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THE AFTERMATH After a rocky 2011 season, Doug Marrone and Syracuse look to bounce back in their final Big East season 2012 FOOTBALL SEASON PREVIEW

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Page 1: Football Guide

THE AFTERMATH

After a rocky 2011 season, Doug Marrone and Syracuse look to bounce back in their

final Big East season

2012 FOOTBALL SEASON PREVIEW

Page 2: Football Guide

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Page 3: Football Guide

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Sports Editor Ryne GeryPresentation Director Ankur PatankarPhoto Editor Andrew RenneisenCopy Chief Stacie FanelliAsst. Sports Editor Jon HarrisAsst. Sports Editor Chris IsemanAsst. Photo Editor Chase GaewskiDesign Editor Beth FritzingerAsst. Copy Editor Jacob KlingerAsst. Copy Editor Nick Toney

t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k

Laurence Leveille MANAGING EDITOR

Mark Cooper EDITOR IN CHIEF

The Daily Orange is published weekdays during the Syracuse University academic year by The Daily Orange Corp., 744 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. All con-tents Copyright 2010 by The Daily Orange Corp. and may not be reprinted without the expressed written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Orange is distributed on and around campus with the first two copies complimentary. Each additional copy costs $1. The Daily Orange is in no way a subsidiary or associated with Syracuse University.

All contents © 2012 The Daily Orange Corporation

General Manager Peter WaackIT Director Mike EscalanteIT Manager John VidalAdvertising Manager Kelsey RowlandAdvertising Representative Joe BarglowskiAdvertising Representative Allie BriskinAdvertising Representative William LeonardAdvertising Representative Ben UhingAdvertising Representative Sam WeinbergAdvertising Designer Abby LeggeAdvertising Designer Yoli WorthBusiness Intern Tim BennettStreet Team Captain Ian BrooksCirculation Manager Harold HeronCirculation Tony Jing Zeng

C O N TA C T U [email protected]

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EDITORIAL 315 443 9798 BUSINESS 315 443 2315 GENERAL FAX 315 443 3689 ADVERTISING 315 443 9794 CLASSIFIED ADS 315 443 2869

MULTIPLE FRONTS BACK ON THE WARPATH

IN THE CLEAR BIG EAST BREAKDOWN

BEAT WRITER PREDICTIONS

ON THE BRIGHT SIDE

HIDDEN WOUNDS

NO RUSH

‘THE NEW TEMPLE’

Ashton Broyld gives Syracuse a new offen-sive weapon who can attack defenses from a variety of positions

Marcus Sales enters the 2012 season refo-cused and rededicated to football following his season-long suspension

In his 1st season at Syracuse, veteran coach Donnie Henderson aims to turn the strug-gling secondary around

After a slew of unpublicized injuries derailed Syracuse last year, the program makes adjustments to stay healthy in 2012

With no clear-cut starter emerging during preseason camp, Syracuse head coach Doug Marrone will weigh his options at running back going into the season

Coming off a 9-4 season and bowl victory, the Owls are looking to prove they’re here to stay in their second go-around in the Big East

Florida State is poised to return to the champi-onship discussion behind a swarming defense

The Big East poses tough challenges for Syracuse to avoid another letdown in 2012.

The Daily Orange’s beat writers make their predictions and expections for all 12 games.

daily orange file photo

mitchell franz | staff photographer

front page: ankur patankar and mitchell franz | the daily orange

Page 4: Football Guide

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s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m4 2 0 1 2 f o o t b a l l s e a s on p r e v i e w

ankur patankar and andrew renneisen | the daily orange

Page 5: Football Guide

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Ashton Broyld gives Syracuse a new offensive weapon who can attack defenses from a variety of positions

MULTIPLEFRONTS

By Chris IsemanASST. SPORTS EDITOR

A shton Broyld doesn’t feel pres-

sure, and he insists there isn’t

any to begin with.

Broyld’s name has become synony-

mous with Syracuse’s plans to make

“big plays” that can be the difference

between a win and a loss. He’s the

dynamic weapon the unit has lacked

in recent seasons — someone who can

line up in various positions and attack

defenses in multiple ways.

The mere mention of the freshman’s

name elicits hype from fans who believe

Broyld is the player who can take the

Orange to the next level.

Broyld doesn’t hear any of it.

“I don’t feel pressure; there is no

pressure,” Broyld said. “My job is just

to come in here and do what I can do

for the team, and that’s all I’m going to

try to do.”

Where exactly the 6-foot-4, 229-pound

Broyld fits into the Orange’s offense

remains to be seen, but he is expected

to be a big part of Syracuse’s game plan.

The Orange’s offense in recent sea-

sons has been based mostly on short,

methodical passes up the field. Since

the spring, head coach Doug Marrone

has preached the need for “big plays,”

and Broyld is almost certain to become

a big part of that.

“Where he’s going to be, I don’t know,”

offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett

said. “I want to see what he can grasp the

most. Whatever we can do to get him on

the field is what I’m going to want to do.

Where he goes from here is really going

to be determined in the fall.”

The Orange’s offense needs a boost

after finishing 84th in the nation and

seventh in the Big East in scoring last

season with an average of 24.7 points

per game. It was 95th in rushing offense

and sixth in the conference at 120.4

yards per game.

With the Orange’s nonconference

schedule, settling into the offense

quickly will be critical.

Former Syracuse head coach Dick

MacPherson said how the team plays

early will set up the rest of the season

and give clues as to how Marrone is

trying to change the offense and the

program as a whole.

“I think it’s a very, very tough sched-

ule to open up with Northwestern and

Southern Cal and then go into the league,

is a very, very tough grind,” MacPherson

said. “I say right after the month, we’ll be

able to tell exactly who he is and who the

football team overall will be.”

At the team’s media day to open

training camp, Marrone said Broyld

will line up at running back and in the

slot. Broyld will also take snaps in a

wildcat formation, which gives oppos-

ing defenses another aspect to prepare

for each week.

SEE BROYLD PAGE 15

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By Ryne GerySPORTS EDITOR

he usually laid-back Mar-

cus Sales was distraught.

Sales, who was often

upbeat and rarely showed emotion,

couldn’t hold it together.

It was around 3 or 4 a.m. July 30,

2011, as Dan Sisto listened in shock

while his friend fought through

tears.

About six hours earlier, at 9:45

p.m. on July 29, Sales and his

brother were stopped by police

after they ran a red light in Syra-

cuse. They were arrested after

drugs and drug paraphernalia

were found in their car. Both

would face felony drug charges.

Sisto said he could hear the pain

in Sales’ voice during the emotional

call, describing him as depressed

and embarrassed.

“He was just so caught up that

he wasn’t going to be able to play

football anymore at Syracuse,” said

Sisto, a close friend and high school

teammate. “It was really the most

heartbreaking thing to him.”

Head coach Doug Marrone sus-

pended Sales indefinitely in August.

But the drug charges were dropped

in October, and Sales was reinstated

to the team in the spring. The senior

wide receiver is expected to provide a

boost to an offense in desperate need

of a playmaker following a disap-

pointing 2011 season.

Sales worked tirelessly during

his suspension so he’d be ready if he

received a second chance. Now, he’s

anxious to get back on the field with

his team again.

“I got over it; I got through it,”

Sales said of his suspension. “It’s a

new season. It’s in the past, so I’m

just ready to move on.”

SU wide receivers coach Rob

Moore said Sales is the fastest and

strongest he’s ever been in his career.

The senior weighs 195 pounds

now, adding 18 pounds since he last

played in 2010, which Moore said

should help him pick up yards after

the catch. He also shaved his 40 time

to the 4.5-range for the first time.

And Moore said Sales is more

mature, redefining himself after a

challenging season away from the

team. It’s a maturity Sales lacked on

the field early in his career.

The former high school All-Amer-

ican has struggled to achieve his

potential. In his first two seasons, Sales

hauled in 42 catches for 484 yards and

four touchdowns. As a junior in 2010,

Sales only caught five passes for 39

yards in the Orange’s first nine games

as he saw limited playing time.

“I think that was a case where Mar-

cus just had to learn and understand

what was expected of him on the prac-

tice field,” said Moore, who joined the

SU coaching staff that season. “And

that’s a mantra that we preach to all

our young players that come here.

“There’s a certain way you’re

expected to practice, and if you

can’t give us that, we can’t put you

on the field.”

Moore said that toward the middle

of the season, Sales started to give

the effort expected. The increased

effort led to more playing time and

a strong finish to his inconsistent

season, highlighted by a three-touch-

down, 172-yard performance in the

Pinstripe Bowl.

“He’s a young man that I had a

rollercoaster of a ride with the first

year,” said offensive coordinator

Nathaniel Hackett. “It ended on a

very, very high note and never really

got to continue that ride.”

His arrest ended the ride for 2011

and jeopardized his career.

But in the hours after his arrest

— through the tears — Sales vowed

to Sisto he was ready to work out

like old times. He needed to stay in

shape for the following season, and

he needed his high school quarter-

back’s help.

Five or six days a week, they met

at Nottingham High School and

Christian Brothers Academy and

went through planned workouts for

two and a half hours.

