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Position battles

The Advocate is having me pick out four position battles for a camp preview package that will run Sunday. I chose defensive end, left offensive tackle, running back and split end. Dontrell HIlliard will start at running back, but I listed it because of the uncertainty behind at a spot where four will play and the backs averaged 33 carries last year. I left out the battle between Leeward Brown and John Washington at right guard because I didn't think they would want two offensive line positions.

Tulane listed Jacob Robertson ahead of Jabril Clewis at split end, Peter Woullard as the starting DE, Keyshawn McLeod ahead of Tyler Johnson at left tackle and Brown ahead of Washington at right guard at the end of drills.

I expect Clewis and Tyler Johnson to start, although left tackle is beyond scary. Johnson was awful in the spring game, but he was playing through a bad shoulder. If Leeward Brown is in shape, he should hold off John Washington, but is he in shape?

Scholarship numbers entering preseason camp

I count 81, four under the maximum, with 80 eligible

QB (5)

Banks, Cuiellette, Brantley, Ledford, McClain (one of the last 2 likely will play RB)

RB (6)

Hilliard, Badie, Bradwell, Huderson, Strickland, Dauphine (ineligible this year)

WR (11)

Encalade, Mooney, Clewis, Robertson, Owens, Glenn, Johnson, Hicks, Toles, Tucker, LeDee

TE (3)

Jones, Ardoin, Wallace

OL (13)

Diaz, Leglue, Brown, Briggs, T. Johnson, McLeod, Knighton, J. Washington, D. Johnson, Webb, Claybrook, Dublin, Jackel

DE (9)

Aruna, Woullard, Carroll, Kennedy, Kubiet, P. Johnson, Sample, Scott, Singletary)

DT (5) (someone will move over from tackle because the imbalance is too big)

E. Washington, Wilson, Edwards, Williams, Rainey,

LB (9)

Marbley, Harris, Graham, Bryant, Jackson, Brown, Montgomery, Moody, Vault

DB (17)

Nickerson, Keyes, Lewis, T, Jackson, Franklin, Hall, Lofton, Lewis, Napoleon, Shenall, W. Harper, Teamer, S. Harper, Kuerschen, Langham, Monroe, Barge

Special Teams (3)

Neenan, Block, Eatherly

If I had a vote at AAC Media Days

Two years ago, Ted Lewis handed me his vote from The Advocate. Last year, I was emailed a ballot from the conference.

This year, nada. But If I had gotten a vote, here is what it would have been.

WEST

1) Tulsa --QB Dane Evans is gone, but I always felt like he was a product of the system --a very good system under coach Philp Montgomery

2) Memphis--The Tigers have the division's best returning quarterback in Riley Ferguson, but the defense was awful last year. Not sure yet about this team's coaching.

3) Houston --Maybe the realization Tom Herman was leaving caused the Cougars to go in the tank in conference play, but something was rotten. And new coach Major Applewhite was part of it.

4) Navy --Yep, I picked Tulane to beat Navy in my over/under column, but I would have erred on the side of caution. And Navy does not have to play South Florida.

5) Tulane --Considering the continuing O-line concerns, 3-5 seems like the most likely conference record.

6) SMU--I would not be shocked if the Mustangs win the division, which has no great team. But they were all over the board a year ago and have QB issues.

EAST

1) South Florida--Houston was just as overwhelming a favorite in the West last year, but Quinton Flowers is the real deal. No defense in this league can handle him.

2) UCF--Scott Frost has enough returning talent to build on a successful debut season in what should be the weaker of the two divisions.

3) Temple--The Owls will miss coach Matt Rhule in a big way even though new coach Geoff Collins has a lot of surface similarities. But they should be better than the rest of the East.

4) Cincinnati--The Bearcats were awful under Tommy Tuberville, but their talent level was better than their performance.

5) East Carolina--The Pirates lost their last four games by at least 21 points. Still not sure why they replaced Ruffin McNeill with Scottie Montgomery.

6) Connecticut--Trying to recreate the past rarely is a good idea. Can't see Randy Edsall working any magic with a bad roster in his second time around in Storrs.

