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FO
OT
BA
LL G
UID
E
2009
3SU HAS A POINT GUARD PLAYING QUARTERBACK. CAN HE DO IT?
4CAN BURNING A SHOE REVIVE A TEAM? IT WORKED FOR COACH MAC.
The
processrebuilding
6ART JONES SPURNED THE NFL DRAFT TO RETURN TO SYRACUSE
With a new coach and celebrity quarterback,
Syracuse enters a new era
t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k
Stephanie Musateditor in chief
Meredith Galantemanaging editor
designed by Kristin Levesque
Sports editor Jared Diamond Photo editor Luke McCombcopy editor Maria Qualtereasst. Sports editor Conor Orrasst. Sports editor Andrew Johnasst. Photo editor Will Halseyasst. copy editor Tony Olivero
general manager Peter Waackit director Nathaniel Huseit manager Chris Collinscirculation manager Harold Heroncirculation assistant Michael FernandezStudent advertising manager Adam SchatzStudent advertising manager Kelsey Hoffmanadvertising representative Kelly Chenadvertising representative Megan Muphyadvertising representative Emily Bakeradvertising representative Mark Medinaadvertising representative Melanie Zajacadvertising representative Eliza Catalinoclassified manager Gabriel KangSenior advertising designer Lauren Harmsadvertising designer Timothy Han
3 4 6
tab
le o
fc
on
ten
ts 78 10
13 16 17Special thanks to Sue Edson, Pete Moore and SU athletic communications
18
greg Paulus returns to football after a four-year basketball career at duke.
A GRAND EXPERIMENT SYRACUSE AGAINnew head coach doug marrone has brought back traditions of old to inspire the orange.
art Jones’ faith guided him back to Syracuse. an injury proved he made the right choice.
blESSING IN DISGUISE
lAST MEN STANDINGafter losing a slew of potential starting line-backers, SU is rallying around who it has left.
A NEW ERAPullout schedule and position previews inside.
DoESN’T ADD UPthe Big 10 already has 11 teams. But does 12 make more sense?
2009 TEAM RoSTERa look at who will be on the field this season for Syracuse.
Who’S NEXT?after losing Pat White, the Big east waits for a new ambassador.
bIG EAST PREvIEWSa team-by-team break-down of all eight squads.
bEAT WRITER PREDICTIoNSJared diamond, tyler dunne and matt ehalt deliver their insight.
court hathaway | staff photographer
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Greg Paulus shook his basketball past. Now he
needs to shake his doubters.
GREG PAULUSSyracuse, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy6-foot-1, 195
QuarterbackLed CBA to 42-3 record in four years, including a 13-0 mark and state championship his senior year. …Won the championship game MVP, throwing for 376 yards and three touchdowns. …Won Gatorade National High School Player of the Year in 2004. …Threw for 43 touchdowns and a state record 3,677 yards. …Earned All-America honors as a senior. …Named the New York State Player of the Year in foot-ball and basketball in 2004-05. …Earned the National High School Coaches Association Senior Athlete of the Year award.
Point guardAveraged 8.6 points and 3.4 assists per game in a four-year career at Duke. …Finished his career ninth on the all-time Blue Devils list with 139 games played. …Ranks in the top 10 on the all-time Duke record lists for assists (9th, 468), 3-point fi eld goals made (8th, 210) and attempted (9th, 527), and 3-point fi eld goal percentage (T-6th, .398). …Aver-aged 9.1 points and 2.6 assists per game in 18 post-season contests. …
court hathaway | staff photographer
BY TYLER DUNNESTAFF WRITER
Hands on his hips, Greg Paulus shook his head
slowly and coldly. His blissful complexion turned
pale. That GQ-charm faded. No, Paulus did not pay
attention to those verbal grenades from Big East
coaches.
“I don’t hear or see many things,” said Paulus,
suffocated by recorders and cameras. “This is a big
commitment right now with camp and double ses-
sions.”
One anonymous coach said in an ESPN.com report
that he wished Syracuse was fi rst on his schedule.
Another said Paulus will struggle reading defenses.
And yet another hinted that Paulus’ presence at SU
is more about the turnstile than the win column. Not
exactly a welcome mat.
Paulus insists he’s locked in tunnel vision. But
deep inside, Paulus’ brother knows Greg feeds off
hate.
“He wants to stick it back into peoples’ faces who
don’t think he can do it,” said Mike Paulus, a quar-
terback at North Carolina.
Nobody knows if those Big East coaches are right
or wrong. Because nobody knows Greg Paulus the col-
lege football player. About fi ve years ago, high school
scouting afi cionado Tom Lemming compared him
to Joe Montana. But Paulus chose basketball. Four
years at Duke later, he’s returning to football. Back in
Syracuse. Five minutes from his high school.
Maybe this wild experiment combusts in ugly
fashion. Maybe it wakes up a program that’s been
sedated for half a decade. Either way, a fragrance
of mystery stalks Syracuse this fall. And that’s the
allure. Paulus’ hyperactive transition to college
football has been a mysterious work in progress. He
wasn’t around for spring ball. Paulus is one giant
unknown.
Those around him — his teammates, his coaches
and family — know what’s brewing behind the cur-
tain.
“People are thinking, ‘This kid has never played
quarterback. Is this going to work?’” said Dave Pau-
lus, Greg’s father. “This kid is a hell of a quarterback,
and they are going to see here very shortly.”SEE PAULUS PAGE 14
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 3
A GRANDEXPERIMENT
In his fi rst season, Doug Marrone is
turning to the pastto restore SU football
Doug Marrone has his work cut out for him. Here’s where the Orange fi nished nationally* last season in several key categories under former coach Greg Robinson. Rushing – 55th Passing – 113th Total offense – 114th Rushing defense – 101st Passing defense – 83rd Total defense – 101st
STARTING FROM SCRATCH
‘It feels like Syracuse
again’
4 F O O T B A L L P R E V I E W 2 0 0 9
LONG TIME COMINGA look at how SU coaches have fared, starting with the legendary Ben Schwartzwalder, who coached the school to its only national title in 1959.
COACH YEARS WINS LOSSES TIESGreg Robinson 2005-2008 10 37 0Paul Pasqualoni 1991-2004 107 59 1Dick MacPherson 1981-1990 66 46 4Frank Maloney 1974-1980 32 46 0Ben Schwartzwalder 1949-1973 153 91 3
*out of 119 teams
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SEE TRADITIONS PAGE 14
BY CONOR ORRASST. SPORTS EDITOR
It was “early as hell,” Nico Scott recalled, on that
March morning after a 6 a.m. agility workout. That’s when
he saw fi re engines in the parking lot and a blaze rising on
the practice fi eld.
About 120 yards from the football wing at Manley Field
House assembled a circle of football players around the
fl ames about to experience their fi rst shoe burning, a once-
forgotten page in a once illustrious Syracuse football his-
tory book.
“We had no idea” Scott, a senior cornerback said. “We
knew somethin’ freaky was going on.”
And so newly crowned head coach Doug Marrone
handed the fi rst player a single cleat, with a set of simple
instructions: Take your miseries, grievances and personal
burdens of seasons past and transfer them to the shoe.
Then, pass it on.
After each player willed the collective woes of a team in
its worst stretch in program history, the man who employed
the tradition when Marrone was a player — former SU head
coach Dick MacPherson — turned his back to the fl ames
and cast the shoe into the inferno. The metaphor was com-
plete. Life was set to begin anew for this program.
“It felt like a baptism by fi re,” junior center Jim McKen-
zie, said. “It was a really special time for us. We just got rid
of all the frustration that had built up from all the previous
seasons of the strife and hardship.”
With his return to Syracuse football - fi rst as a player
under MacPherson and now as a coach - Marrone is trying
to do more than turn a team around. By readopting the
traditions and attitude of past Syracuse teams, the coach
has his sights set on cultural overhaul.
Gone are the days of Greg Robinson, the West Coast
offense and the search for a new identity. Back are the ide-
als of “Coach Mac,” the desire to play smash-mouth football
and the quest to reclaim glory.
“I think it’s my philosophy,” Marrone said. “I’ve heard,
‘Ah, well the players these days, they don’t understand
tradition, they don’t know tradition.’ Well, myself now as
the head coach, it’s my responsibility to teach these play-
ers about the traditions of this school — it’s part of the
process.”
Born in Old Town, Maine, and fresh off a
coaching gig with the Cleveland Browns, Dick MacPherson
wasn’t exactly grounded in Syracuse tradition.
