HB Arnett’s
COUGAR SPORTSLINE
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hbarnett@fiber.net and hbarnett@xmission
Vol. 27,
Issue 40, July 2, 2007
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WHAT MENDENHALL HAS DONE IN JUST TWO
SEASONS REALLY IS AMAZING
It is no secret that we were highly skeptical of Bronco
Mendenhall and his unique approach to running the BYU football program when he
was first hired.
We really didn't think it would fly.
It looks like we were wrong.
We started to realize that this guy may be for real when he did
something that very few other coaches have done or would ever do.
He threw his baby out with the bathwater last season when he
scrapped his personal preference for his 3-3-5 defense and chucked it for the
benefit of his team.
That showed us that this guy may really be head coach material.
Here are other things that he has done in just two years that
appears to have BYU on the fast track to success.
He established discipline. This was something that was lacking
for the last 10 years.
He brought former players into the program and let them embrace
their heritage and legacy. With their involvement, he created a recruiting network
with those same former players and has them involved in locating players all
across the country that will fit the new BYU football mold.
More Palatable
He has been proactive in the public relations department.
"Violation of team rules" certainly sounds more palatable to the
public than “Honor Code” violations.
The only time you ever hear that phrase used any more is when it
is mandatory because something has hit the police blotter.
The biggest thing that he has accomplished, however, in our
opinion, is that he has taken what was the biggest weakness of the BYU football
program and made it the strength of the program.
Stay with us on this one and let us explain.
Until Mendenhall, in our opinion, the biggest weakness of the
program was its affiliation with the
This is not a debate about The Church and its beliefs, tenets
and teachings, it is about how in the past they realistically made recruiting
very talented football players, both LDS and non LDS an extremely difficult
proposition for BYU football.
It is amazing that in just two short years, Mendenhall has now
branded BYU as a premium product because of those same perceived liabilities.
The school of management doesn't have to look very far for a
good case study for their students.
Nature of Business
BYU won’t always win 11 games each season. We can
guarantee that there will be years when fans start to wonder just how good of a
coach Mendenhall really is. That is the nature of the business and his coaching
acumen will fluctuate with the win-loss record.
But while there will be occasional doubts concerning his
coaching abilities, based on what he has done so far, there should be no doubts
about his marketing abilities.
Fans and supporters are embracing his stoicism and
steadfastness. With his foray into summer firesides and his exceptional
organization of his summer camps, he has somehow found a way to successfully
couch Cougar football within the parameters of the Church.
People have been waiting an entire lifetime for this.
Mendenhall's approach to BYU football and the 11-2 season last
year has given him a lot of football capital in the bank.
We see that capital for the Cougars increasing. All
Mendenhall has to do is consistently win 7-8 games a season and then about
every third or fourth year, when he has a senior dominated team with a proven
quarterback, turn in a big 10 or 11 win year.
That is a formula that will give Mendenhall leg up on
becoming a legend and also put some real money in his personal bank account.
In our opinion, this year Mendenhall will have a seasoned and
veteran team, but he doesn't have a proven quarterback. Seven or eight wins is
how we see it, with the big money to be made the following year by BYU in the
2008 season.
RECRUITING RIVER KEEPS RISING
BYU added another five verbal commitments since our last
newsletter. They include:
Shiloah Te'o, 5-11, 190, Safety, Kahuku HS, HI
Seta Pohahau, 6-0, 205, RB, Aragon HS, CA
Brock Stringham, 6-6, 280, OL, Mountain
Garrett Nicholson, 5-10, 180, DB, West HS, UT
C.J. Santiago, 6-2, 215, punter,
That brings the total of early commitments to 18. Others that have
already given a verbal include:
Kevan Bills, 6-3, 225 LB, Timpview HS, UT
Jesse Taufi, 6-5, 330, OL,
Masi Tuitama, 6-2, 210, LB,
Michael Alisa, 6-2, 210, LB, Timpview HS, UT.
Atem Bol, 6-2, 205, WR,
Michael Yeck, 6-8, 260 OL, Keller HS, TX.
