Well since nothing has changed with either of these programs since my final
report of 2002, I’ll get straight to business.
What… New coaches? J-Lo lost weight? Louisville, the 2002 Pre-season national
title favorites (in the Jefferson county area) and perennial Conference USA
powerhouse is ranked 5th in the 2003 pre-season C-USA polls? Kentucky
Football season tickets will cost how much next year?
Both of these teams have spent the off-season talking many
shoulda-woulda-couldas from the 2002 season. Kentucky’s senior class wants this
season in a bad way; so, it is all aboard the Battleship Lorenzen. Kentucky
football will prove resilient in 2003 serving notice to the big boys in the SEC
East with the Dennis Leary line made famous via MTV: "I think ya hear me
knockin’ and I’m comin’ in!"
Here we go…
Kentucky by: 10
Trenches:
Outside of
quarterback, the Offensive Line is Kentucky’s strength. Senior RT Antonio Hall
has started every game since his freshman year in 2000 and will be the anchor of
what could be one of Kentucky’s most talented O-Lines in quite some time.
The other bookend at LT will be seasoned junior Matt Huff whose 2002 campaign
was cut short by a knee injury. Huff and Hall are as solid as any tackle duo in
the SEC and will provide the extra time needed as J-Lo and Boyd look to throw
the ball down field in offensive coordinator Ron Hudson’s wide-open offense.
Guards Jason Rollins and Sylvester "Big Kat" Miller will plug up the middle
along side one of the best centers in the country and 2003 Dave
Rimington Trophy nominee, Nick Seitze. Kentucky’s O-Line should have no
problem handling the Card’s talented yet inexperienced defensive front.
Even though they are the same players, don’t expect the same offensive line
that almost put Dave Ragone on the quarterback extinction list last year. Jerry
Spencer at guard and 6-foot-6 / 310lb tackle Renardo Foster will flank senior
center Dan Koons on the strong side. Sophomores Travis Leffew and Jason Spitz
will man the weak side, though only sophomores, the duo of Leffew and Spitz are
destined to be star linemen for the Cards. Koons is the leader of this
much-improved group but will have his hands full calling blocking assignments
against a defensive scheme he probably hasn’t seen since grade school. This is
an offensive line much improved from last season but they are still not ready
for the Cat’s D-Line or blitz packages created by the 3-4.
Quarterbacks:
Kentucky
fans should thank Coach Brooks for finding the "J-Lo scales" Guy Morris threw
out the window in 2002. Moreover, for realizing that even if it means two
quarterbacks on the field at the same time, you find a way to get one of your
best athletes in the game!
My new name for the leaner Lorenzen will be "J-sweet-n-Lo" (sorry but it made
me laugh). Lorenzen is the real deal, and Lorenzen at a svelte 265lbs is a legit
Heisman candidate. J-Lo was overshadowed last season by his weight, and Artose
Pinner’s breakout year. One 2002 stat that will get your focus back on J-Lo: 24
touchdowns against 5 interceptions, ‘nuff said!
Under center Boyd is a young Mike Vick and no defensive back in the country
is going to commit to deep coverage with Boyd rolling out of the pocket. He has
the athleticism and smarts to play anywhere on the field, do not be surprised if
he leads the cats in total offense this week. Boyd will get his limelight under
center next season, this year J-Lo breaks some records, and some hearts in the
SEC East!
Look for Lorenzen to throw for at least two touchdowns and over 300 yards
against a young Cardinal secondary.
Last years pre-season hype that was the Louisville quarterback fell silent on
September 1, 2002. You hear that? It’s silence, I hate silence! Yet, that is all
we have heard regarding Stefan LeFors. Most Kentucky fans probably don’t even
know LeFors is the Cardinals starting quarterback. Don’t be fooled by the hush,
LeFors may be an untested D-1 quarterback, but he is a tremendous athlete. He
has a decent arm; great speed and Louisville’s coaching staff loves his
leadership of the Cardinal offense. LeFors speed will test Mike Archer’s 3-4
defense; but if forced to rely on his arm it could be a long night for the
Cards. Forced to throw, the Cardinal’s will call in backup Justin Rascati who
can throw the ball with power and accuracy.
I doubt you will see freshmen phenom Mike Bush under center this week (but
maybe somewhere else), and did Cardinal fans really think Petrino would baptize
the youngster by fire? ESPN2, In-state rivalry, first game of the season, a new
defense yet to be scouted. Give the kid a chance; before it is all over Cardinal
Fan’s, Bush will win you some Conference USA games. However, it is Conference
USA so I might be able to step in as quarterback and win you some games.
Running Backs:
I took the liberty of putting together some potential nicknames for Draak
Davis: Lowercase "d", The Compact Cat, Lil’ Diesel Draak, and my personal
favorite… The Knee-hi-Fly-by. 5’7
Davis may be the smallest Cat on the field, but he’s all about BIG things this
season. Most of you have heard the stats from his 2002 campaign at Solano
Community College in Vallejo, Calif., where he rushed for 1,846 yards and 23
touchdowns. I know, "so that’s Junior College, this is the SEC." Right you are,
but for opposing defenses, finding Davis behind the line of scrimmage will be a
tough task. I’m not joking, outside of his speed, one of Davis’s strengths will
be the fact that it’s hard to spot him behind the likes of Hall and Huff each a
respective 6’5 and over 300 lbs. Arliss Beach has the tools to be a good SEC
runner, the thing he needs most is for Davis to stay healthy, Beach does not
have the strength to take the weekly poundings dished out in the SEC.
