Do you like Brandon Sesay as a DT? 
Sunday, August 17, 2008, 06:49 PM
You're probably going to see some of that this year. Sesay worked at defensive tackle throughout Sunday's practice.

One thing to be stressed here is it's not a position switch. Sesay remains a defensive end, but they want to see what he can do at both. Sesay says he's fine with it. In fact, over a week ago, he had mentioned that wherever they wanted to play him -- DE or DT -- was fine with him. He feels like he can do either.

During the team period, Sesay was part of a second-team front four that had Daniel Howard and Sandy Riley at end and Richard Jones at the other tackle.

Riley just keeps making plays, and defensive coordinator Ruffin McNeill acknowledged after practice that he's ahead of Brandon Sharpe based on what they've seen the first two weeks of camp.
1 comment ( 1 view )   |  permalink   |  related link

Saturday's practice notes  
Saturday, August 16, 2008, 05:21 PM
--Freshman running back Brandon Reid returned to preseason camp Saturday after a week-long absence. He had gone home to deal with family issues.

--Those sitting out today included IR Detron Lewis and DE McKinner Dixon. Lewis was doing conditioning work. Dixon's Friday practice ended early with him favoring his right knee, so figure it's related to that.

--Mike Crabtree ran alongside Edward Britton as the No. 1 deep pairing on kickoff-return work. Lewis' being out might have had something to do with that. But coaches are proceeding with the idea that getting the ball in Crabtree's hands another two or three times a game via kick return might not be a bad thing.

--S Jordy Rowland was back in action today. He had bit of a scare Friday, taking a poke in the eye as he came up in run support. He was tended to on the side for the last 15 minutes of Friday's workout, but again, returned to the fray today.

--Defensive coordinator Ruffin McNeill was frustrated during today's team period. The last few plays of team, the defense was in disarray -- players not getting calls to each other, players being in the wrong position, telling each other they needed to communicate better. Though it wasn't a scrimmage, McNeill yelled timeout to the offensive coaches and gathered his guys around him.
I don't think Mike Leach had planned to end the workout at that point -- probably a few plays later -- but in any event, it concluded on that note.

--Actually, it didn't conclude on that note. In the daily, game-ending field goal situation, Donnie Carona was good from 44 yards and Cory Fowler missed wide right. That's two days in a row that Carona's had the better of the competition. Fowler missed a couple from 40 and in on Friday.

--Players, coaches, the fans who showed up to Jones Stadium ... everybody got a break from the weather finally. Conditions were overcast with a temperature in the low 70s for today's 1:30 p.m. workout. And hey. It more or less stayed that way the whole time. None of this clouds burning off, followed by sweltering heat.
And the really good thing is, before I left home, I surfed over to the Weather Channel and saw highs forecast in the 70s for the next four days.


1 comment ( 2 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

Sounds from practice  
Friday, August 15, 2008, 07:39 PM
I don't generally do much quote-of-the-day stuff. If I did, there would be several candidates today.

Ruffin McNeill was giving Sam Fehoko all the tough love Fehoko could take during the inside running drill. McNeill wasn't pleased with Fehoko being misaligned and yelled at him more than once, "Your way might work! My way will work!'' And .. "I need you to play!'' The DC has gotten after Fehoko pretty good this week. He jumped on him the other day for lining up too deep and letting a running play come to him.

Anyhow, back to quotes of the day.

After Brent Nickerson got beat deep by Mike Crabtree, cornerbacks coach Brian Mitchell had this for Nickerson: "Grab him, trip him, bite him, something.''

And after OLB Julius Howard got into the right position to make another play, McNeill pleasantly chimed in. "Isn't it easier when we work on it? I don't yell. I'm happy. My blood pressure's down. I'm bragging on you. Good work, Julius.''


1 comment ( 1 view )   |  permalink   |  related link

Injury report  
Friday, August 15, 2008, 07:34 PM
Jordy Rowland's day ended early. He got poked in the eye as he came up in run support during one of the plays in team period and was out the rest of the time.

Seeing Rowland outside the locker room after practice, looks like he'll be OK. And he needs to be. Though guys who walk on from little towns sometimes get overlooked, Rowland's worked his way up and can play a significant role this season. He's a second-team safety and a first-unit guy when the Raiders go to a six-DB package.

DE McKinner Dixon also didn't finish the team period. Looks like his right knee's bothering him again. He was on the bench with it iced toward the end of practice. That's the troublesome knee that caused Dixon to drop his weight down to 250.



1 comment ( 1 view )   |  permalink   |  related link

Just tired of each other or team chemistry issue? 
Friday, August 15, 2008, 07:27 PM
Marlon Williams and Brandon Sesay were sniping at each other today during the team period. No punches thrown or anything like that. They were several yards away from each other. But still seemed genuinely peeved as they jawed back and forth. And DL coach Charlie Sadler called Sesay aside and talked to him for a few minutes.

Interesting in that it's the second time this week that two prominent players have gotten into it in a little different fashion than the typical pushing and shoving and "fighting" that goes on all the time in scrimmage settings. Mike Crabtree and Bront Bird got hot at each other one day this week, both on the field and then an hour or more later going up the tunnel after practice.

