Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Knights facing another hurdle with Evans out

- By Shannon Green Staff writer

UCF tight end Jordan Akins will graduate Friday with a bachelor’s degree in communicat­ions and an unofficial master’s in adversity management after weathering a football season fraught with challenges.

Losing the team’s entire coaching staff to Nebraska within the past 10 days was emotional enough for some players. Now, the Knights (12-0) need to overpower one of the best defenses in college football in Auburn (10-3) without Aaron Evans, the team’s longtime starting left tackle.

The teams will face off in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on New Year’s Day.

“It’s huge. I’m not gonna lie,” Akins said. “He’s our best offensive lineman and I had my hand in the dirt beside him all year and I’m really comfortabl­e with him making play calls and in all we were just on one accord. But next man up. We’re looking forward to Jake [Brown] in that spot and we’re gonna go forward from there.”

Evans, a senior who started the past 37 games at left tackle, had surgery Wednesday afternoon to address an injury dating to last season. Brown will shift from left guard to left tackle and Sam Jackson and Tyler Hudanick will likely share rotations at left guard.

The loss of Evans is a major blow to UCF, which finished the regular season as the No. 1 scoring offense in the nation. But the Knights have become adept at pushing past physical and mental challenges.

The past 10 days have been an emotional roller coaster largely for younger players, who were new to the experience of enduring a coaching transition. Some were shocked when coach Scott Frost took the Nebraska job and took his entire coaching staff with him. But veteran players stepped up to keep emotions and perspectiv­es in check during player-only team meetings and casual conversati­ons.

“Emotions have been all over the place. Some kids have been worried about what they should do and how things are gonna play out and you could even tell Coach Frost was emotional,” Akins said. “[There have been] tears of joy [and] tears of sadness with him leaving and it’s all over the place. But when it comes to business, we all pull together and focus on the main goal, which is to get a win. We’re trying to win out, not only for ourselves but for the coaches as well.”

Freshman receiver Otis Anderson Jr. admitted he experience­d some hurt feelings over the coaching transition, but his understand­ing about the realities of college football grew during the past few days.

Hitting the football field and getting their American Athletic Conference championsh­ip rings sized Tuesday certainly helped.

“[It] feels like we got new bodies, honestly,” Anderson said of the recent break. “We’ve been having 12 weeks straight of practicing, so finally getting a week off and being able to come back and just work feels great. We’re knocking the rust off now and I feel like we’re playing a lot faster than what we have been playing.”

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