Connor Nelligan is the consummate possession receiver
You'd have to excuse
Columbia fans if they come into this spring believing they have an
embarrassment of riches at the wide receiver position.
Three breakout stars emerged last season and they're all back for 2013.
The first is rising junior Connor Nelligan, when led the team in receptions and overall gutty play week in and week out. Nelligan is not afraid to lay out for a catch, go into the middle of a defense, and try to run over any defenders after a reception.
Three breakout stars emerged last season and they're all back for 2013.
The first is rising junior Connor Nelligan, when led the team in receptions and overall gutty play week in and week out. Nelligan is not afraid to lay out for a catch, go into the middle of a defense, and try to run over any defenders after a reception.
Second is rising
sophomore Chris Connors, who also showed a healthy reckless
abandon and seemed to get better and better as the season wore on.
Third is fellow rising
sophomore Isaiah Gross, the human embodiment of "what
might have been" for the 2012 season. Head Coach Pete
Mangurian raved about Gross in the preseason, and the freshman lived
up to the hype with some stunning play in the first two games of the
season.
Then, Gross got injured
in the early going of the Princeton game in week 3 and he never saw the field
again all season. Call me a conspiracy theorist, but I think Mangurian shut
Gross down for the season to prevent him from appearing in four games and thus
keeping him eligible for a 5th year medical red shirt. Yep, Gross could be that
good and that worth keeping around for as long as possible.
The Ivy League is known
for having a dearth of top flight RB's and defensive tackles. I would say that
legitimate deep threat WR's are also in relative shorter supply lately and
that's what makes Gross a super commodity. Connors also established himself as
a deep corner and sideline threat which helped raise his stock.
But wait... there's
more! Transfer WR Jake Wanamaker, who is a rising junior, was
also injured for a good part of the season but was impressive when he did get
on the field for parts of seven games.
Each one of the
above-mentioned WR's needs to step up their games, (or at least proves their
100% back from injury), this spring, but they are all squarely "on the
radar" so to speak and won't need to do anything crazy to get noticed.
The other returning WR's
are all "on the bubble" to borrow a NCAA tournament term, and they
could be under big pressure to step things up this strong before the very large
number of freshmen WR's join the fray in August.
Rising senior Louis
DiNovo seems to be one of those players. He played in all 10 games
last season and had a spectacular run-after-the-catch TD versus Fordham. But he
needs to regain the coaches' confidence again.
Rising junior Ryan
Flannery seemed to see his stock rise as the year went on, getting
more looks and designed plays going his way. But it's not clear if that
momentum will carry over to this season.
Another dark horse for
more touches is rising sophomore Scooter Hollis, who emerged
as a possible scatback weapon last season and his speed would seem to demand
giving him another good shot to prove himself this spring.
Two rising
seniors, Joey Andrada and Bruce Grant, just haven't made an
impact yet and it's not clear that they will in 2013. But we certainly don't
know enough to count them out.
Younger players like
rising sophomore, Andrew Dobitsch, and rising
juniors Kal Prince, John Keefe, and Dan Slivka, all have
a tough road to make the top spots on the depth chart.
With 13 returning
veteran WR's and at maybe five more incoming freshmen at the position, no Lion
receiver can afford to be complacent.
TOMORROW: The Tight Ends
4 comments:
Jake, with the abundance of riches here, do you or others think that we might see any position changes, either to the defensive side of the ball or to H back, TE or even RB, where we can use some bench strength? Or do you think we might see more flood patterns with four WR sets considering Nottingham's ability?
I think Mangurian and the OC are toying with a pass-happy offense or run and shoot a la the Houston Oilers of 1989-92. But these kinds of designs tend to change when summer training camp begins.
Jake are you crazy, do you think a career offensive line coach is going to go pass happy? Mangurian will always run the ball, he has everyplace he has ever coached.
That would be fine by me!
Post a Comment