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SportsMonday, August 20, 2007 11:19 PM CDT
In Zook’s third season, Illini thinking bowl
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CHAMPAIGN -- Since Ron Zook rolled into Champaign in 2005, he’s consistently preached that a coach needs three seasons to put his stamp on a football program.

Illinois begins its third season under Zook on Sept. 1 and, true to the coach’s maxim, the team will be almost entirely a product of his famously intense recruiting.

Illinois has better athletes, greater depth and more promise than it had in either of Zook’s first two seasons, during which the Illini won four games and lost 19.

And, though many of those players are still relatively young, some of the older Illini are talking about a bowl game where the program hasn’t been since 2002.

“I expect to go to a bowl game and finish in the upper echelon in the Big Ten, and I don’t see why not,” senior linebacker J Leman said.

The biggest reason for Leman’s optimism might be the defense the All Big Ten selection anchors.

The defense, No. 3 in the Big Ten against the run last season and No. 5 against the pass, kept Illinois in games last year. Most of the starters are back.

Illinois’ offense, while young, is long on potential, too.

Starting running back Rashard Mendenhall ran for 653 yards — 8.2 a carry — as a reserve last year. And sophomore quarterback Juice Williams has a year of tough starting experience.

Working against the Illini is their schedule.

Three of Illinois’ opponents are preseason Top 25 picks — No. 5 Michigan, No. 10 Ohio State and No. 18 Penn State. And two more — Missouri and Iowa — didn’t miss the list by much.

“There’s nothing you can do about that,” Zook said. But, as he said it, he rolled his eyes and put his head in his hands in way that suggested those five games have made him wonder “why us?”

But Zook is nothing if not optimistic that the team that will open the season against Missouri is already better than its predecessor.

For one thing, Zook says, Illinois shouldn’t have to count on very young players to the degree it did in 2006. The coach acknowledged after last season that he had asked Williams, for one, to do too much.

As a freshman, Williams completed just 39 percent of his passes. He threw as many interceptions — nine — as he did touchdowns.

Williams’ cast of targets likely will be better this fall, too, particularly with the addition of freshman Regus Benn. The Washington, D.C. product’s decision to come to Champaign left his big-name suitors — Florida State, Notre Dame and Maryland among them — scratching their heads.

The offensive line also relied heavily last year on freshmen and sophomores. Behind them, Illinois led the Big Ten in rushing. But Williams carried the ball 154 times, more than any Illini running back. Some of those carries, in Zook’s words, were the product of a freshman “running for his life.”

This year’s line should be far more experienced. Senior right tackle Akim Millington started nine games last season, and left guard Martin O’Donnell, another senior, and junior center Ryan McDonald each started all 12.

Mendenhall has the starting running back job to himself. He said he’s added about 20 pounds since last season, and now weighs about 220.

The weight, he says, should serve him well in the physical Big Ten, where he says “you’re going to run over a lot more people than run around them.”

While Williams is the face of the program, Zook says Mendenhall is the player most capable of carrying the team.

Mendenhall showed that potential last fall in his only start, a 26-12 loss to Penn State, with 161 yards on 14 carries.

“I think he’ll be as good a back as there is in this league,” Zook said. “He’s got to be durable; he has to hold onto the ball. He is capable off being all those things.”

Defensively, Illinois’ biggest question might be who calls the plays.

Defensive coordinator Vince Okruch left the team for unexplained reasons in July and isn’t expected to return. In his place, Zook made assistants Dan Disch and Curt Mallory co-coordinators.

Zook hasn’t decided who will call the defensive shots, and has said it could be Disch, Mallory, both of them, or maybe the head coach and the two assistants.

Most of last year’s starters are back, including Leman and fellow linebacker Antonio Steele, and defensive backs Vontae Davis, Justin Harrison and Kevin Mitchell.

The defense also has its own high-end recruits: linebacker Martez Wilson, a 6-4, 236-pound Chicago Simeon product who was expected to land at a much more prominent school, and 320-pound defensive tackle Josh Brent from Bloomington Central Catholic. Zook expects both to play.