Sales ran his routes. They ran

sprints and hills. Sisto fired him

more passes. They did cardio and

jump rope. On Tuesdays and Thurs-

days, they followed it up with 90

more minutes of lifting weights at

Gold’s Gym.

At first, Sales was distracted by

his off-field issues. Eventually, he

never wanted to stop working out. It

was an astounding transformation

from their time together at CBA

when Sisto said Sales didn’t believe

in working hard because everything

was given to the star athlete.

“I’ve seen him grow so much

through this time in his work ethic. It’s

sort of unbelievable to me,” Sisto said.

As Sales worked with his eye on

a return to the program in 2012, the

Orange played out 2011.

Sales was supposed to be the

Orange’s top receiver going into

last season. Former SU teammates

Antwon Bailey and Dorian Gra-

ham both called Sales a depend-

able playmaker.

He had sure hands and an under-

standing of the position. And after his

breakout game in the Pinstripe Bowl,

teammates and coaches saw the tal-

ent that made him a coveted recruit

out of high school.

“He brought a lot of respect to the

wide receiver position,” Bailey said.

“And without having him there,

those wide receivers, they had to

gain respect, so we started off with

a lot of eight-man boxes and a lot of

safeties down in the box.

“He would have been a big help for

us last season.”

But Sales had to watch from afar.

He stayed in touch with his team-

mates every week. Graham said he

was in constant communication

with Sales and that he called after

each game.

Bailey also spoke and hung out

with him regularly. Sales asked

about how his teammates, especial-

ly the wide receivers, were doing.

IN THE

T

CLEARMarcus Sales enters the 2012 season refocused and rededicated to football following his season-long suspension

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Bailey said while he longed to get

back onto the field, Sales stayed in

good spirits and supported the team

through his suspension.

After the Orange’s 49-23 upset

of No. 11 West Virginia in October,

Sales was the first to call Bailey. He

was ecstatic, praising Bailey and the

receivers for a stellar performance

before meeting up with his teammate

on South Campus later that night.

“If you didn’t know the situation,

you wouldn’t have known that he

didn’t play,” Bailey said.

Five days after the Orange defeated

the Mountaineers, his hopes for a

return to SU received a boost when the

charges against him were dropped.

Two weeks later, after meeting with

the University Judicial Board, his

suspension was lifted.

Sisto said it was a “turning point”

for Sales. Since the school allowed

him to attend classes again, he was

optimistic it would lead to his rein-

statement in the football program.

Sisto noticed Sales going harder at

workouts. Once he was officially back

with the team in March, he shifted

into another gear. All the hard work

had paid off.

“I knew I was going to have a

chance to get back on the field,”

Sales said. “So I mean it was just

me being ready whenever I got the

call, so that’s what my mentality

was the whole time.”

Now, Sales will continue the ride

that was interrupted in 2011. Moore

expects Sales to make plays and

pick up where he left off at Yankee

Stadium two years ago.

Sales, though, isn’t looking

back. After an emotional year dur-

ing which he was sure his football

career was over, he’s leaving the

past behind and preparing to run

back onto the Carrier Dome turf to

begin his senior season.

“I’m just glad to be back out here

competing with my friends and my

teammates,” Sales said. “I mean, just

being out here, just to be able to play

football — it’s a blessing.”

[email protected]

beth fritzinger and nate shron | the daily orange

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By David WilsonSTAFF WRITER

D onnie Henderson has a ring.It may not be easy to tell from the

way he acts and how he never wears it out in public, but he definitely has one.

“He’s not that type of person (to brag),” strong safety Shamarko Thomas said. “He’s just a down-to-earth person. He just wants to teach us like he teaches them, and he will never say he has a ring over us.”

Henderson earned a Super Bowl ring with the 2000 Baltimore Ravens as an assistant defensive backs coach. During that stretch, he coached the likes of Chris McAllister, Rod Woodson and Ed Reed. He parlayed that suc-cessful stretch into the defensive coordinator job with the New York Jets from 2004-05.

During those two seasons with the Jets, Henderson’s defense lined up in practice every day against an offensive line coached by none other than Doug Marrone.

The relationship that developed between the two for those seasons with the Jets served as a launching pad for Henderson’s arrival to Syracuse in February as the defensive backs coach.

“That’s the No. 1 reason I’m here,” Hen-derson said. “Let’s be honest, it’s because of Doug Marrone. My relationship with him and my relationship with him as far as football coaches, No. 1. We’re on different sides of the ball. We’ve shared the camaraderie, so make no mistakes about it — it’s because of Doug.”

Still, a relationship alone isn’t enough to

get a coach a job. Marrone’s decision to bring Henderson on to his staff is fueled as much by his prowess as a defensive coach as it is by their friendship.

“All of the coaches obviously bring a lot to the table, or they wouldn’t be here,” Mar-rone said. “Donnie’s had a great track record not only as a defensive coordinator but, more importantly, as a defensive back coach — play-ers that he’s coached and he’s developed.

And again, it’s a great relationship for myself.”

In the 1999-2000 season, the Ravens boasted one of the NFL’s all-time great defenses during their Super Bowl run. That team featured a pair of Pro Bowlers in McAllister and Wood-son in its secondary, but a player Henderson coached two seasons later is the one who leaves the Orange’s defensive backs most awestruck.

“When he told me he coached Ed Reed, I was like, ‘Dang, you can turn my game into that?’” Thomas said. “So it’s very good that we’ve got him in here because he’s teaching us things that we’ve never seen here on the field.”

In the 2002 NFL Draft, Baltimore selected Reed with the 24th pick of the first round. Dur-ing his rookie season, Reed had five intercep-tions. And in 2004, he set the NFL record with a 106-yard interception return for a touchdown.

Henderson is now using Reed’s playmaking ability as an example for his current players, who grew up watching Reed do the extraordi-nary on a regular basis.

Now, Henderson hopes Syracuse can even-tually have a player with similar ability to

Reed’s in the secondary. Last season, SU had a tendency to surrender the big play in the pass-ing game last season.

Henderson hopes to reverse that script this year. He expects his secondary to be the one making the big plays.

“The way coach Henderson’s system is, he just makes sure he puts you in the right place to make plays,” cornerback Keon Lyn said. “It’s just on you to make those plays.”

Freshman defensive back Wayne Morgan already feels he has grown exponentially as a player in the lone summer he has spent with SU.

Henderson taught his players that on deep balls, they should play the role of the wide receiver: focusing on catching the ball. The importance of having the insight of a Super Bowl-winning coach is something that’s not lost on Morgan.

Aside from playmaking, Henderson’s big-gest focus during training camp has been fostering greater chemistry within his unit. Marrone had similar ideas for the team as a whole, and that’s why the Orange spent a week of training camp 80 miles north of Syracuse at Fort Drum going through military-style training.

In addition to daily football practices, SU spent the week working with the soldiers to learn the importance of teamwork, leadership and communication.

While the Fort Drum experience was a unique one for everyone involved, it held a special place in Henderson’s heart.

ON THE BRIGHT SIDEIn his 1st season at Syracuse, veteran coach Donnie Henderson aims to turn the struggling secondary around

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From 1992-97, Henderson was a safeties and defensive backs coach at Arizona State. For three of those seasons, Pat Tillman was a line-backer for the Sun Devils. Tillman went on to play briefly with the Arizona Cardinals, but he cut his NFL career short to serve with the U.S. military in Afghanistan.

While deployed, Tillman was killed in friendly fire.

Henderson always had a deep appreciation of Tillman’s life, but the week at Fort Drum gave him an even greater understanding of what it was like for him post-football.

“I don’t know if I could compare being at Fort Drum with that situation, but I did get a strong feeling, a strong appreciation of what our troops do,” Henderson said. “It just makes you take your hat off to them.”

Tillman’s story reminds Henderson of just how small football is in the grand scheme, but it’s still his life.

It’s his only focus, just as it must be for the Orange to succeed this season. Henderson has his work cut out for him in trying to transform a secondary that was repeatedly beaten last season.

“Last year was that team,” Henderson said. “… The thing that I’m going to try to get them to do is just be fundamentally sound and play with consistency. And here’s the bigger one: You’ve got to play with confidence.

“I don’t believe one play can win or lose a game, but I believe one play can win or lose a guy.”

