Thursday Husker news

From LJS

[SIZE=14pt]NU working hard to improve punt return game[/SIZE]

BY STEVEN M. SIPPLE / Lincoln Journal Star

Cory Ross says punt returns "can make or break a game."

"You have to have somebody back there who's a threat," he said.

Statistics indicate Nebraska lacked such a threat last season. Indeed, the Huskers, with true freshman Santino Panico returning most of the punts, ranked 107th nationally with an average of 5.8 yards per return.

Nebraska seems determined to improve those numbers this season. For one thing, first-year Husker assistant coach Ted Gilmore, who now oversees the area, has instilled in his return men a different mindset, Ross said.

"He just brings more of an attitude that you have to respect what you do back there," the senior I-back said. "It ain't about being back there and thinking, ‘OK, I'm catching these punts and whatever.' You have to take it seriously like you do with every job on the field. He's making us take it seriously."

Is that a change compared to last year?

"Definitely. Definitely," said Ross, repeating himself for emphasis.

Fifteen practices into preseason camp, several Huskers are in the hunt to replace Panico, who left the team during the offseason. Among the front-runners are Ross, Cortney Grixby, Terrence Nunn, Blake Tiedtke, Frantz Hardy, Grant Mulkey and Robert Rands.

Among those players, only Ross has experience from last season, when he returned three punts for 29 yards. Panico returned 22 for 68 yards.

Nebraska coaches chart return men's catches and drops during each practice. Gilmore said starting return men may not be determined until the week of the Sept. 3 opener against Maine.

"We have so many skilled athletes," NU head coach Bill Callahan said. "We're doing our best to improve the return situation and make sure we get the best player on the field."

Panico's struggles elicited grumbling from fans. Grixby, though, defends Panico, pointing to his ability to catch the ball in traffic.

"We fielded the ball last season, and that's the whole purpose of punt returning — to gain possession for the offense," said Grixby, a sophomore cornerback. "From that perspective, we did very well. As far as return yardage, we need improvement."

Grixby said Nebraska coaches, above all, stress catching the ball.

Their philosophy after a player makes the catch?

"Make somebody miss and get up field," Grixby said. "When you're returning punts, there are going to be guys you have to make miss. All the great returners can do that."

Bill Busch, Nebraska special- teams coordinator, instructs return men to "excite the blockers," Grixby said.

"If your blockers are excited, they'll block harder, and we'll get yardage," Grixby said.

As for Husker kickoff returners, about a half-dozen players have been mentioned as leading contenders: Tierre Green, Marlon Lucky, Titus Brothers, Bryan Wilson, Nunn and Hardy.

"I think they're still evaluating, but right now I'm on the first string with Tierre," said Lucky, who returned kickoffs for North Hollywood (Calif.) High School. He returned two kickoffs for touchdowns as a junior and one as a senior.

"Teams started squibbing kicks to us because they didn't want either of our guys to return them," said North Hollywood coach Brad Ratcliff.

Nebraska ranked 67th nationally last season in kickoff returns. Green averaged 19.2 yards on 26 attempts, and Brandon Jackson averaged 21.1 yards on 17 chances, breaking one for 59 yards.

Jackson, however, has been held out of contact this month because of a shoulder injury. He's cleared to begin contact drills Aug. 26.

"I want to be back there," he said. "I did OK last year, and I'm looking to do better this year."

Same goes for his team, especially when it comes to punt returns.

 
From LJS

[SIZE=14pt]Secondary education a new opportunity for freshman Jackson[/SIZE]

BY BRIAN ROSENTHAL / Lincoln Journal Star

Leon Jackson isn't playing running back anymore. That doesn't mean he won't be touching the ball.

Confused? Don't be. Just listen to what Jackson's father, Leon Jackson Sr., told his son about moving to free safety.

"He said that once you intercept the ball, you're a running back again," Jackson said. "That's my goal."

Leave it to Dad to point out the positives.

Not that Jackson, a true freshman on the Nebraska football team, necessarily needed a pick-me-up. After all, it was his decision to move to defense. He approached Nebraska coach Bill Callahan earlier this week and volunteered his services at free safety.

"I think he was shocked that I even came up to him and said that," said Jackson, who played safety in the U.S. Army High School All-American game in January. "The look on his face was like … I think he was thinking, ‘Oh, you read my mind.' I think he was planning to have me at free safety."

The 6-foot-2, 210-pound Jackson entered fall camp — albeit a couple of days late — as a running back. Coaches said before the season that Jackson, a two-way standout at Pasco (Wash.) High School, would be given every opportunity to prove himself on offense.

