With no spring practice, coaches try to fill void

Coach Brian Kelly (above), shown before Notre Dame’s bowl victory over Iowa State, said coaches are trying to gure out ways to re-create some of what has been lost since spring practices were wiped out by the coronavirus pandemic. “Your football team is under construction. A new group of players that require time. Those hours mean a lot,” Kelly said. (AP/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
Coach Brian Kelly (above), shown before Notre Dame’s bowl victory over Iowa State, said coaches are trying to gure out ways to re-create some of what has been lost since spring practices were wiped out by the coronavirus pandemic. “Your football team is under construction. A new group of players that require time. Those hours mean a lot,” Kelly said. (AP/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

Since taking over as Florida State coach in December, Mike Norvell has spent seemingly endless hours laying the foundation of his program.

Winter is time for coaches to deliver a consistent message, build the culture they want and get players to buy into a way of going about their business whether they are in the weight room, a meeting room or classroom.

Norvell has seen plenty of positive signs. Spring practice is the first opportunity to see how it translates to the field. The Seminoles got in three practices before the coronavirus outbreak shut down college sports and upended nearly everything else.

"You spend so much time teaching them why we do things. And you're hopeful to get the chance to show them some of the payoff of that through spring practice," Norvell said.

Normally, college football teams all over the country would be preparing for the upcoming season. Installing new schemes. Working on fundamentals. Developing less experienced players and expanding the skills of veterans. Building a cohesive team, players and coaches connecting.

That's gone now and coaches are trying to figure out how to re-create some of what has been lost.

"Your football team is under construction," Notre Dame Coach Brian Kelly said. "A new group of players that require time. Those hours mean a lot. You begin to develop the DNA of your football team."

Kelly is in Year 11 with the school and the Fighting Irish are coming off a third consecutive season of double-digit victories. He replaced offensive coordinator Chip Long after last season, but did so promoting quarterbacks coach Tommy Rees. The Irish also have a fifth-year senior quarterback in Ian Book heading into his third season as the starter.

Kelly said his top concern was making sure players stay on top of their now online academics. Notre Dame normally offers no online classes.

"We're all academic advisers," Kelly said of his staff.

Miami Coach Manny Diaz doesn't have Kelly's luxuries. The Hurricanes have a new offense under coordinator Rhett Lashlee (Springdale, Arkansas Razorbacks) and a new quarterback in Houston transfer D'Eriq King.

"You can really hone in on the techniques, fundamentals [during spring practice]," Diaz said. "That's the time the players are introduced to the new scheme and then they get a chance in the summer to grasp it on their own before we get back together again for training camp in August."

Spring practice across major college football is typically done by the end of April. The ACC has canceled all athletic-related activities through the academic year; the other Power Five conferences have suspended spring athletics, including practices, though various dates.

"I'm not going to be overly optimistic about the return to practice," SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said. "We haven't fully closed that opportunity but I think practically that window is pretty narrow."

Coaches are hopeful some of the time they have lost in the spring might be given back in the summer, either through minicamps or earlier starts to preseason practices. But there is so much uncertainty the old coaching cliche of taking things one day at a time has never been more relevant.

Indiana strength and conditioning coach Aaron Wellman said he is trying to individualize workouts to match what players have available.

"We've provided the workouts through an app on their iPhones so that they can download their workouts, we can track their progress," Wellman said.

Illinois center Doug Kramer, a senior, said nothing compares to the amount of repetitions a player gets in spring ball "to work on specific skills that you can bring to the team sets."

"Also, you're going to miss out on those team reps, which are big just to get the timing of the offense and the repetition of the defense," he said.

Norvell said he planned to send his players a five-minute video of himself, twice a week. Having them hear his voice and see his face is more about building trust than teaching football.

"There's a lot of uncertainty with everyone," Norvell said. "Just to continue to re-emphasize our commitment to their development in any way possible and just let them know that we're here for them."

Sports on 03/29/2020

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