Texas State vs Georgia State Prediction, Game Preview

Texas State Bobcats vs Georgia State Panthers prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines: Saturday, October 23

Texas State vs Georgia State prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, October 23


Texas State vs Georgia State How To Watch

Date: Saturday, October 23
Game Time: 2:00 ET
Venue: Center Parc Stadium, Atlanta, GA
How To Watch: ESPN+
Record: Texas State (2-4), Georgia State (2-4)
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Texas State vs Georgia State Game Preview


Why Texas State Will Win

The defense is coming off of two of its better games. It allowed 31 points to both South Alabama and Troy, but fewer yards were allowed in both games than in any game in September.

It’s still not a brick wall, but the pass defense was solid and there was just enough defensive pressure to be a factor.

Georgia State is coming off its best pass rushing game of the season in the win over ULM a few weeks ago, but in general the defense doesn’t bring enough pressure to matter.

The Texas State offense should be able to keep things moving, but …

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Why Georgia State Will Win

The Bobcats don’t have anything the Panther defense has to worry about.

There’s no real running game – the 212 yards against South Alabama were an anomaly – and the downfield passing attack isn’t good enough because the line doesn’t provide enough time.

There might not be a whole lot of Georgia State pass rush coming into this, but there’s nothing from a Texas State line that’s generated a mere six sacks. With freshman QB Darren Grainger starting to come into his own …

Week 8 College Football Schedule, Predictions, Game Previews

What’s Going To Happen

The big plays should be there against the Texas State secondary.

The Bobcats have allowed teams to hit 74% of their passes over the last two games, but the bigger problem is on the other side with seven giveaways on the season.

Georgia State will capitalize on the two takeaways it’ll get.

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Texas State vs Georgia State Prediction, Line

Georgia State 38, Texas State 26
Line: Georgia State -10.5, o/u: 58
ATS Confidence out of 5: 3
10 Best Picks Against The Spread: Week 8

Must See Rating: 2

5: Succession
1: Dancing with the Stars: Grease Night

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Georgia State Panthers: CFN College Football Preview 2021

College Football News Preview 2021: Previewing, predicting, looking ahead to the Georgia State Panthers season with what you need to know

College Football News Preview 2021: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Georgia State Panthers season with what you need to know.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

– What You Need To Know: Offense | Defense
Top Players | Key Players, Games, Stats
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Georgia State Schedule Analysis
– Georgia State Previews
2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015

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2020 Record: 6-4 overall, 4-4 in Sun Belt
Head Coach: Shawn Elliott, 5th year, 22-25
2020 CFN Final Ranking: 77
2020 CFN Preview Ranking: 114
2019 CFN Final Ranking: 75

Georgia State College Football Preview 2021: Offense

The offense didn’t always work, but when it wasn’t playing a few of the Sun Belt’s elite teams it was a whole lot of fun with a slew of exciting playmakers and a whole lot of production whenever it had the chance to score. The main parts are back to keep it all going.

Cornelious Brown didn’t get a whole lot of all-star attention in a Sun Belt full of strong quarterbacks, but he turned into the playmaker the program can work around for the next few years. It’s a mobile 6-5, 200-pound downfield passer who needs to be more accurate, but he came through time and again to keep the attack moving.

Brown gets back his main men to throw to, starting with 6-4, 210-pound junior Sam Pinckney and 5-11, 185-pound senior Cornelius McCoy. In all, the top ten receivers of last year are back to go along with a rising QB with a year of experience under his belt.

– Brown can run, but he doesn’t have to do it all. Senior Destin Coates led the team with 769 yards and seven scores – and he can catch – and 220-pound senior Tucker Gregg provides a bit of thump. Just like the receiving corps, almost all of the production from 2020 returns. If it’s not enough that all the skill guys are back, all five starters return to the offensive front that should be among the Sun Belt’s best.

– What You Need To Know: Defense
Top Players | Key Players, Games, Stats
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Georgia State Schedule Analysis

NEXT: Georgia State College Football Preview 2021: Defense

Georgia State Football Schedule 2021

Georgia State Panthers 2021 football schedule, analysis, and what Sun Belt teams they miss.

Georgia State Panthers 2021 football schedule, analysis, and what Sun Belt teams they miss.


