Kanan Ray did not practice today, but no announcement has been made on his status for Saturday's homecoming game against Memphis. If he cannot play, it would mark the first time a Tulane starting offensive lineman missed a game since Corey Dublin sat out the 2020 finale against Memphis due to COVID.
Trey Tuggle and Josh Remetich, both former starters themselves, filled in admirably for Ray after he got hurt against South Florida, although Tuggle totally whiffed on his first play after replacing Ray on the opening drive. Ray appeared to injure his left leg after getting pushed backwards by a pass rusher. He did not get tangled up on anybody but must have taken a wrong step as he stumbled. I do not know what his status will be, but it is the spot where Tulane could most afford an injury up front. The competition between Ray and Tuggle was the only close one on the offensive line in preseason camp, and while Prince Pines has looked very solid at left guard, Ray has been up and down at right guard. I have no idea how he has graded out, but that has been my impression.
Today, the first-team line had Tuggle and the usual suspects. The second-team line was Sully Burns, Shadre Hurst, Caleb Thomas, Remetich and Matt Lombardi from left to right. The third-team line had Burns again, Hutson Lillibridge, Ethan Marcus, Jackson Fort and Nik Hogan from left to right. The scout-team line, when they broke up into those units, had Keanon McNally, Joseph Solomon, Marcus, Fort and Hogan from left to right.
Michael Pratt has looked sharp in practice again this week. Yesterday he threw a dart to Shae Wyatt in the back of the end zone. It certainly helps that he has seven receivers on pace to catch 20 passes this year (Jha'Quan Jackson, Shae Wyatt, Duece Watts, Dea Dea McDougle, Tyjae Spears, Lawrence Keyes and Tyrick James all have between 14 and 19 through seven games). Last year Tulane barely had three, with Duece Watts catching 21. behind Wyatt's 33 and Tyrick James' 31, and that matched the high in the Willie Fritz era. There were two in 2020 (Duece Watts and Jha'Quan Jackson), three in 2019 (Darnell Mooney, Jalen McCleskey, Amari Jones), two in 2018 (Mooney and Terren Encalade), two in 2017 (Encalade and Mooney) and two in 2016 (Encalade and Mooney). The last time Tulane had more than four receivers with 20 catches was six in 2014 under Curtis Johnson.
FRITZ
On having seven guys capable of catching 20 or more passes:
"It's big. You don't want people to be able to gang up on, in this personnel grouping or this formation, you're throwing it to this guy. Our offensive coaches have done a very nice job of spreading the ball around, but also not giving a tell to the defense about what we're running or who could possibly get the ball. They've done an excellent job of that."
On having success with motion into the backfield or having a tight end lined up in the backfield:
"It's real important. It is complicated, but the thing we've done an excellent job of is getting it installed and working on most of it on Monday and all of it on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday morning. I've been around coordinators or teams where I was always having to fight that. Don't be adding stuff on Thursday, and certainly don't be adding stuff on Friday, but people do. Coach Hampton does a great job of that defensively as well. We've got our game plan in quicker, but it's also multiple enough. We're changing pieces a little bit. Something that looked this way the week before looks a little bit different the next week, so they've done a good job of that."
On potential for getting full crowd:
"We'd love to. I say it all the time, if you come out here to a game, you'll enjoy it. It's a very intimate setting, and it's a lot better for football than people probably understand. We'd love to have a full crowd."
On what he means when he says servant-leader, one of his favorite phrases, when he talks about Pratt, Tyjae Spears, Sincere Haynesworth and others:
"Oh, the first thing that Mike is going to do or Tyjae, you know, Tyjae cleans up the locker room. Michael, any time I ask him to do anything, he'll do it. He works with all sorts of different things, a lot of stuff I don't even know about. He leads a Bible study. They are looking to help people. You see them helping people rather than telling them about how they are helping people. They are not looking for credit, either, and we've got a lot of guys like that. A servant-leader is what you're looking for."