But after his predecessor, Frank Maloney, won just 32
games in seven seasons (1974-1980) and members of the
school’s only national championship team called for his
resignation, MacPherson didn’t have a choice — he needed
to step in and win over his new city.
Blessing inAn offseason injury confirmed Art Jones’ faith
Art Jones may have been a second-round pick in the NFL Draft, but he spurned professional football to return to Syracuse for his senior season.
Year Tackles TFl-Yards sacks-Yards2008 60 13-60 3.5-372007 51 17.5-43 1-42006 15 1-5 0.5-4
The ArTful DoDger
By JAred diAmondSportS editor
Art Jones’ life philosophy revolves around a simple phrase: Everything happens for a rea-son. It’s a cliché, but one that has guided Jones through life’s toughest times, including the death of his sister when he was in the eighth grade. This mantra provides Jones with undy-ing faith in the world, for he profoundly knows that an unseen higher power has a master plan. For the son of a pastor, spiritual belief provides a backbone, a foundation.
For a brief moment one fateful February day, this core value was challenged. About two months had passed since Jones decided to forgo the NFL Draft and return to Syracuse for his senior season. He may have been a second-round pick, which likely would have led to a substantial payday.
Jones was in the weight room with his brother, Chandler, nearby. On each side of Jones rested five 45-pound discs — 450 pounds in total of sheer resistance to bench press. “I was trying to lift the whole weight room,” said Jones, Syracuse’s star defensive tackle.
He tried one rep too many. He felt a pop in his chest. At first, Jones thought it was just a charley horse. Then he looked down and knew it was something more. It was a torn pectoral muscle that required surgery — a diagnosis severe enough to provoke thoughts of dooms-day for any athlete. But then he remembered his time-tested chorus.
“I believe God has a plan for me, and every-thing happens for a reason,” Jones said. “If that happened right after the season or right around the combine, I could have gone seventh round to free agent. So it definitely was a blessing.”
Jones is healthy now, back to lead the Orange’s defensive line. Instead of bolting for the allure of professional football, Jones chose to stay in school and instantly becomes one of the best players in the Big East. As he rehabbed from his injury for six long months, he couldn’t help but consider how lucky he really was. Quickly, Jones’ faith was restored.
The decision to remain at Syracuse was far more complicated than Jones likes to let on. He was already a hot commodity after the 2007 season, when he burst onto the scene with 17.5 tackles for loss. His performance on one of the grandest stages in the sport only proved his value. He exploded for 15 tackles in SU’s stunning 24-23 win at Notre Dame last year. Suddenly, the entire country knew Art Jones’ name.
From that day on, Jones’ phone wouldn’t stop ringing. Everybody wanted a piece of him. The NFL seemed like the best option. His stock may never have been higher. “After the Notre Dame game, I had at least one foot really out the door,” Jones said.
Yet he remained conflicted. Jones tried to hide it, but everybody knew it. Fellow defen-sive lineman Jared Kimmel said he sensed the magnitude of the decision weighing on Jones’ mind. Chandler Jones, a redshirt fresh-man on SU’s defensive line, felt it but wasn’t always sure what to say. He wanted more than anything the experience of playing alongside his brother, but didn’t want to deny Art of his lifelong dream and the potential to earn mil-lions of dollars. And as much as Jones coveted the chance to play in the NFL, the possibility of playing with Chandler presented a certain appeal and made leaving a year early that much tougher.
see jones page 9
disguise
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6 f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9
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9 jared diamond (5-7)
After four years of nothing but suffering, why not a little optimism? Doug Marrone has this group looking and sounding like a real college football team, which is more than anyone could say about Greg Robin-son’s squads. Offensively, Syracuse should rely mostly on its trio of solid running backs, which will significantly take the pressure off Greg Paulus. There are still questions about the offensive line and linebackers, but maybe it’s just fun for once to drink the Kool-Aid.
tyler dunne (5-7)
Greg Paulus isn’t the next messiah. Don’t expect a Big East title in Doug Marrone’s first year. But look for the unlikely QB-coach duo to take a big step toward respectability this season. With SU’s rough non-conference schedule, five wins would be a major moral victory. Remember, last year’s offensively challenged team hung with Pittsburgh and West Virginia. Look for a few of those games to tilt in SU’s favor this fall.
matt ehalt (3-9)
With Greg Paulus, there is the unknown. He was great in high school, but will he be able to make the same reads this many years later? Will the same keen awareness needed as a quarterback still be there? Can he throw a deep ball with a linebacker breathing down his neck? Those questions will be answered this year, but I tend to think they won’t be favorable ones. This team is moving in the right direction under Doug Marrone, but is still a year or two away from a run at .500.
jared diamond
matt ehalt
tyler dunne
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f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 7
8 f e brua ry 27, 2 0 0 8
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Hogue, Smith and Gillum lead a patchwork linebacking coreBy Tony oliveroASST. Copy ediTor
For some time now, Derrell Smith has been eagerly anticipat-ing the start of the 2009 football season. A season Syracuse’s top returning linebacker hopes will be a fresh start for a unit that was dismal under Greg Robinson last year.
Leading up to the start of August camp, every time the junior ventured to the football meeting room, he felt the same could be said about Derek Hines, a 6-foot-1 JUCO transfer from California. After all, almost every time Smith strolled into the room, he was either joined by, or stumbled across Hines, who seemed to be readily preparing mentally for his likely starting role at weakside linebacker.
But Hines abruptly left the team on Aug. 14, leaving an already depleted group at linebacker in further disarray. With only nine players remaining within the unit, Smith — who
had 73 tackles last year — and the rest of the gang are hoping they can weather the lack of depth throughout the season. Aside from Smith, the rest of the remaining linebackers made just four tackles combined last season.
“You really couldn’t tell he was going to quit, we got along well,” Smith said. “We just came back in the morning, and it was like, ‘Derek quit? Huh? For real?’”
Hines, who said he left the team due to a loss of passion for the sport, was the latest among a slew of players to transfer into, out of, or within a linebacker group, which has seen a tremendous amount of turnover since last season. Receiver-turned-linebacker Dan Sheeran transferred to Massachusetts along with starting linebacker Mike Mele. Parker Cantey left the team in spring ball, and linebackers Chad Battles and Brandon Sharpe were both moved to defensive end.
The group that now forms the starting linebacking trio is comprised of players completely new to their roles. Smith, who played some outside linebacker last season, is penciled
in as the starter at middle linebacker. Former running back Doug Hogue will man the strongside, and due to Hines’ depar-ture, sophomore Ryan Gillum and freshman E.J. Carter will split time, with Gillum earning the starting nod.
The chance at the starting job for Carter is surprising, considering where the unheralded recruit from Orlando was mere months ago — a situation Smith can relate with.
“I wasn’t a big recruit either, so you just come in with a chip on your shoulder,” Smith said. “I think E.J. plays with a chip on his shoulder and is proving that he is worthy of starting.”
Once Hines departed, it was assumed Carter would be given the starting job, but Gillum (who in linebacker coach Dan Conley’s eyes has been the biggest surprise this August), has pushed him. Yet, the competition between the two hasn’t been all that bitter, as the two have formed a tight brother-like relationship since the start of camp.
“Ryan, man, he’s like a big brother to me, he’s been more
linebacker timeline
see linebackers page 12
It has been a busy nine months for the Syracuse linebackers. Here’s a glance at how it all went down.
Senior linebacker and team captain Jake Fla-herty plays in the last game of his career, a 30-10 loss to Cincinnati.
Hogue, Smith and Gillum listed atop Syracuse’s final depth chart
at linebacker
Outside linebacker Chad Battles moves to defensive end. Wide receiver Dan
Sheeran and running back Doug Hogue move to linebacker. Outside linebacker
Derrell Smith moves to inside line-backer.
Recruit E.J. Carter commits to play for
the Orange
Linebacker Dan Sheeran leaves team;
eventually transfers to Massachusetts.
Nov.
29, 2
008
Projected-starting line-backer Derek Hines leaves football team
Aug.
31, 2
009
Freshman line-backer Brandon
Sharpe moves to defensive end
Aug.
12, 2
009
Aug.
11, 2
009 Walk-on
Adam Harris participates in
first practice
Aug.
14, 2
009
Projected starting line-backers Parker Cantey and Mike Mele leave the team. Mele transfers to UMass.
California JUCO linebacker Derek Hines transfers to Syracusem
Ay 4,
2009
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8 f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9
court hathaway | staff photographerdoug hogue (left) and derrell smith each moved from running back to linebacker during their time at Syracuse. The duo has since formed a relationship which they hope will help bolster the linebacking unit.
