Quantcast The Daily Northwestern
College Media Network
  • Home


NU defense finally forcing turnovers

Arrington's pick turning point in win; team's thoughts with McGee as he mourns his father's death

Chris Gentilviso

Issue date: 10/15/07 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
Northwestern coaches and players preached about it for weeks. And it finally happened.

While the Wildcats' offense continued to hit its stride with another blistering performance, NU's 49-48 double-overtime victory came with a little help from the defense in a once-barren department: turnovers.

With his team down by 21 points, and only 17 minutes left in the game, junior linebacker Malcolm Arrington brought his big-play capability to the table for the second straight week. After a blocked punt against Michigan State, Arrington snagged an errant throw by Minnesota freshman quarterback Adam Weber, setting up a momentum change that would bring the Cats out of their mid-game lull.

"I was just chomping down in zone coverage," Arrington said. "That's what we've been taught and I've just been doing my job. I got lucky enough that the quarterback threw the ball to me."

But there was a little offense mixed in Arrington's defensive play. Arrington played both sides of the ball in high school, starring as a linebacker and tailback at Orchard Lake St. Mary's Prep in Rochester, Mich. His open-field skills came back to life Saturday, when he returned the ball 27 yards to set up NU's first score since early in the second quarter.

"He's got really good hands, and he's really starting to come into his own," NU coach Pat Fitzgerald said. "I'm proud of the way Malcolm is playing. He's grown."

Arrington's interception led to contagious success late, as the Cats forced another turnover on a tipped pass later in the fourth quarter, which was snagged by sophomore defensive end Corey Wootton. The two picks were just the third and fourth interceptions for the Cats this season.

As the NU offense continues to find its identity in the 580-610 yards per game territory, the defense will be pressed hard to keep pace. Arrington said his unit will continue to work on making the same plays it made Saturday.

"As a defense, we can't depend on the offense to outscore the opponent every week," he said. "Lately we have been doing that. We have to step up and it's definitely a gut check."
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

The DAILY encourages you to share your thoughts on this story. Please help us keep the discussion lively, but civil. Comments that are abusive to others, off-topic or vulgar, or comments that misrepresent someone's identity, will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to delete any comments in violation or to close comment threads on articles.

Please e-mail online@dailynorthwestern.com to flag a comment or for more information.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Advertisement