Championship Game: South Florida over Tulsa with at least 80 points scored combined.
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Chase Solesky

The departure of Chase Solesky and the transfer of J.P. France to Mississippi State remove the only two potentially-returning pitchers from our roster who pitched half-way decently in 2017. France, of course, only had one year left, and whatever difficulties he had with the coaching staff, is apparently looking to play for a team with a good chance for post season (even Omaha) success. I don’t like it but wish him well in his choice. Solesky apparently became a victim of “numbers,” or lack of “dollars.” The kid looked very good early on with an ERA of 3.05 for the first two months of the season. From mid-April to the end, however, his 4.73 ERA was, at best, “lackluster.” Of course, even that was better than the majority of our pitchers, including Merrill, whose ERA over his final six games was 6.57.

Some on here may know more about the “dividing up” of scholarship money than I. But apparently Coach Jewett did not think Solesky’s potential contribution was worth what Coach Pierce had provided in financial aid. Not knowing the details, it is hard to argue one way or the other. I will say that, while I think Solesky showed greater potential than the rest of the freshmen pitchers recruited by Pierce, I certainly don’t think he was a “great pitcher” as some anti-Jewett fans have proclaimed. Has Jewett found better potential for less money in the incoming class? We’ll have to wait and see. I’d have liked to have seen Solesky return and doubt his departure is good for either him or Tulane. But, I wish him well and hope our incoming Freshmen and JC transfers prove worthy of the scholarship money (whatever it is) that they have been offered. I can’t even imagine the difficulties of kids knowing this guy or that guy (teammates) are receiving more (or less) than they are. That can’t foster good morale. Regardless, it is what it is.

Roll Wave!!

Football Early Signing

Does anyone have an opinion on the new “Early Signing” period for college football? Schools will now be able to sign recruits during a 72 hour period starting on December 20, 2017. Then, the traditional signing period will take place starting February 7, 2018. I doubt anyone really knows how this change will affect teams, particularly ones like Tulane.

Only seven bowl games will have taken place prior to “early signing.” Traditionally, all of them have occurred prior to national signing day. Does this affect anything? Does visiting a team preparing for a bowl influence recruits? I’d think so.

In the past, almost all of Tulane’s “official visits” were scheduled during January when football was complete for the year and coaches and administration personnel could concentrate on the visitors. While each student athlete is limited to 5 “official” (meaning “paid for” visits), schools can offer as many as their budget allows. To take advantage of “early signing,” I’d assume we’d offer “early” official visits to kids we’ve most seriously targeted and go after the rest as the “dust clears” in January. What would that mean?

What percentage of kids will be early “signees?” No one really knows. Many schools have a dozen or more commitments already, or roughly half their eventual total. How many will sign in December? If 90% signed early, that would take a lot of kids “off the boards” but also limit the “flexibility” of schools with near-full signing classes. If only 15-20% sign early, the whole issue may become moot. For this first year, I think a school like Tulane should sign a minimum of truly “desired” recruits and wait to see who “falls through the cracks” of the P5 schools. In general I don’t think it wise to accept early commitments from 2nd or 3rd tier targets. But, by my calculations, we’ve offered over 300 kids in the 2018 recruiting class. Over half of them have already committed to someone else or have indicated that Tulane is no longer in the running for their services. And that number may be low. How long does a school wait for their “most desired” recruit with the possibility of losing out not only on him but #2, #3, etc.?

I notice Alabama has only four commitments so far whereas LSU has 18. Is that an indicator of how they will play things? Of course Alabama currently has a pretty good shot at six 5-star players and upwards of 75 4-star recruits, so they’ll probably be OK. But we’re not going to beat out LSU or Alabama for a recruit anyway. With very rare exceptions, no other G5 school is likely to either. But what about those kids who “fall off the table?” Will the early signing period make more available to schools like Tulane come January?

Anybody got thoughts?

Roll Wave!!!

New Commit...QB/Ath-Amare Jones Frisco Heritage

http://www.nola.com/tulane/index.ssf/2017/06/texas_ath_amare_jones_commits.html#incart_river_index




He looks to be more of an Athlete or RB at the moment. He has quite an arm, but his throwing motion and mechanics leave a lot to be desired. Of course he can always become a better passer...his run game is plus. He can cut on one foot without slowing, has excellent change of direction, though he may be quicker than fast he's fast enough.

Pitching and the College World Series

I just took a look at the regular season records of the eight College World Series participants. Not surprisingly, the statistics suggest that pitching is the name of the game. Oregon State was 1st in the country in ERA and Louisville was 3rd. In 55th place out of 295 teams was TCU. Everyone else in the CWS was at #41 or higher, with the eight averaging 24th place.

