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Lincoln
Gators dive into new season
[SEPT.
4, 2001] Lincoln
Gators Swim Club starts Sept. 4. Any swimmer up to age 18 who can
swim one length of the pool is encouraged to come out and join the
fun. Sign up at Lincoln College Aquatic Center, located behind the
gymnasium, beginning the week of Sept. 4, at 6 p.m. Parents need to
accompany new swimmers to sign up. The swim club is a parent-run,
nonprofit organization.
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Gators
practice from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Swimmers
receive coaching in endurance, speed and competitive technique in
all four strokes, racing starts and turns. Fun swimming drills help
participants develop swimming skills.
New
things this year include:
Swim
level determination and
progress tracking
Progress
will be determined through a new Levels Program based upon swimmers’
technique, endurance and speed.
Swimmer
of the Month
Recognition
will be awarded to the swimmer who displays the best sportsmanship,
progress in technique and participation in events.
Gators
Olympics
In
addition to regularly scheduled swim meets, the club has added a
monthly Gators Olympics swim meet. Each swimmer receives handicap
seconds, allowing an equal opportunity to win any event.
Swim
to Athens, Greece!
The
team is swimming to the home of the next Summer Olympics. Total
yards will be tracked for each swimmer and added together. Miles
swum by the team will be tracked on a map.
Alligator
Court
Did
you splash the coach? Walk funny? Chew gum? Come watch the fun every
third Tuesday right after the parents’ meeting.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Lincoln
Gators Swim Club 2000-2001 season was supported by
the following businesses and individuals:
Lincoln
IGA
Fred
Plesé family
Dr.
Don Sielaff family
Dr.
Dennis Carroll family
Illico
– Apollo Mart
Dave
Weaver family
Jim
Xamis Ford
Cindy
Stover family
Guzzardo’s
Restaurant
NAPA
Family
Chiropractic
Tom
Funk, attorney at law
Century
Dental
Ag-Land
FS
Woody
Jones Insurance
Dr.
Freesmeier
Graue,
Inc.
Charlotte
Griffin
Franz
Express Copy and Parcel
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Smith
fires a no-no
[SEPT.
4, 2001] The
LDN has learned that late last night St. Louis Cardinal rookie lefty
Bud Smith fired a no-hitter against the San Diego Padres in only his
13th major league start. Smith became the 18th rookie in
major league history to accomplish the feat. Another Cards rookie,
Albert Pujols, clobbered his 32nd homer to stake Smith to
an early 2-0 lead.
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Smith’s
gem was the ninth no-hitter in Redbird history and the third this
year, following the ones pitched by Boston’s Hideo Nomo and
Florida’s A.J. Burnett.
Smith’s
date with destiny was especially sweet as he left tickets for 14
immediate family members, including his mom and 10 of his high
school buddies.
The
Redbirds continue to chase the Cubs for the wild card playoff spot.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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High
school football
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Lincoln Railsplitters: 7
Chatham Titans: 47
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High
school volleyball
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Super
rematch nets same results
By Rick Hobler
[AUG.
31, 2001] Rematch:
A second match between the same teams, usually played with vivid
memories of the first match. Super rematch: A match played
between two teams that have recently met in a supersectional. That
was the pre-game billing for last night’s high school girls
volleyball match between the Lincoln Lady Railers and the Morton
Lady Potters. The Railers and the Potters had tangled in last season’s
Class AA Supersectional. The Railers, ultimately on their way to a
fourth-place place finish in the state tournament, readily disposed
of the Potters. But that was last year.
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The
atmosphere at the Potterdome in Morton was nothing like your usual
early season matchup. There were large crowds for both teams, lots
of noise, lots of emotion, a hard-fought battle and ultimately the
same result. The Lady Railers (2-0) defeated Morton (0-1) in
successive games, 15-7, 15-10. But the victory didn’t come easy.
In
Game 1 the Railers jumped out to a quick start, briefly let the
Potters back in, and then finished well. The Railers quickly took a
5-0 lead behind the serving of Kelli Gleason and the front-line play
of Samantha Conrady and Christina Cook. Morton, though, quickly
fought back and brought the score to 6-5. After a series of scoring
exchanges, the score was 8-7. Railer Coach Charissa Howe had had
enough and called a timeout. Whatever she said to her team worked,
especially on Darcy White and Kari McFadden. Darcy, playing
consistently great defense and serving out the last six points of
the game, along with Kari’s net play, shut Morton down and brought
home the 15-7 final score.