“One thing I said to him is that it is going to be a unique opportunity to play with your brother,” defensive line coach Derrick Jackson said. “It’s going to be pretty neat, whether it’s game one or game 12, sometime down the line, you and Chan-dler are going to be on the field together. And at some point hopefully, we have a meeting of the two Jones brothers at the quarterback, so they can say, ‘Jones and Jones on the tackle.’”
It was an interesting notion, and a prospect that undoubtedly began alleviating Jones’ con-fusion. Meeting new head coach Doug Marrone was the final convincing he needed.
“There are certain looks (Marrone) gives you, things that he does that just shake you,” Chandler Jones said. “When he put that look on us when we went through that door, Art just knew he had to come back, because he just knew this guy was for real.”
Jones announced his decision at a press con-ference less than two weeks after Marrone was hired. Marrone called Jones the first recruit of his tenure as the Orange’s new coach. First, Jones phoned Chandler and told him he was coming back to help the program. Chandler could not contain his happiness.
Throughout the summer Marrone has main-tained that he is not the reason Jones decided to stay, and he did not try to sway Jones’ decision. Jackson, too, stressed that while he offered him-self as a resource, he did not try and convince Jones one way or the other.
Not like either of them were complaining with Jones’ choice. They may not have said it then, but they knew just how important Jones
would be to Syracuse’s defense this season. The Orange had its star back.
“When he told me he was coming back, I had as big a smile as you could have,” Jackson said. “Well, I don’t know if it was me or coach Marrone — we both had pretty big smiles on our faces.”
Jones didn’t stay to suffer through another long year of misery and disappointment. The novel concept of winning brought him to the weight room in February, trying to bench 450 pounds.
Kimmel said that when Jones chose to remain at SU, the one thing he feared was an injury. Of course, he suffered an injury. Jones said it was the only time he ever questioned his decision.
When Jones heard the prognosis, though, it all made sense. The doctors realized quickly that the muscle tear was not career threatening, that Jones would be back on the field by training camp. The doctors cleared Jones to play on Aug. 9, one day before the first summer practice. He thought back to when he was struggling with his decision, realizing what his fate would have been if he got hurt after leaving Syracuse. The great NFL career he planned could have been derailed before ever beginning.
Now Jones has a chance to improve his status even further. Another strong season could propel him into the first round of the draft, again proving he made the right choice. And if that happens, he’ll once again look to his faith and that magical phrase that continues to guide Jones through life.
It has not steered him wrong yet.“The NFL isn’t going anywhere, and this
was a blessing in disguise,” Jones said. “It’s humbling for me. It shows this childhood game can be taken away that quick. It makes me appreciate football. I always say that everything happens for a reason.”
jonesf r o m p a g e 6
court hathaway | staff photographerart jones earned First Team All-Big East honors following his junior season in 2008.
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 9
10 f
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20
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Her
e’s a
look
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ight
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and
a
trip
to S
tate
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lege
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a m
atch
up w
ith s
torie
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enn
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ew
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nam
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yan
Nas
sib
the
star
tin
g qu
arte
rbac
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arch
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spri
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prac
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s. T
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wh
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reg
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join
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for
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ill
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yler
Du
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taff
wri
ter
Qu
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Am
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he
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pla
surr
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racu
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new
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quar
terb
ack,
th
e re
turn
of
Mik
e W
illi
ams
has
bee
n
shov
ed i
nto
the
back
grou
nd.
Wil
liam
s w
as a
sta
r tw
o ye
ars
ago
and
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th
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Gre
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as
anyb
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to
thro
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o. D
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ses
wil
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rtai
nly
dou
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team
W
illi
ams
all s
easo
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nd
Dou
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arro
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ghou
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ain
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cam
p th
at a
sec
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con
sist
ent w
ideo
ut h
as n
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mer
ged.
— J
are
d D
iam
ond
, sp
orts
ed
itor
Wid
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ec
eiv
er
s
Del
one
Car
ter
hop
es h
is c
olle
giat
e fo
otba
ll c
aree
r co
mes
fu
ll
circ
le t
his
fal
l. A
fter
a b
ann
er f
resh
man
yea
r (7
13 y
ards
, fou
r to
uch
dow
ns)
, th
e m
usc
le-b
oun
d ta
ilba
ck m
isse
d al
l of t
he
2007
se
ason
wit
h a
hip
inj
ury
an
d w
as g
rant
ed a
med
ical
red
shir
t.
Las
t yea
r, h
e su
ffer
ed a
ham
stri
ng
inju
ry a
nd
nev
er c
rack
ed th
e ro
tati
on.
Mar
ron
e pr
aise
d C
arte
r’s
play
all
su
mm
er a
nd
wil
l li
kely
fea
ture
him
in
th
e of
fen
se t
his
sea
son
. B
ut a
lso
expe
ct
Ant
won
Bai
ley
and
Ave
rin
Col
lier
to s
ee ti
me.
Th
e sq
uat
ty B
ai-
ley
may
be
SU’s
tou
ghes
t pou
nd-
for-
pou
nd
back
, wh
ile
Col
lier
is
a w
eapo
n in
the
pass
ing
gam
e.—
Tyl
er D
un
ne,
sta
ff w
rite
r
ru
nn
ing
ba
ck
s
Mik
e O
wen
em
erge
d la
st y
ear
as a
leg
itim
ate
thre
at i
n t
he
pass
ing
gam
es a
nd
serv
ed a
s a
con
sist
entl
y re
liab
le t
arge
t fo
r qu
arte
rbac
k C
amer
on D
antl
ey. O
wen
fin
ish
ed s
econ
d on
th
e te
am i
n b
oth
rec
epti
ons
(19)
an
d re
ceiv
ing
yard
s (1
75).
Wit
h
Sy
racu
se l
ack
ing
in w
ide
rece
iver
dep
th,
Ow
en m
ay n
eed
to
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helping than anything,” Carter said. “We’re both really competing but in a positive way. We are so hungry right now we don’t care who starts. We just want to compete and make it to a bowl game.”
Smith and Hogue, have formed a tight rela-tionship as well. They each made the move from running back to linebacker - Hogue this year and Smith two years ago.
“He sees the little consistent things that I would do when I was at running back, and he kind of teases me because he used to go through that type of thing,” Hogue said.
“I know what he’s feeling right now, and we are able to connect because of that,” Smith said. “I mean running backs get all of the glory, but defense wins championships.”
Team chemistry aside, and despite the end-less setbacks, the surrogate group at linebacker has seemed to steadily improve and commit to Conley and head coach Doug Marrone’s system.
Hogue especially has developed a newfound confidence under defensive coordinator Scott Shafer’s system.
“I think after the scrimmage we feel better about Doug Hogue,” Conley said during the last week of camp. “It feels like he’s got a little bit of a swagger going now. I wish like heck I would have had him last year. I don’t know where he’d be today if I had him then.”
Heading into the season-opener against Min-nesota on Sept. 5, the group at linebacker, in its entirety doesn’t yet have a distinct swagger, but it has certainly meshed to a point of cohesion. The mentality now, after all of the turmoil, is one of complete unity. Players from senior Mike Stenclik to the freshman Carter realize they will need to sacrifice and play multiple linebacker positions frequently throughout the year.
“People are saying we have a lack of depth, but I don’t see that as being a problem,” Stenclik said. “There are just more opportunities to step up and play.”
“We are more focused on being leaders as a whole group, as a group among the team, we
strive to be the strongest area of the whole team every day,” Carter said. “Each one of those guys is well capable of filling other roles.”
There is no denying, though, that another setback or injury within the unit would most likely be incurable, as there have simply been too many defections from the unit to seriously rely on the second team as a whole.
“As long as we stay healthy, I feel good about the guys we have,” Conley said. “But do I wish I had more guys? Yeah.”
Until that first game against the Golden Gophers rolls around, all Smith, Hogue, Gillum and company will need to do is open their locker doors to remind themselves of all they have been through and all they hope to accomplish together. For inside it lies what they hope to do this year. As a unit.
Taped up inside each linebacker’s locker will be a list of Syracuse’s schedule. Next to each oppo-nent they will check off who they think they will defeat, and who they don’t. Below the markings, each backer will list out his goals for the year.
It’s the same exact thing former SU head coach Dick MacPherson had Conley do two decades ago.
Said Conley: “So I guess after all of this, at the end of the season that’s what they’ll look at to see how far we’ve come.”
