Coach
Tavani said the other day that the only date that matters to him right
now is Sept. 7, when his Lafayette team opens the season at home against
Sacred Heart.
But
truth be told, he’s not entirely certain yet that Sept. 7 will be
opening day at all. In fact, if he is still hoping to land another
opponent for this year and next – and that extra game just might be
scheduled during the final week in August.
“This
year is pretty much done,” Tavani told me, but then he added, “there
could still be some changes. I’m looking at possibly doing something. “
A
quirk in the NCAA calendars for 2013-14 means teams are permitted a
12-game regular season. The last time Lafayette played 12 games in a
regular season was 2002. Ironically, Lafayette added Monmouth to the
schedule that year, and Monmouth is one of the main reasons that making a
late addition to this year’s card is a possibility. Monmouth dropped
out of the Northeast Conference, leaving a bunch of teams with openings,
and Coach Tavani said that other FCS schools are also exploring the
possibility of adding a game these two years.
Lafayette
has a bye after the third game this fall, and while Tavani welcomes
that, he also said that the Sept. 28 date is one that could be used for a
12th game.
More
and more teams seem to be playing games the Thursday night of the last
week orf August. That is also a possibility for this year, though
probably remote, but Tavani did say, “We’d like to look at that down the
road; that would be an ideal time for a an FBS game – get a TV deal,
then have 10 days before you have to play again.”
Lafayette’s
2014 and 2015 schedules have an open date listed for the week before
the big Lafayette-Lehigh game, and Tavani said if things remain that
way, it’s possible that the Leopards would look for a natural-grass
facility on which to practice. Why? Well, the 2014 finale, the 150th
Lafayette-Lehigh game, is scheduled for Yankee Stadium and the 2015 game
is at Lehigh’s Goodman Stadium, both natural-grass surfaces. “There’s
not a lot of difference when you go from grass to FieldTurf, but going
from FieldTurf to grass is a little different.
Leopard
coordinators Mickey Fein (offense) and John Loose (defense) spent their
2012 game days working from the press box, and Coach Tavani liked the
way that worked out and plans to have them upstairs this season, too.
“Both of them are very cerebral guys and bright coaches,” Tavani said.
“It took some adjustments for both, but it’s a much calmer atmosphere. I
felt there were better adjustments and we were always lined up and
ready to go, particularly defensively. The sideline is chaos. There are
different schools of thought about it, and there are a lot of reasons to
do it the other way, too, but I felt that we had greater improvement
with communications, and I think it will get even better.”
“As
coaches, we know a lot of football, and we can draw things up on the
board and scheme things out, but it’s not what we know (that is
important), it’s what the kids know,” Tavani said. The Lafayette game
plan each week can get pretty complex, but in analyzing last year’s game
films during the offseason, the coaches noted that “some of our
breakdowns were because our technique wasn’t very good.” So, spring ball
will focus on technique – “we’ll try to master a few, and get really
good at them before we move on,” Tavani said. You aren’t going very far
in 15 practices. If you are, it’s because you’re watering things down.
We’ll try to get as sharp as we can.”
Because
of the way Lafayette’s spring-Easter break is arranged this year, the
spring “camp” will have three, not just two, extensive scrimmages, the
last being the Maroon and White Game on April 20. “You’re only going to
be as good as the number of repetitions you get done in practice,”
Tavani said. “There are no scout teams in the spring. Everybody will get
plenty of chances to show us what they can do.” The next month could be
especially important for the rising sophomores on the squad. “A lot of
freshmen get frustrated by midseason,” Tavani said. “They think, ‘Geez,
I’m just a blocking dummy; I should be playing; I’m better than this; I
was a star in high school.’ I talk to them about that ahead of time, but
until they go through it, they don’t know. They’re all realizing it
now. Every day, they can get reps they weren’t getting last season.”
Every
year, it seems more teams are working the no-huddle offense into their
game plans, and Coach Tavani said that while “were practice two-minute
(drills) every day,” he’s not sold on going fast from beginning to end.
“It’s all about trying to gain an advantage,” he said. I think it’s good
in situations. If you’re going up and down the field and scoring
points, it’s fine; but if you’re not, you’re turning the ball over to
the other team’s offense quicker and it hurts your defense. I like it
situationally. The game is about spreading people out now; the days of
lining up with a basic tight end, flanker, I-back and slamming the ball
30 times (is past). People wouldn’t put eight or nine guys up to stop
run; now they do. But Chip Kelly says they didn’t go to that offense (at
Oregon) to throw the ball; they did it to run the ball.”
Make
no mistake about it, things still begin with Ross Scheuerman, who has
1,200 net yards rushing and 2,558 all-purpose yards in his first two
seasons. “He’s getting better and better, and the only thing that held
him back at the end of last season was that hip pointer,Shop for besthandsfreeaccess dolls
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your home or office.” Tavani said. “But he’s feeling better and the
inside reads, and with his speed and power, we can use him many ways.”
Greg Kessel, who is now listed at 248 pounds, is listed second on the
depth chart right now, even though he had only two net yards rushing in
2012. He had 11 touches – six rushes, five pass receptions – and scored
three touchdowns. “He runs faster than you think and he is a brute,”
said Tavani, who could also use him as a pass protector-outlet receiver.
Greg Rabb came to Easton at 240 pounds; he is now down to 217, and
he’ll get a chance to show if he might be the power back the Leopards
have been looking for. Deuce Gruden has been moved to RB, and while he
is only 182 pounds, he’s also only 5-6 (maybe); and,With superior
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shame on me but I remember a Lehigh running back by the name of Ronald
Jean who played way above his stature some years back. And Tavani is
touting freshman Kyle Mayfield out of North Penn as another power guy.
This position looks great to me.
I would have thought this was Kessel’s domain,A smooth and lanyard not
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Creahan doesn’t make a better impression than last year,The term 'bobbleheads control'
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handbag. look for rising sophomore Dan Dellovade to move right in.
Tavani says Dellovade, who is another 240-pounder,With superior quality
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bowls people over. That would be a big asset on some of those third-
and fourth-and-ones that have often been a sore spot for the offense.
Tavani said he also wants to get a look at another sophomore, Freddie
Hess, too.
Because
three of the starters will be new, this position looks like one where
some youngsters – and I’m talking about freshmen – will have a chance to
make an immediate difference. You won’t see the names Robin Cepeda,
Matt Rothrock or Collin Albershardt on the two-deep chart – in fact,
none of the incoming scholarship class is on the list. But Coach T’s
eyes lit up when he mentioned those names. So, we’ll have to wait until
this summer. In the meantime, Steve Mercado, who was the defensive scout
team MVP for 2012, Darius Glover and Shane Dorner will get the first
shots. Tavani really seemed to like rising sophomores Ryan Sanders and
Bobby DiPietro, too. James Coscia has gotten bigger over the winter. I
see big improvement coming in this area before September rolls around.
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