2003 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team

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2003 Eastern Michigan Eagles football
ConferenceMid-American Conference
DivisionWest Division
Record3–9 (2–6 MAC)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorTim Salem (1st season)
Defensive coordinatorTim Rose (1st season)
Home stadiumRynearson Stadium
Seasons
← 2002
2004 →
2003 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
East Division
No. 10 Miami (OH) x$   8 0     13 1  
Marshall   6 2     8 4  
Akron   5 3     7 5  
Kent State   4 4     5 7  
UCF   2 6     3 9  
Ohio   1 7     2 10  
Buffalo   1 7     1 11  
West Division
No. 23 Bowling Green x   7 1     11 3  
Northern Illinois   6 2     10 2  
Toledo   6 2     8 4  
Western Michigan   4 4     5 7  
Ball State   3 5     4 8  
Eastern Michigan   2 6     3 9  
Central Michigan   1 7     3 9  
Championship: Miami 49, Bowling Green 27
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2003 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team represented Eastern Michigan University in the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season. Eastern Michigan competed as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) West Division. The team was coached by Jeff Woodruff in his final season at EMU. Following the 38–10 loss to Central Michigan, Woodruff, who had compiled a 9–34 record in 3 34 seasons, was fired on November 3.[1] Running backs coach Al Lavan was named the interim coach while the school conducted a national search for the new permanent coach,[2] and under his leadership the team won two of their final three games. After the end of the season, Northwestern running backs coach Jeff Genyk was hired as the new EMU head coach.[3]

Schedule[edit]

DateTimeOpponentSiteResultAttendance
August 287:00 pmEast Tennessee State*W 28–21[4]11,725
September 47:00 pmWestern Illinois*
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
L 12–34[5]11,123
September 136:00 pmat AkronL 17–24[6]10,262
September 201:30 pmat Navy*L 7–39[7]27,627
September 276:00 pmMaryland*
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
L 13–37[8]19,628
October 42:00 pmWestern Michigan
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
L 3–31[9]19,963
October 117:00 pmat ToledoL 14–49[10]22,807
October 186:00 pmBowling Green
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
L 20–33[11]6,154
November 11:00 pmat Central MichiganL 10–38[12]8,391
November 812:00 pmCentral Florida
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
W 19–13[13]5,150
November 151:00 pmBall State
  • Rynearson Stadium
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan
W 38–14[14]5,075
November 222:05 pmat Northern IllinoisL 24–38[15]16,589

[16]

EMU was briefly scheduled to host the University of South Florida Bulls in 2003. The Rynearson Stadium game had originally been scheduled for 2002, but the Bulls paid EMU a $50,000 postponement fee to delay the game to 2003, allowing USF a 2002 game at Arkansas. However, EMU dropped USF from the 2003 schedule with no advance notice.[17]

Roster[edit]

2003 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
WR 5 Chris Talley Jr
WR 6 Chris Roberson Jr
WR 7 LaGarian Houston Fr
QB 8 Jeff Crooks Sr
TE 82 Kevin Zureki Sr
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
DB 2 Yves Dieudonne So
DB 14 Jereme Perry Jr
LB 37 Mike Salvatori Sr
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured Injured
  • Redshirt Redshirt

Roster

Game summaries[edit]

East Tennessee State[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Buccaneers 0 14 7 0 21
Eagles 7 7 7 7 28

EMU opened the season with the East Tennessee State Buccaneers, a Division I-AA team in the Southern Conference. East Tennessee State had a 4–8 record in 2002,[18] and 2003 would be the final year for their football program, which had been losing nearly $1 million per year from 1999 through 2003.[19]

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 1:16 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 68 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–0 EMU

2nd Quarter

  • 10:26 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 38 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 14–0 EMU
  • 8:56 East Tennessee State – Scott Brumett 70 yard interception return (Jonathan Godfrey kick) 14–7 EMU
  • 0:57 East Tennessee State – Brian Matthews 34 yard pass from Carl Meadows (Jonathan Godfrey kick) 14–14

