ADVERTISEMENT

The Doctor Pepper Club

Well if this weeks polls did not show how little the BCS Championship Series is slanted nothing will. At this point in the season I am sure that a two loss USC team has grown up a lot and can play much better than they did in September. If you think Washington was over rated what is the over under on the Devils in Seattle this week. I just think its time that the NCAA and the collusive forces which continue to deny a play of among the so called Big 5 did it. OSU and Michigan will settle it on the field. Then what are the odds they deny a one loss Washington. Very Interesting.

Strength of schedule discussion

After looking at this week's committee rankings I realized that 4 of our 5 losses are to top 25 teams and 3 of those 4 are top 15 teams. Although Saturday we will probably be adding another top 25 loss, does that fact that ASU has been losing to ranked teams help assuage some of the pain of our season? How does our strength of schedule compare to our win/loss? How does it compare to other teams in the Pac amd nationally?

Which JC recruits could factor into the 2017 class?

Junior College recruiting is always a hotly debated topic. I think everyone's ideal scenario (Outside of Alabama, Michigan and USC) is landing a class that's at least 17-20 deep in preps that average a 3.5 star rating. Obviously no one is going to complain if a class includes some JC studs, as long as they come in ready to play.

2016 has been an interesting year for ASU when it comes to JC recruits, because on paper, it seemed like the Sun Devils struck gold

  • Christian Hill and Dougladson Subtyl were 4-star pass rushers
  • City College of San Francisco teammates AJ McCollum and Michael Sleep Dalton were considered by some to be the best at their positions in the country
  • Tyson Rising amassed 14 offers, and likely would have had more if he waited
  • ASU won a late recruiting war for Alex Losoya over multiple SEC and Big-12 schools
  • Koron Crump, J'Marcus Rhodes and Maurice Chandler were ranked 39, 42, and 59 in the top 100 JuCo prospects of the 2016 class
  • Deion Guignard chose ASU over staying in Texas and going to upstart Houston.
Yet this class hasn't made the immediate impact many had hoped. Christian Hill is raw, and has had as many or more reps on offense as he has had rushing the passer. Doug Subtyl didn't qualify and is currently in limbo. AJ McCollum came in out of shape, and seems to have (possibly temporarily) lost the starting job he earned to a walk on. Tyson Rising has been injured all season. Maurice Chandler and J'Marcus Rhodes haven't taken advantage of opportunities to seize starting jobs. Alex Losoya and Deion Guignard have only made brief cameos in a handful of games. As of now, the only instant-impact player has been Koron Crump, who is among the nation's leaders in sacks for a linebacker.

ASU doesn't yet have any JuCo commits for the 2017 class, and one might think that with how many they took in 2016, and the wait-and-see approach ASU has taken with what is the deepest local recruiting class in the history of the state, that JuCo might not be a priority this year. I don't believe that to be the case. I just think Arizona State is being more selective than usual in this area, and I also believe that ASU is hot on the trail of some already committed JuCo prospects.

Securing Doug Subtyl's enrollment at ASU will be the class of 2017's #1 priority, and ASU will also benefit from the addition of Oklahoma transfer John Humphrey and Texas transfer Ryan Newsome. Beyond that, here are the JuCo players that I believe you should be watching out for:

1) Gary Johnson- 4 star ILB, Dodge City CC

Johnson's profile doesn't show an ASU offer, but the Sun Devils did offer him back in April, and they've been pursuing him ever since- even though he had he committed to Alabama a month before that. As it turns out, Johnson can't attend Alabama, or any SEC school, because his algebra class wasn't taken at the same JuCo that he attends. He announced on Sunday that he wouldn't be at Alabama, opening the door for Arizona State as a possibility.

2) Stephen Guidry- 4 star WR, Hinds CC

ASU offered Guidry in April, and he hasn't been shy about sharing some of the recruiting promo stuff he's received on social media (Here, and here). Guidry was committed to LSU from mid-May until early October, when all the Les Miles stuff went down.

3) Brandon Martin- 4 star WR , Gulf Coast CC

Martin signed with Auburn out of high school and committed to Auburn earlier this year, but he backed off that commitment within a week, and ASU is in hot pursuit. Martin, like Guidry, is 6-4 and is an instant-impact playmaker.

4) Jonathan Abram- DB, Jones County JC

Abram started 4 games for Georgia as a freshman and is playing at Jones County this year before presumable enrolling at another SEC school. ASU still wants him though, as do several Pac-12 schools. Abram has teammates at Jones County who I also believe ASU has taken an interest in. They offered one of them yesterday, and could offer 3-star DE Marques Ford before it's all said and done. Ford started out at Rutgers before transferring.

