What's new
AllBuffs | Unofficial fan site for the University of Colorado at Boulder Athletics programs

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • Prime Time. Prime Time. Its a new era for Colorado football. Consider signing up for a club membership! For $20/year, you can get access to all the special features at Allbuffs, including club member only forums, dark mode, avatars and best of all no ads ! But seriously, please sign up so that we can pay the bills. No one earns money here, and we can use your $20 to keep this hellhole running. You can sign up for a club membership by navigating to your account in the upper right and clicking on "Account Upgrades". Make it happen!

2nd Half Checklist – Offense

RSSBot

News Junkie
By Stuart


[h=3]Second Half Checklist – Offense[/h]The University of Colorado football team has conducted seven of its allotted 15 spring practices, taking a week off for spring break before resuming practices Monday. The Buffs will have six more practices (including a scrimmage on Friday, April 4th) leading up to the Spring Game on Saturday, April 12th (noon, MT, Pac-12 Networks). CU will then close out the spring, as they did last year, with a final Monday practice on April 15th, with coaches giving players their marching orders for the interval leading up to Fall Camp in August.
While the Buffs had many positives coming out of the first half of spring ball, there remain many unanswered questions as the program seeks to break a school-record string of eight consecutive losing seasons.
Below is a breakdown, by offensive unit (a similar report on the defense is soon to follow), of how the Buffs fared over the course of the first two weeks of practices, and what is expected from them over the course of the next two weeks.
Quarterbacks
The first goal of the spring for the quarterbacks was not to get either of the two scholarship signal callers injured.
So far, so good.
With only two scholarship quarterbacks on the team, the Buffs turned to equipment manager turned backup quarterback Trent Sessions for help. A high school quarterback, Sessions’ role*has been to provide an extra arm so as to relieve fellow sophomores Sefo Liufau and Jordan Gehrke, while giving some extra passes to the wide receivers and tight ends. Sessions, reportedly, has done just that.
While it is all fine and good that the CU quarterbacks are healthy, and that Trent Sessions has fulfilled his assignment as a human interest story, the real questions this spring concerning the quarterbacks were: 1) How much – if any – has Sefo Liufau has improved since being thrown into the starting lineup last fall; and 2) Whether Jordan Gehrke would provide real competition for the starting position.
Reports are that Liufau has, in fact, made progress in his first off-season in Boulder.
“Sefo has been very good,” said Mike MacIntyre.* “The first couple of days, I noticed a zip on the ball, he was stronger, I think he was completely healthy, his body was fresh. He’s throwing off his back foot better and rotating his hips better, so he has more zip on the ball.* He’ll be more accurate.* He was good before, but he’s gone out and done the things that Coach (Brian) Lindgren told him to do in the off season on his own and he’s improved in that area.”
Liufau threw for four touchdowns in the second scrimmage right before break, and seems to have a good understanding of the CU offense. His continued development over the remainder of the spring will be an added bonus.
So, for the quarterbacks, the real question for the second half of spring practices is whether Jordan Gehrke can establish himself as the primary backup to Liufau for the fall. Gehrke did complete 11-of-16 passes in the second scrimmage, but for only 128 yards, and he was sacked five times. While Liufau produced four touchdowns in eight possessions under center, Gehrke produced only one field goal in his seven drives at the helm.
Heralded freshman recruit Cade Apsay will*arrive in Boulder this summer. If Gehrke wants to impress upon coaches the notion that he is to be more than a clipboard carrier the remainder of his tenure in Boulder, the next two weeks*are critical.
Running*Backs
The running game did not produce spectacular results in the first half of the spring. In the two scrimmages, the Buffs had a combined 57 rushes, going for all of 199 yards (not counting 60 yards lost in sacks). The 3.5 yards per carry average was right in line with the 3.44 yards per carry average the Buffs had in 2013 … when Colorado ranked 108th in the nation in rushing.
Malcolm Creer led the*Buffs in rushing over the first two practices, with eight rushes for 40 yards, followed closely by Tony Jones, with nine carries for 38 yards. Red-shirt freshman Phillip Lindsay, from whom much*is anticipated, had 11 rushes for a total of 28 yards.