Tolu Moala, 6-1, 230, LB, El
Tevita Hola, 6-1, 310, DT,
Jerry Bruner, 6-3, 225, RB/LB, Evergreen HS,
Daniel Sorensen, 6-1, 200 Safety,
Cameron Comer, 6-1, 180, DB, Springville HS, UT
Justin Sorensen, 6-2, 215, K, Bingham HS, UT
Austin Holt, 6-5, 230, TE, Bingham HS, UT
Three Sophomore
Commits
BYU already has 3 commitments fro the 2009 recruiting class. They
include:
Adam Timo, 6-1, 175, RB,
Jray Galeai, 6-0,185, Safety, Timpview/Kahuku HS
Craig Bills, 6-2, 190, Safety, Timpview HS, UT
REINING IN THE RECRUITING REVERIE
If you haven't been keeping track, BYU already has 18 verbal
commitments in the fold for the 2008 football recruiting year. They have at
least three commitments in the bag for the 2009 recruiting class.
This follows the new recruiting model instituted by Bronco
Mendenhall beginning last year when he made a concentrated push to offer
scholarships early and then get those early commitments.
Bronco's method involves targeting recruits that can meet his
stringent criteria for those who will represent the BYU football program, the
university and the
Recruiting has never looked so rosy. BYU fans have never been
more excited.
The model appears to be succeeding in all areas, except one,
which remains to be proven.
Based on what we have seen on paper, it is highly likely that
this last test will also be passed, but in reality, no one really knows. We
should start to get a clearer picture this season.
The one question that seems to be forgotten is can any of these
new Bronco recruits play?
Coming off a remarkable 11-2 MWC championship season and a
glittering Las Vegas Bowl win over
The biggest evidence of that is the demand for tickets.
Bought The Model
We have bought into the infrastructure and organizational model that
Mendenhall has instituted. How could you not be impressed?
Before we go totally giddy and gaga, however, we still want to
exercise some due diligence and see one or two more seasons of the system in
action.
That is because we still hold to our number one principle of
college football: It is all about the players. If you don't have enough good
ones, performing at a high enough level, you won't consistently win.
BYU and Bronco Mendenhall certainly had enough good players
performing at a high level last season. It turned what had been a four-year
disaster into a fairy tale season.
We give Mendenhall credit for working his magic with those
players last season.
Now we want to see him work that same magic in the next season
or two, with his own players.
Nobody wants to rain on the parade, but the magic of last year
was accomplished almost entirely with Gary Crowton's players.
It probably is a testament to how good a coach Mendenhall really
is that he was able to take players that had underachieved and made them big
winners.
We think there is some validity to that, but we also think you
have to keep talented players in the equation.
Urban Meyer reaped the benefit of players left in the cupboard
by Ron McBride at
We would have loved to see if he could have maintained that same
level at
We will know, however, in about two seasons, just how Mendenhall
will fare with a roster of only players he has recruited.
On Paper
Again on paper, it is very exciting, but on the field, we still know
nothing.
That will start to change slightly this coming season and then
we can truly judge whether we should fasten our seatbelt on the BYU bandwagon.
Here is list of players from last year's championship team on
both offense and defense that were all recruited and signed by Gary Crowton or
walked on during his tenure:
John Beck, Fui Vakapuna, Curtis Brown, Jonny Harline, Daniel
Coats, Michael Reed, Matt Allen, Nate Meikle, Bryce Mahuika, Zac Collie, Dallas
Reynolds, Ray Feinga, Jake Kuresa, Travis Bright. Only Sete Aulai, Mckay
Jacobson and Manase
On defense, we had some promising glimpses of Mendenhall
recruits. Almost the entire defensive line was his. Ian Dulan, Romney Fuga, Jan
Jorgensen and Russell Tialvea were all early Mendenhall recruits.
The linebackers were almost all holdovers from the Crowton era.
Cam Jensen, David Nixon, Bryan Kehl, Aaron Wagner and Markell Staffieri were
Crowton guys. Kelly Poppinga came in under Mendenhall. The starting safeties
from last year, Dustin Gabriel and Quinn Gooch were Crowton guys, while the
corners, Justin Robinson and Ben Criddle started their BYU careers with
Mendenhall.
