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Some new roster notes

On the latest roster, I notice Leonard Davis is no longer listed; nor is "walk on" QB, Desmond McGovern. Additionally, another walk-on QB, P.J. Hurst, is not on the roster either. I don't know if I ever recall a team going into the season with only 3 QBs on the roster, but I'm sure it's happened. Surprised and disappointed that Davis isn't listed. Hope it's just an oversight.

Roll Wave!!!

Revised practice schedule (more of them closed to reporters)

I suspected this would happen with Roger Dunaway leaving Tulane's sports info department. He was a major proponent of keeping everything open, but those days are over.

This is not an editorial on what's right or wrong--although I have strong feelings about that for a program that is starved for media coverage--just a statement of fact. On another note, It certainly will hurt me because my practice reports from the preseason are probably the best thing I do on this site, something no one else provides.

Here is the revised schedule. The new closed practices are on Aug. 6, Aug. 9, Aug. 11, Aug. 16, Aug. 18 and Aug. 23, all at Yulman Stadium. Previously, every Yulman practice in the preseason was open to reporters.

2016 Tulane Preseason Football Key Dates/Practice Schedule


August

4 Thursday Tulane Football Freshmen/Varsity Reports

5 Friday Practice #1 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

6 Saturday Practice #2 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

7 Sunday Practice #3 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

8 Monday Practice #4 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

9 Tuesday Practice #5 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

10 Wednesday MEDIA DAY (11:30 a.m.) – Glazer Family Club (Yulman Stadium)

Two-a-Day #1

Practice #6 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

Practice #7 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to media)

11 Thursday Practice #8 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

12 Friday Two-a-Day #2

Practice #9 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

Practice #10 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to media)

13 Saturday FAN DAY (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the public/media)

Practice #11 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

15 Monday Two-a-Day #3

Practice #12 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

Practice #13 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to media)

16 Tuesday Practice #14 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

17 Wednesday Two-a-Day #4

Practice #15 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

Practice #16 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to media)

18 Thursday Practice #17 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

19 Friday Two-a-Day #5

Practice #18 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

Practice #19 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to media)

21 Sunday Practice #20 (7:45 p.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

22 Monday Practice #21 (8:15 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

23 Tuesday Practice #22 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed media)

24 Wednesday Practice #23 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

25 Thursday Practice #24 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

26 Friday Practice #25 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

28 Sunday Practice #26 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Closed to media)

29 Monday Classes Begin

Practice (8:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

30 Tuesday First Weekly Press Conference (12 p.m.) – Glazer Family Club (Yulman Stadium)

Practice (8:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to media)

31 Wednesday Travel Day

2016 Football Prediction

A couple weeks back Guerry wrote an excellent “over or under” article predicting Tulane would win fewer than 5 ½ games. Many Tulane fans seem to be expecting about six wins this year and a bowl appearance. Some are predicting as many as 8 or more and some, on the other end, are suggesting a 3 win season. Most of the magazines and “professionals” are going with the latter with some going as low as 1 win and others ranging from 2 to 4. Very few (but some) give us much chance to go bowling. And looking at our squad, it’s hard to disagree.

The OFFENSE: We are woefully inexperienced and/or simply not very good at what I think are the two most important positions—the offensive line and QB.

We have three experienced offensive linemen (Diaz, Taylor, and Jaquet) and none of them have been better than average (G5 average, not BCS-wide average). We’re missing a proven left tackle and the guys vying for the two remaining slots in the line have shown nothing to this point in their Tulane careers.

At QB, the question mark is gigantic. And, in Coach Fritz offense, the decision-making ability at this position is critical. Powell? Cuiellette? Bradwell? Brantley? None of them give anyone much confidence to this point.

Our wide receiving corps returns Encalade who missed last year after a so-so freshman campaign and Devon Breaux who can’t seem to decide if he even wants to play. He missed spring practices, so that didn’t help learning a new offense. Everyone else is unproven.

Our tight ends are clearly better than in previous years, but none are major receiving threats and their blocking has been suspect all along. Of course, in the Fritz offense, blocking is their primary responsibility.

Only at RB are we well stocked. Hilliard is a proven three down back and Badie has tremendous potential to break gains with the ball in his hands. But neither is big enough to be the “pound it out” between-the-tackles guy. Thompson, of course, is. To me, Rounds is far behind these three but is a serviceable backup. Even here, however, we’re not talking All Americans or dominant P5 type performers. We have three guys who, with enough carries could be All-AAC players in my opinion and might eventually be late round draft choices or free agents in the NFL. But without a greatly improved line or some kind of passing game, can they succeed against 8 and 9 man fronts?

The DEFENSE: To me we have one proven player on the defensive line—Tanzel Smart. He’s an all-Conference guy who I think will play on Sundays. Sean Wilson looked pretty good last year playing about half the time and for the fourth year in a row, we’ll be looking for Ade Aruna to fulfill his potential. Who plays the other end or backs up the starters across the entire line is still a question mark. We’ve got names, of course, but no assurance of success.

At linebacker, our two undersized seniors, Nico Marley and Eric Thomas, may get more out of their physical tools than anyone else on the team. Both run to the ball but overrun too many plays. They never give up but are only ordinary at covering either tight ends or backs out of the backfield. Still, they provide solid play against our current level of competition. Zack Harris, Marbley, and Bowie have been inconsistent but have the potential to provide good backup play.

In the defensive backfield, only Parry Nickerson has put together a solid year; and that was two years ago. Last year, he was at best average. Jarod Franklin, Leonard Davis, Donnie Lewis, Roderick Teamer, Taris Shennell, and Richard Allen all have untapped potential, but it needs to come together this year for success.

