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Football is back as Hornets begin spring practice.

For the Sacramento State football team, spring football in 2012 marks the beginning of a new chapter in the program’s history.

2011 was a season full of highs and lows that saw the Hornets defeat Oregon State in Corvallis, beat Montana for the first time ever, and win a game without completing a pass.  Along with those highs though, the low points saw the Hornets struggle in the kicking game, miss the playoffs, and lose the Causeway Classic at home.

The Hornets will put that all behind them though as they march into spring football, which is set to open up on Wednesday.  Spring football marks the start of position battles, players getting into playing shape, and for this year’s team, the installation of a new offense.

Along with bringing in more than 20 new recruits, Coach Marshall Sperbeck also added an offensive coordinator to his staff for the 2012 season.  He hired Paul Peterson, who spent the past four seasons with Southern Utah as the team’s passing game coordinator, quarterbacks and receivers coach.

“(Sac State is) real close to getting over the hump,” Peterson said.  “Hopefully I’m going to be a part that’s going to be consistent in competing in the Big Sky and winning championships.”

Sperbeck said that having Peterson in as an offensive coordinator would provide the biggest change for him as far as spring ball is concerned.

“I think the biggest difference is that we do have an offensive coordinator,” Sperbeck said.  “Obviously that will free me up to probably get around and be more involved with some other team responsibilities, so I’m looking forward to that.”

The Hornets will utilize spring football as a time to sort out positional battles, as well as install the new offense that Peterson will bring to the team.  According to Peterson, he and Sperbeck worked together on combining their two playbooks to make the transition as easy as possible for the players.  Even with those efforts to make the transition easier for the Hornets, there is still work to be done to get players to master the new offense.

“You start off with some basic things,” Peterson said.  “We start with formations.  We want each of our student-athletes to understand that going in; they need to know every formation so we don’t need to spend time installing that.”

Once players have the formations mastered, they’ll move on to integrating the basic concepts of the offense, and then adding to it from there.

“As far as signals go, it’s kind of a progression,” the Hornets offensive coordinator said.  “You start out simple and you can build from there.  The basic fundamentals, getting lined up, the cadence, those types of things are where you start, and then you get into the meat of the stuff and the plays.”

Peterson said that by the time spring ball is finished, he wants to have the entire playbook installed.

“Once we get to a point and figure out what we do well, we’ll build off of those plays with certain things,” he said.

The Hornets will not only need to adapt to a whole new playbook, but they’ll have to pick up the concepts of the playbook quickly and know them well as Peterson plans on having the team run a no-huddle offense that will feature more of a spread passing attack than the Hornets have used in years past.

“We’re going to go no huddle, up-tempo offense,” Peterson said.  “We’re going to have a little more emphasis on the pass than we will on the run.”

Despite more of an emphasis on the passing game, Peterson said he will not abandon the Hornets’s rushing attack.

“We’re still going to run the ball,” he said.  “I think they did that fantastic last year.  They put a lot of emphasis on the run game and they were successful at it.  That’s part of the offense that I’m super excited about.”

Something that arises with the installation of a new offense is the question about who will be conducting the Hornets’s new, no huddle attack.

According to Sperbeck, quarterback, along with every other position, is wide open heading into spring workouts.

“Every time you go into spring football, every job’s open, every position is open,” he said.  “We want to encourage our spring ball to be competitive at every position.”

For the Hornets, there are currently three players vying for the opening at quarterback following the departure of last year’s starter, Jeff Fleming.

Garrett Safron is a contender for the position after taking the reins when Fleming went down with an injury.  Safron split time with Tommy Edwards, who transferred to Occidental College, before emerging as the team’s starter.  In 5 games for the Hornets, Safron completed 24 of 57 pass attempts for 394 yards and three touchdowns.  He contributed 53 carries for 286 yards and three touchdowns on the ground.  His 286 rushing yards were good for fourth best on the team.

