Big East: Lawrence Wilson
Looking at Big East NFL draft hopefuls
March, 23, 2011
3/23/11
10:33
AM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
Scouts Inc. has come up with comprehensive draft boards for every position as we draw ever closer to the 2011 NFL draft (and, hopefully, a 2011 NFL season).
Let's start on the offensive side of the ball and take a look at where some Big East hopefuls are ranked. First, the skill positions:
Now, the offensive linemen/tight ends:
Now let's move to the defensive side and see where Scouts Inc. rates some Big East defenders:
These projections aren't gospel by any means, but they should give you a pretty good idea of how Big East hopefuls are being viewed right now.
Let's start on the offensive side of the ball and take a look at where some Big East hopefuls are ranked. First, the skill positions:
- Jonathan Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh: second round
- Jordan Todman, RB, Connecticut: third round
- Dion Lewis, RB, Pittsburgh: fourth round
- Delone Carter, RB, Syracuse: fourth round
- Bilal Powell, RB, Louisville: fifth round
- Anthony Sherman, FB, Connecticut: fifth round
- Noel Devine, RB, West Virginia: sixth round
- Henry Hynoski, FB, Pittsburgh: seventh round
- Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati: seventh round
Now, the offensive linemen/tight ends:
- Jason Pinkston, OT, Pittsbugh: fifth round
- Cameron Graham, TE, Louisville: sixth round
- Zach Hurd, OG, Connecticut: sixth round
- Ryan Bartholomew, C, Syracuse: seventh round
- Jason Kelce, C, Cincinnati: seventh round
Now let's move to the defensive side and see where Scouts Inc. rates some Big East defenders:
- Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida: second round
- Jabaal Sheard, DE/LB, Pittsburgh: second round
- Johnny Patrick, CB, Louisville: third round
- Greg Romeus, DE, Pittsburgh: fourth round
- Brandon Hogan, CB, West Virginia: fourth round
- Robert Sands, S, West Virginia: fourth round
- Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut: fifth round
- Scott Lutrus, LB, Connecticut: fifth round
- Joe Lefeged, S, Rutgers: sixth round
- Chris Neild, DT, West Virginia: sixth round
- Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse: sixth round
- J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia: sixth round
- Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse: sixth round
- Greg Lloyd, LB, Connecticut: seventh round
These projections aren't gospel by any means, but they should give you a pretty good idea of how Big East hopefuls are being viewed right now.
One month from Saturday, the Villanova board of trustees is expected to vote on whether to move up to the FBS for football. The future of the Big East will be changed by whatever the school decides.
But we're not waiting on Villanova around here. It's time for Friday mail.
Chris from Morgantown, W. Va., writes: Brian, great job on the schedule analysis features! My question is this: if we'd get a miracle and some BE teams win big Non-Conference games (like Syracuse over USC and WVU over LSU), how would it affect the nation's view on the conference?
Brian Bennett: The only way to change perception is to win big games, and the Big East didn't do much of that last year. There aren't a ton of marquee out-of-conference games this year for the league, but if West Virginia and Syracuse can pull those off, and if Pitt and South Florida can win their big matchups or Cincinnati can win at Tennessee, then respect will slowly come the Big East's way. Ultimately, the league needs to win its BCS game, too, because the three-game losing streak is not doing it any favors.
Chris from Wallingford, Conn., writes: Brian, I have to respectfully disagree with you about something. I think you have continually underrated Lawrence Wilson the past couple of years. All this kid has done, as you state, is put up ridiculous numbers. And he's done it for three years straight. It's not a fluke and I would think after leading the league in tackles for two years in a row he'd get a lot more talk for defensive player of the year. He was, without question, a top 5 player in the league last year. Even if you forget for a moment that he's amassed 263 tackles in the last two years, or that he had over 110 tackles in 3 of his 4 years, or that he pretty much won two big games over his career with pick-6's (Louisville 07/USF 10), he still led the league in tackles this year. Eighth-best is too low.
Brian Bennett: I agree with most of what you say, Chris, and I was a big fan of Wilson's work during his Huskies career. However, the top 25 list was based on 2010 performance alone, so I did not consider his career achievements. Wilson had another really good year this past season, but I didn't think it was quite as strong as his 2009. He and the entire defense weren't playing that great in the first half of the season, and you could argue that Sio Moore had a bigger impact at linebacker in a couple of UConn's major victories. Tackle numbers aren't the entire story; I also like to see tackles for losses, sacks and forced turnovers, and Wilson didn't put up huge numbers in those categories this year.
Corey from Baton Rouge, La., writes: So let's say with the addition of TCU in 2012, the Big East does end with a $450+ million television contract. Would that money do anything to pursuade a team to jump ship from the ACC? If it happened before 2012, couldn't the Big East push the number up to $500 million?
Brian Bennett: Bloomberg had a story earlier this week speculating that the Big East could more than double its current contract to about $460 million. But understand two things about that. One, it was mostly speculation. And two, that number is based on the current six-year, $200 million contract. So that would be $460 million over six years. The ACC recently signed its deal worth a reported $155 million annually. And, of course, the Big East has 17 teams to split the pie. So there's still no financial incentive for a team from another BCS league to come aboard.
Ray from Rahway, N.J., writes: Re: Pitt this upcoming season. I am expecting HUGE things from Ray Graham. Entering his junior year bigger, stronger, faster, more experienced at the collegiate level, coming off a productive season averaging 6.2 per carry and almost 1,000 yards (missing two games) (Dion Lewis averaged 4.8 per carry last year), the only returning upper class RB, the new offensive scheme sure to give him more touches both running and receiving and coming at the defenses from such a variety of angles (unpredictable). He could be a Heisman candidate by mid-season.
Brian Bennett: There's no question that this could be a monster season for Graham. It kind of has to be, because right now Pittsburgh doesn't have anybody else at tailback. I worry about him staying healthy all year, and whether he can fix his fumbling problems. Still, Todd Graham and Calvin Magee are going to use him as much as possible. Interestingly, Tulsa finished 15th nationally in rushing offense last year but didn't have anybody run for more than 561 yards, and its leading rusher was the quarterback.
John from New Jersey writes: Rutgers has the highest winning percentage in opponents combined record: 35-28 (.556). Rutgers has the most TEAMS from out-of-conference who went to 2010 bowl teams: 4. But only one BCS opponent. There are so many teams with BCS tie-ins that are not good. Why does Rutgers not give itself more credit and play those lower BCS teams?
Brian Bennett: I'll say this for Rutgers' schedule: Navy is usually better than most lower-tier BCS conference opponents you can find. The schedule does have more marquee names coming on it in the near future. But the less said about the Scarlet Knights' scheduling, the better.
Dave from Missouri writes: Is it sad that we live our lives for football given to us by arguably the worst league in college football? At least you get paid for it.
Brian Bennett: That might be the saddest e-mail I've ever received. Cheer up, Dave. It's almost spring.
Kelly from Tampa writes: BB, when are you going to post your own trick shot video?
Brian Bennett: If you saw my workout video, you know that's a poor idea.
But we're not waiting on Villanova around here. It's time for Friday mail.
Chris from Morgantown, W. Va., writes: Brian, great job on the schedule analysis features! My question is this: if we'd get a miracle and some BE teams win big Non-Conference games (like Syracuse over USC and WVU over LSU), how would it affect the nation's view on the conference?
