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Quick Hits: We predict the quarterfinals

We’re down to four games, so it’s time to bring a little commentary back — here’s our take on the national quarterfinal games, with, perhaps, something resembling explanation.

Keith McMillan, Ryan Tipps, Pat Coleman, Adam Turer, Frank Rossi and Greg Thomas each take their crack at it this week and every week from here to the Stagg Bowl. Photo: Jonel Reed streaking up the sidelines against Berry. (Photo by Joe Fusco, d3photography.com).

Live video, live stats of quarterfinal games

— Pat Coleman

St. John’s at Mary Hardin-Baylor

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Keith’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 35, St. John’s 21. This is the Nos. 2 and 3 teams in the Top 25, so let’s just enjoy it. The Johnnies have the best quarterback on the field, but this will be the fastest defense he’s seen since the Big Ten. (It’s also No. 1 nationally vs. the pass, with 26 INTs and 4 TDs allowed.) UMHB showed last week that not even its quarterback issues are actual issues, and I think the Cru plays its closest game of the year and gives up a season-high point total, and still wins with room to breathe.
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Ryan’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 35, St. John’s 24. There’s so much to be drawn to with the Johnnies returning to the level of play we saw in the early 2000s, but it’s hard to go against a defense that has only twice this year given up double-digits on the scoreboard (and only 15 points total this postseason). Despite early-season coaching drama and season-long quarterback shuffling, the Cru’s level of play has been absolutely crippling for its opponents.
Pat Coleman
Pat’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 27, St. John’s 21The biggest question for me is about the St. John’s defense, which gave up 609 yards of total offense to St. Thomas. They bent a whole lot, and they broke a little, in giving up 20 points, but picked off five passes. They’ll need to figure out a way to stop the UMHB run game, since the Cru could simply run them to oblivion. However, I do think that the Johnnies will score some points, and I’m looking for a game which is close at the end.
Adam Turer
Adam’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 43, St. John’s 42.The most exciting game of this round features two electric offenses. The Johnnies have the edge at the quarterback position, but can their defense keep up with the speed of the Cru? UMHB seems destined to play three more games in its home state, but faces its toughest challenge yet.
Frank Rossi
Frank’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 24, St. John’s 21.The Cru jets out to an early lead, and it will be too little, too late in a comeback attempt by Jackson Erdmann and the Johnnies.
Guest
Greg’s take: Mary Hardin-Baylor 31, St. John’s 28.Can Jackson Erdmann find enough time and space to give the Johnnies a chance? I believe so. I also believe the Cru have enough offense of their own to outlast the Johnnies and advance.

Hansen odds to advance: Mary Hardin-Baylor, 74%.
Consensus: Mary Hardin-Baylor, but it gets closer with every prediction, so by Saturday, who knows?

Bethel at UW-Whitewater

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Keith’s take: UW-Whitewater 34, Bethel 24. This game might lack the flash of other matchups, but for those who like mauling lines, backs who keep their feet churning and teams who exude joy, it’ll be the best matchup of the quarterfinals. The Warhawks, for a team that won by 33 in Round 2, cut it close in several ways and will have to tighten up against the Royals, but ultimately they are too deep and too adaptable to any style of game to be worn down. Warhawks pull away late.
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Ryan’s take: Bethel 41, UW-Whitewater 38. I suspect I’m bucking my colleagues here, but Bethel has been so good over the past three weeks (averaging more than 400 yards of offense a game and putting so much pressure on opponents’ quarterbacks) that it’ll be hard to staunch that momentum.
Pat Coleman
Pat’s take: UW-Whitewater 24, Bethel 15. Get all your rock-pounding right here. Or your smash-mouthing. Harry Henschler and Kyle Kilgore on each side will provide focus points for the opposing offensive lines, but hardly the only players worth noting on defense. I think points will be more at a premium because of the defensive performers and because of offenses that like to keep the ball on the ground.
Adam Turer
Adam’s take: UW-Whitewater 17, Bethel 10. Another matchup of similar styles. The Warhawks and Royals butter their bread with rushing and defense. This is going to be a classic Wisconsin-Minnesota slugfest. The Royals defense will need to keep it close, so that UW-W can’t force Jaran Roste into more passes than Bethel would like to attempt.
Frank Rossi
Frank’s take: UW-Whitewater 27, Bethel 14. Rush defense has been both teams’ specialty this year, but the Warhawks will overcome the Royals’ ground-stop after Cole Wilber forces Bethel to diversify their defense.
Guest
Greg’s take: UW-Whitewater 28, Bethel 10This isn’t the Pound The Rock Warhawks of championship vintage, but the home side should be able to grind down the Royals at the line of scrimmage and inch away in the last 20 minutes.

Hansen odds to advance: UW-Whitewater, 77%.
Consensus: Non-unanimous, but UW-Whitewater in a relatively low-scoring battle.

