Championship Preview: App State at Troy
![Championship Preview: App State at Troy](/img/li/championship-preview-app-state-at-troy-1.jpg)
"This is going to be a great football game," App State head coach said. "It's going to be a challenge for us to go down there in a hostile environment. We've played there before, and they have a great fan base with great support from their students. It's one of those games, when you play at this level, you want to play for a conference championship and play in those types of environments."
Troy is 21-2 since its well-documented visit to Boone on Sept. 17, 2022, when App State hosted ESPN's College GameDay for the first time and then won 32-28 on a 53-yard Hail Mary to . The Trojans went on a tear from there, winning the 2022 Sun Belt title, and their only losses this season have come against Kansas State (42-13 in Week 2) and James Madison (16-14 in Week 3).
Troy's current nine-game winning streak included seven straight Sun Belt wins, with only a 31-24 victory against Louisiana being decided by less than 18 points. The Trojans have a balanced offense and, like JMU, a dominant defense, given that they allow just 16.7 points per game (10th nationally) and 300.1 yards per game (12th nationally) under the direction of former App State assistant Greg Gasparato."They have both things — great players and great coaches," Clark said.JMU's run-stuffing defense was as good as advertised in slowing down App State's ball carriers, but the Mountaineers moved the ball effectively and won in overtime with Sun Belt Newcomer of the Year throwing for 318 yards and three touchdowns. The offensive line offered stellar protection for Aguilar in the JMU win, and it will be another challenging test with the likes of Javon Solomon (14 sacks this season) rushing the quarterback for Troy.
The Trojans allow just 102.1 yards per game on the ground (or 3.1 yards per carry), and there's a better chance of rejoining the mix with , and company after Noel sat out the regular-season finale.
App State's defense has been responsible for allowing just 15.3 points per 60 minutes during the last four games — all wins against bowl-bound teams — and Troy quarterback Gunnar Watson averages 261.8 passing yards per game to go along with the work-horse production of Sun Belt Offensive Player of the Year Kimani Vidal (112.4 rushing yards per game).Watson has thrown only five interceptions during his 26-touchdown regular season, while the Mountaineers are tied for ninth place nationally with 15 interceptions, including eight in the last four games."We started playing faster and more confident," Clark said. "I think you could see that through the latter part of the season that our kids were having fun playing football again."Jabre Barber (5-foot-10, 174 pounds) leads the team with 60 catches (21 more than the second-highest total on the team) for 855 yards (327 more than the second-highest total on the team), while 6-foot-4, 204-pound Chris Lewis has scored touchdowns on nine of his 29 receptions. The only Sun Belt player with more touchdown receptions than Lewis this season is App State's .
A fast start could be important, considering the first quarter has been the lowest-scoring quarter this season for both App State (64 points, with at least 107 in every other quarter) and Troy (outscored its opponents a combined 48-41 in the first quarter). The Mountaineers have ended their first drive with a punt in seven straight games."Coach Sumrall is a great football coach, and if you know Jon on a personal level, I think his team has taken on that persona," Clark said. "They're tough, they're disciplined, they play the game the right way and they don't beat themselves."- RB
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