1 2 f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9
linebackersf r o m p a g e 8
“We are more focused on being leaders as a whole group, as a group among the team. We strive to be the strongest area of the whole team every day. Each one of those guys is well capable of filling other roles.”
E.J. Cartersu freshman linebacker
court hathaway | staff photographerE.J. CartEr will see a great deal of playing time this year at the weakside linebacker position, despite being a true freshman. carter will share reps with starter ryan Gillum.
BY MEREDITH GALANTEMANAGING EDITOR
Eleven teams make no sense to former Syracuse Athletic Director Jake Crouthamel. He can explain 10, because the conference is called the “Big Ten.” Twelve teams make sense, too — it would be a great revenue source.
But 11? That doesn’t make sense.Since Crouthamel’s time at Syracuse, starting in 1978 and
ending in 2005 to give way for current AD Daryl Gross, he’s advocated for Syracuse to join the Big Ten. For any team to join the Big Ten, for that matter. Back in Crouthamel’s day, the Big East was in its infancy and struggling. The Big Ten provided more fi nancial support to its teams and a higher level of competition.
For now, the Big Ten consists of 11 schools, one more than its name suggests and one short of giving the conference the ability to split in half and conclude each season with intra-conference playoffs. Big East teams like Syracuse, Pittsburgh and Rutgers are mentioned as possible expansion teams for the Big Ten.
“All conferences are expanding, the Big Ten is no differ-ent,” Crouthamel said. “Ten, 11, doesn’t make sense. Twelve, going to 12 makes sense. Follow suit.”
Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno has openly talked about his desire to expand the conference for years with a team like the Orange or the Panthers, but specifi cally not Notre Dame.
Mark Abbott, the assistant athletic director at Iowa who
schedules the Hawkeyes’ opponents, said he looks for teams that play in areas that Iowa recruits in, and Big East oppo-nents fi t that bill — making them an ideal pool of applicants for expansion.
“I don’t think we take into consideration that these current Big East schools could be potential conference foes in the future,” Abbott said. “We look to schedule a BCS conference opponent in an area we recruit.”
Iowa just fi nished a two-year series with Syracuse and is slated to play another series with Pittsburgh starting next season. Michigan also scheduled a Big East team, playing 2008 conference co-champion Connecticut in 2010.
The Big Ten schools might not be trying to schedule prospective conference rivals, but if the Big Ten contained 12 teams, the conference would split evenly. Playoffs could be held for two different divisions and then a larger Big Ten championship game. Other major conferences like the Big 12 and Southeast Conference have a playoff system in place. Playoffs and conference championship games provide extra revenue. “It just makes sense,” Crouthamel said.
“We’d entertain the possibility of increasing conference games if our peers also considered it and it fi t well for every-one,” Abbott said about the future of the current Big Ten.
But creating playoffs could potentially diminish the lure to the Rose Bowl for the Big Ten. The Rose Bowl, the oldest bowl game in college football, created in 1902, traditionally has Pacifi c 10 and Big Ten conference tie-ins and is highly coveted by Big Ten teams.
Adding a playoff system within the Big Ten would change
Doesn’t add up
The Big Ten has 11 teams. Does it need 12?
BIG THINGS IN THE BIG TEN
Penn State: Shared the conference championship with Ohio State and fi nished the regular season 7-1. …Lost to Southern California in the 2009 Rose Bowl.
Ohio State: Shared the Big Ten championship with Penn State. …Lost to Texas in the Fiesta Bowl.
Michigan State: Finished the season 9-4. …Lost to Georgia in the Capital One Bowl.
Iowa: Finished the season 9-4. …Defeated South Caro-lina in the Outback Bowl
Northwestern: Finished the season 9-4. …Lost to Missouri in overtime of the Alamo Bowl.
Minnesota: Finished the season 7-6. …Lost to Kan-sas in the Insight Bowl.
Wisconsin: Finished the season 7-6.
Illinois: Finished the sea-son 5-7.
Purdue: Finished the sea-son 4-8.
Michigan: Finished the season 3-9.
Indiana: Finished the sea-son 3-9.
SEE BIG TEN PAGE 19
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 13
illustration by rebekah mackay
1 4 f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9
Tryout opens door No way was a scout from the Green Bay
Packers on line one. This had to be a prank call.
Smiling inside his office at Duke, Chris Collins played along. The Blue Devils’ assis-tant basketball coach listened to the so-called Packers scout, jotted down some information and called Paulus. The Packers, supposedly, wanted to give the point guard a workout.
They both laughed. “He hadn’t taken a snap since high school,”
Collins said. “We didn’t know if it was a joke, if someone was pulling a prank on us.”
Collins did his homework. The scout was legit. So Mike grabbed a couple of his receivers and the Paulus brothers went to work. Eight miles apart, they traveled back and forth to Duke and UNC. Nothing too serious. Mostly “to at least look decent,” Mike joked.
A funny thing happened, though. “The passion and the itch came back,”
Greg said. “I started to make certain throws and thought, ‘Maybe we can do this.’”
The Packers never offered a contract. But they gave Paulus a platform to reintroduce himself as a football player — they made the transition realistic. Suddenly, 15-to-20 schools were calling. And these were no pranks. Pau-lus visited Michigan, Nebraska and Syracuse in search of the best chance to start.
On his trip to SU, Paulus meandered through the halls of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications with head coach Doug Marrone at his hip. Students gawked as Paulus’ tour guide Carolyn Davis, a Ph.D student, showed him broadcasting equipment he had never seen at Duke.
The awkwardness she typically buffered as a tour guide was nonexistent here. A rap-port was forged.
“It seemed like they knew each other really well,” Davis said. “You know how you act when you’re around a professor? It wasn’t like that.”
And the opportunity to start was clear. “From a quarterback situation, it’s a lot
harder to walk into Nebraska and start than it is at Syracuse,” Mike Paulus said. “That’s not a diss on the program. That’s just realistic. They needed help, especially at that position.”
So with an offer from a European basketball team on the table — and a slew of agents ready to represent him — Paulus did a 180. Instead of living halfway around the globe, Paulus made a pilgrimage home. Behind a squint-to-see NCAA rule that allows four-year college athletes to compete in another sport if they haven’t redshirted, Paulus chose to enroll as a graduate student at SU on March 14.
Paulus never felt constricted to the status quo. He knew football could pop up again. After all, he was the Gatorade National High School Player of the Year at Christian Broth-ers Academy, throwing for 11,763 yards and 152 touchdowns as a four-year starter.
Right now, he’s Syracuse’s starting quar-terback. After that, who knows?
“Broadcasting is an option. Coaching is an option. Football is an option,” his dad said. “And if he wanted to go to Europe to play basketball, that’s an option.”
Maybe someday Paulus will slide next to Mike Krzykewski on the bench like so many former Dukies. This football experiment hasn’t derailed that dream. If anything, it enhances it. Collins said Paulus hopes to help the Orange’s basketball team in a graduate assistant type of role.
But that’s months from now. His bas-ketball is safely stashed away. Paulus’ new teammates beg him to slip into Manley Field
paulusf r o m p a g e 3
For added pressure, he had to fill a brand new 50,000-seat domed stadium with a team that had won just one bowl game in the last two decades, and his most feared offensive weapon was a 5-foot-11 South African kicker named Gary Anderson.
Needless to say, the fans that did show up during the early years didn’t have very high expectations, MacPherson remembers.
“There were times when they’d come to the games when I was coaching, and they’d wear bags over their heads,” MacPherson said. “I said I didn’t mind that so much, but they didn’t even cut out the eye holes so they could see the game! They just put the bags over their heads.”
In his corner, though, he had the go-to source for Syracuse football tradition — Ben Schwartz-walder. Like Marrone has MacPherson, MacPher-son had the legendary coach of the 1959 national championship team there to remind players exactly what they were working toward.
Sporting a well-cropped plot of gray hair and a pair of thick-rimmed glasses, Schwartzwalder would visit with MacPherson’s players during practice. Though he insisted upon not staying long, he would come and recount stories of Ernie Davis, the old Archbold Stadium and the ‘59 national championship team to the impres-sionable young Orangemen.
“I started thinking about how I learned tra-dition,” Marrone said. “And when it came to Syracuse University, I was fortunate enough to have a great coach in Dick MacPherson who taught us the tradition, and then he’d have Ben (Schwartzwalder) come back and tell us about the teams he had.”
Though the visits were short, it was easy to see the effect it had on the players. Because of Schwartzwalder, they had perspective. Because of MacPherson, they began to understand what it took to take their program to the next level.
By MacPherson’s third year at the helm, the Orangemen began to rise again.
