On  Camp:
“I  thought it was a good camp. I thought our guys worked extremely hard, the  players, the coaches and the staff, to put us in a position to get us in our  season. We were fortunate that not a lot of guys got banged up, hopefully that  trend can continue. We’re not where we need to be, to be the football team we’re  capable of being, but probably a lot of coaches in the country feel that way.  We’re just going to have to keep working through it, we’re going to be a work in  progress, and we just have to see how much progress we can  make.”
On  the possibility of throwing the ball more:
“We  have a senior quarterback, so we’re certainly more apt to throw the ball this  year than Mike’s first year as a starter. But as I said before, having an  experienced quarterback, it’s not just about throwing the ball, it’s about  running the offense, getting in and out of the right plays, we feel more  comfortable with that stuff.”
On  the wide receivers:
“Kenny  [Britt] and Ty [Underwood] have played a lot of football for us and they have  been very productive. The experience they have leads us to feel comfortable  there. Dennis [Campbell] and Tim [Brown] are the guys that have done things for  us at different times, but we need consistency from them. They are both electric  players, but consistency from them is going to be the key. I anticipate  consistency from them, and that’s going to give us a lot of depth. Then we have  a bunch of young guys that I think will be able to contribute in their own  way.”
On  Fresno State’s Quarterback, Tom Brandstater:
“He’s  very comfortable in what he’s doing. Look at his stats from last year, 63  percent completion rating, 15 touchdowns and five interceptions, those are all  very telling statistics. He’s mobile, to the extent that he can get out of  trouble very well. They don’t ask him to be an option quarterback or a run-read  quarterback, but that doesn’t mean they’re not going to because they do have a  new offensive coordinator [Doug Nussmeier], but that has not been the demands  put upon him. But when he is under pressure he’s got a great feel in the pocket  and he can escape.”
On  the similarities between Fresno State and Rutgers:
“They  lost a really good running back, I think he’s in the NFL now. They have some  young backs that will fill in there, they played some last year like our backs  did, but now it’s their show. They have a very good tight end, a very good  player. We are going to have to know where he is at all times. They are multiple  in their schemes offensively. They shift in motion and move a ton, they do some  unconventional things. But make no mistake they are going to bloody your nose  and run the football, so we better match toughness play for play. Defensively  they have a real good defensive tackle [Jon Monga], he’s a real disruptive  force. Their middle linebacker is a really good player, and then one of their  safeties is a really active guy, and their corner [A.J. Jefferson] is a really  active guy. The defense plays very, very hard. And their special teams group is  extremely good. That’s going to be an area where the game might be decided, and  it always can be, but they are very good in that area and we’re young in that  area, they have a new kick off guy, so we’ll see. It should be a great  opener.”
On  Rutgers’ toughness:
“I  think we’re a tough football team, but we do need to get tougher. We play  extremely hard, and we are tough, but we’re not as precise as we need to be, or  as consistent as I want us to be, but that goes with the first  game.”
On  the team’s mentality before the season-opener:
“You  only get to play 12 games, so no matter who you’re opening with, you’re excited  and you’re ripping at it ready to go. I think there is a little bit extra  because we know that this team is something else. Our best may not be good  enough to beat them, and that’s a fact. Right now our best might not be good  enough to handle them. But if we don’t play our best, we have no  chance.”
On  his relationship with Fresno State head coach Pat  Hill:
“We’ve  known each other. He’s a very good football coach and a good person. He’ll bring  a team here that’s ready to play and is tough. I see a team there that’s similar  to us, schematically and the way they play.”
On  Fresno State’s offense:
“You  talk about balance, they’re balanced. Over 200 from both sides, over the course  of 13 games, that’s balanced. From knowing Pat, they’re going to do what he  does. He was an offensive line coach before he became a head coach, so he  believes in what he believes. What you have to do is try to figure out what the  new offensive coordinator [Doug Nussmeier] is going to add to that. I know that  they are going to come and lead up with that fullback and try to smash you, and  that’s what we’re going to see and they are going to see that from us. It’s the  other things, the periphery things, that you have to be ready for. Special  plays, formations, different things, maybe there will be option, maybe gun zone.  We prepare for it anyway in the preseason, and even if they haven’t shown a lot  of it, you know something different will show its head.”