5) Marquise Brown- WR, College of the Canyons

Brown is probably the fastest JuCo WR in the country. He's an athlete on TIm WHite's level, but unlike Tim White- everyone knows who he is. He'll be a tough get.

6) Malik Young- DL, Eastern Arizona CC

Young has been by ASU already with a few of his teammates. The 6-3, 285 DT is in high demand, and Arizona State could have the inside track because of proximity, but they could also lose out to any team that tells him he can play immediately, or anyone near where he grew up in Georgia. We'll have to wait and see.

7) Preston Hendry- DL, Orange Coast CC

Hendry has already visited ASU, and I believe he's looking for the offer that will keep him closest to the coast. ASU is a strong contender if they choose to pursue Hendry as a part of the 2017 class.

8) Badara Traore- OL, ASA College

Arizona State was the first to offer the 6-8, 310 OL, now the 4-star JuCo product has 20+ offers and will probably end up in the SEC. My guess is Georgia.

9) Maurice Burton- DE/OLB, Scottsdale CC

I haven't seen or heard of anyone besides ASU offering Burton, who led AZ JuCos in sacks as a freshman. I know his offer is legit, because he tweeted a picture of his official offer back in August. This is a strong likelihood for ASU, especially if he's not receiving other offers. It's possible he's just not publicizing them though.

10) Mik'Quan Dean- TE, NEO A&M JC

As Hod has previously written, there's a strong chance ASU would have already taken a commitment from Dean if everything was sound academically. Not sure if Dean is still in ASU's plans, and I've noticed Dean's other official visits are focused in the southeast.

11) Walter Palmore- DT, Eastern Arizona CC

Arizona State moved in on Palmore last week after the group of EAC players all came to visit ASU with Malik Young. The 6-4, 305 pound prospect migth be open to a package deal scenario with Young, but Georgia has been after him a while, as well as Houston and West Virginia.

Here are a few players with reported ASU offers that I do not believe are part of their plans:

Daquan Wilson- DE, LA Harbor CC
Gabriel Luyanda- DE, Garden City CC
Ben Sutton- DB, Blinn College
Octavious Morgan- DB, Butler CC



Some others to look out for include New Mexico Military Institute's Jordan Harris (6-6, 320 OT, 2 for 2), Riverside City College's Brandon Brooks (6-3 DB, 3 for 2), Mesa CC's CJ Leggett (2 for 2, former Georgia Tech RB), Highland CC's Marquis Terry (3 for 2, recently made Rivals JuCo's top RB prospect rankings), Pearl River CC's Matthew Eaton (Iowa State commit, 6-4 WR), Blinn College's Jhavonte Dean (4-star DB, Alabama commit), Arizona Western's Craig Evans (6-4, 310 DT), College of the Desert's De'Jon Wilson (6-2 safety),

11-16-16-Wednesday Practice Report

ATTIRE: Helmets and Pads

LOCATION: Kajikawa Practice Fields

MEDIA AVAILABILITY: About 20 minutes

SPECIAL GUESTS: ASU AD Ray Anderson was at practice. He spoke with a scout from the Cowboys. There was also a Jets scout there.

TOWELS AND SUNSCREEN (Muscle beach): The weather is cooling down, but the beaches were still packed.

WR Cam Smith, OL Sam Jones (was in cleats today, but still walked through stretches), DL George Lea (brace on right knee), LB Malik Lawal, DL Christian Hill, DL Emanuel Dayries, OL Cade Cote, DB James Johnson (brace on right knee) jogged to start practice, but ended up on muscle beach

PERSONNEL NOTES: LB Salamo Fiso had a brace on his left knee, OL Zach Robertson's left ankle was taped, LB Carlos Mendoza still had that sprained right hand in a bandage, RB Demario Richard walked into the practice facility, but he didn't participate in the 11-on-0 offensive drill (more to come on that)

TACKLE CIRCUIT: ASU began the day with tackle circuit, but this particular drill focused on knocking the ball out and locating it.
Login to view embedded media
11-on-0 OFFENSE: ASU ran a few series of 11-on-0 offense. Pretty typical stuff. Here's how the teams looked...