TYRICK JAMES
On lining up in different spots (he scored TD against ECU after lining up in backfield):
"It's real fun. Getting a hold of coach Boda's offense has been a real fun deal since he's gotten here. It's not complicated at all. It's very easy. It's not many signals you have to memorize. It's just the plays and we have the wristband, which makes it that much easier."
On seven guys who can catch 20 passes:
"It's helped a lot. At times when we can't run the ball, we get what we've got to get with the passing game. Not to be selfish. Everybody eats here."
Slow start personally but has picked it up a lot:
"My brother, who's a head coach, he's always said don't rush the time. Your time is coming. Whenever you're not getting your passes or your touchdowns in a game, don't be down on yourself because God has a timing for everything."
On offense tough to stop:
"Very tough. We like everybody getting the ball. Whoever gets the ball it's just go be able to make plays."
On crowd Saturday:
"I'm hoping for a big crowd. It's homecoming and we're 6-1. We want New Orleans to come out."
On ECU crowd:
"We try not to worry about the crowd. Once we hit the field and once it's kickoff time, we're not worried about who's in the stands."
DEA DEA MCDOUGLE
On catch that was ruled incomplete before being overturned by replay:
"I was really shocked at the time, but I wasn't too shocked just because of the simple fact that I got up without handing the ball to the ref. The ref behind me was the one that actually made the call. I was shocked, but at the same time I have to stand up and give the ball to the ref, so that's on me."
On relationship with Pratt:
"Me and Pratt have always had a great relationship. Before here we were great friends. We grew up in the same neighborhood. We were both from Boca Raton, so that's where it all started. Obviously we played our senior year in high school together. That was a fun experience. We met actually at a 7 on 7. I was deciding where I was going to go in high school between Boca Raton, where he went to school, and Deerfield. I chose Deerfield, and Pratt was really upset about that, but that's kind of where we built that connection--that seven on seven and he's seen me make a lot of plays. I played offense and defense, and he saw I was a standout guy right away and just wanted to throw balls to me right away. That's where it all started."
On happy Pratt transferred to Deerfield Beach for senior year:
"Yeah, of course. While he was at Boca I was still watching the games. I was still paying attention to him. I wanted him over there bad and we were always talking all the time. He came his senior year and we made some magic.
On what makes Pratt good:
"His intellect for the game of football. He's a very smart player. He's just a natural born leader all around, a great guy that everyone wants to be around. Since the first day I met him he's just really funny, cool and just great to be around. He's an all-around good person."
On transferring to Tulane from Maryland:
"I'm not going to say it was very easy, but at the same time I made my mind up sooner than later. I made an easy decision just by talking to Pratt and communicating with him, and talking with my parents. It took off from there."
On motion a lot in this offense:
"It's very fun actually. I'm still getting adjusted to the playbook, but I feel like I became an instant impact player in this offense. It's really exciting, and I'm going to keep working."
On spring:
"Coming in just learning the new system and learning all the guys, it took me some time to get adjusted, and I'm still getting adjusted, but I've come a long way of course. It took some time."
On his best strength:
"Just awareness, just being aware of my surroundings on the field. I feel I'm a very smart player on the field and off the field. I have really strong hands and run really great routes. Man-to-man coverage, I win."
On seven guys who can catch 20 passes:
"It helps a lot because it takes a lot of pressure off the quarterback for one. I just feel like all the guys in the receiver room are great guys. No one's selfish or anything like that. Everyone wants to see everyone win. It's really a great receiver room."
On what happened at Maryland:
"I definitely keep up with those guys, even on social media and everything these days, we still talk. Just at Maryland I watched myself fall farther and farther down the depth chart. I made a business decision and took it from there."
On potential for big crowd Saturday:
"Oh my God, it would be great. I've been talking to my teammates and they've been telling me how last year not many people came to the games. This year everything is different all around. to look up and see people come and fill the stadium would be really great."
On being ranked:
"I don't really pay attention to the top 25, but to see us ranked, it's been such a long time, so it's a really great feeling."