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Flipping Georgia Southern QB commit Darius Bradwell

I'm hearing that Darius Bradwell, a two-star QB from Tallahassee Godby who had committed to Georgia Southern, has switched to Tulane to follow Fritz and will try to confirm it tomorrow.

Bradwell was offered by Oregon State before his senior year, but they lost interest. He also had an offer from Louisville, but he committed to Kent State before switching to Georgia Southern with no interest by that point from P5 schools. He is listed as an athlete by Rivals and was originally a 3-star recruit who was downgraded to 2 stars.

Whether this turns out to be true or not, and I expect it is true, the days of Tulane pursuing drop-back QBs are over. Regardless of what happens this fall, Fritz' QBs will be runners first and passers second. That doesn't mean they won't throw the ball well, but the first priority will be athletic ability.

Lots of Questions.

School will start up again next week.

  1. What’s the story on kids who didn’t make it to school last fall for academic reasons: Darius Williams, Doug Henry, and Darius Black? Are any of them enrolling for this year? Any chance or desire for any of them to return?

  2. What’s the status of Rene Fleury? He was suspended indefinitely early last season and, to the best of my knowledge, never reinstated. Is he still a member of the team?

  3. What’s the latest on our academic casualties? Leondre James dropped out of school vowing to return. Will he? What about Leonard Davis and Edward Williams who “were not on track to graduate” according to CJ? Are they “back on track” and ready to contribute? What about Kenneth Santa Marina and Braynon Edwards? They both sat out the year, losing a year of eligibility I might add, due to academic deficiencies. Are those cleared up or are they gone?

  4. What ever happened to Sergio Medina? He played a lot on special teams as a Freshman, was moved to fullback as a sophomore and still saw some action on special teams and then played nary a down last season, which could count as a redshirt if he’s still around. Is he?

  5. A number of players were not playing by the final game last season including Richard Allen, Eric Bell, Quinton Carroll, Tristan Cooper, Terrence Encalade, Zach Harris, Devon Johnson, Roderick Teamer, Eldrich Washington, and Peter Woullard. Most of these guys were injured and some probably simply didn’t play due the coaches’ decisions. Are the injured all returning? How about the non-contributors?
That’s a lot of guys with question marks.

6. Any others who will be leaving?

7. Does anyone have a “good” list of commitments?

8. How many total does Coach Fritz plan to sign?

Anyway, were a little over a month to signing day and we may still have quite a few holes to fill.
Go get 'em, Coach Fritz.

Roll Wave!!!

First commit for 2017

I'm not breaking any news here, but LB Kalia Davis of something called West Florida Tech in Pensacola is Tulane's first commitment for 2017.

I lived in Florida for 21 years and never heard of West Florida Tech, but I also never covered football recruiting there.

He's unrated by Rivals or any other service but Fritz and his staff obviously like him. He had no other offers according to Rivals, but South Carolina was recruiting him.

Thoughts on basketball team

Tulane opens its AAC schedule at Memphis on Tuesday after an unimpressive 7-6 non-conference performance that included zero victories against teams currently ranked in the top 200 according to RealTimeRPI.com, a bad loss to Alabama A&M and some ugly wins against UNO and Drake.

Only twice, against Appalachian State--when Tulane took a 40-8 lead, which is hard to do against air--and in the last 25 minutes against Stephen F. Austen, has Tulane looked good, but the upside is higher than in Ed Conroy's first five years. The problem is in realizing that potential.

Here's my assessment of each scholarship player heading into the Memphis game, starting with the backcourt and proceeding to the frontcourt.

1) Louis Dabney

For most of November and December, he appeared to show little of the trust in his teammates he boasted about before the year started. He forced too many shots as if he did not believe anyone else could get the job done. But in the last two weeks, he calmed down and began letting the game come to him. He needs to continue playing that way because Tulane cannot win with him shooting below 40 percent, and he is not good enough to score consistently against defenses geared to stop him. But he is good enough to do damage if he gets some help from teammates and does not have to carry the burden of trying to score for 40 minutes.

