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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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FOOTBALL |
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Pirates must adjust at QB |
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The
concept of developing depth and position competition at East
Carolina may be facing its biggest test in the tenure of Ruffin
McNeill as he enters his sixth season as football coach of the
Pirates. ...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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FOOTBALL |
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What a difference a week makes |
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The
offensive timing was back for East
Carolina�s final scrimmage of the
preseason on Saturday. That timing
was a big part of five scores for
the offense in the scrimmage. It was
a far cry from a week before, when
the Pirate defense dominated play.
...
More
from Brian Bailey... |
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MULTIMEDIA |
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Audio: The Brian
Bailey Show |
|
 The
Brian Bailey Show airs on Pirate
Radio 1250 on Mondays at 6:30 p.m.
Brian's guest this week was ECU
offensive coordinator Dave Nichol
(right):
Replay
show... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Pirates generate alarming numbers |
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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. ...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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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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By
Al Myatt
�2015 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
VIEW MOBILE VERSION OF THIS PAGE
Lincoln Riley got busy when two quarterbacks who had
committed to East Carolina for the 2014 recruiting class went elsewhere.
"When they
get fidgety, I get fidgety," Pirates coach Ruffin McNeill said of the
sequence of events that sent John Wolford from Bishop Kenny in
Jacksonville, FL, to Wake Forest and Shawn Stankavage from Cardinal
Gibbons in Raleigh to Vanderbilt.
Riley, the
former East Carolina offensive coordinator who left to assume those
responsibilities at Oklahoma, found left-hander Blake Kemp at Mesa (AZ)
Community College, wanting a chance to play on the Football Bowl
Subdivision level.
Kemp had
played at Hamilton High School, helping the Huskies of coach Steve
Belles during an incredible 53-game winning streak that included three
Arizona state championships.
Still, he
was between getting a job after high school or taking advantage of his
lone opportunity at the next level at Mesa as his prep career concluded.
The
Thunderbirds hired Ryan Felker as coach. Mesa had just seven wins in the
previous four seasons. But with Kemp at the controls of a passing
offense that was similar to what Riley was directing for the Pirates,
the T-Birds made back-to-back junior college bowl appearances. Kemp was
named Mesa's Male Athlete of the Year for 2013-14.
Following
Mesa, Kemp had an offer from Southeast Missouri State, a Football
Championship Subdivision program, as well as interest from Georgia
State, New Mexico, New Mexico State and Nevada-Las Vegas.
Riley became
aware of Kemp through Alex Jacobson, Mesa's running backs coach, who
knew the former Pirates OC through camps in the southwest. Kemp,
incidentally, holds the NJCAA record for attempts per game (44.0) and
completions per game (28.6).
Kemp visited
ECU and had a productive discussion with Riley that led to
a late, but possibly fortuitous signing
on March 7, 2014.
Kemp, who
has two years of eligibility remaining at ECU, spent last season on the
Pirates scout team as a redshirt. His maturity and experience provided
some good preparation looks for the Pirate defense.
When Kurt
Benkert went out for the season with a right knee injury, Kemp, the
back-up, got a preseason promotion.
Dave
Nichol's start as Riley's replacement at OC has certainly had some
twists and turns but McNeill has confidence in the entire process.
"I was
disappointed for Kurt but God doesn't make mistakes," said the ECU
alumnus and coach. "Kurt has some great things ahead of him."
Kemp will be
surrounded by a talented group.
"We have a
lot of depth around him," McNeill said. "We like our depth up front with
Ike Harris (left tackle) and Quincy McKinney (left guard), C.J. Struyk
(center) and J.T. Boyd (right guard), Dontae (Livingston, right tackle),
Brandon Smith (second team right tackle) and Christian Matau (back-up
guard).
"At the
receiver positions, Bryce Williams and Stephen Bagget are at the inside
Y position. Jimmy Williams and Brandon Bishop at outside (Z). Brandon
Bishop has had a great fall camp."
At the other
outside receiver spot, the X in ECU's terminology, Davon Grayson and
Daquan Barnes are set to go. Junior Isaiah Jones is the top returning
receiver and will operate at the H inside receiver spot with sophomore
Quay Johnson.
"At the
running back, Chris Hairston and Ant (Anthony) Scott really had good
camps," McNeill said. "Devin Anderson is a kid we like. He walked on
here but you'll see a lot of him. He's a good player."
Kemp
actually had better numbers than Benkert in preseason scrimmages.
"Blake did a
great job in the offseason, just like Kurt, and all that room, a really
good student," McNeill said. "Cody Keith, he's back. He had a little
slowdown with a foot injury but he's back, moving well, throwing the
ball. James Summers, one of our signees, has played quarterback all of
his life. He was going to be a wideout like Justin (Hardy). With the
injury to Kurt, we put him back at quarterback. John Jacobs, the young
freshman, has done a good job there. The competitive depth is still
there at each position."
Summers ran
for 1,002 yards and 12 touchdowns last season at Hinds (MS) Community
College.
There is
certainly enough talent at quarterback to keep anyone from becoming
complacent.
"They all
can make things happen with their feet, really," McNeill said of the
quarterback corps. "The old days of having a straight drop-back
quarterback, it's not happening now. You've got to have a mobile
quarterback. James has that. John Jacobs has that. He really has great
feet. Cody has improved in that part as well. So does Blake."
