Wednesday, 28 February 2007
Bob Shoop moves to Defensive Coordinator for William & Mary
The UMass website has an article about UMass' defensive backs coach Bob Shoop being hired by William & Mary as Defensive Coordinator.
UMass and the Tribe play on 10/27/07.
Matt Vautour had reported back on 01/26/07 that Shoop was a hot property in I-AA as a Defensive Coordinator.
Shoop is the second UMass caoch to leave after the 2006 season. Matt also reported that Brian Smith left to join the Jets organization.
Good luck to both coaches! Except, of course, to Bob Shoop on 10/27.
UPDATE: According to W&M fans, Shoop is the seventh Tribe Defensive Coordinator in eleven years...
Tuesday, 27 February 2007
UMass Football Banquet March 9, 2007
Just want to remind everyone that time is getting short to RSVP to make reservations for the UMass Football Banquet.
Friday march 9, 2007
- 6:00 pm Guest arrival/Social hour
- 7:00 pm Buffet Dinner
- $40/person, Children (12 & under $20)
- RSVP by 03/01/2007
- Call 413-545-2026, EXT 0
I encourage all UMass Football fans to attend.
Monday, 26 February 2007
The Wayne Hardin Project gains momentum
From left, Hardin, The Manhattan Project, Kennedy
"This nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth, " President John F. Kennedy, May 25, 1961
By Mike Gibson
Forget about the degree of difficulty with The Kennedy Project or The Manhattan Project or even The Alan Parsons Project.
The Wayne Hardin Project could make them all seem like child's play in comparison.
Back in 1961, when Kennedy stood before Congress and said that "this nation should commit itself" to putting a man on the moon before the end of the decade, there were a lot of "huh?" looks in the gallery.
"Moon? You mean that same moon that's up in the sky?"
In the early 1940s, when a group of scientists said they were committed to splitting the atom, people said:
"What, are you crazy? Do you know how small that thing is?"
That's sort of the same reaction Hardin got when he went on the Temple football post-game show in November and "guaranteed" to put 66,000, mostly Temple, fans in the stands for the 2007 home opener against Navy at Lincoln Financial Field.
Guaranteed.
Hardin assured Temple athletic director Bill Bradshaw, the moderator of the show, that he wasn't kidding.
"We're going to do all we can to help you," Bradshaw said.
Hardin offered one caveat.
"We're going to try to play this game on the Thursday before Labor Day," Hardin said. "I've given Bill that job now. He'll get to work on it Monday."
Bradshaw worked and worked and worked some more. Sometime, in December, Bradshaw almost gave up, saying "it appears the Eagles want that date."
Yet he did not give up.
"We're not going to abandon the idea of Thursday night yet," Bradshaw wrote in an email in December.
Bradshaw hammered away on the problem for months and finally delivered his end of the bargain today with the announcement that the Owls now have that date.
Jeff Lurie and Joe Banner wanted to keep it for the possiblity of an Eagles-Jets' game.
The Eagles were originally going to play that night and were unwilling to budge.
Bradshaw conjoled and pleaded, even begged, for the game, saying that it would help the Eagles, Temple, Navy and the city.
The city got on Temple's side and convinced Lurie and Banner that it would best serve their community relations if they helped Temple out with this special night.
Mostly, though, it was Bradshaw who kept his word to Hardin that he would help. He didn't give up and neither did Temple. Getting Thursday night is huge and, if you've been a Philadelphian for any length of time, you know why. The city virtually empties on the Friday of the holiday weekend, the last chance for folks to go "down the shore" before the long, cold winter.
Playing on Thursday night was the only shot Temple had of getting a crowd that weekend.
Now it's up to Hardin to keep his word to Bradshaw.
Will Hardin be able to deliver?
Folks who've known Hardin for years say don't sell him short, even on something this ambitious.
"If you think he can't do it, you just don't know coach Hardin," long-time friend Kevin Touhey wrote in December.
Hardin was the guy who took the Temple job after it struggled against the Gettysburgs and Kings Points and Xaviers and looked people in the eye and said: "We're going to be playing Penn State and Pitt and we're going to go toe-to-toe with them. We're going to be in a bowl game."
Plenty of eyebrows raised, but few nods of belief.
Yet Hardin delivered. Temple played one of the greatest Penn State teams ever, the 1978 squad, toe-to-toe. Temple was nationally ranked. Temple went to a bowl game.
If anyone can do this, Hardin can.
Nothing gets The Wayne Hardin Project off to a running start like a Feb. announcent.
Now Billboards can be made, commercials can be filmed and radio spots can be written.
Hardin is still a compelling figure, both in this town and the Baltimore/D.C. area. He was, after all, the last Navy head coach to have that team in a major bowl and ranked in the top 10, as high as No. 2.
Hardin is counting on his Navy and Temple friends to deliver on some favors. Hardin already has convinced incoming recruit Corwin Acker, among others. "Our first game next year is against Navy," Acker said. "We have a sold-out crowd, 68,000 people. I can't wait to play in front of all those people."
If Hardin is able to pull this off, taking Navy to No. 2 in the country or Temple to No. 17 in both major polls will seem easy by comparison.
He deserves the benefit of the doubt and all the help we can give him.
Great Performances 2006---- Offensive Line
In the rush to the National Championship Game, it was easy to forget the performances that got us there.
In two previous blogs, I covered the play of Liam Coen and Steve Baylark.
Not much happens on offense without good play from the Offensive Line. In 2006, UMass' OL played superbly.
In 2006 UMass had 898 offensive plays and gained 5757 net yards. That's 6.4 yards/play. It's also good for 12th in the nation in offensive production.
The Offensive line gave up 16 sacks for 105 yards in 334 passing attempts. That's one every 20.8 attempts and just a tad over 1 sack per game. Those totals are good for 1st in the A10 and 14th in the nation.