Game
2 was not so easy. The two teams were tied on six occasions. The
Railers had to work hard and come from behind to pull off the
victory. Game 2 began with a seesaw battle as each team refused to
let much distance come between them. A whole team effort by the
Railers held Morton to mostly one- and two-point leads. But in the
end, the Railers’ consistency pulled them through to victory.
Strong serving by Darcy White, Megan Franz and an end-game run by
Kelli Gleason provided the back-line offensive punch. Christina Cook
led the way on the front line but was strongly supported throughout
with crucial kills by Michelle McFadden, Samantha Conrady and Kari
McFadden. After another crucial heart-to-heart timeout talk from
coaches Howe and Conrady, with Lincoln down 8-10, the Railers never
looked back. They scored seven unanswered points to finish out the
game and match.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Overall
the Lady Railers looked fundamentally solid and consistently strong.
They hustled throughout the match and refused to lose, especially in
Game 2.
The
strong and emotional front-line play of Samantha, Kari, Christina
and Michelle consistently created points and side outs for the
Railers. I thought Michelle McFadden (in spite of being a freshman
starter, with all the pressure that goes with that characterization)
did a quiet but tremendous job at the net. Kelli Gleason did a
marvelous job of covering every inch of the Potterdome floor while
making excellent sets for her teammates and providing a few surprise
dinks and consistent on-target serves of her own at crucial moments.
Darcy played her usual excellent defense, diving on the floor
everywhere, and served strongly throughout the match. Missy Aper,
Megan Franz, Christina Xamis and Mindy Crawford came in and provided
crucial points and defense throughout the match.
Coach
Howe strategically substituted role players, called timeouts at
appropriate points in both games and apparently motivated her team
to win. After each timeout, the Lady Railers did not allow Morton
another point and went on to win each game.
The
Railers’ next test will come this weekend in the Centennial
Invitational.
The
Lady Railer JV squad showed a never-say-die attitude as they went on
to also defeat Morton, by the match score of 15-12, 8-15 and 15-13.
Among many other highlights was the serving of Katie Green, Julie
Fults and Mia Benitez, along with the convincing kills by Kendall
Paulus.
[Rick
Hobler]
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Local
athletes participate in international competitions
Reinwald’s
team takes third, Zurkamer
comes in sixth in competition abroad
[AUG.
28, 2001] Lori
Reinwald stole home for the only run to lead her team to third place
in People to People Sports Ambassadors competition in Haarlem, The
Netherlands, while Luke Zurkamer, 18, placed sixth in decathlon at
the Deaflympics in Rome, Italy. Both international competitors
are from Lincoln.
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American
teams took all three medals in the People to People softball
competition. The Titans, Reinwald’s team, played two German, one
Dutch and two
American teams. She played center field in all five
matches, clocking as much game time as any Titan.
[Lori Reinwald (right) with her People to People
friends, Thierry (Cherry) from the Netherlands and Leeanne England
from Ottawa, Ill.]
Reinwald
was chosen for the program in part for her bunting ability and used
it to get on base and to move players around the bases. She was also
the fastest runner on her team and stole several bases. In the match against Hamburg, Germany,
for third place, she stole home for the
only score in the game.
Although
practices were less demanding than Reinwald expected, she said her
coach, Bill Callaghan, was "really good" and she
"actually learned a lot in five to six days." She improved
her bunting range, with emphasis on drag, slap and left-handed
bunts.
[Lori Reinwald with her team. Reinwald is
located in the far back right corner.]
The
German teams used slow pitch and Reinwald found it "harder to
hit a slow pitcher." "There was good competition,"
she added; "the games were close." In fact, her first two
games went into extra innings.
Zurkamer’s
best events in the Deaflympics decathlon were the throwing
competitions and 1,500-meter run. In javelin he bested his
qualifying time of a year ago by 30 feet to about 157. In discuss he
improved from 96 to 110 feet and in shot put from 34 feet, 10 inches to 35-1. In
the 1,500 he ran his lifetime best of 4:48.
[Luke Zurkamer]
Results
are approximate because the Deaflympics, affiliated with the
international Olympics, was slow to notify him of results. At the
event about 5,000 athletes from 70 nations competed from July 21 to
Aug. 1. The U.S. team had 290 members. The 70 in track and field won
12 gold and many silver and bronze medals.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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In
June 2000 when he qualified for the U.S. team, Zurkamer scored a
total of 4,200 in the 10 events; in Rome he improved to 4,500. His
coach, Nancy Benson of Maryland, also coached the women’s
heptathlon. The teams practiced in Washington, D.C., beginning July
7.