Brian Bennett: The only way to change perception is to win big games, and the Big East didn't do much of that last year. There aren't a ton of marquee out-of-conference games this year for the league, but if West Virginia and Syracuse can pull those off, and if Pitt and South Florida can win their big matchups or Cincinnati can win at Tennessee, then respect will slowly come the Big East's way. Ultimately, the league needs to win its BCS game, too, because the three-game losing streak is not doing it any favors.
Chris from Wallingford, Conn., writes: Brian, I have to respectfully disagree with you about something. I think you have continually underrated Lawrence Wilson the past couple of years. All this kid has done, as you state, is put up ridiculous numbers. And he's done it for three years straight. It's not a fluke and I would think after leading the league in tackles for two years in a row he'd get a lot more talk for defensive player of the year. He was, without question, a top 5 player in the league last year. Even if you forget for a moment that he's amassed 263 tackles in the last two years, or that he had over 110 tackles in 3 of his 4 years, or that he pretty much won two big games over his career with pick-6's (Louisville 07/USF 10), he still led the league in tackles this year. Eighth-best is too low.
Brian Bennett: I agree with most of what you say, Chris, and I was a big fan of Wilson's work during his Huskies career. However, the top 25 list was based on 2010 performance alone, so I did not consider his career achievements. Wilson had another really good year this past season, but I didn't think it was quite as strong as his 2009. He and the entire defense weren't playing that great in the first half of the season, and you could argue that Sio Moore had a bigger impact at linebacker in a couple of UConn's major victories. Tackle numbers aren't the entire story; I also like to see tackles for losses, sacks and forced turnovers, and Wilson didn't put up huge numbers in those categories this year.
Corey from Baton Rouge, La., writes: So let's say with the addition of TCU in 2012, the Big East does end with a $450+ million television contract. Would that money do anything to pursuade a team to jump ship from the ACC? If it happened before 2012, couldn't the Big East push the number up to $500 million?
Brian Bennett: Bloomberg had a story earlier this week speculating that the Big East could more than double its current contract to about $460 million. But understand two things about that. One, it was mostly speculation. And two, that number is based on the current six-year, $200 million contract. So that would be $460 million over six years. The ACC recently signed its deal worth a reported $155 million annually. And, of course, the Big East has 17 teams to split the pie. So there's still no financial incentive for a team from another BCS league to come aboard.
Ray from Rahway, N.J., writes: Re: Pitt this upcoming season. I am expecting HUGE things from Ray Graham. Entering his junior year bigger, stronger, faster, more experienced at the collegiate level, coming off a productive season averaging 6.2 per carry and almost 1,000 yards (missing two games) (Dion Lewis averaged 4.8 per carry last year), the only returning upper class RB, the new offensive scheme sure to give him more touches both running and receiving and coming at the defenses from such a variety of angles (unpredictable). He could be a Heisman candidate by mid-season.
Brian Bennett: There's no question that this could be a monster season for Graham. It kind of has to be, because right now Pittsburgh doesn't have anybody else at tailback. I worry about him staying healthy all year, and whether he can fix his fumbling problems. Still, Todd Graham and Calvin Magee are going to use him as much as possible. Interestingly, Tulsa finished 15th nationally in rushing offense last year but didn't have anybody run for more than 561 yards, and its leading rusher was the quarterback.
John from New Jersey writes: Rutgers has the highest winning percentage in opponents combined record: 35-28 (.556). Rutgers has the most TEAMS from out-of-conference who went to 2010 bowl teams: 4. But only one BCS opponent. There are so many teams with BCS tie-ins that are not good. Why does Rutgers not give itself more credit and play those lower BCS teams?
Brian Bennett: I'll say this for Rutgers' schedule: Navy is usually better than most lower-tier BCS conference opponents you can find. The schedule does have more marquee names coming on it in the near future. But the less said about the Scarlet Knights' scheduling, the better.
Dave from Missouri writes: Is it sad that we live our lives for football given to us by arguably the worst league in college football? At least you get paid for it.
Brian Bennett: That might be the saddest e-mail I've ever received. Cheer up, Dave. It's almost spring.
Kelly from Tampa writes: BB, when are you going to post your own trick shot video?
Brian Bennett: If you saw my workout video, you know that's a poor idea.
We're down to the Elite Eight in our countdown of the Top 25 players in the Big East in 2010, based on performance and impact last season ...
No. 8
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut, Sr.
Preseason rank: No. 11
2010 numbers: Led the Big East with 123 tackles, including 10 for loss and 3.5 sacks. Also had an interception, three pass breakups, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries.
Making the case for Wilson: All Wilson has done the last two years is collect 263 tackles, far and away leading all Big East players. But this is about 2010, and Wilson remained a defensive force for the Big East champion Huskies.
Moved to middle linebacker from the weakside spot he played in 2009, the 6-foot-1, 226-pound Wilson used his speed and smarts to make stops at key times. If there was any moment that defined his season, it was his 55-yard interception return for a touchdown in the season finale against South Florida. That was UConn's only touchdown in that BCS-clinching win.
Wilson finished with more than 110 tackles in three of his four years with the Huskies. He is undersized for the next level, but NFL scouts would be foolish to ignore his production.
Previously
No. 25: Zach Hurd, OG, Connecticut
No. 24: Dave Teggart, K, Connecticut
No. 23: Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse
No. 22: J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia
No. 21: Johnny Patrick, CB, Louisville
No. 20: Dion Lewis, RB, Pittsburgh
No. 19: Tavon Austin, WR, West Virginia
No. 18: Isaiah Pead, RB, Cincinnati
No. 17: Kendall Reyes, DL, Connecticut
No. 16: Jason Pinkston, OT, Pittsburgh
No. 15: Jon Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh
No. 14: Robert Sands, S, West Virginia
No. 13: Brandon Lindsey, DE, Pittsburgh
No. 12: Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse
No. 11: Brandon Hogan, CB, West Virginia
No. 10: Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida
No. 8
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut, Sr.
Preseason rank: No. 11
[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Chris O'MearaLawrence Wilson was tops in the Big East in tackles, collecting 123 including 10 for loss.
AP Photo/Chris O'MearaLawrence Wilson was tops in the Big East in tackles, collecting 123 including 10 for loss.Making the case for Wilson: All Wilson has done the last two years is collect 263 tackles, far and away leading all Big East players. But this is about 2010, and Wilson remained a defensive force for the Big East champion Huskies.
Moved to middle linebacker from the weakside spot he played in 2009, the 6-foot-1, 226-pound Wilson used his speed and smarts to make stops at key times. If there was any moment that defined his season, it was his 55-yard interception return for a touchdown in the season finale against South Florida. That was UConn's only touchdown in that BCS-clinching win.
Wilson finished with more than 110 tackles in three of his four years with the Huskies. He is undersized for the next level, but NFL scouts would be foolish to ignore his production.
