Oklahoma State Defense Preview 2025: How Fast Can the Cowboys Improve?
X CFN, Fiu | CFN Facebook | Bluesky Fiu, CFNOklahoma State 2025 PreviewOklahoma State Offense Breakdown Season Prediction, Win Total, Keys to Season - The defense played like it had nine guys on the field. Only Kent State was worse than a Cowboy D that allowed 501 yards per game. The pass rush wasn't bad, but the pass defense was awful, the run defense worse, and here comes the transfer portal to change everything.
- Again, the defense was able to get into the backfield. But here comes the improvement with Kyran Duhon (UTEP) coming in to take over on one side. DeSean Brown looks the part, but he needs to get behind the line more.The tackles are getting a boost with the addition of De'Marion Thomas from Vanderbilt. He's a 333-pounder who needs to be a rock against the run from the start, and Michael Diatta (Virginia) will be a quicker option. Veteran Iman Oates is a 315-pounder with enough experience to be a plus.
- The portal is helping out the linebacking corps, too, with Malik Charles a dangerous pass rusher from West Georgia who can do a little of everything. He and Jaleel Johnson will be true hybrids on the outside.Akron's Bryan McCoy made 204 tackles and eight tackles for loss over the last two years. Now he'll be a key option on the inside along with Trip White (Ole Miss), a veteran coming in looking to jumpstart his career.
- Cam Smith is a veteran at one corner, Dylan Smith, David Kabongo, and Parker Robertson will once again be among the team's leading tacklers at safety, and the portal will take care of the rest. Mordecai McDaniel (Charlotte) will push for one safety gig, and Jeremy Cook (Louisiana) was brought in to be a key backup.Season Prediction, Win Total, Keys to Season Oklahoma State 2025 PreviewOklahoma State Offense Breakdown
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Miami Herald
38 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Marshall Football Preview 2025: How Fast Can the Thundering Herd Rebuild?
How do you go from what Marshall pulled off in 2024 to a complete and total rebuild that fast?The Herd got red hot, ripped through a relatively weak conference slate, won the game it had to pull off at James Madison, and shut down Louisiana cold for a 31-3 victory for the Sun Belt ten-win season was the first since the Doc Holliday days of 2015, and then head coach Charles Huff took the Southern Miss job. Almost everyone jumped into the portal, there weren't enough guys around to play the bowl game, and now Marshall is starting from scratch. 52-year-old Tony Gibson has never been a head coach. He comes in after spending the last six seasons as NC State's defensive coordinator, and yeah, he might have to work his way into the not his fault. At last count, over 25 players had left through the portal. It could come together fast. If the running game finds a groove right away, the schedule is manageable enough to come up with a shocker of a strong first campaign under 0-12 wouldn't be a total stunner, either, considering it's not just about the new faces, there's woefully little overall time logged in at the FBS level among the protected starters. Marshall Thundering Herd Preview 2025: Offense X CFN, Fiu | CFN Facebook | Bluesky Fiu, CFN- Welcome to the Jacksonville State Thundering Herd. Former Gamecock offensive coordinator Rod Smith made the move over to Marshall after helping to lead one of the nation's most interesting and dangerous attacks. This is all starting from scratch, but … - They have a few nice quarterbacks. Zion Turner was in the Jax State system last year, but didn't play much. Carlos Del Rio-Wilson (Syracuse) is a dangerous option who'll get every shot at the job with the all-around skills to step in right away. For comparison, last year's Gamecock quarterback Tyler Huff ran for 1,344 yards and 15 scores, and … - This system will hammer the hot running back. Tre Stewart led Jacksonville State with 1,638 yards and 25 touchdowns, and now it's up to Michael Allen (UNLV) and Jo'Shon Barbie (McNeese State) to combine forces. Both averaged over five yards per carry last season for their respective schools. - There's more continuity on the offensive line than anywhere else on the team, at least in the interior with Logan Osburn back at center and Jalen Slappy a veteran guard to work around. 348-pound Shunmarkus Adams should be set at the other guard spot. The tackles are coming from the portal - 6-9, 356-pound Tyler McDuffie (Hampton) should be the best of the lot.