The O-line also racked up a slew of awards for 2006:
- Matt Austin----SPORTS NETWORK 2006 1-AA/FCS 3RD TEAM ALL-AMERICA
� ECAC 1-AA FIRST-TEAM ALL-STAR
� ATLANTIC 10 FIRST-TEAM OFFENSIVE LINE
� NEW ENGLAND FOOTBALL WRITERS ALL-STAR TEAM - Nick Diana--- SECOND TEAM ALL-A10
- Alex Miller---- SPORTS NETWORK 2006 1-AA/FCS FIRST TEAM ALL-AMERICA
� AFCA ALL-AMERICA
� ATLANTIC 10 FIRST-TEAM CENTER
� ECAC 1-AA FIRST-TEAM ALL STAR
- David Thompson----SECOND TEAM ALL-A10
- Chris Hopkins---- Took over for an injured Sean Calicchio and had an excellent year.
Saturday, 24 February 2007
Owls' spring goal should be to take care of the little things
By Mike Gibson
Watching Temple in the Bobby Wallace or Ron Dickerson years line up with too many or not enough men on the line of scrimmage reminded me what the two greatest coaches I ever knew told me over and over again.
"Mike, you take care of the little things and that'll lead to big things," they said.
One was a college coach about to enter the National Football Hall of Fame.
The other was a high school coach who was every bit as good.
Wayne Hardin and Mike Pettine took care of the little things and they both accomplished big things.
Hardin fielded national powers at two places where people said there would not be a national power in the modern era: Navy and Temple.
Despite a mandatory five-year military commitment (pre-Vietnam War), Hardin had the Middies No. 2 in the nation and developed two Heisman Trophy winners, Joe Belino and Roger Staubach. At Temple, he had the Owls ranked No. 17 in both polls and beating California in a bowl game.
Pettine won 326 high school games, lost 42, tied four and won three straight "large school" Pennsylvania titles before retiring on top at Central Bucks West. In the 1990s alone, Central Bucks West was 121-8 under Pettine. That's not a misprint. One hundred and 21 wins, eight losses. That followed a sub-par 1980s (95-11-1). Pettine had a lot of slow, small, white kids but they never jumped off side, they never went in motion before they were supposed to, they never lined up with too many men on the line of scrimmage.
Yet they constantly beat teams with bigger, faster athletes because they took care of the little things.
Pettine's teams literally went years without substitution problems or illegal procedure penalties or false starts.
Now Central Bucks West is a sub-mediocre football school.
It's no coincidence it's without Pettine.
I once asked long-time Pettine assistant coach Mike Carey, a former All-American center at Pitt, about why I could cover CB West games for five years and never see an offside or illegal procedure penalty.
"Mike, come to one of our practices, you'll find out," Carey told me.
So I did. For a whole week I saw kids go offsides, but never in a game.
Always in practice.
It went like this:
A kid would go offsides.
"Run it again," Pettine would yell out.
Another kid would go in motion too soon.
"Run it again," Pettine would yell out.
And they ran it.
Again and again.
When there was a subsitition problem, the assistant coaches weren't immune to the criticism.
"Coach (Sid) Hunsberger, what happened there?" Pettine would yell out.
"Run it again," Pettine would say. "That's it, coach. It better not happen again."
Watching Temple in the past, the most disappointing thing to me is the bull-bleep penalties the Owls used to get. I don't mind getting beat off the ball by superior athletes, but just once I'd like to see a team execute the way those Central Bucks West and Temple teams of the past did.
I'd like to see this team do the little things right in 2007.
"Run it again," Pettine would say long into the Doylestown night.
Hopefully, Al Golden will be spending much of the upcoming spring practice doing the same at 11th and Diamond.
Golden could have no better coaching templates to follow than the one established by people like Hardin and Pettine. On this long road back, following their wonderful example is as good a first step as any.
Watching Temple in the Bobby Wallace or Ron Dickerson years line up with too many or not enough men on the line of scrimmage reminded me what the two greatest coaches I ever knew told me over and over again.
"Mike, you take care of the little things and that'll lead to big things," they said.
One was a college coach about to enter the National Football Hall of Fame.
The other was a high school coach who was every bit as good.
Wayne Hardin and Mike Pettine took care of the little things and they both accomplished big things.
Hardin fielded national powers at two places where people said there would not be a national power in the modern era: Navy and Temple.
Despite a mandatory five-year military commitment (pre-Vietnam War), Hardin had the Middies No. 2 in the nation and developed two Heisman Trophy winners, Joe Belino and Roger Staubach. At Temple, he had the Owls ranked No. 17 in both polls and beating California in a bowl game.
Pettine won 326 high school games, lost 42, tied four and won three straight "large school" Pennsylvania titles before retiring on top at Central Bucks West. In the 1990s alone, Central Bucks West was 121-8 under Pettine. That's not a misprint. One hundred and 21 wins, eight losses. That followed a sub-par 1980s (95-11-1). Pettine had a lot of slow, small, white kids but they never jumped off side, they never went in motion before they were supposed to, they never lined up with too many men on the line of scrimmage.
Yet they constantly beat teams with bigger, faster athletes because they took care of the little things.
Pettine's teams literally went years without substitution problems or illegal procedure penalties or false starts.
Now Central Bucks West is a sub-mediocre football school.
It's no coincidence it's without Pettine.
I once asked long-time Pettine assistant coach Mike Carey, a former All-American center at Pitt, about why I could cover CB West games for five years and never see an offside or illegal procedure penalty.
"Mike, come to one of our practices, you'll find out," Carey told me.
So I did. For a whole week I saw kids go offsides, but never in a game.
Always in practice.
It went like this:
A kid would go offsides.
"Run it again," Pettine would yell out.
Another kid would go in motion too soon.
