2015 football season preview

16
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF SYRACUSE , NEW YORK 2015 FOOTBALL GUIDE FRESH SLATE

Upload: the-daily-orange

Post on 23-Jul-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2015 Football Season Preview

t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k

201 5 FOOTBALL GUIDE

FRESHSLATE

Page 2: 2015 Football Season Preview

2 the daily orange football guide 2015

The Daily Orange is published weekdays during the Syracuse University academic year by The Daily Orange Corp., 744 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. All contents Copyright 2015 by The Daily Orange Corp. and may not be reprinted without the expressed written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Orange is distributed on and around campus with the first two copies complimentary. Each additional copy costs $1. The Daily Orange is in no way a subsidy or associated with Syracuse University.

All contents © 2015 The Daily Orange Corporation

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

EDITORIAL 315 443 9798 BUSINESS 315 443 2315 GENERAL FAX 315 443 3689 ADVERTISING 315 443 9794

t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k

Cover photo by Logan Reidsma | Photo editor

Sports Editor Sam BlumPresentation Director Chloe MeisterPhoto Editor Logan ReidsmaWeb Editor Jesse DoughertySocial Media Producer Laina PisanoMultimedia Director Leslie EdwardsWeb Developer Brendan WinterAsst. Sports Editor Connor GrossmanAsst. Sports Editor Matt SchneidmanAsst. Photo Editor Chase GuttmanAsst. Photo Editor Moriah RatnerDesign Editor Colleen SimmsAsst. Copy Editor Chris LibonatiAsst. Copy Editor Paul SchwedelsonAsst. Sports Web Editor Sam Fortier

General Manager Christopher RussoIT Manager Maxwell BurggrafIT Support Tech GeekeryBusiness Assistant Tim Bennett

Web Programmer Tyler RandAdvertising Manager Lucy SutphinAdvertising Representate David BakerAdvertising Representative Gonzalo GarciaAdvertising Representative Sarah CooksonAdvertising Assistant Lauren SinatraAdvertising Assistant Lucy SutphinAdvertising Assistant Manuel Garcia

Digital Sales JJ House

Special Events Coordinator Angela Anastasi

Special Sections Coordinator Caroline MahonyMarketing Assistant Yuqi ZhouAdvertising Design Manager Alexandra Perle Advertising Designer Alex PerleAdvertising Designer Andrew MaldonadoAdvertising Designer Kerri NashAdvertising Copywriter Emma Melamed

Circulation Manager Charles Plumpton

Student Circulation Manager Michael Rempter

Mara CorbettEDITOR IN CHIEF

Brett SamuelsMANAGING EDITOR

86

Dear Readers,

It's that time of year again. Our 2015 football preview provides a great inside look on the previous hurdles and forward-thinking goals of four of Syracuse's senior contributors. We'll delve into the recovery process and offseason regimen of quarterback Terrel Hunt. We'll show the injury struggles and perseverance of defen-sive lineman Luke Arciniega, as well as the maturation process of offensive lineman Ivan Foy and cornerback Julian Whigham. We also dive into stories from around the conference and the country, as well as look at the key stats for Syracuse football heading into the new season.

Thanks for reading,Sam Blum, Sports Editor

Page 3: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 3

CLEAR VISION

Text by Sam Blumsports editor

Photo by David Salanitristaff photographer

TAKE AWAY THE FANS. Take away the media. Take away the pressure. Terrel Hunt spent the summer on the Syracuse practice fields testing his teammates. The only eyes watching were his, trying

to get everyone else to think the way he thought.“Run a seam route,” he’d instruct, know-

ing the defense was positioned to ensure it wouldn’t work. He’d set his receivers up to fail, but hope they’d adjust their route and break off quicker so he could feed them the ball.

When Hunt lined up the offense, he told receiver Steve Ishmael to call out the type of defense they were opposing. Usually Ishmael was right, but when he was wrong, Hunt wouldn’t say a word, instead letting the fail-ure breed success in the future.

Hunt knows how to get the most out of his teammates. He knows that if he wants to call out Ron Thompson, he better do it with no one else in earshot. He knows that with other

players, being honest in front of everyone makes them motivated to work even harder.

“I always want them to think they can talk to me about anything, they can tell me, ’T-Hunt, you not doing well.’ But nobody ever has to tell me that, because I do my job,” Hunt said “…Nobody ever gets on my case because I don’t allow them to…If I’m doing more than you, you can’t say anything to me.”

In 2014, Hunt wasn’t the quarterback and leader he’s hoping to establish himself as in 2015. In the first half of the season’s first game, he was ejected for punching a Villano-va defender in the helmet. Four games later, in the midst of a three-game losing streak, Hunt suffered a season-ending injury when he fractured the fibula in his right leg.

The expectations placed on him now are similar to the one’s he had entering last year’s lost season. But now he’s more equipped to handle them. After struggling to watch Syracuse lose six of its final seven games from the sideline, the Orange’s fifth-year senior quarterback has reinvented him-self heading into his final season.

Hunt grows more comfortable in leadership role following lost season as he enters his final shot as Syracuse’s quarterback

TERREL HUNT

54.2%of Hunt’s touchdowns have come from rushing

3Throwing TDs vs

Power Conference opponents

12Interceptions vs.

Power Conference opponents

10TH

Hunt’s ranking in all time SU history with 2,621 passing yards

5.6

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

AV

G. Y

AR

DS

PER

RU

SH

2013

2014

4.7

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

AV

G. Y

AR

DS

PER

PA

SS

2013

2014

6.8

6

see hunt page 4

Page 4: 2015 Football Season Preview

4 the daily orange football guide 2015

“I think any time a young man at that posi-tion grows confident in his playing abilities, his ability to influence others on the team, it’s a maturation that’s exciting to see,” SU head coach Scott Shafer said. “He’s owned it. He’s embraced it.”

Every day after his injury Hunt would receive a call from his grandmother, Eunice Semple. Every time his message to her would be the same. “I’m OK. I’m OK.” Hunt didn’t want to open up, Semple said, but she knew he was hurting.

