Let's talk about the defense, shall we? Rather than an evaluation of the Alamo Bowl as an isolated event, let's take a look - group by group - with where we stand, who's leaving, who's returning, coming in, etc. Including the coordinator.
We'll spend a lot of offseason time on this, so I won't even try to get as in depth as we need to later on. This is our starting point.
Defensive Line
Leaving: Tim Crowder, Brian Robison, Tully Janszen
Key '07 returnees: Derek Lokey, Roy Miller, Aaron Lewis, Brian Orakpo, Frank Okam
Potential new contributors: Eddie Jones, Ben Alexander, Brian Ellis, Lamarr Houston, Henry Melton(?)
2006 performance: Kind of a mixed bag for this year's group, though far more good than disappointment. The only real problem, I thought, was a lack of coherence. Just as Derek Lokey started coming on very strong, he suffered a season-ending injury. Okam never seemed fully recovered from his nagging injuries until returning to play A&M after two weeks of rest. Robison's ankle injury docked his strength for a stretch of games.
In sum, everyone had good stretches, which made the line play, on the whole, quite good. But the unit was never -quite- at full strength, which meant we never really saw a dominant game from this group - not against above average competition, anyway.
Brief 2007 outlook: Losing Robison and Crowder hurts, of course, but Texas isn't exactly hurting for depth on the ends. Lewis gave the 'Horns valuable minutes this year, and figures to be a prominent part of next year's rotation, if not a starter himself. Orakpo, meanwhile, is on the verge of greatness. He's already one of the best third down pass rushers on the end that Texas has ever had, and he's getting better and better in other down and running situations. Expect great things next season.
The young guys are, by all accounts, ready to contribute. By next season, many of these guys will be Longhorn household names.
Linebackers
Leaving: None
Key '07 returnees: Rashad Bobino, Robert Killebrew, Scott Derry, Roddrick Muckelroy, Drew Kelson
Potential new contributors: Jared Norton, Jeremy Campbell, Sergio Kindle
2006 performance: Eek. This was an uninspiring group all year, though each individual had their moments. The shine on Robert Killebrew is really starting to fade - he just isn't making plays and hurts this team. Scott Derry certainly had a nice out-of-nowhere season, but he's not an elite player. Still, who knows just how bad things would have gotten if Derry hadn't emerged as a solid contributor. Bobino, meanwhile, was wildly inconsistent this year. His angles to the ball are particularly disappointing, though he's showing some improvement as he gains experience.
Drew Kelson just sort of disappeared this year, and it's tough to figure what, exactly, happened. He suffered an injury just before Ohio State, and never really made it all the way back to his '05 level, which was quite good. Can he get back to being a strong player for this team? Muckelroy, meanwhile's, got a ton of potential; he should be at full strength by spring camp.
Brief 2007 outlook: Bring in the reserves!! Killebrew's days may be numbered, Derry is solid (but limited), and Bobino needs to be more disciplined. With the play of this group in 2006, there's every opportunity in the world for guys like Jared Norton, Jeremy Campbell, and, yes, Sergio Kindle, to log big minutes. The high ankle sprain to Kindle, really, may have been one of the biggest setbacks to this 2006 team. I don't know that he could have jumped in right away, but this group seriously lacked playmakers all year. A huge question heading into 2007.
Secondary
Leaving: Aaron Ross, Michael Griffin, Tarrell Brown
Key '07 returnees: Marcus Griffin, Tweedle Dee, Tweedle Dum
Potential new contributors: Deon Beasley, Chykie Brown, Robert Joseph, Ishie Oduegwu, Erick Jackson
2006 performance: Eek, again. Ross and Griffin are Sunday players, but the secondary as a whole struggled this season. As has been discussed previously, a good bit of that comes down to the extra compensation for the poor linebacking play, but it doesn't explain away many of the struggles. If you're new here, Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum are Ryan Palmer and Brandon Foster - both struggled mightily in the first half of the season, when they earned their nicknames.
I'm done throwing these guys under the bus too much, though. These are national title winners, and I wish them nothing but the best. They've been great Longhorns.
Brief 2007 outlook: Performance-wise, the group can't exactly regress. The 'Horns finished - what - 115th in the NCAA in pass defense? So, there's that. The big question is how good the new guys can be, and how quickly. Will Texas land Christian Scott? Can he contribute right away? How will Chykie Brown and Deon Beasley do as starters? They'll be depended on heavily.
