Tulane practiced in absolutely gorgeous weather for probably the last time this spring on Wednesday morning, with a nasty cold front likely making Friday's workout miserable if they keep it outdoors and making the spring game on Saturday morning a little uncomfortable.
Curtis Johnson was hot at the end of the workout because nickel back Jarrod Franklin missed a tackle and then fell down for no reason, something CJ considered lazy and unacceptable. He yelled at the team for several seconds before they went to the locker room, and he was still trying to cool down when he talked to reporters.
"They don't want to run extra, so they'll fall," CJ said. Look, we want to run. We're not falling. We got shorts on. We're running."
Franklin was in a red no-contact jersey despite practicing full go, and CJ was not impressed with that either.
"I don't know what his deal was. I think he's milking his injury. It's time for him to get back, but he did everything, especially when he fell, so that kind of got me a little bit. He's going to fall just to fall because he missed a tackle."
I don't want to sound like a broken record, but the kickers remain unacceptably bad. In the field goal drill, Andrew DiRocco made kicks from 20, 32 and 42 yards but was not even close on a 47-yarder. I guess that constitutes improvement. Meanwhile, Trevor Simms, who has a rocket leg, sprayed his attempts all over the place, missing all of them except for the one from extra point difference. When he kicks it solidly, the ball clears the net behind the goal post and lands in the stands. When he flubs it, there's no telling where the ball will end up.
"I don't know who's doing what anymore," CJ said. "We've just got to make those kicks. Those kicks were pretty simple. I expect those kickers to make them."
Coaches can't make kickers kick straight, but Tulane is trying some new special teams drills under new coordinator Doug Lichtenberger. I liked the one yesterday where Peter Picerelli tried to punt near the sideline and the goal line, and the returners had to make a decision on whether to catch it or let it drop. How many times did Teddy Veal mess up that decision last year? It was Veal, Darion Monroe and Devon Breaux, and they also worked on running away from the ball and calling fair catch to fool the coverage guys and give it a better chance of bouncing into the end zone. That's standard stuff in football but something I had not seen at a Tulane practice before.
Lichtenberger is also having the kickers do conditioning work on the field they use outside the stadium while the rest of the team is practicing. That's new, too.
"That's one of the things that we gotta do. The problem with the kicks is we've got to be in better shape. I was a little bit disappointed last year with just the conditioning of those guys, so we are going to do it. All of those guys need to run more. It was Doug's idea. He's brilliant. He's doing a fantastic job. Sometimes we pull them out and bring them in the weight room and stuff like that, but they are going to condition."
It was a run-heavy practice, which can be boring to watch when tackling is not allowed, but it does look like CJ is serious about pounding the ball on the ground next fall. The success hinges on the development of the offensive line because Tulane has outstanding running backs in Dontrell Hilliard, Lazedrick Thompson and Sherman Badie, plus Josh Rounds (I'm doing that like CJ, who always forgets Rounds initially and then adds him after the fact).
"You look at these runners now, and watch what they are doing at receiver," CJ said. "I just saw Sherman make one of the best catches I've seen (I missed that one). We're doing some things differently, and it's going to be a surprise in the fall."
To say CJ is high on those guys is an understatement. With former players Ryan Grant (who politely declined an interview), Ryan Griffin and Lorenzo Doss attending the practice, he lamented the fact that Matt Forte has not returned to Tulane since leaving.
"It's about time we start getting some guys to come back," CJ said. "I wish the running back from Chicago would come back and pay our players a visit. I've sent messages and haven't been able to (talk to him), but I'd love for him to come back. I think these backs are going to play in the NFL, so I like him to come through to these guys a little bit."
Having NFL guys from Tulane talk to his players is a big deal for CJ.
"It's critical in our situation because we're so young," he said. "Whatever you say to these young guys, they get. We even had a visit from old Shaun King last week. It's good to have those guys come back."
Teddy Veal, the most impressive wide receiver in the spring, came up empty at the end of the practice when he got behind the secondary and Tanner Lee threw a perfect pass to him for what would have been a touchdown. But he dropped it. It was a really bad drop. Haven't seen that from him this spring.
One guy making his presence felt is redshirt sophomore William Townsend, who played a big role against option-based Georgia Tech last year and disappeared for the rest of the season. With Tulane playing three option teams (Army, Navy, Georgia Tech) this season, Townsend should make a bigger impact. He was around the ball a lot Wednesday, working with the No. 2 defense. His strength is against the run, and as I wrote earlier, it was a run-heavy day.
Ed Daniels of WGNO-TV attended practice yesterday and asked CJ a series of questions. It's good to get a different perspective than the ones from the people who are out there every day. Here were his questions and CJ's answers:
Have you told your coaches we've got to light years better on offense?
"We did. We talked about it at the end of last season, and we've sat down and done some things that are a little different. We've got to figure out what we can and cannot do, and that's what we're doing. I like what we did today. We really moved the ball real well. I think our defense was good. I had a couple of coaches come back and say, man, you guys killed us today. I think we're moving in the right direction."
When you come off a season like last year, does that send a little different vibe to spring practice?
"We got a little bit better sense of urgency this year. I'd like them o be even-keeled. One thing about me is I have amnesia, and I think our coaches do, too. The bowl season when we were good, it was over right after that, and now this season is over and it's time to get back to work, roll up our sleeves and try to get better."
Is it sometimes harder to handle success than failure?
"I agree with that totally, but also we played 20-something freshman, and that has a lot to do with, and we played in a better conference, and that comes into play also. But when you're successful, it's easy to be a fat cat. These guys are really working hard and practice has been working better."
Give me a couple of guys that maybe we don't know about who have had great springs.
"Trey Scott is one of them. You just watch him improve in catching the ball, and I love what he's doing. Ade (Aruna) is a pass rushing demon right now. If he can continue to get a little bit tougher, those two guys, offensively and defensively, will be important weapons for us this year."
This post was edited on 3/5 11:23 AM by Guerry Smith