She knew that even when Hunt had the smallest of injuries, his late mother, Katrina, treated it like a catastrophe. A small paper cut would be bandaged up like he was seriously bleeding. As a child, Semple

said, Hunt readily expressed his emotions. Now facing the first significant injury of his life, he closed himself off.

“Terrel never really showed his feelings ever since his mother passed,” Semple said. “What-ever happens, ‘It’s OK. I’m alright. I can do it.’ But he never talked about his feelings. I felt like he didn’t want me to worry.”

When Hunt was a child and had a problem, he’d sit on Semple’s lap and put his head onto her shoulder and tell her what was wrong. The first time he came home following his injury, he

saw his grandmother, sat down next to her and put his head onto her shoulder.

At home, the talk of Hunt’s injury — aside from routine physical therapy sessions — was few and far between. Valencia Hunt, his guard-ian since Hunt was 14, said since everyone else was asking him about his injury, she steered clear of the topic.

Ben Lewis, his roommate and teammate, didn’t want to say Hunt was disappointed by the circumstances. But he remembered Hunt fruitlessly hoping that if the team played well

enough to make a bowl game, he’d make his triumphant return in December.

Hunt didn’t want to talk about what he’d been through. He wanted to move past it.

“That’s always the conversation with him,” Valenica Hunt said. “No matter what it is, it’s just, let’s move forward. Let’s move forward. Deal with where you are, what you have to do with it, let’s move forward.”

Now with a new season, and a new — albeit final — chance to prove himself as a quarter-back, he intends to come back as a different one

than he was before. He tried losing weight in an effort to become

more of a pocket passer. He doesn’t want to risk getting injured again. He’s always been a nat-ural runner — 13 of his 24 career touchdowns have come using his legs — but taking that risk is what hurt him in the first place.

He spent a summer with renowned quarter-back coach George Whitfield, who would take a broom and force Hunt to evade the bristles as he swept it back and forth near his feet. It was one of many drills to help him become more comfort-able in his element, by taking him out of it.

During the few hours he didn’t spend work-ing with teammates in Syracuse over the sum-mer, he worked on his visuals. Hunt asked graduate assistant Joe Furco to test him on different coverages and fronts.

“He’s done a good job of just communicating in the huddle,” offensive coordinator Tim Lester said. “…All those guys, they need to be another coach out there. He’s done a good job of that.”

Hunt knows Lester won’t get upset at him as long as he has a reason for everything. It’s not always a good reason, Lester says, but at least having one can help correct the process.

Everything Hunt has done and continues to do leading up to the season has a purpose. It’s a type of leadership that even he admits he didn’t bring to the table as the starter last season.

“10 cent” he’ll yell at his receivers when they mess up on a route or drop a ball, taxing them for the mistake. “10 cent,” they’ll yell back at him for his own bad pass.

He’s holding them, and himself accountable. He’s showing just how much every penny and every step really matters to him, even when no one else is watching.

“I really don’t care what anybody says. The media can write what they write. The fans can say what they say,” Hunt said. “But my teammates believe in me. And they know that I believe in them. It really doesn’t matter what’s being said. I feel like I got way better. I got smarter.”

[email protected] @SamBlum3

from page 3

hunt

I THINK ANY TIME A YOUNG MAN AT THAT POSITION GROWS CONFIDENT IN HIS PLAYING ABILITIES, HIS ABILITY TO INFLUENCE OTHERS ON THE TEAM, IT’S A MATURATION THAT’S EXCITING TO SEE. HE’S OWNED IT. HE’S EMBRACED IT.Scott Shafersu head coach

TERREL HUNT was unable to return from a fractured right fibula last season. He spent his offseason preparing to become more of a pocket passer despite the majority of his career touchdowns coming on the run. spencer bodian staff photographer

Page 5: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 5

Text by Jesse Doughertyweb editor

Photo by David Salanitristaff photographer

ALL SPRING, LUKE ARCINIEGA WAS PREPARING for a season that could have never come.

He attacked a switch to defensive end with aban-don, marrying himself to his playbook while reshap-ing a decade of linebacker training. He added muscle

in the weight room. Then more muscle. A bag of protein sat next to his bed in his University Village apartment. Another in the kitchen. Everything geared toward a football career that may have finally slipped through his fingers.

Injuries had run Arciniega’s eligibility dry and there was a chance he’d played his last college game against Louisville on Oct. 3, 2014. Then he was in Syracuse’s athletic compliance office one afternoon last March and a staff member congratulated him.

“Wait, did I just ruin it?” they asked. “I don’t know, what did you ruin?” Arciniega answered. Soon Arciniega learned that, after months of hoping and

waiting, he’d been granted two additional years of eligibility from the NCA A. He immediately called his parents, sister and girlfriend. When he got back to his apartment he joked to his roommate, former SU linebacker Josh Kirkland, that he’d be at Syracuse long enough to get a Ph.D.

“No way,” Kirkland said to him. “You were only expecting to get one year back.”

If football has taught Arciniega anything, it’s to steer clear of firm expectations. His Division I career was supposed to start in 2010 at the University of Nevada, a 20-minute drive from his hometown of Spanish Springs, but he was medically disqualified for head injuries after sustaining a concussion in the first week of training camp. What followed was a jagged path to Syracuse, including three semesters away from football, a year at Sierra (California) College and a series of injuries that have hampered him in two seasons with the Orange.

Now he’s found stability as a 23-year-old junior defensive end, and one of Syracuse’s four captains, five years after graduating

FATHER TIMELuke Arciniega graduated from high school in 2010, and has improbably found stability at 23

see arciniega page 6

LUKE ARCINIEGA

5 1 All five of the upperclassmen on the defensive line for Syracuse are at least two months younger than Arciniega, who is 23.

Luke Arciniega's number at Syracuse, Sierra College and Spanish Springs High School.

On Aug. 5, Arciniega and his girlfriend Rachel found out that Rachel is pregnant with a boy.

It's been five years since Arciniega graduated from Spanish Springs High School, and he's been to three colleges in that time.

It was in the fifth game of Syracuse's 2014 season, at home against Louis-ville, that Arciniega suffered another foot injury that sidelined him for the rest of the year.