Home Runs seem to be the next best, but not good, indicator of success with the eight teams averaging a 72nd place finish. FSU was 15th; Louisville 23rd while Fullerton was number 105 and Oregon State was number 197.

Batting average didn’t seem to matter a great deal with the eight teams averaging 130th place, just above the NCAA average. Only Oregon State finished in the top 50 in 45th place while FSU (157), Fullerton (178), and Florida (219) finished in the bottom half of all NCAA teams.

What was Tulane’s problem this year? Well, our batting average came in at #187 even though we were #29 in HR’s. But our team ERA put us in 224th place. The previous year (2016), we finished #193, #13, and #24 respectively in those three statistics. Falling from 24th to 224th place in ERA was clearly the statistical difference between the two teams (1st quartile to last quartile). Was it losing half our pitching staff and the failure of most “new” pitchers? Was it the inexplicable reversal of Ross Massey? Was it the head coach? Was it the pitching coach? Who knows? Everyone and his relatives have made their positions known. It is what it is. Next year? Hopefully some of our returning pitchers turn it around and some of the new guys really step up. We’re not likely to have much power, so good pitching will again be paramount.

Roll Wave!!

Football Commit - Davon Wright, DT, Donaldsonville, LA

Davon Wright announced today via twitter that he has committee to Tulane. Coach Fritz followed that with a confirming "Roll Wave, out of Donaldsonville."

I don't think Wright is a "top 50" guy in the state, but he's probably a "top 10" defensive tackle at about 6'1" and 290#. I have him at #8 for what it's worth (not much:(). He's a 3-star on Rivals (and #47 in the state according to them) but has not been rated by other services.

Here's his junior highlights: Login to view embedded media
Roll Wave!!

New Oline commit...Stephen Lewerenz

The kid has good size at 6'3" 280, you put him in our weight room for 18 months over a redshirt season and you have quite a player. He moves really well for an olineman, good feet and has some short area quickness and he's not FAT. His team does a lot of the things we do, double teams, angle blocks, G pulls...and he does them very well (I got excited watching him trap block on his film). If this guy was 6'5" his offer list would be more substantial than it is but he looks like a "bonafide D1 football player".

http://www.nola.com/tulane/index.ssf/2017/06/florida_offensive_lineman_step.html#incart_river_index
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Auburn Baseball

I just got back from attending a high school graduation party for a neighbor’s kid who will be attending Auburn this fall on a full academic scholarship. He was offered the same at Ole Miss and Mississippi State. His grades and SAT scores were such that he would most likely have gotten into Tulane but he wanted a true Engineering school. Moreover, he would not have received an Academic scholarship for sure and his parents would not have qualified for any other help. I mention this because the kid plans to walk on to play baseball at Auburn after hitting .475 this past season in high school. Since he’s a catcher I’m guessing he will be greeted with open arms. Anyway, this got me thinking about Auburn baseball.

In 2015, they had the #26 RPI team in the nation and were eliminated in the Tallahassee regionals finishing with a 36-26 record against the #4 SOS in the country. Their coach retired and they hired a 23- year assistant coach with no head coaching experience named Butch Thompson. Thompson’s first year at Auburn was a disaster. They had eight returning starters but only two of their top seven pitchers. The team went 23-33 and the RPI dropped to #148 in the country. Fans were irate. But, the Athletic Director stayed with him and in his second year (just completed) Thompson went 37-26 and finished #38 in RPI with an almost completely rebuilt team that he recruited. They once again lost in the Tallahassee regionals. Who knows what his future will bring.

I have no idea how Coach Jewett will fare in the coming years either but there is an eerie similarity to Butch Thompson’s history. We’ll see.

Roll Wave!!!

Summer baseball?

Guerry-- Any chance of finding out who is playing where this summer, including any of the JC guys coming in this fall? I've been trying to research it but have only found Gillies who is on the roster of the Baltimore Redbirds of the Cal Ripkin League and Witherspoon who is on the roster of the Bourne Braves of the Cape Cod League, Neither league has started play yet.
I sure hope a lot of our guys are getting some playing time this summer.

Roll Wave!!!

Recruiting Louisiana -- Football, 2018

Many Tulane fans were very disappointed (even angry) last year when Coach Fritz only signed two Louisiana high school players. The departures of Tanner Lee and Teddy Veal (seemingly without any effort to retain them) upset some fans even more. The Louisiana priority established by Coach Johnson was seemingly lost despite the fact that Coach Fritz repeatedly said that one of the main selling points of the Tulane job was the local recruiting area. Regardless, one signee doesn’t seem to support that claim.