[email protected]

ankur patankar and andrew renneisen | the daily orange

Page 10: Football Guide

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No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Class1 Ashton Broyld RB 6-4 229 Fr.2 Wayne Morgan DB 5-10 190 Fr.2 Quinta Funderburk WR 6-3 190 So.3 Durell Eskridge FS 6-3 205 So.4 Brandon Reddish CB 5-11 186 So.5 Marcus Sales WR 6-0 195 Sr.6 Ritchy Desir CB 5-11 180 So.7 Oliver Vigllie LB 6-3 224 So.8 Keon Lyn CB 6-1 196 Jr.9 Ri’Shard Anderson CB 6-0 191 Sr.10 Terrel Hunt QB 6-3 217 So.10 Markus Pierce-Brewster DE 6-3 257 Jr.11 Marquis Spruill LB 6-0 230 Jr.12 Dontez Ford DB 6-2 198 Fr.12 Ryan Nassib QB 6-3 228 Gr.13 Deon Goggins DT 6-1 275 R-Sr.14 John Kinder QB 6-3 190 Jr.15 Alec Lemon WR 6-2 205 Sr.16 Keenan Hale WR 6-2 190 So.16 James Jarrett SS 6-2 203 Sr.17 Charley Loeb QB 6-4 215 Sr.18 Siriki Diabate LB 5-10 220 Sr.19 Ryan Lichtenstein K 5-10 168 Sr.19 Joe Nassib CB 5-9 180 Jr.20 Mitchell Piasecki FB 5-11 249 So.20 Greg Tobias RB 5-10 169 Jr.21 Shamarko Thomas SS 5-10 210 Sr.22 Adrian Flemming WR 6-3 197 Jr.23 Prince-Tyson Gulley RB 5-10 192 Jr.23 Julian Whigham CB 6-1 182 Fr.24 Jaston George CB 5-10 166 So.25 Jeremiah Kobena WR 6-0 182 Sr.26 Myles Davis FB 6-1 225 Fr.27 George Morris III RB 6-0 191 Fr.28 Jeremi Wilkes FS 5-9 189 Jr.29 Devante McFarlane RB 6-0 194 Fr.30 Steve Rene RB 5-7 185 Jr.31 Clay Cleveland FB 6-1 232 Jr.32 Travon Burke RB 6-1 235 So.33 Dan Vaughan LB 6-2 221 Gr.34 Adonis Ameen-Moore RB 5-11 229 So.35 Dyshawn Davis LB 6-2 214 So.36 Christopher Clark WR 5-11 159 Jr.37 Ross Krautman K 5-7 163 Jr.37 Chris Williamson DB 6-0 199 So.38 Cameron Lynch LB 5-11 220 So.39 Dom Anene LB 6-0 231 Sr.40 Zachary McCarrell LB 5-11 198 Jr.41 Lewellyn Coker LB 6-1 228 Jr.42 Jacob Green TE 6-1 263 Fr.43 Franklin Santos CB 5-10 177 So.45 Jerome Smith RB 6-0 226 Jr.46 Jonathan Fisher P 6-1 206 So.47 Sam Rodgers LS 6-2 224 So.48 Carl Cutler FB 6-3 249 R-Sr.49 Ryan Norton K 5-11 181 Fr.50 Femi Aliyu LB 5-11 222 Jr.51 Donnie Simmons DE 6-2 246 So.52 Eric Crume NT 6-0 304 So.53 Lucas Albrecht DT 6-2 270 So.55 Rob Trudo OG 6-3 288 So.57 Omari Palmer OL 6-2 320 Fr.59 Macky MacPherson C 6-2 277 Jr.60 Sean Hickey OT 6-5 285 Jr.61 Eric Morris LS 5-10 218 Sr.62 Andrew Phillips OT 6-5 280 Sr.63 Ryan Sloan DT 6-3 311 So.64 Daniel Anyaegbunam DT 6-3 282 Jr.67 Justin Pugh OT 6-5 298 Sr.68 Nick Robinson OT 6-5 282 So.70 Marcus Coleman DT 6-1 273 Fr.70 Jesse Wolf-Gould OL 6-4 312 So.72 Ivan Foy OG 6-4 311 So.74 Seamus Shanley C 6-1 252 Fr.75 Zack Chibane OG 6-5 295 Sr.76 Kyle Knapp OL 6-4 268 Fr.77 Lou Alexander OG 6-4 311 Sr.78 Jason Emerich OL 6-3 277 Fr.80 Ron Thompson TE 6-4 256 Fr. 81 Louie Addazio TE 6-3 241 So.82 Alvin Cornelius WR 6-1 185 Fr.83 Max Beaulieu TE 6-2 238 Jr.84 Ben Lewis WR 6-2 199 Fr.85 Beckett Wales TE 6-3 235 Jr.86 David Stevens TE 6-3 228 R-Sr.87 Kyle Foster WR 6-3 207 So.88 Jarrod West WR 6-2 205 Jr.89 Josh Parris TE 6-2 258 Fr.90 James Washington LB 6-1 220 Fr.91 Brandon Sharpe DE 6-1 253 Sr.92 Riley Dixon K/P 6-5 205 Sr.92 Davon Walls DT 6-5 312 Jr.93 Micah Robinson DE 6-4 268 Jr.94 Robert Welsh NT 6-3 266 Jr.95 Josh Manley DE 6-2 269 Fr.96 Jay Bromley DT 6-4 293 Jr.97 Macauley Hill WR 6-0 198 So.97 John Raymon DE 6-5 316 Fr. 99 Zian Jones DT 6-4 335 Jr.

NUMERICAL ROSTER

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HIDDEN WOUNDSAfter a slew of unpublicized injuries derailed Syracuse last year, the program makes adjustments to stay healthy in 2012

By Michael CohenSTAFF WRITER

E ach time the scene is the same. Doug Marrone alongside an injured Syracuse football player, a doctor nearby and the

young man’s parents on speakerphone.The doctor is the bearer of bad news, his find-

ings the cause of the room’s dejection. Time after time, Marrone sat through that phone call during the 2011 season. So often that he and the players began to question their luck.

Eleven players — or more than 10 percent of the active roster — suffered concussions last season with a frequency that surprised the coaching staff. Other injuries, many of which have not been made public until now, also piled up, and 10 of the 11 starters on defense dealt with serious ailments in the latter stages of the year.

“We were very banged up,” said Mikhail Mari-novich, a defensive end on the 2011 team who has since graduated. “A lot of guys, including myself, weren’t even in a lot of practices and just kind of played the day before and then game day.”

The injury problem was the principal hin-drance during the five-game losing streak that closed out the 2011 season. A stout run defense became porous, and the offense slipped in produc-tivity as the team went into a tailspin. It forced Marrone and his staff to alter certain elements of the team’s strength training and on-field practice habits going into 2012, with the ultimate goal being a more controlled environment that should produce a healthier season.

“What I did when the season was over is I went out and researched the amount and type of plays that we needed to be successful and all this quality control,” Marrone said. “And I just felt that we as a coaching staff should change up what we’re doing.

“We hope that will help us not get as many of the types of injuries that we’ve been getting.”

‘you won’t hear about it’Since age 4, Dan Vaughan was a wrestler. He spent 15 years of his life on the mat developing the keen neck strength that is both necessary within the sport and a by-product of its movements.

Now a graduate student entering his fifth sea-son at linebacker for Syracuse, his muscular development from wrestling is an advantage in the battle against concussions. Years of putting his head down on the mat and manipulating his neck to build strength and counter opponents puts him at a lower risk for a concussion.

It’s a correlation that has been embraced by Marrone and his staff, and special strength drills in the weight room began last spring to improve players’ neck strength.

“We do some stuff in the weight room where you go up against someone’s knee, and you’re constantly going back and forth,” offensive line-man Justin Pugh said. “We’ll be on all fours, and someone will put their knee out, and you push your head up against it in and out.”

Vaughan said another exercise has one player

move his head in different directions while it is held by a partner in various positions to strength-en the entire circumference of the neck.

Both Vaughan and Pugh struggled to name any of the 11 players who suffered concussions a season ago. They mentioned Adam Harris, a starting fullback in 2011 who saw his career end due to multiple concussions, but backup center Ian Allport was the only other player they named.

Pugh said players are not made aware of their teammates’ injuries, and trainers don’t share information when asked. Vaughan added that only severe concussions are made public to the team, and it’s very easy for a player to sit out of practice a few days and return without any explanation.

“Unless a guy comes out and says it, you won’t hear about it,” Pugh said.

Marrone said the early results are positive, but the full test will come once the regular season gets underway. He said Syracuse made it through spring practice without a concussion or any concussion symptoms, and the players showed improvement when their neck strength was tested prior to the start of preseason camp.

“The coaches and the medical staff, we all take injuries seriously, but especially concussions,” Marrone said. “ … We all have a high awareness for it.”

Pugh said the other major change for the 2012 season is the extra time spent by the coaching staff instructing players on the proper tempo of each drill. Players weren’t on the same page last year, he said, when it came to how hard each drill was supposed to be run.

It’s something Marrone said he addressed with his coaching staff during the summer to make some alterations for this year’s preseason camp. The goal was to avoid the dangerous game of one-upmanship that Pugh described as essentially part intensity and part self-defense.

“If we’re going (at a speed) where you’re not actually hitting somebody, we’re not going to have guys lowering their heads thinking, ‘He might come full speed, so I have to go full speed,’” Pugh said.

“It’s kind of like this thing where it’s one-up, one-up, one-up until it gets to a level that’s too high.”

‘it’s kind of like a battery’ Week after week, Marinovich struggled to sleep the night before a game. Two to three hours at most was all he could manage, struggling to get comfortable and relax. Nerves weren’t the issue — his back was.

Marinovich said he “was hurt all year” and played the entire 2011 season with three herniated discs and a bulging disc in his back.

“In the hotel rooms I slept on the floor, slept on the ground,” Marinovich said. “It was a night-mare.”

Marinovich was one of five former seniors on the 2011 team who discussed at length the additional injury problems — outside of concus-sions — that plagued the Orange defense and derailed a once-promising season. Every starter except safety Phillip Thomas, who was dismissed from the team for a violation of team rules after 10 games, played through a moderate to serious injury while the media and fans were, for the most part, unaware.