2

3

4

5

Defensive end Luke Arciniega wears the No. 5, but some significant tidbits from his recent football career have meaning with the number as well.

HIGH FIVE

Page 6: 2015 Football Season Preview

6 the daily orange football guide 2015

high school with two years left to play. “You have to take advantage of being able

to play while you can,” Arciniega said. “It’s not going to be around forever.”

Joe Imelli was sitting at his desk in the physical education office at Shaw (Nevada) Middle School when a scrawny seventh grader with flowing hair walked in. The kid intro-duced himself as Luke Arciniega and Imelli shook his extended hand. Imelli could see the physical outline of a football player but it was only a blank canvas, untouched by weights or Arciniega’s eventual growth spurt.

In the next six years, the scrawny seventh grader grew into the centerpiece of an impen-etrable defense. He drew college interest by his junior season and Spanish Springs shift-ed Arciniega to middle linebacker before his senior year. The Nevada coaches regularly made the short drive to see him play. When they offered a scholarship, Arciniega jumped to play for the team he grew up watching.

He was around 210 pounds after joining Nevada’s Class of 2010, and they told him they wanted him to be between 240 and 250 when he got to campus. Arciniega went to his mom Nancy’s pizza shop, Manny & Olga’s, every day for lunch and stomached pizza, wings and fries. The customers who came in and out told him they were excited to see him play for the hometown team.

But then came an unforgettable hit during a forgettable training camp play. A “misun-derstanding” with the Nevada coaches about Arciniega’s concussion and concussion history led him to leave the team and sport all at once.

“One thing I do know is that they made a mistake,” said Lawrence Quadrio, who was Arciniega’s defensive coordinator at Spanish Springs. “However it went down, I have no problem saying it on the record that Nevada made a mistake.”

To keep his scholarship, Arciniega took an internship with the Nevada athletic depart-ment. With Arciniega standing on the side-lines, not in pads or a uniform, now-San Fran-cisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick led the Wolf Pack to a 13-1 record including a West-ern Athletic Conference championship, a win over Boston College in the Fight Hunger Bowl and a No. 11 national ranking at season’s end.

Jeremiah Green, then a sophomore line-backer and Arciniega’s roommate, would come home from practice most nights to find Arciniega laying on his dorm-room bed lamenting his situation.

“I just want to play, that’s it,” Arciniega said to Green one night.

“Well right now you can’t,” Green recalls telling him. “You just need to focus on how you can get better, and you can’t let one person tell you that you can’t play.”

In time, Arciniega listened. He added close to 40 pounds of muscle in the weight room, sought

a second medical opinion and moved an hour west to Rocklin, California after he was cleared.

He revived his career in a stadium that held just 1,500 fans, where his play with the Sierra Wolverines drew interest from a handful of power-five programs. After one junior college season, he committed to play linebacker for Syracuse.

“I think that once it wasn’t there for him he felt something,” Brice Anderson, Arciniega’s high school linebackers coach, said. “I think he really realized how much he missed it. And he was so excited to get the opportunity at Syracuse.”

Arciniega collected 18 total tackles while playing in all of SU’s 13 games in 2013. But hip problems, that had lingered since the start of his football career, became debilitating and he had one of his hips replaced days after Syracuse beat Minnesota in the Texas Bowl.

With a replacement for his other hip sched-uled a month and a half after the first, Arciniega again found himself at the intersection of love and frustration. He got lunch with Quadrio, like he always did, at Bully’s Sports Bar and Grill in Spanish Springs. Sitting across from Quadrio was the linebacker who once blitzed on a screen pass and chased a speedy running back for 60 yards before tackling him at the doorstep of the end zone. It was one of the best defensive players he’d ever coached. It was still Luke Arciniega, even if there was heavy doubt in his eyes.

“I don’t think I’ll be able to finish this off like I wanted to,” Quadrio remembers Arciniega saying to him.

Instead, Arciniega underwent the second replacement and readied himself for the next year. Then he suffered a foot injury against Maryland, three weeks into the season. A quick rehab had him back two games later against Louisville in the Carrier Dome, but he re-in-jured his foot and sat out the Orange’s final seven games to avoid surgery.

While Arciniega made yet another come-back, his future was completely out of his hands. Quadrio had always urged Arciniega to apply for an additional year of eligibility for his lost freshman season at Nevada, and missing most of 2014 pushed him to do so.

When the NCA A surprised Arciniega by giving him two years — for his first year at Nevada and his most recent season with SU — he was knee deep in his transition to defensive end. During training camp, SU defensive line coach Tim Daoust monitored his progress daily and said he’s ready to stop the run and close to being a viable pass rusher for a defen-sive line that graduated three starters after last season.

Syracuse’s other defensive linemen, all younger than Arciniega, call the 23-year-old “Grandpa” and “Dad” to remind him of his winding road to now. Coincidentally, he and his girlfriend Rachel found out on Aug. 5 that she’s pregnant with a boy and is due in January.

“I hope he can look back at my film,” Arcinie-ga said. “And whatever he wants to do, whether it’s sports or not, I hope he’ll be able to take something from it.”

One day, Arciniega’s son will hear stories about his father. He’ll hear about the fear he inspired in opponents at Spanish Springs. He’ll hear about what happened at Nevada. The year and a half away from football. The resurgence. The injuries. The rehabs. The switch to defen-sive end and whatever happens next.

And then he’ll know that his dad never gave up.

[email protected] | @dougherty_jesse

from page 5

arciniega

YOU HAVE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF BEING ABLE TO PLAY WHILE YOU CAN. IT’S NOT GOING TO BE AROUND FOREVER.Luke Arciniegasu defensive end

Page 7: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 7

Text by Matt Schneidmanasst. sports editor

Photo by David Salanitristaff photographer

PAOLA FOY WAS GETTING READY to leave the house when her mother called in a panic.

It was Winter Break in 2013, just after Paola’s older brother and Syr-acuse’s starting right tackle, Ivan,

helped the Orange to a 21-17 win over Minnesota in the Texas Bowl.