At safety, I have my doubts as to whether Marcus Griffin can be a starter at this level. Some disagree, but it was not an inspiring 2006. I'm convinced that Robert Joseph is going to be an enormous part of next year's defense. The guy can hit, can cover, is physical, and has great instincts.
Coach
Do we promote Duane Akina to the full time gig? I actually liked what I saw in the Alamo Bowl, for the most part. Akina was more aggressive than Chizik typically was, without being Carl Reese reckless. I'm fine with Mack handing him the keys and seeing what he can do, but if there's a true impact coordinator that's eager to come coach at Texas, I don't think Mack Brown would be unwise to sniff around. I do think, though, that hiring someone just to hire someone, is an exercise in futility. Bring in someone that can be a tremendous impact right away, or just go with Akina. Don't get cute.
--PB--
0 recs | 18 comments
Erick Jackson
I can't wait to see this guy playing defense. His kick coverage, albeit simple, was outstanding and he was one of the few who really would lay the wood (This is why I like chris ogbonayya (sp?) so much)inVINCEable - January 3, 2007
Two thoughts
Peter Bean - January 3, 2007
Secondary Outlook
2007 just has to be better, as you say. And we will be helped from day one by our top defensive recruit, Curtis Brown. He is enrolling early, so he will be out on the field with the team this spring, which gives him a good chance to compete with Beasley and the other C. Brown for a starting spot.He's also 6'0", while Beasley is only 5'10" and it showed on a number of plays against 6'5" receivers. Brown's the second-best DB recruit in the country behind super-stud Eric Berry, and his 174 pounds will surely get up to 194 when he spends the summer in conditioning programs.
Mack also landed 6'1" Ben Wells, who could play either corner or safety. As much as it scares me to think that 3 of our starters in the secondary could be freshmen (RS and true), we have to have our best athletes on the field.
patienthornsfan - January 3, 2007
Freshmen
I didn't include any freshmen in the outlook for next season, except for a brief mention of Christian Scott, who may not even be a Longhorn.But you're right - Curtis Brown may be logging important minutes next season. It's absolutely a real possibility.
Peter Bean - January 3, 2007
Re: Scott
I'm not 100% sold on Scott yet. Maybe I'm missing something, but he just doesn't seem like the kind of guy Mack usually recruits. He seems like a character project. Maybe I'm completely wrong. In any event, many in the recruiting world think he's ours if he doesn't commit anywhere else before he visits Texas (Jan. 19th), he will commit to Texas.As a side note, Lennon Creer is also taking an official visit to Texas on Jan. 19th. Some believe he will be recruited for Safety in addition to RB. So if that pans out as well, he could be another player to be included in the 2007 mix. Of course for now, this is all speculation, but it is out there...
GoHorns - January 4, 2007
Question about D-Line
What's the major difference in the past few seasons, and the 1998 season with Casy and Shaun in the middle? I remember clearly them being compltely unblockable and wrecking havoc in the backfield on a regular, and it just seems to me that we haven't had that level of backfield destruction sense then.Is it my imagination? Were Casey and Shaun THAT good? (yes, I know they play on Sunday, but we've had some killer athletes brought in) Is it a change of scheme and responsibilities?
Hornbud - January 3, 2007
Well
Casey Hampton is the best nose tackle in professional football. He demands a double-team on every play and frees up Pittsbrugh to play that 3-4 defense they thrive on; with him eating up blockers in the middle, the LBs roam free to make plays.Rogers, too, is pretty much an All Pro caliber player.
So, yeah - that's a ridiculously high standard.
Still, I really thought Okam would develop into a Hampton-esque dominant force in the middle, but it just didn't happen - perhaps because of the nagging injuries. We'll find out next season.
Peter Bean - January 3, 2007
So it would be
safe to say, that they were just that freakishly talented, and that there probably hasn't been a tandum like that in CFB since?Hornbud - January 3, 2007
I'm giving Kelson a flyer
because of his injury. He played so seldom it was hard to get a read on his development. Plus, my nostalgia for his game breaking plays on the run to the title makes me prejudice.The DBs don't concern me as much as the LBs do. I like Derry, Bobino couldn't cover my grandma, Killabrew is a waste of an athlete and the others are a question mark. That sucking sound is the vortex of potential on several scholarships.
