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go off like a roman candle

Bear Axed

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http://www.gogriz.com/news/2016/8/16/football-o-line-ready-to-lead-from-the-front-in-2016.aspx


When Bob Stitt took the helm of the Montana Grizzlies football program ahead of the 2015 season, fans were excited to see his brand of up-tempo, pass-heavy, vertical-pressure offense that had earned him a sort of cult following among some of college football's elite coaches.

One of the ingredients necessary to build that offensive attack was a strong offensive line, capable of creating a solid pocket and opening up holes for the run game when necessary.

Over the course of the 2015 season, the O-line went through a series of ups and downs, dealing with injury and adjusting to the up-tempo style of play. But as the business end of the season rolled around, it was clear to observers that the O-line had matured in the trenches, and came together to provide quarterback Brady Gustafson enough time to rack up 1,143 yards passing in the final four games of the season.

Now, with seven months' worth of conditioning under strength coach Matt Nicholson, veteran center Ben Weyer back from injury and a whopping 92 career starts between them, the Grizzly offensive line is shaping up to be one of Montana's strongest and most cohesive position groups of the 2016 season.

"It's very difficult to have confidence when you're physically outmatched," said Stitt. "The work our O-line has done in the offseason, not only to get their weight up but their strength up, is really going to pay off this fall. You're going to see a collective group that is much more confident and aggressive."

Returning to the O-line as a two-year starter is All-Big Sky senior guard Devon Dietrich, who brings 26 career starts to the table all by himself. Weyer is back in 2016, carrying 12 starts as a junior in 2014 before missing the 2015 year due to injury. Junior tackle David Reese is also a two-year starter with 24 under his belt, and senior guard McCauley Todd returns with nine career starts after missing a portion of 2015 due to injury.

Experience is one thing on the offensive line, but weight is another. And the returning Griz bring plenty of that.

This season's projected starters (Reese, Todd, Weyer, Dietrich and Thiebes) entered fall camp weighing an average of 302.6 pounds, while the average weight of all 11 returners comes in at 303.1 pounds, putting the Griz O-line up there with the bulkiest in the Big Sky.

"Having returners on the O-line, they have to work together and they're going feel so much more comfortable with each other this year, but it all starts up front," added Stitt. "We've got an offensive line with some experience and some starts under their belt. We've also got the same quarterback, the same running backs, and a good crew of receivers. I expect the offense to be much improved because of the offensive line."

With five seniors on the offensive line preparing to play their final season as a Grizzly, Stitt and his staff hit the recruiting trail hard to bring in more size on the offensive line in 2015.

The result: a group of five true freshmen with an average weight of 304.4 pounds. The freshmen are highlighted by big bodies like Brandon Scott out of Oklahoma, who arrived at camp tipping the scales at 320 pounds and Thayne Jackson, who put on nearly 50 pounds before arriving in Missoula, entering camp at 312 pounds.

Set to take the reins and lead this group of Clydesdale horses in 2016 is Weyer, a center out of Bozeman who is the beating heart of the group. Weyer was visibly torn when faced with the prospect of missing the 2015 campaign, and has worked tirelessly to return to action.

"Number one he's a great player, but number two he's got great leadership, and he brings an intensity that you really like and want up front," said Stitt.

Flanking Weyer at left and right guard are Todd and Dietrich, who Stitt believes will be one of the keys to the success of the entire offense this season.

"We're stepping it up all across the offensive line this year, but especially with the guards. We've got to be able to keep the pocket firm when you're throwing it and get some movement in the run game, and I think this group can do that."

But perhaps no one person is more responsible for leading the improvement of the O-line than former Grizzly All-American and veteran line coach Chad Germer, who Stitt hired out of UNLV when he took the job at Montana in 2014.

"Coach Germer brings an attitude that you want out of your offensive line," added Stitt. "Every day they get better, and he's never satisfied. He coaches them hard so they know he cares about them."

With offensive weapons in hand like Gustafson's NFL-caliber arm, an athletic corps of wide receivers on hand to make big plays, and a physical group of running backs able to pound out the yards, Stitt's up-tempo offense is set to go off like a roman candle in 2016. The cliché is that it all starts up front, and this group appears ready to prove that.
 
http://www.gogriz.com/news/2016/8/17/football-special-team-come-into-focus-at-fall-camp-day-10.aspx

Special team come into focus at fall camp day 10

The Grizzly football team moved fall camp on to the turf inside Washington-Grizzly Stadium on Wednesday for the first practice since Monday's scrimmage, and the first practice of fall camp not held at the Riverbowl.

As a reward for an overall strong team performance at the scrimmage and an effort to rest tired bodies, coach Bob Stitt cancelled Tuesday's practice, and used the time to take in the latest Jason Bourne flick with the players.

The special teams unit was one of the bright spots in Monday's scrimmage, and they picked up where they left off in Wednesday morning's session. Tim Semenza and Brandon Purdy opened the practice with a series of booming field goals that pushed past the 40-yard mark, drawing cheers from the team.

Special teams continued to be the focus, moving into punt unit work and capping off the session with kickoff coverage. The boots again looked strong, dropping kickoffs consistently close to the goal line.

All together the team dedicated nine periods of practice to special teams, while the quarterbacks and offensive line drilled individual unit


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The receivers and quarterbacks spent the next three periods squeezing in as many route reps as they could before moving into a team run. The No. 1 unit was led by Brady Gustafson, while Chad Chalich and Reese Phillips split the remainder of the drives, still pushing to separate themselves and win the backup quarterback position.

Former QB Makena Simis made a catch worthy of consideration for play of the day when he caught a pass from Phillips on a simple slant route. He then showed fast feet and great special awareness, making two defenders miss and sprinting into the open field for a would-be score.