"Run it again," Pettine would yell out.
And they ran it.
Again and again.
When there was a subsitition problem, the assistant coaches weren't immune to the criticism.
"Coach (Sid) Hunsberger, what happened there?" Pettine would yell out.
"Run it again," Pettine would say. "That's it, coach. It better not happen again."
Watching Temple in the past, the most disappointing thing to me is the bull-bleep penalties the Owls used to get. I don't mind getting beat off the ball by superior athletes, but just once I'd like to see a team execute the way those Central Bucks West and Temple teams of the past did.
I'd like to see this team do the little things right in 2007.
"Run it again," Pettine would say long into the Doylestown night.
Hopefully, Al Golden will be spending much of the upcoming spring practice doing the same at 11th and Diamond.
Golden could have no better coaching templates to follow than the one established by people like Hardin and Pettine. On this long road back, following their wonderful example is as good a first step as any.
Friday, 23 February 2007
Sign Man and Video
The UMass Daily Collegian has an article about Ed Rubin AKA "Sign Man" here .
Ed is a great UMass fan. He was on the same plane I was on the marathon trip to Chattanooga.
Speaking of Chattanooga, there is a You Tube highlight video of the National Championship Game here . It's Appalachian State centric, but still worth watching. The Army Black Knights jump is here . First called to my attention by a AGS post.
There are more UMass football video snippets here .
Hopefully, the Athletic Dept will come through with the 2006 Football Highlight Video as promised.
Thursday, 22 February 2007
Thursday Morning Odds & Ends
The good folks at Appalachian State have a limited edition commemorative edition print of the UMass-Appalachian State National Championship game out. It's $30.00 from e-Bay.
Matt Dougherty, in his Extra Point column, takes a look back on the recruiting class of 2004 and considers how they're doing.
The last two CAA/A10 teams Maine and Towson, have announced their respective schedules. Both press releases feature National runner-up UMass.
Maine's schedule is a big improvement from 2006. Last year Maine played DII Shaw and Boston College. It takes 9 wins (usually) to get a home playoff game. Eight wins will get you a road at-large bid. With BC a loss, and Shaw not counting towards playoff eligibility, Maine was looking at going 9-0 in the A10 to get a home bid and 8-1 to just make the playoffs. Not easy to do in the tough A10.
This year's schedule has Monmouth, Stony Brook and UConn. Two good I-AA games and a winnable I-A game could have the Black Bears growling in '07.
Towson has won 11 straight OOC games since it joined the CAA/A10. The Tiger's 2007 schedule is a step up. They play CCSU (who wrecked GSU's 2006 season), Morgan State and play Colgate at Hamilton, the old graveyard of UMass' hopes.
Today's blog post is the 1,201 blog entry since we started in May of 2005...
Wednesday, 21 February 2007
Great Performances 2006-------Steve Baylark
In the run to the National Championship game it was easy to overlook the great performances it took to get us there. In a previous blog entry I took a look at Liam Coen's 2006 performance .
This time we'll consider the impact Steve Baylark made in 2006.
- His 235 yards against Rhode Island was the 10th all time single game total (dropping Jerome Bledsoe's 226 against Richmond in 1991 off the list)
- His 338 season carries was 3rd all time (he now holds three of the top ten season carries records---2006, 2003 and 2005)
- Baylark's 1,104 career carries places him 2nd behind Marcel Shipp's 1,215
- Baylark's 130.7 yards/game was 6th all time for a UMass running back
- His 15 TDs in 2006 ties him with Garry Pearson (1980) and Paul Metallo (1972)
- Baylark's 42 career TD's places him 3rd all time behind Rene Ingoglia's 54
- His 1,960 yards in 2006 places him first in yearly total for a senior (over Garry Pearson's 1,631 in 1982)
- Baylark's 5,332 career yards places him 2nd all time to Marcel Ship's 6,250
All in all, a great performance for Steve and the 2006 Minutemen!
UPDATE: A reader named Football1 has amended a very good comment. Please take time to read it.
Tuesday, 20 February 2007
UNCC studies adding I-AA football
UMass' basketball foe from the A10, UNCC is considering adding I-AA football.
NCAA regulations require schools with DI basketball to play I-A or I-AA football.
North Carolina is a hotbed of high school football, so the 49ers could recruit. The article states that UNCC has 21,000 students. I-AA football certainly feasible.
Now can some basketball trivia fan tell me how UNCC's nickname became "the 49ers"? What does a team from North Carolina have to do with the California gold rush?
Monday, 19 February 2007
Recruiting 2007 --- Reflections
Well, recruiting for 2007 is mostly over. Coach Brown stated that he is holding one or two scholarships up his sleeve.
Usually I-A transfers decide after Spring Football when they end up down in the depth chart. We'll have to wait to see if Brown comes up with any I-A transfers.
Obsessing about recruiting is foolish, as Chuck Burton points out in his CSN Diary-Letter of Intent article. Starting a "fire the coach" website when a fan's team suffers the hell of only signing 6 four-star Rivals recruits and Florida State signed nine is crazy.
But that only goes so far. Recruiting is the lifeblood of a program and better athletes means better results.
UMass signed seven defensive players (counting the punter as defense) and eight offensive recruits. Four of the recruits were team captains in high school.
How did we do? Pretty well thinks this blog. Lots of I-AA teams signed I-A transfers. Not many signed a I-A All American like Jeromy Miles.
UMass signed four OL. Reading the pedigree of offensive linemen is usually not very exciting. They usually are touted as "All league". UMass' recruits are all over 6-4 and all have multiple citations for "All-Something".
Octavious Hawkins could be a steal at QB.
Three of the recruits should start. Jeromy Miles should start at Strong Safety. JUCO Chris Pollard should start at Free Safety. Brett Arnold should start at punter.
Can't wait to Spring Football to see them all perform.
