Coordinator Jim Glogowski and other members of Minnesota State Mankato's defensive staff had been reminding players last week that Texas A&M Commerce had a penchant for running trick plays.
"We saw a few on video, but it was more the coaches telling us, 'Be ready for anything,' '' senior linebacker Alex Goettl said.
The Mavericks were leading 21-14 late in the third quarter in Saturday's Division II quarterfinal at Mankato's Blakeslee Field. Commerce was starting a possession from its 41 – and the Lions decided to go with trickery immediately.
Quarterback Mikla Smalls tossed a pass to his right to receiver Matt Childers.
"We were supposed to bite on it as a bubble screen,'' Goettl said. "The running back was leaking out on the other side, though. Something was fishy.''
Childers threw back across the field, 10 yards behind the line of scrimmage. Goettl took the pass in stride, in front of the intended target, and went 31 yards with the interception. The touchdown broke open what became a 42-21 victory and put the Mavericks (13-0) in the national semifinals on Saturday at Slippery Rock (Pa.).
It also gave the National Football Foundation another highlight if interested in adding to a brief video when Goettl is introduced along with 11 other finalists for the William V. Campbell Trophy – euphemistically known as the "academic Heisman'' – on Tuesday night at the New York Hilton in Manhattan.
There's an $18,000 post-graduate scholarship for all the finalists, and that's upgraded to $25,000 for the winner. This will be the 62nd dinner for the NFF, which had Gen. Douglas MacArthur among its founders.