Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vandy will play ‘all gas’ on defense this season

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NASHVILLE — The Vanderbilt Commodores are coming off a smothering defensive performanc­e without their two top safeties, and linebacker Charles Wright believes this could be the start of something very good on defense.

Wright credits new defensive coordinato­r Jason Tarver with changing the Commodores’ mentality on defense.

“It’s all gas, no brakes. We think about the ball no matter what it is,” Wright said Tuesday. “Whenever I see somebody with the ball, my first instinct is to go punch it out whether that be like walking in the hallway, in practice when I’m on the sideline. He’s just got me ready to go. Like I’ll play right now. I would’ve played Sunday after the game. That’s how much he’s into us. I love it.”

Tarver is in his first season as defensive coordinato­r, a job that had been handled by Vanderbilt head coach Derek Mason since the end of Mason’s first season. Mason was co-defensive coordinato­r with Tarver in 2011 at Stanford, and Mason was willing to wait to bring Tarver to Nashville. He finally hired him this offseason after Tarver spent the last three seasons in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers.

The Commodores put on an impressive performanc­e in their opening 35-7 win over Middle Tennessee.

They matched their season high of a year ago with a Southeaste­rn Conference-best six sacks in the opener, five of those by halftime. Dayo Odeyingbo returned a fumble for a touchdown, and safety Frank Coppet had an intercepti­on. Brent Stockstill, who could finish his career at Middle Tennessee with 10,000 yards passing and 100 touchdowns, had a great start against Vandy but couldn’t sustain it.

Stockstill threw for 100 yards in the first quarter but was held to 78 yards the rest of the game.

Vanderbilt shut down the MTSU QB despite safety Zaire Jones being suspended indefinite­ly following his arrest Aug. 23 for bumping an off-duty police officer with his car before a Beyonce concert on campus. Then the Commodores lost starting safety LaDarius Wiley for targeting in the first quarter, which Mason said Tuesday was “100 percent” the right call by officials.

“That’s a costly penalty,” Mason said. “You don’t want to make that mistake and find yourself out of the ballgame before you’ve even got a chance to warm up.”

Wiley will be back Saturday when the Commodores host Nevada (1-0) from the Mountain West Conference, and just in time with the Wolf Pack coming in off a 72-19 win over Portland State. Only two teams scored more than Nevada in the opening week, and quarterbac­k Ty Gangi threw for 342 of the Wolf Pack’s 420 yards.

“This quarterbac­k can run to run,” Mason said. “And when he wants to throw he can put it up. We’re facing a little different challenge this week.”

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