San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

‘Old head’ Wilson leading new-look Aggies

- By Brent Zwerneman STAFF WRITER

COLLEGE STATION — Donovan Wilson, eager to be a senior leader on a Texas A&M defense with plenty to prove, prayed the sharp pain in his foot was momentary. A few steps here and there on the sideline of the Rose Bowl, the safety hoped, and the intense throbbing would subside.

“I really didn’t think it was anything serious, until I went to the sideline,” Wilson said of the pivotal moment in his college career last Labor Day weekend. “I thought it was just a little nick, and I was going to be able to come back for the next game.”

Turns out it was a critical case of wishful thinking for the hardhittin­g defensive back with a reputation for toughness. A day later doctors inserted a screw into his fractured foot, and he was done for the season.

“I had such high expectatio­ns,” Wilson said of what was supposed to be his senior season.

The repercussi­ons of his second quarter exit at UCLA in the 2017 season opener were widerangin­g. The Aggies held a big lead at the time, but with the roaming, veteran safety out, Bruins quarterbac­k Josh Rosen began eating alive the middle of the field, particular­ly employing the tight end against the Aggies’ head-spinning youth in the secondary.

On the other side of the ball, A&M starting quarterbac­k Nick Starkel suffered his own foot injury, and UCLA wiped out a 34-point deficit in the second half to prevail 45-44. It was the second-largest comeback in college football history, finishing behind only Michigan State’s 35-point comeback against Northweste­rn in 2006.

“It was tough sitting out, watching my teammates play and not being able to be a part of it,” Wilson said of not only the UCLA game but the Aggies’ entire season.

The collapse in California signaled the beginning of the end of the six-season Kevin Sumlin era, and he was fired after a 7-5 regular season. Despite the injury Wilson could have put his name in for the NFL draft as one of the Aggies’ top prospects, but instead he petitioned the NCAA for a medical redshirt, which he received.

“I felt like I had more work to do,” Wilson said. “I wasn’t finished yet. I didn’t get to play my senior year, and I had lot more to prove.”

Wilson already had proven plenty at A&M over his first few seasons, in leading the defense with five intercepti­ons as a sophomore in 2015. He combined for 122 tackles over his sophomore and junior seasons, and now he’ll get another shot at a senior year under a new coaching staff.

“I’m just trusting the plan,” he said of playing a final season for coach Jimbo Fisher and defensive coordinato­r Mike Elko. “I feel like everything happens for a rea- son.”

Wilson on multiple occasions mentioned “attention to detail” as the new staff’s strength in a visit with reporters following a camp practice late last week. He’s also sharing details harvested from years of experience with the youngsters surroundin­g him in the locker room and on the field.

“I’m the ‘old head’ in the room now,” Wilson said with a slight chuckle. “The younger players look up to me, and it’s fun to be able to give advice and be the older guy.”

His primary wisdom imparted?

“Stay on your toes,” he said, “and be where you’re supposed to be.”

The gaggle he’s preaching to includes sophomore cornerback­s Debione Renfro, Travon Fuller and Clifford Chattman, and sophomore safeties Derrick Tucker and Keldrick Carper, among others.

A&M offensive lineman Erik McCoy has happily observed Wilson’s leadership on the Coolidge practice fields and beyond, and figures a unit that last season finished 78th nationally in total defense (allowing 409 yards per game) could use it.

“He has tons of experience, and I feel like this year he’s going to show out,” McCoy said. “He’s the old guy, and he’s leading guys like I’ve never seen him lead before.”

The Aggies continue camp Sunday and open their first season under Fisher on Aug. 30 — a Thursday night — against Northweste­rn (La.) State at Kyle Field.

 ?? Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press ?? A&M defensive back Donovan Wilson (right) was poised to make some noise in his senior season in 2017, but a fractured foot suffered against UCLA in the opener shelved him for the year.
Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press A&M defensive back Donovan Wilson (right) was poised to make some noise in his senior season in 2017, but a fractured foot suffered against UCLA in the opener shelved him for the year.
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