SPECIAL TEAMS: We have no proven punter, kicker, snapper, holder, kickoff specialist, punt returner or kickoff returner. Why would anyone think our special teams will be any good? The ONLY reason is Willie Fritz, who will personally handle special teams. It’s hard to be worse than the last couple of years, so improvement is almost assured. But, how much is really possible considering or personnel?

In fact, Willie Fritz and staff are the only reason anyone should hope for more than 2-3 wins this season. The talent, in my view, is simply that bad. But, with a new offense and improved technique, I expect the offensive line to improve dramatically. I think we’ll be able to get our backs into open areas for big gains, and I think our running game will help the passing game, whoever is the QB. On defense, I have faith in our coaches to get the most out of our players and to establish the kind of discipline we’ve lacked for several years. And Willie Fritz is a magician on special teams. So, despite the talent shortage, I think that will also improve.

Also, I like a number of our incoming freshmen. A good “contest” might be to have everyone on the site predict the starters for our homecoming game. I'd guess it will be very different than we'll see against Wake Forest.

In my lifetime, I can remember only four football coaches who came to Tulane with previous head coaching experience. Bennie Ellender came to Tulane from Arkansas State where he’d gone 52-20-4 over 8 years. He proceeded to go 27-29 in five years with the Wave. Mack Brown had a one year stint at Appalachian State (6-5) before coming to Tulane where he went 11-23. Vince Gibson had coached at Kansas State and more recently at Louisville before coming to Tulane. His 17-17 record with the Wave actually improved his overall win percentage which, when complete, stood at 75-98-2. Bob Toledo had 13 years of head coaching experience at UC Riverdale, Pacific, and UCLA with a combined record of 78-68, but hadn’t been a head coach for 5 years. At Tulane, he went 15-40.

So, now, in comes Willie Fritz. He’s had more experience as a head coach than any of his predecessors, and more success. He also has more energy than guys like Bob Toledo (then again, who doesn’t?). He and his staff are the reasons for optimism this year despite the shortcomings I cited above. I’ll be shocked if he doesn’t leave Tulane with a better record than any of the coaches I’ve mentioned—a lot better record. Whether that starts this year, the jury is still out. But I think his presence is worth at least 2-3 games, so I think we’ll go somewhere between 4 and 6 wins; If force to bet, I’d say 5. Prove me wrong and run the table.

Roll Wave!!!

The background of Jewett's two assistant coaches

If Scott Kushner's story in The Advocate tonight proves true (and he has excellent sources), Travis Jewett has picked his two primary assistants, and they match the varied background he cited yesterday when saying what he wanted in the makeup of his staff.

I've done some internet research on both of them, and here's what I've gotten.

1) BILLY JONES, recruiting coordinator and hitting coach

Hometown: Kent, Washington

Most recently: Why in the world Appalachian State hired Jones as head coach in 2013 is a mystery, but he's a very qualified assistant. The entire coaching staff at Oklahoma State was fired in 2012, his last of eight years there as recruiting coordinator, but he somehow landed the job at Appalachian State, which had advanced to the championship game of a regional in 2012 and lost its coach to Duke. He lasted four years, going 86-130 before getting fired at the end of an 18-36 season in which Appy St. finished last in the Sun Belt this season with an RPI of 235.

History: recruiting coordinator and hitting coach at Oklahoma State from 2005-12, recruiting coordinator at NC State from 2002-04 under the coach that's still there, Elliot Avent, assistant coach at Arizona State in 2001, assistant coach at Oregon State in 1999-2000, head coach at Greer River Community College in 1997-98, assistant at Greer River CC in 1995-96

Why he's here: He recruited really well for most of his tenure at Oklahoma State and while he was NC State. getting 33 MLB draftees at Stillwater and an amazing 21 drafted players at NC State. Oklahoma State hit .305, .316, .319, .326, .300, .312, and .307 in his first six years before the whole program began to slide under former coach Frank Anderson (now an assistant at Houston). The .326 average in 2008 was the 18th best in the country and the fifth best for a team in a major conference.

Did he win?: Mostly. He had five regional appearances in eight years at Oklahoma State, including one super regional. Here is the full record:

Oklahoma State

2012: 30-25, 13-11 (no regional)
2011: 33-25, 14-12 (0-2 in regional, losing to Troy, Belmont)
2010: 29-26 (no regional)
2009: 34-24 (2-2 in Clemson regional)
2008: 44-18 (2-2 Stillwater regional)
2007: 42-21 (lost in Louisville super regional)
2006: 41-20 (2-2 in Fayetteville regional)
2005: 34-25 (no regional)

NC State

2004: 36-24 (no regional) promoted to assistant head coach
2003: 45-18 (won regional, lost Miami super regional)
2002: 33-26 (1-2 in Coral Gables regional)

Arizona State (under Pat Murphy, now the bench coach for the Milwaukee Brewers)

2001: 37-20-1 (1-2 in Fullerton regional)

Oregon State (coached under current coach Pat Casey)

2000: 24-25
1999: 19-35

Coached at all levels: before going to Oregon State, he was the head coach at Greer River Community College in Auburn, Wash. from 1997-98 and an assistant there in 1995-96.

Interesting fact: He attended three schools as a player (Lower Columbia College, Bellvue CC and SW Texas State) but did not get his undergraduate degree in 2001 from Oregon State.

2) JACK GIESE, pitching coach

Hometown: Fort Worth, Texas

Most recently: Giese has been a sports agent after being removed from his position at Oklahoma for what apparently were minor recruiting violations involving impermissible phone calls and texts to recruits after electing to stay in Norman when coach Sunny Galloway left for Auburn in 2014. That whole deal is strange because he appeared to be an excellent pitching coach.

