lonestar-web
Football

2004 FOOTBALL OUTLOOK: Defense Overview

July 27, 2004 Preseason All-Big 12 selectionJaxson Appel Coming out of spring practice, defensive coordinator Carl Torbush prefaced his cautious observations about the defense with a blanket s

July 27, 2004

Jaxson Appel
Preseason All-Big 12 selection
Jaxson Appel

Coming out of spring practice, defensive coordinator Carl Torbush prefaced his cautious observations about the defense with a blanket statement, "We made a great deal of improvement this spring."

He followed immediately with probably the most time-worn phrase in coaching, "We have a long way to go...," though he added a caveat that a hopeful Aggieland longs for, "...but we have more pieces to the puzzle in place."

And even more pieces fit in with the expected influx of four junior college linebackers.

Factor into the equation how quickly the new, but experienced linebackers from juco and eight redshirt freshmen can learn and adapt to the highest level of competition in the country, and whether an incoming freshman or two might surface quickly as well and contribute to much-needed depth.

That's a lot to ask or expect. But a stark, harsh fact is that there's scarcely any way to go but up. The 2003 defense wasn't just stripped of the storied "Wrecking Crew" moniker earned by years of stingy and bell-ringing defenses, which Torbush said the unit will have to earn back; it was shredded by dire, record-setting statistics and scores that led to bending, breaking, and blowouts in eight defeats.

On paper, the Aggies have quite a bit of experience to draw from. The same sheet of paper contains designations that erode some of the experience factor - size, stopwatch times, and walk-on status. At one point last season four of the eight linebackers in regular rotation were walk-ons, for example. Hence, the recruiting binge at LB (five signed).

Any positives that Torbush and the defensive staff of line coach Stan Eggen, cornerbacks coach Chris Thurmond, and safeties coach Melvin Smith felt were prefaced on two things - the second year in the system, and the promising talent displayed by eight redshirt freshmen and a couple of seasoned players who changed positions.

Dealing from strength, the Aggie defense brings five players who started all 12 games last season, four players who were in regular rotation on the d-line (the coaches prefer eight), and five defensive backs who appeared consistently in the multiple defenses that featured a lot of nickel and dime packages.

IN-DEPTH: AGGIE DEFENSE


Returning players who played regularly in rotation: 23
Returning Starters (all games): 5
Returning starters, some games: 5
Others who played all games: 3
Others who played some games: 10
Starters gone: 4
Others who played in rotation gone: 1

Main strengths: good young players, depth in DL
and secondary.

Main concerns: quality and depth at LB, speed.

Returning Starters Pos. (GS/GP)
Jaxson Appel FS (12/12)
Johnny Jolly DT (12/12)
Byron Jones CB (12/12)
Ray Ray Jones SS (12/12)
David Ross DE (12/12)
Marcus Jasmin NT (7/12)
Justin Warren LB (7/12)
Archie McDaniel LB (5/12)
Nurahda Manning LB (3/12)
Bryant Singleton SS (2/12)


Returnees who played in regular
rotation or special teams
Pos. (GP)
Blake Kendrick LB/SpT (12)
Brandon Leone FS (12)
Bryce Reed DT (12)
Anthony Squillante LB/SpT (12)
Jonte Buhl CB (11)
John Ray SpT (11)
Marcus Thornton DE (11)
Fred Woods LB/SpT (11)
Mike Montgomery DE (10)
Keelan Jackson LB (9)
Beau Adams LB/SpT (7)
Melvin Bullitt CB (7)
Kevin Mangum FS (4)

An added strength last spring was not only the talent level of five greenhorn defensive backs and four d-linemen, but also, from Torbush's perspective, "Without question (the inexperienced players) add much more athleticism and the energy level and enthusiasm picked up tremendously because of them."

Position changes by two seniors looking for a way to get off the bench and contribute brought a new, improved look to spring practice, too. Keelan Jackson moved from safety to linebacker, lending additional speed to the outside edge. Thomas Carriger brought strength and size to the middle of the line after at tight end. They both had a productive spring.

The shifting of personnel and an increased speed of the game, attributed largely to the confidence level brought by familiarity with the system, gave rise to Torbush assessing, "We have greatly increased our production and ability to make a play."

He added, "A year in the system made us better. The fat has been trimmed, and those who want to be part of this foundation are working hard and believing in what it takes."

However rejuvenated the Aggies appear, a "Wrecking Crew" usually has a smattering of all-this-or-that" candidates, prime-time playmakers. Some Aggies show potential for that, such as senior Jaxson Appel at free safety and Montgomery at defensive end.

One final point of emphasis for Coach Torbush: call his defense "Multiple," not "4-3."

Fact is, despite continual references to the 4-3 formation, inferring a drastic change from the Aggie past, the defensive breakdown show that A&M worked out of the 4-3 barely half the time. "We teach out of the 4-3, but we change up constantly and actually try to disguise what we're in," Torbush explained. "We're definitely not any one thing."

In the spring the defense worked on more coverage packages, more blitz packages, and spent an inordinate amount of time on tackling, tackling, and tackling. Also, a period each day was dedicated to forcing takeaways, a factor that head coach Dennis Franchione believes can make a 1-2 game difference in the season.

The main lingering question remains, how relative will all the improvement become with a season looming that brings two preseason ranked teams - Utah and Clemson, the latter with a Heisman hopeful quarterback - and the defending Big 12 champions, Kansas State, in the first month, and the power-packed Big 12 South after that?

That brings back the refrain: "....a long way to go."



An closer look at the Aggie defense, position-by-position: