The Palm Beach Post

Injured Francois trying to help out

Quarterbac­k attends practice, instructs Blackman.

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TALLAHASSE­E — Injured Florida State quarterbac­k Deondre Francois has had to watch from the sideline as the Seminoles have staggered to their worst start in 41 years.

The sophomore sustained a season-ending knee injury during a 24-7 loss to Alabama on Sept. 2. The pain he felt when he was injured may be gone, but it hurts to see his teammates struggle.

“Being a competitor and wanting to play, it hurts watching from the sideline because of my understand­ing the game and how things can be different,” Francois said Tuesday in his first public comments to the media since he was injured. “I’ve been trying to encourage the guys and trying to help out.”

Coach Jimbo Fisher and wide receiver Auden Tate said Francois has been a frequent presence at practice and given true freshman James Blackman — a former standout at Glades Central — as much guidance as he can.

“He’s been a good vocal presence for James because he went through a lot of those situations last year,” Tate said. “He still watches a lot of the practices. Taking the time to go over the film and giving us feedback shows he is still with us.”

Fisher was hopeful following Francois’ injury that he could be back at some point for spring football. Francois said though that it is still too early in his rehabilita­tion to have any ideas about when he might be able to return. Sunday will mark two months since Francois had surgery to repair a torn patellar tendon in his left knee.

Francois said his rehabilita­tion is focused on getting power back in his quad along with doing calf raises. He added that they aren’t pushing the knee too hard yet but still doing enough.

“I don’t know what type of healer I am. I want to be back as soon as I can. But you can’t rush an injury like this,” he said. “It doesn’t matter what type of player you are. You have to take it slow.”

Francois is one of three offensive starters who sustained season-ending injuries, and FSU’s statistics show much they are missed.

■ Going into Saturday’s game against Syracuse, Florida State (2-5, 2-4 ACC) has scored just 122 points and is averaging a Power Five-worst 17.3 points per game. It is FSU’s worst output through seven games since 1975, when it had just 75 points and finished with 187 in 11 games.

■ Last week’s 35-3 loss at Boston College was the first time in 125 games (Sept. 20, 2008, vs. Wake Forest) the Seminoles did not score a TD.

■ The last time Florida State started 2-5 was 1976. That also was the last time it did not have a winning season.

“We understand we are not playing up to par as players. We have to do a better job. I’m just trying to stay positive, give everyone a level head and continue to work,” Francois said.

Blackman, who has started six games since Francois was hurt, has thrown seven intercepti­ons in his past 91 attempts after not throwing one in his first 71. Blackman has also had to deal with a diminished receiving corps and the loss of leading running back Jacques Patrick in a Oct. 21 loss to Louisville.

Francois said that has made Blackman’s growing pains more difficult.

“My situation was better because I had a year to redshirt and I was able to be in the playbook,” Francois said. “It’s a tough situation for him. Going into battle not knowing a lot of the playbook because you just got here is a tough task. Seeing him battle and have that grit amazes me.”

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