By
Al Myatt
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East Carolina football coach Ruffin McNeill has had time
to examine
Saturday's 15-10 home loss to Virginia Tech.
"I thought it was a game we can learn from as a staff and
as a team," McNeill said. "We've accepted things that need to be
corrected."
The game tape has been analyzed and the Pirates are doing
some scrimmaging in practice this week with an open date coming up on
Saturday.
"I was very pleased with how we approached the game as a
team," McNeill said Wednesday. "We went into the game with expectations
of winning the football game. We felt great about our game plan on all
three sides of the ball."
The Hokies are synonymous with strong special teams play.
"I thought special teams play became an advantage for us
against one of the best special teams programs in the country," McNeill
said. "We did a good job of covering, a good job of returning and I was
really proud of that."
Virginia Tech missed two field goals and an extra point.
"The field goal misses, they were forced field goal
misses," said the Pirates coach. "When you watch the film, we forced
pressure on the kicker. I was very pleased with that part."
The Hokies managed just 53 yards rushing in 34 attempts,
an average of 1.6 yards per carry. Virginia Tech ran for 153 yards on 33
rushes, an average of 4.6 yards, in a 35-10 loss to No.1 Alabama in the
season opener at the Georgia Dome on Aug. 31.
"Defensively, we did a really good job up front of
controlling the run game," McNeill said. "I was very proud of our
defensive line, our front seven and our safeties. When they were needed,
they did a great job. They converted some third downs on us. The third
and mediums more than anything is what we've got to correct from that. I
thought the defense held up well after turnovers. They did a good job of
going on the field and giving us some momentum with stops. I was proud
of that by that group.
"All three sides played hard. You watch the film. There's
effort and then there's strain. These kids, we strained the entire game
on every snap. I was proud of that."
Defensive coordinator Bud Foster is another component of
success for the Hokies.
"That was a top 10 defense we played the other day,"
McNeill said. "They did a good job, especially in man coverage, but we
learned a lot about some things we've got to be able to do. We started
correcting those this week. I thought the kids competed well. They made
some plays. They did some good things up front."
ECU quarterback Shane Carden was sacked seven times by
the Hokies. He completed 19 of 31 passes for 158 yards with one
touchdown and three interceptions.
"I thought Shane got a little frustrated, but he'll
bounce back and have a great game," McNeill said. "He learned a lot from
that game, too. He's still one of the best quarterbacks I've been
around."
The Pirates matched first unit offense and first unit
defense during practice on Tuesday. The program has put the
disappointment of the nonconference loss behind them. Its focus has
shifted to executing better and eliminating mistakes that were costly
against the Hokies.
"I was very pleased with our resiliency, being able to
bounce back and being ready to practice," McNeill said. "We had a great
day yesterday (Tuesday)."
ECU will practice today. The players will have Friday and
Saturday off but coaches will be traveling to recruit. Some of the
coaches took off Wednesday night to see some prospective players. The
Pirates will convene on Sunday evening to start a normal game week of
preparation for a 12:30 p.m. kickoff at North Carolina on Sept. 28.
"We have been sprinkling in some UNC offense, defense and
special team schemes, exposing the team to that this week, too," McNeill
said.
Linebackers working way back
Brandon Williams was in on a team-high 12 tackles against
the Hokies with a tackle for loss and half a sack as he filled in for
injured linebacker Kyle Tudor. Zeek Bigger was involved in nine tackles
with a stop for a loss in place of dinged linebacker Jeremy Grove.
"We miss their experience and leadership on the field,"
McNeill said.
The ECU coach said Tudor (shoulder) is a little bit ahead
of Grove (chest) as far as projected time to return. Tudor may be ready
for the North Carolina game.
"Jeremy is a little bit further out, but not far,"
McNeill said.
Sack situation
The seven sacks sustained by the Pirates against Virginia
Tech are a factor that needs to improve for the game in Chapel Hill. The
Tar Heels registered seven sacks in a 27-6 win in Kenan Stadium last
year.
