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I-backs know they must protect quarterback
BY BRIAN ROSENTHAL / Lincoln Journal Star
Friday, Aug 04, 2006 - 12:13:09 am CDT
Toss out the 40-yard dash times. Forget the catchy references to thunder and lightning. Try to ignore any comments about speed, power, burst, vision ... you know the list.
For Cody Glenn, none of those things comes to mind when he’s telling you what Nebraska coaches are looking for in a starting running back.
“Probably the No. 1 thing is somebody who’s going to protect No. 13,” said Glenn, a sophomore running back. “They preach that every day. If you’re not going to protect, you’re not going to play.”
Of course, No. 13 is Nebraska’s starting quarterback, Zac Taylor. And you may recall that Taylor absorbed his share of hits — and sacks — last season.
“He got hit too many times,” Glenn said. “We’ve got to do a lot better job.”
Glenn was referring to those returning running backs vying to replace last year’s starter, Cory Ross. There are four of them, plus a newcomer, junior college transfer Kenny Wilson.
But Glenn and fellow sophomore Marlon Lucky shared the No. 1 spot on the post-spring depth chart, according to Glenn. No official depth chart was released.
Glenn and Lucky, however, are statistically the most-experienced backs from last season, as they combined for 88 carries and 260 yards in backup roles to Ross. It makes sense if they’re the front-runners.
But they’ll only stay at the top of the chart if they’re able to block and pick up blitzes, therefore keeping Taylor off his keister.
“Picking up blitzes, knowing which way they’re coming from, all of that stuff,” Lucky said. “If you let (the defenders) go, and they get to the quarterback, that’s not good.”
No, it’s not.
Lucky can’t remember blocking in high school, save for the time he dabbled at tight end.
“I had to catch on to it (at Nebraska),” Lucky said, noting he also struggled in learning the system the first part of his true freshman season.
“I didn’t know the playbook, I didn’t know the plays, didn’t know route-running, footwork ... nothing,” Lucky said. “The playbook was so big, and you’d look through it, and you’d have to keep going and going. Then you go to practice and mess up ... that was stressful.”
It’d stand to reason, then, to expect Wilson — despite those dazzling reports of his running ability and physical prowess — to be a step behind the incumbents during fall camp.
Glenn and Lucky aren’t so sure.
“He’s way ahead of where I was last year,” Lucky said of Wilson. “He’s going to bring his stuff. He’s going to bring his ‘A’ game.”
Said Glenn of the newcomer: “He did great with offseason conditioning stuff. For us to see that and know that he’s ready, that pushes all of us. We’ve got to step it up a little bit.”
Nebraska coaches have been very guarded when discussing the running back situation. Forget asking about a front-runner. Bill Callahan and running backs coach Randy Jordan try their darnedest not to mention a player by name when discussing the race.
“We have a talented group there,” Callahan said. “All of them have unique traits and abilities.”
The group also includes junior Brandon Jackson, who’s recovering from another shoulder surgery, and Leon Jackson, who switched back to the position during the spring, left the team, and then returned.
Ross was Nebraska’s main running back in 2004 and 2005. Will coaches search for another single player to carry the load, or is it possible two or three players will form a “by-committee” approach?
“It’s one of those things if somebody emerges, that’s great,” Jordan said. “But right now, we have no depth chart. We are competing. We want to get these guys competing every day.
“The No. 1 thing is obviously being able to protect the passer, and second thing is to be able to protect the rock, and not necessarily in that order. If you put the ball on the ground and you can’t protect the passer, you’re not going to play.”
So, the participants know what’s expected. What if all five candidates adhere to the rules and offer little separation?
“I guess that’s why the coaches get paid all that money,” Glenn said, “to make these kinds of decisions.”