He was sleeping in bed, so Paola woke him up, confused why her mother feared for his future after getting off the phone with SU head coach Scott Shafer. But Ivan knew. He tried explaining to his sister that he’d been suspend-ed from all team activities for failing a class in the fall, but words wouldn’t come out. He stayed in the same spot in bed for six hours, looking up at the ceiling, wondering if he’d ever play football for Syracuse again.

“I wanted to die,” Foy’s mother, Ramona Santana said. “When the coach called me and told me that, I wanted to die.”

Foy openly talks about his bumps in the road. The immaturity as a freshman third-string-er. The academic struggles that threatened his future at Syracuse. The six-game absence last season because of a right knee injury that deflated his morale.

They’ve helped mold the fifth-year senior working to perfect the intricacies of a new position after switching from right tackle to left. It’s a challenge belittled by past obstacles, but one that could validate Foy’s career in the last chance to do so.

“I don’t ever want to come off the field and say, ‘Damn, I wish I would’ve had this block and maybe we would’ve scored,’” Foy said. “Nah, I need to get everything done this year.”

•••Foy doesn’t hesitate for a second when admit-ting that his freshman self was immature.

He went through the motions because he felt he wasn’t getting attention. Andrew Tiller, a senior offensive lineman at the time, said Foy cut class and didn’t listen. The way Foy says

this year’s freshmen are “so smart and so into things” was absent with him four years ago.

“I knew that I wasn’t playing so I kind of laid back and kind of tried to enjoy college freshman year and not so much focus on football,” Foy said.

The only reason people were patient was because they knew Foy had intangibles to com-plement a maturity if it ever developed, Tiller said.

But until then, a 6-foot-4, 318-pound redshirt stood on the sideline with untapped potential.

•••When Ivan Foy Sr. hung up with Shafer – Foy left it to the head coach to tell his parents – Paola broke down in tears.

“Oh my god,” Foy Sr. now says with a chuck-le about the moment. “…I don’t even know how to describe it.”

Before Foy began his path back, Tiller had a stern message: “It’s not the end of the road yet, but

it can be if you don’t get your sh*t together well.”He had to pass all his classes, get above a 2.0

grade point average, stay in shape and then, if

he maintained all three, could rejoin the team if Shafer wanted.

Foy couldn’t be around the team in Manley Field House during spring ball. He estimates 95 percent of his time is spent with football players, so he felt uncomfortable not having them around.

When they were, he wouldn’t talk about football.In the meantime, he watched TV in his room,

played video games or shot hoops at Archbold Gymnasium. After being out of his element for an entire semester, he got a call from his advisor in the Falk College, who told Foy he’d met the academic requirements to return.

He was lying in the same spot in his bed, this time tearing up.

•••Foy ran down the MetLife Stadium turf against Notre Dame last September, looking to block a safety as the Orange ran an outside zone to the left.

“And out of nowhere, pop pop.”Doctors gave him two options: end his season

with surgery or rehab on his own and possibly play again. Foy chose the latter and began an eight-week stretch that included 2-3 rehab sessions per

see foy page 10

CHANGING STANCEFifth-year senior tackle Foy prepares for position switch after learning from past obstacles

IVAN FOY

I JUST WANT TO BE THAT GUY THAT THE O-LINE LEANS ON, LIKE YOU WANT TO RUN IT TO MY SIDE TO HAVE PRESSURE ON ME.”

Ivan Foysu left tackle

Page 8: 2015 Football Season Preview

8

Scott Shafer is officially named the head coach at Syracuse, replacing Doug Marrone after he was hired as the head coach of the Buffalo Bills. Shafer had been the defensive coordinator at SU since 2008, where he inherited a defense that allowed 32.7 points per game before his arrival, and improved it to one that was ranked No. 7 in the nation in 2010. Shafer hired Chuck Bullough to replace him in that role.

JANUARY 9, 2013

With Syracuse down 28 in the first half to No. 3-ranked Clemson, the Tigers went for the conversion on 4th down instead of attempting a field goal. Shafer screamed an obscenity across the field in the direction of Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney. Shafer later apolo-gized for the outburst. The loss dropped Syra-cuse's record to 2-3.

OCT. 5, 2013

After squeaking into a bowl game with a last-second touchdown pass from Terrel Hunt to Josh Parris, Shafer leads Syracuse to a 21-17 win over Minnesota in the Texas Bowl. Brisly Estime's 70-yard punt return helped set the Orange up for its second bowl win in two years.

DEC. 27, 2013

SCOTT SHAFER walks with his head down during Syracuse’s 27-10 loss to Duke on Nov. 8, 2014. After the game, Shafer pounded the podium while answering a question about whether the season was a disappointment. The loss dropped Syracuse to 3-7 on the sea-son and 1-4 in Atlantic Coast Conference play. Shafer had said the team’s goal was to win eight games in 2014, but SU fell well short. margaret lin staff photographer

THIRD DOWN

I ENVISION AN OFFENSE WITH A LOT OF JUICE. A LOT OF ORANGE JUICE … I WANT THIS TEAM TO BE AN OFFENSIVE

UNIT THAT WHEN YOU COME AND WATCH THEM PLAY YOU BETTER NOT

TAKE A BATHROOM BREAK. CAUSE THERE’S GONNA BE A LOT OF JUICE

ON THE FIELD. I ENVISION AN ORANGE CRUSH DEFENSE THAT MAKES THEIR

OPPONENT’S FAMILIES CRINGE WHEN THEIR CHILD’S TEAM COMES TO PLAY US.

Scott Shaferat opening press conference

342014-2015 RECRUITS 2

17

STAR WATCHIn Shafer’s two recruiting classes, he’s brought in twice as many three-star recruits as ones with none or two stars, according to Scout.com.

4-STAR RECRUITS

LESS THAN 3 STARS

3-STAR RECRUITS

Shafer is officially introduced to the Syracuse media. He breaks out his "hard-nosed" theme and expressed his desire to have a Carrier Dome "that shakes and intimidates and when we get the opposition in the Loud House, we lock the doors behind them and we don’t let them out for 60 minutes or more. Whatever it takes, they are locked in the Dome and aren’t allowed to escape.”

