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ECU Pirates 2015
Football Schedule |
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DATE |
TIME |
OPPONENT |
TV |
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Sept 5 |
6 pm |
Towson |
ESPN3 |
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Sept 12 |
7 pm |
at Florida |
ESPN2 |
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Sept 19 |
3:30 pm |
at Navy |
CBSSN |
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Sept 26 |
TBA |
Virginia Tech |
TBA |
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Oct 3 |
TBA |
at SMU |
TBA |
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Oct 10 |
TBA |
at BYU |
TBA |
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Oct 17 |
TBA |
Tulsa |
TBA |
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Oct 22 |
7 pm |
Temple |
ESPN2 |
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Oct 30 |
7 pm |
at UConn |
ESPNU |
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Nov 7 |
TBA |
USF |
TBA |
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Nov 19 |
7:30 pm |
at UCF |
ESPN |
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Nov 28 |
TBA |
Cincinnati |
TBA |
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Dec 5 |
12 pm |
Championship |
ABC/ESPN |
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MULTIMEDIA |
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Audio: The Brian
Bailey Show |
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 The
Brian Bailey Show airs on Pirate
Radio 1250 on Mondays at 6:30 p.m.
Brian's guest this week was ECU
athletic director Jeff Compher:
Replay
show... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Pirates rigging for difficult seas |
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The
2015 East Carolina football schedule is quite a conversation
piece. There's a rematch with Florida from the Birmingham Bowl
in the Swamp on Sept. 12. The trip to Navy for the Midshipmen's
first ever American Athletic Conference contest ensues Sept. 19.
...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Pirates pad up and pop |
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East
Carolina head coach Ruffin McNeill
says camp is flying by. I�m not sure
if the players agree, but the
calendar continues to peel off the
dates as we get closer to the season
opener. ...
More
from Brian Bailey... |
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FOOTBALL: ECU MEDIA
DAY |
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Pirates have
questions to answer |

GREENVILLE �
The pertinent
questions were asked at East
Carolina's football media day on
Saturday. The Pirate coaches
essentially said we'll have to
get back to you.
The quarterback situation in the absence of Shane Carden
and the potential impact of Minnesota/Rutgers transfer Philip Nelson as
well as the competition for placekicker are among the issues ECU is
dealing with as the 2015 season approaches. Nelson walked on with the
Pirates and his status for this season is to be determined.
...
Story & pictures from Al Myatt...
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Pictured: ECU Coach
Ruffin McNeill
expressed his
excitement that the
program is into
preseason camp while
addressing reporters
on media day. (Photo
by Al Myatt) |
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FOOTBALL: AAC MEDIA
DAY |
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Keeping pace with the Power 5 |

NEWPORT, RI �
For American
Athletic Conference commissioner
Mike Aresco, one element of full
cost tuition for
student-athletes is keeping pace
with the Power Five conferences
� the ACC, the Big Ten, the Big
12, The Pac-12 and the SEC.
Aresco led off the AAC football media day Tuesday at the
Hyatt Regency with wide-ranging remarks and touched on the provisions
for payments to athletes that will begin this academic year.
...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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Pictured: ECU coach Ruffin
McNeill responds to a
question during the media
Q&A session at the AAC media
day on Tuesday in Newport,
RI. (Photo by W.A. Myatt) |
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FOOTBALL: AAC MEDIA
DAY |
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Monday Fun Day for AAC |

NEWPORT, RI �
The Big East kept
the name for its contingent of
basketball-geared athletic
programs but the American
Athletic Conference retained
some impressive traditions for
its football kickoff.
Those events over the last three years for the AAC
include a round of golf for athletic directors, coaches and media
members at Newport National Golf Club, a well-maintained challenge
complete with occasional sea breezes.
...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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Pictured: East
Carolina athletic
director Jeff
Compher enjoyed
playing golf at
Newport National on
Monday as part of
the AAC's football
kickoff. (Photo by
Al Myatt) |
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By
Al Myatt
�2015 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
VIEW MOBILE VERSION OF THIS PAGE
GREENVILLE � For a fan base that counts the hours to the
start of the football season, there is a paucity of statistics this time
of year. The only numbers generated since preseason camp started at East
Carolina earlier this month were from a scrimmage Saturday at
Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.
