CHRONICLING EAST
CAROLINA & CONFERENCE USA
SPORTS
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View from the East
Thursday, October 11, 2012
By Al Myatt |
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Pirates seek grasp of elusive momentum
By
Al Myatt
©2012 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
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East Carolina has had
a long week to contemplate
a 40-20 loss at Central Florida.
The Pirates got out to a 14-0 lead in the Thursday night encounter
with the Knights. After a 75-yard touchdown drive and a 76-yard
scoring pass from Shane Carden to Justin Hardy on the first two
possessions, ECU led 14-0.
Then UCF made a U-turn
with the game's momentum on a 99-yard kickoff return by Quincy McDuffie
and the Pirates never quite recovered. The outcome dropped ECU to
3-3 overall and 2-1 in Conference USA.
The course of the loss to the Knights has influenced the Pirates'
preparation and thinking going into a Homecoming matchup with Memphis at
4:30 p.m. on Saturday.
"Getting back on the
winning track is important," ECU coach Ruffin McNeill said Wednesday
morning. "Making sure we learn from the Central Florida game about
momentum and keeping it and if we lose it, get it back. Making sure all
three sides (offense, defense and special teams) understand that they
work together. ... They all depend on one another."
Some personnel adjustments
apparently have been made on coverage teams. ECU also had a kick
returned for a score in the Texas-El Paso game although it came with the
Pirates safely ahead and didn't impact the outcome to the same degree.
McNeill advocates an
attacking mentality that also applies to coverage teams.
"Be the hammer, not the
nail," cites the ECU coach.
McNeill said the Pirates
have had good practices getting ready to face a Tigers team that got its
first win, 14-10, over Rice last week. Memphis is under the direction of
first-year coach Justin Fuente.
The loss at UCF will have
some value if ECU learns something from it. The Pirates appear to have
an easier schedule in the league for the remainder of the season
compared to the Knights. UCF hosts a Southern Miss team which has yet to
play like a traditional Golden Eagles team. UCF also must make trips to
Marshall, UTEP and Tulsa. ECU has Marshall at home, has already beaten
the Miners at home and does not play the Golden Hurricane (5-1) during
the regular season.
"There's a lot of football
to be played," McNeill said after the loss in Orlando.
The second half of the
2012 schedule appears much more manageable than the first half, but the
Pirates will have to do a better job of controlling the elusive quality
of momentum than they did in the short week following the home win over
UTEP.
Four of ECU's last six
games are at home and the combined record of the two teams the Pirates
will face on the road, UAB and Tulane, is currently 1-9.
Homecoming special for
Ruff
ECU is 47-10 in homecoming
games since 1955 and has won six straight of the alumni gatherings.
McNeill remembers
homecomings from his playing days as a Pirate strong safety in the late
1970s.
"My parents (Ruffin Sr.
and Bonnie) coming up (from Lumberton) and bringing food for my
roommate, Charlie Carter, and I," McNeill said. "They always seemed to
enjoy it. They came to every game I played and even away games, they
would travel. They'd leave school on Friday and travel to where we were.
My dad's coming up. It's always a festive environment. Parents and the
festive environment. It was the same feeling."
McNeill's mother passed
away in 2007 when he was at Texas Tech.
"My mom was the rock and
my dad, everybody knows how I feel about him," McNeill said. "It was
very tough on us when we lost mom. Those memories always come back. The
positive memories come back. When I'm walking or during a game I always
wear (Mom) on my sweatband so she's there in my heart, in my memory and
spirit. She's there watching over the Pirates."
Watching film
It takes McNeill two to
three hours to watch a game tape even though the time between plays is
edited out in the versions he sees.
He may spend five to six
minutes watching one play from different angles as he looks for
tendencies from individual players.
"I run it back and forth
to see if I can see something that will help the offensive or defensive
staff," said the Pirates coach.
He watches film from
practice with the same degree of scrutiny.
"I run it back each time
to watch each guy," he said. "I may watch each guy a couple of times. It
takes a while."
I remember seeing Frank
Orgel, an assistant in the Pat Dye era, doing the same thing with a film
projector sitting at a desk in the football office and projecting the
image on a wall. Orgel sat about two feet from the images in the
darkened room.
No wonder he wore glasses.
The technology has improved significantly.
The story goes that Dye
once had to cut a postgame radio interview short after a comeback
victory so he could find Orgel, his college teammate at Georgia.
"I've got to go find my
defensive coordinator," Dye said. "I fired him during the game and I've
got to hire him back."
Davis with unbeaten
Falcons
The Atlanta Falcons are
5-0 and although rookie quarterback Dominique Davis from ECU hasn't
thrown a pass, his presence in the NFL helps the Pirates with
recruiting.
"It does," McNeill
confirmed. "Even the guys who were here before the current staff — Chris
Johnson, C.J. Wilson, Linval Joseph. Big Steve (Baker) is still on the
roster with the Cardinals and Dwayne (Harris, Cowboys). Those guys are
still hanging in there. It always helps (recruiting) because the kids
have their dream of playing in the NFL. We talk about academics and
getting a degree but you also have to let them know that they have the
same chance of going to the next level as anyone else."
McNeill permits NFL scouts
to observe a portion of practice every other week. They are also allowed
to evaluate film.
Different diets during
delay
A story on Yahoo Sports
revealed that UTEP coach Mike Price bought barbecue for his players from
a girl scout booth at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium during the 80-minute weather
delay in
a 28-18 ECU win over the Miners
on Sept. 29. Price said he had gotten his players turkey legs one time
during a delay in a game at New Mexico State.
"We got some UTEP money
into the Greenville economy," said McNeill with a chuckle. "Mike is one
of those guys who will do things out of the ordinary. I got a kick out
of that."
The Pirates got some
fortification, too.
"We had some energy bars
that Coach (Jeff) Connors had," McNeill said. "We had some bananas that
we normally have at halftime for energy. We had some Powerades, trying
to make sure we were hydrated. We didn't get barbecue sandwiches."
ECU's cuisine may have
been more effective under the circumstances as the Pirates put up 21
decisive points after the delay.
Recruiting objectives
The Pirates staff put in
some time on the recruiting trail after the Thursday night game at UCF
before reconvening with the players on Sunday night to get ready for
Memphis.
"We're always trying to
replenish and stack the offensive and defensive lines," McNeill said.
"We're making headway there. With the defense being a 3-4, linebackers
are a premium. Also, finding DBs who can cover on the back end.
Offensively, we're always trying to get a running back. We try to make
sure we keep speed at the wideout position. You always have to sign a
quarterback in this offense."
Birthday a working day
Tuesday marked McNeill's
54th birthday.
"Practice, work," he said
of how he spent the occasion. "It seems I'm always working because it's
always during the season. I spent some time with Erlene (wife). I
watched Tom Cruise in The Last Samurai. I watched it by myself. I'm a
big movie buff. I love watching movies. ... I had some leftover
spaghetti."
Maybe the Pirates can get
their coach a belated birthday gift, a momentous win over Memphis.
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10/11/2012 02:55 AM
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