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FOOTBALL |
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ECU's finances get a boost |

East Carolina
is changing its stripes. Or
more accurately, it�s
trading in its swoosh for
three stripes. Athletic
director Jeff Compher broke
the news Wednesday when he
announced that the school
has agreed to a 10-year
exclusive partnership with
adidas, effective next July
when its current contract
with Nike comes to an end. ...
More from
Brett Friedlander... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Ruff does some 'head' coaching |
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Being
a Football Bowl Subdivision head
coach can involve supervising game
plans, maximizing recruiting,
directing staff, responding to
media, making appearances and in
Ruffin McNeill's approach, being a
father figure to over 100 young men.
This week the East Carolina head
coach also has been just that, a
head coach, shaping the mental side
for the Pirates
...
More from
Al Myatt... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Coach addressing 'Ruff' times |
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Even though they had very little
experience, both James Summers and
Blake Kemp seemed to be having fun
after being thrust into the
experience of playing the
quarterback position at East
Carolina. Lately that has not been
the case ...
More from
Brian Bailey... |
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MULTIMEDIA |
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Audio: Ruff Weekly
Presser |
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 ECU
coach Ruffin McNeill
met with reporters on Monday
at his weekly press
conference
(audio courtesy of
Pirate Radio 1250; file photo):
Select audio clip... |
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The good, the bad, and the Huskies |
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13 |
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31 |
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MONDAY
INFOGRAPHIC: When losses happen,
fingers start pointing. Don't blame
East Carolina's Friday night road
loss to Connecticut on the white
crossbones helmets � the Pirates are
0-3 wearing the alternate helmet.
Don't blame it on the day of the
week � ECU is 18-23 overall in
non-Saturday matchups. The Pirates'
31-13 defeat by the Huskies is hard
to figure. ...
Details and data from Greg Vacek... |
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FOOTBALL |
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Kevin's Keys to the Game |
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The
East Carolina Pirates come into
today's American Athletic Conference
game at 4-4 while the Connecticut
Huskies are 3-4. Both teams are well
into their conference schedules and
are in desperate need of an AAC win
after coming off league losses.
...
More from Kevin Monroe... |
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FOOTBALL |
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'Play the next play' |
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It
was not a happy group of East
Carolina football players that left
Bagwell Field after a 24-14 loss to
No. 21 Temple Thursday night. The
Pirate supporters among a crowd of
39,417 at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium were
frustrated, too.
...
More from
Al Myatt... |
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BASKETBALL |
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AAC hoops has its
day |
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ORLANDO, FL �
The
three-year-old American
Athletic Conference
continues to make a name for
itself. The league currently
has three of the Football
Bowl Subdivision's unbeaten
football teams.
Houston, Memphis and Temple are all 7-0. The Tigers are
ranked No. 16 by the Associated Press, the Cougars are No. 18 and the
Owls are No. 21 going into a high profile matchup on Saturday in
Philadelphia with Notre Dame.
As good as its going on the gridiron, the AAC has been
even better in basketball. ...
Story, pictures & audio
from Al Myatt...
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Pictured: The
American Athletic
Conference
basketball
championship trophy
was on display at
the league's media
day on Tuesday at
the Amway Center in
Orlando, FL. (Photo by
Al
Myatt; more pictures
on this page...) |
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By
Al Myatt
�2015 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
VIEW MOBILE VERSION OF THIS PAGE
Being a Football Bowl Subdivision head coach can involve supervising
game plans, maximizing recruiting, directing staff, responding to media,
making appearances and in Ruffin McNeill's approach, being a father
figure to over 100 young men.
This week the East Carolina head coach also has been just that, a head
coach, shaping the mental side for the Pirate players as ECU looks to
break a two-game losing streak at home against South Florida at 7:30
p.m. Saturday.
He who hesitates is lost as the saying goes and after McNeill evaluated
the tape from
a 31-13 setback at Connecticut,
he saw too much hesitation from the Pirates.
ECU needs to have one of those games where all three sides of the ball
are playing well and feeding off one another.
"Execution is always big with any side of the ball," McNeill said. "We
just talked about execution, do your job. Two things I told them relates
to the ball. Take care of the ball on offense. Take it away on defense.
I've got to take pressure off the kids. You saw guys hesitating on film
because they were listening to me. There's too many don't and not tos.
Just go. Let it go. Play. Play. Play.
"I've approached it that way. Do not hesitate. Just play. Hopefully,
that will take some of the pressure off them. Just play. Don't worry
about the nots or don'ts. You know, don't make a penalty. Too much don't
and too much not to and now the guys are afraid to make a mistake and
they become hesitant, which sometimes leads to more mistakes. Play smart
but don't hesitate. ... You can see it on film. I have a group of
coach-me-coach kids. They want to please and do exactly what I've said.
I've talked to them.
"Clear minds mean fast legs. Cloudy minds means slow legs. Just make
plays and have a good time at this game but don't hesitate. Execute. Do
your job. Make routine plays but don't hesitate. That's how I've
approached it. I'm going to keep doing that."
Injuries have taken toll
There have been mitigating factors for the Pirates, who are 4-5 overall
and 2-3 in the American Athletic Conference.
ECU invested a lot in Kurt Benkert, the heir apparent to Shane Carden at
quarterback before Benkert went out for the season with a knee injury
relatively late in preseason camp. In an offense that depends heavily on
a quarterback's judgment and execution, James Summers and Blake Kemp
have each had a broad range in terms of consistency.
"It's tough," McNeill said. "James was going to be our Justin Hardy,
like we've done with quarterbacks. We moved Isaiah (Jones) to receiver.