Marinovich listed off the walking wounded with ease and named almost all 11 players on the defense. The injuries to Chandler Jones (knee), Keon Lyn (shoulder, hand), Jay Brom-ley (hand) and Ri’Shard Anderson (hand) were obvious, as their braces and casts were visible during games.

But it was players like Deon Goggins (major shoulder problems), Dyshawn Davis (dislocated shoulder), Shamarko Thomas (partially torn hamstring) and Dan Vaughan (severely strained oblique muscle) who gutted out the season while shrouding their true statuses.

Cory Boatman, a backup defensive tackle who rotated in with Goggins and Bromley, was forced to wear a molded brace on his right wrist during games to prevent it from bending backward and to limit the severe swelling.

“I just knew that a lot of guys were banged up,” Boatman said. “We would talk in the locker room and be like, ‘Dang, I’m not feeling it this practice.’ But we would go out there and compete.”

A group that allowed just 99.4 rushing yards per game through a 5-2 start sprung leaks over the final five games. Syracuse was continuously carved apart by opponents’ rushing attacks to the tune of 168.4 yards per game during that stretch, including a 37-17 loss to South Florida when it gave up 236 yards on the ground.

Marinovich said his practice time was limited to the point where he sometimes only participated in the walkthrough before taking the field on game day. Other weeks he would practice sporadi-cally, but there was rarely more than a day or two in between games.

Harris said it was difficult at times for the offense to get the necessary looks it needed against a first-team defense where only a handful of start-ers actually practiced and others were playing at only 75 to 80 percent at best.

“It’s funny because you go into those games and you think, ‘All right, well, I’ll recover by next week,’” Marinovich said. “But it’s kind of like a battery, and you just keep going lower and lower and lower until finally something gives.”

Marinovich’s back finally did give when he was speared by a Cincinnati tight end 30 yards away from the ball in the second-to-last game of the season. It was the end of his Syracuse career and another casualty for the defense.

‘never crossed my mind’Naturally, the questions poured in as the losses added up. A defense that allowed only one 75-yard rusher in the first seven games of the season allowed six in the final five games.

But the same players were going out there each week. It didn’t make sense. And Marrone was peppered with criticism and inquiries from the media.

What is going on with the defense? Why can’t you stop the run? What are you going to do differ-ently?

“There’s plenty of times where he would like to just come out and say, ‘This player or this player or this player,’” Marinovich said. “But he’s got integrity. He’s an honest guy, and I think he’s a hell of a coach.”

Marrone protected his players, opting not to stand at the podium and disclose injuries to the media when all five former players said it would have been easy to. They lauded him for it, calling him a true players’ coach.

And after the season, when Marrone was again presented with an opportunity to explain exactly the type of medical hardships the 2011 Orange team faced, he declined once more.

“It really never crossed my mind to get up there and start listing off injuries and ‘woe me’ and ‘woe this team,’” Marrone said.

He said excuses — no matter when they are made — don’t help win football games.

Instead, he created a plan to overcome the outburst of injuries that essentially crippled an entire season. Whether it works is still to be seen, but the adjustments have been made in an attempt to avoid another health meltdown.

Now he just hopes that good fortune is on his team’s side.

Said Marrone: “I give a lot of credit to those players. They went out there and played as hard as they could.”

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Dan VaughanStrained oblique

Cory BoatmanSwollen/bruised wrist

Shamarko ThomasPartially torn hamstring

Dyshawn DavisDislocated shoulder

11 playersConcussions

UNDER THE RADAR

The injury bug continually bit Syracuse down the stretch of the 2011 season. The defense was hit hardest, with several starters playing through a considerable amount of pain in the second half of the season. As a result, the run defense suffered mightily and gave up 168.4 yards per game in the last five games. Here’s a look at some of the less publicized injuries that plagued the SU defense:

Mikhail MarinovichBack (three herniated discs, bulging disc)

BEFORE AND AFTERThe win over No. 11 West Virginia was undoubtedly the turning point in Syracuse’s 2011 sea-son. At the time, SU sat 5-2 and controlled its own destiny after a 26-point throttling of the Mountaineers. But a host of injuries caught up with the Orange, specifically on the defense. Here’s a look at the performance of the Syracuse defense through the first seven games of the year compared to the five-game losing streak toward the end the season:

CATEGORY FIRSTSEVENGAMES LASTFIVEGAMESRushing yards allowed 99.4 yards per game 168.4 ypgNumber of 75-yard rushers 1 6Points allowed 26.7 points per game 31.0 ppgPasses intercepted 7 3

illustration by micah benson | art director

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Broyld’s skill set is what Marrone and the Orange have been searching for to send the offense to a higher level and come through with big plays.

“It’s accountability that when it’s there, we need to take it. That’s how you create it,” Mar-rone said. “You also create it through speed. You don’t really see the lack of a big play with the lack of some type of speed, so we’ve helped ourselves in that area.”

As a senior at Rush-Henrietta High School, Broyld passed for 1,961 yards and 24 touchdowns and rushed for an astounding 1,540 yards and 24 touchdowns.

Playing defense isn’t beyond his ability level either.

Joe Montesano was among the first to see that firsthand.

In the 2010 state championship game against Troy High School, Rush-Henrietta traded touch-downs for the entire game. Whenever Troy scored, Broyld brought the Royal Comets back into the game.

He threw a 66-yard touchdown pass, and he scrambled for 8- and 15-yard touchdown runs. But late in the game, Troy started to make a come-back, and Montesano, the Rush-Henrietta head coach, knew his team needed a big defensive stop.

Montesano put Broyld in at safety in the big-gest game of the season.

“We threw him in there because we were kind of on our heels a little bit defensively,” Montesano said. “He made three plays in a row and basically closed out the game for us.”

Arguably his biggest defensive play came when he sacked Troy quarterback Brian Marsh for an 11-yard loss at the Flying Horses’ 27-yard line.

Broyld’s stat line earned him the game’s Most Valuable Player honors, as he rushed 23 times for 196 yards and two touchdowns and completed five of his 11 passes for 94 yards and one score.

“I’ve never had a kid who you feel like you can put him anywhere, and he can just take a game over,” Montesano said. “He’s just a football player.”

Montesano said Broyld has a unique combi-nation of speed and strength. Once he gets free in open space, he can break tackles with his size and elude them with his feet.

After playing at Rush-Henrietta, Broyld attend-ed Milford Academy for a semester to improve his grades before enrolling at SU in January. Both schools ran spread offenses, giving Broyld a chance to make plays outside the pocket.

At Milford, he threw for 427 yards and six touchdowns, and rushed for 259 yards and six touchdowns.

Milford head coach Bill Chaplick said Broyld understood the team’s offense from the start.

“He has no problem picking it up. He won’t

have a problem. You just have to give him the time to do it,” Chaplick said. “We were multiple, we ran the ball, we did stuff out of the shotgun with him. He can do just about anything.”

When Broyld first met running back Jerome Smith, he told him just that, listing off every position he could play.

Smith didn’t think Broyld could possibly have any quickness. Broyld simply looked too big to be able to move freely in open space, but Smith soon saw him go to work on the field.

“And then he’ll give you a move here and there, and you’re like, ‘Whoa,’” Smith said. “He’s a natural running back; he’s a natural playmaker.”

Hopefully for the Orange, one who can make those elusive “big plays.”

It’s a determination to provide a different element to SU’s offense, which rarely caught opposing defenses off guard. Syracuse quarter-back Ryan Nassib has a young weapon to hand the ball off or throw to.

Getting the ball in his hands is the ultimate key.

“Ashton’s definitely a talented player. He’s got some skills that can really help us,” Nassib said. “Myself and the coaches just really have to do a good job of getting him in the right place, getting him the ball in areas where he can show off those talents, do what he can do.”

Broyld said the coaches slowly teaching him Syracuse’s system paid off. While Broyld adjusted to the college game, he said he also understood the offense and his role in it better by the day.

How he helps the team, where he plays and how he challenges opposing defenses should unfold early in the season. Broyld said he doesn’t care where he lines up.

“I’ve really like began to grasp and get a feel for the game because it’s much faster, and things happen way quicker, and guys react a hundred times faster,” Broyld said. “And I’m just trying to help the team win.

“I just want to be back on top with the Orange, and I think we can do it.”

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Syracuse started training camp with five players competing for the running back spot. As training camp progressed, no running back separated himself from the group.

Jerome Smith, Prince-Tyson Gulley, Adonis Ameen-Moore, George Morris III and Ashton Broyld were all in the mix. With only days left in camp, the Orange coaches moved safety Devante MacFarlane to running back to see if he could earn the starting job.

But head coach Doug Marrone said at the end of camp that none of the backs emerged as the team’s primary option.

“No, I wouldn’t right now say, ‘Hey, here’s the guy we’re going to give the ball 30 times to.’ I would not say that right now today,” Marrone said. “That may change in the next couple of days but right now you’ll see a couple of guys. We’re discussing exactly who they are.”

Smith is listed as the starter for SU’s season opener against Northwestern. Marrone said the decision came down to his prior game experi-ence and his performance in camp. Still, each back remains in the discussion to see time

throughout the season.