Greater New Orleans and the larger state are clearly fertile recruiting grounds for college football. In many years the state produces a higher per capita number of BCS scholarship players than any other state. In fact, in recent years over 100 Louisiana kids have signed BCS scholarship papers annually; until last year. Last year may have been an aberration but the number of scholarships dropped significantly. In 2015, for example, 114 kids received scholarships, 57 to P5 schools and 57 to G5 schools. In 2016, those numbers dropped to 108, 57, and 51 respectively. But last year (2017) only 44 Louisiana kids received P5 scholarships with another 41 going the G5 route. 85 BCS scholarships total suggests a bad recruiting year for the state compared to previous years, despite, anecdotally, an increase in out-of-state interest in Louisiana players.

If Tulane is to compete for an AAC title, let alone compete for a P5 position at some point, we need to recruit against P5 schools, not G5 schools, or, heaven forbid, FCS schools, for most of our signees. With roughly 300 high schools playing football in the state and probably well over 3,000 seniors (at least 10+ per school) participating, only about 100 or so will receive BCS scholarships. Roughly half of those, the top 50, are what we need. And every year (including the last one), based on info gathered from various print and internet recruiting sites, we seem to offer virtually all of the “top 50” players in the state. Signing them has been the problem. Settling for 2nd and 3rd tier guys will not get us to where we need to go. So rather than sign a bunch of guys foisted on us by local coaches who shield their best players from "the Wave," I’d rather say “no thanks.” That’s apparently what Coach Fritz did last year to the consternation of some high school coaches and many of our fans. Of interest to me, Frank Wilson, at UT San Antonio, signed only one Louisiana player last year, though he, Jason Rollins, and Frank Scelfo spent a great deal of time in the state. For people with such strong Louisiana ties, you’d think they’d have signed more than a few, let alone, just one. I think part of the answer is lack of true BCS-caliber players last year.

So, that brings us to this year. At this point we don’t know how many kids we can sign. I’d guess around 20, though a couple more might be in the cards also. Coach Fritz has offered over 60 kids in-state thus far with the vast majority (40+) included on James Smith’s latest “Nifty 50.” Although I recognize Smith’s “love affair” with LSU and his highly questionable relationship with the afore-mentioned Frank Wilson, his list is probably as good as anyone else’s. Anyway, our only current commit, Monjarres, is on that list. If we could get 5-7 more, I’d be thrilled and wouldn’t be concerned that we didn’t sign a bunch of more marginal prospects from the state. It’s been many years since we signed as many as three “top 50” guys and some of those failed miserably.

To this point, I’ve reviewed the highlights of about 200 Louisiana kids—most of the ones with at least some “recruiting site” interest and, though there are undoubtedly more. I think there may be 70 or so players in the state I’d be happy with. That’s up from last year, even at this early date, so I think this is likely to be a good year for Louisiana recruiting.

Over the next two months our coaches will interview, test, time, weigh, measure, and evaluate hundreds of Louisiana (and other state) kids “up close and personal.” I expect more offers to come in and a few more commitments during that time.

Roll Wave!!!!

Athlon's football preview

I wrote the Tulane preview for Athlon's for the fourth consecutive year, but for the first time, they completely changed the last paragraph, which I guess is their right since my name appears nowhere on the article.

Here's what I wrote after the first paragraph of the Final Analysis:

"If Banks is the answer at quarterback—Tulane finished dead last nationally in passing efficiency—and the defense survives the loss of Smart and Marley--a .500 or better season is within reach. Fritz won at least eight games in his second year at each of his first four coaching stops."

Here's what they changed it to, apparently convinced I was being far too optimistic:

"Being more competitive, however, won't necessarily translate into more wins. Not only do the Wave play in the far more difficult West Division of the AAC, but they must also face USF, the overwhelming favorite in the East. And don't forget about a game at Oklahoma. Anything close to a .500 record would be a great accomplishment."

I didn't write any of those words. We'll see whether their judgment was sound by the end of the year.

Baseball- What went wrong this year

Last year, Tulane finished with a record of 41-21 with an RPI good for 33rd place in the country. We won the AAC regular season title and finished in 24th place in the Coaches’ poll. We were also ranked #19 by Baseball America after being eliminated in the Oxford Regional. This year, we finished with a 27-31 record and an RPI of 77. We weren’t even close to being ranked or getting a bid to the NCAA regionals. What happened? What caused the 44-place slide in RPI?

