Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, everybody, Welcome to the Hunley Huddle powered by Nova
ho Loans.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I'm here with the Lamont Honey and Ricky Hunley. I'm
Steve Rivera, well, I'm Lamont. Ricky Cann here right now
on the bottom. Just go on the bottom. He gotta
plug in.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Welcome everybody. How's everybody going today? Our second show of
the Hunley Huddle. Great to have you back. What was
the feedback? Round one, Round one, round two?
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Now, how was it? What was the feedback? I think
they love you Ricky and Lamont. Okay, I'll take it.
Who's the boy? They We got some good feedback. We
had quite a few people telling us that game, oh
good good, good goodness. Show here.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Let's go back real quick and we'll talk about and
I know Ricky you played a little journalist here, and
we'll hear from a coach Brennan. We'll talk to some
of the other assistants on last week's show. Uh, just
real briefly, your your synopsis of last week.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
I thought, you know, overall the game was a solid game. Uh. Defensively,
you know, the turnovers is the key. I mean they
got five turnovers. You get five turnovers, you should win.
The game, so it was a plus five and the
turnover margin. So the key is winning third downs and
we didn't do as well offensively on third downs, but
you did enough on defense third down wise that we
(01:24):
say they had them and our running game was on point.
So you control the ball, you control the game, you know,
with the running game, and we'll see a better know
of this week for sure. Okay, I too. I mean
I think defense is what really controlled the whole tempo
of the game and the outcome of the game. I
was very impressed with the defense. I mean I I
(01:44):
even love you know, our defensive coordinator as far as
his mancho is Evalid and they were I mean, those
guys are flying around. I mean I was so proud
of seeing so many helmets around the ball. Yeah. And
again that's that's where we come from. I mean, we
come from that type of football. Beat you at the football,
and I was so proud of watching the defense in
(02:07):
that fashion offensive wise, you know, I'm still I want
to see more from Noah. Yeah, man, I need to
see more from Noah. And this is a good game
to set up for that.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
So Ricky, when you're watching the game now in your
capacity or your title. Do you watch it differently now,
maybe compared to two years when you're on the field.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
Yeah, Well, when you're on the field, I mean you're
in the game plan. I mean you're calling plays, you're
watching tendencies. Yeah, you watch the game differently. You watch
it as a fan. You watch for the execution.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
But what are you saying that kid should have been here,
that kid should have been here when you're on the sideline.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Yeah, so you're still kind of doing what you do there, right, Yeah,
it never leaves you, you know. Yeah, coach your coach,
Yeah yeah, no, of course coach, but he's still coaching, right,
you know, he's still coaching. But you know it's like
Lamma said, the you know, the violence that yet on
the football, and it came from the guys running to
the football. It was all about what coach talked about,
(03:01):
redline on one hundred percent. That effort part of it
was there when it came to run into the football
and big plays that I mean, we Gavin Hunter made
hits like Chuck Cecil. It was it was brilliant. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
In fact, we're gonna have Chuck Cecil on the show
here about four forty get Ahold of him talk about
his career here at JUVE and the impact he's had
here on the team, with the program and otherwise.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Right so here we are, let me ask you this.
You've played as athletes and athletes.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Can you remember a time when you faced a Weaber
State and you were afraid just because you knew you
were better and you said, we can't poop the bed today.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Well, I remember those games, Like those games scared me
more than anything because it's easy for your players to
look past exactly a Weaver State type team, but those
kids on scholarship too. When you play football, everybody's all in,
you know, and they get up for this. They're excited
about this. I mean, you're sitting here watching Middle Tennessee,
you know, and they're battling this team down to the wire,
(04:02):
and Wisconsin's like where did they come from? So you
can't relax. You got to be ready. But you got
to do your job, like coach said, do your job,
you know, execute, give one hundred percent effort, and the
things of third down, winning your third downs, getting the turnovers,
and giving great effort on the football field, and all
(04:22):
of it takes care of itself. Can you remember one, oh, yeah,
I mean I well, first personally, I think Ricky's talking
more as a coaching perspective, being a coach, but I
think as a coach, it's important that you get these
kids prepare for these type of games. Yeah, And I
honestly believe that the mindset should be we should be
dominating these kids. I mean, there should be no if
(04:45):
it's about it, nothing, dominate, dominate, dominate. So when I
played against the team like that, naturally that's my recourse.
I'm coming in. I'm gonna shut you down. You don't
belong on the field with us, period, You do not
belong to feel with us. But if you don't have
that mindset, little things can happen and the outcome is
not good.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
So I've been doing this a long time. As you
got to know, one of the things I've learned at
the top of the list is if you're not emotionally ready,
you're gonna get emotionally beat, and sometimes that costs you games.
How do you get them ready emotionally, Well, I think.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
The biggest thing is like just narrow their focus so
that they're understanding the game plan, They're making sure that
they're mistake free and they're given one hundred percent effort.
When you can, you know, clear up the mud, the
muddy waters with those things, then it becomes an easy
(05:40):
game because everybody's on the same page. Everybody's running to
the football, everybody's running their rouse, everybody's executing. You know,
we're controlling the ball, we're getting big runs, the blocks.
