Thursday (3/20) practice observations

• Alumni at practice included: Allan Adami, Brian Bischoff
• 2008 freshmen at practice included: Braden Smith, Bryce Lunday
• Interesting juggling of the defensive line. Running with the first team: LE Anthony Sowe, LT Serge Elizee, RT Patrick Handy, RE Youri Yenga
Second unit: LE Adrian Dizer, LT Chris Parham, RT Zac Thomas, RE Jordan Johnson
• These coaches teach  constantly. When players are pulled aside for individual instruction, another coach swoops in to continue teaching. OL coach Dennis McKnight looks like he can still suit up, and at times looked like he might, in order to demonstrate technique. RBs coach Wes Suan was meticulous working with the running backs on the angles to take when approaching the QB for a handoff. DL coach Bert Hill was relentless with his group, putting aends and tackles through the same series of pass rush drills. And of course, Frank Gansz put the entire team through his standard special teams boot camp, eschewing the electronic bullhorn for a headset that allowed him to coach into a public address system. If that wasn't enough, the offense went through a skeleton drill, with subs standing in as token defensive players. On one scene, the mock pass rushers were Phillip Burley and ... June Jones.
• In one drill, Coach McKnight was barking at his offensive linemen to be quicker. The drill had a quarterback making a short pitch to a running back, who took off upfield, and clearly the offensive linemen needed to stay out in front and get downfield more quickly. On several consecutive plays, the quickest Mustang blocker: Josh LeRibeus.
• Catch of the day: Emmanuel Sanders. The junior-to-be ran a deep crossing route, and the pass was thrown a little behind him. Sanders turned toward his back (right) shoulder, twisted his body all the way around to make a stretching catch ... essentially behind him, as he ran away from the ball... or something. The description doesn't do it justice, but it was a sensational catch.
• The defensive line certainly looks different. Adrian Dizer is ... taking part in practice, which is a great sight. Youri Yenga is visibly bigger and stronger (Vic Viloria says Yenga has added about 15 pounds of lean muscle mass since the end of last season). Serge Elizee has lost 15, and it shows  he's much quicker in drills, and seems to have much better stamina. Zac Thomas looks thicker. Kyle DeGroat, coming off the busted ankle last year, moved surprisingly well in drills in which the linemen sprinted through foam tackling dummies  he's got a way to go, I would guess, but he was out there and running. The biggest transformation, though, is in Anthony Sowe. Remember how skinny he was when he signed? Now he says he's getting up toward 240, and looks impressive  very strong and very quick/explosive. Ran with the first-team defensive line, raced through drills with speed and power and showed good closing burst when tackling a foam dummy representing a QB. Will be interesting to see how he plays.
I know, it's short. Got out there late. Will get more in-depth next week.
• 2008 freshmen at practice included: Braden Smith, Bryce Lunday
• Interesting juggling of the defensive line. Running with the first team: LE Anthony Sowe, LT Serge Elizee, RT Patrick Handy, RE Youri Yenga
Second unit: LE Adrian Dizer, LT Chris Parham, RT Zac Thomas, RE Jordan Johnson
• These coaches teach  constantly. When players are pulled aside for individual instruction, another coach swoops in to continue teaching. OL coach Dennis McKnight looks like he can still suit up, and at times looked like he might, in order to demonstrate technique. RBs coach Wes Suan was meticulous working with the running backs on the angles to take when approaching the QB for a handoff. DL coach Bert Hill was relentless with his group, putting aends and tackles through the same series of pass rush drills. And of course, Frank Gansz put the entire team through his standard special teams boot camp, eschewing the electronic bullhorn for a headset that allowed him to coach into a public address system. If that wasn't enough, the offense went through a skeleton drill, with subs standing in as token defensive players. On one scene, the mock pass rushers were Phillip Burley and ... June Jones.
• In one drill, Coach McKnight was barking at his offensive linemen to be quicker. The drill had a quarterback making a short pitch to a running back, who took off upfield, and clearly the offensive linemen needed to stay out in front and get downfield more quickly. On several consecutive plays, the quickest Mustang blocker: Josh LeRibeus.
• Catch of the day: Emmanuel Sanders. The junior-to-be ran a deep crossing route, and the pass was thrown a little behind him. Sanders turned toward his back (right) shoulder, twisted his body all the way around to make a stretching catch ... essentially behind him, as he ran away from the ball... or something. The description doesn't do it justice, but it was a sensational catch.
• The defensive line certainly looks different. Adrian Dizer is ... taking part in practice, which is a great sight. Youri Yenga is visibly bigger and stronger (Vic Viloria says Yenga has added about 15 pounds of lean muscle mass since the end of last season). Serge Elizee has lost 15, and it shows  he's much quicker in drills, and seems to have much better stamina. Zac Thomas looks thicker. Kyle DeGroat, coming off the busted ankle last year, moved surprisingly well in drills in which the linemen sprinted through foam tackling dummies  he's got a way to go, I would guess, but he was out there and running. The biggest transformation, though, is in Anthony Sowe. Remember how skinny he was when he signed? Now he says he's getting up toward 240, and looks impressive  very strong and very quick/explosive. Ran with the first-team defensive line, raced through drills with speed and power and showed good closing burst when tackling a foam dummy representing a QB. Will be interesting to see how he plays.
I know, it's short. Got out there late. Will get more in-depth next week.