The first time I saw Michael Pratt in spring ball in 2020, he excelled and looked far better than any quarterback I had seen under Fritz. Although he slowed down that spring when the defense started throwing more at him, that initial impressions proved accurate when he replaced Keon Howard and immediately changed the offense that fall.
I'm here to tell you my first impression of Carson Haggard is even better than the first impression of Pratt. He is small (6-0, 175) and needs to bulk up down the road to withstand the rigors of college football, but he had as stretch during the middle of practice yesterday that was the best I've seen from any Tulane quarterback since I started covering the team when Ryan Griffin was the starter. Take it for what it's worth, but I'm not someone who engages in much hyperbole. He looks like the real deal. The quarterbacks were alternating reps in an 11-on-11 drill with no pads, and his accuracy on the run was uncanny. He threw a bullet to a receiver whose number I did not catch for a touchdown while rolling to his right, zinging it between two defenders. He threw another beautiful touchdown pass on a corner route, hitting the receiver in stride. He threw short to secondary receivers when the defense had guys covered downfield. He hit Tyjae Spears on an improvised swing pass that would have gone for a long gain if Spears had not dropped it. He hit walk-on Matthew Redmond with a dart in traffic while running to his right again. He found Tyrek Presley on an inside route and hit him again a few plays later. He threw a touchdown pass to Luke Besh. And mind you, these were essentially consecutive reps. I might have missed one or two, but I'm not cherry picking the good plays. A former Tulane wide receiver watching practice next to me (I won't name him because he had no idea I would write what he was saying) simply called Haggard "a baller."
So yes, that was my No. 1 impression of the first open practice, and I can promise you I did not go there expecting to report about a true freshman fourth-string quarterback who enrolled early from high school. There must be something about the Florida quarterbacks Tulane has signed. Obviously there is much more to being a great quarterback than excelling in a no-pads, 11-on-11 drill at the beginning of spring, but the uncanny accuracy--something all Tulane quarterbacks under Fritz before Pratt struggled with mightily--is a huge asset.
Pratt was not as sharp as Haggard, airmailing a short throw over Shae Wyatt's head and going up to him to apologize afterward and floating another throw over the middle that could have gotten a receiver injured in a tackling drill, but he had some good moments. Remember, he was just cleared a week ago for full work after underdoing unspecified shoulder surgery following an injury-filled 2021 season. He may have thrown a perfect pass to former high school teammate Dea Dea McDougle in the corner of the end zone early in the drill, but I admit I did not see the ball released and am not sure whether it was him or Justin Ibieta. I do know safety Macon Clark, who was a step late to get over to the throw, was angry enough that he slammed his fist into the padding along the wall.
For the rest of the drill, Ibieta did not have any noteworthy or bad throws--Fritz said he was not 100 percent coming off a torn labrum--but Kai Horton made the best pass I've seen from him since he arrived for a TD to McDougle. He also threw high of a walk-on running back on another one.
The first thing I did when I got to practice was write down who was practicing with each position group, although I did not get to the defensive linemen because they stayed on the small practice field outside the stadium until team drills. You know the four quarterbacks.
The running backs were Spears, Ygenio Booker, Iverson Celestine, Cam Carroll, Ashaad Clayton and walk-ons Josh Coltrin, Lucas Barisas and Charles Schibler.
The wide receivers were Duece Watts, Phat Watts, Wyatt, McDougle, Lawrence Keys, Presley, T.J. Huggins (who was in a no-contact jersey) and walk-ons Lucas Desjardins, Michael Lavergne, Besh, Trevor Evans and Reed Rutkowski. I did not see Byrce Bohanon.
The tight ends were Tyrick James, Will Wallace, Reggie Brown and walk-on Jonathan Kahn.
The offensive linemen were Nik Hogan, who has been moved back, Joey Claybrook, Joseph Solomon, Caleb Thomas, Jackson Fort, Trey Tuggle, Matt Lombardi, Sully Burns, Hutson Lillibridge, Josh Remetich, Rashad Green and walk-on Ethan Marcus. I did not see Sincere Haynesworth, who has a class conflict. I requested him for an interview Tuesday and he was not made available because of a class he had to get to.
The linebackers were Nick Anderson, Dorian Williams, Jesus Machado, Mandel Eugene, Corey Platt and walk-ons Aidan McCahill, Jack Collins, Austin Sybrandt and Adam Uppuluri. I did not see walk-ons Matthew Remondet, the younger brother of departed scholarship O-lineman Matthew Remondet, or Andrew Wilks, both of whom are listed on the roster.
J.J. McCleskey was working with four defensive backs--Jadon Canady, Levi Williams, Jarius Monroe (who looks good) and walk-on Chadwick Bailey.
Joshua Christian-Young was working with Larry Brooks, Macon Clark, Bailey Despanie, DJ Douglas and walk-ons Gabe Liu, Jean-Jacques Hunter and No. 29 (not on the roster). Jonathan Mestayer, another walk-on, was out there but did not practice.
Chris Hampton was working with Lance Robinson, who looks better than a year ago, Kiland Harrison, Kevaris Hall, Shi'Keem Laister and walk-ons Rishi Rattan, Brandon Kim and Rodrek Williams II.
Carlos Hatcher, recovering from ACL surgery, will not be cleared to practice this spring but he made himself useful by flipping the ball to Hampton before each rep of a defensive backs catching drill.
There were fewer dropped passes than in most of the days last spring or fall, although Jha'Quan Jackon had one in a passing drill, and so did McDougle. Presley let one go through his hands in a 11-on-11 drill and it deflected to Monroe for an interception. Pratt got picked by Canady, who jumped a route and is without a doubt is Tulane's best defensive backs regardless of where he lines up.
Without Haynesworth, the first-team center was Fort, with Claybrook, Remetich, Thomas and Green around him. The second-team line was, from left to right, Lillibridge, Burns, Solomon at center, Tuggle and Lombardi.
New running backs coach Derrick Sherman was all over Celestine for losing a fumble even though it happened late in a play with guys slapping at the ball. He let him know ball security was paramount, and Celestine took it well.
Wide receivers coach John McNemanin is very active on the field.
I talked to Fritz and both coordinators after practice but don't have time to transcribe the interviews now. They will be up before the next practice.