Prince-Tyson GulleyHeight: 5-10Weight: 192Class: JuniorHometown: Akron, Ohio

Prince-Tyson Gulley started last season second on the depth chart behind Antwon Bailey. Gul-ley showed promise in Syracuse’s fourth game of the season, rushing for 66 yards on 10 carries — both career highs.

But Gulley suffered a broken collarbone after the game and was out for the final eight games of the season.

“I’m just looking to finish where I left off and keep it going,” Gulley said.

Gulley returns in 2012 as part of a crowded backfield fighting for time. He worked back from his injury and got back on the field dur-ing the summer, using the time to regain his strength. As a freshman, Gulley played in 10 games and ran for 74 yards on 13 carries. He also served as the Orange’s primary kick returner, taking 29 kickoffs for 633 yards.

The shifty running back said he’s looking forward to seeing the unit improve heading into the season.

Motivated by his injury-shortened 2011 sea-son, he’s ready to make something happen when his name’s called.

“Just patience and focus — that’s all I’ve been thinking about, man,” Gulley said. “When it’s my time, make sure I can make a play and put myself in the best position to make big plays.”

Adonis Ameen-MooreHeight: 5-11Weight: 229Class: SophomoreHometown: Denver, Colo.

Adonis Ameen-Moore shed 15 pounds during the offseason and enters the season at 229. Marrone said during camp he was happy to see Ameen-Moore’s hard work had paid off.

The sophomore only saw the field in four games his first season, rushing for 40 yards. This season may be tough for him to break into the rotation, but he said the fierce competition will only benefit him.

“Every day, I just go out there and try to do my best,” Ameen-Moore said. “Just try to show the coaches I can help win games, hopefully.”

Ameen-Moore enjoyed a decorated high school career, earning all-state and All-Ameri-can honors at Mullen High School in Colorado. He rushed for 1,774 yards and 26 touchdowns his senior season and led his team to three state titles.

The highlight for Ameen-Moore in 2011 came against West Virginia when he gained 19 yards on five carries.

After working hard in the offseason to reshape his body, he finds himself with an opportunity to earn more time in an unsettled situation at his position.

“We’re all competing, trying to get a job. So we’re all going to go out there and compete hard, and we’re going to practice even harder,” Ameen-Moore said, “because when we see some-body else do good, like ‘OK, I got to top that.’”

Devante McFarlaneHeight: 6-0Weight: 194Class: FreshmanHometown: Wheatley Heights, N.Y.

Devante McFarlane was a late addition to the battle for time at running back. In the final week of camp, Marrone moved the freshman from safety to running back.

“When the situation came up of the running back situation where no one was really taking it,” Marrone said, “we just moved Devante over there, and he’s done a nice job.”

McFarlane played running back at Half Hol-low Hills West High School, where he was a first-team all-state selection and rushed for 754 yards and 12 touchdowns as a senior. Marrone said he wavered back and forth on where to play McFarlane when he arrived at SU. He saw a big, strong, fast kid who could develop into a safety or even grow into a linebacker.

Marrone said that after just two days at the position, McFarlane was in the mix to see time when the season begins.

Jerome SmithHeight: 6-0Weight: 226Class: JuniorHometown: Bear, Del.

Jerome Smith was listed first on Syracuse’s preseason depth chart, though the competition for the starting running back spot was ongoing through training camp. When camp ended, none of the running backs created any separa-tion, including Smith.

Last season, Smith was Antwon Bailey’s primary backup and rushed for 139 yards on 37 carries, scoring one touchdown. Smith knows about the lineage of his position. Syracuse has had a 1,000-yard rusher for the past four sea-sons, but Smith isn’t focused too much on that number.

The only number he cares about right now is the one that sits in the Orange’s win column.

“You set personal goals, but all those goals don’t mean anything if you don’t win games,” Smith said. “I’d rather have a lot of wins. I’m not going to lie.”

Though Smith’s playing time at SU has been limited, he put up impressive numbers the last time he was a starter, which came during his senior year of high school at Pencader Charter in Delaware.

He ran for 1,334 yards and 16 touchdowns on 193 carries. He has the ability to make the big plays Syracuse is looking for, but Smith said as long as everyone fulfills their responsibilities, big plays will happen.

“Our biggest thing is just everybody doing your job,” Smith said. “If you do your job, big plays are going to come.”

Ashton BroyldHeight: 6-4Weight: 229Class: FreshmanHometown: Rochester, N.Y.

A quarterback throughout high school, Ash-ton Broyld worked primarily with the running backs in training camp. The Syracuse coaches want to get him on the field as soon as possible, so having him line up in the backfield is likely the best way to do that.

Broyld was a dual-threat quarterback who spent a lot of time playing in a spread offense, so he’s shown he’s dangerous with his legs and will continue to showcase his rushing skills with the Orange.

As a senior at Rush-Henrietta High School, Broyld rushed for 1,540 yards and 24 touch-downs. That’s in addition to throwing for 1,961 yards and 24 scores.

For at least this season, Broyld won’t be beat-ing defenses with his arm but with his legs.

While he’s vying for a running back spot, he could also be used in the slot and will take direct snaps in a wildcat formation.

“The physical part isn’t the hard part. It’s more of a mental and learning the plays and doing the little things right,” Broyld said. “I’m just trying to get better every day.”

The balance for offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett, though, has been not over-loading him with too much information. Broyld has learned the system little by little and said he understands it better each day.

Wherever he lines up, the Orange is simply excited to see him on the field.

“Ashton right now has shown that he’s a darn good football player. The key is going to be he’s still a freshman,” Hackett said. “I’m very excited to give him enough so he can showcase what he can do but not overload him to hurt him being a freshman.”

George Morris IIIHeight: 6-0Weight: 191Class: FreshmanHometown: Lawrenceville, Ga.

In the competition for the starting running back spot, George Morris isn’t in the lead and probably won’t see much time on the field as a freshman.

As a senior at Central Gwinnett High School in Georgia, Morris rushed for 1,045 yards and 17 touchdowns. He has speed and has impressed the Syracuse coaching staff but was listed sixth on the preseason depth chart.

Still, since none of the tailbacks separated themselves from the rest of the group in train-ing camp, it isn’t out of the question that Morris will play a minor role this season.

The depth at the running back position is something Hackett said he’s happy to have. Mor-ris is among the backs he’s excited about and brings skills that could become valuable over the course of the season.

“Our depth at that position, it’s exciting,” Hack-ett said. “It allows you to really mix it up, but you can keep it simple. And you can throw a lot of dif-ferent guys. It puts a lot of stress on the defense.”

—Compiled by The Daily Orange sports staf,f, [email protected]

NO RUSHWithout a clear-cut starter after preseason camp, Syracuse head coach Doug Marrone will weigh his options at running back during the season

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By Jacob KlingerASST. COPY EDITOR

A top a silver ladder, Derek Dennis and Morkeith Brown took turns conducting the Temple Diamond Marching Band

at University Stadium in Albuquerque, N.M. His teammates sang along to the school fight song.

They were celebrating their victory in the 2011 Gildan New Mexico Bowl, the Owls’ first bowl win since 1979.

Eighty-one days later, Temple celebrated its return to the Big East. The conference announced the Owls would begin Big East play in football this fall with their other sports join-ing in 2013.

“It’s a tremendous natural step that we need-ed to have the opportunity to take, and we’ve taken it,” said head coach Steve Addazio. “Now we’ve got to go about the business of building it.”

Today’s Temple is nearly unrecognizable compared with its first run in the Big East from 1991-2004. The Owls won just 30 games during that stretch and were eventually forced to leave the Bowl Championship Series conference due to lack of attendance and investment in the program. But the team enters the Big East this season coming off three straight winning sea-sons and the bowl victory.

With state-of-the-art facilities and a foun-dation of success, the Owls are expected to compete with their conference opponents this time around. Though the preseason Big East media poll ranked Addazio’s team last, Temple is a far cry from the perennial doormat it was for 14 seasons.

“This isn’t their first barbecue, so to speak,” Connecticut head coach Paul Pasqualoni said. “You better be prepared to play Temple because Temple is going to play hard. They’re going to be

well-coached, and they’re going to be capable of winning games.”

But when Bobby Wallace took over as Temple’s head coach in 1998, he saw why the program had struggled mightily for much of the decade. On campus, the team practiced without a fully modernized facility.

The field behind McGonigle Hall doubled as stomping grounds for local kids. One player nearly collided with a child on a bicycle while running down a punt on Wallace’s first prac-tice. Wallace recalled seeing neighborhood kids shred his practice field while playing pickup football games on rainy Sundays.

The Edberg-Olson football complex across campus was completed in 2000. Wallace said it helped to calm down the circus-like atmosphere of Temple’s practices, but the program and its facilities still lagged behind their Big East counterparts.

In 2005, a relieved Wallace walked off the turf at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Md. An 0-11 season and his career at Temple were complete.

“I was thinking about moving back to the South,” said Wallace, who went 19-71 in seven seasons.

Wallace’s fate was partially sealed in Janu-ary 2001 when the Big East voted to end Temple’s membership in 2004. The decision crippled recruiting efforts and the entire program. Wal-lace called it a “kiss of death.”