Overall,
Reinwald rated hers a good experience and found it "neat to
hang out with" the other American and European players. She
experienced no communication problems because everyone spoke
English. All 10 teams plus the boys in People to People Sports
Ambassadors baseball competition attended a barbecue and disco
party.
About
half the 11-day trip (July 29-Aug. 8) was spent touring with a
Dutch-born guide. Reinwald said the group took "lots of canal
cruises and bus tours," saw the Anne Frank house and the World
War II monument in Amsterdam and a mini Holland layout in The Hague,
and viewed "cathedrals and neat old buildings" in Cologne
and elsewhere. She was impressed with the amount of bicycle traffic.
"The bikes will run you over," she said.
[(Left to right) Decathlon competitors from France,
Germany, USA (Zurkamer), Italy and Bulgaria]
Zurkamer,
18, had only one free day to tour Rome. His father, Mark Zurkamer,
said Luke had some trouble communicating because there are 14 sign
languages, and the foreign athletes did not sign as he does. Still
he enjoyed trading parts of his American uniform, including the coat
to a German and the vest for a German hat. He also returned with a
couple of international T-shirts. Mark
and Carmen Zurkamer traveled to Rome to form the cheering section.
Luke hopes to try out as a wrestler for the next Deaflympics, to be
in Melbourne, Australia, in January or February 2005. His father said Luke
is actually a better wrestler than decathlete but was recruited for
the track-and-field team at the 2000 Central State Deaf Track Meet.
Zurkamer
left Aug. 14 for Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., to
practice for the football team. He is a freshman at the university.
[Lynn
Spellman]
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Part
2
Oaks,
Railers battle to be competitive
Jeff
Mayfield interviews John Oaks
[SEPT.
4, 2001] I’ve
heard it said that it takes three years to turn a losing athletic
team into a winner. Others suggest that it takes five years for such
a transformation. Personally, I have no idea how long it takes. I do
know that it will take time. I take my hat off to the new coach of
the Lincoln Railer football team, John Oaks. He has stepped up to
this challenge. We all know what football has been like around here
the last few years. It will do no good to bring up the past again. I
can tell you that the current group of Railers seems to be throwing
support behind coach Oaks and his staff. The LDN hopes that the
community will as well. During the middle of last week the LDN was
able to attend their workout and talk with the coach on the field
immediately after practice.
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[Click here for
Part 1] Q.
Ball control sounds like it will be the key for this week and for
the rest of the season. Will you try to keep the ball between the
tackles, will you spread the offense like you said earlier, or will
you just mix it up?
A.
It depends on how soon we get Sam Moore back. Our offense has taken
a hit, in that we don’t have a tailback with near the capabilities
of Sam. We’ll be working that position by committee. Players who
could see time in that slot are T.J. Swinford, a junior; Scott
Maestas, a senior; and maybe Jason Melton, a sophomore, could rotate
in there some. We want to try to move the ball without Sam, so we’ll
rely on Jim Babbs who’s a good fullback with some quickness. He’s
not real big, but he’s a tough hitter up in the hole. You can’t
just run in, you can’t just run out. We don’t have the speed to
run outside, and we can’t just run up the middle because teams
will gang up there. So, we hope to mix it up some.
Q.
If the offense can get untracked, do you think that will bode well
for the Railers against Chatham?
A.
It’s really hard to assess them from just that one game that we
saw. We really don’t know how we’ll match up against them. They
gave up 30-plus points to Chicago, but Dunbar’s a pretty doggone
good team, too. We’ve got to worry about ourselves and make
ourselves better. We’ve got to go into the game and make as few
mistakes as we can and take it from there. We’ll prepare against
their offense and we’ll prepare against their defense, but the key
for us is to concentrate on ourselves — limiting our mistakes and
improving our execution — and see where that takes us.
Q.
What have been some of the pleasant surprises that you have
encountered since coming to Lincoln?
A.
We’ve been real happy with the players’ attitudes and with their
work ethic. I think we need to get a few things going in the right
direction and gain a little extra intensity and enthusiasm on their
part.
Q.
What about the things that must improve in order to compete?
A.
Two things: We have to get stronger; we must build the weight
program to a higher level, and that’s going to take time. Also, we
must build the numbers back up on every level of the program. We’ve
got too many kids playing both ways right now. We need to have fewer
kids sustaining injuries so that we can become a stronger program.
