BEAR TRAP: With Big East play looming, Orange looks to avoid letdown against Maine
By Tyler Dunne
Posted: 9/24/09, 1:34 AM EST Section: Sports
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"I was like, 'Do we have a flying mouse? What's going on?'" Carter recalled. "Nobody knew what was going on."
No, SU's locker room wasn't raided by a mutant rodent. This was just head coach Doug Marrone's way of telling his team not to overlook Syracuse's next opponent. The mousetraps were a clever, albeit bizarre, metaphor for the cliché "trap game." With South Florida on tap next week, Marrone doesn't want his team overlooking Maine, a Division I-AA opponent. The Orange (1-2) hosts the Black Bears (2-1) Saturday at the Carrier Dome (7 p.m., TW26).
After admitting to looking past teams in the past, players have vowed to focus on Maine - and Maine only - this time. Those mousetraps have been the friendly reminder.
"They're hanging from the ceiling letting us know, 'Don't get trapped,'" Carter said. "We got the one win, but we can't take this game easy. They're going to be just as hungry as we are."
Carter knows the grim consequences of taking an opponent lightly. Last year, the Orange was stunned by Mid-American conference opponent Akron, 42-28, in one of ugliest losses of Greg Robinson's tenure as head coach. In the week of practice leading up to that game, intensity was lacking.
Players expected to coast. They were wrong.
"You could sense the team was lax," Carter said. "Guys weren't taking it serious, saying it was just Akron. You can't do that."
This was a recurring theme, SU cornerback Nico Scott pointed out. Too often, players mentally leapfrogged opponents on the schedule.
"We did a lot of that in the past, taking opponents lightly," Scott said. "You get a Maine or a Vermont or something like that, and you think it's a cupcake walk. …We had some real crappy practices. But now the attitude and mentality around this place has changed."
So, the honeymoon from last week's pulsating win against Northwestern didn't last long. The Black Bears of the Colonial Athletic Association will likely be hungry coming off a bitter loss. Last week, Maine hemorrhaged 17 fourth-quarter points and lost to Albany, 20-16. A run-first team, Maine leans on running back Derek Session. In three games, Session has rushed for 314 yards and three touchdowns.

The Daily Orange



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Marc LeVine
posted 9/24/09 @ 4:10 PM EST
That's right. You don't look past Maine and you also don't forget that bowl bids are only given out to teams that finish with 7 or more wins in a season. (Continued…)
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