The two-and-a-half-hour practice wrapped up with a session of seven-on-seven passing, where the QBs once again split the reps, focusing on shorter quick-out routes.

Today's top targets: Keenan Curran, Jerry Louie-McGee and Justin Calhoun continue to earn reps with the number ones, and continue to come up with big catches off clean routes to justify it. Simis saw increased action and true freshman Samori Toure continues to be a threat as well.

Play of the day: Wednesday's play of the day goes to a different receiver however, one that had multiple balls thrown his way, and made the most of it at every opportunity. Samuel Akem, the tall, long, true freshman with size 4x gloves takes home today's play of the day. During the final seven-on-seven session of practice, Chad Chalich found Akem running an out route and threw a 35-yard bomb for the native of Broken Arrow, Okla. Akem got full extension and separation from his defender, leaping for the ball and getting both his toes down for the big gain.




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@CoachBobStitt and the @VoiceoftheGriz recap Wednesday morning's #GrizFootball practice. #GoGriz!
11:14 AM - 17 Aug 2016
2 2 Retweets 5 5 likes


Next up: Coach Stitt has cancelled this afternoon's scheduled practice, instead opting for more time for the players to meet with their position coaches. The Griz will return to the practice field on Thursday and Friday mornings before holding the second scrimmage of fall on Saturday, Aug. 20 at 9 a.m. The second scrimmage is open to the public.

This week's schedule:
Thursday August 18: 8AM: Pre Practice/Media
Friday August 19: 8AM: Pre Practice/Media
Saturday August 20: (Scrimmage 2) – 9AM: Open to public | Media Day
 
Reading between the lines Coach Stitt must be pretty happy with where they are at if he cancelled practice on Tuesday (team went and saw the new Jason Bourne movie) and Wednesday afternoon (players met with position coaches vs. practice).
 
The coach says the o-line is vastly improved and posters say they are borderline terrible. I hope they end up closer to what the coach says. If not why not unleash the young bucks? There seems to be some great talent in the wings.
 
Mavman said:
The coach says the o-line is vastly improved and posters say they are borderline terrible. I hope they end up closer to what the coach says. If not why not unleash the young bucks? There seems to be some great talent in the wings.

This site is plagued with posters who haven't played or coached the game at the college level for 30+ years, who don't have playbooks in hand, giving opinions on what they think they see is going on in a practice or scrimmage. Me. I'll bet on the evaluations of the guys whose full time livelihoods depend on success on the field and watching and grading tape. Most of the posters close to the program that get unwashed information from the coaching staff never post it here. Some blab everything they hear to look important based on who they know. The coaches know who they are, and will only give them something they don't mind seeing here or in the Missoulian. And you are right, we do have exciting talent in the wings.
 
horribilisfan8184 said:
Mavman said:
The coach says the o-line is vastly improved and posters say they are borderline terrible. I hope they end up closer to what the coach says. If not why not unleash the young bucks? There seems to be some great talent in the wings.

This site is plagued with posters who haven't played or coached the game at the college level for 30+ years, who don't have playbooks in hand, giving opinions on what they think they see is going on in a practice or scrimmage. Me. I'll bet on the evaluations of the guys whose full time livelihoods depend on success on the field and watching and grading tape. Most of the posters close to the program that get unwashed information from the coaching staff never post it here. Some blab everything they hear to look important based on who they know. The coaches know who they are, and will only give them something they don't mind seeing here or in the Missoulian. And you are right, we do have exciting talent in the wings.

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horribilisfan8184 said:
Mavman said:
The coach says the o-line is vastly improved and posters say they are borderline terrible. I hope they end up closer to what the coach says. If not why not unleash the young bucks? There seems to be some great talent in the wings.

This site is plagued with posters who haven't played or coached the game at the college level for 30+ years, who don't have playbooks in hand, giving opinions on what they think they see is going on in a practice or scrimmage. Me. I'll bet on the evaluations of the guys whose full time livelihoods depend on success on the field and watching and grading tape. Most of the posters close to the program that get unwashed information from the coaching staff never post it here. Some blab everything they hear to look important based on who they know. The coaches know who they are, and will only give them something they don't mind seeing here or in the Missoulian. And you are right, we do have exciting talent in the wings.

And let's be honest...Coach Stitt would tell us if the line needed work. If he really didn't believe they were better, he'd say something.
 
horribilisfan8184 said:
Most of the posters close to the program that get unwashed information from the coaching staff never post it here. Some blab everything they hear to look important based on who they know.

I thought this was an interesting observation. I think we all know where we fit here.
 
The only thing going off like a Roman candle is PlayerRep when he fucks his hand while looking at a picture of Gregorak. Those are vinegar strokes you never want to see.

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AZDoc said:
horribilisfan8184 said:
Mavman said:
The coach says the o-line is vastly improved and posters say they are borderline terrible. I hope they end up closer to what the coach says. If not why not unleash the young bucks? There seems to be some great talent in the wings.

This site is plagued with posters who haven't played or coached the game at the college level for 30+ years, who don't have playbooks in hand, giving opinions on what they think they see is going on in a practice or scrimmage. Me. I'll bet on the evaluations of the guys whose full time livelihoods depend on success on the field and watching and grading tape. Most of the posters close to the program that get unwashed information from the coaching staff never post it here. Some blab everything they hear to look important based on who they know. The coaches know who they are, and will only give them something they don't mind seeing here or in the Missoulian. And you are right, we do have exciting talent in the wings.

And let's be honest...Coach Stitt would tell us if the line needed work. If he really didn't believe they were better, he'd say something.

It doesn't really matter who says what at this time of year. Griz nation will know soon enough whether or not the OL has improved.....
 
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