SU camp ending with 3 constants
The Southern football team?s preseason camp is nearly two weeks old, and, with classes starting Thursday, effectively coming to an end, although the first game won?t be until Sept. 1 against Florida A&M in Birmingham, Ala.
So, what have been the constants?
Escalating, oppressive heat.
Strange position battles ? at quarterback, running back, linebacker and on and on ? where there is a mixture of youth and potential and not so much a desperate need for urgency to find one guy. Instead, there is more so a sense of calm because there?s a feeling that finding one guy doesn?t matter as much as having depth.
There is a feeling that SU possesses interchangeability, between quarterbacks Bryant Lee and Warren Matthews and running backs Darren Coates, Larry Thomas, Kendrick Smith and Brian Threat and on and on throughout the team.
Everybody?s going to play. Everybody?s going to be counted on. And everybody needs to be ready.
Southern head coach Pete Richardson found three good ones in his three new hires for this season: running backs coach Elvis Joseph, offensive line coach Damon Nivens and linebackers coach Todd Middleton.
Joseph and Nivens, both former Southern players, are in their first seasons as collegiate coaches (though Nivens was an assistant to former SU line coach Gary Smith in 2003).
Middleton comes with a wealth of experience in a career that began in 1991. Because of those years, he?s more of a proven commodity, though unlike Joseph and Nivens, he?s having to learn everyone around here.
Joseph, who played with the Jackonville Jaguars, just started coaching when he joined the staff in the spring, but to watch him work with his kids is to see a natural, someone with a gift for coaching.
Nivens, a black college All-American tackle who went on to stints as an NFL free agent and time in NFL Europe, has, in just a few short seasons at SU and as offensive line coach at Istrouma, already started to put together a nice r?sum? of molding solid linemen.
?The first-year guys are doing fine,? said Richardson, who is entering his 15th season as head coach at Southern and 20th overall. ?I?m impressed with the instructional part, the technical part of coaching. All of them are energetic.?
All three will make an impact, if just because all three coach basically all-new groups.
Senior running back Darren Coates, with 119 yards and one touchdown last season, has the most experience in the backfield. ? More than half of Nivens? 13 offensive linemen have never played a collegiate snap at their position. ? And there are no seniors among the linebackers, with juniors and two of the three spots will have new starters.
As coaches and players, they?ll learn together, succeed or fail together.
So far, you can tell by the players, from attitude to retention, that the three new coaches are making the intended difference.
Saturdays await.
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