By David Mercer

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHAMPAIGN — Since Ron Zook rolled into Champaign in 2005, he’s consistently preached that a coach needs three seasons to put his stamp on a football program.

Illinois begins its third season under Zook on Sept. 1 and, true to the coach’s maxim, the team will be almost entirely a product of his famously intense recruiting.

Illinois has better athletes, greater depth and more promise than it had in either of Zook’s first two seasons, during which the Illini won four games and lost 19.

And, though many of those players are still relatively young, some of the older Illini are talking about a bowl game where the program hasn’t been since 2002.

“I expect to go to a bowl game and finish in the upper echelon in the Big Ten, and I don’t see why not,” senior linebacker J Leman said.

The biggest reason for Leman’s optimism might be the defense the All Big Ten selection anchors.

The defense, No. 3 in the Big Ten against the run last season and No. 5 against the pass, kept Illinois in games last year. Most of the starters are back.

Illinois’ offense, while young, is long on potential, too.

Starting running back Rashard Mendenhall ran for 653 yards — 8.2 a carry — as a reserve last year. And sophomore quarterback Juice Williams has a year of tough starting experience.

Working against the Illini is their schedule.

Three of Illinois’ opponents are preseason Top 25 picks — No. 5 Michigan, No. 10 Ohio State and No. 18 Penn State. And two more — Missouri and Iowa — didn’t miss the list by much.

“There’s nothing you can do about that,” Zook said. But, as he said it, he rolled his eyes and put his head in his hands in way that suggested those five games have made him wonder “why us?”

But Zook is nothing if not optimistic that the team that will open the season against Missouri is already better than its predecessor.

For one thing, Zook says, Illinois shouldn’t have to count on very young players to the degree it did in 2006. The coach acknowledged after last season that he had asked Williams, for one, to do too much.

As a freshman, Williams completed just 39 percent of his passes. He threw as many interceptions — nine — as he did touchdowns.

Williams’ cast of targets likely will be better this fall, too, particularly with the addition of freshman Regus Benn. The Washington, D.C. product’s decision to come to Champaign left his big-name suitors — Florida State, Notre Dame and Maryland among them — scratching their heads.

The offensive line also relied heavily last year on freshmen and sophomores. Behind them, Illinois led the Big Ten in rushing. But Williams carried the ball 154 times, more than any Illini running back. Some of those carries, in Zook’s words, were the product of a freshman “running for his life.”

This year’s line should be far more experienced. Senior right tackle Akim Millington started nine games last season, and left guard Martin O’Donnell, another senior, and junior center Ryan McDonald each started all 12.

Mendenhall has the starting running back job to himself. He said he’s added about 20 pounds since last season, and now weighs about 220.

The weight, he says, should serve him well in the physical Big Ten, where he says “you’re going to run over a lot more people than run around them.”

While Williams is the face of the program, Zook says Mendenhall is the player most capable of carrying the team.

Mendenhall showed that potential last fall in his only start, a 26-12 loss to Penn State, with 161 yards on 14 carries.

“I think he’ll be as good a back as there is in this league,” Zook said. “He’s got to be durable; he has to hold onto the ball. He is capable off being all those things.”

Defensively, Illinois’ biggest question might be who calls the plays.

Defensive coordinator Vince Okruch left the team for unexplained reasons in July and isn’t expected to return. In his place, Zook made assistants Dan Disch and Curt Mallory co-coordinators.

Zook hasn’t decided who will call the defensive shots, and has said it could be Disch, Mallory, both of them, or maybe the head coach and the two assistants.

Most of last year’s starters are back, including Leman and fellow linebacker Antonio Steele, and defensive backs Vontae Davis, Justin Harrison and Kevin Mitchell.

The defense also has its own high-end recruits: linebacker Martez Wilson, a 6-4, 236-pound Chicago Simeon product who was expected to land at a much more prominent school, and 320-pound defensive tackle Josh Brent from Bloomington Central Catholic. Zook expects both to play.