Previously
No. 25: Zach Hurd, OG, Connecticut
No. 24: Dave Teggart, K, Connecticut
No. 23: Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse
No. 22: J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia
No. 21: Johnny Patrick, CB, Louisville
No. 20: Dion Lewis, RB, Pittsburgh
No. 19: Tavon Austin, WR, West Virginia
No. 18: Isaiah Pead, RB, Cincinnati
No. 17: Kendall Reyes, DL, Connecticut
No. 16: Jason Pinkston, OT, Pittsburgh
No. 15: Jon Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh
No. 14: Robert Sands, S, West Virginia
No. 13: Brandon Lindsey, DE, Pittsburgh
No. 12: Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse
No. 11: Brandon Hogan, CB, West Virginia
No. 10: Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida
More Big East results from the NFL combine
March, 1, 2011
3/01/11
3:30
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
On Monday, I looked at the results posted by Big East offensive linemen, running backs, receivers, tight ends and preliminary numbers for the linebackers. Let's check in now on some more updates by top performers for the defensive guys from the league (performance ranks are listed by position).
Defensive line
Pittsburgh's Jabaal Sheard had the fifth-fastest 40-yard dash time at 4.69 seconds. He was 12th in the broad jump.
Linebackers
Scott Lutrus put up strong numbers, finishing first in vertical leap (38 inches) second in the 60-yard shuttle, third in the three-cone drill, fourth in the 20-yard shuttle, tied for fifth in the broad jump and tied for seventh in the 40 at 4.68 seconds. Here's what our Scouts Inc. team wrote about Lutrus's performance:
Syracuse's Doug Hogue was fifth in the 40 at 4.63 seconds. He tied for fifth in the broad jump, tied for sixth in vertical leap and was 12th in the three-cone drill.
West Virginia's J.T. Thomas tied for seventh in the 40, tied for 10th in the 20-yard shuttle, and tied for 13th in the 60-yard drill.
Connecticut's Greg Lloyd tied for 14th in the three-cone drill.
UConn's Lawrence Wilson tied for 13th in both the vertical leap and 40-yard dash. Would you have guessed Lutrus would beat teammate Wilson in the 40?
Safeties
West Virginia's Robert Sands showed off his array of skills. He tied for second with a 35-inch vertical leap and had the best broad jump at 10 feet, four inches. His 40 time of 4.57 seconds was third.
Cornerbacks
Rutgers' Joe Lefeged, a safety in college who was listed with the cornerbacks at the combine, tied for the fifth-best 40 time at 4.43 seconds. He also tied for 11th in the vertical leap and 14th in the broad jump.
West Virginia's Brandon Hogan tied for 10th on the bench press with 19 reps at 225 pounds.
Defensive line
Pittsburgh's Jabaal Sheard had the fifth-fastest 40-yard dash time at 4.69 seconds. He was 12th in the broad jump.
Linebackers
Scott Lutrus put up strong numbers, finishing first in vertical leap (38 inches) second in the 60-yard shuttle, third in the three-cone drill, fourth in the 20-yard shuttle, tied for fifth in the broad jump and tied for seventh in the 40 at 4.68 seconds. Here's what our Scouts Inc. team wrote about Lutrus's performance:
"Lutrus (6-2½, 241) far exceeded expectations based on what we've seen on film. ... We now have to go back to the tape to see if we missed something during our initial evaluation and figure why his explosiveness and lateral quickness are so much better at this point."
Syracuse's Doug Hogue was fifth in the 40 at 4.63 seconds. He tied for fifth in the broad jump, tied for sixth in vertical leap and was 12th in the three-cone drill.
West Virginia's J.T. Thomas tied for seventh in the 40, tied for 10th in the 20-yard shuttle, and tied for 13th in the 60-yard drill.
Connecticut's Greg Lloyd tied for 14th in the three-cone drill.
UConn's Lawrence Wilson tied for 13th in both the vertical leap and 40-yard dash. Would you have guessed Lutrus would beat teammate Wilson in the 40?
Safeties
West Virginia's Robert Sands showed off his array of skills. He tied for second with a 35-inch vertical leap and had the best broad jump at 10 feet, four inches. His 40 time of 4.57 seconds was third.
Cornerbacks
Rutgers' Joe Lefeged, a safety in college who was listed with the cornerbacks at the combine, tied for the fifth-best 40 time at 4.43 seconds. He also tied for 11th in the vertical leap and 14th in the broad jump.
West Virginia's Brandon Hogan tied for 10th on the bench press with 19 reps at 225 pounds.
Weekend Combine results for the Big East
February, 28, 2011
2/28/11
10:38
AM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The NFL combine kicked into full swing over the weekend in Indianapolis, and several Big East players already turned in their audition.
There's a lot more testing to be done, with defensive linemen and linebackers getting center stage on Monday. But many results are already in, and here's a look at how Big East players have fared so far. All results are based upon performance by position unless otherwise noted:
Running back
Connecticut's Jordan Todman was third among running backs (and sixth overall so far) in the 40-yard dash with a time of 4.40 seconds. He was third with a 38-inch vertical, third in the 60-yard shuttle, eighth in the 20-yard shuttle and sixth in bench press with 25 repetitions.
Huskies fullback Anthony Sherman topped running backs at 32 repetitions on the 225-pound bench press.
Syracuse's Delone Carter was third in the 20-yard shuttle (and ninth overall so far), 14th in the 40-yard dash at 4.5 seconds, 10th in the three-cone drill, sixth in broad jump, seventh in vertical leap at 37 inches and fourth on the bench press.
Pittsburgh's Dion Lewis was 13th with a 4.57 time in the 40, fourth in the 60-yard shuttle, eighth in the 20-yard shuttle and three-cone drills, and 14th in vertical leap at 34.5 inches. Lewis, by the way, measured in at 5-foot-7 and 193 pounds.
West Virginia's Noel Devine was seventh in the bench press.
Wide receivers
Pitt's Jon Baldwin topped all receivers (and is second overall so far) with a 42-inch vertical leap. He was fifth in broad jump, 12th in the 40-yard dash at 4.5 seconds and fourth in bench press with 20 reps.
West Virginia's Jock Sanders tied for sixth in bench press and was 10th in the 20-yard shuttle.
Offensive linemen
Syracuse's Ryan Bartholomew topped offensive linemen with 34 reps in the bench press. He was second in the 40-yard dash at 4.97 seconds and ninth in the 20-yard shuttle.
Cincinnati's Jason Kelce was first among offensive linemen with a 4.93 40-yard time and also came in first in the three-cone and 20-yard shuttle drills. He tied for eighth in vertical leap and was third in broad jump.
Defensive linemen
West Virginia's Chris Neild tied for 10th with 30 reps on the bench press.
South Florida's Terrell McClain tied for 14th on the bench with 29 reps.
Tight end
Louisville's Cameron Graham was 11th in bench, 12th in vertical leap, 12th in the 3-cone and 12th in the 20-yard shuttle.
Linebackers
Connecticut's Lawrence Wilson tied for seventh on the bench press with 24 reps.
West Virginia's J.T. Thomas did 23 reps, which tied for ninth.
UConn's Greg Lloyd tied for 13th with 22 reps.
There's a lot more testing to be done, with defensive linemen and linebackers getting center stage on Monday. But many results are already in, and here's a look at how Big East players have fared so far. All results are based upon performance by position unless otherwise noted:
Running back
Connecticut's Jordan Todman was third among running backs (and sixth overall so far) in the 40-yard dash with a time of 4.40 seconds. He was third with a 38-inch vertical, third in the 60-yard shuttle, eighth in the 20-yard shuttle and sixth in bench press with 25 repetitions.
Huskies fullback Anthony Sherman topped running backs at 32 repetitions on the 225-pound bench press.