3rd Quarter

  • 7:12 East Tennessee State – Gavin Varner 1 yard run (Jonathan Godfrey kick) 14–21 East Tennessee State
  • 4:02 EMU – Chinedu Okoro 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 21–21

4th Quarter

  • 7:49 EMU – Eric Deslauriers 44 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 28–21 EMU

Western Illinois[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Leathernecks 7 7 6 14 34
Eagles 3 3 3 3 12

Following the Leathernecks' win over EMU, Western Illinois received its first-ever #1 ranking in the national Division I-AA polls, though they lost the ranking the following week with a 35–7 loss to the eventual I-A national champions, the LSU Tigers.

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 11:02 Western Illinois – Travis Glasford 2 yard run (Justin Langan kick) 0–7 Western Illinois
  • 4:14 EMU – Andrew Wellock 38 yard field goal 3–7 Western Illinois

2nd Quarter

  • 13:01 EMU – Andrew Wellock 33 yard field goal 6–7 Western Illinois
  • 2:01 Western Illinois – James Norris 95 yard punt return (Justin Langan kick) 6–14 Western Illinois

3rd Quarter

  • 13:27 EMU – Andrew Wellock 35 yard field goal 9–14 Western Illinois
  • 8:41 Western Illinois – Travis Glasford 1 yard run (Justin Langan missed kick) 9–20 Western Illinois

4th Quarter

  • 13:18 EMU – Andrew Wellock 25 yard field goal 12–20 Western Illinois
  • 7:22 Western Illinois – Russ Michna 15 yard run (Justin Langan kick) 12–27 Western Illinois
  • 3:56 Western Illinois – Travis Glasford 11 yard run (Justin Langan kick) 12–34 Western Illinois

Akron[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Eagles 0 10 7 0 17
Zips 7 14 0 3 24

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 3:42 Akron – Matt Cherry 58 yard punt return (Jason Swiger kick) 0–7 Akron

2nd Quarter

  • 14:17 Akron – Miquel Irvin 16 yard pass from Charlie Frye (Jason Swiger kick) 0–14 Akron
  • 11:06 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 13 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–14 Akron
  • 4:15 Akron – Charlie Frye 2 yard run (Jason Swiger kick) 7–21 Akron
  • 1:20 EMU – Andrew Wellock 43 yard field goal 10–21 Akron

3rd Quarter

  • 3:49 EMU – Chinedu Okoro 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 17–21 Akron

4th Quarter

  • 5:14 Akron – Jason Swiger 23 yard field goal 17–24 Akron

Navy[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Eagles 0 0 0 7 7
Midshipmen 8 3 14 14 39
EMU junior quarterback Chinedu Okoro being tackled by Navy junior linebacker Lane Jackson.

With their win over EMU, the Midshipmen won consecutive home games for the first time since 1997.[20] EMU's offense committed six turnovers,[21] including four interceptions thrown by Chinedu Okoro,[20] about which head coach Jeff Woodruff commented, "You can’t beat a high school team giving up five turnovers...Mathematically, you are out of the game with that. That was frustrating because the defense was playing well."[21]

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 1:12 Navy – Eric Roberts 15 yard pass from Craig Candeto (Amir Jenkins pass from Craig Candeto) 0–8 Navy

2nd Quarter

  • 7:57 Navy – Geoff Blumenfeld 29 yard field goal 0–11 Navy

3rd Quarter

  • 12:23 Navy – Tony Lane 32 yard run (Geoff Blumenfeld kick) 0–18 Navy
  • 8:17 Navy – Trey Hines 17 yard run (Geoff Blumenfeld kick) 0–25 Navy

4th Quarter

  • 13:50 Navy – Craig Candeto 3 yard run (Geoff Blumenfeld kick) 0–32 Navy
  • 12:28 Navy – Bronston Carroll 2 yard run (Geoff Blumenfeld kick) 0–39 Navy
  • 7:13 EMU – Chris R. Roberson 13 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–39 Navy

Maryland[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Terrapins 6 10 7 14 37
Eagles 3 7 3 0 13

