Tuesday practice report: Sept. 27
- By Guerry Smith
- Joe Kennedy's Wave Crest
- 7 Replies
The Glen Cuiellette-Terren Encalade connection that sprang to life in the second half and in overtime against ULL was alive and well as Tulane began serious preparation for UMass on Tuesday. Just after I arrived, Cuiellette threw deep for Encalade, with Tre Jackson (clearly healthy) running stride for stride with him. Jackson, though, could not make the play, tipping the ball and falling down as it deflected right to Encalade for a long touchdown.
Look for plenty of those attempts against UMass. Coach Willie Fritz confirmed the obvious after practice, saying Cuiellette would start Saturday with freshman Johnathan Brantley getting guaranteed time off the bench.
Thanks to the late explosion against ULL, Tulane no longer ranks dead last nationally in passing. The Green Wave leapfrogged Army with an average of 87 yards compared to the Black Knights' 75.8, and as long as Cuiellette remains the starter, the Wave should keep rising.
"We found a little rhythm in the passing game in overtime," said Encalade, who had two scoring receptions in the extra session of the dramatic 41-39 four-OT victory against ULL. "That's going to open up the run, and the run is going to open up the pass. It's hand in hand."
Tulane's receiver depth chart changed during the ULL game. Freshman Darnell Mooney, who started against the Ragin' Cajuns and had three catches, including a nice 25-yard touchdown in the second OT, will start again versus UMass.
"Darnell particularly had a really good week of practice, and the times he'd been in the games, he'd made some mistakes just like a lot of young kids do, but he'd also done it going 100 miles an hour," wide receivers coach Jeff Conway said. "When you do that, you can build on that. You can get those corrected, and that's Darnell right now. He came into our summer preparation late and has done nothing but hard work trying to soak up what we're teaching him."
The depth chart lists fellow freshman Chris Johnson as a backup, but it also lists Devin Glenn as a wideout even though he was moved to running back (while not receiving any snaps there on Saturday) last week. Don't rule out Johnson starting ahead of Devon Breaux, who has three catches through four games. Yes, Johnson had a horrible drop in the third OT, but he was wide open.
"The thing I think that gets lost in that, and this is what we've really tried to help Chris with is he ran flat by the defensive back. There are not a lot of guys who can do that. He didn't need to have any technique except I'm big, I'm fast and I just ran by you. That gives him hope for the next play. It's all a learning process right now for those young guys, but they're trying like crazy to get better."
I would assume Tulane will have the starting offensive line against UMass, with Junior Diaz missing a second consecutive game with his bad ankle, John Leglue replacing him and Kenneth Santa Marina replacing Leglue at right tackle. The Wave had mixed results with that group against ULL, struggling to open holes in the running game and looking shaky early against the pass rush before settling down late.
The defense, which played well against ULL, should have the same 11 starters, including sophomore end Peter Woullard. Cornerback Donnie Lewis, who many people have been hard on but whom Fritz loves, played his strongest game despite getting burned twice. He picked off his first pass and providing good coverage the rest of the time. Having not played much in the past, Lewis needed something good to happen to gain more confidence. Look for him to give the Wave an outstanding cover tandem along with Parry Nickerson, who had another interception on Saturday.
"It was nice to get the first one out of the way," Lewis said. "I talked to (Lorenzo) Doss, and Doss told me the first one will take some time but when it comes then the rest of them will start coming. Once it came, I was kind of excited."
Lewis had to keep his head high after giving up some big plays against Southern and Navy.
"It's really a challenge from the practice to the game," he said. "We are going against receivers bigger than us in the game (though not Southern's), which we don't get that look in practice. I practice having amnesia because you are going to give up big plays. I just try not to let it beat me."
I caught up with Ade Aruna, who executed two perfect back flips in the post-game celebration as he was running off the field. He weighs 260 pounds, which might qualify him as the biggest man in the country who do back flips, particularly after playing 84 downs in a four-overtime game.
"It goes back to Nigeria," he said. "I used to do gymnastics growing up. I wasn't thinking about doing it, but one of the freshmen (he thinks it was Larry Bryant) did it first, so I was just running to the field and I was like, OK, let me who them what I got, let me do mine, too."
Aruna, who used to struggle against the run, took pride in the way he helped the defense limit ULL star running back Elijah McGuire to 89 yards on 38 carries (2.3 average).
"Our coaches were preaching since day 1 that he's the best back we were going to play and he was supposed to go to the NFL," Aruna said. "It was just preparation, and we didn't let up. We knew he could make you miss, but we just played with effort and as one team. We got him out of the game.'
Aruna also took a playful jab at Woullard, who looked lost after he picked up a fumble in the first quarter, blowing an opportunity to score a touchdown by starting slowly and then running out of bounds for no reason.