Syracuse's Delone Carter was third in the 20-yard shuttle (and ninth overall so far), 14th in the 40-yard dash at 4.5 seconds, 10th in the three-cone drill, sixth in broad jump, seventh in vertical leap at 37 inches and fourth on the bench press.
Pittsburgh's Dion Lewis was 13th with a 4.57 time in the 40, fourth in the 60-yard shuttle, eighth in the 20-yard shuttle and three-cone drills, and 14th in vertical leap at 34.5 inches. Lewis, by the way, measured in at 5-foot-7 and 193 pounds.
West Virginia's Noel Devine was seventh in the bench press.
Wide receivers
Pitt's Jon Baldwin topped all receivers (and is second overall so far) with a 42-inch vertical leap. He was fifth in broad jump, 12th in the 40-yard dash at 4.5 seconds and fourth in bench press with 20 reps.
West Virginia's Jock Sanders tied for sixth in bench press and was 10th in the 20-yard shuttle.
Offensive linemen
Syracuse's Ryan Bartholomew topped offensive linemen with 34 reps in the bench press. He was second in the 40-yard dash at 4.97 seconds and ninth in the 20-yard shuttle.
Cincinnati's Jason Kelce was first among offensive linemen with a 4.93 40-yard time and also came in first in the three-cone and 20-yard shuttle drills. He tied for eighth in vertical leap and was third in broad jump.
Defensive linemen
West Virginia's Chris Neild tied for 10th with 30 reps on the bench press.
South Florida's Terrell McClain tied for 14th on the bench with 29 reps.
Tight end
Louisville's Cameron Graham was 11th in bench, 12th in vertical leap, 12th in the 3-cone and 12th in the 20-yard shuttle.
Linebackers
Connecticut's Lawrence Wilson tied for seventh on the bench press with 24 reps.
West Virginia's J.T. Thomas did 23 reps, which tied for ninth.
UConn's Greg Lloyd tied for 13th with 22 reps.
Big East's NFL prospects head to combine
February, 24, 2011
2/24/11
2:05
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The NFL combine officially began on Wednesday, as players arrived in Indianapolis and started interviews with team officials.
There are more interviews Thursday, along with measurements and medical examinations. Workouts start on Friday, and here is the schedule for position groups:
Friday: Specialists
Saturday: Offensive linemen, tight ends
Sunday: Quarterbacks, wide receivers, running backs
Monday: Defensive linemen, linebackers
Tuesday: Defensive backs
It will be fun to follow the Big East players as they strut their stuff for scouts. Who will be the top player drafted from the league? My money is still on Pittsburgh receiver Jon Baldwin, whom I expect to put up dazzling numbers in his combine workouts.
Here again is the full list of Big East players scheduled to participate in Indianapolis:
Cincinnati (3)
Armon Binns, WR
Jason Kelce, OL
Jake Rogers, K
Connecticut (6)
Zach Hurd, OL
Anthony Sherman, FB
Jordan Todman, RB
Lawrence Wilson, LB
Greg Lloyd, LB
Scott Lutrus, LB
Louisville (3)
Cameron Graham, TE
Johnny Patrick, CB
Bilal Powell, RB
Pittsburgh (6)
Jon Baldwin, WR
Henry Hynoski, FB
Dion Lewis, RB
Jason Pinkston, OL
Greg Romeus, DE
Jabaal Sheard, DE
Rutgers (1)
Joe Lefeged, S
South Florida (1)
Terrell McClain, DT
Syracuse (4)
Ryan Bartholomew, OL
Doug Hogue, LB
Delone Carter, RB
Derrell Smith, LB
West Virginia (6)
Noel Devine, RB
Brandon Hogan, CB
Chris Neild, DT
Jock Sanders, WR
Robert Sands, S
J.T. Thomas, LB
There are more interviews Thursday, along with measurements and medical examinations. Workouts start on Friday, and here is the schedule for position groups:
Friday: Specialists
Saturday: Offensive linemen, tight ends
Sunday: Quarterbacks, wide receivers, running backs
Monday: Defensive linemen, linebackers
Tuesday: Defensive backs
It will be fun to follow the Big East players as they strut their stuff for scouts. Who will be the top player drafted from the league? My money is still on Pittsburgh receiver Jon Baldwin, whom I expect to put up dazzling numbers in his combine workouts.
Here again is the full list of Big East players scheduled to participate in Indianapolis:
Cincinnati (3)
Armon Binns, WR
Jason Kelce, OL
Jake Rogers, K
Connecticut (6)
Zach Hurd, OL
Anthony Sherman, FB
Jordan Todman, RB
Lawrence Wilson, LB
Greg Lloyd, LB
Scott Lutrus, LB
Louisville (3)
Cameron Graham, TE
Johnny Patrick, CB
Bilal Powell, RB
Pittsburgh (6)
Jon Baldwin, WR
Henry Hynoski, FB
Dion Lewis, RB
Jason Pinkston, OL
Greg Romeus, DE
Jabaal Sheard, DE
Rutgers (1)
Joe Lefeged, S
South Florida (1)
Terrell McClain, DT
Syracuse (4)
Ryan Bartholomew, OL
Doug Hogue, LB
Delone Carter, RB
Derrell Smith, LB
West Virginia (6)
Noel Devine, RB
Brandon Hogan, CB
Chris Neild, DT
Jock Sanders, WR
Robert Sands, S
J.T. Thomas, LB
Big East players headed to NFL Combine
February, 4, 2011
2/04/11
9:00
AM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The official invitation list to the NFL combine is out, and 30 Big East players will be showing off their skills at the premiere pre-draft event.
The following league players are scheduled to participate in the set of drills before scouts from Feb. 23 to March 1 in Indianapolis:
Jon Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh
Ryan Bartholomew, OL, Syracuse
Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati
Delone Carter, RB, Syracuse
Noel Devine, RB, West Virginia
Cameron Graham, TE, Louisville
Brandon Hogan, CB, West Virginia
Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse
Zach Hurd, OL, Connecticut
Henry Hynoski, FB, Pittsburgh
Jason Kelce, OL, Cincinnati
Joe Lefeged, S, Rutgers
Dion Lewis, RB, Pittsburgh
Greg Lloyd, LB, Connecticut
Scott Lutrus, LB, Connecticut
Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida
Chris Neild, DT, West Virginia
Johnny Patrick, CB, Louisville
Jason Pinkston, OL, Pittsburgh
Bilal Powell, RB, Louisville
Greg Romeus, DE, Pittsburgh
Jake Rogers, K, Cincinnati
Jock Sanders, WR, West Virginia
Robert Sands, S, West Virginia
Jabaal Sheard, DE, Pittsburgh
Anthony Sherman, FB, Connecticut
Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse
J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia
Jordan Todman, RB, Connecticut
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut
The following league players are scheduled to participate in the set of drills before scouts from Feb. 23 to March 1 in Indianapolis:
Jon Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh
Ryan Bartholomew, OL, Syracuse
Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati
Delone Carter, RB, Syracuse
Noel Devine, RB, West Virginia
Cameron Graham, TE, Louisville
Brandon Hogan, CB, West Virginia
Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse
Zach Hurd, OL, Connecticut
Henry Hynoski, FB, Pittsburgh
Jason Kelce, OL, Cincinnati
Joe Lefeged, S, Rutgers
Dion Lewis, RB, Pittsburgh
Greg Lloyd, LB, Connecticut
Scott Lutrus, LB, Connecticut
Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida
Chris Neild, DT, West Virginia
Johnny Patrick, CB, Louisville
Jason Pinkston, OL, Pittsburgh
Bilal Powell, RB, Louisville
Greg Romeus, DE, Pittsburgh
Jake Rogers, K, Cincinnati
Jock Sanders, WR, West Virginia
Robert Sands, S, West Virginia
Jabaal Sheard, DE, Pittsburgh
Anthony Sherman, FB, Connecticut
Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse
J.T. Thomas, LB, West Virginia
Jordan Todman, RB, Connecticut
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut
How All-Big East team ranked as recruits
January, 31, 2011
1/31/11
1:15
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
National signing day is Wednesday, and every fan base will be excited about the guys their schools bring in.