“We probably were the worst program in Division I-A,” said Temple athletic director Bill Bradshaw. “Not just on the field, attendance, performance, but academically and the kind of disciplinary issues there, we probably were dead last.”

For two years, more than 90 percent of Wal-

lace’s recruits were junior college players. Most high school seniors were off limits.

The reliance on junior college recruits meant the team’s talent had two fewer years to develop chemistry. Those recruits, while talented, often came with personal baggage that made them hard to coach, Wallace said.

“I rather would’ve just gotten voted out right away because it made it difficult to recruit when you couldn’t tell a young man and his parents whether we would have football or what level we’d be playing at in three years,” Wallace said.

Wallace and Bradshaw fought to keep the program’s Division I-A status. The university considered downgrading to Division I-AA or even ending the football program at one point.

Seven years after leaving the Big East, Tem-ple football is thriving. Facilities are now a selling point to recruits already drawn in by the team’s recent success.

Former Owls offensive lineman Dan Klecko, who played seven seasons in the NFL, checked out the team’s new facilities on a visit back to the school this year. Bradshaw said Klecko told him he had never seen a nicer weight room in his professional career.

The players Temple has brought should also give the program high-level talent for years to come. Scout.com ranked the 2012 incoming freshman class the 55th-best recruiting class in the country.

Addazio is looking to use the combination of resources and talent to build on a 9-4 season in 2011.

His image can be seen in this year’s team. He emphasizes to his players energy and physical play.

“The fundamental starting point for our program is, No. 1, we have a group of players

that respect the game,” Addazio said. “They understand it’s a privilege, not a right, and every day they’re going to take the football field, and they’re going to compete.”

The philosophy is a holdover from his pre-decessor, Al Golden, who led the Owls to a 17-8 record from 2009-10.

After Wallace’s resignation, Golden inter-viewed for the Temple job Nov. 6. Bradshaw had already interviewed several potential replace-ments. They planned on meeting 10-15 more candidates.

Fifteen minutes into the interview, Golden all but ended Temple’s search. By that time, Bradshaw’s yellow legal pad read, “This is our man.” One month after his interview in a Char-lottesville, Va., hotel room, Golden was intro-duced as the new head coach.

Golden went on to lead Temple to a share of the MAC East division title and the team’s first bowl game in 30 years.

“Al came in to captain the ship over rough waters and he did — miraculously, according to some, and extraordinary, according to even people who aren’t given to hyperbole,” Brad-shaw said.

Golden’s work made Addazio’s job easier, too. Now, with a bowl victory and his team’s jump to the Big East, the head coach said his program has taken the next step.

Yet Addazio refuses to let his players forget what the program went through. He brought in former players to tell stories of Temple’s struggles and motivate its current squad.

“We’re the new Temple,” said quarterback Chris Coyer. “We like to play hard. We’re tough, and we’re going to do the best we can, and we’re going to give everybody what they want.”

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courtesy of mitchell leff | temple athletic communicationsAfter leaving in 2004, Temple returns to the Big East to kick off a new chapter in the program’s history. The Owls are thriving as a result of new facilities and talented players.

‘THE NEW TEMPLE’Coming off a 9-4 season and bowl victory, the Owls are looking to prove

they’re here to stay in their second go-around in the Big East

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NORTHWESTERNThe Wildcats went to their fourth straight bowl game last season, but the team fell to Texas A&M in the Meineke Car Care Bowl of Texas. Last season, Northwestern quarter-back Kain Colter was one of the most explo-sive and versatile quarterbacks in the coun-try as Dan Persa’s backup. Colter rushed for 654 yards and nine touchdowns and passed for 673 yards and six touchdowns.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIASouthern California went 10-2 last season, but the Trojans weren’t eligible for a bowl game because they were in the second year of a two-year ban. Largely the same team as last season, Southern California has some-thing to play for again and is considered a national title favorite.

The Trojans are ranked No. 1 in preseason polls, and are led by one of the bestquarterbacks in the country in potential Heis-man Trophy candidate Matt Barkley. Lastseason, Barkley threw for 3,528 yards and 39 touchdowns, averaging 294 passing yardsper game. Barkley also has a tremendous receiver to throw to in Robert Woods, who had 111 receptions for 1,292 yards and 15 touchdowns a season ago.

STONY BROOKIn any other season, Stony Brook would be an easier team to play. This year, the Sea Wolves have running back Marcus Coker, a transfer from Iowa who rushed for 1,384 yards and 15 touchdowns last season. Stony Brook, a Football Championship Subdivision

team, finished last year 9-4. The Sea Wolves already had a consistent offense, as they won their last eight regular season games and scored at least 37 points in each.

MINNESOTADoug Marrone began his tenure as Syra-cuse’s head coach with a 23-20 loss to Min-nesota to open the 2009 season. Three years later, the Orange has a chance for revenge against a very mediocre Minnesota team. The Gophers struggled all of last season, fin-ishing up the season 3-9. Minnesota’s three wins came against Miami (Ohio), Iowa and Illinois, with the victory over the Hawkeyes serving as the team’s signature win of the season.

PITTSBURGHThe Panthers are coming off a turbulent and strange 6-7 season. Former head coach Todd Graham resigned toward the end of the year to head to Arizona State, and defensive coordinator Keith Patterson served as interim coach for Pittsburgh’s 28-6 loss to South-ern Methodist in the BBVA Compass Bowl. Then-newly hired head coach Paul Chryst watched the game from the press box. Running back Ray Graham is one of the best in the nation and averaged 119.8 yards per game before suffering a knee injury against Connecticut in 2011. Graham missed the final five games of the season, but he’ll likely return healthy at some point this season.

RUTGERSSyracuse travels to Piscataway, N.J. to face new head coach Kyle Flood and the Scarlet Knights after falling to RU 19-16 in overtime

last season. Former head coach Greg Schi-ano left after last season to take a job with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Flood named sophomore quarterback Gary Nova the starter toward the end of training camp. Nova played in 10 games last year, throwing for 1,553 yards and 11 touchdowns. Rutgers had a breakout season last year, going 9-4 and beating Iowa State 27-13 in the Pinstripe Bowl.

CONNECTICUTThe Huskies beat Syracuse last year 28-21, the second of the five straight losses. It was Connecticut’s fifth straight win over Syracuse. In that game, Huskies quarter-back Johnny McEntee completed 8-of-14 passes for 113 yards and a touchdown. He returns this season along with three start-ing offensive linemen from a year ago. Lyle McCombs, who ran for 1,244 yards and seven touchdowns in 2011, will also be in the backfield for the Huskies.

SOUTH FLORIDALast year’s game against South Florida ended in an embarrassing 37-17 loss in the Carrier Dome, continuing the Orange’s late-season slide. The Orange rushed for only 108 yards while the Bulls ran for 236 yards, including 117 yards and a touchdown from B.J. Daniels. The USF quarterback finished last year’s game with 371 yards of offense and outgained the Orange until the final three minutes. South Florida returns eight offensive starters who finished last year with 3,205 yards of total offense.

CINCINNATICincinnati finished 10-3 last season, includ-

ing a 30-13 win against Syracuse in the Orange’s second-to-last game of the season. The Orange got a good look at the Bearcats’ starting quarterback this year in that game. Munchie Legaux threw for 169 yards and two touchdowns. If the Bearcats plan a repeat of last season’s 10-3 mark, the running game will need to be just as good as it was with Isaiah Pead and Zach Collaros leading the way.

LOUISVILLEThe Cardinals started the Orange’s late-sea-son woes last year, beating Syracuse 27-10 in late October. And with unanimous 2011 Big East Rookie of the Year Teddy Bridgewa-ter under center, Louisville looks primed to improve on a 7-6 season that ended with a loss to North Carolina State in the Belk Bowl. An offensive line that returns four starters should help the sophomore quarterback. The defense, ranked 17th in the nation in scoring defense last season, returns nine starters for head coach Charlie Strong.

MISSOURISyracuse will travel to Missouri in November to play one of the newest members of the Southeastern Conference. James Franklin returns as the starting quarterback, coming off a season in which he threw for nearly 3,000 yards and 21 touchdowns. Franklin also ran for 981 yards and 15 touchdowns.

TEMPLEIn its last season in the Mid-American Con-ference, Temple went 9-4 and coasted to 37-15 win over Wyoming in the Gildan New Mexico Bowl. Now in the Big East, the Owls are sure to meet more challenges, especially since the team only returns nine starters. Quarterback Chris Coyer made four starts for Temple last season, but three of the team’s top wide receivers and leading rusher Ber-nard Pierce have departed.

OPPONENT BLURBS

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By Nick ToneyASST. COPY EDITOR

T he two crystal footballs get special treatment. They’re not tucked away in the coach’s office with the rest of the

bowl trophies — they’re both showcased at the entrance of the Coyle E. Moore Athletic Center for every student-athlete to see.

As soon as he walks through the doors, Lamar-cus Joyner is reminded about the golden age of Florida State football and the 13-year national championship drought in Tallahassee, Fla.

“We’re hungry to get one,” said Joyner, an All-Atlantic Coast Conference free safety last season. “You want to add to the tradition of Florida State, and we’ve got a good chance to get one for ourselves.”

