South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Kiffin: Robison, Tronti top QB derby

Owls coach says team’s first scrimmage of camp was ‘sloppy’

- By David Furones

BOCA RATON — Florida Atlantic coach Lane Kiffin left what he called a “sloppy” scrimmage on Saturday, the first of fall camp for the Owls, feeling that redshirt sophomore quarterbac­ks Chris Robison and Nick Tronti took a step ahead of junior Justin Agner but hedged that assessment noting Agner had been sick leading up to Saturday.

“They both probably got ahead of Justin,” Kiffin said. “Justin had the bad intercepti­on to start the game, but he’s been really sick, struggled to eat for a few days now, throwing up, so kind of hard to evaluate him on that.”

Robison, the incumbent starter who was suspended for spring football, was pleased with his performanc­e as he worked with the first-, second- and third-team offenses. Unofficial­ly, Robison went 6 for 10 for 154 yards, two touchdowns and no intercepti­ons.

“I thought Chris did what he’s kind of done in camp. We all know he’s arm talented, made some really good throws,” Kiffin said. “But at the same time, he’s got to make the right decisions. We’ve got a third-and-1 in two-minute there where you hand the ball off and he pulls the ball. You lose a yard and waste a timeout. He’s a sophomore now. He can’t make those mistakes in critical situations.”

Following the scrimmage, he said he’ll maintain his same approach, which going back to the same time last year, won him a competitio­n over De’Andre Johnson and Rafe Peavey.

“I’m going to go out there, try to get better every single day and try to operate the offense as well as I can,” Robison said.

Tronti, unofficial­ly, was 4 of 11 for 57 yards, a touchdown and two intercepti­ons. The former Florida Mr. Football award winner at Ponte Vedra High in the Jacksonvil­le area, who transferre­d from Indiana ahead of last season, was not pleased with what he showed.

“I looked like a high school quarterbac­k out there, to be honest,” Tronti said. “Missing throws, turning the ball over. Unaccept

able. It’s not going to help the team win.”

Agner was the first quarterbac­k on the field but was very limited due to his illness and not even on the sideline late in the scrimmage. He was 1 of 5 for 7 yards and an intercepti­on, unofficial­ly.

The offense, stymied early in the scrimmage, finally got going in the middle of it. Robison connected with redshirt sophomore receiver Chris Herring for a touchdown, and Tronti hit senior tight end John Raine for a score on the following drive. Both were on intermedia­te routes.

Former Alabama running back BJ Emmons was a standout, displaying his power-running abilities consistent­ly and then his speed on a 51-yard touchdown scamper.

“I feel I did all right for how long I’ve been here, only eight months,” said Emmons, who took last season off and was at Hutchinson Community College in Kansas in 2017 after he was with Kiffin when he was the offensive coordinato­r of the Crimson Tide in Emmons’ 2016 freshman season. “I know I still got a lot to learn. It’s just a learning experience, every day just coming out here and getting better with my teammates.”

The Owls’ first three drives,

which gave each quarterbac­k competing for the starting job an initial chance on Saturday, all

ended in turnovers. The first two were intercepti­ons thrown by Agner and Tronti, picked off by safety

Da’Von Brown and cornerback Diashun Moss, respective­ly. The third, while Robison was in at quarterbac­k, was a fumble from running back Kelvin Dean, recovered by linebacker Hosea Barnwell.

“I thought it was more a reflection of the offense,” Kiffin said of the turnovers. “The first intercepti­on, you should’ve never thrown. You just chucked it up. Anybody could’ve made that play on defense. The defense did force a fumble on the third one, but still, that’s bad ball security. A couple of other balls came out later from the running backs.”

Defensive tackle Noah Jefferson dropped back into coverage late in the scrimmage to pick off a Tronti pass. Hybrid defensive end/linebacker, known as the Leo in defensive coordinato­r Glenn Spencer’s scheme, Leighton McCarthy recovered a fumble. Fellow Leo David Belvin had a sack, as did linebacker Akileis Leroy.

Reserve freshman quarterbac­k Javion Posey scored a rushing touchdown, keeping the ball on a read-option from near the goal line.

The first points the offense scored came on the seventh drive of the scrimmage on a 41-yard field goal from Vladimir Rivas. It was a strong scrimmage for FAU kickers as Aaron Shahriari later got a 48-yard kick just over the crossbar. Rivas later hit his next attempt, from 39 yards out.

FAU has a day off on Sunday before returning to practice on Monday.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? FAU coach Lane Kiffin said redshirt sophomore quarterbac­ks Chris Robison and Nick Tronti took a step ahead of junior Justin Agner following what he called a “sloppy” scrimmage on Saturday.
WILFREDO LEE/AP FAU coach Lane Kiffin said redshirt sophomore quarterbac­ks Chris Robison and Nick Tronti took a step ahead of junior Justin Agner following what he called a “sloppy” scrimmage on Saturday.

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