First team: QB Manny Wilkins, RB Kalen Ballage, WRs N'Keal Harry/Tim White/Fred Gammage, TE Jay Jay Wilson (split out to the left), LT Evan Goodman, LG Steven Miller, C AJ McCollum, RG Quinn Bailey, RT Zach Robertson

Second team: QB Dillon Sterling-Cole, RB Nick Ralston, WRs Terrell Chatman/Kyle Williams (slot)/Ellis Jefferson, TE Raymond Epps (split out left), LT Cohl Cabral, LG Stephon McCray, C Tyler McClure, RG Alex Losoya, RT Mason Walter

Third team: QB Jack Smith and 10 scout team players

As always, if you have any questions, feel free to ask.

Rolling Rings?

I always enjoy Fabian Adaya's daily practice reports, but there was a sentence in yesterday's report that made me chuckle aloud:

"Defensive backs focused on tackling rolling rings."

First, I hate playing armchair coach and I freely admit I'm totally and completely unqualified to pass judgement on an experienced college football coach. That said, given the current state of our defense (notably our secondary and tackling) this gave me a moment of pause. I've actually seen this drill being run throughout the season and, honestly, it looks about as silly as it sounds. My unknowledgeable view leads me to believe this drill is a huge departure from actually tackling a real-life football player. I understand a rolling ring can be elusive and won't stop rolling until someone takes it down, but I sure hope we play the University of Washington Rolling Rings, because I like are chances in that scenario. If we have to play the actual football team, things are going to be a bit more difficult. Go Devils...Give'em Hell!!

Tuesday Practice Report 11-15

ATTIRE: Helmets and pads
LOCATION: Kajikawa Practice Fields
MEDIA AVAILABILITY: ~15 minutes
GUESTS: Scouts from the Cleveland Browns and Detroit Lions were in attendance.

EN VERDE (NO CONTACT): OL Stephon McCray (leg; still participated in drills)

THE WALKING WOUNDED (MUSCLE BEACH): WR Cam Smith (unknown), OL Tyson Rising (unknown), OL Cade Cote (left shoulder; was in a sling), DL Emanuel Dayries (unknown), Christian Sam (foot; wasn't in cleats), LB Malik Lawal (unknown), DL George Lea (unknown), DL Christian Hill (unknown), OL Sam Jones (right foot; had cleat off on that foot on the training table).

Notes: Christian Sam was wearing the new James Harden adidas sneakers, which looked nice.

NOT DRESSED: QB Bryce Perkins (neck), QB Brady White (foot)

Notes: Brady White has a scooter, with an impressive collection of magazines.

TACKLING

ASU was working on form tackling during the opening session. DL coach Joe Seumalo focused on wrapping up. Defensive backs focused on tackling rolling rings. LBs coach Shawn Slocum focused on tackling in the open field.

Login to view embedded media
TEMPO

ASU ran its offenses against air on Tuesday, essentially running two plays -- inside zone handoff, or a quick screen to the outside. Here's how the teams lined up:

FIRST TEAM: Manny Wilkins (QB), Kalen Ballage (RB), Tim White (WR), N'Keal Harry (WR), Fred Gammage (WR-slot), Kody Kohl (TE), Evan Goodman (LT), Steven Miller (LG), AJ McCollum (C), Quinn Bailey (RG), Zach Robertson (RT)

Drive finish: Wilkins screen TD pass to White.

SECOND TEAM: Dillon Sterling-Cole (QB), Nick Ralston (RB), Terrell Chatman (WR), Ellis Jefferson (WR), Kyle Williams (WR-slot), Raymond Epps (TE), Cohl Cabral (LT), Stephon McCray (LG), Tyler McClure (C), Alex Losoya (RG), Mason Walter (RT)

Drive finish: Dillon Sterling-Cole quick screen TD to Chatman.

THIRD TEAM (notables): Jack Smith (QB), Tre Turner (RB), Ryan Jenkins (WR-slot), Jay Jay Wilson (TE)

Drive finish: Tre Turner TD run.

SONG OF THE DAY

Login to view embedded media
As always, let me know if you have any questions.

ASU celebrates decade of Graduation Success Rate success with all-time high 87% GSR.

TEMPE, Ariz.—Sun Devil Athletics has recorded an all-time high 87 percent Graduation Success Rate (GSR) for its student-athletes, the NCAA announced Tuesday.


Sun Devil Athletics has either tied or surpassed its all-time best GSR in each of the past 10 years. This year’s mark, which is three-percent higher than the all-time high announced in 2015, ranks second in the Pac-12 Conference and first among public institutions in the league.