On  facing Fresno State’s offense:
“As a  defensive coach, you are worried about every offense whether they have the  119th ranked stats or the top-ranked stats. Because defense in and of  itself is kind of a negative. If they gain one yard you’re in the hole. So what  you try to do is cut your losses, you try to defend. This group is certainly  potent. It’s going to take every ounce of what we have to have a chance to  win.”
On  Rutgers’ defensive backs:
“Obviously the twins are our guys  at corner. Then we have some really good young defensive backs playing behind  them. Brandon Bing is going to be very good. The guy who is a steadying factor  back there is an older guy in Billy Anderson. All Billy does is do everything  right, so he’s going to play. Then you look at the young guys, Brandon Jones is  a good football player, he and David Rowe may get on the field. So there are  some young guys who can run and who can play, they’re just  inexperienced.”
On  Rutgers’ defensive line:
“We’re  building that as we go. I think Charlie Noonan had his best period of play over  this camp. He continues to get better. Blair Bines is getting ready, but he’s  going to be forced to play maybe before he’s ready to play, but that’s the way  it goes. I think we’re ok at the ends, we have Jon Freeny and Gary Watts, it’s  the inside where you wonder what it’s going to be.”
On  Rutgers’ linebackers:
“With  the linebackers, I knew they would play hard last year, and now I think now they  are more experienced, and I think they are more comfortable, which makes me feel  more comfortable. I think we were productive last year. You look at Malast’s  stats, he was our leading tackler. But I think we’re going to play better. I  think that our linebackers will play more consistently.”
On  Rutgers’ running game:
“I’m  not concerned, because I think we’ll be able to run the ball, but until we do I  can’t be sure. We’ll have to wait and see on Monday, line up against someone  else and run the football. I won’t be concerned with it until something makes me  concerned.”
On  Rutgers’ running back position:
“I  think Mason Robinson and Kordell Young are going to be the first two guys, not  necessarily in any order, just see what plays we’re running. Our offensive  coaches do a good job of knowing this is what he does best and this is what he  does best, and then try to fit that. So we’ll do that today and tomorrow, really  hone in on which runs are for whom, and then go from  there.”
On  Rutgers’ ability to run outside:
“I  think they can run outside, but I think they can run inside as well. They both  have a good sense of inside running. I think it will be a mix, and I think it  may even be a better mix than it was because we are more capable of going  outside.”
On  Rutgers’ offensive line:
“I  think these young guys will be good. Caleb Ruch has never played in a college  football game, so Fresno State will be his first, and that will be interesting.  I believe he’s ready, he’s worked very hard to get himself ready, to understand  what it is to play every down on a Division I level. Now that’s in practice, so  now he has to do it in a game. Howard Barbieri has established himself as  someone we can count on. Kevin Haslam I believe will be back and will be ok.  From a health standpoint, I think Anthony Davis will be ok. So I think we’ll  have our top six guys ready to go, and if we have to go deeper than that, we’ll  have to do some shuffling of the deck.”
On  the relationship between quarterback Mike Teel and his offensive  line:
“We’re  going to find out how good they are. You have two guys who are in NFL training  camps right now and Mike Fladell, who should be in camp, in my opinion. That’s  pretty hard to replace. I’m sure in Teel’s mind he’s confident in his offensive  line, but let’s see you do it. Teel can’t worry about that, he has to do his job  and trust that they will do theirs. But those are the unknowns, so until you see  them do it, how do you know?”
On  RU defensive lineman Alex Silvestro: 
“He’s  getting there. Alex is another young guy, and going down inside is another world  you have to learn, and Alex is getting better every day. Jamaal Westerman could  always go back there, but I just felt that here was a guy who had played a  position for four years now and I wanted to see how he’d do down there, and he’d  be fine. But I would rather not disrupt two positions.”
On  watching former Scarlet Knights in the NFL:
“I’m  just too busy, so I really just don’t have time to watch NFL games. I just found  out Jeremy Zuttah started a game the other night. Pedro Sosa is in a camp now, I  just found that out yesterday, and that’s great. I root for them but we’re so  busy, and they send us texts about what they’re up to. But I haven’t really  watched any pro football, I watched maybe 10 plays of the Browns-Giants game,  and that’s it. But it is exciting. When we got here we said eventually that line  is going to start flowing to the NFL, and once it does it won’t stop. That’s  what is happening, that’s for sure. You look at this group of seniors now, there  are going to be many of them playing in the NFL, and that’s what good programs  do.”