History: It's definitely not conventional. Before becoming pitching coach at Oklahoma in 2012 and 2013, he was the pitching coach for the Hudson Valley Renegades, a Class A team in the Tampa Bay Rays system from 2010-11. Before then, he was associate head coach at Howard JC in Big Springs, Texas from 2007-2009, coach of the Coppell Copperheads of the Texas Collegiate League (summer league for college players) from 2004-06 and coach of the Dallas Mustangs (1999-2003), an amateur baseball program that develops prospects.

Why he's here: His pitchers were very good at Oklahoma and Howard College, and Jewett said he wanted coaches who had been knocked around a bit because it made them stronger. Oklahoma had a team ERA of 3.32 in 2012, the 39th best in the country, and 2.95 in 2013, the 21st best in the country. His best pitcher, Jonathan Gray, was the No. 3 overall pick in the MLB draft and is a starter for the Colorado Rockies now. His second best pitcher, Dillon Overton, was taken in the third round by the Oakland Athletics and is a part-time pitcher for the As already. The Sooners struck out 542 batters in 2013, the third highest total in program history. Howard College struck out a school-record 542 batters in 2009.

Did he win? Yep. Oklahoma won regionals in both of his years, going 41-25 in 2012 before losing a super regional at South Carolina and going 43-21 in 2013 before getting blasted by a terrific LSU team in a super regional. The Sooners also advanced to the Big 12 tournament title game in both seasons, losing the final in 2012 and winning it in 2014. And get this: Howard College went 63-1 in 2009, winning the National JUCO Championship with an utterly dominant performance under coach Britt Smith. The program went 48-10 and 36-20 the two previous years.

Coached at all levels: Clearly, that's the case. It might be better if he had spent more than two years in D1 and had not been out of baseball for the last three years, but Jewett said he wanted guys with a varied resume, and Giese's track record is good.

Interesting Fact: Giese's wife's first name is September.

Fritz Q & A

Good job, Guerry, on the Q&A with Coach Fritz. It sounds like he and his coaches are on top of things and the players are responding. Good to hear some of our "fat" guys are losing weight though "6 or 7 guys losing 150-200 pounds" doesn't sound like that much considering I think three specific guys need to lose a combined 150 pounds. Anyway, it will be interesting to see what those guys look like and how they move when practice starts up.

Roll Wave!!

Barbara Burke leaves for Iowa--one thought

I am not surprised at the least. When I approached her at a Tulane basketball game a couple weeks after Dannen was hired and asked for an interview, she coldly said she was not interested in saying anything. I had no problem with her refusing to talk, but the bitterness in her tone and expression made it pretty clear she was not happy about being passed over.

Dannen has gone out of his way to compliment Burke at every opportunity since then, and I think the respect was genuine, but there was no way she was staying at Tulane long term to be a No. 2.

Tulane preseason practice schedule

I have a two-part Q&A with Willie Fritz on the front page, and here is the practice schedule for August Tulane sent out today:

2016 Tulane Preseason Football Key Dates/Practice Schedule


August

4 Thursday Tulane Football Freshmen/Varsity Reports

5 Friday Practice #1 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

6 Saturday Practice #2 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

7 Sunday Practice #3 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

8 Monday Practice #4 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

9 Tuesday Practice #5 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

10 Wednesday MEDIA DAY (11:30 a.m.) – Glazer Family Club (Yulman Stadium)

Two-a-Day #1

Practice #6 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

Practice #7 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to the media)

11 Thursday Practice #8 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

12 Friday Two-a-Day #2

Practice #9 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

Practice #10 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to the media)

13 Saturday FAN DAY (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the public/media)

Practice #11 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

15 Monday Two-a-Day #3

Practice #12 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

Practice #13 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to the media)

16 Tuesday Practice #14 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

17 Wednesday Two-a-Day #4

Practice #15 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

Practice #16 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to the media)

18 Thursday Practice #17 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

19 Friday Two-a-Day #5

Practice #18 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

Practice #19 (2:15 p.m.) – Saints Facility (Closed to the media)

21 Sunday Practice #20 (7:45 p.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

22 Monday Practice #21 (8:15 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

23 Tuesday Practice #22 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

24 Wednesday Practice #23 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

25 Thursday Practice #24 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

26 Friday Practice #25 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

28 Sunday Practice #26 (7:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

29 Monday Classes Begin

Practice (8:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

30 Tuesday First Weekly Press Conference (12 p.m.) – Glazer Family Club (Yulman Stadium)

Practice (8:45 a.m.) – Yulman Stadium (Open to the media)

31 Wednesday Travel Day


September

1 Thursday Season opener at Wake Forest | 6 p.m. CT | ESPN3

Commitment No. 9

I have a short story on Starkville offensive tackle Joey Claybrook on the front page.

Hopefully he's not setting a trend for modern recruits. He only allowed me to ask him questions by text rather than talking on the phone.

He fits the profile of Tulane's recruits under Fritz--under the radar but from a winning program and apparently with plenty of upside and desire.

Travis Jewett Q&A

The transcript of Travis Jewett's 14 1/2 minute introductory speech can be accessed here.

http://www.tulanegreenwave.com/news...vis-jewett-introductory-press-conference.aspx

Here's the transcript from his 15-minute conversation with reporters right after his introduction. EDITORIAL COMMENT: He and David Pierce are so different, with Pierce sticking to the point and never elaborating on anything while Jewett rambles a bit and gets passionate about what he is saying. There is no one way to be successful, but both guys are true to themselves.