This game was the first — and so far, the only — occasion on which a team from an AQ conference played at Rynearson Stadium.[8]

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 12:07 Maryland – Domonique Foxworth 44 yard interception return (Nick Novak kick failed) 0–6 Maryland
  • 2:09 EMU – Andrew Wellock 42 yard field goal 3–6 Maryland

2nd Quarter

  • 4:56 Maryland – Josh Allen 1 yard run (Nick Novak kick) 3–13 Maryland
  • 0:23 EMU – Kevin Zureki 8 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 10–13 Maryland
  • 0:02 Maryland – Nick Novak 27 yard field goal 10–16 Maryland

3rd Quarter

  • 10:54 EMU – Andrew Wellock 25 yard field goal 13–16 Maryland
  • 5:42 Maryland – Josh Allen 8 yard run (Nick Novak kick) 13–23 Maryland

4th Quarter

  • 14:54 Maryland – Scott McBrien 9 yard run (Nick Novak kick) 13–30 Maryland
  • 9:16 Maryland – Dan Melendez 14 yard pass from Scott McBrien (Nick Novak kick) 13–37 Maryland

Western Michigan[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Broncos 0 0 14 17 31
Eagles 0 3 0 0 3

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 13:34 EMU – Andrew Wellock 32 yard field goal 3–0 EMU

3rd Quarter

  • 11:30 Western Michigan – Greg Jennings 34 yard pass from Chad Munson (Robert Menchinger kick) 3–7 Western Michigan
  • 5:42 Western Michigan – Philip Reed 9 yard run (Robert Menchinger kick) 3–14 Western Michigan

4th Quarter

  • 10:23 Western Michigan – Greg Jennings 22 yard pass from Chad Munson (Robert Menchinger kick) 3–21 Western Michigan
  • 8:46 Western Michigan – Robert Menchinger 22 yard field goal 3–24 Western Michigan
  • 2:49 Western Michigan – Tyson Devree 16 yard pass from Chad Munson (Robert Menchinger kick) 3–31 Western Michigan

Toledo[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Eagles 7 0 7 0 14
Rockets 14 28 7 0 49

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 12:57 Toledo – Trinity Dawson 5 yard run (Jason Robbins kick) 0–7 Toledo
  • 7:17 EMU – Chris R. Roberson 4 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–7
  • 0:04 Toledo – Trinity Dawson 1 yard run (Jason Robbins kick) 7–14 Toledo

2nd Quarter

  • 11:35 Toledo – Astin Martin 1 yard run (Jason Robbins kick) 7–21 Toledo
  • 6:42 Toledo – Trinity Dawson 8 yard pass from Bruce Gradkowski (Jason Robbins kick) 7–28 Toledo
  • 4:13 Toledo – Steve Odom 12 yard pass from Bruce Gradkowski (Jason Robbins kick) 7–35 Toledo
  • 0:31 Toledo – Terrance Hudson 19 yard pas from Bruce Gradkowski (Jason Robbins kick) 7–42 Toledo

3rd Quarter

  • 3:29 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 3 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 14–42 Toledo
  • 0:00 Toledo – Steve Odom 80 yard punt return (Jason Robbins kick) 14–49 Toledo

4th Quarter

Bowling Green[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Falcons 14 12 0 7 33
Eagles 7 7 3 3 20

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 13:19 Bowling Green – P.J. Pope 1 yard run (Shaun Suisham kick) 0–7 Bowling Green
  • 10:38 EMU – Kevin Zureki 40 yard pass from Chinedu Okoro (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–7
  • 3:45 Bowling Green – Josh Harris 20 yard run (Shaun Suisham kick) 7–14 Bowling Green

2nd Quarter

  • 14:12 Bowling Green – Shaun Suisham 24 yard field goal 7–17 Bowling Green
  • 10:56 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 3 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 14–17 Bowling Green
  • 6:59 Bowling Green – Josh Harris 4 yard run (Shaun Suisham missed kick) 14–23 Bowling Green
  • 0:22 Bowling Green – Shaun Suisham 23 yard field goal 14–26 Bowling Green