Hopefully this freshman class that has 40 in it will continue to
grow and get better. That should be a good start in the right
direction for us.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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Q.
Are you wanting to bring up some of those sophomores to plug some of
the gaps you’ve got right now?
A.
I don’t like doing that unless we have to. We had seven or eight
sophs dress Friday night, and many of them were on special teams. We
had one of them in the regular starting lineup. We are trying to
plug some holes the best we can while trying to keep the units
intact. We’d like the sophs to stay together and achieve some
success. When you move ’em up, it’s kind of tough on those
younger levels that you’ve depleted. We’d like to keep them
intact the best we can. Right now we just don’t have the numbers
to completely do that.
Q.
I know the schedule is brutal, but what does it look like after this
week?
A.
We go to Lanphier next week and then on to Jacksonville. Certainly
Lanphier looked awfully tough in their opening win over Peoria
Manual. And Jacksonville had a big upset victory over Jerseyville. I
guess they play Taylorville, and we’ll find out how good everybody
is after that one. There are no break times in the Central State 8.
And this year seems to be more of an up year than most. There are
least five or six teams that are playoff quality. It looks like we’re
going to have our work cut out for us. We’ve just got to get our
own act together to have a chance to be competitive.
I’ve
always believed that anyplace can be competitive. It just takes time
and patience. You have to get the right things in order — like I’ve
been real happy with the booster club, and the community support
here has been great so far. The kids have had a good attitude, and
if we can keep that going through some of this drought time, then I
think we can get things headed in the right direction.
Conclusion
Everyone
here at the LDN and the community is behind you, coach Oaks, and
behind every Railer team.
Good
luck, Railers, throughout the season!
And
if you’re on a local sports team and would like some coverage,
call 732-7443 and let us know about it. You and your team may well
be the next feature!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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Part
1
Oaks,
Railers battle to be competitive
Jeff
Mayfield interviews John Oaks
[SEPT.
1, 2001] I’ve
heard it said that it takes three years to turn a losing athletic
team into a winner. Others suggest that it takes five years for such
a transformation. Personally, I have no idea how long it takes. I do
know that it will take time. I take my hat off to the new coach of
the Lincoln Railer football team, John Oaks. He has stepped up to
this challenge. We all know what football has been like around here
the last few years. It will do no good to bring up the past again. I
can tell you that the current group of Railers seems to be throwing
support behind coach Oaks and his staff. The LDN hopes that the
community will as well. During the middle of the week the LDN was
able to attend their workout and talk with the coach on the field
immediately after practice.
|
Q.
Tell us about this week’s game.
A.
We’ve got the Chatham Titans, which is their new nickname. But
they’ll be the same old tough team, I’m afraid. They have quite
a few starters back from last year’s team. They had a tough
opening loss to Chicago Dunbar. In that game their quarterback was
injured, but they’ve still got quite a few weapons. I’m certain
they may have a little more of a ground game this week, but their
backup quarterback came in and threw the ball pretty well for them,
too. So, it will be a tough opening game here at home.
Q.
How do you plan to go up against them?
A.
We'll do the best we can. We’re beat up pretty badly ourselves
right now. We lost two key starters with injuries and a third one
due to disciplinary action. We’ve kinda got the shorts in trying
to piece together a lineup out there. It’s going to be tough. I
think our best chance is to try to put together some type of
ball-control offense where hopefully we can keep the ball a little
bit and keep it out of their hands.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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Q.
Last week you guys got off to a pretty good start but then seemed to
encounter some bad breaks and some injuries. How did you see it?
A.
We moved the ball fairly decent, but we had some little things go
against us. Some of those were our own doing. When things haven’t
gone well for a team for a number of years, those things bring you
down. We gave up a long run early in the game, and they ended up
scoring a touchdown. We then had a nice drive going ourselves and
got all the way down to the 14-yard line before three penalties in
the next four plays killed the drive. You just can’t do those
kinds of things. I think that took some of the wind out of our
sails. We were still in it, only being down 7-0 at halftime. Then we
had a couple of key injuries, one in the second quarter and one
in the third, that I think hurt us, especially when we were trying to
get the tide turned. Looking back on the game tapes, it wasn’t a
terrible performance; we just need better consistency than what we
showed. And now, obviously, with the injuries, we’ve got an even
tougher job trying to replace those guys.
