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Update: Thursday, Oct. 24

So I asked Jon Sumrall about Will Hall's presence at practice Tuesday and Wednesday (he was not there today) after the Thursday walkthrough, and this is what he said:

"I've known Will several years. Good friends. Obviously was the offensive coordinator here for two years. Coached against him the last two years when he was at Southern Miss and we were at Troy, but have known him way before that, going back several years. When everything went down, we texted. We text throughout the year, all the time anyways. We're friends. And when everything happened Sunday, he texted me Sunday morning and just said, hey, loved watching y'all play this year, let's connect, and then it all came out and we connected that night, talked again the next day. He's not an employee at Tulane, but he might be a remote conversation for our offensive staff or myself. I've got a lot of respect for Will. Love him. Great friend to me and somebody I pulled for other than when we played him. The '22 year that they came here and won the game, the Cotton Bowl year, we played them the next week and beat them and I always was trying to lobby that hey, Tulane and Troy ahd the same common opponent and Troy won the game, so I was trying to get us in the Cotton Bowl, but nobody listened to me. A lot of respect for Will. Our profession's very tight knit, and even though you compete guys, you're friends with him. It was fun to have him here for a couple of days. It wouldn't surprise me if you show up at practice at some point in the next few weeks, if he's not here on a practice day. He's not moving here. His kids are still in school. He's got a seventh grader and an 11th grader."

I also asked about Shazz Preston. I'm still skeptical that he can help the team yet, but he definitely received more work in practice this week than last.

"He's legitimately practiced. There's a chance he'll play. It's not going to be a huge number. He's in a backup role, but flow of the game, he could play. Last year he was available, but he wasn't available unless we had a big lead."

I then asked him if they were considering redshirting Preston, but he misunderstand the question as one about redshirting the freshman and gave an informative answer--just not about Preston.

"It's relevant (redshirting guys), but Shaun Nicholas is playing because he's having a big enough impact on special teams. He's the first or second guy down on kickoff coverage. We talked about it as a staff--coach McMahon and I talked about how big is his role. We talked about Jarvis Landry (at LSU), who got drafted because of his special teams stuff as a freshman. After thinking through it, he's the only one (true freshman) that will play the rest of the year. He doesn't have a crazy number of catches. He's not big catching the ball, but he's probably our best blocking wide receiver, so there's a role even though it's maybe not flashy that I think will benefit him as his development goes the next year or two, that he played this year and went out there and competed. Shaun's the one that will play. Jamauri (McClure), we'd like to reserve and hold the redshirt, and that's the plan. The problem for Jamauri is the number of carries doesn't merit (burning the redshirt), and he doesn't have the same special teams value that Shaun does. Reese Baker we would like to hold the redshirt and that's the plan. He's probably our third best tackle, and he's going to be a really good player, but is he ready for prime time? No. So he doesn't have enough value right now. He'd only go in if there's injuries. He knows what the situation is. If there's major injuries, all those guys know you have to lose the redshirt if something catastrophic happens. The team's bigger than the individual, and they all understand that. We've had conversations and they all know where they're at."

I'm not crazy about them deciding to redshirt McClure, but he is eligible to play two more games and keep his redshirt. The running back room is deep, and clearly they believe Duda Barnes and Shaadie Clayton-Johnson and Trey Cornist are good enough that McClure cannot help them win games this year. I'm not so sure about that, but I see where they are coming from.
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Back from NOLA

Back from NOLA

My wife and I spent the last week in New Orleans visiting our grandson who is a freshman at Tulane, as well as old friends from as far back as 70 years ago. We had some great meals and a couple that were disappointing, but overall excellent.

We went to the football game, and I probably can’t add anything to what others have said over the last few days. But, I have two non-football observations. The student body section was packed shortly after the opening kickoff, but I’d guess that 80% left at half-time with the score tied. By the fourth quarter, I’d guess no more than 10% of the original group was still there. To me, that was disappointing. But I pointed out to my grandson that when Bob Toledo came to Tulane, he took the team over to the student section at the end of the first game to sing the Alma Mater. There were something like 6 students there. So, student support is a lot better now.

Secondly, we were amazed at the girl (young woman) who took a carryall of water around to each of the referees at every break in the action. She must have sprinted 100+ yards at a time and probably logged a couple of miles carrying that thing. If she’s not on the cross-country team, she missed her calling. Anyway, we were impressed.

I also got to participate in the Baseball Alumni events. No-one I played with attended but Dick Roniger (a Senior when I was a Freshman) and Johnny Arthurs, better known for basketball (a Freshman when I was a senior) were there. We got to spend some time remembering some of the people who overlapped one or the others of us. Good times.

Roll Wave!!!

Update: Wednesday, Oct. 23

Following up on what one defensive assistant said was the best defensive practice of the year on Tuesday and what Jon Sumrall said was high quality all the way around, Tulane put in another strong effort Wednesday. It is clear the coaches and players are taking North Texas very seriously, and a team with championship aspirations wants to prove it can play a complete game on both sides of the ball. Other than blowouts of distracted South Florida and overmatched UAB, Tulane has not done it this year, playing well on offense but not on defense against UL, turning in an excellent first half but mediocre second half against Kansas State, no-showing for the first half against Oklahoma and struggling offensively against Rice until Makhi Hughes took over in the fourth quarter.

The Wave needs to show it can win comfortably without relying on turnovers. Tulane's plus-12 in the turnover margin the past four games is insanely good, but I've always believed turnover margin was the most reflective stat of what has happened and the least predictive. A team with a really good run defense is very unlikely to suddenly get gouged for 300 yards on the ground, but a team with a fantastic turnover differential can lose that battle 3-0 in an individual game if the ball bounces a funny way. If Tulane can really slow down North Texas's prolific offense, which only Texas Tech has done this year, it will go a long way toward proving it can win the AAC, assuming the offense does not have the uncharacteristic bad drops and poor throws in the passing game that plagued it against Rice. North Texas is bad defensively but not quite as bad as its 120th ranking in yards allowed indicated. Because of the Mean Green's fast pace on offense, there are a lot of plays in its games. The defense is 101st in yards per play allowed.