On current Scarlet Knights  speaking with former Scarlet Knights in the NFL:
“Could  be good and could be bad. Could be good, because for kids at that age, the level  of player that these guys are, the NFL is it. Anything they see, they talk about  it, they love it. They just have to be sure that they understand that there’s  good and there’s bad. Don’t wish away time because there’s nothing like your  college football experience. That I can tell them, I’ve been in both sides, and  I think the NFL guys have told them that. This is it. The next one is a job.  This is it.”
On  Rutgers’ linebackers:
“I  thought they played well. Right now the starting three are Manny Abreu, Ryan  D’Imperio and Kevin Malast. Damaso has gotten a lot better this year, as has  Ryan, so Damaso Munoz is going to play some. Jim Dumont has played his way into  the two-deep. Antonio Lowery is in the two-deep, which is good for him. So not  only are the first three guys doing well, but I think the backups are  too.”
On  facing a team like Fresno State in the first game:
“In  college football, you don’t have preseason games, so everything is right off the  bat. We have a lot of situations where have to face some of the best right off  the bat, so we better be ready. I don’t know if our best is good enough, but  anything less we’re not going to have a chance. There are guys on this team who  have never played in games, so we don’t know how they are going to respond. We  have new coaches that have not coached together in a real game, so we tried  using headsets during scrimmages. But the pressures of a real game are  definitely different than anything you can create in  practice.”
On  veteran leadership in the defensive backfield:
“It’s  great to have Courtney Greene and the twins back there. As long as they’ve been  playing, they help us. We discuss ideas with them, ask them if they think this  can work or that can work. It reminds me of working in the NFL, going back and  forth with guys. If you have a young guy, it really doesn’t do much to ask him,  because he really doesn’t know what problems are out there. He might tell you  what he likes, but he doesn’t know how it’s going to fly. Guys like Courtney and  the twins, they’ve played a lot of football, so they know. They come back and  say, coach remember when we did this, that happened, and that’s  great.”
On  the strong safety position:
“That’s the best of those two  guys, Zaire Kitchen and Joe Lefeged. Each day we were alternating who was with  the first team, and I never realized. I had to ask Coach Pinkham who was out  there at safety, because each one of them did a great job, and I feel very  comfortable with both. We want to make sure both of them play, because there’s  no reason that one of them should be tired when we have another on the  sideline.”
On  Rutgers as a physical team:
“I  think we have a team that will punish you. Especially a guy like George Johnson,  he’s a guy that has put some hits on people this training camp where I was  worried they weren’t getting up.”
On  the opening game being broadcast on ESPN:
“I  think it’s great to be on national television. If you win some games, you’ll get  on television, and if you don’t win, you won’t be on television. Our job is to  make sure that we keep winning, and television will take care of itself. But it  is great, they have UCLA and Tennessee after us, so that’s a great afternoon and  evening of football.”
On  the possibility of Kenny Britt returning punts:
“He’s  working there, but I’m not sure he’s the best punt returner, so that’s why we  wouldn’t have him in there. If he’s the best, then we may be careful because if  he’s gassed or tired we wouldn’t want him out there. But if he’s the best and  that gives us the best chance to win, then that play is just as important to me  as him running a takeoff route.”
On  communicating on the field:
“I  think our leadership does that more than we do. When we’re out there playing we  try to communicate on defense. We’ve told them that they are at home this week,  so the good news is that the opposing offense can’t hear themselves, but the bad  news is that we can’t hear ourselves either. So when you’re making checks and  changing the defensive coverages, you have to do hand signals, you have to be  loud, you have to communicate, and not many high school players have to deal  with a game where they can’t even hear themselves talking. We try to give them  experience with crowd noise, and making the crowd noise deafening so that they  have to communicate via hand signals. All that is fine, but then you throw that  one variable of the pressure to perform in a game, and you don’t always know how  it’s going to go. That’s why weird things happen in  games.”
On  the college football schedule:
“You  haven’t played a game in so long. You play the first one, then bang 10 days  later you’re playing another one, and then six days later another game, so the  key I think is to treat every game like the first game of the season, approach  it with that kind of enthusiasm and newness, so we will work on that. It’s not a  problem for the actual first game, it’s when you get into the year and you’re  banged up and the game is coming too fast for you, then you have to have that  kind of attitude.”
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