The stats
were not too reassuring for a program whose offense averaged 35.8 points
and 533 yards per game in 2014.
The offense
yielded seven sacks and Kurt Benkert, who was named the starting
quarterback Wednesday, completed three of 15 passes with an
interception.
First-year
offensive line coach Brad Davis appeared to have been simmering for
several days when he answered questions after practice Thursday morning.
"We're
nowhere near where we need to be," Davis said.
First-year
offensive coordinator Dave Nichol didn't lay all the blame on the
offensive front.
"Everybody's
involved," Nichol said. "If the receiver doesn't look and we hold on to
the ball and they're blitzing people, yeah it's a sack. We can only
block five. Stuff like that. We're working through that."
There has
been an urgency this week in fixing protections.
"We just had
a couple of mental errors," said guard/center J.T. Boyd, a preseason
All-American Athletic Conference performer by several outlets as well as
an Outland Trophy candidate. "We've worked since then in the film room
and on the field doing extra blitz pick-up to get those errors fixed.
"We've all
got to attack the process every day, overcome adversity and just give
everything we've got on every play. We feel like if we do that in
practice it will carry over into the games and we'll have success from
there."
Benkert was
in the midst of competing for the quarterback job last week. He has
obviously shown the coaches more than his scrimmage numbers would
indicate. He's smart enough to realize he can't dwell on the negative
personally when leading an entire unit.
Someone once
said mistakes have value if you learn from them. The preseason is
obviously a good time to learn.
"I was
really frustrated, actually," Benkert said Thursday. "Obviously, 3 of 15
and a pick. That's terrible. I was frustrated and I realized I've just
got to come out and show everybody it's not going to affect me at all.
I've just got to put the ball in play more and I started doing that this
week even better than I felt like I did before."
To look at
the offensive performance is to see the glass half full. The defense
threw some aggressive wrinkles into play and had a day.
"They were
blitzing us and zeroing up a lot (man coverage with no help)," Benkert
said. "Playing a lot of man. We weren't jelling that day."
Benkert
realized in retrospect that he was trying to do too much.
"When we
were out there on Saturday, when we weren't in a good play, I was like,
'Well, dang, I've got to figure out something to get us into," Benkert
said. "This week I just kind of looked at what they did and took what
they gave me instead of trying to make too much happen. We got behind
the sticks Saturday, I was trying to make too many big plays instead of
just take what they give me. I just really tried to focus on that this
week."
Nichol said
Benkert earned the opportunity to start. He was the leader coming out of
spring ball and apparently maintained that position.
"It's a
by-product of everything," Nichol said of the quarterback decision. "How
they handle themselves, how they are around the team. There's a lot that
goes into it. Like I've always said, I love our quarterback room. We've
got really good teammates. You worry with certain kids if they're going
to be detriments but our guys are all pretty good guys. And so we just
felt it was time, felt Kurt was the guy and definitely wanted to give
him more reps to get on the same page with everybody with the offense.
"It's a
dependent position. Guys have got to make plays. Guys have to block.
That's what's great about football. That's what we just talked to them
about today, just executing better. I said it last week, our effort was
fine. ... We've just got to go in the right spots. If you hit the guy
selling hot dogs, it doesn't matter how hard you're going. We had some
execution issues last week."
Blake Kemp
completed 9 of 14 last Saturday although it was not clear if he was
facing the first or second defensive unit.
"I thought
it was pretty close," Nichol said of the quarterback competition, which
initially included Cody Keith until he sustained a foot injury. "That's
a good thing. They're all smart, heady guys who are motivated and want
to win. That's what's tough at that position because you don't rotate 'em.
We won't. We won't try to. You hope you don't. There's only one of 'em,
you know. That's what makes it tough. They all can do some good things."
Ultimately,
Nichol said Benkert's grasp of the system was a deciding factor. He was
like a Siamese twin to Shane Carden as an understudy. He has sat in on
offensive line meetings to get a better feel for that group and their
blocking schemes.
"I think his
overall knowledge of the offense," Nichol said of the primary
decision-making factor. "Again, it's good throughout the room. His skill
set, his intelligence and then just kind of wanting to move forward.