But how much do star rankings and hype really correlate to future success? One way to find out is by working backwards. Let's take a look at this year's official All-Big East team and see where each player was ranked as a recruit coming into his program.
All information is based on ESPN.com's recruiting rankings.
Offense
QB: Zach Collaros, Cincinnati: Unranked as a recruit.
RB: Jordan Todman, Connecticut: Two-star recruit, ranked No. 118 among running backs in the Class of 2008.
RB: Bilal Powell, Louisville: Unranked as a recruit.
WR: Armon Binns, Cincinnati: Unranked as a recruit.
WR: Jon Baldwin, Pittsburgh: Four-star prospect, ESPNU150 performer, No. 8 among wide receivers in the Class of 2008.
OT: Mike Ryan, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
OT: Jason Pinkston, Pittsburgh: Four-star prospect and No. 13 defensive tackle in the Class of '06.
OG: Zach Hurd, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
OG: Mark Wetterer, Louisville: Two-star prospect and No. 70 offensive tackle in Class of '07.
C: Sampson Genus, South Florida: Three-star prospect and No. 12 center in the Class of '07.
TE: Cameron Graham, Louisville: Junior college transfer.
Defense
DL: Kendall Reyes, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
DL: Jabaal Sheard, Pittsburgh: Two-star prospect and No. 83 defensive end in the Class of '07.
DL: Terrell McClain, South Florida: Three-star prospect and No. 29 defensive tackle in Class of '07.
DL: Chris Neild, West Virginia: Three-star prospect and No. 17 tight end in Class of '06.
LB: Lawrence Wilson, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
LB: Doug Hogue, Syracuse: Three-star prospect and No. 84 running back in Class of '07.
LB: J.T. Thomas, West Virginia: Unranked as a recruit.
CB: Johnny Patrick, Louisville: Unranked as a recruit.
CB: Keith Tandy, West Virginia: One-star prospect and No. 207 quarterback in Class of '07.
S: Dom DeCicco, Pittsburgh: Two-star prospect and No. 126 wide receiver in Class of '07.
S: Robert Sands, West Virginia: Unranked as a recruit.
As you can see, it was almost as likely that a player without any stars attached to his name would develop into an All-Big East performer as those more highly regarded. There were some on-the-mark evaluations, such as Baldwin and McClain, Pinkston and Genus. And there were guys who flew way under the radar, like Binns and Powell, Ryan and Wilson.
It still, like always, comes down to proper evaluation by a staff, then to player development and an individual's own desire to be great. Something to keep in mind on signing day.
But how much do star rankings and hype really correlate to future success? One way to find out is by working backwards. Let's take a look at this year's official All-Big East team and see where each player was ranked as a recruit coming into his program.
All information is based on ESPN.com's recruiting rankings.
Offense
QB: Zach Collaros, Cincinnati: Unranked as a recruit.
RB: Jordan Todman, Connecticut: Two-star recruit, ranked No. 118 among running backs in the Class of 2008.
RB: Bilal Powell, Louisville: Unranked as a recruit.
WR: Armon Binns, Cincinnati: Unranked as a recruit.
WR: Jon Baldwin, Pittsburgh: Four-star prospect, ESPNU150 performer, No. 8 among wide receivers in the Class of 2008.
OT: Mike Ryan, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
OT: Jason Pinkston, Pittsburgh: Four-star prospect and No. 13 defensive tackle in the Class of '06.
OG: Zach Hurd, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
OG: Mark Wetterer, Louisville: Two-star prospect and No. 70 offensive tackle in Class of '07.
C: Sampson Genus, South Florida: Three-star prospect and No. 12 center in the Class of '07.
TE: Cameron Graham, Louisville: Junior college transfer.
Defense
DL: Kendall Reyes, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
DL: Jabaal Sheard, Pittsburgh: Two-star prospect and No. 83 defensive end in the Class of '07.
DL: Terrell McClain, South Florida: Three-star prospect and No. 29 defensive tackle in Class of '07.
DL: Chris Neild, West Virginia: Three-star prospect and No. 17 tight end in Class of '06.
LB: Lawrence Wilson, Connecticut: Unranked as a recruit.
LB: Doug Hogue, Syracuse: Three-star prospect and No. 84 running back in Class of '07.
LB: J.T. Thomas, West Virginia: Unranked as a recruit.
CB: Johnny Patrick, Louisville: Unranked as a recruit.
CB: Keith Tandy, West Virginia: One-star prospect and No. 207 quarterback in Class of '07.
S: Dom DeCicco, Pittsburgh: Two-star prospect and No. 126 wide receiver in Class of '07.
S: Robert Sands, West Virginia: Unranked as a recruit.
As you can see, it was almost as likely that a player without any stars attached to his name would develop into an All-Big East performer as those more highly regarded. There were some on-the-mark evaluations, such as Baldwin and McClain, Pinkston and Genus. And there were guys who flew way under the radar, like Binns and Powell, Ryan and Wilson.
It still, like always, comes down to proper evaluation by a staff, then to player development and an individual's own desire to be great. Something to keep in mind on signing day.
Recapping the Big East at the Senior Bowl
January, 31, 2011
1/31/11
10:14
AM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The Big East player who probably helped himself the most last week at the Senior Bowl was Louisville running back Bilal Powell.
Powell drew positive reviews all week for his running style and vision during practice, and he led all rushers in Saturday's game with 51 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries. He may have worked himself up into being one of the top running backs taken.
Another star tailback from the league didn't have as good of a week. Noel Devine measured only 5-foot-7 and 160 pounds, and while he had a touchdown for the victorious South team, he finished with just eight yards on seven carries. He did have a 12-yard catch, though.
Former West Virginia teammate Jock Sanders had a catch for seven yards.
Connecticut's Lawrence Wilson collected six tackles for the North team, while Rutgers safety Joe Lefeged made four stops and returned a kickoff 25 yards. (But analyst Todd McShay said Lefeged was among those who didn't improve his draft stock last week). West Virginia nose tackle Chris Neild was credited with two tackles.
Other than Powell, none of the Big East players really attracted much of a buzz during the Senior Bowl festivities. Right now, McShay isn't projecting a single Big East player in the first round of the draft.
Powell drew positive reviews all week for his running style and vision during practice, and he led all rushers in Saturday's game with 51 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries. He may have worked himself up into being one of the top running backs taken.
Another star tailback from the league didn't have as good of a week. Noel Devine measured only 5-foot-7 and 160 pounds, and while he had a touchdown for the victorious South team, he finished with just eight yards on seven carries. He did have a 12-yard catch, though.