But Jackson said he wanted to contribute early and help the team as much as possible. Then he did the math. Including Jackson, the Huskers had five viable options at running back, including returning starter Cory Ross.

Only one letterwinner — Andrew Shanle — was returning at free safety. Hence, Jackson's decision.

His move is among several sudden changes this week among Nebraska's safeties. Senior Shane Siegel, who was practicing at strong safety, has left the team. Jackson moved to free safety. And Shanle, listed No. 1 at free safety on the pre-spring depth chart, has moved to strong safety, with returning starter Daniel Bullocks.

Jackson said Shanle is rotating between both positions. When Shanle's at strong safety, the candidates at free safety are Jackson, Blake Tiedtke and Tyler Fisher.

"I think (Fisher) has helped me the most," said Jackson, who's been working mostly with the second unit. "He sits there and actually spends time with me to go over the plays. Because of him, I'm picking it up faster."

Like any true freshman, Jackson is focusing on learning his plays and staying focused mentally. He's also working with special teams, on kickoff, kickoff return and punt block. Jackson blocked four punts his senior year of high school.

"He's a pretty physical guy," Ross said. "Like I said before, he'd put his head in there (as a running back) and block. He's very fast, and it looks like he's fine technique-wise."

Ross said Jackson probably would be able to "just play football" at free safety and not think as much as he'd have to playing running back. Jackson, who had to await the OK from the NCAA academic clearinghouse, missed the first two days of practice.

"It was just in the blitz pickup, the pass, what routes we had to do," Jackson said of the challenges of learning the running back position. "It was just a little difficult. Being two days behind, that's 80 plays right there, because we learn 40 every day. That's a killer."

But is Jackson's move to defense permanent?

"Coach Callahan said for now, yes, it is," Jackson said. "But he said, ‘Don't be surprised if I'm coming at you to run the rock.' Whenever he's ready for me to run the ball, I'm ready."

 
From LJS

[SIZE=14pt]Meet the new guys: Leon Jackson & Bryan Wilson[/SIZE]

BY BRIAN ROSENTHAL / Lincoln Journal Star

Leon Jackson

Like many true freshmen, Leon Jackson is living a long way from home for the first time. He's not alone, though. His fiance, Dominique, also moved to Lincoln and is taking classes at Southeast Community College. Leon and Dominique are looking at July 2007 for a wedding date. For now, the native of Pasco, Wash., is trying to learn his new position of free safety. He spent the first week of his Husker career with the running backs.

What do you like the most about Lincoln?

"Lincoln, it just feels like home. That's the reason why I committed here and signed. It's just so home. It's just like where I'm from. It's not a big city, it's a nice town. Plus, the fans love Nebraska."

Is Dominique OK with living here, too?

"Me and her agreed on it. We just wanted to get out, get away from home and learn how to grow by ourselves, have each other. It's been working. She loves Nebraska."

Of the veterans on the team, who are you closest with?

"Brandon Jackson. Me and Brandon got real tight when I was with the I-backs. We were trying to figure out if we're cousins or not. Right now, we're both doing research."

Seriously?

"Seriously. He has family in Chicago, I have family in Chicago. He has family under Tilman, I have family under Tilman. There's a possibility."

Who's doing the most research on that?

"Mostly Brandon. I'm trying to learn the defensive plays."

What are your impressions of Cody Glenn?

"I compare him to (USC tailback) LenDale White. I think he's more elusive than LenDale, though. He runs downhill. He has so much power behind him, and he moves like he's Barry Sanders. He has so much lateral movement. He's going to be a great back."

Bryan Wilson

Junior college transfer cornerback Bryan Wilson was among the last players to commit to the Huskers' 2005 recruiting class. He's currently working on the right side behind Tierre Green, who moved to the position during spring ball. Wilson said he's also a candidate to return kicks.

When did Nebraska appear on your radar screen?

"Late. It was late in the recruiting process. I took my recruiting trip Jan. 29. Actually, two weeks before that, I met Coach (Dennis) Wagner and Coach (John) Blake in L.A."

Where would you have ended up if not Nebraska?

"It was between here and Texas Tech, so probably Texas Tech."

What do you like about Lincoln?

"I can't say a whole lot, because I haven't been around. Me and Cody Glenn, we drove around Sunday looking for a Sprint store to get my phone fixed. That was about the most I've been around the city."

Do you have reservations coming from the West Coast to the Midwest?

