The Capital

Picking up the pieces

Mids hope full-contact practices better prepare them following beatdown from BYU in opener

- By Bill Wagner

Navy facesnumer­ous questions going into the second game of this strange football season.

Coach Ken Niumatalol­o is hopeful some answers will come Saturday at Tulane.

The Midshipmen were shell shocked by what happened in the opener, where they suffered the most lopsided loss of Niumatalol­o’s 13-year tenure. BYUwas ready to play tackle football while Navy was not, and the resultwas a 55-3 beatdown on LaborDay.

It was a nationally televised embarrassm­ent for a proud program and Niumatalol­o put all the blame on his shoulders, saying his decision to avoid contact practices was the sole reason.

“I’ve never, ever seen aNavy football team play like that — we just weren’t ready,” Niumatalol­o reiterated this week. “To me, the biggest thing was physicalit­y. We’ve never gotten pushed around like that.”

Niumatalol­o announced two days later the Midshipmen would begin conducting full-contact practices. Navy had a bye last weekend due to cancellati­on of the Lafayette home game, which gave the coaching staff extra time to get the players “pad-ready.”

And that begs the most important question: Is a week-and-a-half of padded practices enough to improve the blocking and tackling that was so clearly subpar in the season opener?

“We took off the training wheels the last two weeks, so you’re hoping that you’re better because of it,” Niumatalol­o said. “Obviously, we have to improve a ton from the last game.”

Navy is attempting to make up a lot of lost time after spending all of August training camp blocking bags and tackling doughnuts. Niumatalol­o elected to avoid contact practices due to concerns about the coronaviru­s.

Usually, the Midshipmen would stop having contact practices once the season started because the players had already been physically toughened.

“We had some physical practices and had great interactio­n,” Niumatalol­o said. “We pushed the envelope to speed up the process. We went against each other more than we normally would but felt like we needed to do that. I definitely feel much better going into this game knowing that we practiced normally.”

Full-contact scrimmage situations between the starting offense and defense sparked the competitiv­e spirit, and Niumatalol­o noted there was “a lot of smacktalki­ng, a lot of after-play scuffles.” That emotion and intensity was missing during training camp because bags don’t hit back.

“This was much needed,” Navy defensive coordinato­r Brian Newberry said of padded practices. “Players have a different look in their eyes now. The improvemen­t every daywe go live is extremely evident.

“There’s no substitute for going live and good-on-good. We’re better already, but we’re not wherewe need to be.”

Navy’s coaching staff felt the team was properly conditione­d going into the opener but found out quickly that wasn’t the case. Offensive and defensive linemen reported beingworn down during the first quarter because they were unaccustom­ed to the strain caused by pushing and pulling against another body.

Navy fans should expect some depthchart changes because player evaluation­s began anew along with the live contact. Navy offensive coordinato­r Ivin Jasper liked the way his unit responded to competitio­n with the frontline defense.

“We were able to see what guys can really do — full-speed reps and trying to block a moving target … a lot of things get exposed,” he said. “Some guys can process things really fast and some can’t.”

Newberry hinted at one potential change, mentioning that John Marshall has moved from safety to the outside linebacker position known as“striker .” The 6-foot-2, 197-pound sophomore saw significan­t action in Navy’s dime package against BYU and responded with five tackles.

“You’re always trying to get your best 11 on the field,” Newberry said. “That [BYU game] was the first time I saw Marshall tackle. To see him throw his body around, make some tackles and be productive — I was impressed.”

Standout linebacker Diego Fagot, who led Navy with 13 tackles against BYU, is a returning starterwho­said hewas not quite prepared for regular-season football.

“To be completely honest, the first two or three drives I was still trying to get adjusted to the speed of the game,” said

Fagot, adding the full-contact practices held over the past two weeks have been beneficial. “Seeing the speed of the game and going against a more physical opponent has definitely made a difference.”

Navy’s other big question mark comes at quarterbac­k, with Saturday’s starter still unknown. That position became an unexpected problem after starter DalenMorri­s and backup Perry Olsen both struggled in the opener.

Olsen is no longer part of the program, having announced Sept. 11 his intention to transfer. Meanwhile, Morris was forced to fight to remain the starter as the Midshipmen held an open competitio­n in practice the past twoweeks.

Jasper, who coaches the quarterbac­ks, said freshman Xavier Ar line and sophomore Mass ai May nor were battling Morris. During a virtual news conference Wednesday afternoon, Niumatalol­o declined to identify a starter, stating “we’re not there yet.”

 ?? PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Navy football players take the field before their season-opening game against BYU on Labor Day. They’ll try to shake off a bad loss when they face Tulane on Saturday.
PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE Navy football players take the field before their season-opening game against BYU on Labor Day. They’ll try to shake off a bad loss when they face Tulane on Saturday.

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