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Georgia State Football Schedule 2021

2021 Sun Belt Football Schedule

Sept. 4 Army

Sept. 11 at North Carolina

Sept. 18 Charlotte

Sept. 25 at Auburn

Oct. 2 Appalachian State

Oct. 9 at ULM

Oct. 16 OPEN DATE

Oct. 23 Texas State

Oct. 30 at Georgia Southern

Nov. 4 at Louisiana

Nov. 13 at Coastal Carolina

Nov. 20 Arkansas State

Nov. 27 Troy

Sun Belt Teams Missed From West:South Alabama

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Georgia State 39, WKU 21: LendingTree Bowl 10 Things To Know

Georgia State 39, WKU 21. The 10 ten things you need to know about the Georgia State win over WKU in the LendingTree Bowl.

Georgia State 39, WKU 21. The 10 ten things you need to know about the Georgia State win over WKU in the LendingTree Bowl.


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Georgia State 39, WKU 21: LendingTree Bowl

10. It doesn’t matter if it’s the LendingTree, the Dollar General, the GoDaddy or the GMAC – this has been a rough bowl watch for a long, long time. With this 18-point Georgia State win, that makes it five years in a row of games decided by double-digits. Some of these have been better than the final score, but ever since the classic Byron Leftwich Marshall 64-61 overtime win over East Carolina, 16 of 19 have been relative blowouts.

9. This got a bit chippy. There weren’t a ton of penalties – 15 in all – but these two started to get into it as the game went on. WKU got hit with the nine penalties – three more than Georgia State – and was more mistake-prone overall. More on that in a moment.

8. The Georgia State offense was a different animal this year when Destin Coates was able to get moving. The junior RB hit the 100-yard mark four times, and all when he got the ball 20 times or more. He ran 23 times for 117 yards and a touchdown. Is scoring dash at the end of the first quarter go it all going for the Panthers.

7. Georgia State’s Cornelious Brown should be one of the Sun Belt’s biggest stars in 2021. The QB had his problems with picks here and there – he threw one against WKU early on when he tried to make something big happen – and he didn’t get going on the ground with just 40 yards, but he threw for 232 yards and three touchdowns. He was in control, he kept the chains moving, and again, the big mistakes weren’t there.

6. Turnovers and mistakes continue to be a killer this bowl season – WKU was -2 in turnover margin. QB Tyrrell Pigrome completed 17-of-33 passes for 180 yards, and he ran for a score. There was one big problem, actually two – his two interceptions. Before this, he threw 264 passes in the regular season with no picks.

5. The WKU pass rush stepped it up late in the season, but it only generated one sack against the Panthers. However, there were plenty of big plays made behind the line – ten tackles for loss – and it wasn’t nearly enough. Third down stops were too much of an issue, and they were a big problem against this Panther offense.

4. Georgia State did a better job at controlling the game. It had the ball ten minutes longer, converted 13-of-21 third down tries, and the style never allowed the Hilltoppers to make much of a push after going on a 27-0 run in the first half.

3. Going into next year, WKU needs more of a running game. It averaged under four yards per carry for the season, and while it got the mark against Georgia State, it only came up with 104 yards. There were three touchdowns, and CJ Jones was able to tear off a big scoring dash, but there wasn’t enough of a push.

2. The lack of a consistent WKU offensive punch turned out to be a big deal once again, coming up with just 284 yards. Blowing up on FIU and Charlotte to close out the regular season was nice, but the programs needs a positive identity and style to move the ball more consistently. When the game was starting to get away, there wasn’t the ability to slow things down or answer. It was the sixth time the Hilltoppers gave up more than 21 points, and they lost all six.

1. It’s a winning season for Georgia State. Don’t dismiss just how big a deal that is to a program, especially in this insane season. It was able to finish 6-4 with this win and close out with four wins in the last five games. The team was consistent, it was occasionally explosive, and now it’s a bowl winner two years in a row for the second time in four seasons.

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PODCAST: 2019 Mountain West Bowl Show Part 2

Get caught up with the latest Mountain West bowl news.

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PODCAST: 2019 Mountain West Bowl Show Part 2


A pair of recaps and a preview.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Air Force, Hawaii come away with wins.

Jeremy flies solo once again to recap the Cheeze It and Hawaii Bowl, plus he previews the Arizona Bowl between Georgia State and Wyoming. In the bowl recaps it starts with Hawaii earning a 38-34 victory over BYU. The Warriors offense had a huge game throwing the ball from Cole McDonald who was turnover-free in the game.