Rock Johnson is the best blocking fullback on the team and has shown flashes
of speed in the spring. Listed as the starting tailback, I expect Alex Bwenge to
spend more time at fullback this season. My reasoning is that Kentucky’s
coaching staff expects their lead blocker to be able to run the ball on more
than the occasional third and short.
The Knee-hi-Fly-by has a big opening night for the Cats; he does not
break the century mark rushing, but will dazzle with two touchdowns, one going
for over 40 yards.
At 6-foot-3 / 245lbs, Eric Shelton is the real deal, he could be for
Louisville in 2003 what Artose was for Kentucky in 2002, or he could be a bust.
Shelton has all of the physical necessities you want in a running back:
strength, speed, vision and good hands. The question is does he have the
maturity that it takes to play D-1 football? He clearly had issues at Florida
State and if he fails to see immediate and substantial playing time with the
Cards will he cry foul? How will he bounce back after a poor performance? If
Shelton proves he can handle adversity, he could be one of the top tailbacks in
college football.
Junior Lionel "L-Train" Gates has yet to play up to his potential, but will
split time with Shelton this week. Senior T.J. Patterson has good hands and
could be a threat catching the ball out of the backfield. Bottom line: If the
Cardinal’s backfield gets rolling it could be a long night for the
Wildcats!
Receivers:
Those of you
that kept up with my reports last season remember my excitement over then true
freshman Glen Holt. Holt is the real deal, and under the tutelage of Joker
Philips, Holt is primed to become an all-American wide receiver, shake your
heads now, the talent is there! Expect more of the same and some extra as Derek
Abney the receiver climbs back towards his 2001 career high of sixty-six
catches. Chris Bernard needs to be on the field as much as possible; he is an
Aaron Boone type of receiver that can make the big play. 6-foot-2 Freshman
Keenan Burton will play early and often as will Freshman Maurice Marchman. With
Tommy Cook out this week, Bernard and Burton need to step it up in a big
way.
Not sure what to tell you about the tight end position other than the thing I
loved most about Hal Mumme was his understanding of how important the tight end
position is, and the wrinkle it creates for opposing defenses. In 2002, the
tight end was Kansas States third leading receiver, coincidence or will Ron
Hudson look to utilize Kentucky tight ends Jeremiah Drobney and Win Gaffron? I
guess we will all know the answer to that question Sunday night.
J.R. Russell, Broderick Clark, and Joshua Tinch will be LeFors main targets
this week. Clark is the Cardinal’s home run threat, Tinch always seems to find
an opening, and at 6-foot-3 with great speed, Russell could have a breakout
season in 2003.
Tight end Rhonnie Ghent has been all-conference since his freshmen year and
that probably won’t change for this his final season. A knee injury prematurely
ended Ghent’s junior season, but he is back full strength for this week’s game.
Stepping in for the injured Ghent last year was then junior Richard Owens who
made quite a name for himself in 2002 hauling in 20 catches and 2 touchdowns the
final six games of the season. One thing about Petrino, he likes to throw to his
tight ends. The Kentucky linebacker’s better keep an eye on these two,
guaranteed the ball will be coming their way.
D-Line and Linebackers
Jeremy Caudill, Sweet Pea Burns, Lamar Mills,
Ellery Moore and true Freshman Ricky Abren will be one of the top defensive line
units in the SEC. Do not let the three-down lineman scheme fool you; most of the
time outside linebackers Deion Holts, Raymond Fontaine and true freshman Durrell
White will be on or close to the line of scrimmage, the 3-4 relies on athletic
outside linebackers that can blitz and cover the short pass.
Middle Linebacker is a big question mark for the Cats.
At 6-foot-5 / 245lbs, Dustin Williams has the size of a Southeastern Conference
MLB, but will reoccurring concussions end his season and/or career? Starters
Justin Haydock and Chad Sumerall are an interesting pair, Haydock is a former
walk-on, and Sumerall tips the scales at 215 lbs. The coaching staff has been
impressed with Summerall’s instinct for the ball and Haydock’s physical play, I
am just not sure that either one of these guys can be the run stopper Kentucky
desperately needs. By mid-year I expect either Kamaal Ahmad or Chad Anderson to
be starting opposite Williams. Bottom line: this unit must improve a rushing
defense that gave up an average of 174.3 yards a game on the ground in
2002.
Montavious Stanley has good strength and is fast off the ball, we will see
how much he learned as the number two man behind all-world defensive end Dewayne
White in 2002. Speedster Marcus Jones will provide the other D-Line bookend, he
is lightning off the ball which makes up for his lack of size. A pair of
300-pounders by the names of Tyrone Saterfield and Scott Lopez will clog up the
middle of the defensive line. Back from offseason surgery is reserve tackle
Bobby Leffew who garnered all-American honors as a freshman in 2000.