- The Herd have a star in tight end Toby Payne - he needs the ball more. He tied for the team lead with six touchdown catches, but all of the other receivers of note are gone. Demarcus Lacey (Jacksonville State) has speed on the outside. 6-3, 200-pound Antonio Harmon got in a little work at Mississippi State, and Ben Turner (West Liberty) is a quick inside target. Marshall Thundering Herd Preview 2025: Defense - There's no replacing the pass rush that was so good last year. 17-sack Mike Green is a Baltimore Raven, and just about everyone else who came up with a sack is gone. Paul Hutson (Campbell) is a big end coming in, but it's the inside that has to shine right away.335-pound KaTron Evans (Charlotte), 330-pound Tyas Martin (Jackson State), Jamaal Whice (South Carolina) and Jalil Rivera-Harvey (Arizona State) bring the bulk.- There isn't much experience among the new linebackers, but Javae Gilmore (Mississippi State) is a big body for the interior, and quick Jibreel Al-Amin (Jacksonville State) made 23 tackles in a rotation. - The secondary caught a bit of a break when Jadarius Green-McKnight chose to come back. The safety made 38 tackles with a pick-six, corner Daytione Smith got in a little time, and everyone else is from the portal. Most of the new parts are nice prospects without a ton of proven production, but safety Boogie Trotter (Tennessee State) should be a statistical star coming off a 62-tackle season. Corner Marvae Myers-Glover (Middle Tennessee) started his college career in 2019, and made 41 stops and broke up four passes last season. Marshall Thundering Herd Key to the Season Get the running game working right offense won't be smooth, but as long as the experienced interior and huge tackles can blast away, the quick backfield should control games a bit on the ground. Time of possession won't be on the Herd's side, so … Marshall Thundering Herd Key Player Katron Evans, DT goes for all the giant new defensive tackles. This gets ugly fast if the Herd can't hold up against the run, and that's where the 335-pound Charlotte transfer comes in. He needs to be an anchor. Marshall Thundering Herd Top Transfer, Biggest Transfer Loss Top Transfer In: Michael Allen, RB throw in Jo'Shon Barbie from McNeese State. Give Allen and Barbie a little bit of room, and these two should be able to rip off yards in chunks. They're both quick backs - Allen looked good when he had his chances at UNLV - and should take over a game or Transfer Out: Christian Fitzpatrick, WR your pick of any one of the bazillion transfers who might be the most important. Fitzpatrick has the 6-4 size, the deep speed, and the production with a 34-catch, six-touchdown grab season for the Herd, averaging 17 yards per play. Now he's at Oklahoma State. Marshall Thundering Herd Key Game at Middle Tennessee, Sept. 20How far do the Herd have to go to be decent? The hope is to get past Missouri State and Eastern Kentucky to get to 2-1, and if there's a win over Middle Tennessee on the road in the Sun Belt opener, this could be a surprise team.- 2025 Marshall Schedule Breakdown Marshall Thundering Herd Top 10 Players 1. Toby Payne, TE Jr.2. Ladarius Green-McKnight, S Sr.3. Michael Allen, RB Jr.4. Zion Turner, QB Jr.5. Eric Meeks, C Jr.6. Jo'Shon Barbie, RB Jr.7. Carlos Del Rio-Wilson, QB Sr. 8. Boogie Trotter, S Sr. 9. Javae Gilmore, LB Jr.10. Marvae Myers-Glover, CB Sr. Marshall Thundering Herd 2024 Fun Stats - Sacks: Marshall 36 for 230 yards, Opponents 17 for 120 yards- Second Quarter Scoring: Marshall 138, Opponents 68- Interceptions Thrown: Opponents 13, Marshall 4 Marshall Thundering Herd 2025 Season Prediction, Win Total, What Will Happen Out of all 136 college football teams coming into the season, Marshall is the biggest guess when it comes to figuring out what's about to very, very sheepish call is that the offense works just enough at times to push past a few weak defenses, but there won't be a lick of consistency anywhere across the let's go with this. There will be a win over Eastern Kentucky early on, maybe there's some success against Missouri State, and things will start to get better as the season moves on. It's hard to see the Herd as a major favorite over anyone in Sun Belt play, but there's a chance this changes big one way or another in a real The Marshall Thundering Herd Win Total At … 3.5Likely Wins: Eastern Kentucky50/50 Games: at App State, at Coastal Carolina, at Georgia Southern, Georgia State, at Middle Tennessee, Missouri State, Old Dominion, Texas StateLikely Losses: at Georgia, James Madison, at Louisiana © 2025 The Arena Group Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.

Miami Herald
3 days ago
- Miami Herald
Duke Blue Devils Offense Preview 2025: Will Darian Mensah Be THAT Good?