The Seminoles are ACC favorites once again. After failing to take the conference in 2011 with losses to inferior teams like Virginia and Wake Forest, they enter this season with the talent needed to recapture the glory of the storied Bobby Bowden era.

Joyner and his defensive teammates will be at the center of FSU’s charge this year. Head coach Jimbo Fisher will field the deepest and most talented defense since Bowden’s national championship team in 1999. Only Alabama, LSU — the two teams that played for the 2011 national championship — and Temple out-ranked the Seminoles in total defense last sea-son. Florida State surrendered only 275 yards per game in 2011, and the defense will return eight starters in 2012.

If that unit plays to its incredible potential, this could be the year Florida State returns to national prominence.

Defensive ends Brandon Jenkins and Bjoern Werner combined for 15 sacks alone in 2012. Jenkins could’ve been a first-round NFL Draft pick but returned to team up with Werner for

his senior season.Joyner, fellow safety Terrance Brooks and

cornerback Xavier Rhodes are just as talented and just as NFL-ready. Even without recently exiled cornerback and returner Greg Reid, the secondary has few rivals in the country.

Linebackers Vince Williams and Christian Jones help put the unit over the edge.

“You can’t just point to one moment or one play in practice,” kicker Dustin Hopkins said of the defense. “They do something amazing on every snap, and they’re only getting better.”

James “Buster” Davis can’t help but think about how he would play on a unit like this. The former All-ACC middle linebacker finished his college career six years ago, but as he watched the Seminoles last season from his home in the Jacksonville, Fla. area, he said his alma mater looks completely different on the defensive side

of the ball.Davis said that Bowden and his former defen-

sive coordinator Mickey Andrews, never devi-ated from the recruiting recipe that won them championships in the 1993 and 1999 seasons. After all, the two had unprecedented success with undersized players who were fast and could break on the ball during their historic streak of top-five finishes from 1987-2000.

“Those teams I played on were built around speed and the freedom to go make a play with that speed,” said Davis. “You could be 5-9, and if you were fast and could get to the ball, you were good. These defenses that coach Fisher and coach Stoops put out there aren’t built like that at all.”

The change was necessary. By the time Davis got there, FSU was on the decline. And by the time Fisher took over, the team surrendered an average 30.8 points per game.

Fisher was Bowden’s offensive coordinator for three seasons, but the work he put into rebuilding the defense — including the hire of Stoops away from his brother Mike at Okla-homa — is reflected in the state of his current roster.

These Seminoles are fast, but they’re also built to combat the pass-happy spread offenses in college football.

The first padded practice of the summer showed Christian Thompson just how dominant the defense has become under Fisher.

Before his number was called, the senior run-ning back was forced to watch as the defense returned three consecutive interceptions for scores. Thompson thought that the ensuing play, a screen pass away from the FSU blitz, could be a much-needed spark for a dejected offense.

“It worked so well during team drills, and we were all ready to get into some sort of groove,” said Thompson. “But sometimes the defense likes to remind us that we still have work to do.”

Those reminders occur often for the offense against this defense. On this play, Thompson cradled the ball against his chest before looking upfield and right into the garnet and gold helmet of Jones.

“Those are the plays that you can’t wait to see in a game,” said All-ACC placekicker Dustin Hopkins. “Those are the plays you can’t wait to see them make against someone else.”

On paper, the team has the makings to be among the best in the ACC, but the Seminoles must prove it on the field.

Bowden’s two national championships and decades of success set the bar high for college football at FSU. Expectations are heightened in Tallahassee again in 2012.

Joyner knows how important his defense is to living up to the preseason hype. The unit will be crucial to Florida State becoming a program that competes for titles at the end of the season, not the beginning.

“If people are going to say that Florida State is back, that means that we’re competing for championships,” Joyner said. “They’ll be no question that we’re back when that happens.”

[email protected]

BACK ON THE WARPATHFlorida State is poised to return to the championship discussion behind a swarming defense

courtesy of ross obley | florida state sports informationJIMBO FISHER is looking to get Florida State’s defense back to the high level it com-peted at under Bobby Bowden. The Seminoles are a favorite in the ACC this season.

MATT BARKLEYQB, Southern California2011 statistics: 3,528 passing yards, 39 passing touchdowns

Voted sixth in the 2011 Heisman voting, Bar-kley could be preparing for life in the NFL right now. He was projected as a top-10 pick in many mock drafts. Instead, he chose to return for his senior year at Southern California. Last season he threw for 3,528 yards and 39 touchdowns while completing 69.1 percent of his passes. Barkley held USC together through NCAA sanctions that banned the Trojans from postseason play the past two seasons. As the leader of a loaded Trojans team ranked No. 1 in the nation who was expected to contend for the national title, Barkley enters the season as the Heisman favorite.

DE’ANTHONY THOMAS RB, Oregon2011 statistics: 2,235 total yards, 18 total touchdowns

Last year’s Pac-12 co-offensive freshman of the year is already tabbed for more hon-ors. Arguably the most versatile threat in the nation, Thomas was the only player in the country to gain 400 yards in rushing, receiving and kick returning. Listed as a running back, he ran for 595 yards and seven touchdowns while splitting time with LaMichael James, who is now with the San Francisco 49ers, and Kenjon Barner. Barner returns and will take some car-ries from Thomas, but his versatility ensures he’ll get plenty of touches.

MONTEE BALLRB, Wisconsin2011 statistics:1,923 rushing yards, 33 rushing touchdowns

Ball led the nation in rushing last season with 1,923 yards. He also rushed for 33 touch-downs en route to a fourth-place finish for the 2011 Heisman. Danny O’Brien will replace Russell Wilson at quarterback for Wisconsin, so Ball will need a smooth transition to pile up the

same numbers this season. The No. 12 Badgers can only hope to go as far as Ball carries them, and strong late-season showings against Michi-gan State and Ohio State will likely be crucial to his chances.

DENARD ROBINSONQB, Michigan2011 statistics:2,173 passing yards, 20 passing touchdowns; 1,176 rushing yards, 16 rushing touchdowns

Michigan’s dual-threat quarterback has been a nightmare for opposing defenses. Robin-son already holds the NCAA single-season record for rushing yards by a quarterback with 1,702. Winning the Heisman will require sharper passing from the player who threw 15 interceptions last season. Robinson will have a chance to shine on the national stage

when the Wolverines open the season Sept. 1 at 8 p.m. against No. 2 Alabama at Cowboy Stadium.

GENO SMITHQB, West Virginia2011 statistics: 4,385 passing yards, 31 passing touchdowns

Last season, Smith passed for 4,385 yards and 31 touchdowns with just seven intercep-tions. The quarterback has flourished in head coach Dana Holgorsen’s spread offense, and he will look to have another productive sea-son with the return of leading receivers Sted-man Bailey and Tavon Austin. As the Moun-taineers transition to the Big 12, though, Smith and the offense may be challenged by stiffer competition.

—Compiled by Jacob Klinger, asst. copy editor

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POSITION BREAKDOWN

SPECIAL TEAMS: Jonathan Fisher returns after starting at punter as a freshman. He averaged 39.3 yards per punt. As a team, SU ranked sixth in the conference in punting in 2011. Ross Krautman led the league in field goal percentage as a sophomore last season, making 78.9 percent of his attempts. He returns as the team’s leading scorer with 78 points. Jeremiah Kobena is back after helping the Orange average 22.64 yards per kick return last year. Freshman Ryan Norton will likely handle kickoff duties.

—Compiled by Jacob Klinger, asst. copy editor, [email protected]

QUARTERBACK:Ryan Nassib is going into his third season as Syracuse’s starting quarterback. Nassib will lead the Orange’s offense after a record-setting 2011, when his 22 touchdowns tied the school’s single-season record. At times, though, the SU offense became predictable because of the repeated short passes and screens Nassib threw. Marcus Sales’ return gives Nassib a dynamic receiver to throw to. Sales is someone whom Nassib can trust to haul in longer passes downfield. At the very least, Nassib can be expected to manage games with a veteran presence with few turnovers. He threw nine intercep-tions last season.

RUNNING BACK: Antwon Bailey was the latest of Syracuse’s 1,000-yard rushers, but now the Orange has to fill his void. Jerome Smith began the preseason as first on SU’s depth chart, though that’s not set in stone, and he’s yet to prove to the coaching staff he deserves the starting spot. Smith, a junior, is the only returning running back who scored last season. He ran for one touchdown. Competing with Smith are Prince-Tyson Gulley, Adonis Ameen-Moore and George Mor-ris. Devante McFarlane moved from safety to running back toward the end of training camp and could see some snaps at that position. Ashton Broyld could be an X-factor in a Wildcat package or even rushing from a split position. Syracuse has to establish its running game so it can open up Nassib’s abil-ity to run play action and throw longer passes. Who’s lining up in the backfield is critical for the Orange.

WIDE RECEIVER: Marcus Sales returns to the team as a fifth-year senior after serving a yearlong suspen-sion stemming from his arrest on drug charg-es that were eventually dropped. His speed and familiarity with Nassib add a deep-threat element to SU’s offense that was absent last season. Senior Alec Lemon, whose value cannot be overstated, is Nassib’s outlet underneath. He set the single-season program record for catch-es with 68 last season.