In 1984, the team shocked the college football nation with a 17-9 win over top-ranked Nebraska in front of more than 47,000 at the Carrier Dome. A year later, it rattled off a five-game winning streak through October and part of November to earn a Cherry Bowl berth. And by 1987 — the
year SU went undefeated and tied Auburn in the Sugar Bowl — it appeared as though MacPher-son’s vision had been realized.
And through it all sat Marrone. Fighting through MacPherson’s practices with his scuffed Bike football helmet, No. 78 green prac-tice jersey and grimy practice pants with the hip pads jutting out the sides, he was living through the same overhaul he would one day have to emulate.
Then, his dreams were different. Ones of NFL glory. But now, as he’s taken his dream job, he can’t remember a more helpful source then the days of “Mac and Ben.” He couldn’t find a better standard to abide by in his drive to bring back SU football.
“I’ve been fortunate to have coach Mac,” Marrone said. “To see the correlation within the programs from coach Schwartzwalder to coach Mac to coach P (Paul Pasqualoni), the relationship of the different types of programs that were run here during times when they’ve been successful, and that’s one of the things I’ve been studying quite a bit.”
After the flames were doused and the fire trucks drove away on that March morning, Manley Field House became a differ-ent place.
Per venerable tradition, it was once again like a place of business. Players dress differ-ently: a clean-cut look with attire only suitable in a professional atmosphere, linebackers coach Dan Conley said.
No clothing with beer slogans or inappropriate sayings, no excessive facial hair, no earrings, no hats indoors and no long hair are allowed, Conley said. Player photos were taken in shirts and ties — the same outfits that they’ll wear boarding air-planes to away games from now on. Last season, their headshots were taken in uniform.
Just like during the days of Mac, Marrone and his coaches had a “cut your hair” meeting the first day of camp in August.
“I brought four people in after the first day of camp and said, ‘You have until 12 o’clock noon to get your hair cut,’” Conley said.
Conley, who played two years under MacPherson and another four under his suc-cessor Pasqualoni before joining the staff under Robinson in 2008, has been tutored in Syracuse tradition for nearly his entire career and wel-
comed Marrone’s throwback philosophies. “I was a part of the staff (under Robinson),
and I saw how the program had changed,” Con-ley said. “And when they hired coach Marrone to come in, we sat down that Friday night and I can’t tell you how excited I was — not only to be retained — but to see his vision of the program going back to the way coach Mac and coach (Pasqualoni) ran the program.”
But the collective visions of “Mac and Ben” aren’t just present in the locker room under Marrone. On the field, during spring ball and throughout summer camp, Syracuse tradition was upheld.
Just like when Marrone was in college, prac-tices are a battleground. More contact, more competition, more conditioning.
“It’s a lot more intense,” junior defensive tackle Andrew Lewis said. “There’s a lot more hitting. It reminds me a lot of high school when you really don’t have any limitations — a lot more physical. It’s more of what a camp should be and not that kind of NFL-type camp thing.”
In the spring and summer, packs of Orange football players lined the long blue Gilman pads that marked the “Syracuse drill,” where a defen-sive and offensive player battle in a full-contact slugfest for supremacy.
After each bone-crushing hit, the surround-ing players let out a battle cry, waiting to call out their next opponent.
“Everything we do now, we have to do as hard as we can, and that’s expected out of us,” McKenzie, the junior center, said. “Just like coach tells us, we’re not being punished. More is being demanded of us.”
Through it all, Marrone is watching his players in Manley and on the practice field to see how they’re fitting into his plan. He’s admit-ted that he has too much work to do to stop and absorb the significance of it all and how his Syracuse roots are affecting this downtrodden program.
But for the players, coaches and fans who have been waiting for the revival of Syracuse football, it couldn’t feel any better. Whether it’s the burning of the shoe or simply the way a player looks a coach in the eye and calls him “Sir,” the days of old are back.
“It feels like it used to,” Conley said. “It feels like Syracuse again.”
TradiTionsf r o m p a g e 4
court hathaway | staff photographerdoug marrone is the first Syracuse alumnus to serve as head football coach since Reeves H. Baysinger in 1948.
see nexT page
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 15
House for a quick pickup game. He declines. At each interview with the media, Paulus instinc-tively repeats that football — and only football — is his 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. obsession.
Collins texted Paulus all August. Like every-one, he wanted a sneak peak. In return, Paulus provided 100-character peepholes into what’s cooking behind closed doors. Each successive text was a tad brighter than the last.
“I can sense the excitement going back and forth,” Collins said.
Marked ManHe’s been sheltered all preseason. In pads,
but untouched. Syracuse’s coaches don’t let the quarterbacks get hit.
So when guys are foaming at the mouth to smack Paulus for the first time since 2004, he’ll need a safety valve. A trusty tight end. A friend in times of danger. He’ll need diehard North Carolina fan, Mike Owen.
SU’s starting tight end has followed UNC since fifth grade. He was part of steaming Tar Heels Nation when Gerald Henderson struck Tyler Han-sbrough with a nasty elbow that drew a faucet of blood. So he had to ask.
“How were those games man?” he asked Paulus. “There were blood and fistfights. That’s intense.”
Arguably no position in sports is as polar-izing as the Duke point guard. Paulus was a bull’s eye for four years, blasted with obscene spam every night. Though his football game was cryogenically frozen for years, Paulus boasts an unprecedented resume for a college quarter-back.
When referred to as one of the most hated players in sports after an August practice, Pau-lus cracks a wide grin, rewinds old memories for a moment and chuckles.
“Yeah, that was a good time,” he said. Like the guaranteed “Mike is bet-terrr!”
chants in Chapel Hill. Or the countless pictures students held of players skying over Paulus for dunks. And the time West Virginia’s Cam Thoroughman took a below-the-belt postgame
shot for the ages. After the Blue Devils — and their eight McDonald’s All-Americans — were blindsided by the Mountaineers in the second round two years ago, Thoroughman asked a reporter if Paulus was one of those eight.
The reporter acknowledged he was and a shocked Thoroughman responded, “Oh, my God. Are you kidding?”
It’s part of his job description at Duke. You’re forced to lead as America’s Most Wanted.
“There’s no better feeling than keeping people quiet with a big shot or a big play,” Paulus said.
This is how he was able to command respect immediately from his SU teammates. Paulus barely touched a football the last four years, play-ing catch with Mike in the backyard sparingly.
Teammates, like critics, were unsure if Pau-lus could handle football at first. They knew he could handle pressure.
“The competition, the fight, the hunger,” Owen said. “He brings that mentality here.”
Paulus and Owen haven’t debated the Hen-derson/Hansbrough incident quite yet. Touched on it, but haven’t dove into it. Green-lighting such discussion is like triggering a healthcare debate. There’s a time and place. No use risking quarterback-receiver hostility in August.
But the time will come.“Come January, February, whenever the
season starts and it’s Duke-Carolina, we’ll butt heads then,” Owen said.
Getting ReadyAfter inheriting a new offense and a new
set of quarterbacks, Rob Spence kept it simple. He didn’t need a howitzer arm. He didn’t need a tuck-and-run dazzler. Last spring, Syracuse’s new offensive coordinator insisted he needed a brainy “point guard” in the cockpit.
Spence was being metaphorical. The answer was literal.
“(Paulus) has a good feel and a very high athletic I.Q.,” Spence said. “He’s very, very intel-ligent and a natural leader.”
Spence isn’t one for leaking details of his
complex, multi-receiver offense from Clemson. But he is quick to say there have been no short-cuts in Paulus’ growth. Familiarity helped. At CBA, head coach Joe Casamento employs a high-school version of Spence’s offense.
“You’d be surprised how similar the game is whether you’re talking about the pro level, col-lege level or high school,” Casamento said.
A year and a half ago, Casamento and another high school coach from Kentucky visited Spence for a week in Clemson to pick Spence’s brain. It’s a common trip. NFL, college and high school coach-es all visit Spence for knowledge, Casamento said.
So Casamento doesn’t see today’s Paulus as any lesser than the golden boy that generated full-ride offers to Notre Dame and Miami (Fla.) as a football player.
“When he was a senior, 18-year-old kid, every-body thought he was great,” Casamento said. “Now he’s a 23-year-old man and everybody wonders if he can do it. I think all those people are crazy.”
This summer, with Paulus thirsting for reps and SU’s coaches prohibited from working with players per NCAA rules, his inner circle at CBA lent a hand. Blasts from the past, former Orange safety Bruce Williams and current Orange wide-out Lavar Lobdell, ran routes for Paulus regularly. Casamento stood nearby as Paulus’ football occu-pational therapist, helping him recapture his old self throw by throw.
