CHRONICLING EAST
CAROLINA & CONFERENCE USA
SPORTS
-----
View from the East
Friday, February 22, 2013
By Al Myatt |
|
One more season in C-USA
By
Al Myatt
©2013 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
View the Mobile Alpha version of this page.
Football membership in
the Big East for East Carolina was sort of like reaching a promised
land.
It represented the
culmination of efforts over the years to improve facilities and
performance in a range of sports. Hopefully, the invitation will evolve
into a home for all Pirate programs as the Big East redefines itself
with the pending exit of seven basketball-oriented Catholic schools.
But as that situation goes
forward, ECU still has a tour of duty in Conference USA for the 2013-14
school year. As this winter's strength and conditioning program gives
way to spring practice in football before returning to summer workouts
under Coach Jeff Connors and then the outset of preseason camp in
August, ECU likely will emerge as a favorite in the new East Division
lineup of C-USA.
Gone will be defending
East Division champion Central Florida. Memphis also will join the
Knights in the Big East in 2013. The Tigers' departure takes away the
premier basketball program from C-USA as well as a developing football
entity in the division.
ECU's division loses those
two programs and adds three for next season. The newcomers include
Florida Atlantic, Florida International and Middle Tennessee State for a
total of seven teams in 2013. Alabama-Birmingham, Marshall and Southern
Miss return.
In the West Division,
Houston and Southern Methodist are moving to the Big East. The additions
are Louisiana Tech, North Texas and Texas-San Antonio. Rice, Texas-El
Paso, Tulane and defending division champion Tulsa will be back.
That's 14 possibilities
for the C-USA championship game on Dec. 7. ECU's focus is much more
immediate but there is a mindset in place to be playing that Saturday.
"The Big East move is
there and it's in front of us," said ECU coach Ruffin McNeill. "But we
only think about things we can control and that's the here and now.
Right now, we're in preparation for spring."
The Pirates are scheduled
to open spring practice March 25. The spring game is set for April 20.
Assuming a favorite's role
in C-USA is some way down chronologically on the Pirates' to-do list.
"We always have
expectations and goals for our team," McNeill said. "We always have that
vision for our team. One of the most important things that can be
overlooked and normally is overlooked is the process — making sure the
players and coaches and everybody involved, managers, sports medicine —
everybody involved in the football program understands that the process
is the most important thing.
"The goals and the vision
they are there but what we're emphasizing right now is the process
toward those goals. ... The way that we'll handle any expectations is
that none will be higher than ours. What comes right behind that is
making sure that we understand the process and embrace it. That's where
we are with that."
The Pirates are scheduled
to open that 2013 season at home on Aug. 31 against Old Dominion, which
joins C-USA in 2014. The matchup with the Monarchs will be the first of
four with teams ECU has never played in football. The three former Sun
Belt teams — Florida Atlantic (home, Sept. 7), Middle Tennessee (away,
Oct. 5) and Florida International (away, Nov. 2) — present an element of
the unknown. It's a little different than facing opponents where there
may be some continuity from year to year in terms of schemes and
personnel.
ECU didn't meet a team it
had not faced in its football history during an 8-5 season in 2012.
"It's always different
when you have a new opponent on your schedule," McNeill said. "Just as
they are new to our coaches and our program, it's the same for us. We'll
be new to them as well. In the offseason, we'll try to get as much film
as possible on each team. ... We'll make sure we have as much knowledge
as we can."
ECU's new defensive
coordinator, Rick Smith, will be a source for research for the programs
the Pirates will play.
The intelligence files on
the opposition only go so far in terms of the factors that produce
success. The bulk of the process comes from within.
"We'll do our due
diligence as far as the film study and preparing that way," McNeill
said. "The primary emphasis will be making sure we are as focused as we
can be and understand that it's going to take a sustained effort and
focus to make sure we really dive in and embrace the process. That's the
biggest thing right now."
ODU, Florida Atlantic,
Middle Tennessee and Florida International will all get their share of
attention from ECU as the 2013 season unfolds. There may be some role
reversal for the Pirates, who have been the up and comers in many
instances during their football journey. McNeill said there will be
plenty of chips to go around.
"We welcome the new teams
into the conference," McNeill said. "We've always played with a chip on
our shoulders here. I think maybe the conference has as well. We'll all
have that chip on our shoulders. It won't just be East Carolina. ...
We'll just keep worrying about ourselves and making sure we do all the
things we can do every day to make sure we're the best we can be and
that we improve each day."
Opportunities to learn,
support and socialize
McNeill has been involved
in coaching since he finished playing at ECU in 1979. He'll be sharing
some of the wisdom his coaching experience has produced at a Nike clinic
in St. Louis today.
McNeill is scheduled to
speak specifically on linebacker play. He always tries to pick up some
information in addition to that which he imparts in such settings.
"If you go to a clinic and
learn one item, you really have advanced yourself," McNeill said.
"You're always trying to expand your knowledge and your craft if you
can."
The Pirate staff is in
demand as speakers. Connors will be doing a clinic in Indiana, near the
NFL combine. Offensive coordinator Lincoln Riley spoke recently in
Charlotte. Running backs coach and special teams coordinator Kirk Doll
has a pending engagement in South Carolina.
McNeill plans to attend
the funeral of Sam Hardy, the father of outstanding receiver Justin
Hardy, on Saturday.
"That's been a tough
deal," McNeill said. "Unexpected. ... That's some of the family part,
not the business part like the Nike deal."
The ECU coach and wife
Erlene will soon be making a circuit of Pirate Club gatherings
throughout the region.
"We look forward to those
travels and those engaging conversations that we always have at each
stop," McNeill said.
Competition designed
for development
As spring ball approaches,
there is not a wide open, four-man battle for the quarterback position
in the works such as the one which characterized the sessions a year
ago.
But competition remains
very much an element in the overall design for improvement.
"We want to create
competition every day at every position," McNeill said. "That's the goal
of recruiting and of offseason development. It's very important that we
continue to increase competition. The better the competition, no matter
the position, whether it's the quarterback or the offensive line or
linebacker — the more competition at each position makes that position
better because they keep trying to outperform themselves each day and
whoever is competing against them."
Spring also will be an
integral part in the maturation process of the next ECU football team.
"I'm looking forward to
spring," McNeill said. " ... I'm looking forward to getting around the
kids on the field. ... Every team is new. Every team is different. I'm
anxious to see this team's personality begin to develop in spring. ...
It's got a chance to be a special group."
E-mail Al Myatt
Al Myatt Archives
02/22/2013 09:26 AM
---------- |