X CFN, Fiu | CFN Facebook | Bluesky Fiu, CFN2025 Duke PreviewDuke Offense BreakdownDuke Defense BreakdownSeason Prediction, Win Total, Keys to Season - The offense wasn't along for the ride, but it didn't exactly hold up its end of the bargain like the defense did. It was horrible on third downs, the passing game wasn't effective enough, and the rushing attack was among the worst in the nation. - Quarterback Maalik Murphy was and is great, but he threw too many picks and didn't hit enough third down throws to keep things moving. He's off to Oregon State, the program paid retail for Darian Mensah from Tulane, and now the big downfield plays should come. Henry Belin IV is a strong No. 2 option. - Que'Sean Brown and Sahmir Hagans are decent returning receivers - they finished third and fourth in yards, respectively, but the firepower is coming in through the Anthony started his career at Michigan, went to Oklahoma, and wasn't able to stay healthy. If he's in one piece, he's a deep threat star on the outside. Cooper Barkate (Harvard) caught 63 passes for 1,084 yards and 11 scores last season. - The offensive line was among the best in the nation in pass protection, but it didn't do much for the running game that averaged just 93 yards per game. Almost all of the starters from late in the season are back, with Brian Parker the best of the lot at one tackle job.- Jaquez Moore was second on the team in rushing in 2023, got hurt last year, and now he's back, along with last year's second-leading rusher, Peyton Jones. Mensah will add rushing yards, too. Duke Defense Breakdown 2025 Duke Preview Season Prediction, Win Total, Keys to Season © 2025 The Arena Group Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.


New York Times
3 days ago
- New York Times
Ben Johnson went through a humbling time, and it led to his meteoric NFL rise
Ben Johnson didn't have a job. After eight seasons with the Miami Dolphins, which included numerous roles, coaching positions and promotions, he was out of work and in NFL limbo. It was an unwelcome feeling for a 33-year-old coach with big dreams. 'I kind of got the feeling that the cycle had already gone by,' Johnson said of his job status in 2019, 'and I would have to wait till the next cycle.' Advertisement Johnson, though, couldn't stay away from football. He needed it. He had kept in contact with Butch Davis, his former head coach at North Carolina who took over at Florida International in 2019. Davis invited him to a spring practice. That visit soon turned into summer conversations about volunteering in the fall. 'We all have the itch,' Johnson told The Athletic. 'So I was much better scratching that itch, spending some time at FIU, than I was staying at home with my family for 24 hours. And I think my wife understood that. She got a better version of myself when I was home, knowing that I was able to actually be around the game.' Johnson, now the head coach of the Chicago Bears, took Davis up on his volunteer offer. Johnson couldn't actively coach as part of his role, but he worked with the offensive coaching staff, particularly with offensive coordinator Rich Skrosky. Johnson watched film of practice and offered his thoughts. He was still working with FIU when the Panthers opened the 2019 season against Tulane on Aug. 29. 'As we got closer to the season, Rich trusted me enough to do some advance scouting for the opponent at hand,' Johnson said. 'So I certainly remember going into that Tulane week, watching some Tulane film from the year before and giving some third-down thoughts (or) things that he had put in during training camp (that) were … outside of the box that maybe he wanted to incorporate.' Johnson, who once worked with Adam Gase, Clyde Christensen, Bill Lazor and Mike Sherman in Miami, also had ideas for Davis. 'I remember a few times there, I'd give Butch a piece of paper maybe at the end of the week, just a couple thoughts, like 'Hey, think about using a wet ball in practice for a couple periods, just in case we get a rain game during the season,'' he said. Advertisement Johnson was prepared to help FIU for the rest of the season. Then the Detroit Lions called. They were scrambling for help. Johnson's life was about to change. Johnson didn't start at quarterback for Davis at North Carolina. He joined the team as a walk-on in 2004. Davis arrived in 2007, and T.J. Yates soon became the No. 1 QB. Yates went on to get drafted by the Houston Texans in the fifth round in 2011 and spent eight seasons in the NFL. 'We had a couple of quarterbacks,' Davis said. 'Creatively and athletically, they were probably a little bit better than (Johnson), but not necessarily that much better mentally. He knew how the game plans worked and how to study and how to look into it.' Johnson graduated from North Carolina in 2008 with computer science and mathematics degrees. His Tar Heels bio doesn't include any game stats. But it does say Johnson 'pretended to be Joe Montana as a kid' and 'is proficient in solving difficult math equations.' Johnson loved studying film. He wanted to figure out how the opposition played. That's what Davis remembered. Johnson also leaned on offensive coordinator John Shoop as a resource. By then, Shoop had 12 years of NFL experience, including a three-season stint as the Bears' offensive coordinator under head coach Dick Jauron. 