Former West Virginia teammate Jock Sanders had a catch for seven yards.
Connecticut's Lawrence Wilson collected six tackles for the North team, while Rutgers safety Joe Lefeged made four stops and returned a kickoff 25 yards. (But analyst Todd McShay said Lefeged was among those who didn't improve his draft stock last week). West Virginia nose tackle Chris Neild was credited with two tackles.
Other than Powell, none of the Big East players really attracted much of a buzz during the Senior Bowl festivities. Right now, McShay isn't projecting a single Big East player in the first round of the draft.
Seven Big East players in Senior Bowl
January, 20, 2011
1/20/11
5:11
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The Big East won't have a heavy presence at next week's Under Armour Senior Bowl, but some of the top seniors from the league in 2010 will be participating.
The game announced the invitees from the league Thursday afternoon, adding six alongside the previously announced inclusion of Noel Devine. Here is the list of invitees:
Connecticut: Lawrence Wilson, LB
Louisville: Johnny Patrick, DB; Bilal Powell, RB
Pittsburgh: Jason Pinkston, OL
Rutgers: Joe Lefeged, DB
West Virginia: Noel Devine, RB; Chris Neild, DL
Also, Rutgers announced on Thursday that defensive end Jonathan Freeny and linebacker Antonio Lowery will play in the inaugural Eastham Energy College All-Star Game this Sunday. West Virginia safety Sidney Glover, South Florida receiver Dontavia Bogan and center Sampson Genus, and Louisville defensive end Rodney Gnat are also listed on the rosters for that game. It will be held at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.
The game announced the invitees from the league Thursday afternoon, adding six alongside the previously announced inclusion of Noel Devine. Here is the list of invitees:
Connecticut: Lawrence Wilson, LB
Louisville: Johnny Patrick, DB; Bilal Powell, RB
Pittsburgh: Jason Pinkston, OL
Rutgers: Joe Lefeged, DB
West Virginia: Noel Devine, RB; Chris Neild, DL
Also, Rutgers announced on Thursday that defensive end Jonathan Freeny and linebacker Antonio Lowery will play in the inaugural Eastham Energy College All-Star Game this Sunday. West Virginia safety Sidney Glover, South Florida receiver Dontavia Bogan and center Sampson Genus, and Louisville defensive end Rodney Gnat are also listed on the rosters for that game. It will be held at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.
Best Big East games of 2010: Nos. 5 and 4
January, 19, 2011
1/19/11
3:00
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
Continuing our look at the best Big East games of 2010, and doing it in two-a-day style:
No. 5
Oklahoma 31, Cincinnati 29, Sept. 25 at Paul Brown Stadium
Why this one: Lots of big plays, a thrilling near-comeback and a great atmosphere in a pro stadium as Cincinnati came close to upsetting the nation's No. 8-ranked team.
What it meant: Unfortunately, not much for the Bearcats, who went on to finish 4-8. But it showed what they are capable of under Butch Jones. And given that the Sooners finished sixth in the final two major polls, this might have been the Big East's best nonconference showing even in defeat.
Player of the game: Cincinnati's Isaiah Pead ran 21 times for 169 yards, averaging eight yards per carry.
Play of the game: D.J. Woods fumbled a punt return after Cincinnati had sliced the lead to 24-22 and forced a defensive stop. Oklahoma's Landry Jones threw a touchdown pass moments later to salt the victory away.
Quotable: "As a team, we left everything out there. We gave them our best punch. I think we took their will early. I think we were the better team today. Instead of beating them, we beat ourselves." -- Pead
No. 4
Connecticut 19, South Florida 16, Dec. 4 at Raymond James Stadium
Why this one: All this game did was clinch the first-ever BCS bid for UConn, and in wildly dramatic fashion as Dave Teggart kicked the winning 52-yard field goal with 17 seconds left. The only reason it's not higher is because this was a defensive-filled snoozefest for three quarters before an exciting finish.
What it meant: See above. The Huskies celebrated, while West Virginia was devastated.
Player of the game: Teggart. Not only did he drill the game-winner, he added three other field goals, including a 50-yarder early in the fourth quarter.
Play of the game: Lawrence Wilson's interception and 55-yard touchdown return with 1:11 left in the first half that gave UConn a 10-3 lead. That would be the Huskies only touchdown of the game.
Quotable: "The bottom line is we won the game and nobody can take anything away from us. We played by the rules and we won the Big East, so we get the BCS. That's what the rules are, and we're going." -- UConn coach Randy Edsall.
No. 5
Oklahoma 31, Cincinnati 29, Sept. 25 at Paul Brown Stadium
Why this one: Lots of big plays, a thrilling near-comeback and a great atmosphere in a pro stadium as Cincinnati came close to upsetting the nation's No. 8-ranked team.
What it meant: Unfortunately, not much for the Bearcats, who went on to finish 4-8. But it showed what they are capable of under Butch Jones. And given that the Sooners finished sixth in the final two major polls, this might have been the Big East's best nonconference showing even in defeat.
Player of the game: Cincinnati's Isaiah Pead ran 21 times for 169 yards, averaging eight yards per carry.
Play of the game: D.J. Woods fumbled a punt return after Cincinnati had sliced the lead to 24-22 and forced a defensive stop. Oklahoma's Landry Jones threw a touchdown pass moments later to salt the victory away.
Quotable: "As a team, we left everything out there. We gave them our best punch. I think we took their will early. I think we were the better team today. Instead of beating them, we beat ourselves." -- Pead
No. 4
Connecticut 19, South Florida 16, Dec. 4 at Raymond James Stadium
Why this one: All this game did was clinch the first-ever BCS bid for UConn, and in wildly dramatic fashion as Dave Teggart kicked the winning 52-yard field goal with 17 seconds left. The only reason it's not higher is because this was a defensive-filled snoozefest for three quarters before an exciting finish.
What it meant: See above. The Huskies celebrated, while West Virginia was devastated.
Player of the game: Teggart. Not only did he drill the game-winner, he added three other field goals, including a 50-yarder early in the fourth quarter.
Play of the game: Lawrence Wilson's interception and 55-yard touchdown return with 1:11 left in the first half that gave UConn a 10-3 lead. That would be the Huskies only touchdown of the game.
Quotable: "The bottom line is we won the game and nobody can take anything away from us. We played by the rules and we won the Big East, so we get the BCS. That's what the rules are, and we're going." -- UConn coach Randy Edsall.
Big East players in East-West Shrine Game
January, 6, 2011
1/06/11
4:06
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
Here is the list of players from the Big East who will be participating in the East-West Shrine Game, a showcase for seniors and NFL hopefuls:
The 86th annual game will be held Jan. 22 in Orlando.
- Anthony Sherman, FB, Connecticut
- Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati
- Delone Carter, RB, Syracuse
- Doug Hogue, LB, Syracuse
- Greg Lloyd, LB, Connecticut
- Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut
- Ryan Bartholomew, OL, Syracuse
- Scott Lutrus, LB, Connecticut
- Terrell McClain, DT, South Florida
- Zach Hurd, OL, Connecticut
The 86th annual game will be held Jan. 22 in Orlando.
Todman is Big East's lone AP all-American
December, 14, 2010
12/14/10
2:30
PM ET
By
Brian Bennett | ESPN.com
The Associated Press All-America teams are out, and the Big East has just one representative.
