Let’s get back to just
football, on the field matters for now… or at least until some kind of
Twittergate news or news on Chad Washington’s case breaks.
What else can we do at
this point?
I expect silence from
the athletic department for the most part over the next three months. That’s
partly because it is summer break and partly because some of the people
responsible for publicizing the team’s news are getting more directly ensconced
in this story.
Recruiting Trends
More Ivy schools are releasing their lists on incoming
freshmen football players.
Based on what I’m seeing from the other Ivy schools’ lists
of incoming recruits, it appears Head Coach Pete Mangurian and Columbia may not
be on such a lonely island after all when it comes to targeting some lighter
players.
That might change, especially since we’ve now been promised
by Mangurian that the veteran offensive linemen will be bigger by the time the
season starts in the fall.
One of the things that annoys me about the Ivies is that the
teams tend to fall into general recruiting trends. 10 years ago it seemed like
every team was going after bigger players. 5 years ago, I noticed an focus on
speed across the league. Now, there seems to be an emphasis on somewhat leaner
players with better than average speed.
The herd mentality gives an advantage to any school that
intelligently tries to counter what everyone else is doing.
And the school that
most routinely ignores what everyone else is doing and goes after players that
fit its system is Brown.
For almost 20 years now, Brown has featured pass-happy
offenses and has recruited accordingly. To Head Coach Phil Estes’ credit, he briefly
hit pause on that strategy when he saw the potential RB Nick Hartigan ’06 had
and went with a run offense for two years. That helped net the Bears the 2005
league crown.
Mangurian has made statements over the last 17 months that
lead me to believe he wants to pursue an iconoclastic recruiting strategy as
well. And he should… because if Columbia gets into recruiting battles for the
same players with Harvard and Penn too often, the Lions won’t be able to field
a team.
Post Spring Pole Position
With spring practice at all eight schools wrapped up, here’s
a very quick take on where the seven other teams are right now:
Penn: Still feels
like the team to beat right now. QB Billy Ragone is a winner. He doesn’t do it
in a pretty way, and he is injury prone because of the way he lays it all out
there, but he gets the job done.
Harvard: Hard to believe the Crimson won’t be strong this
fall as usual. But Harvard doesn’t look as scary right now. And that, actually
scares me. What am I missing?
Dartmouth: For the first time since Buddy Teevens came back
to Hanover, I think he has a winning proposition at the crucial QB position. He
has talent and depth there and a star RB too. I also like the Green linebackers
and secondary, but I’m not so sure about the D-line. A lot of stars are
starting to align at Memorial Field.
Brown: Patrick Donnelly is back at QB and he’s a dark horse
candidate to lead the league in a lot of categories this fall. The Bears will
never fall too far for too long as long as Estes is there. These guys look and
feel like a 6-4, 4-3 in the league kind of team.
Princeton: I don’t
expect the Tigers to have as good a year overall as they did in 2012. But they
have the best overall player coming back in DT Caraun Reid and a deeper running
attack than they’ve had in a long time. This is a solid 5-5 team.
Yale: The Elis will now have had a full offseason to adjust
their attack to cater to Tyler Varga’s strengths. But there’s still no strength
at QB and the defense has some serious graduation losses.
Cornell: Jeff Mathews is back and has a lot riding on how good
his season is as he attempts to enter the NFL draft. Unfortunately for Big Red
fans, that doesn’t necessarily mean the team will win. Cornell’s extremely
young new head coach is probably going to face a rough start this year.
8 comments:
If that was your predicted order of finish for teams not named Columbia, sounds about right to me.
Where do think the Lions fit? Between Brown and Princeton?
Probably impossible to predict Columbia's position without knowing which players, if any, will get suspended. If everyone returns, Columbia should be a competitive, middle of the pack team. If several projected starters are dismissed... that's another story.
I would be surprised if any players in our two deep are likely to be suspended. While there is a question regarding Chad Washington I think it is premature to conclude anything about his status.
oldlion- if you read the statements from the captains that Jake posted above, it's at least a decent possibility that players other than Washington are suspended. Unless they get Bobby Bowden justice--extra laps after practice or sitting out the first quarter against Monmouth.
Great phrase, "Bobby Bowden justice." Will be sure to mention it to my Florida State friends.
Predicting other teams' success is dicey w/o knowing what's happening behind the scenes (e.g., injuries and recoveries therefrom, defections, academic problems, etc.) But, I guess it's the equivalent of the hot stove league.
GO LIONS!!!!
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