AstroDin wrote: ↑Mon Jan 18, 2021 8:03 amJackal's post prompted me to look at the MLB depth.
Bryce McCormick 6-2 214 RSFR —
McCormick was injured and in a boot (surgery) as 2020 preseason practice begin, I'm pretty sure Bryce did play some against Point. McCormick was highly recruited out of CPA and appears to fit the mold of a Fruman MLB.
Nick Kuzemka 6-2 212 RSFR —
I think Kuzemka was a PWO - in the practices I watched he caught my attention. Nick appeared in three games and had six tackles. Nick appears to have a good shot at developing into a nice role player at MLB.
Dan Scianna 5-10 198 RSFR —
Scianna played against Point.
Evan DiMaggio 6-3 230 FR —
I have to temper my expectations of Evan as a true freshman playing MLB. That said DiMaggio has the pedigree (Buford HS) and size and skill set to be another Furman great.
Ty Youngblood 6-0 216 FR —
When Furman started recruiting Youngblood the thing that stood out to me was his toughness. Youngblood was a great two-way player in high school (fullback and linebacker).
A few thoughts on this.
MLB is one of those positions that you are not going to see a lot of rotation. So, my expectation is that Gilby will be the starter and will probably be out there most of the time.
I think we have enough depth at the moment to get really creative with how we use our front seven. This is an example I like from the Point game, but you saw Furman do similar stuff a lot of the season:
Furman is a base 3-4 defense, but this is more of a 4-2-5. Furman substitutes a CB for MLB and moves the SPUR (usually Wilkins) inside. They move the BANDIT (Agbenou here) down and Lawrence to the edge to give more of a traditional 4-3 look at DE. The two DTs are two NGs.
I'd expect to see a lot of this sort of thing from Furman - using limited substitutions to change up defensive looks while staying strong against run and pass.
I'm not breaking any new ground here, of course. This is what defenses want to be able to do. It's just been a long time since we've had the personnel to do it.