Another player that is eyeing the starting quarterback spot for the Hornets in 2012 is University of Nevada-Reno transfer, Mason Magleby.  Magleby saw very limited action in his three seasons at UNR.  In 16 games for the Wolfpack Magleby completed 10 of 11 passes for 109 yards and four touchdowns.

Despite his limited playing time, Sperbeck still thinks Magleby can contend for the starting quarterback spot.

“We’re excited to have him as a member of our team,” he said.  “He did some good things up at UNR…We think that he can come here and compete for the starting job.”

Another quarterback on the radar is freshman Nolan Sorensen from Buchanan High School in Clovis.  Sperbeck said that Sorensen “has a chance to develop as a guy for the future.”

Sorensen was also being recruited by Peterson while Peterson was at Southern Utah.

After weeks of meetings, the team and its new coaching staff are ready to get back on the field.  The Hornets will go without pads for their first two practices, and will only wear helmets.  Their third day they will go into full pads.  After that, the team will be practicing four days per week for the next three weeks before the final Spring Game on April 21st at 9 a.m.

“I can’t wait to see how these guys perform with the football,” Peterson said with a smile on his face.  “We’ve had some team runs where we’re out there running around; I’ve seen them in the weight room and I’m super excited about the caliber of student-athletes that we have.  I’m getting to know each one of them more and more and I’m excited to get out and play some football.”

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Hornets and others hope to shine at Sac State Pro Day

Sacramento—With the NFL Draft Combine over and the NFL Draft starting April 26, teams will turn their scouting focus to Pro Days for a closer look at potential NFL prospects.

Sacramento State will hold a Pro Day at Hornet Stadium on Tuesday at 10 a.m., and will be open to the public.  A Pro Day consists of various football related workouts, as well as tests of overall athleticism.  The workouts will feature athletes from Sacramento State, UC Davis and a few other schools.

For the Hornets, the participating athletes will be defensive end Zack Nash, wide receivers Brandyn Reed and Chase Deadder and quarterback Jeff Fleming.

No other schools could be reached for confirmation on which of their athletes would be attending the Pro Day.  Sac State’s Sports Information Director Brian Berger said there will be about 20 NFL scouts in attendance.

Continue Reading →

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UC Davis’ Les Taking Basketball Transition In Incremental Steps

Bradley Mens Basketball 6

Photo courtesy of Flicker.com

By Bill Bradley, SacStateSports.com Editor

UC Davis must be déjà vu for Jim Les.

The new men’s basketball coach at UC Davis has been here before. At Bradley, he coached a mid-major team at a small university (6,100 students) with an emphasis on academics and years of mediocrity on the court.

He turned that program around, taking it to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 2006. He made basketball relevant at Bradley again.

Can he do the same thing at UC Davis, another school where academics is more important than athletics but an enrollment five times that of Bradley?

“We had some hurdles when we took over at Bradley over some of the commitment and some of the facilities and we had to raise some funds. We kind of re-energized the program,” said Les, whose Aggies play host to the Sacramento State Hornets tonight at 7 p.m in The Pavilion. “That’s very similar to here. We’ve got a campus and a community to sell to recruits. I think we’ve got an unbelievable educational experience here at Davis now we want to wrap that up and tie it with a nice bow with an uptempo  style of basketball that kids are going to want to come here and play. Continue Reading →

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Sac State Women Earn First Win By Beating Long Beach State

Boxscore /statistics

By Miranda Prado, SacStateSports.com staff writer

Alle Moreno scored five of 11 points and had three steals in the final five minutes, helping Sacramento State earn its first women’s basketball victory of the season, 74-67 over Long Beach State on Saturday night.

The game was the closest this season for the Hornets (1-3). They watched the lead change 11 times.

