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An influx of depth and talent has YSU’s defensive line thinking big

By Joe Scalzo

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

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Photo by: William D. Lewis

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After appearing in nine games last year, including one start, overachieving defensive tackle D.J. Moss of Austintown Fitch has emerged as one of YSU’s best linemen so far in training camp.

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Photo by: William D. Lewis

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YSU defensive lineman Andrew Johnson started eight of his 10 games last fall but said he’s not practicing like a man guaranteed of a job.

By Joe Scalzo

scalzo@vindy.com

YOUNGSTOWN

After a solid — and slightly overlooked — first season on Youngstown State’s football team, there is probably no defensive lineman with a safer job than senior Andrew Johnson.

He doesn’t see it that way.

“I feel like I can’t take any plays off [in practice],” said Johnson, who transferred in last summer from Bowling Green. “Just because I’m a senior and this is my last go-around doesn’t mean I’m guaranteed any playing time because we have that much talent.”

That wasn’t the case last year, where players such as Johnson and then-senior DT Torrance Nicholson wore down in games because YSU didn’t have enough depth to give them a breather.

“We definitely went out and recruited with depth in mind,” defensive line coach Tom Sims said. “We wanted to upgrade our talent also and we felt like we did that.”

Junior college transfers Nick DeKraker and Josh Fenderson arrived in the spring and 10 more defensive linemen joined the team this summer, including Grand Rapids Community College transfer Aronde Stanton, a junior defensive tackle.

“He’s really coming on and doing a good job,” Johnson said of Stanton. “Watch out for [No.] 94 this year.”

DeKraker, Johnson, Obinna Ekweremuba and sophomore D.J. Moss (Fitch) were the first team defensive linemen in Saturday’s scrimmage, with Stanton, Fenderson and pass rushing specialist Daniel Stewart also getting first-team looks.

Of those, the undersized (5-foot-11) Moss might be the biggest surprise.

“He’s an overachiever,” Sims said. “He has to do everything right and he has.”

Said Moss, “I’m just working hard, trying to do things right and make a name for myself.”

While an offensive lineman might play all 70 snaps, even the best defensive linemen are limited to 40-50 and Sims plans to rotate liberally, particularly since so many conference teams play an uptempo style.

“The best way to put it is, a great miler will lose to an average relay team,” Sims said. “We’re a work in progress. We feel like we took some steps forward this week but we’ve got a long way to go before our first game.”

YSU coach Eric Wolford’s philosophy is the closer you are to the ball, the less likely you are to play early in your career. Positions such as wide receiver or cornerback rely more on athleticism, whereas positions such as guard or defensive tackle are more strength-oriented.

Since freshmen typically need time to bulk up for the college game, it’s unlikely one of the newcomers is going to snag a starting spot.

But since defensive linemen rotate in and out so often, it wouldn’t be a surprise if a handful earned letters.

“Anybody that proves that they can contribute, we’re going to put them out there and give them opportunity,” Sims said. “So we’ll have a lot of people playing.”

YSU lost two starters to graduation, Nicholson and Luke Matelan, and senior-to-be Stephen Meadows left the team in the offseason after losing his starting spot to Ekweremuba in the final six games.

Like last year, Sims said players will be constantly evaluated.

“It’ll be day-to-day, play-to-play,” he said. “Lot of people talk about starters. I’m looking for finishers, people that I can trust at the end of those ballgames that are going to finish them.”


YSU Roundup | News and Notes

Position changes: Junior linebacker Will Shaw was switched from linebacker to tight end, one of three position changes announced Monday. Shaw played all 11 games at safety last year, starting eight. He was moved to linebacker in the spring but was limited with a hamstring injury. YSU coach Eric Wolford said he talked with Shaw about the switch on Sunday and Shaw was initially hesitant. “After one practice [Monday morning], he was like, ‘Wow, I can be pretty good at this,’” Wolford said. The other changes involved freshmen: Brandon Green moved from DT to the offensive line and CB Parnell Taylor was moved from CB to WR.

Future in doubt: Senior DE David Rach (South Range) could be academically ineligible this season, Wolford said. “He had a class where he didn’t get the grade he expected to get, which is unfortunate because he busted his tail in it,” Wolford said. “He’s trying to talk to the teacher because he thinks maybe they made a mistake, but if he doesn’t get his grade changed, he will be ineligible.” Rach, a secondary education major, started all 11 games at linebacker last year.

Depth chart: Wolford posted his first depth chart Monday but did not release it to the media. He hinted it has quite a few underclassmen. “Just because you were a starter on a 3-8 team doesn’t mean you’re gong to be a starter this year,” he said. “You’re not grandfathered in.”

Preseason poll: Defending FCS champion Eastern Washington received 90 of 140 first-place votes to take the No. 1 spot in the The Sports Network/Fathead.com FCS preseason poll. Appalachian State and William & Mary were 2-3. Defending Missouri Valley Football Conference champion Northern Iowa was seventh, North Dakota State was 10th and Southern Illinois 19th. YSU was 40th, which sounds OK until you consider that Harvard was 36th.

Joe Scalzo