JANUARY 11, 2013

1

1 SCOTT SHAFER, seen here coaching against Clemson in 2013, screamed an obscenity at Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney during the game, which was a blowout loss in one of SU’s first tests against top ACC competition. Similar frustration reigned throughout the 2014 season, as the Orange stumbled to a 3-9 finish and lost nine of its last 10 games on the season. sam maller staff photographer

SHAFER’S RECORD

15

123-156-1Shafer enters 3rd season looking to rebound from miserable 3-9 year

Page 9: 2015 Football Season Preview

9

Shafer promotes Tim Lester to offensive coordinator, one day after a 28-6 drubbing from Louisville just five games into Syracuse's season. George McDonald, unhappy with his demotion to wide receivers coach, said if he knew he would only have 18 games to be offen-sive coordinator, that he would have stayed at Arkansas — the job he left for the higher position at SU.

OCT. 4, 2014

In the last question of the final spring football media opportunity, Shafer is asked if the lack of buzz around the team was by design. He'd previously tried to instill positivity around a team that just went 3-9, but said the seem-ingly less hype heading into his third season wasn't intentional. "No I don't think anyone designs a lack of buzz. I think that would be really stupid."

MARCH 31, 2015

SCOTT SHAFER gives high fives to the fans at Fan Fest during Training Camp. Shafer is going into his third season at SU. david salanitri staff photographer

YARD SALEShafer helped bring SU’s defense to prominence, leading the unit to allow 114 fewer yards per game in 2010 than in 2008. But the offense has declined since Shafer took over at the helm of the Orange.

2012

2014

476

330

2008

2010

415

301

BEFORE SHAFER BECAME DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR

SECOND YEAR SHAFER WAS DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR

BEFORE SHAFER BECAME HEAD COACH

NOW

OFFENSIVE YARDS PER GAMEYARDS ALLOWED PER GAME

100THIN NATION

7THIN NATION

18THIN NATION

116THIN NATION

Following a blowout loss to Louisville, Shafer tries to contextualize the importance of foot-ball by referring to world events at the time, including ISIS killings. The comments made national headlines.

OCT. 3, 2014

2

SU loses to No. 22 Duke, 27-10, to fall to 3-7 on the season. When asked by a reporter if he thought Syracuse's season was a disappoint-ment, Shafer slammed and broke the podium, upset with the question.

NOV. 8, 2014

3

SCOTT SHAFER, seen here coaching against Clemson in 2013, screamed an obscenity at Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney during the game, which was a blowout loss in one of SU’s first tests against top ACC competition. Similar frustration reigned throughout the 2014 season, as the Orange stumbled to a 3-9 finish and lost nine of its last 10 games on the season. sam maller staff photographer

NO DESPAIR. I’M THE LUCKIEST GUY ALIVE. I SEE ISIS IS OUT THERE CUTTING PEOPLE’S HEADS OFF. THE REAL WORLD’S GOT SOME MAJOR PROBLEMS. SOME MAJOR PROBLEMS. AND WE’RE JUST SO DOGGONE

LUCKY TO BE COACHING AND PLAYING A SPORT AND BEING CRITICIZED FOR NOT GETTING A CALL MADE WITH A COUPLE SECONDS LEFT IN THE GAME,

OR BEING CRITICIZED FOR NOT CATCHING A DEAD PIG WITH AIR IN IT. Scott Shafer

after loss to louisville2

BOUNCE BACKAfter a 7-6 season in 2013 that included a Texas Bowl win over Minnesota, Shafer led the Orange to only a 3-9 record. This year, he’ll try and flip the script.

SHAFER’S RECORD

10

LOSSESWINS

WELL, BECAUSE WE DIDN’T REACH OUR GOAL. THOSE QUESTIONS ARE HILARIOUS TO ME. I DON’T KNOW WHERE YOU COME UP WITH

THOSE. WE WANTED TO WIN EIGHT, AND WE DIDN’T WIN EIGHT SO WE’RE DISAPPOINTED.

OK, SO INTERESTING QUESTION RIGHT THERE.

Scott Shaferafter loss to duke

3123-156-1Scott Shafer’s all-time career coaching record since he became a graduate assistant at Indiana University in 1991. He’s been a coach every year since.

Page 10: 2015 Football Season Preview

10 the daily orange football guide 2015

day, coaching his teammates from the sideline and somberly walking into the training room.

Foy never missed a game in high school due to injury, Fort Hamilton head coach Daniel

Perez said. He had trouble coping with being sidelined and Paola said he even pondered culi-

nary school as a backup career path. But he returned Nov. 22 against Pittsburgh

and has been at full health since shortly after the season, easing his transition to left tackle. The change in technique is nothing drastic, just doing the opposite footwork and hand maneuvers. The position comes with increased pressure since he’s protecting quar-terback Terrel Hunt’s blindside, but Foy pre-fers it that way.

“He’s one of those guys, that if I was to get hit, he would get down on himself,” Hunt said. “He really cares about playing that position.”

It’s a different pressure than what Foy has shouldered before and one he marvels at. It’ll make his teammates and coaches trust him, something they haven’t always been able to do.

from page 7

foy

•••Foy’s forehead drips with sweat at a post-prac-tice interview, his “man bun” standing vertically on his head secured by a hair tie. He’s dropped 38 pounds since his freshman year and reflects on how the past guides who he’s become.

Whenever he’s in Brooklyn, Foy visits Fort Hamilton and preaches to the football team about staying on top of academics. This year he vows to lead strictly by example since he never liked being told what to do.

“Ivan’s like a new person, a new player,” center Rob Trudo said.

Paola, Foy’s only sibling of five that shares the same two parents, said he used to avoid all con-

versation with her. Now she feels comfortable going to him for advice in school or at home, and called his maturation mind-blowing.

Foy’s transformation off the field has formed a new player on it, and the hurdles he’s jumped have given him a new perspective on the delica-cy of a football career.

He’s itching to capitalize on this year’s clean slate, which is something he’s several times thought would never come again.

“I just want to be that guy that the O-line leans on, like you want to run it to my side to have pres-sure on me,” Foy said. “…just knowing it’s my last year and I’m going to give it all I’ve got.”