TIGHT END:Nick Provo was the Orange’s second-leading receiver last season with 537 yards and seven touchdowns. In an inconsistent sea-son, Provo was arguably the offense’s most reliable producer. Beckett Wales will likely be charged with replacing him, though he doesn’t have much experience. He made three receptions for 25 yards a year ago. David Stevens will be his primary backup, but freshman Ron Thompson could also be a factor at the position. Tight ends are a big part of the Orange’s offense, so Wales will likely have plenty of chances to make some big plays.

OFFENSIVE LINE:The unit returns three starters from 2011: All-Big East first team left tackle Justin Pugh, center Macky MacPherson and left guard Zack Chibane. The three upperclass-men blocked for Antwon Bailey’s 1,000-yard season. Pugh is recovering from shoulder surgery and missed all of training camp. He will likely be out until late September. Sean Hickey will take his place and has impressed Doug Marrone in the preseason. Ivan Foy takes over at right guard, and Lou Alexander will start at right tackle. Both have some work to do before they become the type of linemen the Syracuse coaches want them to be. Right now, the offensive line is a big question mark for the Orange.

DEFENSIVE LINE: Syracuse’s front four returns defensive end Deon Goggins and tackle Jay Bromley. The loss of Chandler Jones to the Patriots hurts, but senior Brandon Sharpe, a converted line-backer, has the ability to make plays in the backfield. Bromley suffered an ankle injury in training camp, but he should be ready for the start of the season. John Raymon is a transfer from Iowa who could be a factor on the line if he gets a waiver from the NCAA that would allow him to play this season. Several of the Orange’s defensive linemen still have a way to go before they’re in good enough shape to play on a consistent basis, and that includes Raymon as well as nose tackle Eric Crume.

LINEBACKER:Three of the defense’s seven returning start-ers man the linebacker positions. Marquis Spruill, Dyshawn Davis and Dan Vaughan totaled 177 of the team’s 782 tackles in 2011. The unit at the heart of SU’s defense is its most experienced. Spruill had three sacks and two forced fumbles last season while Vaughan had one of each. Scott Shafer may ask his linebackers for extra help in coverage. Last year, the Orange conceded 258.3 yards per game in the air, the third worst in the Big East. Siriki Diabate started preseason atop the middle linebacker depth chart with Vaughan and Spruill listed as strong-side linebackers and Davis on the weak side.

SECONDARY:The team’s second-best returning tackler from last season, Shamarko Thomas, holds down the strong safety spot with Keon Lyn and Ri’Shard Anderson coming back at the corner positions. Sophomore Brandon Red-dish played in all 12 games last season as a freshman and will see significant minutes again at corner. Jeremi Wilkes, a junior, went into camp as the starting free safety after converting from cor-ner during spring practice. The unit was exposed downfield far too often last season, so improved play will be crucial to the Orange’s ability to stay competitive.

NASSIB

SMITH

SALES

WALES

CHIBANE

BROMLEY

SPRUILL

THOMAS

KRAUTMAN

@DOsports Live updates from each game

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TEMPLEComing off a 9-4 record in its final MAC season, Tem-

ple makes the jump back into the Big East, where it last competed in 2004. To make matters more challenging, the Owls return only four offensive and five defensive start-ers. Quarterback Chris Coyer, who made four starts for Temple last year, looks to take the reins and will be tested by the departure of his top three wide receivers. Strengths: Running back, defensive lineWeaknesses: Wide receiver, offensive line

LOUISVILLEAfter spending years near the Big East basement, the Cardi-

nals have been enjoying preseason recogni-tion and accolades. This season, quarterback Teddy Bridgewater is going to look to build on his freshman year success with a veteran offensive line that returns four starters. With a defense that returns nine starters from last year’s 17th-best scoring defense nationally, Louisville isn’t an underdog anymore. Strengths: Quarterback, safety, defensive lineWeaknesses: Running back

SOUTH FLORIDAUSF experienced

a down year in conference play in 2011, going 1-6 with its sole win coming against Syracuse at the Carrier Dome, but returns eight offensive starters — including quar-terback B.J. Daniels, who finished last year with 3,205 yards of total offense. Daniels has three of his wide receivers returning as well as three starters on the offensive line.Strengths: Quarterback, wide receiver, linebackersWeaknesses: Running back

CINCINNATIThe Bearcats have plenty of holes to fill after losing

starting quarterback Zach Collaros as well as Big East offensive player of the year Isiah Pead and Big East co-defensive player of the year Derek Wolfe. Quarterback Munchie Legaux will come in full-time to replace Collaros, who completed 61 percent of his passes last year. Strengths: Wide receiver, secondaryWeaknesses: Running back, defensive line

PITTSBURGHFirst-year head coach Paul Chryst inherits a team

that loses seven defensive starters from 2011, including linebacker Max Gruder, who led the team in tackles by 49. However, plenty of familiar faces return on offense, including quarterback Tino Sunseri and his top two receivers from last year, Devin Street and Mike Shanahan. Running back Ray Graham is still recovering from a knee injury he suffered in the eighth game of 2011 against Connecticut.Strengths: Quarterback, running backWeaknesses: Linebacker, defensive line

CONNECTICUTStarting quarter-back Johnny McEn-tee is looking to

improve on last year’s 51.3 percent comple-tion rate. Three starting offensive linemen return to help McEntee, along with standout running back Lyle McCombs. The Huskies will be experienced on defense, returning nine starters — including the three top tack-lers from a year ago. Strengths: Running back, linebackersWeaknesses: Quarterback, wide receiver

RUTGERSFirst-year head coach Kyle Flood inherits a defense that led the

Big East in fewest points and yards allowed in 2011. Eight starters return from that defense, including linebacker Khaseem Greene, who led the Big East with 141 tackles last year. Running back Jawan Jamison returns to lead a rushing attack that eclipsed 150 rushing yards on five occasions last year, but top receiver Mohamed Sanu left for the NFL. Strengths: Running back, secondaryWeaknesses: Wide receiver, defensive lineSYRACUSE

Coming off an excit-ing 2010 season that saw a Pinstripe

Bowl victory, the Orange fell back to Earth with a 1-6 conference record in 2011. Quarterback Ryan Nassib returns for his third season at the starter, but the offense will be hurt by the loss of leading rusher Antwon Bailey, and defensive line stalwart Chandler Jones has departed to the NFL.Strengths: Wide receiver, offensive lineWeaknesses: Running back, cornerback

—Compiled by Kevin Prise, staff writer, [email protected]

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BIG EAST BREAKDOWN

DAILYORANGE.COM

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BEAT WRITER FORECASTS

GAME-BY-GAME FORECASTS

M I C H A E L C O H E N

not a dime back

R Y N E G E R Y

that’s respect

C H R I S I S E M A N

take it or leave it

L ast year I drank the Kool-Aid. I truly believed that a Pinstripe Bowl win would carry Syracuse through to a great

2011 season in which the Orange would post an 8-4 record and reach another bowl game. I was very, very wrong. So this year I’m going the other way. SU will start the year 0-3 with losses to Northwestern, No. 1 Southern California and an incredibly dangerous Stony Brook — yes, Stony Brook. Marcus Coker will return to glory by defeating the Orange in the Carrier Dome, thus stamping Syracuse’s season a disappoint-ment. Marrone won’t quit, though, and SU will win three games in all. But the season will certainly be a disappointment.

C oming off five straight losses to end last season, Syracuse is surrounded by uncertainty across the field. The

Orange doesn’t have a clear-cut rotation at run-ning back to replace 1,000-yard rusher Antwon Bailey. With Justin Pugh out for the start of the season and two other starters to replace, the offensive line is an area for concern, too. Defensively, the line is inexperienced, and the secondary has a lot to prove after a tough 2011 campaign. This Orange team doesn’t even match up with the one it had a year ago, and that team finished last in the Big East and couldn’t make a bowl. SU barely edges Temple to avoid a second straight last-place finish.

A t the start of training camp, Doug Mar-rone told reporters the team had a long way to go and isn’t where he wants it to

be. On the final day of training camp, he said the team still wasn’t where he wanted it. See the problem? Less than two weeks before the season starts and Marrone doesn’t like where the team is. Competitions at several positions were never settled during the preseason. The Orange is going into game week with several starters yet to be named. Out of a group of five running backs, not a single one proved he deserved to be a starter. Three days before the end of train-ing camp, the coaches moved safety Devante MacFarlane

Northwestern — LSouthern California — L

Stony Brook — LMinnesota — WPittsburgh — LRutgers — W

Connecticut — LSouth Florida — L

Cincinnati — LLouisville — LMissouri — LTemple — W

Northwestern — LSouthern California — L

Stony Brook — WMinnesota — WPittsburgh — L

Rutgers — LConnecticut — WSouth Florida — L

Cincinnati — LLouisville — LMissouri — LTemple — W

Northwestern — LSouthern California — L

Stony Brook — WMinnesota — LPittsburgh — L

Rutgers — LConnecticut — WSouth Florida — L

Cincinnati — LLouisville — LMissouri — LTemple — W

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