Observations from Georgia Tech’s 12th preseason practice

GTFLETCH

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Observations from the portion of the practice open to media.


1. As was the case with Thursday’s practice, the practice was a rehearsal for Friday practices once the season begins. A light day by design, players were outfitted in soft shoulder pads and shorts and went through some of the workout without helmets. A key part of the Friday schedule is a period dedicated to going over plays to be used in the game, during which the offense and defense split up. With coaches, backups and staff serving as members of the opposing team, players ran a series of plays for roughly 20 minutes.
The day’s simulation was to extend even to a Friday-night stay at the team hotel before the Jackets’ scrimmage Saturday.

2. Coach Geoff Collins led a short period for special teams to simulate game situations, going so far as having the entire team congregate on the home sideline. From there, he summoned the kickoff team onto the field and then, after the 11 players lined up at their spots, he called out specific players as “down,” or unavailable, a preparation to make sure the backups for the starters were paying attention.

3. Walk-on offensive lineman Joe Fusile appears to remain in the mix at guard. Offensive-line coach Brent Key has continued to shuffle players in his fivesomes as he tries to settle on a starting group. Fusile, a redshirt freshman from Richmond Hill High, did not play last season in his first year on the team. Key said that Fusile, listed at 6-foot-6 and 316 pounds, had asserted himself in the preseason. “On offensive line, you want big, strong guys, and he’s that,” Key said. “You want tough guys, he’s that. You want smart guys, and he’s smart. He’s extremely smart. He doesn’t make mistakes. He’s a strong, strong kid, and he’s worked himself into that position to compete for a starting job.” Other possibilities at guard include returnee Paula Vaipulu and transfers Paul Tchio (Clemson) and Pierce Quick (Alabama).


 
I like hearing about Fusile.

When you are recruiting 18 year olds you don't really know what is going on in their heads. They may have been coached to say the right things, no replacement for seeing them.

Maybe he will fade, maybe he will turn into a starter, maybe he will be another Brandon Burlsworth and win the award named after him.

I like rooting for young people that have a plan and by God are they going to see if it can work.
 
Observations from the portion of the practice open to media.


1. As was the case with Thursday’s practice, the practice was a rehearsal for Friday practices once the season begins. A light day by design, players were outfitted in soft shoulder pads and shorts and went through some of the workout without helmets. A key part of the Friday schedule is a period dedicated to going over plays to be used in the game, during which the offense and defense split up. With coaches, backups and staff serving as members of the opposing team, players ran a series of plays for roughly 20 minutes.
The day’s simulation was to extend even to a Friday-night stay at the team hotel before the Jackets’ scrimmage Saturday.

2. Coach Geoff Collins led a short period for special teams to simulate game situations, going so far as having the entire team congregate on the home sideline. From there, he summoned the kickoff team onto the field and then, after the 11 players lined up at their spots, he called out specific players as “down,” or unavailable, a preparation to make sure the backups for the starters were paying attention.

3. Walk-on offensive lineman Joe Fusile appears to remain in the mix at guard. Offensive-line coach Brent Key has continued to shuffle players in his fivesomes as he tries to settle on a starting group. Fusile, a redshirt freshman from Richmond Hill High, did not play last season in his first year on the team. Key said that Fusile, listed at 6-foot-6 and 316 pounds, had asserted himself in the preseason. “On offensive line, you want big, strong guys, and he’s that,” Key said. “You want tough guys, he’s that. You want smart guys, and he’s smart. He’s extremely smart. He doesn’t make mistakes. He’s a strong, strong kid, and he’s worked himself into that position to compete for a starting job.” Other possibilities at guard include returnee Paula Vaipulu and transfers Paul Tchio (Clemson) and Pierce Quick (Alabama).


Key still looking for his starting five is a huge red flag.
 
I like hearing about Fusile.

When you are recruiting 18 year olds you don't really know what is going on in their heads. They may have been coached to say the right things, no replacement for seeing them.

Maybe he will fade, maybe he will turn into a starter, maybe he will be another Brandon Burlsworth and win the award named after him.

I like rooting for young people that have a plan and by God are they going to see if it can work.

Why go all the way back to Burlsworth, when you can highlight our very own Sean Bedford?
 
Key still looking for his starting five is a huge red flag.
Yeah...IDK...it might be a case of finding five game ready players who have the best playing chemistry. Or I am just hoping we are not witnessing another train wreck in motion.
 
It could be or you could have guys that are all bunched up together in skill level so It will be a rotation until the best five emerges. Not that uncommon.
We lost several starters from last year's OL, which wasn't very good, and we're replacing them with players of a lower pedigree (transfers that didn't have playing time at their previous school replacing players who were starters at their previous school).

Occam's razor: it's a red flag
 
We lost several starters from last year's OL, which wasn't very good, and we're replacing them with players of a lower pedigree (transfers that didn't have playing time at their previous school replacing players who were starters at their previous school).

Occam's razor: it's a red flag
Backups at Clemson and SEC schools, who had higher HS rankings, have a lower pedigree than the previous starters from our 3-3-3 teams?
 
I'm just looking for true freshman impact players to pick up in the freshman draft of my college fantasy league
 
We lost several starters from last year's OL, which wasn't very good, and we're replacing them with players of a lower pedigree (transfers that didn't have playing time at their previous school replacing players who were starters at their previous school).

Occam's razor: it's a red flag
Folks act like these guys were all scrubs at their previous spots. Most were underclassmen behind veterans that would all just now be seeing playing time anywhere.
 
We'll see if Brent is right about Franklin, though. I do think Chip will be better about playing to the line's strengths.
 
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