[email protected] | @matt_schneiman

IVAN FOY was immature as a freshman, got suspended for failing a class as a redhsirt soph-omore and missed six games due to injury last year. Now in his final season, he’s matured into a different person both on and off the field. logan reidsma photo editor

ACCORDING TO CUSE.COM ROSTERS, FOY HAS DROPPED 38 POUNDS

SINCE HIS FRESHMAN YEAR.

38

Page 11: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 11

Text by Paul Schwedelsonasst. copy editor

Photo by David Salanitristaff photographer

JULIAN WHIGHAM RECEIVED a text message from defen-sive coordinator Chuck Bullough at 5:30 a.m. similar to others he received throughout the summer.

“It’s your ball,” the text read.Whigham doesn’t respond with a message of his

own, but instead heeds Bullough’s advice on the practice field.“It just kind of gets your mind right when you get up

out of bed,” Whigham said.Whigham’s all about football from the moment he

wakes up, and the texts justify his overhauled lifestyle this offseason. Everything he’s done has been to change what happened last season and Bullough’s texts serve as the reminder: Last year, it wasn’t his ball.

Whigham structured his routines off the field in order to regain his confidence on it. How Whigham, a corner-back, matches up against the conference’s best receivers will determine if it paid off.

“My focus was that much more intense knowing this is my last go-round being a senior,” Whigham said.

Last season, Whigham wasn’t physical enough. He was inconsistent with his stance at the line of scrimmage and failed to make enough plays on the ball. Receivers attacked the ball with more power and got to it first.

“When there’s no consistency, you end up with games that I had,” Whigham said.

By the end of the year, his confidence was shot and he felt like he let the team down.

“‘Man, I really need to get my mind right,’” wide receiver Steve Ishmael recalled Whigham telling him at the end of the season.

He hid his PlayStation in his closet and stopped watch-ing TV. Whigham hit the weight room instead of sleeping in on Saturday mornings. He put Netflix aside to go to the practice field and work on his technique.

“It kind of clicked once the season ended like I need to do more,” Whigham said. “… I finally focused up, put it together and I’ve come out an entirely different person.”

Whigham added 15 pounds of muscle, and when he went home to Florida in May and saw his close friend Bobby Puyol for the first time since Winter Break, Puyol said, “Dang Julian, you’ve gotten so much bigger!”

“If you watch the film, Julian is right there,” Bullough said. “… It’s not like he’s busting (the coverage) and the guy’s 10 yards in front of him. He’s right there. He’s just got to concentrate on making the play.”

Part of the issue for Whigham was becoming comfortable with the shadow technique, a type of stance he said Syracuse head coach Scott Shafer implemented in the spring of his sophomore year.

Whigham spent his junior season trying to figure out what was most comfortable for him — feet spread wide or narrow, hips lifted high or knees bent low. It all contrib-uted to the season Whigham had.

But he’s decided the stance he will use this upcoming season and said he’s perfectly comfortable with it.

Off the field, Whigham completely altered his eating habits. He cut down visits to his favorite restaurants The Cheesecake Factory and Five Guys Burgers and Fries. He learned how to cook a few meals in his apartment so he didn’t have to go out. Whigham substituted the 20-piece Chicken McNugget meal for a bowl of homemade pasta.

In the past couple years, Whigham’s mother, Wanda, talked to him about cutting down on fatty foods. Whigham’s attitude was that he would just burn off the calories when he worked out, but now with his back against the wall, he conceded his favorite delicacies.

“It stresses his mom out when she looks at his Twitter and sees pictures of a Cheesecake Factory bag,” Wanda Whigham said of her son’s previous eating habits. “Or I see him tweet out that he’s happily going to Five Guys for burgers because that’s not healthy weight.”

Despite all the adjustments Whigham made, Shafer didn’t guarantee him a starting spot at Atlantic Coast Conference Media Day in July. It was another effort to eliminate his complacency and Whigham said it was the best thing Shafer could have done for him.

“Last year, it was just kind of handed to me,” Whigham said, “and I just kind of sat around, did what I had to do and I didn’t get as good as I could have been last fall.”

Whigham still had an occasional lingering thought about 2014 during the spring and summer, but at the start of training camp, he washed them out. He changed his

routines in order to help put it behind him. Syracuse has an annual tradition to kick off training camp

called “Burn The Shoe,” in which players toss shoes into a fire pit and seniors give speeches to teammates. Whigham offered advice about “the little things,” since that’s what

Whigham focused on himself entering the season.“I made sure that when I threw those shoes in there,

everything from last year was gone,” Whigham said.Now Whigham has just one season left to prove it.

He’s done everything he says he could in order to make Bullough’s texts ring true.

“The ball is mine,” Whigham says before pausing, preparing to finish his sentence like he hopes to do with pass breakups.

“At all times.”[email protected] | @pschweds

0

13

2012

2013

2014

CORNEREDWhigham only has four interceptions in his three years as a cornerback at SU.

HIS BALLSenior cornerback Whigham transforms offseason lifestyle to improve play on field for Syracuse

JULIAN WHIGHAM

Page 12: 2015 Football Season Preview

12 the daily orange football guide 2015

Date Opponent Time Location

Fri., Sept. 4 Rhode Island 7:00 PM Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat., Sept. 12 Wake Forest 12:30 PM Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat, Sep 19 Central Michigan 12:30 PM Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat., Sept. 26 LSU TBA Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat., Oct. 10 USF TBA Tampa, FL - Raymond James Stadium

Sat., Oct. 17 Virginia TBA Charlottesville, VA - Scott Stadium

Sat., Oct. 24 Pittsburgh TBA Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat., Oct. 31 Florida State TBA Tallahassee, FL - Doak Campbell Stadium

Sat., Nov. 7 Louisville TBA Louisville, KY - Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium

Sat., Nov. 14 Clemson TBA Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

Sat., Nov. 21 NC State TBA Raleigh, NC - Carter-Finley Stadium

Sat., Nov. 28 Boston College TBA Syracuse, NY - Carrier Dome

SYRACUSE FALL 2015 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

Page 13: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 13

By Connor Grossmanasst. sports editor

MICHAEL BREWER NEEDED to take his mind off football.

