One of the most valuable traits
of a coach is the ability to handle situations and make good
adjustments. Ruffin McNeill, who reaches his second anniversary
as head coach of the East Carolina football program tomorrow,
has shown on numerous occasions that he possesses those
qualities, most recently in adding the vast experience of Kirk
Doll, a fellow Pirate football alumnus, and Pat Washington, who
played quarterback for ECU hall of famer Pat Dye at Auburn, to
his coaching staff.
McNeill became a viable
candidate for the Pirates vacancy at the conclusion of the 2009
season when he became interim head coach at Texas Tech,
following the dismissal of Mike Leach, and guided the Red
Raiders to a 41-31 win over Michigan State in the Alamo Bowl.
His resume backed that successful night as the man in charge
with decades as a capable assistant and coordinator.
McNeill will soon announce his
third recruiting class and it's shaping up to be a strong one.
One of the silver linings to missing a bowl at the conclusion of
the 2011 season is that it has allowed the Pirate staff to go
full tilt on recruiting since the season ended on Nov. 26.
McNeill's first recruiting class
had a notable absence as quarterback Dominique Davis opted not
to follow through on a commitment to Skip Holtz's staff on
signing day. McNeill quickly went after Davis and brought him in
for two more-than-serviceable seasons as the program converted
to a pass-oriented offense.
It should be noted that Holtz's
offensive personnel was geared to more of a ball control scheme
than the "Air Raid" attack that McNeill and offensive
coordinator Lincoln Riley have installed at ECU. The Pirates are
still in a transitional phase in terms of bringing in personnel
that fits that system, specifically smaller, more agile
offensive linemen who can pass block and keep up with the
desired high tempo from a physical conditioning standpoint.
The summer after McNeill became
head coach he had to dismiss an assistant for improper
involvement in offseason workouts. The situation was reported to
the NCAA. McNeill shifted Clay McGuire to special teams
coordinator and brought Duane Price on staff to fill the
vacancy.
After his first season at the
ECU helm produced a 6-7 season and a fifth straight bowl trip
for the program it was readily apparent that defensive
deficiencies had to be addressed. McNeill and staff revised the
scheme from a three-man front to a 4-3 and aggressively sought
some junior college talent to make an immediate impact. The
Pirates went from allowing 478.77 yards per game in 2010, which
was 120th and last in the Football Bowl Subdivision to yielding
376.44 yards per game in 2011. That's over a football field of
difference and ECU moved up to 56th nationally in the NCAA's FBS
total defensive statistics this past season.
McNeill has conveyed the message
that he cares about his players but he will discipline them when
necessary. When corner Emanuel Davis and receiver Michael Bowman
were arrested for a drinking episode downtown last summer,
McNeill suspended them for the season opener against South
Carolina.
"I love all of our kids but I
love the team and East Carolina more," McNeill said at the time.
" ... I hold our team to a high standard. It's not one way for
one person and another way for another person. We're going to
gather information whenever an incident happens. We'll take a
decisive, disciplined and consistent approach and we keep moving
on. Those young men have accepted responsibility. They're in the
midst of doing all those things. I love 'em and I'll welcome
them back once everything is done."
McNeill has the players'
respect. The ECU coach spoke highly of Davis after a 38-31 win
over Central Florida on Senior Night.
"He's done a great job with me,"
said the Pirates coach. "Some deals happen but I'm very proud of
Emanuel and how he's been a leader for me. He's done whatever
I've asked him to do. He said one thing when he hugged me
tonight. 'Thank you.' I go, 'Hey, thank you more.' "
When it comes to making
adjustments, one of the biggest is McNeill's own weight loss
program. Hip problems and an unchecked appetite caused him to
balloon to nearly 400 pounds in his first season back on the ECU
sideline. That was more than double his playing weight. But
McNeill and his team of Greenville-based medical personnel made
the adjustments — weight loss surgery followed by a hip
replacement. McNeill has shed over 130 pounds. He looks like a
new man and says he feels like one, too.
Leach, who indirectly put the
wheels in motion for McNeill to get the ECU job, was the
catalyst for McNeill's most recent round of adjustments. Leach
came out of his coaching exile to take the job at Washington
State. McGuire and Dennis Simmons soon left the ECU staff to
join Leach with the Cougars.
McNeill combed over candidates
and added Doll and Washington, who have each been on BCS
national championship staffs during lengthy careers as
assistants.
The case could certainly be made
that the ECU staff got stronger, no question in terms of
experience, with the recent hires.
McNeill also brought in Brian
Overton, who has strong Eastern North Carolina connections, to
fill the director of football operations position.
Situations will continue to
arise that will require McNeill's handling. The reassuring
aspect of the process is that the program often appears better
off after he gets involved in the solution.
Creech happy for Doll, Pirates
When McNeill brought Doll back
aboard the Pirate ship as running backs coach and special teams
coordinator, Jimmy Creech was very pleased. Creech, who is
entering his second year as Executive President of the Pirate
Club, and Doll were among nine seniors on ECU's Southern
Conference championship team in 1972.
Creech, his son, David, and
former Pirates teammate, Billy Tart, were guests of Doll in New
Orleans at the conclusion of the 2003 season when Doll was on
the LSU staff and the Tigers, then coached by Nick Saban, took
the BCS title with a 21-14 win over Oklahoma. They also were on
hand for a 27-13 Denver win over New England in the playoffs
following the 2005 season when Doll was a Broncos assistant.
"Kirk and I went to dinner
recently," Creech said. "He came here to help take East Carolina
to the next level. He's had a lot of success and expects the
program to win. He's a solid person with impeccable character."
Creech recalled that Doll came
to ECU as a junior college transfer, playing defensive end as a
junior and moving to defensive tackle as a senior.
"He's back where he wants to be,
which is different from a lot of coaches we've had who might be
at East Carolina until they can go somewhere else," Creech said.
"This is where he wants to retire."
Hoops eyes Houston
The first leg of ECU's
basketball swing through the Lone Star state
produced a 70-56 loss at
Texas-El Paso on Wednesday night, dropping the Pirates to 0-4 in
Conference USA.
A 3-pointer by Shamarr Bowden
did give ECU its first lead in league play this season at 7-6
with 17:12 left in the first half as the Pirates avoided another
bad start against a C-USA opponent. Threes by Miguel Paul and
Paris Roberts-Campbell produced second half leads for ECU.
UTEP closed with a decisive 18-6
run in a game that featured dominance in a couple of statistical
categories by the Miners. The hosts held a 39-19 rebounding
advantage and were 18 of 21 at the free throw line while the
Pirates were two for three.
ECU's seven turnovers were
certainly within an acceptable range.
The Pirates are in Houston today
preparing for an 8 p.m. game with the Cougars on Saturday.