2) Malik Morgan

I'm not crazy about his outside shot, which his mother called "beautiful" in a story I wrote about him and his sister for The Advocate last December. His release point is too high and too late. But he has a knack for the game. At Mississippi State, he scored two baskets in a row by tipping the rebound off the glass and in, and neither was accidental. He can score in a lot of different ways and is crafty. Look for him to play two guard a lot more the rest of the way because he's just not a reliable point guard, going out of control on the dribble too often. He can excel in a role as a scorer and is a good rebounder for his position. Defensively, he gets his hands on a lot of balls but needs to be more judicious. Foul trouble has been an issue, and he has to stay on the floor.

3) Von Julien

Even though did not make a shot in the two games after becoming the starting point guard, he needs to remain the starter because he is the only natural point guard on the roster. He can penetrate and find open players and also is better than Morgan at handling pressure even though he is a freshman. But if he does not develop some scoring ability, Tulane will be in trouble. The coaches have to trust that he will improve as he gets more experience.

4) Kajon Mack

Since coming back from a knee injury, Mack has been better than I anticipated as a backup point guard. Tulane can use his athletic ability and defense. The question always has been whether he could provide anything on offense, and his three assists and zero turnovers in four minutes of first-half action against Southern Miss was encouraging. He will get healthier as the year goes along, and he looks more comfortable than he has in the past.

5) Cameron Reynolds

At some point, he needs to start knocking down some shots because he would be a big attribute if he could. His size and athletic ability make him a valuable defender, but that value is negated when he cannot score. His shooting percentage of .315 is woeful, and it's not because he gets bad looks. Maybe being a regular part of the rotation will help him gain some confidence in his offense. It better. He has the tools.

6) Kain Harris

Harris is Tulane's most reliable freshman, which is not saying much to this point, and the Wave's best outside shooter. Still, he needs to prove he can consistently knock down open 3s. It's hard to win in modern college basketball without the threat of the 3, and no one on the roster scares opponents from behind the arc. Good players improve as they gain experience. The Wave needs Harris to follow that path.

7) Melvin Frazier

Tulane's most hyped freshman has been ineffective, beginning the year as a starter but falling out of the lineup because he's shown nothing other than raw athletic ability. He's not a good ball-handler, passer or shooter, averaging a paltry 5.1 points with 15 turnovers and five assists. He's also horrendous from the foul line. Maybe the light will go on, but he has a long way to go. At this point, he is effective only as the finisher on the fast break.

8) Dylan Osetkowski

He showed promise as a freshman, and it's been no surprise that he has improved dramatically as sophomore. He had all the intangibles that indicated steady growth. Osetkowski will struggle to score when he catches the ball on the post against athletic AAC defenders because he is not a good jumper, but he has outstanding feel for the game, is a superb passer and tough rebounder. With Tulane possessing more options offensively than it did last year, look for him have more games like his 20-point day against Mississippi State.

9) Jernard Jarreau

He's a terrific passer, too, giving Tulane so much more ability on the inside than it ever has had under Conroy. The concern with him is his health. Injuries derailed his career at Washington, and although he has made some athletic plays, giving Tulane a defensive presence on the interior it has lacked for awhile, he looks slow at times during games, too. If Jarreau maintains the level he showed in the non-conference play, he will help the Wave significantly. The one concern is his tendency to hang his head when plays don't go well. That moodiness needs to stop pronto. He also should be a better free throw shooter than his .541 percentage attests. He has good form.

10) Blake Paul

Paul gives Tulane a shot-blocking presence off the bench. Although he looks very much like a freshman offensively, he has the upside to contribute this year. We'll see if it happens.

11) Ryan Smith

The coaching staff loves Smith because of his work ethic. The problem is his limited game. When he is on the floor--and his time has decreased as the year goes along--Tulane essentially is playing 4 on 5 offensively.

12) Taron Oliver

This guy is gifted offensively, possessing nice touch and a variety of shots. He also is no factor because of his weight and likely won't be this year. It's a shame. If he works as hard as everyone around him insists he has done since he arrived on campus, he can be a significant factor in the future.

Assistant coaches

I just texted Jason Rollins, and he said he had not heard from Fritz yet.

Interestingly, Fritz retained Georgia Southern's defensive coordinator, Jack Curtis, when he arrived in Statesboro. Curtis had been on the staff of Jeff Monken since 2011, and he came to Ga Southern from Central Missouri, Fritz' old stomping grounds.