Kurt was the leader but if three were just exactly equal, we still had
to name somebody because three guys getting reps, we weren't getting any
better. At some point, you've got to give one guy the reps. We probably
would have made a decision pretty darn quick anyway."
That may
show some valid perception on Nichol's part. The Pirates didn't name a
starter the last time there was a quarterback competition in preseason
camp in 2012 until much closer to the season opener and then Rio Johnson
was the choice, not Carden, the record setter to be."
Now Benkert,
his teammates and Pirate Nation know it's on him when the season starts
against Towson on Sept. 5.
"I'm going
to have the nerves and all that but I know I've got 10 good dudes around
me that are really going to help this team go," Benkert said. "We've got
a good defense. I just feel like we're more of an overall team this year
than we were."
Benkert
hasn't lost confidence in the offensive front.
"Of course,
I don't worry about anything when I've got them in front of me," he
said. "I don't, especially with all the experience they have. It's one
less thing to worry about. It's comforting."
Nichol said
Benkert is passionate about competition.
"I try to
get him to relax," Nichol said. "He's a real type A personality. It's
like, 'Hey, Kurt, I bet I can beat you in 21.' He's like, 'Lets go,
right now.' He's just got to relax in general sometime. I talk to him
about that."
Last
Saturday's scrimmage actually helped Benkert ease up a little bit.
"Honestly, I
felt myself relaxing after the scrimmage because it couldn't get much
worse than that," he said. "After that scrimmage I was like, you know
what I'm just going to come out here and play and have fun and whatever
happens, happens. It started paying dividends."
Benkert has
also realized he needs to communicate more with teammates.
"Really just
got to get everybody on the same page," Benkert said. "It starts with
me. I have to start talking to guys more. Like, 'Hey, you can make that
catch' or 'If it's this look, you can run this just a little bit
different so we can get a little better position.' Just different little
things."
Last
Saturday was history and this Saturday is a mystery as far as head coach
Ruffin McNeill is concerned. AAC officials will be on hand to call this
week's scrimmage.
"After a
two-a-day yesterday, I was pleased with the way we approached practice,"
McNeill said after Thursday morning's session. " ... I saw some things
that I really liked. It wasn't the most consistent practice we've had,
maybe to average out, it would have been. For what we expect, it wasn't
bad. My grade, it was OK. There were some spots we were playing like we
were supposed to.
"It's that
grind part of camp that's around that 16th day that happens but this
group will bounce back. This group is one that when you tell something
to them or bring it up to them, they fix it. They're a quiet bunch.
They're not like the bunch we've had in the past. They're a listening
bunch, not really a very vocal bunch."
The
quarterback position may have determined its starter but other spots
remain up for grabs.
"I like the
way we're progressing," McNeill said. "I like the competition at all
positions. These guys are fighting for spots. I'm looking forward to
seeing that continue. We got one (practice today). We'll scrimmage
Saturday. I don't know how long we'll go. I'm interested in quality, not
quantity. Meet the Pirates is on Saturday, a good chance to see Pirate
Nation. Sunday will begin mock game week. We'll get some guys who have
not been through game week before, we'll get that done starting on
Sunday.
The
scrimmage will emphasize some aspects of game day situations.
"Sideline
communication," McNeill said. "Upstairs with our coaches. Get the phones
situated. There's always that first game (preparation). We'll work on
sideline discipline. It will be like a game-type deal coming on the
field, getting 'em ready a week early how we approach the field on game
day. Sideline order, where everyone will sit.
"Those types
of things will be going on. And then the substitution packages on both
sides. Looking for great communication with that. We're doing a great
job with that right now. The last thing is just making sure we keep
improving on fundamentals ... and making sure we limit our penalties.
We've done a good job with that these past three days on both sides of
the ball with penalties."
The unit
matchups will feature some best on best.
"We'll go
some ones on ones, twos on twos," McNeill said. "I'm going to get those
guys out of there quick. Some guys that are running with twos and
threes, I want to see in live action."
The
scrimmage is closed so the release from the athletic media relations
department and post-scrimmage interviews will be the sources from which
the information-hungry fan base will determine if there is cause for
concern this week.