3rd Quarter

  • 2:15 EMU – Andrew Wellock 40 yard field goal 17–26 Bowling Green

4th Quarter

  • 12:59 Bowling Green – Josh Harris 5 yard run (Shaun Suisham kick) 17–33 Bowling Green
  • 8:08 EMU – Andrew Wellock 29 yard field goal 20–33 Bowling Green

Central Michigan[edit]

Following the 38–10 loss to Central Michigan, EMU's eight consecutive loss, Jeff Woodruff, who had compiled a 9–34 record in 3 34 seasons, was fired on November 3.[1] Running backs coach Al Lavan was named the interim coach while the school conducted a national search for the new permanent coach.[2]

1 2 3 4 Total
Eagles 7 3 0 0 10
Chippewas 0 10 14 14 38

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 10:33 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–0 EMU

2nd Quarter

  • 14:57 EMU – Andrew Wellock 21 yard field goal 10–0 EMU
  • 8:52 Central Michigan – Joseph Staley 29 yard pass from Derrick Vickers (Mike Gruzwalski kick) 10–7 EMU
  • 2:26 Central Michigan – Mike Gruzwalski 33 yard field goal 10–10

3rd Quarter

  • 11:03 Central Michigan – Jerry Seymour 14 yard run (Mike Gruzwalski kick) 10–17 Central Michigan
  • 0:23 Central Michigan – Troy Peyerk 12 yard pass from Derrick Vickers (Mike Gruzwalski kick) 10–24 Central Michigan

4th Quarter

  • 9:42 Central Michigan – Jerry Seymour 16 yard run (Mike Gruzwalski kick) 10–31 Central Michigan
  • 4:41 Central Michigan – Jerry Seymour 15 yard run (Mike Gruzwalski kick) 10–38 Central Michigan

Central Florida[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Knights 0 13 0 0 13
Eagles 10 7 0 2 19

In Al Lavan's first game as interim head coach, the Eagles snapped an eight-game losing streak with a 19–13 win over Central Florida. After the two offenses combined for 20 second-quarter points, neither offense scored in the second half of the game.

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • 12:50 EMU – Alonzo Harris 15 yard pass from Ken Bohnet (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–0 EMU
  • 4:13 EMU – Andrew Wellock 39 yard field goal 10–0 EMU

2nd Quarter

  • 13:50 Central Florida – Dontavius Wilcox 8 yard run (Matt Prater kick) 10–7 Central Michigan
  • 9:31 Central Florida – Matt Prater 40 yard field goal 10–10
  • 4:25 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 16 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 17–10 EMU
  • 0:50 Central Florida – Matt Prater 46 yard field goal 17–13 EMU

3rd Quarter

4th Quarter

  • 3:42 EMU – Matt Kudu safety 19–13 EMU

Ball State[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Cardinals 0 0 7 7 14
Eagles 0 14 17 7 38

With a win over Ball State, the Eagles achieved back-to-back wins over Division I-A opponents for the first time in more than three years; they had last done this in November 2000, in Jeff Woodruff's first season as head coach.[22]

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 14:58 EMU – Ken Bohnet 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–0 EMU
  • 5:29 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 14–0 EMU

3rd Quarter

  • 9:37 EMU – Andrew Wellock 32 yard field goal 17–0 EMU
  • 7:44 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 24–0 EMU
  • 4:00 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 1 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 31–0 EMU
  • 1:31 Ball State – Dante Ridgeway 1 yard pass from Andy Roesch (Brian Jackson kick) 31–7 EMU

4th Quarter

  • 11:18 EMU – Anthony Sherrell 9 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 38–7 EMU
  • 3:47 Ball State – Ryan Hahaj 20 yard pass from Andy Roesch (Brian Jackson kick) 38–14 EMU

Northern Illinois[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Eagles 14 3 0 7 24
Huskies 7 10 13 8 38

Scoring summary[23]