He transferred to Virginia Tech two months before start-ing at quarterback last season,

forcing him to spend four to six hours a day during the summer digesting his new playbook.

His only reprieve came during Fourth of July weekend, fishing under 90-degree skies in Islamorada, Fla.

Brewer’s tosses were his fishing line into the Atlantic Ocean. The highlight reel catch came in the form of a 150-pound tarpon jumping six feet out of the water.

“Michael didn’t think one thing about football,” Brewer’s father, Robert, said. “He didn’t run into anybody that knew who he was or asked about football.

“We never even talked about it.”The silence sealed off fresh memories from

a 7-6 Virginia Tech season that Brewer called a “constant struggle,” equipped with just a two-month crash course in the playbook before training camp.

The time for excuses is over, Brewer

said, and he’s overcome the adversity of abandoning his family’s deep Texas football roots because of an injury in his third sea-son at Texas Tech. A season of experience and commitment to offensive coordinator Scot Loeffler’s intensive teaching methods, including take-home tests, have Brewer primed for a rebound season.

“I feel like I did a pretty good job of not really listening to the outside world,” Brew-er said. “I’ve seen it so many times and been taught the right way to handle all that.

“It can’t do anything for you.”Brewer has no choice but to listen to Loef-

fler, who’s working with a returning quarter-back for the first time in his three seasons on the job. He demands every member of his offense understand the inner workings of everyone else’s jobs — linemen knowing receivers’ routes, receivers knowing line-men’s schemes, and so on.

Loeffler’s method of quality control is administering pen and paper tests.

Brewer’s responsible for drawing out entire offensive formations — 200 of them — and by mislabeling 18 of them on his first assessment, he wasn’t approaching his coach’s standard.

“I got it pretty good from coach Loeffler

that day,” Brewer said.The quarterback struggled to embrace

his coach’s criticisms and understand the minutia of each play like Loeff ler did. Robert Brewer, a former college quar-terback himself, told his son to “get to another level.”

Improvement on pen and paper tests translated to better communication on the field. Third-year tight end Bucky Hodges said Brewer’s improved on discretely tip-ping his receivers on the route he wants at the line of scrimmage.

It’s a sign of Brewer’s enhanced confi-dence under center, something that fluc-tuated trying to orchestrate an offense last season whose top three receivers were underclassmen.

“My expectation for him this season is to be one of the top quarterbacks in the (Atlantic Coast Conference),” receiver Isaiah Ford said. “He’s put in an extreme amount of work.”

Brewer is trying to live up to a name that success has always followed in foot-ball. His father, grandfather, uncle and great uncle were all quarterbacks at Uni-versity of Texas.

Winning four state championships at Lake

Travis (Texas) High School, Brewer appeared on the same track. But injuries complicated his situation at Texas Tech, and the strenuous pro-cess of transferring “made Michael a man,” his father said.

Brewer was overwhelmed by his “whole new world:” Moving away and into his own apartment, teaching himself the long ver-biage of Virginia Tech’s pro-style offense and seeking out a new kayak spot.

“Sometimes making you better doesn’t involve a pat on the shoulder,” Robert Brew-er said.

Ahead of his final season, Brewer’s no longer jaded through the lens of year-to-year championships he experienced in high school. He’s no longer staring at the lowlights of his once-sidelined football career.

The ledger has evened out over the course of his college career, most recently in high-light-reel wins against Virginia and Ohio State last season while also losing five games by one possession.

“When things are going good, keep it even keel,” Brewer said. “When things aren’t going well, keep it even keel.

“I don’t feel any pressure going into my last season, I’m excited.”

[email protected] | @connorgrossman

Virginia Tech fifth-year senior QB Michael Brewer looks to improve in 2nd, final year in ACC

MICHAEL BREWER lost his starting job at Texas Tech after an injury in his third year with the Red Raiders. He transferred to VT before the 2014 season, led a mediocre 7-6 Hok-ies team and now hopes to capitalize on what he’s learned from offensive coordinator Scott Loeffler to have more success. courtesy of virginia tech athletics

FINAL EXAM

Page 14: 2015 Football Season Preview

14 the daily orange football guide 2015

Syracuse catches an early break with a

schedule stacked with likely wins. SU will

run over Rhode Island before taking down

WFU and Central Michigan — opponents

that made up two-thirds of SU’s 2014 wins

— and needs to win toss-up games against

Pittsburgh and Boston College. A defense

that has ability but little experience and an

offense that’s injury prone doesn’t instill

supreme confidence. But with a quarterback

and as easy a schedule as the Orange could

hope for, SU will reach a bowl.

Projected Record: 6-6

Rhode Island — Win

Wake Forest — Win

Central Michigan — Win

LSU — Loss

USF — Win

Virginia —Loss

Pittsburgh — Win

Florida State — Loss

Louisville — Loss

Clemson — Loss

North Carolina State — Loss

Boston College — Win

Offensive MVP: Steve Ishmael

Defensive MVP: Ron Thompson

Syracuse’s bottom-heavy schedule allows

for a strong start to the season, with three

straight wins in the Carrier Dome before

LSU offers a dose of reality. Then comes

the most important two-game stretch of

the year, a visit to Virginia and a home date

with Pittsburgh. The Orange wins the first in

Charlottesville but then loses a close game to

the Panthers in the Carrier Dome. Then a 1-4

finish — with four straight losses to Florida

State, Louisville, Clemson and N.C. State —

keeps SU out of a bowl game.

Projected record: 5-7

Rhode Island — Win

Wake Forest — Win

Central Michigan — Win

LSU — Loss

USF — Loss

Virginia — Win

Pittsburgh — Loss

Florida State — Loss

Louisville — Loss

Clemson — Loss

North Carolina State — Loss

Boston College — Win

Offensive MVP: Ervin Philips

Defensive MVP: Rodney Williams

JESSE DOUGHERTYTHE DOCTOR’S IN

SAM BLUMTHAT’S WHAT I SAID

The Orange has an opportunity to collect

several nonconference wins early in the sea-

son, but once mid-October rolls around, SU’s

young defense will be exposed by the peren-

nial powers of the ACC. SU’s second-year

players, including wide receiver Steve Ishma-

el, hybrid Ervin Philips and middle linebacker

Zaire Franklin, could quickly develop into the

backbone of the team. Despite breakouts

from that trio, the Orange falls short of a bowl

game as it sputters down the stretch.