You talked about using academics as a recruiting tool to Tulane. Can you elaborate on that, and how much will your experience at Vanderbilt help?

"I don't know if I can put a price tag on help much it's going to help. I understand the academic criteria. I understand the financial aid component. I love that. I do. I want to sell that to people. I want people that want that themselves. To me that's important. I think to get an educated kid and a family that wants education, you're already ahead of the game. You want to talk about a team? You have a bunch of guys that are motivated about something, and it's not always all about baseball, but that part of it will help us on the field. I promise you. There weren't many schools that I was leaving Vanderbilt for even though I wasn't the head coach. I wasn't. This is one of those schools."

What do you feel like Tulane needs to get to the College World Series?

"Me. No, I'm just kidding. Make sure you scratch that. Just a togetherness, an investment level that matches the expectations of the players. You can't lay around in bed all day if you want to hit .400, nor can you skip class if you want to get a 4.0. It's like what are you willing to do? I need to see an investment level from coaches, players, trainers, equipment managers. Everybody needs to be invested, and if we all invest at a level that's worth its return, then we'll have a shot, and if we don't, they'll be a lot of tears, speaking of crying because that's just what happens when you're emotional and you care about what you're around and what you're putting into it. Now, whether it hits the chalk line or not, I can't tell you about that, but that's what we need. And good pitching. I didn't say that either. And strike throwers and power sliders in the 9th inning."

As a hitting coach, what is your overriding philosophy about hitting?

"Overriding. Hit, hit versus anything. But I will tell you this, I'm not going to stand there and just hit and watch the guys stand on the mound and look vertically at me and not change his body position, which means put him in the stretch. It's not going to happen. If I'm just going into a game trying to just hit and he's not letting me just hit, then we're going to be multi-faceted where we can be able to turn that pitcher sideways, create some offense. I want to run. I want the kids to feel good about running. I want green lights. I want all that kind of stuff because good pitching is good pitching. Round balls and round bats in fair territory and good defenders, it's hard, so you have to have some different ways to do it. Now, if it's three-run homer, three-run homer, three-run homer, I'm Earl Weaver at his finest. I love it, but it's not always like that."

For all of Tulane's success the past two years, it broke school records for strikeouts in both seasons. How do you fix that, or what is your philosophy about that?

"Well, be careful when you say fix because sometimes you don't have to. Because if your DNA so to speak says strikeout but other strands of it say 75 home runs and a league championship and a regional berth and things like that, those strikeouts don't mean much. Now if it's last place, no regional, striking out and 22 home runs, you have a real problem. So fixing it is a little bit of a weird word, but I'm going to say this. I'm going to try to teach our guys to understand who they are as players, put them in what we call personnel groupings. I almost do something cool where we put them in football positions, so to speak, and then try to understand ball flights, who they are, runners, non-runners, power guys, non-power guys and then set up training regimens in their investment that says this: The guy with no power, I don't want him to strike out as much. The guy with power, I'm OK with him striking out and then the next time, three-run jack. I just am."

Locker room renovations started last week

Hi guys, I had been holding on to this one a while, but Dannen has let the cat out of the bag via twitter, so I can let you all know...they football locker room and football team room renovations are well underway. They have already removed the lockers from the locker room.

You can see the pictures on my twitter feed @SirrLance

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q ... gGn2x8Hc_g



They have been telling the recruits about this for the past year, and the new lockers look really nice. They are going away from the "cell block" to an open locker room with all the lockers going around the room. I don't know what they are going to do with the team room. They will have to tear out the ceiling if they want to go to stadium seating...

Oh well, merry Christmas in July!

Troy Dannen on David Pierce leaving for Texas and his plans for a coaching search

TROY DANNEN

"I knew where Texas stood on his radar screen should that opportunity ever come along, and really the length and the duration of the search, while in some respects I wanted it to get done one way or another and get resolved, in other respects it gave me a chance to do a lot of diligence in the eventuality that David did take the job. In some respects I’m ahead of the preparation game because of the timing of how everything has played out."

On impact of a coach leaving for another school:

"I’ll never sell anybody for Tulane on the next job after Tulane, but you don’t want anybody on your staff fearful of making moves or pursuing things they feel advance them and their family. That’s part of it. Tulane I a great opportunity for someone in baseball if this is your last opportunity or your next opportunity. The program is further along than it was when David took it, and you just have to give someone a chance to really take this thing and run and hopefully we’ll make it attractive enough that it becomes if it is not already someone’s dream."

On the search for the next coach:

"I have a pretty good understanding of the culture on campus. David and had a lot of talks about the uniqueness of the baseball scholarship structure and how that relates to a private school. I have a very good understanding of needs and experiences, but ultimately it’s no different than football or basketball. I want someone’s whose expectations are to win in everything we do—academically, socially and competitively. Someone has to convince me that success in everything is nothing less than their full expectation because it’s mine. It’s an institutional expectation. As you go into it it’s not football, it’s not basketball. The program in baseball is in a different place than both football and basketball were when those hires were made, so maybe that means we have a different pool of candidates. Maybe that means we can look in different directions than we might have looked in those two searches. Each sport has its own unique set of circumstances and a place in the paradigm of prosperity if you will. Where baseball is at right now, it creates some opportunities that maybe we didn’t have in the other sports at the time."

On attractiveness of job:

"I’m extraordinarily optimistic because I can sell this program to potential coaches as one that can compete for a national championship tomorrow because we were just competing for one yesterday. There aren’t many places in the country where that fact rings true. As Rick Jones proved, you can get to the College World Series on a more than an isolated basis."

On if he would hire search firm:

"No. They’ll be certain people on campus that will likely meet with candidates in addition to me, but this search like the other searches is resting in my office."