2007 Illini

SCHOOL COLORS: Orange and blue

FOUNDED: 1867

ENROLLMENT: 38,000

LOCATED: Champaign and Urbana.

COACH: Ron Zook, 3rd year at Illinois (4-19)

2006 RECORD: 2-10

LAST BOWL: 2002 Sugar Bowl, lost to LSU, 47-34

STADIUM: Memorial Stadium, 57,078 (12,000 seats temporarily lost to renovation project)

RETURNING STARTERS: 18

KEY PLAYERS: QB Juice Williams; RB Rashard Mendenhall; WR Kyle Hudson; LB J Leman; DB Vontae Davis

KEY DEPARTURES: Defensive coordinator Vince Okruch; RB Pierre Thomas; DB Alan Ball

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING: “I expect to go to a bowl game and finish in the upper echelon in the Big Ten, and I don’t see why not.” — Senior linebacker J Leman.

2007 schedule

Sept. 1: Missouri (at St. Louis)

Sept. 8: Western Illinois

Sept 15: at Syracuse

Sept 22: at Indiana

Sept 29: Penn State

Oct. 6: Wisconsin

Oct. 13: at Iowa

Oct. 20: Michigan

Oct. 27: Ball State

Nov. 3: at Minnesota

Nov. 10: at Ohio State

Nov. 17: Northwestern

Get area high school sports scores and statistics at Varsity Sports.

Take a look
Illinois coach Ron Zook, center, shouts out to his players toward the end of a football game against Indiana in Champaign, Ill., Saturday, Oct. 7, 2006. Indiana won 34-32. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)
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Reader comments on this story - 11 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

To: Big Red wrote on Aug 21, 2007 9:12 PM:

" Uh Ohhhh, looks like someone has Zook envy. The Zooker is not going anywhere. The only cause for an exit would be the Zooker taking a better gig. 7 wins......seriously, use your head little red. "

to: JB wrote on Aug 21, 2007 9:08 PM:

" Keep dreaming? The U of I has been in bowl games before and will be in a bowl game again. "

BIGRED wrote on Aug 21, 2007 6:05 PM:

" He better win! He can recruit but.... he is not that great of a coach. Last year was a good example. The coaching staff lost at least 3 games for the illini with clock management and very questionable play calling. He is on a short leash with all they have done to the stadium and season ticket holders grumbling! He has to win 7 games I think or... UUH OOOH!! "

To JB, Crazy and Ha wrote on Aug 21, 2007 4:28 PM:

" You obviously haven't put much thought into your comments about the Illini making a bowl this year. Your comments are made probably just to create a stir over here. It will be difficult but not impossible for the Illini to make a bowl this year. With the talent they have they can do it. If they don't then they should not be criticized as sometimes it takes 5 years to turn a program around. By the way Turner took them to a bowl in his third year and they had less talent then. "

crazy wrote on Aug 21, 2007 3:20 PM:

" people are nuts to think that they will make it to a bowl game. Zook has always been able to recruit but cannot coach. "

ha!!! wrote on Aug 21, 2007 2:39 PM:

" this guy must be smokin' a bowl if he thinks these guys can make it to a bowl!!! "

Kent wrote on Aug 21, 2007 2:29 PM:

" I believe Wisconsin is also rated.Questions the reliability of the writer.Go Badgers. "

LoopIllini wrote on Aug 21, 2007 11:58 AM:

" WIU students can't even tell time without assistance...how are they gonna rock anyone's clock? "

U of I fan wrote on Aug 21, 2007 9:10 AM:

" Way to go Zook, keep Notre Dame, Florida State, Miami "scratching their heads" how you got "THEIR" recruits...bring it home baby.. "

go wiu... wrote on Aug 21, 2007 7:35 AM:

" leathernecks all the way baby...they will rock u of i's clock! "

JB wrote on Aug 21, 2007 7:33 AM:

" Hahahaha, DU of I in a bowl? Keep dreamin'. "

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