Even though James has played quarterback and done a great job, you're
talking about a guy who coming into the season was expected to play
receiver. Blake was going to be our third-team guy. Those guys have
stepped up and done more things than you could imagine. The position is
one that is very important in this offense. I need to teach and educate
everyone on that. The injuries that we've had, we've been banged up but
guys are stepping up and fighting."
Injuries have been a factor in other areas, too. The offensive line,
projected as a strength, has been forced into numerous personnel
adjustments.
"Some young guys have had to step up and play more but it's one of those
years," McNeill said. "You have game injuries and also the unforeseen
injuries with Kurt Benkert, those kind of things. Non-contact. (Running
back) Marquez Grayson has come back. Making a cut in practice. Those
kinds of things that set you back but no excuses and no complaints.
We've just got to find ways. I think you'll see that. The kids have done
a great job of bouncing back (Tuesday) in practice. I was really proud
of that. I had no doubt about it. Sunday was a good practice and
(Tuesday) was even better."
Has schedule had cumulative effect?
The point has been made but remains valid that the Pirates have played a
tough schedule. Florida, Navy, Temple and Brigham Young have a combined
record of 26-5 with the losses to other nationally-elite teams � LSU,
Michigan, Notre Dame and UCLA.
The loss to UConn doesn't fall in that category but the demands of the
strength of the schedule without a bye week may have caught up with the
Pirates, who will finally have an open date before visiting Central
Florida on Nov. 19.
"There's a very small margin of error with the competition we play,"
McNeill said. "Our nonconference schedule, if you check the other teams'
nonconference schedule, check ours. It was not very forgiving each week.
You don't have a chance to get a lot of players work because the games
are so tight. If we would have had a soft nonconference schedule, which
we don't do here, then, yeah, we'd have some extra Ws in there, too.
"Our nonconference schedule was as tough as anyone's."
Exploiting copycat defenses
Opposing defenses have no qualms about borrowing from game plans that
have worked against the Pirates. ECU went through a five-quarter span
against Temple and UConn without scoring an offensive point.
"We have to take what they give us," McNeill said. "That comes with
having that guy that can make them pay a little bit. That's what you
keep reaching for each week. See what they're doing to you and make them
pay. Don't hesitate. Teams are doing some things differently You see
copycats. We just have to make them pay when we see them in that copycat
mode. ... It's a matter of relaxing and trust what you see and don't
hesitate once you see it. When you see it, don't hesitate when you do
it."
Relying on established process
Retiring Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer was 25-40-2 in his first six
seasons as head coach. Membership in the Big East and later, the
Atlantic Coast Conference, has helped the Hokies. McNeill, in his sixth
season at ECU, currently is 42-32 as a head coach, including a bowl win
at Texas Tech as interim coach of the Red Raiders.
McNeill is confident in the process established at his alma mater.
"You look over the body of work, we've done it from the beginning," said
the Pirates coach. "Losing the most lettermen in the country. Getting in
the recruits in the last few years. We have an attitude of winning here.
We have a high expectation. You have to be a little bit lucky and avoid
the injury bug. ... At some point, you can say next man up and the next
man up is not going to be as good as the first guy. We feel like we're
very competitive at each position. When you lose your quarterback,
that's a main position. Those kids are learning under fire. James'
(Summers) learning has taken place, not in fall practice but in game
weeks. So no excuses though. I think we've set a winning tone here,
getting through those first two heavy years. We want to build a program.
"I was talking about coach (Frank) Beamer (Virginia Tech). I think in
his first six years there, he was still under that realm. This is our
sixth year here and we want to build a program and we've done it the
right way. We're not going to microwave it, which I could go out and
microwave it and get 10 JC guys in here and win for a season. I don't
want to do that for our university. I like to build a program here.
Winning is important. Expectations are high. I think we've committed
that way. You have to have a little bit of luck, too, and avoid the
injury bug.
"We have some guys we've lost to game injuries and some who are banged
and nicked from unforeseen so we'll keep fighting and keep going. I'm
disappointed in not coming through in these games but I'm not down on
our kids. I'm not going to turn our back on our kids."
Getting off the adversity boat
This has been a week for the head coach to work on mindset.
"We talked about adversity and success," McNeill said. "There's two
boats. There's the success boat and it's very heavy. A lot of people
jump on the success boat. The adversity boat, there's not many people on
that boat.
"I like the fact that we're going to be on that boat and we're going to
find a way off of that boat, the adversity boat. I'm not afraid to fight
off of that adversity boat. In fact, I welcome the challenge. It
strengthens me to be on that boat. That's what we're made of here.
That's what we've been built around here.
"I think we've established a winning thought process here. We're having
a tough time right now, during these last two games, but we'll overcome
it."
Weather could be factor
The advance forecast for Saturday indicates that adversity may involve
less than ideal playing conditions.
ECU practiced Tuesday despite poor weather.
"It was messy but we got out," McNeill said. "We did a full practice. It
was slippery and drizzly but we got through it. We did some work on the
turf but the guys want to stay on the grass, which is a lot easier on
their legs. We got a full practice in, which is good. We needed that
one."
Positive outlook
McNeill said the players have been upbeat as they prepare for the Bulls.
"Magnificent," said the ECU alumnus of team morale. "They believe in me,
believe in our staff, believe in each other and what we're doing. This
staff works as hard as any staff I've been around. Any staff. This team
has not had a bad full day of practice, maybe a bad period here or a
play here. They've strained each day with coach (Jeff) Connors in the
weight room, on the field."