Mike Leach acted unconcerned by tempers flaring the day of the Crabtree/Bird incident.

Team chemistry was a strength of last year's club and will have to be again for Tech to live up to its billing. Maybe these guys are just tired of looking at each other after the 12th day in a row of practice.
1 comment ( 3 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

Practice time changes  
Friday, August 15, 2008, 07:24 PM
Tech's weekend practices have been moved up: Saturday's is at 1:30 p.m., two hours earlier than listed. Sunday's is at 3:30 p.m. It had been listed at 8 p.m.

The reasoning: After tonight, coaches are dropping the 8 p.m. team meeting that they've had nightly throughout practices. In turn, the earlier practice times Saturday and Sunday will give the players a longer night off and more recovery time.

1 comment ( 3 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

First scrimmage summary  
Wednesday, August 13, 2008, 07:47 PM
I'll have more to come later, but here's a quick synopsis of Tech's first scrimmage this afternoon at Jones Stadium.

The scrimmage was only 30 plays (29 actually), with Taylor Potts getting 15 snaps and Graham Harrell 14 snaps. The offense was sharp, sharp, sharp. Potts' group moved the ball from the offense's 40 down inside the 5-yard line, but then his 15-play sequence was up.

Harrell led the offense to three touchdowns -- a four-play series capped by a 24-yard scoring pass to Tramain Swindall, a five-play drive capped by a 17-yard scoring pass to Mike Crabtree and a five-play march capped by a 9-yard touchdown run from Baron Batch. They were all 60-yard drives, having started at the minus-40.

Some signicant things to note:
--The first-team defense wasn't in for any of the scoring. In fact, the touchdown pass to Swindall came with third-team defensive guys on the field.

--The defense just started re-installing substitution packages on Tuesday. Defensive coordinator Ruffin McNeill used sub packages on just three or four snaps in the scrimmage. So, in essence, the first-team offense was having its way against backups running basic stuff.

--The most significant thing about the offense is that they showed the 40-second play clock that college is adopting this season shouldn't be a factor. In fact, it might well work to the benefit of the Tech offense. Graham Harrell was snapping the ball with 8 and 10 and 12 seconds left on the play clock, and they were never in danger of a delay of game. They ran no-huddle the whole time, and kept the rapid tempo that Mike Leach likes.

Some teams are putting in a no-huddle offense package, thinking they might need it with the clock changes. Tech has used the no-huddle for years, so there's little to no adjustment for this team, particularly one that has 10 returning starters and a senior quarterback.


1 comment ( 3 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

Ticket updates  
Tuesday, August 12, 2008, 03:34 PM
Got this today from Dave Welsh from the Tech ticket office ...

Texas Tech has sold at least 43,000 tickets for all seven of its home games, according to Dave Welsh, assistant athletic director for ticket operations.
As of Tuesday afternoon, tickets sold were: Aug. 30, Eastern Washington, 44,000; Sept. 13, SMU, 47,500; Sept. 20, Massachusetts, 49,000; Oct. 11, Nebraska, 49,000; Nov. 1, Texas, 53,000; Nov. 8, Oklahoma State, 44,000; Nov. 29, Baylor, 43,500.
Tech’s annual “Take a Kid to the Game’’ promotion is in conjunction with the SMU game. The annual Family Weekend and Fellowship of Christian Athletes Day is in conjunction with the Massachusetts game, and the Nebraska game is on homecoming weekend.
Tech’s season ticket sales are at 41,173, breaking the record of 40,430 set in 2005.
Welsh said only 585 season-ticket packages remain. Those are priced at $220 in Sections 117 and 121 on the east side of Jones AT&T Stadium and $300 in Sections 9, 102 and 108 on the west side of the stadium.
Because of the record sales, Welsh said, the only remaining tickets for the Texas game are those available as season tickets or 37 that may be purchased as a part of a two-game mini-pack.

1 comment ( 2 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

Freshman RB gone ... for how long? 
Tuesday, August 12, 2008, 12:15 AM
Freshman RB Brandon Reid has been missing from practice for the last three days. Tech coach Mike Leach said Reid went home to El Paso for a family situation.

"He's supposed to come back,'' Leach said. "He's going to go tend to something -- a funeral or something like that -- and then be back. I haven't seen him, but didn't expect him for a couple of days.''

Leach said it's his understanding that Reid is to return Thursday.
1 comment ( 3 views )   |  permalink   |  related link

Dixon good to go, but hardly in Leach's good graces  
Monday, August 11, 2008, 11:55 PM
As you might have seen on lubbockonline.com earlier this afternoon, Tech established for certain today that McKinner Dixon is eligible to play this season.

My impression is many Tech fans had been holding their breath and hoping for the good news that they got on Dixon. Thing is, Mike Leach didn't exactly give McKinner a hug and welcome him back.

I'm trying not to put the same quotes in two places, but you might want to check out the Monday Red Raider Notebook elsewhere on this site. If Dixon is going to make an impact for the Raiders this season, he's going to have to work his way out of Leach's doghouse to do it.



1 comment ( 2 views )   |  permalink   |  related link


Next