McNeill said three areas must get better.
"It's great snap to the quarterback exchange," he said.
"We've got to make sure that happens. We've got to play fast and run
better routes. We've got to create space between the receiver and
defensive back. We've got to protect Shane with the front five and when
a running back is included to make sure we give him time. Shane needs to
trust, even if it's a small window, to go ahead and put it out there.
Shane's good at taking care of the ball."
McNeill said two of Carden's interceptions were tipped
balls and the third resulted when a receiver didn't run the called
route. Carden threw the ball where the receiver was supposed to be and a
Hokie was there instead.
"It's such a timing offense and you expect guys to be at
certain spots," McNeill said. "Receivers have to be on the exact same
page all the time. Against great athletes, one step too deep or one step
too slow can cause a tough play for you. ... (Virginia Tech) had some
draft choices on the back end (secondary)."
Hawkins 'day to day'
Cornerback Josh Hawkins left the Virginia Tech game in
the third quarter via rescue squad and is being monitored daily as he
returns from a concussion.
"It's a touchy situation," McNeill said. "You've got to
be careful with it. ... He still has some symptoms we have to be careful
of right now."
Hawkins will be allowed to incrementally increase his
activity level depending on his response to tests.
Basketball practice facility open
Coach Jeff Lebo said the basketball office has moved to
the new practice facility, although there are still some finishing
touches such as televisions and marker boards to be installed.
"It's going to be nice," Lebo said of the $17 million
structure on the north side of Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum. "The
players are excited. There's a lot of people coming through looking at
it. We've just got to finish it off."
The Pirates, coming off a 23-12 season that included
the CollegeInsider.com Tournament championship,
will start the season Nov. 8 at home against North Carolina Wesleyan.
"The new rule is that you can start practice 40 days
before your first contest and you can practice up to 30 of those days,"
Lebo said.
The Pirates coach plans to start practice in late
September.
Pairings were announced this week for the Preseason NIT.
ECU will play Norfolk State at Duke on Nov. 18. That winner will play
the winner between the second-seeded Blue Devils and UNC-Asheville on
Nov. 19. The two losers will meet in a consolation contest. The Pirates
are seeded seventh.
Lebo will be working a lot of new players into the
program and some of the returning players will have expanded roles as
the Pirates adjust to the loss of forward Maurice Kemp and point guard
Miguel Paul.
Kemp, incidentally, is playing in Budapest. Paul is
waiting for a pro gig.
Fall baseball
Fall baseball practice will run from Oct. 9, the day
after fall break, to Nov. 10.
"Barring we don't get a ton of rain," said ECU coach
Billy Godwin.
The Purple-Gold World Series is set for Nov. 7, 8 and 10.
ECU will bid for C-USA baseball tournament
The first game of the 2014 season will be Feb. 14 at home
against James Madison.
The Pirates will visit Virginia the second weekend of the
season. The third weekend, ECU will host Pitt, Ohio State and Western
Kentucky for the Keith LeClair event.
Conference-USA play will start the fourth weekend. ECU
will open with Marshall.
"That's something different, something new," Godwin said.
"We've got 30 league games this year (as opposed to 24 previously). At
the conference meeting in Dallas, the old coaches were in the minority.
We've got six new teams coming in our league that play baseball."
C-USA play used to start after five nonconference
weekends.
The Pirates will still match up with N.C. State, North
Carolina, UNC-Wilmington and UNC-Greensboro, all home and home, in
nonconference games. ECU will play Campbell in Greenville.
The Pirates are making a bid for the C-USA Tournament in
their final year in the league.
"We're interested in hosting but that will be up to the
athletic directors," Godwin said. "We should know in about a month. It
will be at a conference member site. It will not be at a neutral site.
Rice, Tulane and Southern Miss in their own right have great venues,
great facilities."