Fritz' offensive coordinator, Doug Ruse, has been with him for four years. Although those years were run-centric, Ruse coached a prolific passer in his previous stop at Western Illinois, Matt Barr, the runner-up for the Walter Payton award in 2010. He spent eight years before that as offensive coordinator at Arkansas State, where the pass offense never finished higher than 69th and Arkansas State never won more than six games.

The other assistants don't stand out one way or the other.

Memphis Commercial-Appeal story on AAC opener

http://www.commercialappeal.com/spo...30-e807-4aa5-e053-0100007f6815-363686261.html

It's interesting to get the perspective from the other side about Tulane's win at Memphis a year ago. The angle is about how the loss sent the Tigers into a tailspin, with some good quotes. Tulane actually looked like the better team that day, with Jonathan Stark's 24-point performance prompting me to tweet he was better than Ricky Tarrant (definitely in the top five of tweets I regret).

Tulane will get a firsthand look at Tarrant tomorrow. He is scoring well, but his shooting has been abysmal. Take out a hot night in a loss to Ole Miss, and he is 26 for 88 from the floor and 9 for 40 from 3-point range.

This does not appear to be a good matchup for Tulane. Memphis has two athletic shot blockers in Shaq Goodwin (eight blocks in the last two games) and four-star freshman Dedric Lawson (10 blocks in the last three), and the Wave's best route to victory usually involves getting the ball inside to Osetkowski and Jarreau, neither of whom has been effective getting his shot off against athletic big men.

Tulane will need big games from Dabney and Morgan, and someone needs to get hot from 3-point range.

Memphis has gotten bad press this year, and it may be deserved, but the Tigers' three losses were to Oklahoma, Ole Miss and UT Arlington, three times with a combined record of 30-4. Before you dismiss UT Arlington, that team also beat Ohio State and took Texas to OT. This would be by far Tulane's best win of the year and by far Memphis' worst loss.

Willi Fritz's offense at Tulane

We’re all wondering exactly what kind of offense Coach Fritz will bring to the table at Tulane. He’s indicated he won’t be using the triple option, but it’s hard for me to believe that he will “junk” the various sets, nomenclature, and much of the playbook he had at Georgia Southern. I would guess he will keep much of that while putting greater emphasis on the passing game. Having now reviewed a lot of tape from his years at Sam Houston, I am now even more convinced.

At Georgia Southern he operated out of a spread formation and ran the ball 82% of the time over his two years there. He averaged just under 12 pass attempts per game. During his four years at Sam Houston, he operated out of virtually identical sets but only ran the ball 68% of the time. He passed an average of 22 times per game. By comparison, Tulane ran the ball roughly half of the time last year (49.6%) and threw the ball almost 34 times per game. Game situations (being ahead or behind, for example) might explain some of those statistics but they are probably illustrative of intent. For interest, the four teams in the national championship playoffs, Clemson, Alabama, Michigan State, and Oklahoma ran the ball respectively 56.5%, 59.0%, 56.7%, and 57.7% of the time.

From my observations, the multiple formations Coach Fritz used at his last two schools were very similar and I can’t believe they will change significantly when he comes to Tulane. At both schools he operated out of various formations but never, from what I’ve seen, from under center. And his teams virtually never (maybe never) huddled. The multiple formations and even the degree of spread and the positioning of the running backs were almost identical. The one difference I noticed was at SHSU he employed the tight end more often, lining him up next to a tackle on most plays whereas, at GSU, when a tight end was in the game, he was generally positioned in the backfield or spread wide. The tight ends caught 39 passes in his last two years at SHSU for 497 yards and 11 TD’s, pretty respectable efficiency. At GSU, they caught fewer than five passes over two years. I’d guess our tight ends will be employed more like at SHSU, but who knows? Our current tight ends tend to be more pass receivers than blockers.

In both places, most of the passing offense was executed off of play fakes and most QB runs were off of option plays. Even when the running backs carried the ball, the QB was involved, continuing to simulate carrying the ball himself to draw off defenders.

Fritz’s primary QB at SHSU was a better passer than he had at GSU but not near the runner. Frankly, he reminded me a little of Tanner Lee, though he wasn't as big. He didn’t seem to have near the arm and, though he may have been a little better runner, the difference, if any, was small. Regardless, he rushed over 200 times in his last two years while passing 629 times. In both of those years Coach Fritz had a “running QB” who spelled the starter fairly often. In one year, it was a WR who essentially ran a “wildcat,” rushing over 100 times and passing only five. I would not be surprised at all if Coach Fritz employs a similar “game plan” using multiple QB’s at Tulane depending on his personnel.