“I felt they were pretty good,” Moreno said. “They knew how to press us, and break our press pretty well. But in the end we made big plays.” Continue Reading →

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Photo Gallery: Causeway – UC Davis 23, Sac State 19

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Aggies Defense Powers Causeway Victory Over Sac State

Sac State quarterback Garrett Safron dives for a touchdown on the final play of the UC Davis' 23-19 victory Saturday in the Causeway Classic. Photo by Ron Nabity. More photos at NabityPhotos.com.

In a game that featured 14 punts, UC Davis proved to have the stouter defense.

The Aggies scored 10 unanswered points in the second half and held Sacramento State to less than 200 yards total offense in winning the 58th Causeway Classic 23-19 at Hornet Stadium on Saturday.

The loss ended the Hornets season with a 4-7 record and a lot of empty promises after opening the season with an upset victory at Oregon State. The Aggies improved to 4-7 with the win.

Colton Silveria, who rushed for 170 yards on 22 carries, gave the Aggies lead for good at 17-13 with 7:34 left in the third quarter on a 1-yard run. The Aggies’ Sean Kelly added two fourth-quarter field goals to ice the game. Continue Reading →

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Causeway Classic: What Do Radio Broadcasters Think?

SacStateSports Editor Bill Bradley caught up with the radio broadcasters for each team during the Causeway Classic press conference Thursday at the Doubletree Hotel.

Jason Ross, who handles the Sac State broadcast on 93.1 FM, remembers, among other things, a streaker during one Causeway Classic:

Scott Marsh and Doug Kelly, who call the UC Davis broadcast for KHTK see a game that could change drastically if both quarterbacks aren’t healthy:

 

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Sac State (Late) Morning Wake-Up Call: Friday Edition

This is a little late start for the Wake-Up Call, but we’ll still have links for lunch. Take a look:

We’re not sure who will start in goal for the Sac State men’s soccer team against No. 2- ranked New Mexico today in Albuquerque, but if they go with Cesar Castillo there will be some exciting saves. Here’s a highlight reel from last year of Castillo’s work as freshmen. This season he has nine starts.

In Hornets football news:

* SacStateSports’ Kyle Madson reported in his preview that if quarterback Jeff Fleming will start again will be game-time decision.

* The Sac State-NAU game is mentioned in the Big Sky Conference’s weekend viewing guide

* The Fairfield Daily Republic mentioned Kenote Howard in its roundup local athletes in college. Continue Reading →

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Sac State Morning Wakeup-Call: Thursday Edition

We’re two days from the next football game and a week from the first basketball exhibition game. But would you believe men’s soccer  is the big topic of the day?

Featured today at SacStateSports.com is a look at Matt Linenberg, who is the son of the men’s soccer coach, Michael Linenberg. We’re publishing this today because the men’s team on Friday takes on the No. 2-ranked team in the country, University of New Mexico. Here’s why the Lobos are so good with highlights from last month’s match against Columbia (these guys are good):

In Hornets football news:

* This one transcends football:  Capitol Weekly wrote that the $10 million pledge that Alex Spanos has reneged on for the sports complex may cost the university more than the  $1 million it originally received.

* The Arizona Daily Sun wrote about Northern Arizona quarterback Cary Grossart, who was the first passing phenom from the wave of quarterbacks to come out of Folsom. He’ll be coming back home Saturday for the 6 p.m. start against the Hornets.

* SacStateSports had its recruiting update with good news and bad news about playing underclassmen at quarterback. Continue Reading →

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Sac State-UC Davis Football Game Moved To 1 Hour Earlier

Sacramento State’s football game with UC Davis at Hornet Stadium on Nov. 19 has been moved to one hour earlier, the university announced today.

The game will begin at 1:05 p.m. It was originally scheduled to start at 2:05 p.m.

A Sac State press release said the gametime change was made to accommodate a larger time window for the Comcast Sports Net California TV broadcast.

The non-conference matchup will be the final game of the season for both Sac State (3-4) and UC Davis (2-5). Next season the game will part of the Big Sky Conference schedule with UC Davis joining the league on a football-only basis.

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