Projected record: 5-7

Rhode Island — Win

Wake Forest — Win

Central Michigan — Win

LSU — Loss

USF — Win

Virginia — Loss

Pittsburgh — Loss

Florida State — Loss

Louisville — Loss

Clemson — Loss

North Carolina State — Loss

Boston College — Win

Offensive MVP: Steve Ishmael

Defensive MVP: Zaire Franklin

When SU emerges from the Carrier Dome

tunnel against LSU, the Orange will likely be

3-0, providing some false hope before an

inevitable loss. USF and Virginia are beatable,

but Pittsburgh has consistently had SU’s

hand, and the next four teams have four of

the top quarterbacks in the conference. It’ll

all come down to a game at the Dome against

Boston College, just like 2013, but this time

the Orange won’t pull off any heroics to reach

a bowl.

Projected Record: 5-7

Rhode Island — Win

Wake Forest — Win

Central Michigan — Win

LSU — Loss

USF — Win

Virginia — Win

Pittsburgh — Loss

Florida State — Loss

Louisville — Loss

Clemson — Loss

North Carolina State — Loss

Boston College — Loss

Offensive MVP: Ervin Philips

Defensive MVP: Julian Whigham

PAUL SCHWEDELSONBETTER CALL PAUL

MATTSCHNEIDMANCLASS IS IN SESSION

BEAT WRITER PREDICTIONS

Page 15: 2015 Football Season Preview

the daily orange football guide 2015 15

By Chris Libonatiasst. copy editor

SITTING ON THE FIELD WITH three minutes left at a high school showcase game, Patrick Toole looked at his lower leg bent in the shape of an L.

It wasn’t shock or pain that hit Toole when his tibia and fibula snapped, but the long-term reality that hit him hardest.

“I thought my career was over before I even really got to begin in college,” Toole said. “… especially for a kicker, someone who breaks their leg. That’s all they have.”

Toole’s injury stole his opportunity to walk across the stage at his high school graduation — instead he rolled across in a wheelchair. It robbed him of a chance to show off his kicking ability to the coaches at Temple, his first college destination.

It also helped him land at Albany, the first college Toole has stayed at for more than one year. The drive to Albany takes about an hour and a half from his house, but to get there and to earn a scholarship in his final season, it’s taken three years, two one-year trials at Tennessee and Temple and a year off from football at Erie Community College.

“Even the doctors told me that maybe it wasn’t the best idea for me to play sports any-more,” Toole said, “but I knew I could still do it.”

It took a only a year to get back to full strength, but Temple had only offered him the opportunity to earn a scholarship in his first year there. The injury forced him to redshirt.

Al Golden, the coach who had recruited Toole, left for Miami after the 2010 season and Steve Addazio replaced him. Toole didn’t have a chance to kick for Addazio’s staff in his first season and was unable to earn a scholarship.

“We realized he wasn’t going to play at Tem-ple because of the coaching change and also their starting kicker is now the starting kick-er for the (Denver) Broncos,” Adam Tanalski, Toole’s kicking coach said, adding that Toole’s injury also played into the decision.

Toole transferred to Erie Community Col-lege near Buffalo, New York, to get his associates degree and train with Tanalski, but didn’t play football. Tanalski used connections to help get Toole recruited by Tennessee, where he chose to walk on over Louisiana State and Kansas.

The coaching staff Toole committed to was removed before he arrived at Tennessee in the spring of 2013. Tanalski’s connections and head

coach Derek Dooley were replaced by current head coach Butch Jones and his staff. Toole sat behind Michael Pardy, who is on the St. Louis Rams’ roster.

During Winter Break after the 2013 season, Toole’s father, Stephen, had diverticulitis, a diges-

tive disorder where pouches form in the colon, but the pouches burst, causing Stephen to contract blood poisoning. Stephen went to the hospital and had surgery 45 minutes after having an MRI done.

Toole’s father spent 21 days in the intensive care unit at the hospital, losing 60 pounds from surgeries and being sick. Stephen’s condition pushed Toole to transfer closer to home. This time, Toole only entertained Albany.

Unsure of Toole’s ability, Albany gave him the chance to walk on. Off the bat, Toole earned the starting kicking job. After three years with no in-game kicking experience, he started the first game of last season.

When Toole kicked his first field goal in the third quarter of last season’s opener, he missed from 35 yards. After the game, he texted Tanals-ki he hadn’t driven his leg through the ball.

“You could see a little bit of (apprehension to kick) early on in preseason camp last year,” Alba-ny special teams coordinator Jeff Dittman said.

But after the initial miss, he kicked two extra points through the uprights, including the game-winning point with 44 seconds left against Holy Cross. Toole earned third-team All-Colonial Athletic Association honors after last year, and Tanalski said he had four of the five longest field goals in the CAA.

After trying at Temple and Tennessee to not just kick, but also earn a scholarship, the Great Danes put Toole on full scholarship for his senior season.

“It’s rewarding to go through this journey,” Toole said. “… To be able to prove people wrong … is a really nice, humbling experience.”

[email protected] | @ChrisLibonati

Albany kicker Toole earns scholarship in final season after gruesome high school injury, multiple college stops

PATRICK TOOLE suffered a broken fibula and tibia in his senior year of high school. He’s had stints at Temple, Erie Community College and Tennessee before finding his last college home at Albany. He was awarded a scholarship in his final season and hopes to capitalize on his opportunity in his second season with AU. courtesy of albany athletics

LAST LEGEVEN THE DOCTORS TOLD ME THAT MAYBE IT WASN’T THE BEST IDEA FOR ME TO PLAY SPORTS ANYMORE, BUT I KNEW I COULD STILL DO IT.

Patrick Toolealbany kicker

Page 16: 2015 Football Season Preview

SEPTEMBER 6th, SUNDAY9:30PM–12:30AM