As an aside, having nothing to do with the offense, I noticed that punt formations at the two schools were identical even to the choreographed rugby style kicks. Since our punters seem to have trouble holding on to the ball, I don’t know if running with it to punt would work very well.o_O

Anyway, the sign of a good coach is putting his players in the best position to win. I think Coach Fritz’s offense will adapt to the players he has. While it might look the same with Tanner Lee at QB as it would with, say, Lyndsey Scott at QB, the ratio of runs to passes and how much the running game depends on the QB would be vastly different. He showed that at SHSU with his multiple QB system.

Regardless, if you’d like to view some of what went on at Sam Houston, I’d recommend a short highlight of their Spring game in 2013. It runs about three minutes and gives a little feel for their offensive sets as well as a short one-on-one drill at the end.

http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=sam+houston+state+football+2013&view=detail&mid=1454377B4C5464437B791454377B4C5464437B79&FORM=VIRE8

If you’d like to delve into the issue deeper, several game-highlights from 2012 and 2013 are available on you tube. And, if you’re really a glutton for punishment, the entire game against Stephen F. Austin from 2013 (SHSU won 54-49, so it’s wild) is linked below:

http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=sam+houston+state+football+2013&view=detail&&mid=99999EF98F0A8DC0E26399999EF98F0A8DC0E263

Roll Wave!!

Newbie

New to this site however I have been a big football board guy on the other schools site I have always been a Gator and Louisville fan but now Tulane is number one .I am looking forward to the news and info on this board while Coach Fritz take this program to new heights . There should be plenty of news coming out this week. Go Wave!
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58-27...

And the differences between the two teams was even greater than the score. Regardless of whether or not the outgoing coaches' absence was a factor, I'm very grateful that we hired Fritz. Bowling Green were embarrassed tonight and they didn't belong on the same field as GSU.

So encouraged by what I saw tonight. We're in good hands going forward and this is such a new and different experience for me as a Tulane fan that it almost feels wrong to be so encouraged.

Assistant coach news: who is being retained, who isn't

Just got it confirmed.

Jason Rollins wil remain on Tulane's staff with his third head coach after being hired by Bob Toledo and being retained by CJ. I had heard reliable word that no one was going to be retained by Fritz, but either that info was wrong or there was a change of heart.

I for one think it is a good choice to retain Rollins. He has a great relationship with local coaches and is easy to work with, so he can fit in with any type of coaching staff. I also think his coaching skills are underrated. I watched practice closely this year, and even though his position guys had a rough year, the defense responded well to him as co-coordinator. He is extremely popular with a wide variety of players. I know Sam Scofield thought he was great.

Look for an announcement of most of the rest of the staff after Georgia Southern plays in the GoDaddy Bowl tomorrow, most likely on Thursday.

Fritz' first commitment

It's P.J. Hall, a 3-star cornerback from Hoover in Alabama.

He has offers from Memphis, Cincinnati and Mississippi State among others. Just like a lot of Fritz' Georgia Southern recruits, he has better offers than most of the players in the CJ era.

The report on him is he doesn't have great size, but he makes up for it with speed, strength and natural cover skills.

Hoover lost to Spain Park in the quarterfinals of the state playoffs this year, stopping a streak of three straight state championships. Hall has started since he was a sophomore.

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaa/football/recruiting/player-P.J.-Hall-161754

Twenty worth a look

As CJ’s final recruiting class, weak as it was, continues to fall apart, Coach Fritz is obviously looking to shore up a number of positions. What with the large number of academic problems, injuries that may or may not be overcome, and the “deadwood” on the current roster that might not return, I have no idea how many spots remain open or what positions, other than QB, need additional bodies who can play. Transfers from other schools and out of state players should really be the priority in my view, since Louisiana has been pretty well "picked over" for 2016.

But, I’ve been following Louisiana recruiting for a number of years and here are 20 names from within the state and a reference to their HUDL highlight that I’d take a look at. Some are former Tulane commits who I’d like to see back. Others are commits to other schools that with a new coaching staff and more optimistic outlook, might be persuaded to “switch” to Tulane.

