AZGrizFan said:
Our # of sacks just went up.
..........or not?
Total defense, less sacks the focus for Griz D-line
AJ MAZZOLINI
[email protected]
Montana led the Big Sky Conference in sacks in three of the past five seasons and totaled the third-most quarterback takedowns of any FCS program, 43, last year. That trend may be ending in 2016 – and not just because of the graduation of pass-rushing phenom Tyrone Holmes.
"The numbers might go down, well they probably will because Tyrone is an unbelievable player, but our defensive line is not about just getting sacks," head coach Bob Stitt said last month on the eve of his team's first spring practice. "Their job is to play the run and the pass.
"I think you're just gonna see a better defense as a whole and I'm really excited about that. ... We're gonna get back to playing total defense rather than just statistical defense."
Montana's defensive identity is shifting this offseason under first-year coordinator Jason Semore, though only slightly in the observable realm. Semore's system began to rear its head at the end of last season and this spring is all about the players getting more comfortable with the tweaks he wants to make.
But there's a notable difference in feel for this edition of Montana's Dark Side.
"Less rules, more just going and playing football," senior lineman Caleb Kidder summed it up succinctly. "It's awesome; I love it."
Semore, the safeties coach a year ago, is taking over for the departed Ty Gregorak, who infamously defected to Montana State in December. He has stated many times he wants his defensive front to be multiple, a mix of three and four linemen depending on the situation. This week he talked more in depth about the responsibilities of those players in a Semore-run defense.
Of course there's rules, he said, but the 2016 Grizzlies will be more adept at adapting to opponent's offenses. There will be less set in stone.
"We give our guys a lot of freedom," said Semore, echoing the offensive philosophies of head coach Bob Stitt, for whom Semore led the defense in 2014 at Colorado School of Mines
"They communicate with each other within different position groups. They have opportunities to run different line games against different formations."
The Griz lost eight starters from that side of the ball, though Montana appears comfortable with its future at linebacker with a load of young and talented underclassmen in house. They needed help everywhere else, though.
The defensive line and the secondary were a focus in the offseason, both being addressed in the short term with the addition of transfers. Tackles Brandt Davidson (Scottsdale Community College) and Myles McKee-Osibodu (Santa Ana College) enrolled for spring semester while safety Justin Strong (Oregon State) will be in Missoula this summer.
The line especially needed revamping, though.
***
When the Griz square off with Saint Francis to open the season in September, it's highly likely all four line spots will feature a new starter. Gone are seniors like Holmes, the STATS FCS Defensive Player of the Year, Derek Crittenden and tackle Jamal Wilson. The trio accounted for 37 starts between them in 2015.
Kidder, the tackle adjacent to Wilson all last year, is moving outside to D-end to fill the void left by Montana's fearsome pass rusher. In the middle is likely to be some combination of juniors Davidson, McKee-Osibodu and returners Zach Peevey (senior), Nate Bradley (junior) and Kyle Davis (sophomore).
Peevey and Bradley drew first-string duties in Montana's initial spring scrimmage two weeks ago with the new guys seeing limited time.
"We've just got to get them mentally ready to play," Semore said of his transfer DTs. "Missed assignments still an issue, but the other guys have a year or two within the scheme."
Despite his size, the 5-foot-10, 260-pound Bradley made 28 tackles over 13 games with one start last year. Peevey, a Missoula Hellgate grad, was mired by injuries and appeared in 11 games with just five tackles.
On the outside, senior Ryan Johnson and junior Tucker Schye have been duking it out for playing time at D-end this spring while Kidder adjusts to the new position. Johnson has the edge in playing experience, having started two games a year ago in Crittenden's place. He made 33 stops and was second on the team with five sacks.
Without Holmes' presence, this year's Griz line will need to be more balanced, Johnson said. And it can be.
"I don't know if anyone will have 18 sacks individually," Johnson joked of Holmes' outrageous 2015 total. "It'll be great if one of us could, but I think we will be much more by committee this year. I think we've got three, four guys that can go out and put 10 up this year."
The Griz racked up nine sacks in their opening scrimmage, six coming from the D-line. Schye, entering his second season as a converted outside linebacker, had three while Johnson accounted for 2.5.