Four candidates for Tulane baseball coaching job: pluses and minuses

Thanks to Scott Kushner and Chandler Rome, four candidates for Tulane's baseball job have been identified, with Vanderbilt associate head coach Travis Jewett and UCSB head coach Andrew Checketts joining the Andy Cannizaro and Matt Riser, both of whom interviewed Wednesday.

Here's my assessment of each one:

CANNIZARO

Coaching career: LSU recruiting coordinator and hitting coach the past two years, Yankees scout for five years before then.

Pluses: This Mandeville native was one of the greatest players in Tulane history and loves the university. He's a heck of a recruiter who is ticketed for the big time as a coach after two years as hitting coach for LSU. He's the favored candidate of most Tulane baseball bigwigs. LSU improved dramatically at the plate in his first year, hitting .314 (fourth best in the country) while leading the nation in base hits, ranking third in stolen bases and doubles and seventh in runs. The Tigers also led the SEC in fewest strikeouts, a dramatic difference from what we've seen from Tulane the past two years.

Minuses: Not much coaching experience. With an inexperienced lineup, LSU dipped to .295 at the plate this year but improved markedly in the second half of the season.

RISER

Coaching career: head coach at Southeastern Louisiana the past three years after spending six seasons as an assistant to Jay Artigues there. Never coached any place else.

Pluses: Another Tulane baseball alum (2005-06), Riser knows what it takes to win at Tulane. Southeastern has made two NCAA regionals in his three years as head coach after doing it twice in school history before then. The Lions play aggressively and swept Tulane in home-and-home games this year, earning their first-ever at-large bid to a regional. As a private school, Tulane presents difference challenges than Southeastern, but it's not easy to win in Hammond, and Riser has done it, going 120-63 in three years.

Minuses: He was 29 when he got the Southeastern head coaching job and will be only 32 at the start of next season. He does not have much seasoning or any experience coaching at a private school. Southeastern has been sloppy defensively for the most part and has been outmatched in regional play, getting outscored 42-16 in six games with its lone victories by one run against Bryant and Utah Valley.

JEWETT

Coaching career: Four years as Vandy associate head coach, hitting coach and recruiting coordinator, three years in the same capacity at Arizona State, five years as an assistant at Washington State, three years as an assistant at Washington, three years as third base coach at Gonzaga.

Pluses: He's very experienced and won everywhere he has been, including perennial bottom feeder Washington State, which went to an NCAA regional in 2009 for the first time in almost 20 years. Vanderbilt won a national championship in 2014, hitting .322 in the regional and super regional before stealing a CWS-record 17 stolen bases in seven games in Omaha. Vandy hit .313 in 2013, Jewett's first year, after hitting .268 in 2012. Vanderbilt hit 69 home runs in 2015, its most since the gorilla-ball days of 1998, and led the SEC in doubles and triples.

Minuses: Vanderbilt has plenty of scholarship advantages Tulane does not enjoy, stockpiling major league-caliber talent that is impossible to get for the Green Wave. It's not clear how Jewett would handle the difference. A native of Tacoma, Wash who graduated from Washington State, he spent the rest of his career working on the West Coast.

CHECKETTS

Coaching career: head coach at USCB (Cal-Santa Barbara) the last five years. Spent three years as pitching coach and recruiting coordinator for Oregon, seven years as pitching coach at UC Riverside, coached at Riverside Community College before that.

Pluses: Made the College World Series with UCSB this year despite losing a wealth of talent from 2015. It was the Gauchos' first ever appearance in Omaha, and they did it by stunning Louisville in two straight at Louisville after the Cardinals had lost one home game all year. Last year they were a No. 1 seed, hosting a regional at a minor league facility in California because their own facility was not up to snuff. Despite that minus, he has built a terrific program. His teams' pitching numbers have been outstanding, with UCSB having a 2.45 ERA in 2015 and Oregon ranking among the top five in one of his years there. He has been rated one of the top rising coaches in college baseball for quite some time.

Minuses: His entire career has been spent on the West Coast and at public schools. The Gauchos have been a light hitting team, never hitting better than .289 under his watch. As a player, he spent one year at the school I covered, Florida (1995), before transferring to Oregon State, blowing an opportunity to play for a CWS team in 1996 (I'm joking that this is a minus; there's very little to criticize in his resume').

MY OVERALL ASSESSMENT

All four candidates are capable of winning at Tulane and continuing the success David Pierce brought the past two years. Riser would be last on my list, but that's only because of the quality of the other three candidates. Cannizaro, who if passed over will cause some major consternation from key folks, probably is the biggest risk of the remaining three, but his upside is huge. I love Jewett's record of success everywhere he's been. It reminds me of Pierce's but without the ultimate proof of doing it as a head coach. If he is a good fit for Louisiana, Checketts would be a home run in my view. Yes, recruiting can be more challenging at a private school without a bunch of extra scholarships cloaked in academics or other areas, but Pierce had a similar background.

I don't think Troy Dannen will go wrong with this hire. What do you think?

Recruiting Louisiana (football) for 2017

Louisiana is a great state for high school football. Despite being a relatively small state, it routinely produces roughly 100 players annually who receive division 1A (BCS) scholarships (108 last year). P5 schools tend to take about half, around 50 or so, of those kids each year-- arguably, the top 50.

Each of the recruiting services, various blogs, newspapers, and magazines rank the players and I’ve made an attempt to do the same. While I have ranked the players by position and overall, my rankings are not based on a player’s potential for Tulane or any other school. For example, a tall, relatively immobile quarterback with a great arm might not be a “good fit” at Tulane under Coach Fritz, but a high profile, high value recruit elsewhere. At the same time, a shorter, very quick and decisive athlete with an adequate arm might make Tulane a great QB. Thinking back, Anthony Scelfo might have made a better QB for Coach Fritz than Patrick Ramsey. Go figure.