Some of these guys might not fit the “mold” coach Fritz is looking for and, on closer inspection (beyond highlight film) may not, frankly, be good enough to provide help. But their "highlights" are pretty exciting. I’ve intentionally not included players who are a very low probability of us signing and only focused on players who I think have potential and, if already committed, might be persuaded to “switch.” Everyone would probably come up with a different list and, with more information on our actual “needs,” I’d probably alter this list significantly also. Anyway, my 20 in alphabetical order.

  1. Willie Baker, DE, 6’4” 230# Livonia, LOUISIANA TECH http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2617005/highlights/312878375/v2

  2. Ca’Ron Baham, Dual Threat QB/ATH, 5’11”, 190#, John Ehret, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2607517/highlights/204080385/v2

  3. Raymond Calais, RB 5’8” 170# Cecilia, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1402624/highlights/319392471/v2

  4. Douglas Coleman, WR 6’1” 175#, Zachary, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2648055/highlights/189304375/v2

  5. Lloyd Cushenberry, OT, 6’5” 310#, Dutchtown, SOUTH CAROLINA http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1931006/highlights/294945416/v2

  6. Nathaniel Evans, LB, 6’1” 245#, John Curtis, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1615087/highlights/296195375/v2

  7. Austin Guy, Dual Threat QB/ATH, 6’4” 207# Natchitoches, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2444848/highlights/289374384/v2

  8. Javonis Isaac, TE, 6’3” 215#, Acadiana, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2598894/highlights/301104404/v2

  9. Giovanni LaFrance, LB, 6’1” 235#, St. Augustine, FORMER TULANE COMMIT http://www.hudl.com/athlete/4518694/highlights/311927401/v2

  10. Darius May, RB 6’0” 190, McDonough 35, FORMER TULANE COMMIT http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1554610/highlights/305459375/v2

  11. Trey Ragas, RB, 5’11” 200#, Archbishop Shaw, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2716266/highlights/302356445/v2

  12. Lyndsey Scott, Dual Threat QB/ATH, 5’11”, 190#, Zachary, SYRACUSE http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1552093/highlights/315548386/v2

  13. Barrick Slaughter, RB/SS, 6’1” 210#, Livonia, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1651213/highlights

  14. Jarded Sparks, Dual Threat QB, 6’1” 195#, Dutchtown, SOUTHERN MISS http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1840696/highlights/314705382/v2

  15. Tyarise Stevenson, DT, 6’3” 320#, Donaldsonville, FORMER TULANE COMMIT http://www.hudl.com/athlete/1558691/highlights/309534409/v2

  16. Ladarrius Thomas, RB, 6’2” 213#, Woosman, LOUISIANA TECH http://www.hudl.com/athlete/3134099/highlights/198925375/v2

  17. Bladrick Veal, Dual Threat QB, 6’5” 190# Southern Lab, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2085424/highlights

  18. Jayrin Wilson, DB/RB, 5’9” 165#, Acadiana, UNCOMMITTED http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2922428/highlights/299302381/v2

  19. Keondre Wudtree, Dual Threat QB, 6’3” 190#, Parkway, LOUISIANA TECH http://www.hudl.com/athlete/2514580/highlights/316780443/v2

  20. Jarrius Wallace, DB, 6’0” 185#, John Ehret, CENTRAL FLORIDA http://www.hudl.com/athlete/3100648/highlights/315494416/v2

Ca'Ron Baham

I’ve been looking at some “highlights” of John Ehret QB, Ca’ron Baham, who recently decommitted from Missouri. He’s been recruited all year as an athlete or WR, but all of his film is at QB. He doesn’t look to be a great passer, though highlights, of course, show nothing but completions. That said, he is one hell of a runner from a shotgun/pistol position in an option attack. He apparently was tight with the Missouri wide receiver coach and still plans to visit their prior to signing day and is also looking at Colorado and some other schools. Anybody have any idea if he’d be interested in continuing as a QB? Should we be interested in him?

Tulane's All Decade Team 2006-2015: The Offense

While waiting on the announcement of assistant coaches and the baseball season...

We’ve now played ten seasons since the Katrina year. We’ve had one winning year in that time and gone to one bowl game, one of the least prestigious of them all, against an in-state rival from the Sunbelt, played on our own home field at the time. And we lost that. That was the kind of season (our best in a decade) that gets many coaches fired at schools who give a crap about football. During those ten years we’ve had three head coaches and one interim head coach, all of whom, were failures “on the field.” And our overall record for those years was 34-88.

