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Turnovers doom Blizzard in opener

Andrew Pekarek
Sunday March 30, 2008


Sloppy, thunder, patches of sun and periods of heavy downfall are words you can use to describe the weather forecast in Green Bay over the next couple of days. They can also be used to describe how the Green Bay Blizzard played in a 64-48 season-opening loss to the Spokane Shock at the Resch Center.

“We turned the ball over six times,” said Blizzard head coach Bob Landsee. “I thought it looked like third grade football.”

It wasn’t third grade football, but the third quarter is when things started to get really sloppy for the Blizzard.

After Blizzard defensive back Nate Green scored on an interception return for a touchdown to make the score 29-37 in favor of Spokane, it seemed that the momentum was on Green Bay’s side.

Then on Spokane’s next series Blizzard defensive back Rusty Midlam picked off a Jason Murrietta pass, and the Blizzard were poised to close the gap even more on the scoreboard, but that’s when the heavy downfall of turnovers began for Green Bay.

Two plays later Blizzard quarterback Matt Bohnet stared down wide receiver Steve Gonzalez in the end zone and Shock defensive back Sergio Gilliam stepped in front to get his first of three interceptions.

Bohnet was benched after throwing his second interception to Gilliam, which Spokane quickly converted into a 50-29 lead entering the fourth quarter.

Shane Adler came in for Bohnet and scored on a two-yard touchdown run, and the Blizzard defense stopped the Shock by blocking a 55-yard field goal attempt by Brian Jackson.

Adler would take advantage of the good field position and throw a touchdown to tight end Stephen Santos to cut the Shock lead to 42-50, and it appeared the comeback was on.

After a Spokane touchdown on the next series, the comeback came to a thunderous halt when Gilliam crushed Gonzalez to break up a pass, and on the next play crushed the Blizzard’s hopes of a comeback with his third interception.

The loss snapped the Blizzard’s 11-game home winning streak, which dates back to the 2006 season.

“We made a lot of mistakes, veterans and rookies,” Green said. “There was a lot of screw-ups out there and we just got to get them fixed.”

One of the veterans who made a lot of those mistakes was Gonzalez. The former All-af2 receiver had one catch for four yards, a dropped pass, a fumble and an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty.

Gonzalez did do a nice job in the return game, though, by returning six kicks for 162 yards, which forced the Shock to squib kick the ball away from him in the second half.

Another bright spot was the play of veteran defensive backs Nate Green and Rusty Midlam, both of whom played for the Louisville Fire last year. The duo had three interceptions and played well against an experienced group of receivers for the Shock.

“The defense did a great job,” Landsee said. “When you stop an offense five times you should win football games...if you don’t win games then it’s on the offense.”

This game is on the offense then, which generated only 190 yards and struggled to get into any rhythm.

The offensive line played well, but did make one costly mistake in the second quarter, which led to a score by Spokane. The Blizzard line slid its protection to the left and the Shock’s Jason Jack came around Bohnet’s blind side untouched to strip the ball, which was picked up by Shock defensive back Roshawn Marshall for a touchdown.

“We have a lot of talent, but a lot of talent doesn’t win games a team coming together wins games,” said Blizzard wide receiver Scott Burnoski.

The future forecast for the Blizzard is unknown at the moment. Coach Landsee will have to decide on a starting quarterback and the offense will have to improve by leaps and bounds if it wants to contend for a playoff spot in a tough Midwest division.

If those things happen you can expect to see the Blizzard playing in August, but that’s a long way off and the Blizzard is focused on an away game with Tennessee Valley this Saturday.

Game Notes

All-af2 defensive lineman Eddy Yauch did not play because of an injury. He is listed as the Blizzard’s long snapper as well. Filling in at long snapper was center Raymond McNeil, who struggled getting the snap back to holder Nate Green.

This game was a rematch of the 2006 ArenaCup, which Spokane won. Most of the players on the 2008 Shock and Blizzard squads didn’t play in that game, but it was hard to tell as their was numerous times during the game where a referee had to step in between players after a play was over. The most noticeable came at the end of the game when the Shock’s Jason Jack and the Blizzard’s Stephen Santos got in a scrum and had to be separated.

 


 
Andrew is a senior at UW-Green Bay and has written for the student newspaper. He began following arena football in 1998 as a fan of the Green Bay Bombers (IFL). Was a programming intern for Sports Radio 107.5 & 1400 The Fan and is currently pursuing a career in radio broadcasting.
The opinions expressed in the article above are only those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts, opinions, or official stance of ArenaFan Online or its staff, or the Arena Football League, or any AFL or af2 teams.
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