Anyway, my rankings by position and overall state-wide (top 90) rankings:

Quarterbacks (9)
6 Lowell Narcisse 6’2” 200# St. James
13 Keytaon Thompson 6’4” 220# Landry-Walker
35 Connor Curry 6’1” 175# Evangel
36 Devion Warren 5’10” 170# Ouachita Parish
40 Levi Lewis 5’10” 175# Scotlandville Magnet
42 Justice McCoy 6’0” 175# St. Augustine
55 Aldon Clark 6’3” 210# Edna Karr
81 Elijah Walker 6’2” 200# Amite
83 Kohen Granier 6’1”180# Destrehan
COMMENTS: Coach Fritz is probably looking for a QB who is an excellent athlete and good passer. Many high schools play their best athlete at QB even though his future college and possibly NFL potential is at WR or DB. And most of those kids choose one of the latter positions in college for just those reasons. Would a Levi Lewis, for example, prefer to play QB at Tulane rather than WR/DB at another, likely P5, school?

Running Backs/Fullbacks (12)
15 Clydrick Edwards-Helaire 5’8” 194# Catholic (B.R.)
22 Travis Etienne 5’1” 199# Jennings
26 Jaiden Cole 6’1” 196# Neville
31 Trey Coleman 6’1” 201# West Monroe
34 Tevin Bush 5’8” 170# Landry-Walker
40 Jacob Kibodi 6’1” 198# Christian Life
43 Ben Miles 6’1” 225# Catholic (B.R.)
46 Takulve Williams 5’11” 180# St. Augustine
51 Jakyl Holmes 5’10” 180# Ponchatoula
59 Javin Myers 5’9” 175# Woodlawn
69 Kevin Dominique 6’1” 200# Plaquemine
86 Christian Mosley 5’10” 180# Destrehan
COMMENTS: Ben Miles (Les Miles son) is probably the only “real” fullback among the above group, and is all but assuredly going to LSU. As for the running backs, there are several good ones. I’d personally like to see us sign Jacob Kibodi, but who knows.

Tight Ends (2)
68 Damien DeGruy 6’1” 192# West Jefferson
90 Allen Arclies 6’4” 220# Abbeville
COMMENTS: There is not much to choose from in Louisiana for tight ends this year. I rated DeGruy higher than Arclies because he’s a little faster and could play WR. Arclies would be the better choice for the Wave, however, since we need better blocking at the position. That said, we’ll probably go out of state if we get a TE this season.

Wide Receivers (17)
3 Davonte Smith 6’1” 155# Amite
11 Dontre Davis 6’0” 190# Lutcher
18 Jontre Kirklin 5’10.5” 166# Lutcher
21 Michael Young 5’11” 175# Destrehan
25 Jeremy Singleton 6’0” 170# Brother Martin
29 Travis Jordan 6’1” 180# John Ehret
37 Rayce McMath 6’2” 200# Edna Karr
50 Johnathon Jones 6’2” 180# Evangel
54 Brandon Rachel 6’5” 190# Natchitoches Central
56 Kendrick Paul 5’11” 175# Livonia
58 Josh Lister 5’11” 165# Haughton
67 J’Shon Foster 6’5” 200# Ferriday
70 Da’Vontavean Martin 6’4” 170# Ellender
73 Jabari Coston 6’3” 170# Loranger
79 Nijeel Meeking 6’3” 195# Union Parish
81 Nicholas DeRogers 6’3” 185# Livonia
87 Griffin Hebert 6’3” 190# St. Thomas More
COMMENTS: There’s a load of WR again this year in Louisiana who will probably sign BCS scholarship papers; probably more than I’ve listed as some of these will fall of the radar screen and others will be added. On a different thread I mentioned how I like the Martin kid from Houma, who has had little interest to date from other schools. Michael Young and/or Jeremy Singleton would be “top tier” gets, but the competition is fierce for the top 10 or so kids.

Offensive Line (10)
7 Adrian Ealy 6’5” 270# University Lab
38 Dwayne Fisher 6’5” 300# John Ehret
49 Mikhail Hill 6’3” 301# West Jefferson
63 Justin Henderson 6’7” 325# Denham Springs
74 Joshua Mote 6’2” 263# Oak Grove
77 Joshua Cooper 6’5” 333# Haughton
78 Ethan Harvey 6’3” 280# Evangel
82 E’Darius Anderson 6’5” 310# Madison Prep
85 Brian Thomas 6’4” 278# Scotlandville Magnet
89 Zach Tom 6’4” 270# Catholic (B.R.)
COMMENTS: I only see one truly “top end” lineman in this year’s Louisiana crop—Adrian Ealy. Fisher is committed to Arkansas but Hill, Henderson, Mote, etc. could turn out OK, also. Frankly, watching a 300 pound lineman “pancake” a 180# linebacker who doesn’t see him coming might make a good “highlight,” but it doesn’t prove much. Someone with more knowledge of the position could probably get more out of “highlights” than I can, but camera angles sometime hide footwork that could tell more. Sometime its even hard to tell how "high" or "low" the player positions himself.