Muhlenberg at Mount Union

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Keith’s take: Mount Union 45, Muhlenberg 14. In another matchup, I could see the Mules advancing again, but they’d need everyone on defense to play like Frankie Feaster and Nick Sirico to match what the Purple Raiders lineup brings. And then there’s the matter of the opportunistic Mount Union defense.
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Ryan’s take: Mount Union 49, Muhlenberg 14. There’s really very little stopping the Purple Raiders from getting back to the Stagg Bowl in a couple of weeks, especially seeing how D’Angelo Fulford performed being back under center. Muhlenberg has done admirably this postseason and should be able to use this as a springboard to better things in the coming years.
Pat Coleman
Pat’s take: Mount Union 53, Muhlenberg 7. This presents an opportunity for the Purple Raider 2’s to earn back some trust with the Mount Union fans, regardless of their status with the coaches.
Adam Turer
Adam’s take: Mount Union 45, Muhlenberg 17. The Mules’ historic run ends here. Mount Union has too many weapons on offense even if D’Angelo Fulford is less than 100 percent. It might be close early, but the Purple Raiders will pull away with big plays from special teams and defense. The Mules have a deep and talented secondary, but have not seen wide receivers like Justin Hill and Jared Ruth.
Frank Rossi
Frank’s take: Mount Union 47, Muhlenberg 20. The Mules will be able to keep this close for the first quarter, but little by little, Mount Union will pull away after wearing down a stalwart Muhlenberg defense.
Guest
Greg’s take: Mount Union 48, Muhlenberg 10. Congratulations are in order to Muhlenberg on its historic run to the quarterfinals, but Alliance is where a lot of historic seasons meet their end.

Hansen odds to advance: Mount Union, 95%.
Consensus: Mount Union, by varying amounts of a whole bunch.

RPI at Johns Hopkins

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Keith’s take: Johns Hopkins 38, RPI 24. On one hand, RPI just snuffed out a top-five team led by an all-American QB and the nation’s No. 2 defense. On the other, the Blue Jays just hung 58 on a Frostburg defense that was allowing 14.4. Even in the rain, I like David Tammaro and Co. to keep it going.
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Ryan’s take: Johns Hopkins 31, RPI 21. The massive second-half adjustments Hopkins made last week are hard to look past — that’s the kind of thing that sets great playoff teams apart. JHU has the tools to advance, but it will need to keep from turning the ball over so often as Brockport did against RPI in Round 2.
Pat Coleman
Pat’s take: Johns Hopkins 31, RPI 17. Take that, state schools. Academic powerhouses for the win! (Well, Johns Hopkins for the actual win.) Looking for the JHU offense to be clicking in full gear on Saturday.
Adam Turer
Adam’s take: Johns Hopkins 31, RPI 14.The only unranked team still playing gives opposing quarterbacks fits. If David Tammaro can do what Joe Germinerio couldn’t and solve the Engineers, the Blue Jays will advance to the semis for the first time. Johns Hopkins is comfortable playing a high-scoring shootout, but does RPI’s offense have the power to keep up?
Frank Rossi
Frank’s take: RPI 24, Johns Hopkins 21. The game sets up similar to the RPI/Brockport game, but on paper, Brockport had a slightly better defense than Hopkins. The turnover ratio gives RPI a narrow win, especially if it rains.
Guest
Greg’s take: Johns Hopkins 35, RPI 17. RPI’s defense did a whole lot of bending last weekend, but survived several late pushes from Brockport. The Blue Jays are on an absolute tear right now and may well push the Engineers past the breaking point.

Hansen odds to advance: Johns Hopkins, 91%.
Consensus: Johns Hopkins, to everyone but the turnover beancounter.

We invite you to add your predictions in the comments below. Download the Around the Nation podcast on Mondays, where Pat and Keith review the Quick Hits that were prescient, and the Quick Misses that were terribly off base.

3 thoughts on “Quick Hits: We predict the quarterfinals

  1. I think you are shorting Saint Johns and I see a similar situation to 2008 when UWW went down there and beat UMHB (not the close one televised). We will see. Not sure how that conference compares to the MIAC this year. SJU has had good sparing partners, so to speak.

    Mt 45 Mule. 10
    “AP/IB/SAT Bowl ” – Johns Hopkins 27 R.P.I. 24
    Saint Johns (MN) 24 UMHB 20
    UW-Whitewater 30 Bethel (MN) 20

  2. I see what you are getting at, but that 2008 UMHB team had lost a regular season game and only beat Hardin-Simmons by two. You reference the 2008 game, which was 39-13, but only predicting a four-point win yourself.

    Could certainly be shorting SJU by a touchdown. Never impossible.

  3. Weirdest kickoff ever had to come from that 2008 game. UMHB’s kicker who had the leg to kick a 49 yard field goal that year kicked off after half time, with the score 12-10 UWW, the wind was so strong that it knocked the ball back to the point where it may or may not have gone 10 yards. We recovered the “on-side” kicked but it was ruled a penalty. The Warhawks get the ball, throw a TD on the first play and the wheels feel off for the Cru.

    Looking forward to the game on Saturday and too superstitious to make a score prediction. .

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