Marshall Football Receiving High Praise

Marshall University Football is coming off a 10-4 season that has expectations through the roof for the upcoming season.

Before fall even starts Marshall’s football team is receiving more hype than it has in quite a while. Last season saw the Herd challenge for its first Conference USA championship after winning the east division. Marshall traveled to Rice for the conference championship, but fell to the Owls 41-24. The loss was just the second all year against a conference team, the other a loss to Middle Tennessee State.

The Herd was led last year offensively by quarterback Rakeem Cato who led the team to more than 40 points per game, the last two seasons. But the reason 2013 led to a bowl win and 2012 saw the Herd finish 5-7, was that last year’s defense tightened up under new defensive coordinator Chuck Heater allowing 20 points fewer per game and nearly 90 yards less than the season before. Marshall Head Coach Doc Holliday said the defense was the key.

“We also had 14 new players on that defense a year ago, Rouse was back healthy, 14 new players played a lot and contributed a lot and along with Chuck and that defensive staff, we’re a lot more athletic and we can matchup in space a lot better and I think we have a shot at having a good defense as long as long as we can stay healthy and continue to work hard,” Holliday said.

The Rouse that Holliday speaks of, is defensive lineman James Rouse, who after a career riddled with injuries had his breakout season last year. He’s picked as the Conference USA defensive player of the year. Teammate Cato, is picked as preseason offensive player of the year. And the team is picked as the favorite to win the East Division.

Rouse was granted a sixth year of eligibility by the NCAA after dealing with so many injuries his first few years in Huntington, that included back and Achilles problems. Most players are only eligible for four-years with a team, sometimes five if they’re redshirted for a year, which means they sit out to gain experience. Sixth years are sometimes granted if a player has dealt with many injuries.

“I was overjoyed just because of all the injuries I went through in the past, I felt like I wanted to play more for Marshall than I was able to so getting a sixth year really gave me that opportunity,” Rouse said.

Last year’s Conference USA offensive player of the year, Rakeem Cato, has already been named to the:

  • Walter Camp Award Watch List
  • Maxwell Award Watch List
  • Davey O’Brien Award Watch List
  • College Football Performance Award QB Watch List

Cato says he just has to continue working hard.
“The best thing I can do is work on my craft every day and just get better and believe in my coaching staff and believe in the players around me, as long as I can do that at a high level and take care of practice every day and work hard every day, I think we’ll have a great shot at the end of the year,” Cato said.

The senior quarterback has thrown for a touchdown in 32 straight which is 6 shy of the record of 38.

Marshall’s Bazzie Playing Pro Football in Canada

One Marshall University football player has found a unique route to a professional career.

When Marshall defensive end Alex Bazzie finished his playing career at Marshall last season, he hoped at this point in the summer he would be preparing for a career in the National Football League. But after going through a rookie mini-camp with the Cleveland Browns and not receiving a contract offer, he decided to take a different route. That route has taken Bazzie to the British Columbia Lions of the Canadian Football League. Bazzie went from hoping to just get a shot playing football as a career to being a starter for the BC Lions.

“It was a wonderful experience, I embraced it all and the coaches accepted me, they like what I was about and they’ve just allowed me to play comfortable,” Bazzie said. “And once I started relaxing and playing comfortable it allowed me to show my talents and from there it was to the point where the coaches were like we have to get this guy on the field.”

The 228-pound Bazzie has found a spot on the defensive line with the Lions. He was one of just three rookies to start against the Edmonton Eskimos in the Lions opener Friday at home. Bazzie said it’s been quite an experience in his first exposure to professional football.

“I was very humble and I came out and I worked hard every day and I just wanted to show that I could be an impact and soon enough it came to the point where coaches wanted me in the starting lineup and from there I just want to continue being humble and continue working and that’s what I’m still doing,” Bazzie said.

Although league sits behind the NFL, the CFL plays on a field that’s longer at 110 yards than the NFL’s 100 and is wider at 65 yards compared to 55 yards. They also have 12 players on each side compared to 11 like you see in football in the states. Bazzie said it’s been an adjustment.

“I’m still learning, it’s a lot to get a feel for, but as the days and weeks and practices go by I’m learning a lot and I’m picking it up. At the end of the day I told myself it’s football so don’t get caught up to much on what you don’t understand, remind yourself that it’s football and just go out there and play football,” Bazzie said.

Bazzie finished his Marshall career with 66 tackles and 13 sacks in his last season and helped Marshall win its first ever Conference USA East Division Championship and a birth into the C-USA Championship game. Bazzie said his time in Huntington turned him into a man.

“I was a young child coming in and I wasn’t quite sure how to be disciplined and how to carry myself in the proper manner and just being around the guys that I was around when I was at Marshall, the coaches and what they demand as their standards, it all helped me grow up fast,” Bazzie said.

After losing the C-USA title game, Bazzie helped the Herd to a win in the Military Bowl against the Maryland Terrapins in Annapolis Maryland. For the Silver Spring, Maryland Native, not getting offered an NFL contract may give him the motivation to succeed in the CFL.

“It helped me a lot, although I feel I went out there and left it all on the field, there is still a little bit of anger in me, I still carried a chip on my shoulder not being picked up, but just being here at BC now is the perfect fit for me and I was just happy that I was given an opportunity to be here,” Bazzie said.

Bazzie registered three tackles in the season opener for the British Columbia Lions on Friday.

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