Usually I-A transfers decide after Spring Football when they end up down in the depth chart. We'll have to wait to see if Brown comes up with any I-A transfers.
Obsessing about recruiting is foolish, as Chuck Burton points out in his CSN Diary-Letter of Intent article. Starting a "fire the coach" website when a fan's team suffers the hell of only signing 6 four-star Rivals recruits and Florida State signed nine is crazy.
But that only goes so far. Recruiting is the lifeblood of a program and better athletes means better results.
UMass signed seven defensive players (counting the punter as defense) and eight offensive recruits. Four of the recruits were team captains in high school.
How did we do? Pretty well thinks this blog. Lots of I-AA teams signed I-A transfers. Not many signed a I-A All American like Jeromy Miles.
UMass signed four OL. Reading the pedigree of offensive linemen is usually not very exciting. They usually are touted as "All league". UMass' recruits are all over 6-4 and all have multiple citations for "All-Something".
Octavious Hawkins could be a steal at QB.
Three of the recruits should start. Jeromy Miles should start at Strong Safety. JUCO Chris Pollard should start at Free Safety. Brett Arnold should start at punter.
Can't wait to Spring Football to see them all perform.
Saturday, 17 February 2007
Recruiting 2007 --- WR Julian Talley
The final recruit to be joining the Minutemen in 2007 is Julian Talley a 6-1 180 pd WR from Winslow, NJ.
His Rivals page is here . Most relevant stat---- Forty 4.4 sec. He was first team All-state Group 3, First Team All-South Jersey, First Team All-Conference and 3rd team All-State as a senior. Career totals of 2,049 yards and 17 TDs.
He was NJVarsity.com All State . This article also mentions him signing with UMass.
Drew recruiting interest from Minnesota, Rutgers, Syracuse and Bowling Green.
Welcome to UMass Julian! We hope you have a great career with the Minutemen.
Friday, 16 February 2007
Recruiting 2007 ---- OL Justin Sawicki
The fourth offensive lineman to join UMass this year is Justin Sawicki, a 6-5 305 pd OL from Medford MA.
Sawicki was First Team Greater Boston League All-Star. MVP offensive lineman of his team. Started 21 consecutive games at right tackle.
His Rivals.com page is here .
His ESPN page is here .
Drew recruiting interest from Alabama, Nevada, BC, UConn and some I-AA teams.
Welcome to UMass Justin. The OL leads the Way!
Sawicki was First Team Greater Boston League All-Star. MVP offensive lineman of his team. Started 21 consecutive games at right tackle.
His Rivals.com page is here .
His ESPN page is here .
Drew recruiting interest from Alabama, Nevada, BC, UConn and some I-AA teams.
Welcome to UMass Justin. The OL leads the Way!
Thursday, 15 February 2007
Recruiting 2007--- OL Joshua Samuda
Joshua Samuda a 6-4 300 pd Offensive lineman from Hollywood Hills High School in Florida has signed with the Minutemen.
His Scout.com page is here . Named to to the North/South All-Star Team--- Member of the First Team Miami Herald All Broward 6A-4A Football Team (pdf format).
His Rivals.com page is here. There is a highlight video (Video Clip #1) on the Rivals page; I can't link to it directly. Must have javascript enabled and you have to sit through the commercial...
Drew recruiting interest from FIU, FAU, East Carolina, Memphis and Mississippi State.
Welcome to UMass Josh! You made the right choice.
His Scout.com page is here . Named to to the North/South All-Star Team--- Member of the First Team Miami Herald All Broward 6A-4A Football Team (pdf format).
His Rivals.com page is here. There is a highlight video (Video Clip #1) on the Rivals page; I can't link to it directly. Must have javascript enabled and you have to sit through the commercial...
Drew recruiting interest from FIU, FAU, East Carolina, Memphis and Mississippi State.
Welcome to UMass Josh! You made the right choice.
Wednesday, 14 February 2007
Recruiting 2007---- OL Brian Ostaszewski
Joining UMass this year will be Brian Ostaszewski a 6-5 300 pd offensive lineman from Stamford High School in Stamford CT.
His school has an article (with an image of him signing his letter-of-intent) here .
Ostaszewski was First Team All State CT High School Coaches Association (CHSCA), 2nd Team All-State Hartford Courant---First Team All-FCIA--- Member of the Governor's Cup All-Star Team--- started 30 consecutive games on both lines.
He is a friend and former teammate of UMass 2006 OL recruit Vladimir Ducasse. There is an article about Ducasse joining the Minutemen here .
Welcome to UMass Brian! Hope you and Vladimir lead the way to another National Championship.
His school has an article (with an image of him signing his letter-of-intent) here .
Ostaszewski was First Team All State CT High School Coaches Association (CHSCA), 2nd Team All-State Hartford Courant---First Team All-FCIA--- Member of the Governor's Cup All-Star Team--- started 30 consecutive games on both lines.
He is a friend and former teammate of UMass 2006 OL recruit Vladimir Ducasse. There is an article about Ducasse joining the Minutemen here .
Welcome to UMass Brian! Hope you and Vladimir lead the way to another National Championship.
Tuesday, 13 February 2007
Recruiting 2007---- DE Courtney Jackson
The UMass defense adds Courtney Jackson a 6-2 225 pd DE from Gwynn Park HS in Brandywine, MD. Gwynn Park went 10-2 and was ranked the #8th team in Maryland.
No less than five of Jackson's teammates signed with college programs.
He was a team captain-- made 93 tackles, 13 sacks and 5 fumble recoveries. All-county and All-Gazette.
Welcome to UMass Courtney! You'll be playing for the best.
No less than five of Jackson's teammates signed with college programs.
He was a team captain-- made 93 tackles, 13 sacks and 5 fumble recoveries. All-county and All-Gazette.
