Baltimore Sun

Wheatley in a hurry to bring about change

- By Edward Lee

In one of his first meetings with the Morgan State football team, Tyrone Wheatley told the players that a top priority this season is winning the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title.

That might have seemed like a bold declaratio­n considerin­g the program has not won the league championsh­ip since 2014, but the rookie head coach’s candor energized the players.

“We love that kind of talk,” senior wide receiver Manasseh Bailey said Wednesday. “It makes us think that he believes in us, that he trusts us to go out there and win it.

“Of course it would be disappoint­ing [to fall short], but we want that level to be set high. We want our coaches to believe in us and trust us to go out there and fight for everything that we want.”

As Wheatley tries to change the mindset

and culture at Morgan State, the Bears (0-3) open their conference and home schedules Saturday against North Carolina Central at Hughes Stadium.

After beginning the season with losses at Bowling Green, James Madison and Army, returning to Baltimore might sound appealing. But Wheatley’s greater concern is finding a way to defeat the Eagles (1-3).

“It does feel good, but right now we’re not worried about home games [and] we’re not worried about road games,” he said Tuesday during a conference call organized by the league.

“We’re just worried about winning games, getting the team from one place to the next. And what that progressio­n looks like for me is to continue to build the toughness, continue building discipline and just get the win. [We are] looking for our first win. That’s all that matters.”

If Wheatley, a former Michigan running back who played for the New York Giants and Oakland Raiders, is frustrated by the team’s slow start, he has not shown it with the players, several of whom said the coach has remained encouragin­g during practices and film sessions.

That, however, has not diminished his insistence on perfection. Junior center Stefan Touani said unlike his predecesso­rs, Wheatley has had players repeat certain plays in practice if even the slightest nuance is amiss.

“It could be something small like the line missed a block or the quarterbac­k’s handoff wasn’t in the right direction or the handoff wasn’t at the right depth for the running back to keep his shoulders square,” Touani said. “He wants every detail perfect.”

Sophomore kicker/punter Nicholas O’Shea described one interactio­n he had in which Wheatley gave him a pointer after a poor punt during a preseason practice. Admitting he “respectful­ly ignored” Wheatley’s advice, O’Shea launched a better punt but got an icy reception from Wheatley.

“Coach Wheatley looked at me and said, ‘You didn’t listen to me.’ ” O’Shea said. “I was surprised that he noticed because a lot of coaches wouldn’t have. It was nice to know that I had a head coach who understand­s kicking to a certain degree and punting as well.

“He was critical because I have a critical position. A missed kick is a missed kick, and that’s a loss for me and the team some days.”

Wheatley has also sought to refine the players’ behavior away from the field. He has banned profanity, racial epithets and earrings, required players to open doors for female classmates and university staff members, ordered players to maintain a clean locker room and required players to pull up their pants.

While some teams might have chafed at such restrictio­ns, Bailey, who caught six passes for 121 yards and two touchdowns in Saturday’s 52-21 loss at Army, said he and his teammates have welcomed them.

“When you do things like that off the field, it transfers to the field,” Bailey said. “Pulling your pants up may seem small, but it’s a big thing to us because it gets your demeanor right, it keeps your head right. Small things like that will show on the field.”

Wheatley acknowledg­ed that when he succeeded Ernest T. Jones in February, he inherited a team “laden with bad habits.”

“So you have to break those things,” Wheatley said.

O’Shea said the changes made by Wheatley have already had a positive impact on the team.

“It’s a culture.,” O’Shea said. “It’s being there for your brother, being there for your family and making a culture that everyone feels comfortabl­e in.

“Before I got here, [the older players] talked about how the culture wasn’t as good and how they lost faith and how that contribute­d to a lack of success. So they’ve kept our heads in it. That was one of the first things [Wheatley] said: just believe in him and his staff.”

Another encouragin­g sign was that Morgan State owned a 14-7 lead in the first quarter against Army before the latter discovered its groove. But that developmen­t did little to satisfy Wheatley.

“I guess you have to find a silver lining in something, but I expected to be there,” he said. “And I want the guys to expect to be there [and] not to come back and say we had a moral victory and, ‘Oh wow, we had a 14-7 lead.’ That really does us nothing. ... Sustainabi­lity is what we’re after now.”

Time will tell if Wheatley will return the Bears to prominence. But his players are confident the program is moving in the right direction.

“We never lost faith,” Touani said. “The candle is still lit. We’re still buying in, we’re working hard and we have a lot of faith in Coach Wheatley.

“We’re ready to rally around him, just like we know he’s ready to rally around us. We know he’s got our backs and we’ve got his back.”

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