The Warriors defense also stood out with three turnovers of their own. There was some technology issues in the game that could have made things a bit different but the bowl game was lacking the proper tech.

Air Force vs. Washington State lived up to the hype with the Falcons running at will and the Cougars offense slinging the ball quite well. Air Force had a classic 20-play, 12-plus minute drive that went over the first and second quarters for a touchdown. The Falcons defense also made a few big plays by stopping Washington State on multiple fourth downs.

We also preview the Arizona Bowl between Wyoming and Georgia State which will feature strength vs. strength with the Cowboys defense vs. the Panthers offense and vice versa with weakness vs. weakness. Also, there is some confusing information regarding Wyoming’s starting quarterback.

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2019 Arizona Bowl Expert Picks

Picks from across the internet for the Arizona Bowl between Georgia State and Wyoming.

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2019 Arizona Bowl Expert Picks


Find out who likes who between Georgia State and Wyoming


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Bowl game picks

The Arizona Bowl is a day time Tuesday afternoon game between Georgia State and Wyoming. The Cowboys are a seven-point favorite and below are picks from our staff and across the Internet.

Staff Picks

Arizona Bowl: Wyoming (-7) vs. Georgia State 

 

Jeremy: SU: Wyoming | ATS: Georgia State | Score: Wyoming 20, Georgia State 16

Josh F: SU: Georgia State | ATS: Georgia State | Score: Georgia State 27, Wyoming 14

Matt K.: SU: Wyoming | ATS: Georgia State | Score: Wyoming 24, Georgia State 13

Ted M: SU: Georgia State | ATS: Georgia State | Score: Georgia St. 30, Wyoming 21

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Wyoming 28 Georgia St 14

Roger Wyoming 24 Georgia State 18

Erik: SU/ATS: Georgia State

Sean: SU: Wyoming| ATS: Wyoming | Score: Georgia St. 13, Wyoming 24

USA TODAY

Five of the six go with Wyoming as the outright winner

Los Angeles Times

Wyoming 21, Georgia State 19

The Action Cookbook

Funding hadn’t been pulled, of course. The upper echelons of the government, the ones with say over those sorts of things, they’d never known about the program in the first place. The scientist had gotten cold feet. He’d seen inside a football coach’s mind. He knew it was too much, even for a weapon of war. There was no glimmer of humanity. He told his superiors that the experiments had failed. He’d stayed on, worried that they hadn’t.

CBS Sports

ESPN

Both teams have wins against SEC opponents, as Wyoming beat Missouri and Georgia State stunned Tennessee in Knoxville. Wyoming has a clear edge on defense and at the line of scrimmage, ranking sixth nationally in rushing yards allowed and 27th in rushing offense. Craig Bohl’s team gets a lift from 1,000-yard rusher Xazavian Valladay against the nation’s 116th-ranked run defense. Wyoming’s defense contains quarterback Dan Ellington in the win.

Prediction: Wyoming 37, Georgia State 20

Athlon Sports

All three go with Wyoming.


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Arizona Bowl: A Georgia State Q&A With Scott Watkins

We learn more about the Wyoming Cowboys’ bowl opponent, the Georgia State Panthers, with Scott Watkins of Forgotten5.

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Arizona Bowl: A Georgia State Q&A With Scott Watkins


We learn more about the Wyoming Cowboys’ bowl opponent, the Georgia State Panthers, with Scott Watkins of Forgotten5.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS & @MWCwire

A quietly even bowl game.

College football’s bowl season is nearing its January stretch run and the Mountain West’s seven-game slate heads into its penultimate game when the Wyoming Cowboys and Georgia State Panthers face off in the NOVA Home Loans Arizona Bowl on Tuesday, December 31.

Amid the buzz of the College Football Playoff, you might be tempted to overlook this matchup. The Arizona Bowl has always tended to be a fun one, however, and both teams have shown a propensity to surprise this fall.

To learn more about the Panthers, we reached out to Scott Watkins of Forgotten5.

Mountain West Wire: One of the year’s biggest stories was Georgia State going to Neyland Stadium and defeating Tennessee back in Week 1, but can you describe the Panthers’ overall season after that?

Scott Watkins: Georgia State’s season was a long, winding road that was ultimately a success, though I don’t think the team will tell you that. Following the program-defining win over Tennessee, the Panthers quickly hit a crossroad after getting pummeled by Western Michigan and taking an overtime loss to Texas State.