Welcome to UMass Courtney! You'll be playing for the best.
Monday, 12 February 2007
NCAA may revisit new clock rules
As you are well aware, the new clock rules initiated by the NCAA were not popular with most coaches (including Coach Brown). Now Ralph Wallace reports in his rejuvenated log that the NCAA may take another look. Most observers felt the rule change came from complaints that TV games were running long.
The article states that, on average, football games were shortened 14 minutes and reduced by 13.5 plays. UMass in 2006 had 898 offensive plays and made 5757 yards. That's 6.4 yards/play. So the new rules cost UMass about 45 yards of offense per game.
Key quote in the article "Yet in some cases, it appears fewer plays simply meant more commercials, according to a study by cfbstats.com published by thewizardofodds.blogspot.com."
I want more UMass football----not less. Hope they change the rule back.
The article states that, on average, football games were shortened 14 minutes and reduced by 13.5 plays. UMass in 2006 had 898 offensive plays and made 5757 yards. That's 6.4 yards/play. So the new rules cost UMass about 45 yards of offense per game.
Key quote in the article "Yet in some cases, it appears fewer plays simply meant more commercials, according to a study by cfbstats.com published by thewizardofodds.blogspot.com."
I want more UMass football----not less. Hope they change the rule back.
Recruiting 2007---- DT Mathew Goods
Matt Goods is #53 making the tackle in the image to the right. Matt is a 6-2 255 pd DT.
His MaxPreps page is here. Note that he had 45 tackles and 10 sacks plus two fumble recoveries in 11 games for St. Mary's HS in Rutherford, NJ.
Team stats for the 9-2 St. Mary's team is here.
53 tackles from the DT position is a great effort. Defensive Tackle is the toughest position to recruit. Looks like UMass picked up a steal in Goods.
Welcome to the Minutemen Matt! You'll be playing for the best defense in the East.
His MaxPreps page is here. Note that he had 45 tackles and 10 sacks plus two fumble recoveries in 11 games for St. Mary's HS in Rutherford, NJ.
Team stats for the 9-2 St. Mary's team is here.
53 tackles from the DT position is a great effort. Defensive Tackle is the toughest position to recruit. Looks like UMass picked up a steal in Goods.
Welcome to the Minutemen Matt! You'll be playing for the best defense in the East.
Sunday, 11 February 2007
NCAA needs an early signing period
By Mike Gibson
Five minutes after Daryl Robinson's high school career ended, a man leaned on that two foot fence that surrounds Frankford High's field and kept yelling one thing over and over again in the direction of Robinson.
"YOOOO Daryl," the man said, "Notre Dame, Daryl. Notre Dame."
He was like so many Notre Dame fans in Philadelphia: Big and fat and obnoxious. So many of them look the same, it is eerie. Middle aged white men with white hair about 100 pounds overweight and wearing Notre Dame gear from head to toe. You could pen a cartoon about this guy and everybody would recognize the type immediately.
He looks like mayoral candidate Bob Brady, but wasn't Bob Brady.
A Philadelphian, probably an Eagles' fan, latching onto a Division IA team 500 miles west of a town where there already is a Division IA team that desperately needs his support.
"Yooo Daryl," the man kept saying while Daryl was being interviewed, "Notre Dame. Notre Dame."
Daryl just shook his head from side to side, indicating no, and smiled.
It had gotten around the school the weeks before that Notre Dame was in town trying to woo Robinson from his Temple commitment.
This seemed to excite all of the big, fat Notre Dame fans who were North Catholic alumni.
They pressured Robinson with yells and less subtle means.
In a move that speaks volumes for his character and his future, Robinson kept his word to Temple.
The big, fat guys represent what is wrong with college sports, specifically football, these days.
A school works hard to get a verbal, then other schools come in late and are the beneficiary of the hard work of the initial school. In other words, the stealing of verbals. Temple had at least two stolen this recruiting season.
This only hurts the mid-majors and the up-and-coming programs. The established programs feed off the work of younger, more hungry, coaching staffs and the cycle of the same teams having success repeats itself.
This cycle needs to be broken now.
Temple coach Al Golden talked about it on a radio show.
He's in favor of an early signing period.
So is Villanova head coach Andy Talley, who had three of his verbals stolen by Division IA schools as well.
So am I.
So should any fair-minded fan.
More importantly, so should the NCAA.
Five minutes after Daryl Robinson's high school career ended, a man leaned on that two foot fence that surrounds Frankford High's field and kept yelling one thing over and over again in the direction of Robinson.
"YOOOO Daryl," the man said, "Notre Dame, Daryl. Notre Dame."
He was like so many Notre Dame fans in Philadelphia: Big and fat and obnoxious. So many of them look the same, it is eerie. Middle aged white men with white hair about 100 pounds overweight and wearing Notre Dame gear from head to toe. You could pen a cartoon about this guy and everybody would recognize the type immediately.
He looks like mayoral candidate Bob Brady, but wasn't Bob Brady.
A Philadelphian, probably an Eagles' fan, latching onto a Division IA team 500 miles west of a town where there already is a Division IA team that desperately needs his support.
"Yooo Daryl," the man kept saying while Daryl was being interviewed, "Notre Dame. Notre Dame."
Daryl just shook his head from side to side, indicating no, and smiled.
It had gotten around the school the weeks before that Notre Dame was in town trying to woo Robinson from his Temple commitment.
This seemed to excite all of the big, fat Notre Dame fans who were North Catholic alumni.
They pressured Robinson with yells and less subtle means.
In a move that speaks volumes for his character and his future, Robinson kept his word to Temple.
The big, fat guys represent what is wrong with college sports, specifically football, these days.
A school works hard to get a verbal, then other schools come in late and are the beneficiary of the hard work of the initial school. In other words, the stealing of verbals. Temple had at least two stolen this recruiting season.