The rust accumulated in Paulus’ velocity. He wasn’t driving the ball with his hips and legs enough. With daily reps, Casamento helped fix this. Marrone sees a polished product.
“When something breaks down, he can see the field,” Marrone said. “He can make quick decisions.”
To catch up tactically, Paulus used his young-er brother. Together, Greg and Mike studied film of Mike’s Tar Heels playing three schools Greg will face this fall — Rutgers, Connecticut and West Virginia.
“So I could say, ‘These guys do this and these guys do that,’” Mike said. “At Carolina, we game-planned for them, too.”
After UNC plays UConn Sept. 12, Mike plans to mail his playbook from that week to Greg.
The accelerated preparation injected quiet con-fidence to the unknown. Coaches liken Paulus to Drew Brees, Marrone’s former pupil as offensive coordinator of the New Orleans Saints. Whether Paulus’ sixth sense in the pocket, surgeon preci-sion and Duke-tested leadership truly makes him Drew Brees Lite won’t be revealed until this weekend.
But Paulus promises that coulda-made-that-throw-back-in-the-day doubt hasn’t crept into his mind.
“I haven’t had that thought for one second,” he said.
It starts A booming thunderstorm blasts the roof
of the Carrier Dome as Greg Paulus takes his place in the first row of Syracuse’s team photo at media day. Three players to his right is Owen, gazing and grimacing at the Dome top. He’s a little nervous. His car windows are rolled down.
Paulus also looks up at the storm. Wearing this odd, new shade of blue, he slowly spins around in place for a panoramic view. This is his new home.
He could struggle. Who should start under center may erode into a season-long debate. This is only a one-year fling that could delay the maturation of redshirt freshman Ryan Nassib or true freshman Charley Loeb.
With his hands lounged on his V-neck of his shoulder pads, Paulus soaks up the moment in too-good-to-be-true or what-did-I-get-myself-into pause. All eyes are on him this fall. He knows this. He’s had to answer the same questions every day, most of which are packaged in different words with the same meaning - “Are you nuts?”
The mystery is finally revealed Saturday.“They’ve kept things really low key and I
think that’s a good element of surprise,” Dave Paulus said. “Because I think people are going to be surprised here very soon.”
court hathaway | staff photographergreg paulus insists he doesn’t play much basketball anymore. Since signing with Syracuse in May, the former Duke point guard said he’s only shot a basketball one time.
16 f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9
NO. NAME POS. HT. WT. CL. HOMETOWN/HIGH SCHOOL1 Mike Williams WR 6-2 211 Jr. Buffalo, N.Y./Riverside2 Greg Paulus QB 6-1 195 Gr. Syracuse, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy3 Delone Carter RB 5-10 215 Jr. Copley, Ohio/Copley Senior4 Cameron Dantley QB 6-1 228 Sr. Silver Spring, Md./Phillips Exeter Academy/St. Albans HS5 Marcus Sales WR 6-0 177 So. Syracuse, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy6 Da’Mon Merkerson WR 6-1 183 Jr. Passaic, N.J./Saint Mary’s7 Donte Davis WR 6-0 181 Jr. Chantilly, Va./Westfi eld HS8 Cody Catalina TE 6-3 237 So. Ruffs Dale, Pa./Greensburg Central Catholic9 Andrew Robinson TE 6-3 245 Sr. Baltimore, Md./Calvert Hall10 Dorian Graham FS 5-11 182 So. Fort Lauderdale, Fla./Saint Thomas Aquinas School11 Lavar Lobdell WR 6-3 208 Sr. Syracuse, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy12 Ryan Nassib QB 6-3 223 RF Malvern, Pa./Malvern Prep13 Phillip Thomas SS 6-0 186 Fr. Miami, Fla./Miami Edison Senior14 Grant Mayes CB 5-10 191 So. Roselle, N.J./Seton Hall Prep15 Alec Lemon WR 6-2 193 Fr. Crofton, Md./Arundel Senior16 James Jarrett QB 6-2 195 Fr. Clinton, N.Y./Clinton17 Charley Loeb QB 6-4 208 Fr. Hollis, N.H./Lawrence Academy18 John Mark Henderson CB 5-11 185 Jr. San Francisco, Calif./City College of San Francisco/South San Francisco19 Ryan Lichtenstein K 5-10 150 Fr. Monroeville, Pa./Gateway20 Randy McKinnon SS 5-10 191 Jr. Jacksonville, Fla./The Potter’s House Christian Academy22 Torian Phillips WR 5-10 167 Fr. Staten Island, N.Y./Port Richmond24 Max Suter SS 5-11 190 Jr. Ruffs Dale, Pa./Greensburg Central Catholic25 Derrell Smith LB 6-1 236 Jr. New Castle, Del./Paul Hodgson Vocational Tech26 Kevyn Scott CB 5-11 195 So. Tamarac, Fla./Saint Thomas Aquinas School27 Averin Collier RB 5-10 195 RF Rochester, N.Y./Churchville-Chili HS28 Nico Scott CB 5-10 179 Jr. Greenbelt, Md./Eleanor Roosevelt29 Antwon Bailey RB 5-8 193 So. Washington, D.C./St. John’s College High School30 Rishard Anderson FS 6-0 180 Fr. Miramar, Fla./American Heritage32 Doug Hogue LB 6-2 223 Jr. Yonkers, N.Y./Roosevelt33 Dan Vaughan LB 6-2 208 RF Gibsonia, Pa./Pittsburgh Central Catholic HS34 Earl Carter Jr. LB 6-0 222 Fr. Orlando, Fla./Dr. Phillips35 Michael Holmes FS 5-11 184 Jr. Jacksonville, Fla./Mandarin36 George Mayes CB 5-10 185 Sr. Roselle, N.J./Seton Hall Prep37 Mike Jones RB 5-11 202 RF Middletown, Pa./Bishop McDevitt HS38 Ryan Ahern FS 6-2 194 Sr. Agoura Hills, Calif./Roger Williams University/Oaks Christian39 Lonnie Johnson DB 5-10 206 Fr. Liverpool, N.Y./Liverpool40 Jake Smith K/P 6-2 180 Fr. Elkins Park, Pa./Cheltenham HS41 Ryan Gillum LB 5-11 216 So. Youngstown, Ohio/Liberty43 Shamarko Thomas CB 5-10 196 Fr. Virginia Beach, Va./Ocean Lakes46 Robert Nieves FB 6-0 214 Sr. Rye, N.Y,/Rye47 Rob Long P 6-4 184 Jr. Downingtown, Pa./Downingtown West48 Carl Cutler TE 6-2 234 RF Norwich, Vt./Hanover (N.H.) HS49 Adam Harris LB 6-2 239 So. Towanda, Pa./Towanda Junior Senior51 Andrew Lewis DT 6-3 273 Jr. Centreville, Va./Centreville52 Ollie Haney NT 6-3 278 So. Clark, N.J./A.L. Johnson53 Chad Battles DE 6-3 228 So Newport News, Va./Heritage54 Mikhail Marinovich DE 6-4 234 So. San Clemente, Calif./JSerra Catholic55 Anthony Perkins DT 6-4 269 Jr. Washington, D.C./DeMatha56 Cory Boatman DT 6-2 256 RF Olney, Md./Our Lady of Good Counsel HS57 Maximilian Leo LS 5-11 206 Sr. Clay, N.Y./Bishop Grimes58 Mike Stenclik LB 6-0 224 Sr. Webster, N.Y./Webster-Schroeder60 Jim McKenzie C 6-4 284 Jr. Springfi eld, Pa./Saint Joseph’s Prep62 Andrew Phillips OT 6-6 276 Fr. Phoenix, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy66 Andrew Tiller OT 6-5 382 Jr. Brentwood, N.Y./Nassau Community College/Central Islip68 Justin Pugh OG 6-5 280 Fr. Holland, Pa./Council Rock South70 Ryan Bartholomew OG 6-3 288 Jr. Mitchellville, Md./DeMatha71 Adam Rosner OG 6-6 305 Jr. Depew, N.Y./Depew72 Nick Lepak C 6-4 328 So. Auburn, N.Y./Auburn HS73 Jonathan Meldrum OT 6-5 314 Jr. Boise, Idaho/Hargrave Military Academy/Landstown74 Nick Speller OT 6-5 299 RF Baltimore, Md./Edmondson-Westside75 Zack Chibane C 6-5 307 Fr. Paramus, N.J./Paramus76 Ian Allport OT 6-4 301 RF Pulaski, N.Y./Pulaski Central77 Tucker Baumbach OT 6-5 317 Jr. Middletown, Pa./Bishop McDevitt78 Josh White OT 6-5 272 So. Salisbury, Md./Wicomico79 Dalton Phillips LS 6-3 266 Sr. Clancy, Mont./Carroll College/Helena HS80 Nick Provo TE 6-5 232 So. West Palm Beach, Fla./John I. Leonard81 Cody Morgan WR 5-8 166 Fr. Cohasset, Mass./Boston College82 Van Chew WR 6-1 161 So. Manassas, Va./Centreville83 Ollie Taylor WR 6-0 184 Fr. Harvard, Mass./Lawrence Academy84 Michael Acchione WR 5-11 168 RF Solvay, N.Y./Solvay85 Mike Owen TE 6-4 255 Sr. Riverhead, N.Y./Riverhead86 David Stevens LB 6-4 220 RF Short Hills, N.J./Millburn HS89 Thomas Trendowski TE 6-2 225 So. Syracuse, N.Y./Westhill90 Jared Kimmel DE 6-6 252 Jr. Harpursville, N.Y./Harpursville Central91 Brandon Sharpe DE 6-2 227 Fr. Virginia Beach, Va./Ocean Lakes92 Shane Kimmel LB 6-1 229 RF Ivyland, Pa./Council Rock HS93 Jarel Lowery NT 6-4 281 RF Paterson, N.J./Paterson Catholic HS94 Bud Tribbey DT 6-0 274 Jr. Richmond, Va./Varina95 Torrey Ball DE 6-3 250 So. Athens Ga./Georgia Military College/Cedar Shoals97 Arthur Jones NT 6-4 293 Sr. Endicott, N.Y./Union Endicott99 Chandler Jones DE 6-5 246 RF Endicott, N.Y./Union Endicott
SYRACUSE TEAM ROSTER 2009
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 1 7
PAT WHITE BY THE NUMBERS
YEAR PASS YDS. TD INT RUSHES YARDS TD2005 828 8 5 131 952 72006 1,655 13 7 165 1,219 182007 1,724 14 4 197 1,335 142008 1,842 21 7 191 974 8
BY MATT EHALTSTAFF WRITER
Bill Stewart still remembers those magical Thursday nights.The nationally televised wins over Pittsburgh, Maryland, Louisville
and Auburn. They were a major part of the foundation for stamping West Virginia as a Big East powerhouse over the past four years.