1st Quarter

  • Northern Illinois – Shatone Powers 8 yard pass from Josh Haldi (Steve Azar kick) 0–7 Northern Illinois
  • EMU – Anthony Sherrell 2 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 7–7
  • EMU – Anthony Sherrell 15 yard run (Andrew Wellock kick) 14–7 EMU

2nd Quarter

  • Northern Illinois – Steve Azar 28 yard field goal 14–10 EMU
  • Northern Illinois – Michael Turner 59 yard run (Steve Azar kick) 14–17 Northern Illinois
  • EMU – Andrew Wellock 36 yard field goal 17–17

3rd Quarter

  • Northern Illinois – Steve Azar 23 yard field goal 17–20 Northern Illinois
  • Northern Illinois – Michael Turner 31 yard run (Steve Azar kick) 17–27 Northern Illinois
  • Northern Illinois – Steve Azar 44 yard field goal 17–30 Northern Illinois

4th Quarter

  • EMU – Kevin Zureki 20 yard pass from A. J. Bennett (Andrew Wellock kick) 24–30 Northern Illinois
  • Northern Illinois – Michael Turner 3 yard run (Josh Haldi run for two-point conversion) 24–38 Northern Illinois

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Eastern Michigan football coach fired in 4th year". The Beacon News. November 4, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Eastern Michigan fires football coach Jeff Woodruff". The Daily Sentinel. November 4, 2003. p. B6. Retrieved November 1, 2010.
  3. ^ "Genyk takes over floundering program". ESPN. December 1, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2010.
  4. ^ "East Tenn. St. Buccaneers vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. August 28, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  5. ^ "Western Illinois Leathernecks vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. September 4, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  6. ^ "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Akron Zips – Box Score". ESPN. September 13, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  7. ^ "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Navy Midshipmen – Box Score". ESPN. September 20, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  8. ^ a b "Maryland Terrapins vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Recap". ESPN. September 27, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  9. ^ "Western Michigan Broncos vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. October 4, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  10. ^ "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Toledo Rockets – Box Score". ESPN. October 11, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  11. ^ "Bowling Green Falcons vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. October 18, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  12. ^ "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Central Michigan Chippewas – Box Score". ESPN. November 1, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  13. ^ "UCF Knights vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. November 8, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  14. ^ "Ball State Cardinals vs. Eastern Michigan Eagles – Box Score". ESPN. November 15, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  15. ^ "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Northern Illinois Huskies – Box Score". ESPN. November 22, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  16. ^ "Eastern Michigan University Coaching Records Game by Game 2003". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  17. ^ McMurphy, Brett (February 14, 2003). "USF Scrambling Even More After Losing Another Game". Tampa Tribune. p. 1. Retrieved November 3, 2010. The Wildcats are seeking a home game Sept. 20. USF was scheduled to host Baylor on Sept. 20, but the Bears canceled last month. USF also has openings Sept. 6 and 13. USF officials were not aware Eastern Michigan had dropped USF from its 2003 schedule until Wednesday when the Eagles' schedule was released – minus USF. USF was supposed to visit Eastern Michigan in 2002, but pushed the game to 2003 so the Bulls could instead play at Arkansas. USF paid a $50,000 postponement fee to EMU for moving the game.
  18. ^ "EMU to face I-AA team". The Detroit News. August 28, 2003. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  19. ^ Sterling, Feleesha (December 7, 2006), "Football at what cost?", East Tennessean, archived from the original on March 8, 2008, retrieved November 3, 2010
  20. ^ a b "Eastern Michigan Eagles vs. Navy Midshipmen – Recap". ESPN. September 20, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2010.
  21. ^ a b "Navy 39, Eastern Michigan 7". Yahoo! Sports. September 20, 2003. Retrieved November 4, 2010.
  22. ^ "Eastern Michigan Yearly Results 2000–2004". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on December 5, 2010. Retrieved November 4, 2010.
  23. ^ "Eastern Michigan vs. Northern Illinois". USA Today. November 22, 2003. Retrieved November 10, 2010.

External links[edit]

Media related to 2003 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team at Wikimedia Commons