Yet, we had some good players during the past decade so I thought I’d reminisce a little and suggest an “All Decade Team” from one of the worst ten years in Tulane football history.

OFFENSE

Quarterback: I’d go with Ryan Griffin (2008-2012). He threw the most passes in Tulane history, completed the second most for the second most yards. His career 59.9% completion rate was statistically tied with Mike McKay for first place, though McKay was slightly ahead if you took the stat out a couple more places. Griffin also had the best (meaning lowest) rate of interceptions in Tulane history (2.5%). The only other one to consider, in my view, was Lester Ricard, who didn’t have quite the record that Griffin had with the Wave.

Running Backs: To me, this isn’t close. Matt Forte (2004-2007) and Orleans Darkwa (2010-2013) are #2 and #4 respectively in yards rushing in Tulane history. They are also tied with 39 TD’s for first place in rushing touchdowns. Both were All Conference players and Forte even received some All-American consideration. Andre Anderson had a good career at Tulane and Dontrell Hilliard is developing one, but, at this point and for these ten years, they don’t measure up to Forte and Darkwa.

Wide Receivers: This is another easy choice in my opinion. Jeremy Williams (2005-2009) and Ryan Grant (2009-2013) are #4 and #5 respectively in both receptions and yards receiving at Tulane. Dawson is #6 in receiving TD’s and Williams is #8. Both were All Conference guys and clearly the primary receiving target during their years with the Wave. I really couldn’t even find another receiver to compete with these two over this period.

Tight End: This is a tough one, not because of the competition, but due to the lack of candidates. There were no Rodney Holman’s or Larry Route’s on Tulane rosters during the past ten years. Our current TE’s could eventually approach their “numbers,” however, and appear to be the best of the recent decade, regardless. Charles Jones (2014-2015), with 38 receptions for 323 yards and 6 TD’s, has the clear statistical advantage, however, and would be my choice.

Offensive Line: Tulane hasn’t had a good offensive line in many years, certainly not during the past ten, so finding the best five is tough. To me, two stand out: Troy Kropog (2004-2008) and Andrew Nierman (2007-2010). Kropog started 37 games of the 43 he played and Nierman started all 47 games he appeared in. They were clearly the best linemen of their times and, to me, the best of the past ten years. And, not surprisingly, both stepped into the starting line ups as “true” freshmen. I think Eric Jones (2008-2012), Harris Howard (2008-2011), and Zach Morgan (2009-2013) would fill out my starting five, though none of them ever made 1st, 2nd, or 3rd team “all conference” in CUSA. That they each started at least 33 games in their four years as lettermen is probably the best indicator of their standing among our other linemen. Like I said, tough choices.

Tulane's All Decade Team 2006-2015: Defense and Special Teams

I couldn't fit everything on one post, so I had to break it into two threads.

Defensive Line: This is a difficult decision because we’ve had several good defensive linemen over the last ten years. I think Dezman Moses (2010-2011) and Julius Warmsley (2010-2013) are clear selections. Whether Warmsley is chosen at DE or DT makes for more controversy at the position he doesn’t take. But both guys were All CUSA performers in their time at Tulane and key players in what sometimes were very bad defenses, though not due to their contribution. I’ve chosen to call Warmsley a DT (where he played the most), even though I think his best position was at DE. For the end opposite Moses, I’d pick Royce LaFrance (2012-2015) overAntonio Harris, but I think it’s a close call. LaFrance seems to take more plays off than Harris did, but he did have more tackles (157-151) and more sacks (20 to 14), so I guess that swayed me. At the other tackle I’d take Tanzel Smart (2014-2015) though a strong case could be made for the one year provided by Chris Davenport. Tanzel has already become an All-conference player in the AAC and, unlike Davenport, is an every-down kind of player who is good against the run and plays much of the time in the offensive backfield. He has the potential to be one of the best ever at Tulane.

