HB Arnett’s

801
372 - 0819
1391
West 800 South –
Vol. 34,
Issue 35 –March 31, 2014
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UConn 70 BYU 51
Women Basketball
Team Gets in First Blows, but UConn Eventually Blows Out Cougars
BYU made a game of it early, but in the end the Huskies of UConn were
still the lead dog in the game, tournament and nation.
Give Jeff Judkins and his Lady Cougars credit. They never had the
“deer in headlights” look against the top seeded team in the
country.
BYU trailed by just 1 at the intermission and early in the second half
actually held a 3 point lead. From then on the Lady Cougars were game to the
end, but UConn just had too much actual game and showed why they are the
dominant women’s team in college basketball.
BYU was led by seniors Kim Beeston and Jennifer Hamson. Beeston scored
16 and Hamson added 9 points, 13 rebounds and 6 blocked shots.
The Cougars end their season with an outstanding 28-7 record. Now we
will see if they can keep up the momentum next season and find a way to attract
actual paying customers to their games.
While BYU women’s soccer and volleyball are proven draws, BYU
women’s basketball isn’t. It may not be fair, but it is reality.
This may be the trick to turn the tide, but don’t expect it to happen any
time soon.
It will take at least 5 straight seasons of outstanding success for a
following to develop. But for at least the last three weeks, that following was
real among BYU sports fans who appreciated what the Lady Cougars did.
Taysom and Tim
SPRING FOOTBALL GETS PASSING GRADE
BYU’s passing game will be better than it was last year if spring
football practices are any indication. Throw in two more game changers at wide
receiver in the fall with the arrival of Devon Blackmon and Jordan Leslie and
it is possible that BYU might be back in the passing business.
Possible yes, but not likely.
As the headline indicates, BYU’s passing game this spring
projects well for improvement next fall. But a passing grade is just ordinary.
It is not great.
BYU’s passing game will be better, but it won’t be
extraordinary for the next two seasons. That’s my opinion and I stand by
it.
We have to love the fact that Bronco Mendenhall is constantly spouting
how Taysom Hill’s completions percentages have improved. That certainly
is true. He certainly is a better thrower now than he was last season. And why
shouldn’t he. He has been under the tutelage of special QB throwing
coaches and even a pitching coach to help with his mechanics.
But if we don’t expect Kyle Collinsworth to have a night and day
change in his free throw shooting abilities from one season to the next, why do
we expect Hill to do the same?
At this point in a college career, you basically are what you are
throwing the football and shooting free throws.
If Cougar fans are longing to see the Cougars’ offensive strength
be the passing game, they will have to wait two more seasons for Tanner Mangum.
Tim Tebow won two national championships at
As much as Taysom Hill has improved as a BYU quarterback throwing the
ball, he might even get better yet in his senior season. In my opinion,
however, he will never be considered an elite BYU throwing QB.
Who cares? Like Tebow, he is an elite athletic quarterback that can
potentially take BYU to heights of success they have never seen in quite some
time. But, it seems like BYU football fans won’t validate a BYU qb unless
he makes it in the NFL. Hill will make the NFL, but he won’t make it as
strictly a thrower. He will be like Tim Tebow or Jake Locker.
Again, Hill’s passing game will be improved, but it won’t
be elite. The good news is that with the offense BYU is running now, you
don’t need and NFL caliber thrower.
Hill’s passing improvements certainly has got Bronco
Mendenhall’s attention. He emphatically said after last Saturday’s
scrimmage that BYU is a very good team right now and should get better with the
addition of some game changing athletes arriving in the fall.
We mentioned two of those changers in Blackmon and Leslie. Defensively
look for incoming freshmen linebackers Fred Warner and Tyler Cook to also make
a difference.
But again, in my opinion, BYU is doing Hill and the program no favors
by trying to tie itself to the glory years of BYU’s passing game.
Those days may be resurrected with Tanner Mangum showing up from his
LDS mission, but for the next two seasons, BYU should ride Hill and his unique
skill set for all its worth now.
Again, my opinion, but the BYU fan base and the Cougar ticket sellers
and PR machine, are wasting their time trying to make Hill compete with Jim
McMahon, Steve Young and Ty Detmer, et al.