We definitely feel that recruiting under Mendenhall looks
promising and maybe even a little exhilarating, but it still lacks two more
years before it is proven. That will be done by the players on the field.
It's A No Brainer, Cade Cooper
Transfers
Cade Cooper, the highly-touted jc quarterback transfer from
He battled Max Hall for the starting job this past spring. He
came in second. He still may have had a chance at unseating Hall this fall, but
when he seriously injured his foot during the spring game, those chances went
out the window.
Instead, Cooper will be rehabilitating his foot this coming
season at another school. Had Cooper been a John Elway or Tom Brady type qb, he
may have been able to give Hall a run for his money in 2008, but he is no John
Elway. He is good, but not an elite quarterback. For that matter, neither is
Hall or his new backup Brendan Gaskins.
There is no way that Cooper, coming off an injury and missing a
year was going to overtake Hall or Gaskins, both of whom were going to gain a
year of D-1 experience over Cooper.
These are all competitive guys and they all want to play. It
wasn't hard to read the cards and see that barring injuries to Hall and
Gaskins, Cooper wasn't going to be in the BYU qb picture.
It was a bad break, literally, that cost Cooper, but in our
opinion, he is doing what is best for him and his departure from the program
will have no impact this fall or beyond.
Attrition in any program, including BYU's, is normal, but when
that attrition is a quarterback, it attracts attention.
BYU has had its share of qb attrition, especially this season.
Besides Cooper, Jacob Bower also left the program and will play a year at
Bakersfield JC and them more than likely surface again in 2008 at another
Division I program.
Before Cooper and Bower, it was Ben Olson transferring to UCLA.
Other BYU qbs to transfer from
Attrition at quarterback is normal for BYU. Here are some other
quarterbacks that signed with the Cougars and didn't last: Kevin Gilbride,
Lance Pendleton, Danny Southwick, Paul Shoemaker, Brian Vye and Gym Kimball.
FOOTBALL FLUFF AND
STUFF
BYU released its fall roster last week. We noticed they have
already switched incoming freshman Eathyn Manumaleuna from the offensive line to
the defensive line. That says to us that there could still be some depth issues
at that position.
Manumaleuna will join David Angilau as the other freshman
defensive lineman joining the team this year.
BYU signed Star Lotulelei this February as a defensive lineman,
but he isn't on the roster. There is no official word on why he isn’t on
the roster, but there were some previous concerns about him qualifying
academically.
There was some hope that Matangi Tong, the talented lineman and
brother of running back Manase
Of the most recent recruiting class, seven signees will be
serving LDS missions before enrolling in school. They include; Famika Anae,
Braden Brown, Aveni Leung Wai, Devin Mahina, Marcus Mathews and Houston
Reynolds.
Despite having plenty of recruiting suitors from the Pac 10, Big
Twelve and other BCS teams, we have people telling us now that Sausan Shakerin,
the extremely talented running back prospect from Alta HS in Sandy, UT, will
likely stay in the state to play his college football. Those same people are
now telling us that he will either choose
We still think he is a long shot for the Cougars to land, but he
certainly is worth the effort BYU has and continues to put forth in trying to
land him.
BASKETBALL BRIEFS
Dave Rose announced that Terry Nashif will replace Walter Roese
as a new assistant coach for the BYU basketball team. Nashif had been the
director of basketball operations.
His spot was recently filled by Tim LaComb, who comes from
BYU has announced its non-conference schedule for the coming
season.
Sat Nov 10
Wed Nov 14
Fri Nov 16
Tue Nov 20
Fri Nov 23
Sat Nov 24 either
Sat Dec 1
Wed Dec 5 Weber State at
Sat Dec 8
Wed Dec 12 Lamar at
Sat Dec 15 Pepperdine at
Fri Dec 21 Southern Utah at
Sat Dec 29
Thu Jan 3 Loyola Marymount at
Tue Jan 8
You might notice that
That is what will happen. BYU and USU will face each other in
2008 at Energy Solutions Arena. In 2009, they will play in