Look for Adin Huntington to play a huge role Saturday. He is more comfortable at bandit than he was at end and also is healthier than he was earlier in the year. He had by far his best game against Rice, and Tulane will need to take time away from North Texas quarterback Chandler Morris. The Mean Green throws a lot of bubble screens, but they also take a lot of shots with vertical routes that require the quarterback having plenty of time to throw. With Huntington and Matthew Fobbs-White rotating in and out, they can disrupt those plays.

Will Hall was at Tulane's practice yesterday, but I did not see him today. I could see him in a consultant's role for the rest of the year and will check to see if it is a realistic possibility. He will be someone's offensive coordinator next season but needs to do something the rest of the year because football is in his blood.

The two-minute drill at the end of today's practice was sloppy, but Sumrall says it is more about just going over potential situations in games than executing crisply. Starting at the second-team defense's 45 and 55 seconds left on the clock, the first-team offense began with a 4-yard pass from Darian Mensah to Yulkeith Brown on the sideline. Next was an incomplete pass to Brown in traffic after Mensah held the ball a long time. Then came a scramble for a first down and a 5-yard pass to Arnold Barnes in the middle of the field, requiring a spike to stop the clock with 24 seconds left. A bad snap messed up third down, but Sumrall blew the play dead and had them try it again. This time, Mensah threw wide of Barnes. When a fourth down play did not work, Sumrall moved the ball to the 17-yard line and had Mensah take a snap under center, run to the center of the field and fall down for a 1-yard loss, setting up a winning field goal. Bobby Noel's 36-yard kick glanced off the right upright and went through, making him 3 for his last 3 at the end of Wednesday practices.

Tulane's practices are intense, but Sumrall also is more relaxed than Willie Fritz was at times. Today, he had a conversation with Fear The Wave collective co-head Mike Arata for several minutes as they walked down the field.

Sumrall, linebackers coach Tayler Polk and Mensah talked after practice. I had no idea Polk was as young as he is when he sat down for his interview. If anyone else requested players, I would have been sure he was a player I did not recognize. HIs last year at Ole Miss was 2017, and he looks even younger than he actually is (late 20s).

SUMRALL

On Tuesday's practice again:

"Really both sides was back to what a Tuesday should look like, opposite of the bye week Tuesday. But defensively the energy was good. The guys were focused. They understand the challenge. It's a tremendous challenge. These guys are top 10 in the country in scoring offense and total offense. It's not going to be an easy game. It's going to be tough sledding, so they've got to be prepared for what's coming. I thought they put their work in yesterday and today. They had two good days."

On today's practice overall:

"It was good. The two-minute drill we looked kind of sloppy on offense. We looked better all day. We do that as much as anything to work the in-the-game operation. It's less of a competitive drill than I want to work on situations."

On key to slowing down North Texas:

"They're tough because they make you defend every blade of grass. They will throw the screen game and run some fly sweep stuff and screen to the back and the tight end and No.10 (DT Sheffield) and then also throw four verticals a lot. They challenge you because they'll throw the ball 50 yards down the field or minus-5 yards, and you have to be ready for both. It definitely stretches you out a little bit, and you have to be prepared to defend the entire field."

On QB play from top teams in league:

"At every level, the better your quarterback is, the better your opportunity to be successful. I don't care if you're playing Pop Warner, middle school, high school, college or NFL football, the quarterback playing at a high level is critical. I bring this up a lot. Everybody around the quarterback playing well makes the quarterback's job easier, but the quarterback has to be able to execute and be efficient in everything you ask him to do. Their guy is playing at a high level. He's really playing quality football right now."

On Will Karoll:

"He was critical in the game. He flipped the field a lot. The thing that goes unnoticed is once he gets the ball in his hands, he's operating quickly. They rushed on three or four of them and brought more numbers than we had to protect, and he's been doing a great job of getting the ball off but then also punting it with great distance. This week's going to be a challenge because their returner is No. 10 (Sheffield), and he's created some huge returns this year (a long of 27 but an impressive average of 12.8) and we've got to make sure we at least make it harder on him to have clean access, but Will's been really good. He's a weapon for sure."

On getting North Texas offense out of rhythm:

"Their challenge is you can't give them the same thing the whole time, but they really want you to do is give them free access because then they have the ability to second release you down the field and hit the access throws. You have to take something away, and we're probably going to, particularly on No. 10, challenge him more than play off (of him). We've got to get down on him and we'e got to have somebody with the ability to play over the top of him some, but we're not going to play scared. The guys have to go challenge and get down. We don't press a lot to the field corner because that's a far throw. If they want to take that throw all day, that's usually something you'll give them, but we have to be aware of when we're pressing and when we're not and be really detailed with what's going on. We've got calls to mix it up and do both, but I don't think you can just sit back and play 8 yards deep against these guys because they will hit the screen game enough that they'll hit explosives in that area if you don't get down and challenge some."

On Huntington at bandit:

"Oh yeah, he creates some havoc. Him being healthy helps and us putting them helps him with being out there in a little more space, so he's able to create some real opportunities for himself there."

On Micah Robinson:

"He's got great feel in zone coverage, good vision, good ball skills, tracks it well. It was fun to see his on-the-ball production. He's been a pretty solid tackler for the most part. We've challenged him to come down and press a little bit more than he's used to. He's gotten better at that, but to see him have those critical plays was really cool."
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