To some Tulane fans, the reason is obvious. Andy Cannizarro is coaching at Mississippi State and our inept Athletic Director, arrogant and determined to show his independence, continued a series of poor coaching selections in choosing a career assistant coach who some claim is “clueless” and “doesn’t know what he is doing?”

No one could argue that the team’s record this year was comparable to that of last year and coaching certainly must be considered in the calculus. But, I’m not sure Coach Jewett (or the AD for that matter) should carry quite the burden of blame being placed on them. I think the stronger schedule, the loss of Rogers on defense, and the near total collapse of the remaining half of our pitching staff were very important factors. Add to that the inept recruiting of the past two years and we got what we got—a disappointing season.

But, let’s look at coaching. All manner of complaints have surfaced from various fans but several continue to arise. The first, and to me, a legitimate concern, was the poor start to the season. Was the team unprepared as some would suggest? Hard to argue; they played very poorly. Did Coach Jewett prepare them differently than his previous teams, coached by some of the finest coaches in college baseball? I don’t know, but I doubt it. Was it simply a chemistry problem between a new coach and a mostly veteran team? Possibly. Was it a team-wide slump from a team packed with notoriously “streaky” players? I doubt we’ll ever know. It was what it was and it wasn’t good.

The second major complaint is his handling of the pitching staff. Two of the three pitchers we really expected to perform, Merrill and Massey, pitched worse and horribly worse respectively than they did last year. And beyond Merrill, France, Solesky, and Colletti, why did our other ten pitchers perform so poorly that even our most ardent fans held their breath whenever one of them took the mound? In my opinion, some (maybe a great deal) has to be laid at the feet of the coaching staff and, in particular, the pitching coach. Another complaint is that Coach Jewett did a poor job of managing pitching changes. This is a common refrain across baseball at every level, but how true is it? To be honest, why would anyone replace Merrill, France, Solesky, or Colletti on the mound with anyone on our pitching staff other than one of those four. Sure, Merrill or France got tired and didn't have the same “stuff” as they did earlier in a game. But you can’t replace them with the pitcher they were earlier in the game. Most of the time you have to bring in guys named Andrews, Issa, Gillies, Price, Hogan, etc. Talk about a “Hobson’s choice!” Outside of the Santa Barbara series, I watched almost every pitch of this past season and, without benefit of hindsight, wouldn’t have changed much in regard to pitching changes.

The most recent accusation regards the decision to pitch Merrill rather than France to open the AAC tournament. Frankly, with what I know, I’d have pitched France in the opener also. But, of course, I don’t know what the players and coaches knew at the time. But, some of the “rationale” for pitching France first doesn’t face reality. The least credible is that Merrill pitched so much more than France this year and through his career and was simply tired. But, on further examination, prior to the tournament, France actually pitched slightly more than Merrill (1434 pitches to 1419). He even threw over 120 pitches three times to Merrill’s twice. And, of course, France pitched an entire season last year while Merrill was injured and out for much of the season. The reason to start France was simple. He was pitching better. And, in my view, barring information not available to me or any other fan, that should have been the choice. As it happened, neither guy had much success so it probably didn’t matter.

So, what’s the verdict on coaching? I think it’s an incomplete. We started poorly which may or may not have been on coaching, but probably some. At least some of the blame for poor pitching has to be placed on coaching. I’d be surprised (and disappointed) if the pitching coach returns. But, even that assumes we can hire a better coach as a replacement. Personally, I’d give it a shot. As for managing of the pitching staff? Considering what he had to work with, I don’t have a problem with Coach Jewett on that score.

Next, let’s look at the schedule. Last year our SOS was #61. This year as it stands, it’s # 8, undoubtedly the toughest schedule in Tulane history. Had last year’s team played this year’s schedule, they’d have finished with the same RPI (#33) if they had gone 32-30. Hmmm!?! With this year’s schedule, five more wins would have taken us to #39 in RPI and six more would have taken us to #32 (one ahead of last year). For interest, had we not played our first 15 games (but, of course, we did), our 24-19 record since then would have been good for an RPI of .5659 or #31 in the country. Yes, the losing record is hard to take and very disappointing, but against this schedule, many of our past “regional teams” would likely have also sat home in the post season. Of course, that’s not any consolation.

