Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

QB battle will be highlight of Saturday’s game

- By Wells Dusenbury Staff writer wdusenbury@ sun-sentinel .com, Twitter @dusereport

BOCA RATON — Although no trophy will be awarded during FAU’s spring game, there will be stakes attached to Saturday’s exhibition.

“Winners eat steak and the losers eat hot dogs and beans,” FAU coach Lane Kiffin said. “We have a lunch on Monday over at the stadium, and they drafted everyone from the president to academic people, equipment people, so everybody’s got a team.”

The culminatio­n of spring practice, Owl fans will have the chance to see the reigning Conference USA champions hit the field in modified game action on Saturday afternoon. Kickoff is 4 p.m. in FAU Stadium.

The Owls will be split into “Red” and “White” teams, with the first team offense going against the first team defense, and so on with the second unit. New offensive coordinato­r Charlie Weis Jr. will lead one squad, while running backs coach Kevin Smith will guide the other. Kiffin will stay neutral during the scrimmage as he observes Saturday’s action.

The biggest storyline will be the battle to be starting quarterbac­k, as De’Andre Johnson and former Oklahoma signee Chris Robison, who joined the team in January, compete for the position.

While fans will get to see the signal callers operate Kiffin’s high-octane offense in a game situation, the Owls coach said he doesn’t expect to name a starter quite yet.

“I would not think we would make that decision [now],” said Kiffin of the quarterbac­k battle. “I think this will go into the fall. I think they’re too close now.”

Although Johnson was on the roster last season, he missed all but one game with blood clots in his arm. The former Florida State quarterbac­k is now healthy as he continues to re-acclimate himself.

“I think [Johnson]’s a lot further along than he was on day one — mentally and physically,” Kiffin said. “I think he was just rusty like anybody would be after the long layoff and he’s doing really well.”

Singletary limited

FAU will continue to practice caution with star running back Devin “Motor” Singletary, who’s been dealing with a nagging hamstring injury this spring. The American HeritageDe­lray alum has been held out of contact drills since tweaking it during a scrimmage at Fort Lauderdale’s Carter Park on April 10.

On Thursday, Kiffin said the team will hold Singletary out of the first half of FAU’s spring game — which will featuring tackling — but that left the door open for a potential appearance by Singletary later in the day.

“Second half is up for question,” Kiffin said of Singletary’s status for Saturday. “But he will not go in the first half.”

Singletary is coming off a sensationa­l season in which he rushed for 1,920 yards and a NCAA-high 32 touchdowns on the ground. The sophomore was named Conference USA Player of the Year and became the first Owl to earn AP AllAmerica honors.

Cameron eager

After spending last season at Copiah-Lincoln Community College, defensive lineman Charles Cameron has been one of the newcomers on the Owls defensive line. The 6-foot-2, 305-pounder enrolled in January after turning down offers from Texas Tech, Louisville and Kansas. While there’s been a limited sample size in spring practice, Kiffin likes what he’s seen so far.

“[He’s] a very good player,” Kiffin said. “Very productive, very slippery. Hard to stay unblocked. Not the biggest guy, but has done a really good job and helped us with what we thought was a position of need.”

For Cameron, he’s looking forward for the opportunit­y to compete during a live game setting.

“I’ve been waiting on that feeling,” Cameron said of Saturday’s spring game. “Every day I walk down here and look at the stadium. My adrenaline is going to be up and it’s going to be game time. I come alive on game day.”

“Everybody on the D-line — they’re a bunch of dogs, so you’ve got to work even harder to earn a spot.”

 ??  ?? Kiffin
Kiffin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States