Defensive End (8)
20 Bryan Jones 6’5” 240# Madison Prep
24 Dennis Collins 6’3” 250# West Monroe
32 Aaron Moffitt 6’4” 253# Catholic (B.R.)
47 Troy James II 6’3” 266# Madison Prep
52 Danquan Edwards 6’1” 253# De La Salle
53 Davion May 6’2” 220# Hammond
64 Christopher Turner 6’4” 223# Hammond
80 Tre Square 6’3” 230# Catholic (B.R.)
COMMENTS: Jones and Collins are generally considered the “class” of this year’s defensive end crop and have committed to Ole Miss and TCU respectively. For Tulane, I also really like Aaron Moffitt from Baton Rouge as well as Chris Turner from Hammond.

Defensive Tackle (6)
8 Tyler Shelvin 6’2” 310# Notre Dame
27 Phidarian Mathis 6’5” 280# Neville
65 Ziyon Hill 6’0” 279# Catholic (N.I.)
71 Caleb Sampson 6’3” 264# Northlake Christian
75 Andre Landry 6’5” 260# Acadiana
88 Langston Murray 6’2” 300# Logansport
COMMENTS: We’ve already got a commitment from Caleb Sampson, so that’s a good start. As noted elsewhere, I also really like Andre Landry, who could possibly play tight end in a pinch. Shelvin and Mathis are undoubtedly beyond our reach (and both may have academic issues), but I think we could have a shot at the Hill kid from New Iberia.

Linebacker (9)
1 Bruce Jordan-Swilling 6’0.5” 209# Brother Martin
4 Chris Allen 6’4” 220# Southern Lab
10 Patrick Queen 6’0” 190# Livonia
17 Josh Clarke 6’2” 200# Riverdale
46 Shahid Reece 6’0” 220# Rummel
55 Rashaad Harding 5’11.5” 202# Carenco
62 Zikerrion Baker 6’1” 203# Minden
66 Cameron Heil 6’1” 220# Baker
84 Tralon Thomas 6’1” 215# Ville Platte
COMMENTS: There are several really good linebackers in this year’s class, but the top four are probably not likely to sign with Tulane. But I think either (or both) Reece (who I really like) or Harding would be good pick-ups for the Wave.

Defensive Backs (16)
2 Todd Harris 5’11” 181# Plaquemine
5 Brad Stewart 6’1” 194# McDonough 35
9 Keldrick Carper 6’3” 185# Plain Dealing
12 Tre Swilling 6’0” 180# Brother Martin
14 Cheyenne Labruzza 5’10.5” 169# Albany
16 Michael Lee 5’10” 175# Landry-Walker
19 Corey Straughter 6’0” 165# Neville
23 Terrell Bailey 5’10” 175# John Ehret
28 JaCorian Andrews 6’0” 175# Neville
30 Garrett Wallow 6’3” 205# John Curtis
33 Amik Robertson 5’9” 150# Thibodeaux
36 Derrick Munson 6’0” 175# Rummel
44 Josh Paul 6’2” 205# De La Salle
45 Adam Sparks 6’0” 180# Dutchtown
61 Jeremiah West 6’1” 170# St. Augustine
72 Darus Campbell 5’9” 170# John Ehret
COMMENTS: We’ve got a commitment from Darius Campbell who I rate as the 16th best DB and 72nd best overall prospect in the state. At this point I see a big fall off at DB after him, however. Those I’ve rated above Campbell are all likely to end up with P5 schools, though I think Garrett Wallow, Amik Robertson, and Jeremiah West could be possibilities for the Wave.

Kicker (1)
62 Joseph Bulovas 5’11” 210# Mandeville
COMMENTS: Bulovas is the only punter/kicker I see who is clearly worthy of a BCS-level scholarship, though others could earn that over the next several months. I hope our own special teams perform at a level this year that come February, we won’t need to sign a specialist.

Anyway, that's how I see it as of the 4th of July. Much will change over the next few months, but I expect Coach Fritz to sign at least 6-7 kids from Louisiana come February. Any comments or insights would be appreciated. Thanks

Roll Wave!!!!

Summer Baseball

Tulane has been putting out a periodic review (http://www.tulanegreenwave.com/news/2016/7/5/boys-of-summer-second-report-on-tulane-baseball-summer-league-assignments.aspx) of how our players are doing in summer league which is quite helpful but raises some questions. For example, the site does not include Anthony Forte, who is playing with Tyler Heinrich for the Martinsville Mustangs of the Coastal Plains League. Is Forte no longer attending Tulane? Seems like a pretty inexcusable oversight if he’s still with us. Also, Chris Holstein, who transferred to Tulane last year from Davidson and sat out the year, is tearing up summer ball with the Brookhaven Bucks of the Sunbelt League (hitting .347) as a third baseman. Is he no longer with the Wave?

Understandably, it does not appear than Ross Massey, Corey Merrill, or J.P. France are playing this summer. Resting their arms would seem like a good move to me. Sam Bjornfield is pitching in the Northwoods League (quite badly, I might add) and, oddly, Dan Rankin, who presumably is passing on his senior year, is pitching for the Victoria Generals of the Texas League. I’d think Christian Colletti would be playing somewhere but I haven’t found him.

Also, the site lists Jonathan Artigues as playing for the Victoria Generals of the Texas League but does not mention Garrett Grey who is playing catcher and hitting .167 for the same team. Has Grey left Tulane?

Of the field players, Montalbano and Witherspoon are apparently sitting out injuries, though “spoon” is listed on the roster with Kaplan and Hunter Williams of the Santa Barbara Foresters of the California League. Willsey and Hope are also apparently taking the summer off, which may be understandable since they played a lot of innings this year. But, Grant Brown and Jarrett DeHart don’t appear to be playing either and both should be fighting for playing time next season. Seems odd to me. Anyway...


Roll Wave!!!

Tulane football previews...