Linebackers: I only chose two linebackers since we’ve probably lined up in that formation for much of the last decade. My choices are Trent Mackey (2009-2011) and Nico Marley (2013-2015). Mackey transferred from Duke and sat out the 2009 season, but led Tulane in tackles in both 2010 and 2011, with a total of 269 tackles, a phenomenal number for two seasons. He made the All CUSA team in the latter year. Sadly, he missed his final year of eligibility in 2012 due to legal difficulties which were eventually satisfied in his favor. Marley, who was chosen to the All-AAC team this past season, has been a leading tackler for Tulane since he stepped on the field, finishing 3rd in 2013, 2nd in 2014, and 1st this season with a career total, so far, of 231 tackles. Both players were undersized but very aggressive. Darryl Farley with 213 career tackles and Zach Davis, who had 167, were significant contributors for the Wave in their time but, in my view, not at the level of Mackey or Marley.

Defensive Backs: I’ve chosen five players, trying to stay with two corners, two safeties, and nickel. One corner, Lorenzo Doss (2012-2014) is easy. He intercepted 15 passes in his three years at Tulane along with making 123 tackles. He was an All-CUSA selection in 2013. In a close call, I’ve chosen Israel Route(2003-2006) at the other corner over Parry Nickerson and Jordan Sullen. Route had three interceptions and 24 passes defended during his Tulane career and made 204 tackles. He was a 2nd team all-CUSA selection in 2006. Sullen had three interceptions, 20 pass break ups and 96 tackles in his time at Tulane. And Nickerson, who had a great redshirt freshman year fell back considerably this year. It is undoubtedly true, however, that his zero interceptions and many fewer tackles is largely due to weakness at the other corner. On the other hand, with Doss in place his first season, he got many more chances for “picks” and tackles than most players get. Regardless, I went with Route more for his tackling. That's not been a strong suit for Nickerson.

For the Nickelback position, I picked Derrick Strozier (2009-2013). Strozier only played defense his sophomore and senior seasons but in that time had 101 tackles, five interceptions, returning one 99 yards for a TD, blocked two kicks and made 18 pass breakups. He was named player of the week either on defense or special teams on three occasions in CUSA

At safeties, I’ve chosen Sam Scofield (2011-2014) and Darian Monroe (2012-2015). Scofield was everywhere for Tulane in his final two years, leading the team in tackles both years and logging 253 during those two seasons alone. We really missed him this year. Along with others, I don’t think Monroe had the career we initially envisioned, but he has started since the first game of his “true” freshman season and finished with 333 total tackles. When he was out for even a play or two, our defense was not the same. A safety many may have forgotten is David Skeehan, originally a “walk-on,” he eventually led the team in interceptions three straight years. And, though I couldn’t place him on my “All Decade” team, it is hard not to give a mention to Devin Walker, another “walk on” who played very well for the Wave and is remembered fondly by all true Tulane fans and many others around New Orleans and our country. God Bless Devin!

Punter: Chris Beckman (2003-2006) was a pretty good punter for the Wave and barely fits into my ten year time-frame. During his career, he had 222 punts for 9,421 yards and a 42.4 avg. He was a second team selection for All CUSA in his senior year, 2006.

Kicker: Probably the easiest selection on this team is Carlos Santos (2010-2013). During his time with the Wave, Carlos kicked 61 field goals (2nd all time) out of 78 attempts (also 2nd in Tulane history) for a 78.2% success rate, first in the schools annals. He was the Lou Groza award winner and consensus 1st team All American in 2012. Like I said, easy choice.

Long Snapper: With the problems we’ve had the past three years, it’s sometimes hard to remember that we had a great snapper in CJ’s first year. Billy Johnson (2012) only played for Tulane one season after graduating from Georgia where he was the second string snapper. In his one year here, however, he showed us how the position should be played and was named All CUSA. His snaps were fast and accurate and helped our punting and field goal teams immeasurably.

Kick Returner: In 2009, Jeremy Williams (2005-2009) had a return for a TD, the only one of the last ten years and averaged 24.1 yards per return. Since then, Sullen, Kelley, Rounds, Boutte, Hilliard, and Badie have led the team in returns to no better result.

Punt Returner: There is not a lot to choose from here. No punt returner for Tulane has scored a TD in the last decade, but Derrick Strozier (2009-2013) led the team twice and was the only one to average over 10 yards/return for a full season (2011). So, by default, Derrick wins.

Anyway, there you have it—one man’s opinion. I’d have no quarrel with anyone who made different selections at several positions, particularly both lines and cornerback. Leaving Forte or Santos off would be cause for some disagreement, however.:)

Roll Wave!!!
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