McCune. Day, the team's second leading tackler after
recording 101 stops in 2002, is one of only four returning starters on defense,
and the only returning starter among the linebackers. My Scary stat of the
week: McCune can incline-bench press 490 lbs., those of you that have ever
seriously lifted weights are thinking you just spotted a typo, no, he can
incline-bench press 490 lbs. Robert McCune
is a physical presence with great speed and will make himself known to the
Wildcat running backs early and often. Sophomore Brandon Johnson is the smallest
of the trio, what he lacks in size he more than makes up for with speed and
instinct. It will be important for Kentucky to keep a body on this impressive
crew the entire game.
Secondary:
I hear ya…
Kentucky’s defense is young; they lost seven starters, blah blah blah! Remember
these guys? Bo Smith, Claude Sagaille, Antoine Huffman, Earven Flowers, and
Warren Wilson. Big time playmakers on the defensive side of the ball for
Kentucky last year, and not one of them were a starter! Leonard "taco" Burress,
Mike Williams, and Muhammad Abdullah along with the above-mentioned cast should
be the strength of the Wildcat defense. Kentucky’s secondary the strength of the
defense? I know, I can’t believe I said that either. Here is the reason for my
optimism, Last season the Wildcat defense held opposing offenses completion rate
under 50%. The problem was Kentucky gave up an average of over15 yards per
catch, and 220 yards per game. The defensive backfield will play more zone
coverage this season allowing them to spy the quarterback improving upon last
year’s ten interceptions as well as stopping the long catch and run. Keep an eye
out for newcomer Andre Jones, he may be the most athletic Kentucky DB and should
crack the starting line-up by seasons end.
Senior Josh Minkins is the Cards lone returning starter from 2002; he has no
choice but to be the leader of an inexperienced secondary. Gavin Smart swapped
sides of the ball and will be starting this week; as a former receiver he knows
how to read the offense, the question is does he know how to react like a
defender? Safeties Brent Johnson and Kerry Rhodes will be called on to sure up
this shaky unit as they struggle against one of the best guns in the game. True
freshmen reserve William Gray is a tremendous athlete and will get a taste of
his first college action Sunday night.
Special Teams:
I can’t
figure it out, you can’t figure it out and teams across the SEC have no ideal
where to begin. All I know is that out of pads Derek Abney wouldn’t make my four
year-old nephew flinch, but like Superman’s phone booth, so is the locker room
for Abney. More than once last year I thought I spotted a blue cape fluttering
from underneath his jersey. The secret to Abney’s success is acceleration; he
can get from zero to sixty faster than a Ferrari. Kentucky needs to find a
second return man as opposing teams kick away from Abney, my vote if for true
freshman John Logan. Check out Logan’s high school stats: Returned 15 kickoffs
for a 35.8-yard average, including four for TDs, two of them during his senior
year. Not impressed with two touchdown returns his senior season. What if I told
you he only had four returns attempted that year.
I really like sophomore Taylor Begley, he could break some records before he
leaves campus and his leg will probably win Kentucky a couple of close ones this
season. Clint Ruth can boom the ball; the Cats need his kickoffs to keep
Louisville’s offense pinned deep in their own territory, more specifically
keeping the ball out of the hands of return-man Broderick Clark. Cat fans cross
your fingers and hope that Coach Brooks hands-on approach with punters Anthony
Thornton and Sevin Sucurovic pays off.
In case you have forgotten, there is another return man in the game who could
very easily steal the limelight from Mr. Abney. Louisville’s Broderick Clark is
the real deal, and he can flat out fly! As the No. 2 kick returner in the nation
last year Clark garnered freshmen all-American honors. In the blink of an eye he
could shift the momentum of this game.
If that is not enough to worry about, the Cards blocked 12 kicks in 2002,
including a nation leading nine blocked punts. Kentucky’s green behind the
ear-hole punters better get ready as Louisville brings the house. Senior Nate
Smith, a three-year veteran of the kicking game, heads into his senior campaign
on pace to finish his career ranked second on the U of L all-time scoring
charts. In 2001 punter Wade Tydlacka averaged 40.6 yards per kick, Tydlacka gets
back in the groove for 2003, and the question is… Does he put the ball anywhere
near Abney?
In A Nut Shell:
Two of
Kentucky’s most important stats of last season must be duplicated if they plan
on any post-season action. The first is Average drive start, in layman, a term
that means field position. Through the first six games of 2002, Kentucky’s
average start was their own 39, while their opponents was the 23. The second is
turnover ratio; Kentucky was plus seven in this department last season.
It is no secret that I love defense, but this game is going to be about the
big "O". Kentucky offensive coordinator Ron Hudson’s 1998 Kansas State team led
the nation in scoring at 48 points per game, and last season Kansas State was
No.2 nationally with 45.8 points per game. Louisville Head Coach Bobby Petrino
has been the mastermind behind three different teams that lead the nation in
total offense including the 1998 Cardinals. This week comes down to which
defense bends without breaking, experience gets the nod as the Cats bottle up
the Cards offense.