, 2 p. m.

WHERE: Rooney Field, Pittsburgh

RECORDS: Sacred Heart 2- 1; Duquesne 4- 0

WATCH: ESPN3

ABOUT THE MATCHUP: These two schools split the NEC title in 2018, though Duquesne got the conference’s playoff bid. They’ll play for the title in this shortened season. Duquesne won the opener 30- 27 ( and had led 27- 12) with 125 Sacred Heart penalty yards helping out. The Pioneers, seeking their first playoff berth since back- to- back trips in 2013 and 2014, outscored two opponents 61- 16 since. Jr. RB Julius Chestnut has run for seven touchdowns and caught three of Soph. QB Marquez McCray’s five touchdown passes. For Duquesne, Soph. QB Joe Mischler is 62- for- 90 for 860 yards in four games with six touchdowns and three intercepti­ons.

UP NEXT: Automatic bid to the NCAA FCS playoffs for the winner.

— Michael Fornabaio

team had seven for 75.

“Between Game 1 and Game 2 we’ve done a much better job communicat­ing overall on defense,” Nofri said, “doing what the coaches have asked them to do, executing the game plan.”

That third- down percentage pops in the first game, but of those 15 third- down attempts for Duquesne, nine were for five yards or fewer. The Dukes converted seven of those.

“One of our main goals is to win on first down. A drive’s a lot easier when there’s a minus- yard, even a 2- yard gain on first down,” Cooke said. “A lot of guys have a lot of calls for thirdand- 1, third- and- 2. ... ( With third- and- long) you give an offensive coordinato­r fewer options to call.”

Options, the Dukes have. Nofri likes what he sees in Duquesne transfer sophomore quarterbac­k Joe Mischler, who threw for 231 yards against the Pioneers and ran for another 63. He sees something familiar in Mischler, in fact.

“To me,” Nofri said, “he’s a bigger version of what I had two years ago in Kevin Duke,” the quarterbac­k who led the Pioneers to a share of the conference title ( with Duquesne) in 2018. “He’s athletic, can throw, can run, makes good decisions.

“You’ve got a 6- 4 receiver in Cyrus ( Holder), that helps too.”

Garrett Owens, a 6- 3 graduate transfer, had been the Dukes’ top running back through the first three weeks; Billy Lucas ran 26 times last weekend against Bryant, “a pretty good 1- 2 punch,” Nofri said.

Sunday’s winner will learn its playoff opponent on April 18. ( There are six at- large spots in the 16- team tournament, too.) The Pioneers qualified in 2013 and 2014 but have not been back to the FCS playoffs since.

Nofri is already happy with the sacrifices players have made to keep themselves on the field, with only one positive case, he said, since workouts started on Jan. 25.

They’ve given themselves a chance at redemption.

“It’ll be a great challenge, Cooke said, “to right some of those wrongs from the first game.”

 ?? Sacred Heart Athletics / Contribute­d Photo ?? The Sacred Heart defense makes a tackle during a 26- 9 win over Merrimack in March in Fairfield.
Sacred Heart Athletics / Contribute­d Photo The Sacred Heart defense makes a tackle during a 26- 9 win over Merrimack in March in Fairfield.

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