This only hurts the mid-majors and the up-and-coming programs. The established programs feed off the work of younger, more hungry, coaching staffs and the cycle of the same teams having success repeats itself.
This cycle needs to be broken now.
Temple coach Al Golden talked about it on a radio show.
He's in favor of an early signing period.
So is Villanova head coach Andy Talley, who had three of his verbals stolen by Division IA schools as well.
So am I.
So should any fair-minded fan.
More importantly, so should the NCAA.
Saturday, 10 February 2007
Recruiting 2007---- QB Octavious Hawkins
Joining the Minutemen this year will be 6-2, 205 pd QB Octavious Hawkins from South Broward High School in Florida. He was First-Team Miami Herald All-Broward 6A-4A. This link has an image of him and the rest of the All-Broward Team (pdf format).
He was second team All-Broward by the Sun-Sentinel. (also pdf)
The Miami Herald has two articles that mention him here and here.
Six minutes of highlight film on him is available here .
This high-school football thread also discusses him.
Hawkins threw for 1,539 yards, going 66 for 123 with15 TD's in a league that annually produces tons of I-A talent.
Welcome to UMass Octavious! Hope you have a great career with UMass.
A friend of the UMass Football Blog from Florida provided a number of links in this post.
UPDATE: One quarterback we didn't take.
He was second team All-Broward by the Sun-Sentinel. (also pdf)
The Miami Herald has two articles that mention him here and here.
Six minutes of highlight film on him is available here .
This high-school football thread also discusses him.
Hawkins threw for 1,539 yards, going 66 for 123 with15 TD's in a league that annually produces tons of I-A talent.
Welcome to UMass Octavious! Hope you have a great career with UMass.
A friend of the UMass Football Blog from Florida provided a number of links in this post.
UPDATE: One quarterback we didn't take.
Friday, 9 February 2007
2007 Recruit ----- Punter/Kicker Brett Arnold
UMass has signed Brent Arnold a punter/kicker from Lackawanna Junior College .
His last years stats are here .
This article from a kicking camp mentions him (and has an image of current UMass kicker Chris Koepplin demonstrating his technique at the same camp).
This link has video of Arnold booming some kicks.
Arnold was first team All-conference NE Football Conference as both kicker and punter . Two year starter. Averaged 40 yards/kick over two season. Holds school record for longest field goal of 48 yards. Longest career punt 58 yards. Dean's List and President's List with a 3.6 GPA.
Welcome to UMass Brett! May your kicks be straight and your punts always have a long roll.
Some of the information in this blog post came from a "Blog-friend" who graciously provided some of the links.
His last years stats are here .
This article from a kicking camp mentions him (and has an image of current UMass kicker Chris Koepplin demonstrating his technique at the same camp).
This link has video of Arnold booming some kicks.
Arnold was first team All-conference NE Football Conference as both kicker and punter . Two year starter. Averaged 40 yards/kick over two season. Holds school record for longest field goal of 48 yards. Longest career punt 58 yards. Dean's List and President's List with a 3.6 GPA.
Welcome to UMass Brett! May your kicks be straight and your punts always have a long roll.
Some of the information in this blog post came from a "Blog-friend" who graciously provided some of the links.
Thursday, 8 February 2007
Morning after recruiting news
Well, the UMass Football Blog had it's second biggest day ever yesterday. Only the day before the National Championship game brought more visitors to the Blog.
Rumor has it that there were so much interest in National Signing Day both Rivals.com and Scout.com's servers crashed.
Be sure to watch the video interview of Coach Brown on the main UMass Athletic Dept page. It contains some interesting material. Brown said only two recruits who took a recruiting visit to UMass signed elsewhere...
The Springfield Republican has an article about UMass' recruits here . The UMass Collegian has an article here .
The Boston Herald has an article about recruits from UMass, Northeastern and Maine here.
The Milford Daily News has an article about some local recruits and quotes Minuteman Legend and Waltham football Coach, Paul Mayberry.
The Sun Chronicle has a recruiting article that includes a paragraph about UMass recruit Ryan Moreshead.
I'll post more links as they come up.
UPDATE: Matty Vautour has his take on the UMass recruits here . In non-recruiting news he states UMass assistant coach Bryan Smith has left for a position with the Jets. Also two offensive linemen Heath Heekin and Carlos Feliciano have left the program.
Also, former UMass running back Bryan Smith formerly reported to be re-joining the Minutemen will not attend UMass.
The Boston Globe has a post on where the various Eastern Mass players signed. If viewed after today, scroll to the February 7th post.
Rumor has it that there were so much interest in National Signing Day both Rivals.com and Scout.com's servers crashed.
Be sure to watch the video interview of Coach Brown on the main UMass Athletic Dept page. It contains some interesting material. Brown said only two recruits who took a recruiting visit to UMass signed elsewhere...
The Springfield Republican has an article about UMass' recruits here . The UMass Collegian has an article here .
The Boston Herald has an article about recruits from UMass, Northeastern and Maine here.
The Milford Daily News has an article about some local recruits and quotes Minuteman Legend and Waltham football Coach, Paul Mayberry.
The Sun Chronicle has a recruiting article that includes a paragraph about UMass recruit Ryan Moreshead.
I'll post more links as they come up.
UPDATE: Matty Vautour has his take on the UMass recruits here . In non-recruiting news he states UMass assistant coach Bryan Smith has left for a position with the Jets. Also two offensive linemen Heath Heekin and Carlos Feliciano have left the program.
Also, former UMass running back Bryan Smith formerly reported to be re-joining the Minutemen will not attend UMass.
The Boston Globe has a post on where the various Eastern Mass players signed. If viewed after today, scroll to the February 7th post.
Wednesday, 7 February 2007
UMass signs 15 recruits
UMass has signed 15 recruits. A quick look indicates that there are some very interesting additions.