"It's a slower pace, definitely. It's not anything I can't adjust to. The adjustment is easier when you have a lot of good people on the team, like we do."

Are you healthy?

"Yeah, I finally got healthy. I had three years of injuries. After high school, after ‘02, I had a string of bad luck. Now I'm healthy, trying to work my way up the chart and get a starting spot."

 
From OWH

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[SIZE=14pt]Rands wants to get a kick out of his first NU season[/SIZE]

BY RICH KAIPUST

LINCOLN - Weighing just 155 pounds, Robert Rands sees more than a few Nebraska football teammates who are twice as heavy as him.

At just 5 feet 7, Rands is only taller than 5-6 Cory Ross and Brandon Rigoni.

But he's far beyond throwing a penny in the local fountain and wishing he were 6-1 and 200 pounds.

"I'm satisfied with my size," Rands said Tuesday. "I've got speed, a good vertical, so everything works out.

"I'm pretty tough. I've been hanging in there. During Oklahoma (one-on-one) drills, sometimes I win and sometimes I don't. But I'm pretty tough for my size."

Besides, Rands has bigger issues than his measurements nearing the midway point of preseason camp.

Rands feels a little uncomfortable working out at cornerback, where his development is going to be a project. The freshman from Bellevue East wants to return kicks, but so do several other Huskers.

And because of a hectic track schedule, he never really got to catch his breath before arriving in Lincoln.

"I just got back a couple of days or a day before we had to report here," said Rands, who won the long jump at the Pan American Junior Championships in late July. "I've had a busy summer. I haven't had much of a break. I've just tried to hang in there with training camp."

If Rands plays this season, it will be on special teams. He is being tried as a punt and kickoff returner, and coach Bill Callahan mentioned Monday that Rands is being looked at as a player who can block punts.

Rands said his speed and vision serve him well returning kicks.

"That's what I like doing," Rands said. "That's what I want to keep working on to get better and better.

"I'm not the biggest guy, but I don't worry about big guys coming down. I just go."

Rands doesn't speak so confidently of his transition at cornerback. In fact, he said he hasn't really enjoyed it all that much.

But sophomore cornerback Cortney Grixby said Rands has the tools to play the position.

"He's very explosive," Grixby said. "He has very great hips and ability to change direction, and that's what you need to be a corner. He's just a great athlete. You jump 25 feet, and that speaks for itself."

Rands' track career will resume next spring at NU, when he joins coach Gary Pepin's squad. His résumé will include breaking two Gale Sayers long jump state records that stood for more than four decades, and his leap of 24 feet, 113/4 inches to win the Pan Am Junior gold.

"That's what I want to do," Rands said. "I'm a great long jumper, and I want to continue to do great things in that."

 
From GII

[SIZE=14pt]McKeon willing to do whatever needed to help NU[/SIZE]

Linebacker loses his Mohawk, overcomes injury, stays patient

By Mike Babcock

For The Independent

LINCOLN -- Of all the unusual (for lack of a better word) haircuts players sported on the first day of the Nebraska football team's training camp, Corey McKeon's stood out. His was a Mohawk, a serious Mohawk that would have made any Nirvana-bred, hardcore punk rocker proud.

"I looked pretty raw coming out that first day, didn't I?" McKeon said.

The Mohawk, administered by fellow linebacker Bo Ruud, was short-lived. Defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Kevin Cosgrove took one look at it and told McKeon to shave it off.

"He said, 'Hey, no individuals on this team, kid,'" said McKeon.

Individualism wasn't his intent. Unity was. So by day's end, the Mohawk was gone.

"I wanted to keep it, but he wouldn't let me," McKeon said. "I understand."

Still, the Mohawk was appropriate, in a sense what you'd expect beneath the helmet of a middle linebacker, which McKeon is. The sophomore from Naperville, Ill., played five positions in high school, and Nebraska recruited him to play either strong safety or linebacker.

Frank Solich was the coach, and like most incoming freshmen then, McKeon was redshirted.

"I knew I was going to redshirt," he said. "I needed to put weight on. So I came in with the mentality just to get bigger, get stronger, get better. If they need you, they need you. If they don't, no big deal."

At 6-foot-1 and 225 pounds, McKeon still isn't big for a middle linebacker. But like the Mohawk, a few minutes conversation confirms he fits the profile. Plus, he understands the position.

"He's one of those guys who knows what he's doing out there," Ruud said. "That's what I really look for in a player, a smart player. And he's one of those guys."

McKeon comes by his understanding of the game naturally. His dad, Larry, was his coach at Naperville North High School and played football at Illinois. And three of McKeon's uncles played Division I football as well.