Kemp's late
signing doesn't preclude his ability to be effective.
"You find 'em
like that," McNeill said. "Like a Wes Welker (Texas Tech, NFL), like a
Justin Hardy. You find those guys late. (Vintavious) Tay Cooper. ...
Glad he was there."
Kemp has a
quarterback's name. Jeff Blake, an uncle of ECU receiver Isaiah Jones,
led the Pirates to an 11-1 season in 1991. Jack Kemp was a standout
quarterback in the old AFL for the San Diego Chargers and Buffalo Bills
before entering the political arena.
Game speed
The Pirates
will be checking out all systems as Towson visits for the season opener
at 6 p.m. Saturday.
"The speed
of the game is going to change," McNeill said. "The first game is
different from practice, even though we go first team versus first team
quite a bit. That execution is going to be of utmost importance, The
first game, having the ability to play the next play whether it's a
great play � play the next play, or a tough play � play the next play.
It's going to be very important to be able to do that in every game, but
this first game, there will be a lot of new replacements and they will
be wanting to prove themselves. That's not bad so you've got to expect
that."
What's
important against the Tigers, an FCS program with 19 returning starters
that went 4-8 in 2014?
"Make sure
we take care of the ball on offense," McNeill said. "Get some take-aways
on defense. Special teams � be solid with coverage teams, help our
defense and return teams help our offense get great field position. Have
a great, excited sideline. Let's go play. See what's what."
Walking with less impact
McNeill had
his second hip replacement surgery after signing the current true
freshmen class. He's resumed walking although he's no longer pounding
the pavement.
"I don't go
on the street much," McNeill said. "I'm walking around the practice
field on grass, taking some of the pressure off the joints. I love
walking and I love getting out, but the pavement, the streets and the
sidewalks. ... I was talking to Kevin Youngs, my therapist. I just did
(Tuesday) on the grass and it just felt so much better. I recovered
better."
Movie selection
McNeill is a
movie buff and the Pirates head to the theatre at home or on the road
the night before a game.
Straight
Outta Compton, a show about the origins of hip-hop culture in the 1980s,
will be the cinematic selection for ECU on Friday night.
"All the
guys wanted to see it," McNeill said. "It's action-packed. They know
that's what I want. I'm anxious to see how it goes. As long as it has
action and adventure and a toughness, a mentality that will get us into
the game and help that little focus part, I'll enjoy it."
Preseason camp
McNeill was
pleased with the weeks the Pirates have put in to get ready.
"It's been
great," he said. "You find out the personality of your team. It starts
to develop. This is a quiet team. They are a listening team and they go
about their business. What we believe in is in place, how we practice,
our practice tempo, pace. I have a great, great staff. I'm blessed to
have a great staff, not just the coaches but all the personnel.
"Camp, we
got a lot of work done. Replacing some players."
Defense looks solid
If 12 sacks
in two preseason scrimmages are an indication, the Pirates may be pretty
tough on defense.
"We expect
the defense to be solid," McNeill said. "We expect all three units to be
solid. They've done a great job. Rick Smith (defensive coordinator),
John Wiley (associate head coach, inside linebackers coach) Duane Price
(outside linebackers) and Marc Yellock (defensive line coach). Those
guys have done a great job. (Defensive staff assistants) Kyle Chase and
Butch (Brandon Butcher) have done a great job of getting the guys doing
their job and doing it well.
" ... They
run well. They do a good job of having consecutive plays of everybody
doing their job. We like to hope that they keep improving each week and
be a part of the team that helps give us a chance for success. ...
Improved. Zeek Bigger, Montese (Overton) at the backer positions. Up
front with Johnathan White. Terrell Stanley is back. Great to see him
out there. Demetri McGill. Demage Bailey. Fred Presley. Good group.
"Secondary,
real pleased with Travon Simmons and Terrell Richardson at the safety
positions. Bobby Fulp has also done a great job. Josh Hawkins, DaShaun
Amos, Rocco Scarfone (corners). Those guys have done a great job. Worth
Gregory (punter, kick holder) is our leader on special teams."
Demanding schedule
There are
some nonconference heavyweights on the ECU schedule and the Pirates will
be looking to win the American Athletic Conference in the first season
the league has a championship game (Dec. 5) as well.
McNeill was
asked about what this group can achieve.
"The biggest
thing is if we continue to bond," McNeill said. "I was asked, 'What's
the strength of this team?' I think it's the bond. Every team we've had
has been tight. You don't know when you lose dominant leaders like
Dominique Davis and Shane Carden and even quiet, dominant leaders like
Justin Hardy, but the bond is very tight and that's a strength. I think
we can accomplish, if we keep this vision to have a great day each day,
but in that day have everything we do in that day be at
championship-type mode, a champ rep, which is being full speed, error
free, great fundamentals and take it play by play and day by day.
"Not worry
about who we play but how we play. That's very important for these guys.
Don't worry about who we play on any game on our schedule. It's how we
play. That's controllable. The uncontrollable will be the opponents but
the controllable is worry about how we prepare, everybody about
embracing their role and doing their job well."