I've already blogged on five of them (seven counting Chris Pollard and Sloan Russett) scroll down to second entry for Sloan, I can't point Blogger to a specific entry), both of whom ended up doing a year of prep school.
Ben Coblyn (scroll to second post), Emil Igwenagu (scroll to the post before this one), Jeromy Miles (two posts), Ryan Moreshead and Tim Nolan.
Looks like a great class! Jeromy Miles is the top signing in all of I-AA football, IMHO. That Florida QB Octavious Hawkins looks interesting too. I'll be bloggin' a lot more in days to come about this class.
In the meantime, here's some more reading for you:
UPDATE:
I've already blogged on five of them (seven counting Chris Pollard and Sloan Russett) scroll down to second entry for Sloan, I can't point Blogger to a specific entry), both of whom ended up doing a year of prep school.
Ben Coblyn (scroll to second post), Emil Igwenagu (scroll to the post before this one), Jeromy Miles (two posts), Ryan Moreshead and Tim Nolan.
Looks like a great class! Jeromy Miles is the top signing in all of I-AA football, IMHO. That Florida QB Octavious Hawkins looks interesting too. I'll be bloggin' a lot more in days to come about this class.
In the meantime, here's some more reading for you:
- Hofstra's recruits are here.
- our biggest rival in the CAA, the New Hampshire Wildcats recruits are here .
- Northeastern signs nine recruits.
- The Spiders recruiting list is here.
- The Towson Tigers signed eleven .
UPDATE:
- Delaware signs 17 recruits W/four from Massachusetts!
- Villanova signs a strong class.
- William & Mary's recruits are here
- Rhode Island signs 13 including two from Liam Coen's old school
- Maine, which has a history of signing large classes, signs 17
- The JMU Dukes go for defensive backfield help with 5 out of 15 recruits
Tuesday, 6 February 2007
Meet the newest Temple Owls
From left, Jared Williams, Jamal Schulters, Kee-Ayre Griffin
By Mike Gibson
When he took over the head coaching job, Al Golden said the one thing fans will notice about him and his staff is a well-thought-out plan for Temple football success.
With today's class of 25 and two holdovers from last year, Golden's plan is crystal clear:
Speed kills.
Two classes, both lightning quick at all positions on the field.
One kid from the prior regime, Travis Shelton, has "Devin Hester-type" speed and, in case you don't know what that is, Hester is the fastest football player in the world.
Or at least tied for that distinction with his cousin, Travis, who both have been clocked in a 4.27 blur.
Temple has Travis for two more years and, with this class, more of the same kind of speed for three years beyond that.
Daryl Robinson is the fastest player in Philadelphia high school history and he runs "only" a 4.37.
This team has the potential to literally run away from the rest of the Mid-American Conference in a couple of years.
If all goes right, maybe sooner. Temple appears to be incredibly deep and talented at running back right now, where a number of performers are capable of being "the guy" including
Jamal Schulters, one of the most recent acquisitions. Or it could be Kee-Ayre Griffin, who will finally arrive after being initially heralded as the jewel of the 2006 class.
"After I decided on Temple, a lot of schools still tried to come after me," Robinson said on Tuesday. "My commitment to Temple was always strong."
So was the commitment of the rest, including a running back named Jared Williams and a defensive end pass-rushing specialist named Muhammad Wilkerson. This
Muhammad is a mountain of a man who opposing quarterbacks are going to, whether they are like or not.
Even the interior linemen, people like Derek Dennis, are incredibly fast and athletic for their size.
Schools like Miami of Florida and the University of Southern California have proven plans for success with a foundation of speed.
Al Golden has spent the last two years acquiring that kind of speed.
It should be fun watching it kill for the next four years.
Recruiting 2007---- Emil Igwenagu verbals to UMass
Emil Igwenagu, a 6-2 218 pd RB from Holy Name in Worcester has verbaled to UMass.
From the Worcester Telegram article:"Igwenagu helped Holy Name to two consecutive Division 2 Super Bowl wins and rushed for more than 5,000 yards in his career. Holy Name athletic director Jim Manzello said a formal announcement is expected tomorrow morning. "
Igwenagu is a member of the Massachusetts "Super 26" team as one of the 26 best players in the state. Scroll to the 12/18/06 entry in this article.
Emil---Welcome to UMass. You made the right choice!
From the Worcester Telegram article:"Igwenagu helped Holy Name to two consecutive Division 2 Super Bowl wins and rushed for more than 5,000 yards in his career. Holy Name athletic director Jim Manzello said a formal announcement is expected tomorrow morning. "
Igwenagu is a member of the Massachusetts "Super 26" team as one of the 26 best players in the state. Scroll to the 12/18/06 entry in this article.
Emil---Welcome to UMass. You made the right choice!
Monday, 5 February 2007
The interesting case of Chester Stewart
By Mike Gibson
There are all kinds of good recruiting stories out there.
In fact, with this incoming class of 25 new Temple Owls, there are probably 25 good stories.
For now, though, we'll concentrate on the interesting case of one Chester Stewart.
Temple offered a scholarship to this kid without ever looking at a video.
Stewart finished his senior season with stats you wouldn't normally find being produced by a big-time prospect (1,076 yards, 17 TDs).
In fact, Stewart attended a camp for quarterbacks last spring and Al Golden liked him enough to offer him a scholarship on the spot.
The story, or so it goes, was that Golden looked on as Stewart completed 10 straight passes in a seven-on-seven (no pads, no rush) drill and offered him a scholarship on the spot.
I usually like to see my quarterbacks in a real game with a real rush putting up real numbers, like Sto-Rox's Adam DiMichele (2,967 yards, 36 TDs his senior year) but I'm going to have to trust Golden on this one.
Stewart accepted.
Golden didn't look at not even one image of film.