It makes for boring reading, not much new to offer. But they seem to be relatively unbiased...also most of our opponents previews are out if you would like to do some advanced scouting.

http://collegefootballnews.com/2016/tulane-green-wave-football-preview-2016

Also Phil Steele's preview mag is out, he has a ton of stats to pour over, with some interesting conclusions. Some of the stats are available on his website for free..
https://www.philsteele.com/index.html

Athlon
http://athlonsports.com/college-football/top-25/tulane-green-wave-2016-preview-and-prediction

Orlando Sentinel - Very ucf biased I would think...
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/spor...l-countdown-no-126-tulane-20160421-story.html

Our Football Recruiting Area

Despite CJ’s efforts to only recruit within a cab ride of the school, most people believe our primary recruiting area should run from Florida to Texas. Fortunately, this is a very “rich” area for recruiting. Over half of all BCS high school signees come from the six states that make up the region. Last year by my count that was over 1500 signees—Texas (473), Florida (460), Georgia (270), Alabama (140), Louisiana (108), and Mississippi (56).

I generally think that we need to recruit in the top half of signees from each of these states. Simply put, roughly half of Division 1 schools are members of the so-called P5. They sign the large majority of those “top half” kids. If we can recruit significant numbers from the top half, we can not only compete in the AAC and with other G5 schools, but we can start to compete with “lower end” P5 schools.

But the sad truth is that in recent years, we have recruited very few players generally considered to have “upper half” potential from Louisiana or any other state. Last year, Tre Jackson from Louisiana, Jacob Robertson, D. J. Owens, and Will Harper from Georgia, and P.J. Hall from Alabama were probably considered “top half” recruits in their various states. They were all brought in by Coach Fritz but it’s simply not enough long term. So far this year our recruits don’t match up to that standard, but it’s still a long way to February when commitments become signees.

By my count, we’ve offered at least 64 kids in Louisiana— almost all I consider solid Division 1A candidates, and most are clearly “top half” (top 50 or so) guys. We’ve also offered quite a few from surrounding states: Mississippi (12), Alabama (34), Florida (33), Georgia (54), and Texas (53).

I plan to look much closer at each of those states and who we are recruiting.

Roll Wave!!

Jordan Cornish Q&A: Tulane gets nice hoops transfer

Jordan Cornish, a highly recruited 6-foot-6 guard out of Brother Martin High in New Orleans, put up modest numbers in two years at UNLV after originally signing with Tennessee, but he has the potential to be a big-time player and believes he has a future in the NBA. When he decided to leave UNLV after coaching turmoil there, he never thought he would return to his hometown, but new Tulane coach Mike Dunleavy convinced him to change his mind.

Friday, I talked to Cornish and Brother Martin coach Chris Biehl. Here's the interview with Cornish, who has been accepted into Tulane.

What were the primary reasons you decided to come to Tulane?

“I wanted to find a place where I could come in with a good coaching staff and learn and just really expand my game and take it to the next level, and I absolutely think I can do that with coach Dunleavy and his staff.”

What impresses you the most about Mike Dunleavy and his staff?

“Just he’s an NBA guy and he knows what it takes (for a player to get to the NBA). He made out a blueprint for me, and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity.”

Did you even consider Tulane coming out of Brother Martin High in New Orleans?

“To be honest I wouldn’t have even blinked my eye at the thought of coming to Tulane, but with coach Dunleavy being here and his staff, you can tell the changes already. You know he’s going to come in and change the program (180 degrees).”

Is there any chance you can appeal having to sit out a year under transfer rules considering the coaching changes at UNLV?

“NCAA rules I have to sit out because obviously last year I played every game. I have to sit out.”

Your coach at UNLV got fired in January, then the coach they hired as his replacement bolted after one week to go to Texas Tech. What have the last few months been like for you?

“Oh man, the last few months have been very lengthy to say the least. It’s been rough, but God does everything for a reason. I went to Jamaica with my family to get away from things, and even then, Tulane wasn’t anywhere in the picture. I got the call from coach Dunleavy to come visit, and when I left here (Tulane), I told my parents I was coming home.”

When did Dunleavy contact you for the first time?

“Mid-May, maybe. He said I had a chance to play for an NBA coach and an NBA coaching staff and guys who had been around the game who could get me to the next level that me and him both know that I can play at.”

UNLV moved you to point guard this past year, a role that you had never performed. What do you see as your role at Tulane?

“Just a guy that can play all three positions—point guard, shooting guard, wing. I’m a guy that can move around a lot to get guys involved scoring the basketball and doing all those things.”

What is your best asset?

“I would say shooting the ball and getting guys the ball. I’m a very, very unselfish player.”

Contacting someone

Guerry,
I hate to do this again on this forum but I can't find another way. I tried to contact Rivals and got nowhere. It seems all contact is via email. I asked for a # so that I could talk with someone re: my concerns about the recruiting info and was told there is no phone #..I am old school and it bothers the heck out of me that I can't talk with someone. Is there a way I can contact you, even if by email, regarding my concern about the recruiting info?
Again sorry to use this space. Thanks for your help in advance.
Ernie

what happened to recruiting info

Guerry,
Sorry to ask this here but I can't seem to find another place. Before when I went to look at recruits for Tulane I would click on recruit search and database. It would bring up an entire page with either individual info or team info if you click a specific team. It was great I could click TU and see that they had 171 candidates and then I could go to specific positions and see who TU was recruiting at each position. Now when I click on that spot I get sent to Rivals site and it is only for specific players, who may or may not be being recruited by TU.
Can you explain the change? Without the specific TU info half of why I am on this site becomes moot.
Thanks for your insight. Sorry to have used this space to get this info.
Ernie
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