'It was great for him to have John around to kind of talk about all kinds of things, how to practice and the games,' Davis said. When Johnson's NFL career was in limbo in 2019, he reconnected with Davis. 'Could I come down there?' Davis remembered Johnson asking. 'I said, 'Are you kidding me? Absolutely.' We would love to have had him.' Davis wanted to help his former quarterback, the one who took his future wife, Jessica, to the team's Bible study during his final year at North Carolina and the one who scoured film looking for answers to everything. Davis had already done the same with Ken Dorsey, his former quarterback at the University of Miami. Dorsey worked for Davis after being fired by the Carolina Panthers. Advertisement 'As soon as (Dorsey) left, the very next guy that came was Ben Johnson,' Davis said. 'I was fortunate to just absolutely have him and create things to talk about with him and things that he'd learned.' In a matter of weeks, Johnson's suggestions became a great resource for Davis, his assistants and the program. Davis considered hiring Johnson as his full-time offensive coordinator. But Davis knew the NFL would beckon Johnson back soon. 'And I just knew that he needed to be in the NFL,' Davis said. The next opportunity just happened to come in the form of an entry-level position with the Lions. Johnson was overqualified. But it put him in a place to learn and grow. Davis knew how important that was to Johnson. 'He grew from Boston College and the Miami Dolphins, and that's what you love about these guys is that they don't just stay only doing one certain thing,' Davis said. 'It's like you've got to grow every three or four weeks during the season. And when the season's over with, it's like go back and take a look at everything that you've done and what needs to go, and how do you continue to grow? I mean, because if you stay the same, you're going to get beat, you're going to lose, especially in the NFL.' When Kevin Rogers arrived at Boston College as the Eagles' offensive coordinator in 2011, Johnson was already there. He had started two years earlier as a graduate assistant on head coach Gary Tranquill's staff. 'He's all over things,' Rogers remembered thinking about Johnson. 'He was proactive in his own development. He's always ahead by a step.' Rogers relied on Johnson early on. 'I'm in a room full of strangers and we're trying to get ready for spring football,' Rogers said. 'Well, Ben does the entire playbook, gets it on the computer, unbelievably detailed. I mean, all over it. And as soon as I got done, I thought to myself, 'Man, this guy's different.' I mean, he is a brilliant, brilliant guy.' Advertisement Rogers and Johnson spent only one year together at Boston College. Johnson was Rogers' tight ends coach. Johnson joined the Dolphins the following year as an offensive assistant, while Rogers went to Temple, where he was the assistant head coach and quarterbacks coach. But their relationship became the eventual link to the Lions eight years later. Rogers recommended Johnson to Lions offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell, who needed to find a quality control coach after a late dismissal on head coach Matt Patricia's staff. Rogers and Bevell worked together previously with the Minnesota Vikings. Bevell called Rogers for recommendations. 'They were looking for a guy they could get involved quite quickly,' said Rogers, who is now a senior offensive assistant/special projects for the Bengals. 'And of course, Ben was on the tip of my tongue.' 'Kev definitely said, 'Hey, it would be worth your time to talk to Ben,'' Bevell said. Johnson would have to start all over after being the Dolphins' receivers coach in 2018. Grunt work would be back on the table. He would be back to breaking down tape for Bevell. And he would be typing up scripts and drawing up play cards for practice. 'You're basically making it easier on the position coaches,' Bevell said. Johnson wanted to be back in the league he believed he belonged in. He also felt he instantly connected with Bevell. It didn't hurt that Johnson shared some mutual acquaintances with Sean Ryan, the Lions' quarterbacks coach at the time. He took the job in September 2019, making him a very late addition. 'Truthfully, it made sense for both Detroit and myself,' Johnson said. 'It was more a matter of making it make sense for my wife and my kids because we didn't want to keep them in Florida and then be separated for, call it, four months of the season. That, for her, didn't make sense. (I'm) still getting paid by Miami, so why would we willingly do this? So we were able to get to the compromise of getting them up there to Detroit, even though it wasn't necessarily guaranteed after that first season. So it was really a great move for our family.' Advertisement It soon became a great move for the Lions. 'Fast forward a little bit as Ben started doing the work, and quickly I was like, 'This guy's way overqualified for this job,'' Bevell said. 