(To
be continued)
[Jeff
Mayfield]
[Click
here for Part 2]
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Illinois
football 2001
By Greg
Taylor
[AUG.
31, 2001] In
August 2000, most Illinois football fans were greatly anticipating the upcoming
2000 season. Illinois had just completed their first winning season since 1994
and their best overall season since the days of John Mackovic way back in 1990.
The icing on the cake was the phenomenal bowl game victory over Virginia, where
the Illinois offense recorded an incredible 63 points, the most points scored in
any bowl game for ’99-’00.
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The
season started great, with blowout victories over Middle Tennessee in Champaign
and against San Diego State in Southern California. Week three brought a scare
against Pac-10 team California-Berkley in Champaign, a game in which the
franchise, Kurt Kittner, was injured and didn’t play most of the second half.
However, Illinois held on and won 17-15 and appeared poised to make a run for
the Roses.
Unfortunately,
the storybook season ended on Saturday night, Sept. 23, when Illinois blew a
10-point fourth-quarter lead against Michigan and lost 35-31. Including the
Michigan loss, Illinois finished the season 5-6, and only 2-6 in the Big Ten.
While
many Illini fans will point to terrible calls by Big Ten referees which cost
Illinois games against Michigan and Michigan State (and rightfully so), the
bottom line is this: Illinois’ defense in 2000 could not have stopped Sam
Moore, much less the likes of Anthony Thomas (Michigan), T.J. Duckett (Michigan
State), Damien Anderson (Northwestern) or any other quality Big Ten running
back. All of this brings us to one very important question:
What
will football 2001 bring for the Illinois team and their long overdue fans?
Illinois
should once again be very exciting on offense, led by three-year starter and
Heisman Trophy candidate Kurt Kittner at quarterback and several very good skill
position players. However, the defense introduces six new starters, and the
offensive line loses two absolute studs in Marcus Sullivan and Ray Redzeniak,
both of whom will now play on Sundays.
The
LDN today looks at Illinois’ team, position by position, and also highlights
five players you can count on to carry their weight and five players who must
establish themselves early and often if Illinois hopes to improve on last season’s
5-6 season record.
Illinois
position-by-position rating
Quarterback
— A major strength if Kittner stays healthy (he missed significant time in
both the California win and the Ohio State loss and did not dress in the
Northwestern blowout). If Kittner goes down, look out. Dustin Ward is a great
local kid (Centennial HS in Champaign) but is not a Big Ten starting
quarterback. However, Kittner is projected to be the first QB taken in next
April’s NFL draft by Espn.com know-it-all Mel Kiper and has an outside chance
to be in New York City when the ultimate individual prize in college football is
handed out on Dec. 8.
Running
back — Another very strong area for Illinois. Illinois has a great
two-headed monster at tailback with senior Rocky Harvey, a cat-quick player who
can find the end zone and reminds some of Warrick Dunn, and junior Antonio
Harris, a big, strong runner who can carry the ball 25 times a game in the Big
Ten and get major chunks of yards in the process. Illinois’ best fullback last
year, Jameel Cook, left early for the NFL, but Brad Haywood will step in and
Illinois should not miss a beat. Haywood’s strength is blocking and pass
catching, and he should do a great job protecting Kittner’s blind side.
Receiver,
tight end — Sophomore Brandon Lloyd is back and Kittner cannot wait. Lloyd
missed all of last year due to a freak accident in the summer of 2000 but is
back and has big-play capability every time he touches the ball. Junior Walter
Young, junior Greg Lewis, sophomore Eric McGoey and sophomore Dwayne Smith round
out a very solid core, with Young’s 6-foot-5 frame allowing Illinois to have a
very tall target for Kittner. At tight end, four-year starter Josh Wittman
leaves, but Brian Hodges steps right in for Wittman and is definitely a better
athlete. Look for Chatham’s Ken Boyle to get significant minutes at TE as
well.
Offensive
line — This will be the deepest the OL positions have been since coach Ron
Turner came to Illinois in 1997, but the loss of Sullivan and Redzeniak must be
filled by quality. At posting time, center Luke Butkus (senior, 6-4, 290), guard
Jay Kulaga (senior, 6-5, 300) and tackle Tony Pashos (junior, 6-6, 315) all
appear to be returning to their starting positions. The best of the bunch is
Butkus, who will follow his famous uncle, Dick, and play in the NFL. Look for
Rantoul’s Sean Bubin (sophomore, 6-7, 300) and freshman Bucky Babcock
(freshman, 6-6, 399) to round out the starting lineup.