I just want everyone to get a big hug, get healthy and start from scratch in the Spring. Let competition sort it out.
EYESofBEVO - January 3, 2007
great summary PB...
but I'm still left scratching my head at what happened to our much vaunted D in 2006. It's maddening to think we were promised such a dominant force and (when averaged out between line play and secondary) ended up in the middle of the pack.I know and respect the fact that Mack doesn't use injuries as an excuse anymore and this summary more than anything shows that very few of our key players escaped some kind of nagging injury. I sometimes think turf toe is worse than an ACL injury because it sounds much less serious than it is, and it's hard to rationalize sitting a player with it for the two or three weeks necessary for full recovery. What you end up with is 80% or less of a players best..
Still I just am puzzled. Seems like even if they were not injured alot of players just did not get back to 2005 form, and we the fans are left wondering all kinds of crazy things like: was it a conflict in the staff (i.e. Akina v. Chizik and the power struggle of Co-Coord), was conditioning off this year, was the coaching staff as a whole unable to maintain proper motivation after the Ohio State game? Let's face facts, we can focus on the two losses at year end, but we JUST BARELY got by several other games as well...so are we looking at a failure to motiavte after week 2? The way it looked like UT just sort of didn't show up for A&M at times this year looks alot more like an emotional/motivational problem than an X's and O's one.
All in all, I know I need to just let it go and focus postivie thoughts to a rebound year in 2007. And I beleieve in my heart it is completely possible. It's scary to think we'll be relying on so many true Frosh's on the D in particular, but I seem to recall a great bunch of DB's that were almost 4 year starters that were anchored by Stanley "the Sheriff" Richards.
longhornJ - January 4, 2007
Ryan Palmer
...showed moments of greatness, particularly in the Texas Tech game (IIRC). Maybe he can work on being more consistent - he was only a sophomore this year.I'm excited to see what Curtis Brown can do... it is strange how the pass defense could be so bad with so much talent in the secondary this year. Was Chizik TOO focused on stopping the run, at the risk of being too aggressive and giving up big pass plays consistently?
SelimSivad - January 4, 2007
Im not sure if it was Chizik
or Just our the Griffen brothers. But we got caught alot sneaking up on play action and getting burned deep.Wells - January 4, 2007
secondary
I remember reading something from either Michael Griffin or Aaron Ross (I think the former)... where he was talking about how Huff used to call out the assignments. If they were expecting pass, he wanted to be in coverage, but if they were expecting a run play, he would want to cover the run. Griffin (or whoever it was) was saying that they had a hard time getting the younger players to understand how they did it in '05.SelimSivad - January 4, 2007
That was Griffin
He was being called out on a lot of the message boards and he was explaining why this years secondary was so different than last years.GoHorns - January 4, 2007
Linebackers
Joseph Duarte's take:WLB: Muckleroy
SLB: Kindle
MLB: Norton
Backups: Rashad Bobino, Robert Killebrew, Drew Kelson and Scott Derry
Spring will tell.
http://blogs.chron.com/longhorns/
patienthornsfan - January 4, 2007
Honestly
No one earned a starting gig next year.Of course, it's also easy to say the new guys will be better.
Time will tell, you're right, but this is the biggest concern for this team right now. What if Muck and Norton aren't up to the task, either? That's six limited linebackers. Problem.
Peter Bean - January 4, 2007
Snatch Derrick Stephens from aTm?
Watching the replay of the state championship game on FSN SW right now (Cedar Hill vs. Cy-Fair) and Stephens is just a beast.So is William Cole, the Cedar Hill QB. Small guy, but he's got Ramonce Taylor-esque versatility, athleticism and speed. Word is he's taking an official visit to UT on 1/19, along with Lennon Creer and Christian Scott.
patienthornsfan - January 4, 2007
I've seen Stephens play in person
and he didn't stand out. He could be a stud having an off game, but he wasn't as fast as I thought he'd be.Plus, he plays in a mega football talent district Cy-Fair. The competition is equivalent to D2 football.
Lots of good players on the field.
Maybe Kinne will play LB after all.
EYESofBEVO - January 4, 2007
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