"I was mad at him," Aruna said. "I said you should have scored. He just looked at me and said he was so tired. I said, no, just keep playing. I would have scored it. I think it caught him by surprise, so when he got it, he didn't know what to do. I wish he would have scored."
Look for plenty of those attempts against UMass. Coach Willie Fritz confirmed the obvious after practice, saying Cuiellette would start Saturday with freshman Johnathan Brantley getting guaranteed time off the bench.
Thanks to the late explosion against ULL, Tulane no longer ranks dead last nationally in passing. The Green Wave leapfrogged Army with an average of 87 yards compared to the Black Knights' 75.8, and as long as Cuiellette remains the starter, the Wave should keep rising.
"We found a little rhythm in the passing game in overtime," said Encalade, who had two scoring receptions in the extra session of the dramatic 41-39 four-OT victory against ULL. "That's going to open up the run, and the run is going to open up the pass. It's hand in hand."
Tulane's receiver depth chart changed during the ULL game. Freshman Darnell Mooney, who started against the Ragin' Cajuns and had three catches, including a nice 25-yard touchdown in the second OT, will start again versus UMass.
"Darnell particularly had a really good week of practice, and the times he'd been in the games, he'd made some mistakes just like a lot of young kids do, but he'd also done it going 100 miles an hour," wide receivers coach Jeff Conway said. "When you do that, you can build on that. You can get those corrected, and that's Darnell right now. He came into our summer preparation late and has done nothing but hard work trying to soak up what we're teaching him."
The depth chart lists fellow freshman Chris Johnson as a backup, but it also lists Devin Glenn as a wideout even though he was moved to running back (while not receiving any snaps there on Saturday) last week. Don't rule out Johnson starting ahead of Devon Breaux, who has three catches through four games. Yes, Johnson had a horrible drop in the third OT, but he was wide open.
"The thing I think that gets lost in that, and this is what we've really tried to help Chris with is he ran flat by the defensive back. There are not a lot of guys who can do that. He didn't need to have any technique except I'm big, I'm fast and I just ran by you. That gives him hope for the next play. It's all a learning process right now for those young guys, but they're trying like crazy to get better."
I would assume Tulane will have the starting offensive line against UMass, with Junior Diaz missing a second consecutive game with his bad ankle, John Leglue replacing him and Kenneth Santa Marina replacing Leglue at right tackle. The Wave had mixed results with that group against ULL, struggling to open holes in the running game and looking shaky early against the pass rush before settling down late.
The defense, which played well against ULL, should have the same 11 starters, including sophomore end Peter Woullard. Cornerback Donnie Lewis, who many people have been hard on but whom Fritz loves, played his strongest game despite getting burned twice. He picked off his first pass and providing good coverage the rest of the time. Having not played much in the past, Lewis needed something good to happen to gain more confidence. Look for him to give the Wave an outstanding cover tandem along with Parry Nickerson, who had another interception on Saturday.
"It was nice to get the first one out of the way," Lewis said. "I talked to (Lorenzo) Doss, and Doss told me the first one will take some time but when it comes then the rest of them will start coming. Once it came, I was kind of excited."
Lewis had to keep his head high after giving up some big plays against Southern and Navy.
"It's really a challenge from the practice to the game," he said. "We are going against receivers bigger than us in the game (though not Southern's), which we don't get that look in practice. I practice having amnesia because you are going to give up big plays. I just try not to let it beat me."
I caught up with Ade Aruna, who executed two perfect back flips in the post-game celebration as he was running off the field. He weighs 260 pounds, which might qualify him as the biggest man in the country who do back flips, particularly after playing 84 downs in a four-overtime game.
"It goes back to Nigeria," he said. "I used to do gymnastics growing up. I wasn't thinking about doing it, but one of the freshmen (he thinks it was Larry Bryant) did it first, so I was just running to the field and I was like, OK, let me who them what I got, let me do mine, too."
Aruna, who used to struggle against the run, took pride in the way he helped the defense limit ULL star running back Elijah McGuire to 89 yards on 38 carries (2.3 average).
"Our coaches were preaching since day 1 that he's the best back we were going to play and he was supposed to go to the NFL," Aruna said. "It was just preparation, and we didn't let up. We knew he could make you miss, but we just played with effort and as one team. We got him out of the game.'
Aruna also took a playful jab at Woullard, who looked lost after he picked up a fumble in the first quarter, blowing an opportunity to score a touchdown by starting slowly and then running out of bounds for no reason.
"I was mad at him," Aruna said. "I said you should have scored. He just looked at me and said he was so tired. I said, no, just keep playing. I would have scored it. I think it caught him by surprise, so when he got it, he didn't know what to do. I wish he would have scored."