Such sweet memories, all fueled by a fl eet-footed quarterback who broke a slew of records in his four superb years in Morgantown.
“Patrick White was a shining knight in each one of those games,” Stewart, the Mountaineers’ head coach, said. “This guy just made plays. It started with his redshirt freshman year against Louisville and every time he was the spotlight, center stage, he played the highest he could possibly play. That was pretty special.
“He brought a lot not to just West Virginia University but to the conference itself. I think the conference will miss him, but life has to go on, and other leaders have to step up and take over.”
After four years of White’s dazzling performances, record-breaking numbers and uncanny ability to produce in the clutch, the Mountain-eers and the Big East face the unenviable task of trying to replace him. Jarrett Brown is expected to take over at quarterback for White, but will be hard-pressed to make the Mountaineer faithful forget his nimble predecessor. Within the conference, there is varying opinion on who can step up to be the face of the Big East, as White was in his time.
“Patrick White is the greatest winner in college football,” Stewart said. “I think the guy’s going to be a Super Bowl winner someday at quarterback. It’s been a blessing, it’s been a thrill and it’s been an honor to watch this kid play because he’s been great. But he’s graduated, so we gotta go in a different direction now.”
“Winner” is the best word to describe White’s years with the Moun-taineers. He set 25 Big East, West Virginia and NCAA records in his four years. These include:
■ Most career rushing yards gained by a quarterback (4,480 yards) ■ Most touchdowns responsible in Big East and for WVU (103) ■ Most yards in a single game for WVU (424) ■ Most yards in a career for Big East and WVU (10,529)■ Best completion percentage at WVU (64.8 percent)
And those are just his individual statistics.There’s also the 34-8 career record in games he started at West Virginia
that included two Big East championships, two BCS bowl victories and a perfect 4-0 record in bowl games with three MVP awards, making him the only quarterback in history to go undefeated in four bowl games.
“I think Pat White will certainly go down as one of the best, if not the best player in Big East conference history,” Big East associate commis-sioner Nick Carparelli Jr. said. “And I think the timing of Pat White’s
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GOING BOWLINGPat White is the only quarterback in NCAA history to start and win four bowl games during his collegiate career.
DATE BOWL OPPONENT SCORE PASSING RUSHINGJan. 2, 2006 Nokia Sugar Georgia W, 38-35 11-14, 120 yards, 1 TD 77 yardsJan. 1, 2007 Gator Georgia Tech W, 38-35 9-15, 131 yard, 2 TD 145 yards, 1 TDJan. 2, 2008 Tostitos Fiesta Oklahoma W, 48-28 10-19, 176 yards, 2 TD 150 yardsDec. 27, 2008 Meineke Car Care North Carolina W, 31-30 26-32, 332 yards, 3 TD 55 yards
SEE WHITE PAGE 19
Who’s next?Someone has to replace Pat White on and off the fi eld
2008 Record: 11-3 (6-1 Big East, 1st)Postseason: Orange Bowl (20-7 loss to Virginia Tech)Key players: QB Tony Pike, DB Aaron Webster, WR Mardy Gilyard
Season outlook: Cincinnati won the Big East last season but is picked to fi nish third in the pre-season poll this year, despite tying Pittsburgh for most fi rst-place votes. The Bearcats season-opener at Rutgers on Sept. 7 could go a long way in their pursuit of a sec-ond-straight title. Quarterback Tony Pike is back after a strong season last year, while the defense will have a new coordinator and 10 new starters, which could prove to be the downfall for Cincinnati.
2008 Record: 8-5 (3-4 Big East, 5th)Postseason: International Bowl (38-20 win over Buffalo)Key players: LB Scott Lutrus, RB Andre Dixon, CB Jasper Howard
Season outlook: The Huskies have qualifi ed for two straight bowl games, but might have trouble extending that streak this season. Four Huskies were drafted in the fi rst two rounds of the 2009 NFL Draft, including All-American tail-back Donald Brown (selected No. 27 overall by the Indianapolis Colts). Cody Endres and Notre Dame trans-fer Zach Frazer will battle for the starting quarterback job to replace the graduated Tyler Lorenzen. Andre Dixon will look to anchor the running game.
2008 Record: 5-7 (1-6 Big East, T-7th)Postseason: Did not qualifyKey players: LB Jon Dempsey, RB Victor Anderson, WR Doug Beau-mont
Season outlook: Louisville has fallen on hard times under head coach Steve Kragthorpe. The Car-dinals are just 11-13 in Kragthorpe’s two years and have failed to qualify for a bowl game. Juniors Adam Fro-man and Justin Burke are battling for the starting quarterback job, but neither has started a Division I game in their respective careers. Sophomore running back Victor Anderson was named conference Rookie of the Year last year and may see a bulk of the offensive load.
2008 Record: 9-4 (5-2 Big East, T-2nd)Postseason: Brut Sun Bowl (3-0 loss to Oregon)Key players: DL Greg Romeus, TE Nate Byham, RB Dion Lewis
Season outlook: Is this the year Pittsburgh fi nally wins the Big East under head coach Dave Wannstedt? The media seems to think so, pick-ing the Panthers to win the confer-ence. Quarterback Bill Stull returns to anchor the offense, and it will fall upon a committee of running backs to replace second-round draft pick LeSean McCoy. Pitt’s defensive line is strong with All-Big East pick Greg Romeus returning. Games at West Virginia and Rutgers will ulti-mately determine where Pittsburgh fi nishes.
2008 Record: 8-5 (5-2 Big East, T-2nd)Postseason: Papajohns.com Bowl (29-23 win over North Carolina State)Key players: C Ryan Blaszczyk, OL Anthony Davis, CB Devin McCourty
Season outlook: Rutgers was voted fi fth in the preseason media poll, but plays all four of the teams ahead of it (Pittsburgh, USF, WVU and Cincinnati) at home, which could prove to be pivotal for the Scarlet Knights. Rutgers has won three consecutive bowl games, and will look to qualify for a fi fth straight this season. RU will have to replace quar-terback Mike Teel and wide receiver Kenny Britt, but should have enough depth to do so.
