November 24, 2012
Scoring 59 points not enough for Herd
Defensive coordinator Chris Rippon resigns after ECU debacle
AP Photo
East Carolina quarterback Shane Carden gets flipped by Marshall's Dominick LeGrande (6).
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GREENVILLE, N.C. - The epitaph of Marshall's 2012 football season: The Thundering Herd scored 59 points and lost.

The third year of the Doc Holliday era has come to a close, as has the tenure of defensive coordinator Chris Rippon, who handed in his resignation Saturday. After a season in which Rippon's unit shattered a few unwanted Thundering Herd records, the development surprised nobody.

Rippon's last disaster came in the Herd's 65-59 double-overtime loss Friday at East Carolina, a game that hinged on a 19-yard pass from Shane Carden to Justin Hardy on fourth-and-10. Had the Herd stopped the Pirates on that down, it could have taken a few knees and gone to its second consecutive bowl game. Instead, Carden eventually hit Danny Webster on a 6-yard touchdown pass, tying the game at 52 with 4 seconds left in regulation.

You can pick your malignant milestone from that game, including the fact that Hardy's crossing-route reception was the 19th fourth-down conversion against the Herd in 25 attempts this season, a shocking 76 percent. Over the last five games, that figure was 13 out of 16.

Other numbers underscoring Rippon's downfall:

  • Carden's 439 passing yards were the most against the Herd this season, and he was the fourth quarterback to top 300 yards. Carden's 443 total yards were just short of the 467 by Rice's Taylor McHargue.
  • Friday's loss was the seventh time the Herd gave up 40 or more points, the fifth time yielding 50-plus and the second giving up 60-plus. The final bill: 517 points allowed, 43-plus per game. No Herd defense, not even the outmanned 2007 bunch, comes close.
  • The Pirates became the third foe to score 35 or more points in a half. West Virginia was a failed extra point from doing it twice in the same game. Marshall gave up 21 or more in a half a whopping 11 times out of 24.
  • ECU piled up 555 total yards, becoming the fourth team to top 500 against the Herd. That put the season total at 5,481 yards allowed, about 457 a game.
  • The result Friday hurled the MU program back across the thin line from mildly successful to struggling. Instead of playing in its second consecutive bowl game, the Herd suffered its second 5-7 season in three years under Holliday.

    As painful as that is, the Herd has performed better in these three years than the first three years of previous coach Mark Snyder. Holliday is 17-20 overall and 13-11 in Conference USA play, while Snyder was 12-23 overall from 2005-07, 10-14 in league games.

    Record-wise, Snyder's 2007 team scraped the program's bottom at 3-9, and it wasn't hard to figure why. Starting with the season-ending injury to Albert McClellan, the outmanned defense was roughed up for 411 points, yielding 191 rushing yards and 451 total yards per game. The Herd ranked 102nd, 93rd and 107th nationally in those categories.

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