Sun Devil Athletics’ GSR has risen 18 percent since the metric was first introduced by the NCAA in 2005, and surpassed its original goal of 80 percent in 2012.


“We are proud to announce our all-time high Graduation Success Rate at Arizona State,” said Ray Anderson, Vice President of University Athletics. “Graduating student-athletes and competitive success are keystones to defining the Sun Devil Way. The student-athlete is the centerpiece of our department’s efforts. Jean Boyd, his staff, and our coaches not only teach leadership, risk-taking, and teamwork, but also complement the invaluable academic growth gained from the classroom.”


Sun Devil Athletics’ male student-athlete GSR is 83 percent, an all-time high for the department, up four percent from a year ago. Since the NCAA began reporting men’s GSR in 2005, the percentage has improved from 56 percent. ASU’s African American student-athlete GSR also hit at an all-time high at 85 percent.


Men’s basketball’s GSR of 93 percent leads the Pac-12 Conference, while baseball’s 89 percent and football’s 80 percent both rank third best amongst schools in the league. Overall the men’s basketball’s GSR has improved 62 percent over the last nine years.


Arizona State’s female student-athlete GSR is up one percent from a year ago to 91 percent, with three teams reaching 100 percent graduation success: women’s golf, softball, and women’s tennis.


“Sun Devil Athletics is dedicated to developing student-athletes who graduate and go on to live championship lives,” said Jean Boyd, Senior Associate Athletic Director of Student-Athlete Development and Performance. “Earning a meaningful bachelor’s degree is an important element to this commitment. Reaching an all-time high of 87 percent speaks to academic coaches, sport coaches, administrators and student-athletes being in sync on impacting the student-athlete experience. We will remain relentless in these efforts and look forward to reaching our target of 90 percent.”


The GSR is based on student-athletes who entered college as freshmen in 2006-2009 and ultimately entered ASU on athletic aid as freshmen or transfers. The GSR allows for the removal of those individuals from the cohort who left ASU in good academic standing prior to completing their eligibility and is the NCAA's primary tool for measuring academic success.


The GSR is the NCAA's more comprehensive calculation of student-athlete academic success. The NCAA rate is more accurate than the federally mandated methodology because it includes incoming transfers and students enrolling in the spring semester who receive athletic aid and graduate and deletes from the calculation student-athletes who leave an institution and were academically eligible to compete. The federal rate does neither.


Conversely, the APR, or Academic Progress Rate, is a year-by-year gauge of eligibility and retention for Division I scholarship student-athletes that was established in 2004. It is a composite team measurement based upon how individual team members do academically, and the NCAA APR threshold is 925, which is the equivalent of a 50-percent graduation rate.


This is the 26th release of institutional graduation rates since national "right-to-know" legislation was passed in 1990. In 2005, the NCAA Division I Committee on Academic Performance implemented the initial release of the team GSR data.

Stephen Guidry talks ASU visit

The wide receiver position isn’t an area of major need for Arizona State in the 2017 recruiting class, which allows the Sun Devils to be very selective in the prospects they purse. One such recruit is four-star junior college wide receiver Stephen Guidry, who officially visited Tempe last weekend.

The Hinds Community College is a man of few words, so I’m just posting this in the Huddle. Just wanted to mention two things to set this up.

While Guidry is a spring graduate, he did redshirt his first year at Hinds so he’s a 3 for 3 player. So very appealing eligibility wise and ASU has done well landing such prospects in the past. Jaelen Strong if you recall was one such a recruit.

While Guidry is looking at SEC schools such as Alabama and Auburn, the more stringent academic qualification process that conference has with junior college prospects puts Guidry at a better chance qualifying at other conferences, which obviously helps ASU here.

Guidry told me this about his visit:

“The visit was nice. We went to the game right when we got there. I really liked the environment and the people around it; it’s not a boring place. The team is cool and they have two senior wide receivers that are leaving. They throw the ball a lot and do a lot of trick plays. I really like the uniforms.

“Coach Norvell likes my size and speed. I run good routes and catch the ball. Probably my weakness is (needing to) add about 10 lbs. I’m at 6-4 190. My fastest 40-time is 4.24.”

Guidry will visit Mississippi State on 12/2, Auburn on 12/9 and Alabama on 1/27/17. He told me that he didn't intend to make a decision before he took all of his visits.

Again, if the SEC qualification issue remains relevant then in essence ASU is right now is the only school he visited/plans to visit that he has a realistic chance to qualify for.

Login to view embedded media
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT