I am in Fort Worth today and missed Tulane's sixth practice of spring drills, but I was there Wednesday for practice No. 5. They moved it up from Thursday because Willie Fritz flew to Pennsylvania later Wednesday to be honored Thursday with the national coach-of-the-year honor he got in association with the Maxwell Award. Here's the report.
I hesitate from making judgements on running backs when there is no contact--Sherman Badie was a beast in those situations, and yes, I know he had the 200-yard outburst against Tulsa in Tulane's first ever AAC game, but he turned out to be pretty mediocre the rest of his career--but Duda Barnes really looks the part. He has the size, the speed, the instincts and the acceleration to be special down the road. We'll see how he looks in scrimmages and how well he picks up the intricacies of the offense, but color me impressed.
Tulane's walk-on receivers have pretty good hands, but I was amused when Trevor Evans got one hand on a deep ball in the end zone from Kai Horton running a fly pattern, could not make the spectacular catch and then was legitimately angry at himself, smacking a cover on the stands in the back of the end zone as if he should have made the play. As you may recall, he made an incredible catch in garbage time of a game last fall, so I guess he thinks he should make one like that every time.
Bailey Despanie and DJ Douglas continue to be the first-team safeties. Those two spots and nickelback appeared to be the most wide open on the roster entering spring drills. A.J. Sam got some run with the first team at nickelback Wednesday after Kentrell Webb occupied that spot to start spring drills. The linebackers were Tyler Grubbs and freshman Jean Claude Joseph again, but I did not get a chance to ask Fritz about why Jesus Machado and Corey Platt were not practicing for the second straight day because Fritz left immediately after practice to get ready for his flight to Pennsylvania. Still, it is interesting that Joseph is working ahead of Taylor Love and Mandel Eugene at the moment. When I asked Fritz about Joseph earlier this week, he said he had a lot to learn like any should-be high school senior. Defensive coordinator Shiel Wood is coaching the linebackers with Michael Mutz gone.
The first-team defensive linemen continued to be Keith Cooper and Devean Deal on the outside and Eric Hicks and Patrick Jenkins inside.
I was surprised when Jarius Monroe got first-team All-AAC honors from the coaches last year after being a backup for most of the season until Jadon Canady got hurt at the end oft he Memphis game, but it looks like the coaches knew what they were doing. Monroe had the big interception in the Cotton Bowl and made a terrific play in 11-on-11, jumping a route and surprising Michael Pratt with a pick six on the outside. That almost never happens to Pratt in practice, but Monroe showed great anticipation and easily outran Pratt to the end zone as he chased him in frustration. In general, though, the 11-on-11 featured a lot of short completions underneath, although Makhi Hughes caught one for a sizable gain in the open field. Evans ran another fly pattern to the end zone, but Pratt overthrew him. Maybe one of the other receivers would have caught up to it, but not Evans.
I never transcribed the quotes from Shield Wood after the first practice. Here they are along with an interview we did with Shaadie Clayton-Johnson:
WOOD
On day 1:
"Exciting. Just good to get out there on the field and get a feel for how coach Fritz runs practice and see the energy and the enthusiasm the guys have. It was outstanding how they ran to the football. Certainly we have a long way to go with a lot of work to get done before we're ready to play that opener in September, but it was an exciting first day and I'm excited to be here with these guys."
On how this all came together:
"Coach Fritz ended up kind of reaching out, and one thing led to another. We had a chance to get on an interview virtually, and that was a lot of fun just to have the chance. It was kind of a group of people on there, and once we did that we just kind of worked through the process and fortunately I ended up getting the opportunity to come here. I could not be more excited. My family, my wife, my two daughters, we are really excited to be a part of this Tulane University family and a part of this football program. Looking forward to move to the Big Easy here sometime soon."
On one of first things he wants to implement:
"I would say that I want us to understand how to play hard. You hear playing hard and you think effort, well, yes, that's part of it, but that's kind of the baseline. There's other things you have to do well defensively to be able to play hard, and it's a process you have to go through, but at the end of the day if we come out of this spring and we say we play as hard as anybody in the country, then we'll have done something, and that will be a great start."
On his style:
"I want us to attack absolutely. The nature of what we do up front is an attacking style. If we're attacking, we're putting stress on the offensive lines, we're putting stress on the quarterback, we're putting stress maybe on the offensive coordinator as far as how he sees things. If we're attacking up front, that's a great way to limit those plays. If you look at our defense this past season, we were really high nationally in terms of limiting explosive plays, and at the same time we are set up to where we can be very aggressive up front on first, second and third down, so that will be a challenge for us. Like my predecessor said, I'm on board with that. The big plays, we'd like to keep those as low as we can."
On if the best way to limit big plays is putting the quarterback on his back:
"Well, no, I think this. The type of defense that we run, if those guys up front are beating blocks and making plays, that's the style of defense that we want to play, and then we want to be sound. We want to match numbers. We don't want to have busts. We don't want to give up big chunks. There's a lot of different ways you can go about doing that from scheme to scheme, system to system. Certainly I think we're an aggressive style, but at the same time we want to be really good in terms of limiting their big plays and if they are going to score, making teams have to drive the ball and do that gives us ample opportunities to get a stop at some point."
On linebackers replacing Nick Anderson and Dorian Williams:
"I'm impressed. One of the things you do when you take a new job like this is you go through and you try to evaluate the personnel. That's a process that takes a little bit of time, and there's two ways to do it. You can watch tape from practice. You can watch game film. And then you can go back and look at their high school film, and between those three different ways, you try to see what skill sets guys have that allow them to play at a really high level, and you take those evaluations and then you look at what we're going to do. Maybe it's a little different than some of the things they've done in the past here, and you try to show the guys maybe the best positions they can play to be the most successful based on their talents and skill set. But in terms of linebackers, I've been very impressed. We had several guys that played in reserve roles and played a good many snaps, so they've got some film from last year. We've got a group that is hungry to learn. In general we have a group that's probably outstanding from a leadership standpoint, and their ability to dissect what's going on up front and process things really well, and then I like the physical skill set that I've seen so far. It's day 1, and I'll learn more about them as we go, but I'm encouraged right now for sure."