Connecticut running back Jordan Todman was named to the second team. Todman finished second nationally in rushing yards per game. Oregon's LaMichael James and Oklahoma State's Kendall Hunter were the first-team running backs.
The Big East didn't produce a ton of All-America candidates this year, but some other guys who could have been considered included Pittsburgh defensive end Jabaal Sheard, West Virginia nose tackle Chris Neild, Connecticut linebacker Lawrence Wilson and Cincinnati wide receiver Armon Binns.
But at least Todman got recognized for his outstanding season.
Connecticut running back Jordan Todman was named to the second team. Todman finished second nationally in rushing yards per game. Oregon's LaMichael James and Oklahoma State's Kendall Hunter were the first-team running backs.
The Big East didn't produce a ton of All-America candidates this year, but some other guys who could have been considered included Pittsburgh defensive end Jabaal Sheard, West Virginia nose tackle Chris Neild, Connecticut linebacker Lawrence Wilson and Cincinnati wide receiver Armon Binns.
But at least Todman got recognized for his outstanding season.
I'm borrowing a page from the playbook of SEC blogger Chris Low and taking a moment to honor the Big East's top seniors in the 2010 season.
The league was full of young players, particularly at quarterback. But each team also was blessed with excellent seniors who provided leadership on and off the field. Today I recognize one outstanding elder statesman from each team:
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut: A rock on defense for the Huskies as a four-year starter, Wilson covers a ton of ground with his speed and instincts for the game. He led the league in tackles for a second straight year. And when his team needed a big play in the season finale against South Florida with the BCS bid on the line, he came up with a 55-yard interception return for a touchdown.
Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati: Senior leadership was an issue for the Bearcats all season during a disappointing 4-8 campaign. But Binns was always reliable and became unstoppable as the year went on. He led the Big East in every major receiving category, finishing 14th nationally with 1,101 receiving yards.
Bilal Powell, RB, Louisville: Head coach Charlie Strong placed a lot on Powell's shoulders in the preseason, calling the quiet tailback the face of the program. Powell responded with, by far, the best season of his career, rushing for 1,330 yards and 10 touchdowns. He doesn't say a lot, but he leads by example. And he runs as if each cent of his scholarship check depends on it.
Jabaal Sheard, DE, Pittsburgh: When Sheard was arrested after a fight this preseason, Pitt coaches were quick to say the incident was way out of character for a guy who saved a woman from a burning house in high school. He showed his real character this season, picking up the slack for injured teammate Greg Romeus and turning into the most feared pass-rusher in the Big East while winning the league's defensive player of the year award. Sheard was also a leader in the locker room, calling guys out for their effort when the team struggled early this season.
Alex Silvestro, DE, Rutgers: Silvestro came to Rutgers weighing only about 220 pounds, but stepped in at defensive tackle when the Scarlet Knights needed help at the position. He moved between that and defensive end in his career and always contributed. The three-year starter led the team with 14.5 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks this year, earning defensive MVP honors for the Scarlet Knights.
Mistral Raymond, CB, South Florida: Raymond walked onto the team two years ago and quickly became one of the most respected members of the Bulls. His lanky frame allowed him to play corner or safety, depending on the team's needs, and he was the best defensive back South Florida had this season. He was one of the many seniors who stepped up and helped the Bulls turn their season around after a 0-2 start in Big East play.
Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse: Smith moved all around in his Orange career, from running back to defensive end to outside linebacker and finally to middle linebacker. He took each move in stride and wound up as a three-year starter and cornerstone for the program's revival. He's shooting for his fourth straight all-Big East academic team honor as well.
Chris Neild, DT, West Virginia: The Mountaineers were loaded with valuable seniors -- Noel Devine, Jock Sanders, J.T. Thomas, Anthony Leonard and on and on and on. Few did so much important work with so little glory than Neild, whose job is to plug up the middle of the 3-3-5 defense by crashing into two offensive linemen on every play. Neild finished with only 31 tackles, but his stats don't begin to measure his true worth to one of the nation's top defenses.
The league was full of young players, particularly at quarterback. But each team also was blessed with excellent seniors who provided leadership on and off the field. Today I recognize one outstanding elder statesman from each team:
Lawrence Wilson, LB, Connecticut: A rock on defense for the Huskies as a four-year starter, Wilson covers a ton of ground with his speed and instincts for the game. He led the league in tackles for a second straight year. And when his team needed a big play in the season finale against South Florida with the BCS bid on the line, he came up with a 55-yard interception return for a touchdown.
Armon Binns, WR, Cincinnati: Senior leadership was an issue for the Bearcats all season during a disappointing 4-8 campaign. But Binns was always reliable and became unstoppable as the year went on. He led the Big East in every major receiving category, finishing 14th nationally with 1,101 receiving yards.
Bilal Powell, RB, Louisville: Head coach Charlie Strong placed a lot on Powell's shoulders in the preseason, calling the quiet tailback the face of the program. Powell responded with, by far, the best season of his career, rushing for 1,330 yards and 10 touchdowns. He doesn't say a lot, but he leads by example. And he runs as if each cent of his scholarship check depends on it.
Jabaal Sheard, DE, Pittsburgh: When Sheard was arrested after a fight this preseason, Pitt coaches were quick to say the incident was way out of character for a guy who saved a woman from a burning house in high school. He showed his real character this season, picking up the slack for injured teammate Greg Romeus and turning into the most feared pass-rusher in the Big East while winning the league's defensive player of the year award. Sheard was also a leader in the locker room, calling guys out for their effort when the team struggled early this season.
Alex Silvestro, DE, Rutgers: Silvestro came to Rutgers weighing only about 220 pounds, but stepped in at defensive tackle when the Scarlet Knights needed help at the position. He moved between that and defensive end in his career and always contributed. The three-year starter led the team with 14.5 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks this year, earning defensive MVP honors for the Scarlet Knights.
Mistral Raymond, CB, South Florida: Raymond walked onto the team two years ago and quickly became one of the most respected members of the Bulls. His lanky frame allowed him to play corner or safety, depending on the team's needs, and he was the best defensive back South Florida had this season. He was one of the many seniors who stepped up and helped the Bulls turn their season around after a 0-2 start in Big East play.
Derrell Smith, LB, Syracuse: Smith moved all around in his Orange career, from running back to defensive end to outside linebacker and finally to middle linebacker. He took each move in stride and wound up as a three-year starter and cornerstone for the program's revival. He's shooting for his fourth straight all-Big East academic team honor as well.
Chris Neild, DT, West Virginia: The Mountaineers were loaded with valuable seniors -- Noel Devine, Jock Sanders, J.T. Thomas, Anthony Leonard and on and on and on. Few did so much important work with so little glory than Neild, whose job is to plug up the middle of the 3-3-5 defense by crashing into two offensive linemen on every play. Neild finished with only 31 tackles, but his stats don't begin to measure his true worth to one of the nation's top defenses.
Earlier today, I presented you with my picks for the All-Big East team, which you can find here. Not long after, the official league awards and first and second teams came out, which you can find here.
The Big East official teams are voted on by the league's eight head coaches, who know a heck of a lot more about football than me. But that doesn't mean they always make the right choices. Let's take a look at each position and go over some of the reasoning behind the picks, starting with what seems to me like the most egregious error.
