Jones perseveres
Posted October 31st, 2006 by mrasor
Football
Defensive back Andre Jones nearly quit the team last year.
I think most of us would have in his situation. Read his story, told by the PD's Elton Alexander.
- After the Zips' loss to Toledo, the Buchtelite's Dan Kadar suggests a transition to the spread offense, which requires four wide receivers, one back and no tight ends.
Miscellaneous
If you wondered what I was up to in St. Louis, I wrote about it a little…
ST. LOUIS: Until Friday, I never really knew what I desired as an ultimate end to a sports season.
Born in 1985, my closest brush has been the Buckeyes' 2002 national championship.
My taste came Friday night, during the clinching game 5 of the World Series.
I stood atop a parking deck near Busch Stadium. A gap between metal posts and the center field scoreboard afforded me a pencil eraser-sized window of home plate.
The atmosphere was electrifying. Hundreds of Cardinals fans positioned themselves for a similar view.
Intoxicated by it all, I promised to celebrate this like it was the Indians about to bring home the world championship. Jose Mesa and Tony Fernandez stole our best chance in 1997. I'm still bitter about that.
The whole reason I was in St. Louis was for a journalism convention with a posse of five other Buchtelite employees. While there, I met up with my high school friend Steve Young and his brother Chris, who pitches in the Florida Marlins organization. Because of Chris' ties, he and Steve scored tickets for games 3 through 5.
Steve and Chris grew up in St. Louis. Even during the Indians' successful campaigns of the '90s, the Youngs stayed true. The Cardinals belonged to Steve, Chris and, for the night, me.
So I put a full effort into this, starting chants, high-fiving fellow fans and discussing strategy, like Cardinals manager Tony La Russa's questionable substitution of starting pitcher Jeff Weaver before the ninth inning.
As soon as closer Adam Wainwright finished the game, the streets were clogged with cars, and not one horn was silent. Fans rolled their windows down, screaming chants. One guy sat on his Escalade's window ledge, and somehow still managed to drive it. In his hand was a bottle of champagne, which may or may not have been open.
We hit the streets with a case of beer. (St. Louis abolishes its open-container law on game days.) And when Case One was exhausted, we traded it in for Case Two.
Steve and I weaved through the cars, offering high fives and hugs to anyone in range. I carried the case of beer, but it seemed to become lighter each block. (By the way, if you ever crave attention, carry booze down a crowded street. Everybody - mostly automobile drivers - wanted a piece of the case carrier.)
Unfortunately, the end of the case was not ceremonious. The posse entered Busch Stadium for the post-game festival and to take a look at pro baseball's newest gem. Perhaps unaware of the company that brews Budweiser beer, a Busch Stadium employee heisted our stash while the Buchteliter who temporarily carried it gasped in awe.
Don't let the alcohol misguide you, however. This was sober joy, only punctuated by happy juice.
And some October, it will come to Cleveland. Instead of Albert Pujols and Chris Carpenter leaping onto a pile of his teammates, it will be Travis Hafner and C.C. Sabathia.
That day, you will be proud to have stuck with your team through the disappointing years, like 2006.
You can identify me as the guy outside Jacobs Field working on Case Three.



November 2nd, 2006 at 8:27 pm
Mike, I read your blog on a daily basis and I have commented on it before. I also know that your the editor of the buchtelite and Dan Kadar is the sports editor. I have a problem with what he wrote in tuesdays paper, and i think you should have a problem with it too. Being the sports editor he should know the basics of football. This is not Madden or NCAA football where you can change the offense just by picking a new play book. We have developed this offense over the past three seasons here at Akron. It is not something that can be dumped in the middle of a season for a spread option. There are many hours of preparation from the coaches and the players to learn everything in this complicated offense that Coach Brookhart and his staff have brought to Akron.
Kadar makes it sound like our offense doesn't use motion and doesn't check at the line for the best possible plays. Both of these statements are false. Getsy is allowed to make many adjustments at the line of scrimmage as he sees fit for the defensive scheme and we also use motion before the play on a lot of different sets.
Another comment that he makes is that our tight ends would not be missed. Granted they dont get the ball thrown there way very often, but they are used a lot for protection, decoy routes, and for dump off when Getsy is being pressured.
Was this offense not productive and exciting the first two seasons Coach Brookhart was here? This year i will agree it has fallen off a little bit, but it still can get the job done when needed and provide excitement for the fans.
I feel that as a sports editor Mr. Kadar should know more about an offense of a Division 1A football program. The coaches cannot change offenses from week to week. Please, next time have him do a little more research into what he is writting about.
Thanks for listening to my concerns,
Brian
November 3rd, 2006 at 11:20 am
Brian,
Thanks for your thoughtful post.
Dan and I both understand you can't change an offense overnight. It's not really reasonable for the Zips to do it in the middle of a season either.
It was more of an observation that a spread offense might best utilitze Akron's personnel. I don't agree completely, but I see his point.