He will never have their passing skills, but those quarterbacks
can’t match Hill’s other quarterback skills.
I know there will be plenty of Cougar faithful that gladly will point
out Hill’s passing game numbers in Saturday’s scrimmage.
What’s not to like. Hill completed 19 of 27 passes for 307 yards and 3
touchdowns. Now when he can produce those numbers against a legitimate Division
I defense and not an intra squad defense made up of ones and twos, then we
might really have signs of improvement.
There is no argument that he will be an improved thrower, he will just
never be an elite BYU throwing quarterback.
Who cares, Hill will more than likely be judged as BYU’s most
successful quarterback ever if he delivers BYU as a national championship
contender in the next two seasons.
You don’t have to have an elite passer or passing game to be a
national contender. That is proven every season. What you have to have,
however, is an elite quarterback. BYU has that in Hill even though he will
never be an elite thrower.
Once again, despite Hill and other offensive stars like Jamaal Williams
and a bevy of new receivers, BYU will go only as far as their offensive line
will take them.
The word from coaches coming out of spring is that this group will be
better. There is no doubt about that assessment. The doubt is whether
better will translate to good enough to enhance the offensive components around
them.
We shall see and should know all we need to know when BYU heads to
Defensively and on paper Bronco appears to have all the pieces in
place. He has corners, more depth on the defensive line than he has ever had
and outside linebackers who are NFL quality, according to the head man. He is
referencing Alani Fua and Bronson Kaufusi.
BYU will continue to practice this week and wrap up their 15 NCAA
allotted spring practices. The scrimmage held Saturday was staged as to not
interfere with LDS General Conference next weekend.
Spring Depth Chart
Offense
QB – Taysom Hill, Christian Stewart
Running Back – Jamaal Hill, Algernon Brown, Adam Hine
Fullback – Paul Lasike,
Wide Receivers – Colby Pearson, Kurt Henderson, Nick Kurtz,
Michael Davis
Inside Receivers – Devin Mahina, Terenn Houk
Offensive Line - Top 9: Edward Fusi, Brayden Kearsley, Michael
Yeck, De’Ondre Wesley, Ului Lapuaho, Tuni Kanuch, Ryker Mathews, Terrance
Alletto, Solomone Kafu
Defense
Defensive Line –
Top 6: Graham Rowley, Travis Tuiloma, JonRyheem Peoples, Kesni Tausinga,
Marques Johnson, Remington Peck
OLB – Alani Fua,
(waiting for hs signee Fred Warner)
OLB – Bronson
Kaufusi, (waiting for hs signee Tyler Cook)
ILB – Manoa Pikula,
Jherremya Leuta-Douyere
ILB – Zac Stout,
Austin Heder
Corner –
Corner – Jordan
Johnson, Robertson Daniel
Safety – Craig
Bills, Kai Nacua
Safety – Robertson
Daniel,
Punter – Scott
Arellano
Kicker – Vance
Bingham, Trevor Samson
The complete 2014 BYU Spring Football Roster is listed below
BYU
Locks Up Championship and Number 1 Seed for Upcoming MPSF Volleyball Tournament
No. 2 BYU volleyball beat
No. 9 UCLA 3-1 (22-25, 25-22, 28-26, 25-21) on Senior Night to clinch a share
of its second consecutive Mountain Pacific Sports Federation regular-season
title Saturday night at the Smith Fieldhouse.
With the win, the Cougars
clinch the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament. With four conference games
remaining, this is the earliest a team has claimed the MPSF Championship. The Cougars
will host their quarterfinal matchup in the conference tournament and should
they advance, will host the semifinals and championship as the highest
remaining seed.
Once again, Taylor
Sander, BYU senior star showed why he is an elite player at the college level.
Against UCLA he led BYU (18-4, 18-2 MPSF) with 23 kills and three blocks. Josue
Rivera had 11 kills, and Tim Dobbert contributed 10 kills and seven blocks, a
new career-high. Devin Young had seven blocks and Tyler Heap had 48 assists.
Next up for the Cougars
will be two matches against
Television
Timetable
Baseball
BYU vs.
Pacific
Thursday, April 3 at
First Pitch: 6:00 pm MDT
TV: BYUtv
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