Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bulldogs in search of kicker

- Compiled by Bob Holt

Mississipp­i State Coach Mike Leach said being a college placekicke­r isn’t complicate­d.

“The thing is, there’s a ball, and you kick it, and it really doesn’t matter if a bunch of 7-year-olds are watching or if five million Mongol warriors on horses getting ready to shoot their bows and arrows at you,” Leach said Monday at his weekly news conference. “Because, I mean, you approach the ball and kick it. “It’s as simple as that.” Despite what Leach said, he knows it’s not easy for kickers to make field goals even at the SEC level, as the Bulldogs demonstrat­ed last week in their 3128 loss at Arkansas. Mississipp­i State kickers Brandon Ruiz and Nolan McCord combined to go 0 of 3 on field-goal attempts.

Ruiz, senior transfer from Arizona State, missed from 23 and 46 yards.

Leach then had McCord, a redshirt freshman, attempt two extra points, and he hit both.

McCord then missed a 40-yard field-goal attempt on the final play that allowed the Razorbacks to hold on for the victory rather than have to play overtime.

The misses dropped Mississipp­i State to 9 of 17 on field-goal attempts this season, including 1 of 7 from beyond 40 yards.

After the game, Leach said the Bulldogs would hold open tryouts for kickers back on campus, and it wasn’t something said only in frustratio­n after a tough loss.

Leach said Wednesday that about 40 students expressed interest in trying out to be Mississipp­i State’s kicker.

The hopeful kickers haven’t yet gone through tryouts, Leach said, because paperwork needs to be finalized to make sure they’re all academical­ly eligible under NCAA rules.

“We’ve got to get their paperwork and all that stuff,” Leach said. “They have to be approved.

“We haven’t seen any of them [kick] yet. I’m sure they’ll come in all shapes and sizes.”

Leach said he hopes to hold tryouts next week.

“We want to have a pile of kickers that are available that we cultivate, develop,” Leach said. “Over the years, most of my kickers have been walk-on guys that have developed and improved to the point where they become the starting kicker.”

Ruiz came to Mississipp­i State as a scholarshi­p kicker last season, when he hit 10 of 12 field-goal attempts with a long of 43 yards. This season he’s 5 of 9 this season with a long of 44.

McCord is 4 of 8 on fieldgoal attempts with a long of 39.

Leach said a decision will be made later this week who will handle field goals against Auburn on Saturday, but it sounds like it will be Ruiz or McCord with the tryouts for new candidates still on hold.

“You just keep working,” Leach said of what can be done to improve the kicking. “Go back to square one as far as the drills.”

Florida firings

Florida Coach Dan Mullen fired two assistant coaches — defensive coordinato­r Todd Grantham and offensive line coach John Hevesy — after the Gators dropped to 4-5 with a 40-17 loss at South Carolina.

Grantham was in his fifth season as Mullen’s defensive coordinato­r, first at Mississipp­i State, then at Florida. Hevesy was in his 13th season as an assistant for Mullen.

“I’m a pretty loyal person,” Mullen said. “I’m not going to jump to any conclusion. The first sign of trouble, I’m not going to abandon ship on anything. I’m going to look at everything. Honestly, probably a knock sometimes.”

Mullen said he has tremendous respect for Grantham and Hevesy, but that he felt now was the time to make changes on his staff, especially with the early signing period in December.

“Those guys are both friends of mine,” Mullen said. “But my responsibi­lity as the head coach is to do what I feel is best for the Florida Gators, and that comes above it all.

“I think Todd’s an excellent, excellent football coach and there’s times that we’ve played great defense. We just haven’t done it consistent­ly.

“We’re one of the top rushing teams in the country — we just haven’t been consistent with John and the offensive line.”

Linebacker­s coach Christian Robinson, who played for Grantham at Georgia, never has called plays, but he’ll begin doing that for Saturday’s game against Samford.

Graduate assistant Mike Sollenne will coach the offensive line.

“It’s a great opportunit­y for Christian Robinson, a really good young coach, to go call a game for the first time,” Mullen said. “Mike Sollenne gets an opportunit­y. I think he’s a good young coach working with guys. Great opportunit­y for him on the O-line, and I’m going to spend a lot of time with him and the O-line to make sure we’re getting the work done we need there.”

Mullen previously has hired six defensive coordinato­rs, but he’s replacing an offensive line coach for the first time.

“This is Florida,” he said. “So there’s a long list of people that want any job they can get at the University of Florida in any aspect.”

Crazy timing

Hurry-up offenses have made time of possession a less important statistic than in the past when ball control ruled the game, but the time of possession breakdown in Tennessee’s 45-42 victory at Kentucky still defied logic.

The Vols won despite having possession for 13 minutes and 52 seconds compared to 46:08 for the Wildcats.

Kentucky ran 99 plays to 47 for Tennessee.

“I’ve never been a part of a game with that little time of possession and the success that we had,” Vols Coach Josh Heupel said. “It was just unique the way the game unfolded.”

Tennessee scored on the game’s first offensive play when Hendon Hooker hit JaVonta Payton on a 75-yard touchdown pass.

The Vols also scored on a 37-yard run and 56-yard intercepti­on return.

“Even in today’s football that’s definitely a rare occurrence,” Kentucky Coach Mark Stoops said of his team controllin­g the ball for more than 46 minutes and losing. “I think when you’re playing a team like an Ole Miss or Tennessee, time of possession is not that big of a factor if you’re not getting stops.

“We certainly gave up way too many explosive plays.”

Tide streak ends

The longest streak ever for a college football team to score 30 or more points ended at 34 games when Alabama beat LSU 20-14.

It was the first time the Crimson Tide failed to score at least 30 points since they lost to Clemson 44-16 in the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game on Jan. 7, 2019.

Offense’s big 0

Neither team scored an offensive touchdown in Texas A&M’s 20-3 victory over Auburn.

Aggies defensive end Michael Clemons scored the game’s only touchdown on a 24-yard fumble return.

Auburn was held to its fewest points since being shut out by Alabama 49-0 in 2012.

Attention getter

South Carolina Coach Shane Beamer said the Gamecocks’ 40-17 victory over Florida had an immediate impact on recruiting.

“A lot of prospects that weren’t at the game, I had text messages from right afterwards,” Beamer said. “And then frankly, some guys early in the season that I couldn’t get them to return a text, or answer a phone call … some of those guys are showing some interest.”

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? Mississipp­i State kicker Nolan McCord (91) watches his potential game-tying field goal sail wide left on the final play of the Bulldogs’ loss to Arkansas on Saturday at Reynolds Razorback Stadium in Fayettevil­le. Mississipp­i State Coach Mike Leach said after the game he would hope open tryouts on campus for a new kicker.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) Mississipp­i State kicker Nolan McCord (91) watches his potential game-tying field goal sail wide left on the final play of the Bulldogs’ loss to Arkansas on Saturday at Reynolds Razorback Stadium in Fayettevil­le. Mississipp­i State Coach Mike Leach said after the game he would hope open tryouts on campus for a new kicker.
 ?? ?? Leach
Leach

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States