'But it was the one, obviously, we had at that time.' Three weeks in, and Bevell told Johnson exactly that, and gave him more to do. 'The stuff that he was doing was easy,' Bevell said. 'He could be a more integral part of presenting some stuff and suggesting plays.' It soon expanded to include game-planning responsibilities, particularly in the passing game. Johnson became the Lions' tight ends coach in 2020. 'He always brought really good ideas, very sound ideas,' Bevell said. 'You know that he knows what he's doing, just from how he presented things, how detailed he was. The attention to detail was important to me. And he's very detailed in what he presents and very detailed in how he coaches.' Bevell became Detroit's interim head coach during the 2020 season, and he later interviewed for the full-time job. He had a job in mind for Johnson. 'Ben Johnson was the coordinator that I put down,' Bevell said. Instead, the Lions hired Dan Campbell. The NFL's coaching carousel was spinning again. Bevell soon became the offensive coordinator of the Jacksonville Jaguars. Johnson, though, remained connected to Campbell because of their time together in Miami. Campbell retained Johnson as tight ends coach, trusting him to coach the position Campbell played in the NFL. Johnson was in a vital position. He was in the middle of everything. 'That's what the tight end position will do, it lets you stay connected to both parts of the game,' Bevell said. 'You're heavily involved in the runs, but depending on who your guys are, you can be heavily involved in the pass game. … And you're learning techniques and scheme from the (offensive) line group, and then you're also learning the pass game. And he was bringing ideas from the pass game from a wide receiver perspective, so to speak. But not only could he speak it from the wide receiver, but he could speak it from the quarterback position as well, being an ex-quarterback himself.' Joe Philbin's first coaching staff with the Dolphins in 2012 was full of future head coaches. Campbell coached tight ends. Zac Taylor was the team's assistant quarterbacks coach. And Johnson was an offensive assistant. Charlie Bullen, now the outside linebackers coach for the New York Giants, was Johnson's roommate at the time. Advertisement 'No. 1, I just was really impressed with his intelligence,' Bullen said. 'He is naturally a very smart person. He walked on at North Carolina, so he was able to get in there on his own accord. And just his work ethic. I mean, the guy works harder than anybody I know. 'So you apply intelligence, plus the willingness to work, and that's what has led him to his success. The guy just really, really dedicates himself to becoming a great coach, and he did from day one and still does now.' Bullen also remembers being in the weight room with Johnson as two young coaches. 'He is super competitive,' Bullen said. 'He's fit, very physically fit, and he kind of has a natural metabolism. It's (BS). He can eat whatever he wants, and he stays fit. But he was an animal in the weight room. … A consistent lifting routine and he could still throw some good weight around even as a coach on minimal sleep.' Johnson and Bullen broke into the NFL together. Their interviews with the Dolphins overlapped. Johnson was hired to aid the offensive staff; Bullen, the defense. Adam Gase retained both of them when he became Miami's head coach in 2016. When Gase's era ended, Bullen joined the Arizona Cardinals in 2019; Johnson had to wait. 'His path stalled out for a minute,' Bullen said. 'When we got let go in Miami from '18 to '19, you know, most of us caught on elsewhere and kept our coaching careers moving. Ben was out for a little bit.' Johnson had to start over. The late nights and minimal sleep were back. 'And he did it,' Bullen said. 'He did it willingly on a staff that he didn't know anybody and had to prove himself all over again from step one and and doing a bunch of tasks that he had done years ago and thought he probably graduated from. 'But he just started there, kept working, and was himself throughout the process and worked his way up. He hit a little moment where there was some coaching adversity, and he just fought through it the way that he does, and he rose to the top from there.' Advertisement In a way, this is when Ben Johnson became Ben Johnson. 'Anytime you get fired, you get humbled a little bit,' Johnson said. 'Here's what it did for me: it gave me a fresh perspective. I walked into that building up in Detroit at the end of training camp in 2019, and I was all smiles. I loved every second of it. Was it the job that I had always envisioned? No. But I was forever grateful for those people to give me a chance to be in that building. 'I would have never envisioned it going the direction it did, to where I was able to climb from quality control to position coach to coordinator to now a head coach. I didn't see that coming. I was just taking it one step at a time and trying to be the best quality control I could be in that position. And then when I got the tight ends job, just trying to be the best tight ends coach that I could be. So it kind of escalated quickly from there.' All the way to the Chicago Bears.