Pitching: At the beginning of the year I thought we had three proven starters and nothing but question marks for the rest of our pitching. I was concerned that having lost half of our pitching staff from last year and needing at least seven pitchers to be competitive, we could be in trouble. As it has turned out, we had one solid starter (France), one who was up and down (Merrill), and one, Ross Massey, who seemingly has lost all confidence and rhythm to his pitching. Eventually, we found one solid short guy (Colletti) and one (Soleski) who was up and down in both starting and relieving rolls. Everyone else was bad most outings with a rare good one. We walked more batters than any team in the history of Tulane baseball and struck out fewer than any team in the last 27 years. Our team ERA was 5.72, the worst since 1990, during the era of “gorilla ball,” and the second worst on record. You can’t make do with that. Was that coaching? Maybe. I pitched a great deal in my youth and like to think I know something about it and some of these guys were just really bad. Better coaching should help, but we need better talent.

Offensively, we lost two of our best players and a third starter. We returned a bunch of guys (Williams, Kaplan, DeHart, Montalbano, Willsey, Hope, Brown, Rowland, and Witherspoon) who had a combined career batting average of .251 at Tulane. In 2016, they hit .260 as a group; nothing to strike fear in the hearts of opposing pitcher, but they had good power numbers a total of 56 HR’s. This year, despite periods of slumps from virtually all of them, they hit a combined .285 with 69 of the team’s 70 HR’s, far and away their best season playing for the Wave. The five youngsters who have played the most (the Gozzos, Hoese, Heinrich, and Owen) had a combined batting average of .219 with one HR. Those are the guys replacing Alemais, Rogers, and Carthon, who hit .282 between them with 8 HR’s. Our problem at the plate wasn’t lack of hitting from our returning players; it was lack of hitting from our “new” guys. How much did coaching play in the improved hitting from the returnees? As much as poor coaching affected our pitching? Who knows? But I think it unfair to blame coaching for poor performance by the pitching staff and suggest it has nothing to do with improved performance by the hitters.

Defensively, we lost our most important two defensive players, Alemais and Rogers. Despite some egregious errors from Hoese and Gozzo at shortstop, percentagewise they fielded better than Alemais. He made a lot of egregious errors also. But, I don’t think either of them has his range, so that’s a minus, but not a glaring deficiency for this team. The loss of Rogers is a different matter. His presence probably helped our pitchers last year. His absence hurt—a lot in my opinion. When Montalbano was in there, he did a great job, however. Through the first eleven games he played, we obviously didn’t win much (3 - 8), but defensively, he made no errors and had no passed balls. He also threw out 8 of 17 baserunners trying to steal; not Rogers’ type numbers (only 16 of 43 were successful in 2016), but damned good. For the rest of the season we had 19 passed balls, two catcher’s interference, and threw out only 16 of 73 (21.9%) runners attempting to steal. Those are truly terrible numbers. Worse, I think lack of confidence in the catchers could well have affected our pitchers. Our outfield was adequate defensively, but certainly not “stellar.” And Williams, Hope, and Willsey have been fine, though both Williams and Hope are not fielding nearly as well as last season. Willsey has made a couple more errors than normal but has been a magician on the double play. He may be our best defensive second baseman since Holland, over a dozen years ago. But other than catcher, our defense has been OK. Catching, despite the effort, has been woeful. Did coaching affect our defense? Probably not, though somewhere among Tulane’s undergrads there must have been a kid who played catcher in high school who could have spelled Gozzo on occasion. I think we should have found him.

Continued Below

Times set for first three football games

Here's the link: http:

//tulanegreenwave.com/news/2017/5/31/game-times-television-announced-for-first-three-2017-football-games.aspx

As expected, Grambling will be at night, a necessity for an opener in hot weather unless TV dictates otherwise. Kickoff is at 7 p.m., and it is not on TV, just ESPN3.

The road game at Navy the following week is at 2:30 no CBS Sports Network.

The Sept. 16 Oklahoma game, which I plan to attend if I can get some cost-covering from The Advocate, is at 5 p.m. on Fox Sports Oklahoma, which I did not know existed.

Recruiting news

I hear three-star RB Jeremy Gibson of Riverside Academy had a good visit over the weekend. It was the second time he has been on campus.

Gibson is leaning toward Arkansas, which he is visiting this weekend, but if Fritz and company are going to start beating P5 schools for players, RB figures to be the logical position since the offense is so friendly to them.

Gibson rushed for 1,319 yards and 20 TDs, averaging 6.5 yards per carry as Riverside cruised to the state championship last fall.
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