He just liked what he saw in the one day at 11th and Diamond.
Stewart, who never took a snap at quarterback in a varsity game before this season, made Golden look, well, golden with his one year as a high school varsity quarterback.
He led DeMatha to an unbeaten season and threw the deciding TD pass in front of 9,000 fans for the D.C. Metropolitan championship.
Even more impressive about this young man is the strength of his character.
After committing to Temple, Stewart remained steadfast in that commitment despite being wooed by more high-profile programs. Temple made a commitment to Stewart and Stewart, in turn, made good on his commitment to Temple.
It's with those kind of people that Temple will eventually turn this thing around.
We hope.
There are all kinds of good recruiting stories out there.
In fact, with this incoming class of 25 new Temple Owls, there are probably 25 good stories.
For now, though, we'll concentrate on the interesting case of one Chester Stewart.
Temple offered a scholarship to this kid without ever looking at a video.
Stewart finished his senior season with stats you wouldn't normally find being produced by a big-time prospect (1,076 yards, 17 TDs).
In fact, Stewart attended a camp for quarterbacks last spring and Al Golden liked him enough to offer him a scholarship on the spot.
The story, or so it goes, was that Golden looked on as Stewart completed 10 straight passes in a seven-on-seven (no pads, no rush) drill and offered him a scholarship on the spot.
I usually like to see my quarterbacks in a real game with a real rush putting up real numbers, like Sto-Rox's Adam DiMichele (2,967 yards, 36 TDs his senior year) but I'm going to have to trust Golden on this one.
Stewart accepted.
Golden didn't look at not even one image of film.
He just liked what he saw in the one day at 11th and Diamond.
Stewart, who never took a snap at quarterback in a varsity game before this season, made Golden look, well, golden with his one year as a high school varsity quarterback.
He led DeMatha to an unbeaten season and threw the deciding TD pass in front of 9,000 fans for the D.C. Metropolitan championship.
Even more impressive about this young man is the strength of his character.
After committing to Temple, Stewart remained steadfast in that commitment despite being wooed by more high-profile programs. Temple made a commitment to Stewart and Stewart, in turn, made good on his commitment to Temple.
It's with those kind of people that Temple will eventually turn this thing around.
We hope.
Caoch Brown to speak on recruits at the 2/14/07 Sports Luncheon
Coach Brown will attend the February 14th meeting of the UMass Sports Luncheons.
He will speak about this year's recruits and show video.
The UMass Sports Luncheons are an outstanding deal. They feature a salad-to-desert menu for just $7.00. Reserve your seat by calling 413-545-4290.
Remember that's Valentine's Day. Get a card for your favorite person.
Saturday, 3 February 2007
UMass coaching tree--- Duke University
Duke University recently fired former UMass assistant coach Jerry Azzinaro as defensive coordinator.
Azzinaro was assistant coach at UMass from 1992-1994.
Duke Head Coach Ted Roof was an assistant coach at UMass in the middle 1990's.
Duke assistant coach John Strollo was an assistant coach at UMass from 1991-1995.
Another assistant coach at Duke, Brian Sherrod was an assistant coach at UMass in 1995.
Azzinaro was assistant coach at UMass from 1992-1994.
Duke Head Coach Ted Roof was an assistant coach at UMass in the middle 1990's.
Duke assistant coach John Strollo was an assistant coach at UMass from 1991-1995.
Another assistant coach at Duke, Brian Sherrod was an assistant coach at UMass in 1995.
Friday, 2 February 2007
The high cost (for the fan) of I-A football
I've had my seats in Section 6, Row I continuously since 1976. That's 30 years of UMass home games. Sometimes when UMass has having a poor season and the weather was bad, it was just me and the band...
I wonder what I'd do if UMass went I-A and then implemented a requirement like Boston College just did. They now required $1000/seat (plus the cost of the tickets) to keep season tickets between the 30 yard lines.
It would be wrenching to give up my seats that I've held so long. I suppose that I could boycott any bowl game that the team was invited to and save some bucks there. What would you do if you were a long time season ticket holder?
I wonder what I'd do if UMass went I-A and then implemented a requirement like Boston College just did. They now required $1000/seat (plus the cost of the tickets) to keep season tickets between the 30 yard lines.
It would be wrenching to give up my seats that I've held so long. I suppose that I could boycott any bowl game that the team was invited to and save some bucks there. What would you do if you were a long time season ticket holder?
Ben Albert promoted to Associate Head Coach at Delaware
Former UMass star DT and coach Ben Albert has been appointed Associate Head Coach at Delaware.
I've blogged about him before (the second post in the link has a scan of him in action). Note that the previous posts will appear below this one (scroll down after clicking on the link)
The UMass article is here.
The Delaware article is here.
Congratulations! Ben. You were an outstanding player and coach for UMass.
I've blogged about him before (the second post in the link has a scan of him in action). Note that the previous posts will appear below this one (scroll down after clicking on the link)
The UMass article is here.
The Delaware article is here.
Congratulations! Ben. You were an outstanding player and coach for UMass.
Thursday, 1 February 2007
UMass adds another verbal --- Tim Nolan OL
Tim Nolan a 6-4 301 pd OL from Jackson NJ has verbaled to UMass.
This Scout.com link has some praise for him.
He was 3rd team All-New Jersey by NJVarsity.com.
This ScoutCombines.com article describes him as a "Warrior" (scroll down).
Took a recruiting visit to Monmouth. Also received interest from Duke and Rutgers.
Welcome aboard Tim! You made the right choice!
This Scout.com link has some praise for him.
He was 3rd team All-New Jersey by NJVarsity.com.
This ScoutCombines.com article describes him as a "Warrior" (scroll down).
Took a recruiting visit to Monmouth. Also received interest from Duke and Rutgers.
Welcome aboard Tim! You made the right choice!
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