CAMELLIA BOWL NOTEBOOK (Day 1): Teams open practice on Christmas Eve
Compiled by TIM GAYLE and BARRY ALLEN
Both teams went through an afternoon practice on Christmas Eve in preparation for the ninth annual Camellia Bowl, with Georgia Southern practicing at Cramton Bowl and Buffalo practicing at ASU Stadium.
The two teams took morning trips to the Rosa Parks Museum in the morning and were scheduled for a team outing later in the evening, but in between the focus was on football. Temperatures remained at the freezing point for much of the practice, but Buffalo linebacker James Patterson said the frigid temperatures didn’t disrupt practice.
“Preparation has been great up to this point,” Patterson said. “Even from day one, for bowl prep, the focus has been to win, not to dwell on the past or get too overexcited about the future. Stay in the now. Prepare each day like we did today and be ready for Georgia Southern on Tuesday.”
The game is scheduled to kick off at 11 a.m. on Tuesday at Cramton Bowl.
Helton has ties to the area
Much of Clay Helton’s coaching experience has been at Memphis and USC, but the Georgia Southern coach also knows a little about Alabama.
A native of Gainesville, Fla., he was a backup quarterback for Pat Dye in the coach’s final two years at Auburn (1991-92), then transferred to Houston to play for his father Kim in 1993-94. And while his coaching stops have never been in Alabama, both his father and brother Ty were at UAB, with Kim serving as Neil Callaway’s offensive coordinator in 2007-11 and Ty serving as the Blazers’ quarterback during that same period.
“I grew up in the Southeast and my dad is a 50-year NFL and college coach and I enjoy having the opportunity to be back in the great state of Alabama,” Helton said. “I got the opportunity to be with one of the special people in my life, like a second dad to me, in Coach Dye and be with the Auburn family. There were some unbelievable great memories and years there. And UAB has been very special to my family with my dad and brother having coached there.
“This state has been wonderful to us, not only from the fan base but just the people. It’s good to be back in the state.”
Lots and lots of quarterbacks
When Georgia Southern elected to switch from the option style to a spread attack, the first thing new coach Clay Helton did was look for quarterbacks.
Several were on the roster last year, but only one (backup Connor Cigelske) is a holdover. Among the others on this year’s roster are four transfers, including starter Kyle Vantrease (Buffalo) along with Colton FitzGerald (Boise State), Richie Lankford (College of San Mateo) and Kyle Toole (Troy), and freshmen David Dallas, Zac Rozsman and Brooks Pangle.
“When we took the job last year, I knew I was going to go to some similar things that we did at USC,” Helton said. “Also, having the opportunity to sign on Coach Bryan Ellis, who played at USC and was the co-OC last year for my brother at Western Kentucky, I knew we were going to be a passing offense. The challenge of going from an option football team to a passing football team and selling it to kids and say we’re going to be a top five passing team, they had to have belief.
“Kyle (Vantrease) came to us and said I see the system, I see the opportunity and I want to make that transition, but we had to sign others, too. Any time you’re putting a new system in, the first position you’d better have at any level -- I don’t care if it’s NFL, college or high school -- you’d better go find a passer first.”
Opponents reach game with last-second wins
Buffalo and Georgia Southern both needed wins in their final regular season game to become bowl eligible.
Both teams won their final game, and both did in dramatic fashion.
Georgia Southern became bowl eligible with a 51-48 double-overtime win over Appalachian State on Nov. 26 in Statesboro. The game featured seven lead changes and three ties before the dust was settled.
After both teams scored touchdowns in the first overtime, ASU settled for a field goal in the second overtime to take a48-45 lead. Georgia Southern answered with a 25-yard TD pass from Kyle Vantrease to Ezrah Archie on the second play for the thrilling win.
Buffalo’s season came down the wire too. The Bulls rallied from a 16-0 deficit to take a one-point lead on Cole Snyder’s 6-yard TD pass to Justin Marshall late in the third quarter.
Akron regained the lead 22-17 on Clyde Price’s 17-yard run with 11 minutes left in the game. The 2-point conversion attempt was no good.
Buffalo marched 60 yards in the final three minutes for the game-winning score. Snyder’s 16-yard pass to Quain Williams gave the Bulls a 23-22 lead. The 2-point attempt was not good. The defense held off the Zips in the final minute to make the Bulls bowl eligible.