2008 Record: 8-5 (2-5 Big East, 6th)Postseason: Magicjack St. Petersburg Bowl (41-14 win over Memphis)Key players: QB Matt Grothe, DE George Selvie, OL Terrell McClain
Season outlook: Since start-ing the 2007 season 6-0, USF has gone just 11-9 and will now look to move to the top of the Big East. Matt Grothe is arguably the confer-ence’s best quarterback and is on pace to break several conference records. USF has received some fi rst-place votes in the preseason poll and should do well in the Big East. Games against Florida State and Miami will determine whether the Bulls get recognized on a national stage.
2008 record: 3-9 (1-6 Big East, T-7th)Postseason: Did not qualifyKey players: QB Greg Paulus, NT Art Jones, WR Mike Williams
Season outlook: Syracuse ushers in new head coach Doug Marrone after four awful seasons under Greg Robinson. Marrone, a Syra-cuse alumnus, will have some work ahead of him to turn the program around. His starting quarterback, Greg Paulus, has not played foot-ball in four years and will certainly spice things up for the Orange this season. A non-conference schedule with three Big Ten teams does not help, so it could be a long year for SU.
2008 Record: 9-4 (5-2 Big East, T-2nd)Postseason: Meineke Car Care Bowl (31-30 win over North Caro-lina)Key players: QB Jarrett Brown, RB Noel Devine, DL Scooter Berry
Season outlook: West Virginia has lost two prolifi c players to the NFL Draft in the past two seasons: Steve Slaton and Pat White. With-out Slaton and White this season, it will be interesting to see how the Mountaineers move forward. Fill-ing White’s shoes will be fi fth-year senior Jarrett Brown, who appears to be up to the task. West Virginia is picked to fi nish second in the media poll, but a Nov. 27 home game against Pittsburgh could determine its fate.
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18 F O O T B A L L P R E V I E W 2 0 0 9
Big East preview
OFFENSEZ WR Marcus Sales Lavar LobdellA WR Alec Lemon Donte DavisLT Nick Speller Josh WhiteLG Ryan Bartholomew Justin PughC Jim McKenzie Ryan BartholomewRG Tucker Baumbach Adam RosnerRT Jonathan Meldrum Andrew TillerY TE Mike Owen Andrew RobinsonU TE Nick Provo Cody CatalinaQB Greg Paulus Ryan NassibRB Delone Carter Antwon BaileyX WR Mike Williams Van Chew
DEFENSEDE Mikhail Marinovich Jared KimmelNT Arthur Jones Bud TribbeyDT Andrew Lewis Anthony PerkinsDE Chandler Jones Torrey BallSLB Doug Hogue Dan VaughanMLB Derrell Smith Mike StenclikWLB Ryan Gillum E.J. CarterH Kevyn Scott John Mark HendersonSS Max Suter Phillip ThomasFS Mike Holmes Shamarko ThomasCB Nico Scott Rishard Anderson
SPECIAL TEAMSK Ryan Lichtenstein Jake SmithP Rob LongLS Max LeoSS Dalton PhillipsHolder Rob LongPR Donte DavisKR Mike Jones
DEP
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2009
performances on the football fi eld at a time when the Big East was rebuilding played a major part in our resurgence as one of the big six conferences in the country.”
Beyond all the victories, league coaches often mention how White served as an ambassador for the league both on the fi eld and off it. At Big East media day in July, Pittsburgh head coach Dave Wannstedt noted how White helped recruit play-ers for the Big East.
“I think when we’re all out there talking about our conference and we’re all promoting our con-ference on a national stand point, I think it was a great situation to have a player nationally like Pat White to use as a reference,” Wannstedt said.
But those days are over. With White now a Miami Dolphin after being selected with the No. 44 pick of the 2009 NFL Draft, the search for his replacement has begun. At WVU, it leads to Brown, a fi fth-year senior who has served as White’s backup for the past three seasons. In his limited time on the fi eld, which included a 17-6 vic-tory over Syracuse last year, Brown has thrown fi ve touchdowns and four interceptions.
To take the immense pressure off Brown’s shoulders, Stewart handed Brown a football in front of the entire team during spring practice and told him it was his team. Stewart said he has told Brown that he should focus on his own abilities and not try to be another White. Brown, though, said he is ready to pick up where White left off.
“There’s a little pressure, but I can use that pressure, all that energy and go in and watch fi lm, things like that,” Brown said. “The guys around me, they can take all the pressure off me with
(tailback) Noel (Devine) in the backfi eld and my receivers. We’re out there playing for each other and that relieves a lot of pressure off me.”
Though WVU might have someone to replace White in the lineup, fi lling White’s role in promot-ing and advancing the conference is not falling upon one player. There seems to be a bevy of opinions about who can step up, though most are non-committal. “There are so many good players in the league” has become a popular refrain.
Syracuse defensive tackle Art Jones thinks he can be that man. South Florida defensive end George Selvie said USF quarterback Matt Grothe, who is just 287 yards away from break-ing White’s career record for yards gained in the Big East, can step up. Pittsburgh defensive end Greg Romeus threw out the names of Cin-cinnati quarterback Tony Pike and Brown as potential replacements.
Yet when it’s all said and done, there might not be anyone who can replace White’s value to the Big East and West Virginia. That’s why Stewart is tell-ing Brown to simply be himself. And if the league fi nds a replacement, it might be someone the conference or WVU would have never expected.
“Pat Whites only come around so many times and they’re few and far in between,” Connecti-cut head coach Randy Edsall said. “You don’t ever replace a guy like that, and I think when you try and replace a guy like that, that’s when you run into trouble. We lost (running back) Donald Brown, more people have to step up for us.
“You lose Pat White, more people have to do things, and what I think happens is when you have people like that, sometimes you see other people step up because there’s more of an oppor-tunity for them to do things.”
WHITEF R O M P A G E 1 7
f o o t b a l l p r e v i e w 2 0 0 9 19
courtesy of west virginia athletic communicationsPAT WHITE became more than just an on-field presence during his time in the Big East. Coaches from across the league used the quarterback as a recruiting tool.
the landscape of college football, Crouthamel said. In order to expand the Big Ten, it would have to steal teams from other conferences.
Transferring conferences could help and hinder teams that might consider the move. The Big Ten could fi nancially benefi t teams with its stronger postseason presence, Crouthamel said. But with the bigger conference comes stronger opponents.
“With a quality upgrade comes quality com-petition,” Crouthamel said. “Who is prepared for that upgrade? That’s not a put-down on the Big East, but I don’t think top to bottom the Big East can compare with the Big Ten.”
This season’s Top 25 boasts Big Ten power-houses, where the Big East is invisible. Ohio State leads the Big Ten with a No. 6 preseason ranking, followed by Penn State at No. 9. Iowa rounds out the list at No. 22.
So, for a conference with no teams in the Top 25, it’s diffi cult to fi nd a team that could handle the upgrade.
For Syracuse nose tackle Art Jones, leav-ing the Big East would mean disbanding the traditional opponents the Orange has a rich history with.
“It’s a smaller conference, the Big East,” Jones, a senior, said. “It would be sad to see us leave.”
Crouthamel and Abbott both agreed an
expansion in the near future is unlikely because of how the expansion would affect the rest of college football. But if the Big Ten could expand, the most likely suitor may not even be in the Big East.
“The main school out there that the Big Ten would want to recruit at any time of course is
Notre Dame,” Crouthamel said. “In my lifetime we won’t see that happen. Notre Dame will stay independent.”
But Paterno disapproves of Notre Dame join-ing. Right now, the Big Ten teams are relatively equal in media exposure and fi nances. Notre Dame’s strong alumni base and deal with NBC
Universal for football games puts the Fighting Irish on a different playing fi eld.
“Notre Dame brings a whole different envi-ronment,” Crouthamel said. “With their own TV network (NBC) and its alumni base, it transcends everything in terms of loyalty and giving fi nancially. Notre Dame is delighted to be in the Big East for its other sports without football - not many other major conferences would have done that.”
Abbott said he doesn’t give expanding the conference too much thought and just tries to schedule teams for Iowa. There’s too much politics to know what’s truly going on.
“I don’t have answers to if the Big Ten will ever expand,” Abbott said. “Fans give this stuff a lot of thought, much more than anyone else.”
BIG TENF R O M P A G E 1 3
“With a quality upgrade comes quality competition. Who is prepared for that upgrade? That’s not a put-down on the Big East, but I don’t think top to bottom the Big East can compare with the Big Ten.”
Jake CrouthamelFORMER SU ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
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