To be fair, the Buffs’ best two running backs, Michael Adkins and Christian Powell, saw little if any action the first two weeks. Adkins sat out the first scrimmage with a sprained ankle, while Powell missed all of the first half of spring with an injury.
With Powell and Adkins both back in the second half, the Buffs will change their emphasis in the running game. “When we get back, we will have some guys back who haven’t been out here yet so we will do some different things”, said MacIntyre.*”Offensively, we didn’t have our big fullback (George Frazier) and we didn’t have Christian Powell, and he’s a power runner, so we’ll do more emphasis on our heavy sets”.
Buff fans will be checking (hoping?)*to see if the return of Powell, Adkins, and Frazier to the lineup will also lead to more impressive stats out of the running game.
Wide Receivers
This just in … Colorado no longer has Paul Richardson on the roster.
And he ain’t coming back.
“It wouldn’t be fair to ask one guy to do what Paul did,” CU wide receivers coach Troy Walters told the Daily Camera. “He had a special season. He’s a special player. We’ll have a few guys that can make up for what he accomplished.
“Those guys know that there is plenty of opportunities out there. So there is a lot of competition amongst the receivers. Guys are getting after it. They know that playing time is at stake.”
Over the first half of spring practices, it appears that, until proven*otherwise,*Nelson Spruce will be*the primary target for Sefo Liufau this fall.
Walters has dubbed Spruce “Mr. Dependable” because of his work ethic and consistency. He said he believes Spruce is capable of becoming “an All-Pac-12 and All-American type player.”
“Continue to be Mr. Dependable,” Walters said when asked what he is emphasizing with Spruce this spring. “Just because you had a great year last year doesn’t mean you’re going to have great year this year. So he has worked hard and he has shown he has been Mr. Dependable”.
Buff fans looking for an emerging star were looking to mid-year enrollee Lee Walker, who had three catches for 54 yards in the first two scrimmages. “Learning, he’s swimming right now,” said Walters when asked about Walker. “We’re throwing a lot at him with academics and adjusting to college life and then coming on the field he’s swimming a little bit, but he provides great effort. He’s coachable so I think by summertime he’s going to make a huge jump and he’ll be in the mix for playing time this year.”
Red-shirt freshman Bryce Bobo (three catches for 80 yards) has turned some heads over the first two weeks, but the surprise of the first half of the spring has been junior walk-on Wes Christensen, who had four catches for 91 yards and two touchdowns in the first two scrimmages.
“I like the group, I like the guys,” Walters said. “They understand that they got to compete and we’re not just going to give jobs away. I think they’re hungry and motivated to prove that we can be a good unit even without Paul Richardson.”
Offensive Line
For a unit which consistently has produced the most NFL draft picks over the past decade, the Colorado offensive line continues to be a concern for the Buff Nation.
The game of musical chairs continues this spring, with coaches experimenting with different lineups and position changes.
The Buffs lost starting left tackle Jack Harris and starting center Gus Handler to graduation, but returned three starters – Kaiwi Crabb at left guard; Daniel Munyer at right guard; and Stephane Nembot at right tackle – who started all 12 games last season at their respective positions.
But stability has not been the watchword this spring.
Crabb, the starting left guard last season, has been practicing this spring at left tackle. Nembot, who has been a liability in pass protection (surrendering 7 1/2 of CU’s 17 allowed sacks last fall. No other lineman was responsible for more than three), continues to be a work-in-progress entering his junior season. Munyer, a possible replacement for Handler at center, remains at right guard, with Alex Kelley, a potential replacement at guard, taking most of the snaps at center.
The Colorado coaching staff likes to have players who can play multiple positions, and that certainly is an understandable policy. *”The offensive line is doing really well, I’m happy with their progress,” said MacIntyre.*”There’s nothing bad going on, everybody knows what’s going on play wise and doing what they’re supposed to do”.
Still, Colorado – through the first half of spring practices, 2014, is generating a rushing attack on par with the anemic efforts of previous seasons, and the offensive line has given up ten sacks in two scrimmages.
Improvement, especially along the offensive line, where it is difficult for the average fan to quantify progress, is difficult to gauge in the spring.
Buff fans can only hope that the second half of spring ball will result in coach MacIntyre and his staff continuing to be “happy with their progress”.
—–




Originally posted by CU At the Game
Click here to vie
 
Back
Top