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N.C. State has been buried beneath 131 points in its past three games, and Wake Forest’s and Duke’s quarterbacks have picked its secondary apart. So help is desperately needed in that area, right?
Well, it is and it isn’t. There’s already talent on hand. The Pack does already have good young talent enrolled. At safety they’ve got a redshirt freshman - Earl Wolff - and a true freshman - Brandan Bishop - who should be quality players once they gain experience.
At CB, they had another talented freshman, Rashard Smith, but he’s now been lost for the season with a knee injury.
They also have some outstanding secondary prospects currently redshirting, particularly a highly-recruited CB named Jarvis Byrd.
The problem is a lack of veteran experience in the area. Sooner or later, this will be a good group, with or without help from the Class of 2010.
Still, help is on the way, particularly at safety. As you can tell from the above, there are plenty of talented young CBs on campus; now they just have to get them on the field.
N.C. State went after safeties in this class, and has commitments from safeties Dontae Johnson of Pennington, N.J.; D.J. Green from Macon, Ga.; and Pete Singer of Raleigh.
The keys here are the 6-foot-3, 180-pound Johnson and the 6-4, 202-pound Green. Green, in fact, has the physique to develop into an OLB, but for now the pair is being counted on to strengthen the Wolfpack’s secondary run support.
Depending on the development of Wolff and Bishop, Johnson and Green may or may not get early playing time. Both are smart players who are usually in the right position and solid tacklers.
The bottom line is that once the Class of 2010 is in place, the Wolfpack will have a batch of secondary talent that could eventually be as good as any team’s in the country. A little maturity is all that’s missing.
- Stan Olson, The Charlotte Observer
Ken Tysiac has covered the ACC for The Charlotte Observer since 2003, and spent the previous eight years covering Clemson for the Anderson Independent-Mail and then The State in South Carolina. He grew up in Rochester, N.Y., and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame.
Comments
Very funny
Sat, 10/24/2009 - 11:43 — JPDOhioThe easiest thing in the world is to pile on the Pack's defense right now. Fact is, the problem with the secondary is lack of experience being exploited by experienced QB's. The linebacker core is very young as well and the loss of Michel to injury during the BC game compounded the problems.
So KT is on the money with this post, which is a nice change of pace to the usual belaboring of all the current problems. Who knows if, with time, the young talent on State's defense will improve? But to say there is no chance is nothing but wallowing in self-pity.
Patience is a virtue, which is in short supply in Wolfpack nation. That is understandable given the unrealistic expectations going into this year. But the best approach is to stick with the program and watch it get better. It will.
On further review...
Sun, 10/25/2009 - 08:29 — JPDOhioThe "wide field net" comment was pretty funny.
What??? Are they gonna put
Sat, 10/24/2009 - 11:14 — wjollyWhat??? Are they gonna put a field wide net in front of the opposition's end zone??
Yeah, the future is bright,
Fri, 10/23/2009 - 07:11 — jahshuaYeah, the future is bright, but Pack fans have been waiting for that future in basketball and football for far too long.