Defensive
line — This is the most crucial position for the 2001 Illinois football
team. If LBs and safeties continue to lead the team in tackles, look for a long
and losing season. However, if ends like Mike O’Brien, Derrick Strong and
returning starter Terrell Washington can step up and create a significant pass
rush, things could be different this season. The real test will be to see if
tackles Jamie Hanton (juco transfer, 290 pounds), sophomore Charles Gilstrap
(290 pounds) and senior Brandon Moore (285 pounds) can imitate Warren Sapp and
stop teams from running up the gut at Illinois’ defense. If teams continue to
run through Illinois, Kittner and crew will find themselves forced to play
catch-up most of the season.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Linebacker
— Illinois returns just one starter, sophomore Jerry Schumacher. However,
Illinois’ staff feels juco transfer Mario Ivy from Edwardsville and Ohioan Ty
Myers are ready to become the next great Illini backers. Depth should be a
strength at this position, as the staff feels they have seven legitimate
starting linebackers, but only Schumacher has game experience. Translation: Only
time will tell if this position continues as an Illini strength.
Defense
backfield — Should be Illinois’ greatest strength on defense, led by
senior starting safeties Bobby Jackson and Muhammad Abdullah, both four-year
starters. They are backed up at safety by junior Marc Jackson, who will see
plenty of time when Illinois goes to the nickel (five defense backs in the game)
or dime (six defensive backs in the game) defense. The starting corners will be
sophomore Christian Morton, former quarterback and the fastest player on the
Illini roster, and junior Eugene Wilson, a two-year starter. Illinois plans to
blitz early and often, leaving Morton and Wilson "on an island" with
quality receivers. However, Turner and staff feel that Wilson is a great
cornerback already and mention the name "Deion" when reflecting on the
ability of Morton. Juco transfer Mike Hall will see serious minutes as well.
Kicking,
punting — J.J. Tubbs will have a chance to be Illinois’ regular
place-kicker but will have to show up game in and game out, something that did
not happen last fall. Turner will not allow senior Steve Fitts to both punt and
place kick, as the Illini staff felt Fitts’ punting, his real strength,
suffered in the second half of many games. Look for Fitts to punt exclusively
and possibly challenge for All-Big Ten punter. If Tubbs struggles, Turner will
look to true freshman Steve Weatherford from Terre Haute North HS.
Five players you
can count on
1.
Kurt Kittner — He is the real deal, the franchise. If he is healthy, records
will fall.
2.
Brandon Lloyd — His big-play ability and deep threat will make a major impact.
3.
Luke Butkus — A great center who anchors a very strong line.
4.
Rocky Harvey — A three-year starter who leaves it all on the field.
5.
Steve Fitts — A really good punter who will help Illinois win the "field
position" game.
Five players who
must step up
1.
Christian Morton, CB/WR — Could become the program’s second most exciting
player.
2.
Dwayne Smith, WR — Has the athletic ability to give Illinois’ their best 1-2
receiver punch since the Williams boys played in the ’80s.
3.
Sean Bubin, OT — Must replace All-American Sullivan — has the talent, but
will he come through when needed?
4.
Jerry Schumacher — Needs to play more like Dana Howard (circa 1994) than
Michael Young (circa 2000).
5.
J.J. Tubbs or Steve Weatherford, K — Several games could come down to how good
Illinois’ place-kicking is in 2001.
Season forecast
Sept.
1 at California — Illinois wins a wild one, 35-24.
Sept.
8 vs. Northern Illinois — Illinois blows out the Huskies, 49-14.
Sept.
15 vs. Louisville — Illinois outlasts the Cards, 38-28.
Sept.
22 at Michigan — Big Blue too tough for Illinois, 35-28.
Oct.
6 vs. Minnesota — Illinois breaks through against the Gophers, 31-21.
Oct.
13 at Indiana — Illinois says goodbye to Randle El in style, 38-17.
Oct.
20 vs. Wisconsin — Badgers grind out victory, 24-21.
Nov.
3 at Purdue — Illinois falls to the retooled Tiller team, 31-24.
Nov.
10 vs. Penn State — Illinois overcomes Joe Pa, 31-23.
Nov.
17 at Ohio St. — The Bucks are too much, 31-17.
Nov.
11 vs. Northwestern — Illinois upsets the Cats on Turkey Day, 35-34.
Final projected
record: 7-4 (4-4 in Big Ten)
[Greg
Taylor]
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