McKeon has emerged from relative anonymity during training camp to take a significant number of snaps with the first defense, after a foot injury sidelined him in the spring.

Despite the injury, he didn't lament his situation. And he might have tried to practice.

"You can't get down," he said. "It happens. Injuries happen. You don't go through any career saying you're not going to get hurt, you know what I mean? You've just got to get yourself back up, even if that's playing with a little pain. You play with a little pain. You play injured, to a certain extent, until they take you helmet away and not let you practice, like they did to me."

In the spring, Cosgrove said he might move linebackers around to get both Ruud and Steve Octavien on the field at the same time, which would have put Octavien in the middle instead of at weakside.

"There was a possibility, if no one showed up in the middle," said Octavien.

Talk of a position switch quickly subsided, however, with McKeon, junior college transfer Dontrell Moore, sophomore Lance Brandenburgh -- who has been injured and unable to practice -- and true freshman Phillip Dillard in the mix.

Dillard is regarded as position's future. He even wears a No. 38 jersey, the same as Barrett Ruud, the leading tackler in Cornhusker history. The 6-foot-2, 250-pound Dillard is "getting more of the mental aspect," McKeon said. "He realizes this game is mental now, not just physical.

"Once he gets the defense down, he's going to be a great player."

McKeon isn't conceding anything, however.

"Coach Coz will tell you every position's open. There are no starters at any time, for any position, not just the Mike (backer)," he said.

That job uncertainty and the influx of talented newcomers such as Dillard have produced competition in training camp. And the team is bound to benefit.

He was talking to Octavien recently, said McKeon, and they concluded, "we're deep at every spot on defense. We've got young guys who are playing great ball. We've got old guys playing great ball. We can put any of our first three players at a position and we're going to get great results, especially the way Coach Coz is working us up. Everyone's getting reps."

McKeon fits a middle linebacker's mold, except, perhaps, for the No. 13 jersey.

"They tried to give me 53, 52," he said. "But I was like, 'Give me a lower number.'"

 
Jackson ready for action at safety

BY MITCH SHERMAN

817jllj.jpg


LINCOLN - Senior Daniel Bullocks, playing the role of wise veteran, offered words of advice last week for Leon Jackson as the freshman moved from I-back to free safety.

Leon," he said, "if you don't know what you're doing, just get to the football. If you do know what you're doing, that would be better.

"But if not, get to the ball."

Therein lies Nebraska coach Bill Callahan's motivation in encouraging Jackson's position switch, the most significant of any move this month in training camp. Jackson can get to the ball in a hurry.

He is perhaps as fast any NU player. And at 6-foot-2 and 210 pounds, the decorated newcomer appears ideally built for the defensive backfield. Recruited last year with the promise he could start his college career on offense, Jackson has handled the move with grace.

"If it's what coach Callahan wants, I'm going to do it," Jackson said Wednesday after his sixth practice with the defense. "I thought my strongest point was running back, but coach Callahan showed me that my strongest point was safety."

Jackson, a Parade All-American last year out of Pasco, Wash., actually initiated the conversation with his coach that led to the shift. He played a limited role on defense in high school before trying safety for a week in January at the U.S. Army All-American Bowl.

Still, Jackson thought he would fit best in Lincoln as an I-back. Friends and family told him otherwise. Even Jackson's dad told him he had the body of a safety.

After about a week in training camp with running backs Cory Ross, Brandon Jackson, Marlon Lucky and Cody Glenn, he began to agree.

"We've already got great backs," Leon Jackson said, "So I came up to (Callahan) and said, 'Where do you need me most?' He was like, 'I need you at safety.'

"I'm not going to get mad or anything. I'm going back there because I want to help the team."

The second-year coach said Jackson's move is not necessarily permanent.

"We could bring him back to offense, but it's safe to say right now that he's going to be back there for a while so he can learn the position," Callahan said. "He's got a lot of versatility. We'd rather just settle him in at the free safety spot right now and get him to learn the defense and get confident in his role."

As a safety, Jackson said, he won't fear contact.

"I'm used to it," he said. "Just being up here at running back for a few days, (linebacker) Steve Octavien laid me out. I just got right back up. I was fine."

Jackson said he can hardly wait to see a receiver coming at him on a slant route once the season begins. He expects to challenge for playing time this fall.

In preseason practices, Jackson has also worked on the kickoff coverage, kickoff return and punt block teams.

"It's a work in progress," Callahan said, "because every day he's learning something new. Every day is a new day for him."

 
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