Quarterback
The league coaches chose Cincinnati's Zach Collaros as the unanimous pick, which is just shocking to me. Don't get me wrong, Collaros is a fantastic player who can put up crazy numbers. But I don't see how Collaros was chosen over West Virginia's Geno Smith. Smith led the Big East in passing efficiency and had a 23-6 touchdown to interception ratio. He had one bad game against Syracuse and was terrific just about every other game. Collaros threw 26 touchdowns but with a whopping 14 interceptions. His completion percentage was 58.7 compared to Smith's to 65.8.
In conference play, Collaros had 14 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. Smith had 11 touchdowns and four interceptions in league play, not to mention that the Mountaineers were co-champions while Cincinnati finished 4-8.
The coaches, frankly, blew this one.
Running back
Jordan Todman and Bilal Powell were the easy calls here. What's amazing is that neither Noel Devine nor Dion Lewis made the first or second team. No one saw that coming before the year.
Wide receiver and tight end
Armon Binns and Jon Baldwin were the obvious calls at receiver. Louisville's Cameron Graham was the most productive tight end in the league.
Offensive line
Here's where the coaches' expertise should come into play. It's really hard just watching from TV or even from a press box to tell who's playing well on the interior of an offensive line, especially if you don't know what the blocking assignments are supposed to be. I made sure to get some input from coaches on this one and was pleased to see my choices of Sampson Genus at center and Zach Hurd and Mark Wetterer at guard were echoed by the coaches. We also agreed on Jason Pinkston at tackle, though the coaches had UConn's Mike Ryan at the other tackle, while I had Louisville's Byron Stingily. Both are fine choices, since Louisville and UConn had the best offensive lines in the league.
Defensive line
Very little question here with Jabaal Sheard, Terrell McClain and Chris Neild up front. The second defensive end spot was a tricky one for me. The coaches chose Kendall Reyes, who had an excellent year. I picked West Virginia's Julian Miller, who was a beast in conference play and part of the Mountaineers' unbelievable defense. When in doubt at one of these defensive positions, I went with a West Virgina player. I also strongly considered Chandler Jones, Brandon Lindsey and Jesse Joseph for that spot.
Linebacker
Linebacker is one of the deepest positions in the Big East this year. Lawrence Wilson was a definite, and the coaches and I agreed on J.T. Thomas. They chose Doug Hogue while I went with his Syracuse teammate, Derrell Smith. Can't argue too much either way and I would have put all four of them on there if there were enough spots.
Defensive back
Here's another place where I sharply disagree with the coaches' pick. They had West Virginia's Keith Tandy and not Brandon Hogan. I'm not sure even Tandy would agree with that. Tandy had the better interception and tackle numbers, but as he told me in a late-season interview, most of that was because teams wouldn't throw Hogan's way. The coaches I talked to all said Hogan was easily the best cornerback in the Big East. I had him and Johnny Patrick, who was also an official pick, though I heard some support for and strongly considered South Florida's Mistral Raymond.
At safety, Robert Sands was a no-brainer. The other safety spot was my most difficult choice on the entire list. Safety was not a strong position for the Big East this year. The coaches picked Dom DeCicco, who had a solid year. But I felt like he played some his best while working at linebacker for Pitt this year. I went instead with West Virginia's Sidney Glover, a rock-solid senior who fit my "when in doubt pick a Mountaineer" strategy. I liked Rutgers' Joe Lefeged earlier in the year but thought he faded along with his whole team. One coach who played Rutgers late in the season said they picked on Lefeged in the passing game.
So there you have it. How do you feel about the all-conference picks? Do you think, like I do, that Smith and Hogan were the biggest snubs?
The Big East official teams are voted on by the league's eight head coaches, who know a heck of a lot more about football than me. But that doesn't mean they always make the right choices. Let's take a look at each position and go over some of the reasoning behind the picks, starting with what seems to me like the most egregious error.
Quarterback
The league coaches chose Cincinnati's Zach Collaros as the unanimous pick, which is just shocking to me. Don't get me wrong, Collaros is a fantastic player who can put up crazy numbers. But I don't see how Collaros was chosen over West Virginia's Geno Smith. Smith led the Big East in passing efficiency and had a 23-6 touchdown to interception ratio. He had one bad game against Syracuse and was terrific just about every other game. Collaros threw 26 touchdowns but with a whopping 14 interceptions. His completion percentage was 58.7 compared to Smith's to 65.8.
In conference play, Collaros had 14 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. Smith had 11 touchdowns and four interceptions in league play, not to mention that the Mountaineers were co-champions while Cincinnati finished 4-8.
The coaches, frankly, blew this one.
Running back
Jordan Todman and Bilal Powell were the easy calls here. What's amazing is that neither Noel Devine nor Dion Lewis made the first or second team. No one saw that coming before the year.
Wide receiver and tight end
Armon Binns and Jon Baldwin were the obvious calls at receiver. Louisville's Cameron Graham was the most productive tight end in the league.
Offensive line
Here's where the coaches' expertise should come into play. It's really hard just watching from TV or even from a press box to tell who's playing well on the interior of an offensive line, especially if you don't know what the blocking assignments are supposed to be. I made sure to get some input from coaches on this one and was pleased to see my choices of Sampson Genus at center and Zach Hurd and Mark Wetterer at guard were echoed by the coaches. We also agreed on Jason Pinkston at tackle, though the coaches had UConn's Mike Ryan at the other tackle, while I had Louisville's Byron Stingily. Both are fine choices, since Louisville and UConn had the best offensive lines in the league.
Defensive line
Very little question here with Jabaal Sheard, Terrell McClain and Chris Neild up front. The second defensive end spot was a tricky one for me. The coaches chose Kendall Reyes, who had an excellent year. I picked West Virginia's Julian Miller, who was a beast in conference play and part of the Mountaineers' unbelievable defense. When in doubt at one of these defensive positions, I went with a West Virgina player. I also strongly considered Chandler Jones, Brandon Lindsey and Jesse Joseph for that spot.
Linebacker
Linebacker is one of the deepest positions in the Big East this year. Lawrence Wilson was a definite, and the coaches and I agreed on J.T. Thomas. They chose Doug Hogue while I went with his Syracuse teammate, Derrell Smith. Can't argue too much either way and I would have put all four of them on there if there were enough spots.
Defensive back
Here's another place where I sharply disagree with the coaches' pick. They had West Virginia's Keith Tandy and not Brandon Hogan. I'm not sure even Tandy would agree with that. Tandy had the better interception and tackle numbers, but as he told me in a late-season interview, most of that was because teams wouldn't throw Hogan's way. The coaches I talked to all said Hogan was easily the best cornerback in the Big East. I had him and Johnny Patrick, who was also an official pick, though I heard some support for and strongly considered South Florida's Mistral Raymond.
At safety, Robert Sands was a no-brainer. The other safety spot was my most difficult choice on the entire list. Safety was not a strong position for the Big East this year. The coaches picked Dom DeCicco, who had a solid year. But I felt like he played some his best while working at linebacker for Pitt this year. I went instead with West Virginia's Sidney Glover, a rock-solid senior who fit my "when in doubt pick a Mountaineer" strategy. I liked Rutgers' Joe Lefeged earlier in the year but thought he faded along with his whole team. One coach who played Rutgers late in the season said they picked on Lefeged in the passing game.
So there you have it. How do you feel about the all-conference picks? Do you think, like I do, that Smith and Hogan were the biggest snubs?

