The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

PSU safeties ready to stop Minnesota’s backs

- By Travis Johnson

Penn State will need plenty of help from Marcus Allen and fellow safety Malik Golden as the Nittany Lions try to shut down Minnesota and its two-headed rushing attack on Saturday afternoon.

STATE COLLEGE >> As an incoming freshman, Penn State safety Marcus Allen figured his transition to college football would be gradual.

Then he lowered his shoulder against bulldozing 240-pound teammate Zach Zwinak in a preseason practice and Penn State coaches realized immediatel­y they could deploy the gutsy rookie as a weapon in the box. A few weeks later, he was creeping to the line to pop Ohio State’s equally-vicious Ezekiel Elliott.

“I felt as though if I could hit Zwinak, I could hit anybody. That’s a truckload,” said Allen, now a junior. “Ezekiel Elliott, one of the best running backs out there. So having good contact with him gave me more confidence that I could play in this league.”

The Nittany Lions (2-2, 0-1 Big Ten) will need more of that from Allen and fellow safety Malik Golden against Minnesota (3-0, 0-0 Big Ten) and its twoheaded rushing attack as Penn State grasps for momentum in a season that’s soured quickly thanks to a long list of injuries.

Now without all of its starting linebacker­s, Penn State has allowed 326 rushing yards or more in two of its last three games, is coming off an embarrassi­ng loss to No. 4 Michigan and faces the conference’s fifth-best rushing offense on Saturday.

As youngsters in front of them have whiffed again and again, Allen and Golden have combined for 57 tackles. They’ll have their eyes on Minnesota’s Rodney Smith and Kobe McCrary who’ve helped the Gophers rush for just over 228 yards per game.

“You talk about missing tackles, well, typically your linebacker­s are the unit that make the majority of your tackles,” Penn State coach James Franklin said. “And we’ve lost our three starters.”

THIRD DOWN WOES >> Linebacker­s Nyeem WartmanWhi­te, Brandon Bell and Jason Cabinda entered the season with 57 combined starts. Wartman-White is out for the season and Bell and Cabinda are out for this game.

Their replacemen­ts — Manny Bowen, Jake Cooper and former walk-on Brandon Smith — have just seven combined. The inexperien­ce has shown on third down where opponents are converting nearly 40 percent of the time. QB RESOLVE >> Trace McSorley led his high school team to a 55-5 record so the 4910 beatdown to Michigan was an unfamiliar feeling for the Penn State quarterbac­k. He gathered the offense for extra film study earlier this week.

Meanwhile, Minnesota quarterbac­k Mitch Leidner is spreading the ball around and taking care of it. He’s hit at least six different receivers in each game and has thrown just one intercepti­on in his last 95 attempts dating to last season. The 6-foot-4, 230-pound quarterbac­k has also added 135 rushing yards and three touchdowns on 26 carries.

“He’s taking who is open,” Minnesota coach Tracy Claeys said. “I know as a defensive coach you can’t look at one or two guys and take them away and make them go to their third option and beat you. I think that helps you on offense. I’m pleased where the offense is at.”

LIMEGROVER REUNION >> The Gophers will reunite with Matt Limegrover, the well-liked former offensive coordinato­r and offensive line coach who has assumed the latter role at Penn State. Claeys fired Limegrover after last season and replaced him with Jay Johnson and Bart Miller, respective­ly, with a desire to re-establish a power running game and a more productive offense overall.

“It’s definitely in the backs of our minds,” tight end Nate Wozniak said of facing Limegrover’s new team, “but we’re more focused on just getting the (Governor’s Victory) Bell, or keeping it here, I should say.”

 ?? STACY BENGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Minnesota running back Rodney Smith breaks free from Colorado State linebacker Kiel Robinson during an NCAA college football game in Minneapoli­s. Penn State will to stop Minnesota’s two-headed rushing attack of Rodney Smith and Kobe...
STACY BENGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Minnesota running back Rodney Smith breaks free from Colorado State linebacker Kiel Robinson during an NCAA college football game in Minneapoli­s. Penn State will to stop Minnesota’s two-headed rushing attack of Rodney Smith and Kobe...

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