They responded by rattling off four straight wins that included victories over Arkansas State and Army. Act III of the year began in Monroe with trap-game loss against the Warhawks. The Panthers would lose three of their last four games.

Most people who put out any prediction on GSU’s season had the Panthers losing a lot more than winning. The offense had some firepower but the defense was still a major work in progress, making GSU a longshot for a bowl game coming off a 2-10 season.

Yet, here they are. Bowling in Arizona.

MWwire: The Panthers definitely look like a team led by its offense and no one had a bigger impact than running back Tra Barnett. What strengths does he bring to the GSU backfield?

Watkins: It is very safe to say that Barnett is the best running back in GSU history. The senior broke pretty much every rushing record in the young Panther record book this year. Barnett also needs just under 100 yards in this game to become GSU’s first ever Sun Belt rushing champ.

Barnett has been a dangerous weapon because of his versatility. He’s strong for his size and work his way in between the tackles and has enough breakaway speed to reach the third level before the second level can react.

Most importantly, though, Barnett is consistent. Elliott has used anywhere from one to three different backs and Barnett is always heavily involved and producing at a high level. The back has averaged at least five yards per carry in nine games this season, including three games above 6.5 yards a carry.

MWwire: It certainly seems like the effectiveness of quarterback Dan Ellington has had a huge impact on the team’s fortunes, as well, with a 13% difference in completion rate and a 50-point difference in passer rating between wins and losses. What would you say has generally helped Ellington to perform at his best?

Watkins: The win/loss split is certainly eye-opening, but there is much more relevant split to take note of here: pre and post-injury Ellington. Act III began with perhaps the biggest story of the Panthers’ season. In the first half of the game at Louisiana-Monroe, Ellington left the contest with a leg injury. It was later revealed that he had torn his ACL and would be done for the year.

He’s not done. To everyone’s surprise, Ellington started the next game against Appalachian State. While an admirable effort and the most incredible display of toughness and heart I’ve ever seen in person, the full-powered Ellington just wasn’t there. The offense was limited because Ellington’s dual threat capabilities were non-existent and he lacked zip on his throws toward the sideline. Against the Mountaineers, he completed just 44 percent of his passes and tossed two picks.

In Ellington’s three starts since the injury, he has -5 rushing yards on 21 attempts. Without his running ability, the offense is susceptible to going stagnant. Post-injury Ellington’s Panthers are averaging just 21.7 points per game compared to the 36 points a game before. That’s a fairly large swing.

MWwire: I noticed that every GSU athlete named to the all-Sun Belt postseason three-deep played on offense, which I suspect means there have been some issues on defense. What has been the Panthers’ most persistent issue there and who do you think could have a big bowl game to fix it?

Watkins: Defense, as mentioned, has big a pesky thorn in the Panthers’ side for some time now. The unit bottomed out last year and, while it has shown flashed in 2019, is still a big problem.

It didn’t help that GSU lost its two best players on that side of the ball in linebacker Ed Curney and safety Remy Lazarus during the year, either. The Panthers are giving up 5.3 yards a pop on the ground (9th in SBC) and 8.5 yards an attempt through the air (10th) making it a two-pronged problem that has yet to be solved.

The no-doubt star of the defense now is linebacker Trajan Stephens-McQueen. The only reason he didn’t nab an All-Conference bid is because the Sun Belt is stacked at that position. The junior was one of eight players in the league to reach 100 tackles and added two interceptions, as well.

GSU will need a big performance out of Stephens-McQueen against Wyoming, which he is more than capable of doing. Against Army, Stephens-McQueen recorded 20 tackles and reached double-digit tackles four times this season.

MWwire: The Arizona Bowl has already built a reputation for hotly contested games in its short history. Do you believe this year’s iteration will be more of the same? How do you see the game generally unfolding?

Watkins: Bowl games are extremely difficult to predict and this one is no different. On paper, one would assume Wyoming has a clear edge with the phenomenal defense the Cowboys have been playing lined against a struggling Panther offense. I expect Elliott to come out with a few wrinkles to try and jump start the offense in different spots throughout the game. The biggest key is for the defense to simply keep GSU within striking distance, though. GSU is down, but if I’ve learned one thing about the Panthers this year, it’s that they certainly aren’t out.

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