Everything just seems to click everybody. You know, they're all
polished up on all of the things that they control.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
If you know a guy is not there emotionally or otherwise,
you know he's a fantastic player, but is it.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
But you have a guy number two who's not as good.
But you just kind of say, Okay, I gotta get
this guy out. Get him sound production intolerance. I'll tolerate
you as long as you're producing, even if you do
bad things. But if you're not producing on the football field,
it's next guy up. Well, you know you said that.
I was listening to one of the interviews. I think
(06:24):
he was Brennan's in regards to I think he made
a comment to Gazalez to pull one of the defensive
backs because of the efforts that he that he will
have a few plays. Was Gavin a few plays mistakes
that he had made within the defensive scheme. But coach Brennison, no,
leave him in there. Leave him in there because he
(06:44):
believed in that game. Next, look, the thing is an interception.
How important is that? I think it's very important, you know,
because right now, as a player, the coach believes in me,
and Gavin's a young player, coach believes in him. You're
gonna have mistakes, yeah, you know. So you don't be
so quick to pull the trigger up. So let me
ask you that because you you've coached a lot of
(07:05):
time and you've played a lot of time.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
A month, uh, I covered a guy named lut and
Sean right, So now some players were afraid to make mistakes.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
And guess what you do? You make mistakes, So you
look over your shoulder, You look for your shoulder. Is
that happened in football too? It happens in every sport.
How do you get over that? You just relax, take
a deep breath, and go out and play the next play.
You got to have a short memory in this game.
When you make a mistake, you put it behind you,
You learn from it, and then you continue to execute.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
To both of you, guys, you played the Notre Dames.
You played the ranked USC's, the tough teams. Was it
easier to get up for those dudes than the end
the US and things like that?
Speaker 2 (07:43):
Tell me, well, simply because the fact that those dudes
we're playing against, you know, you want to be those
dudes exactly. We were State wants to be you exactly.
So we're not that dude. We're those dudes, right, So
it's easier to get up for those type of a games.
And I think the whole room get up for the
whole that type of game, the coaching staff as well
(08:03):
as the players, you know, because I mean it's a
national you're on a national stage at that point of time,
so it can give you that opportunity to shine and
show America what you're all about. But it's really good
for your team when your team understands that you play
one game at a time, You play one play at
a time, and you just win the next play, win
(08:24):
the next play. Just like this game, it's one game.
We can't play the rest of the schedule. We can't
play all eleven games today. We have to play one
game today and we have to win this game. And
to win the game, we have to execute playoff to play.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
So we're gonna have some interviews with Brennan and the
Gonzales and Carter and some more.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
We talk about the team.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Tell me about Brennan if you grated him and what
did you like last week?
Speaker 2 (08:49):
But I like his composure, you know. But I like
the fact that he got after guys when he needed it.
Even when you're ahead in the game, He's still coaching
the game all the way to the end. Do you
see You notice that when he's on the fielder. Oh, yeah,
so you see it.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
I mean naked eye people, regular fans don't see that.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
But but actually he's more into it this year, which
is great. Yeah, it is great. And I think he
has a great comfort zone because he has two three
exceptional coordinats you know neither you know, Dagi and Gonzales.
He's like a football savant. I mean, he has probably
forgotten more football than most has ever known. And this
guy can go on forever. But did you see the
(09:28):
one episode on the sideline he really got angry about
a situation. I mean, he you know, flair it up.
And did you see that at all last year? No?
You didn't, exactly I saw it. I mean coach different
you behind doors, we're not no, no, but that's what
people like, the general public. We need to see that.
I totally agree with that. We need to see that.
(09:51):
But it's all about timing too. It's the right time
right now. Like Ricky said, he got a staff that
he feel behind and you know they to do their job.
So it's all about timing and timing. Here are game
number two. We were State comes in.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Everyone's assumes that you're gonna have a great game against
these and you can never assume this defense offense. Both
sides need to play better, right, It's always about playing better.
So you talked about Noah, I agree with you. He's
got to show a little bit more. Yeah, he has
to give me a little bit more. I mean, he
got he gotta, you know, show a little more confidence.
(10:28):
Wants the ball is in his hand. I mean, Noah
zipped that ball.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
He can throw the ball, but that was quite a
few passes last week that should have been intercepted first
and foremost, you know. So, I mean I just want
to see him have a little more confident And maybe
it's the fact is that he do not have his
maybe two or three receivers that he feel comfortable with.
Maybe he does, there's out and but but I just
(10:53):
need to see that, you know. Hopefully we can see
that in him this game, because it only gonna make
it better for him. I'm going again, Kansas State and Brickley.
What are you looking for specifically? Specifically, I hope that
we can recreate and produce the same kind of pressure
we had last week. We had a lot of TFLs.
We had guys tackle for loss is like over ten.
(11:14):
We had some pressures, we have some sacks. Because when
you get the pressure, you're gonna get tip balls. When
you get tip balls up front, you know you're gonna
get interceptions. Thirty percent of those tip balls will be intercepted. Okay,
if you get tip balls and you get overthrows because
of pressure and hands in the quarterbacks face, seventy percent
of those balls gonna be intercepted. So we'll end up
with a lot of turnovers just with pressure. And it's
(11:37):
the guys up front football games. I've always believed one
up front. It starts with these big guys. And the
guys have done a tremnius job last week, and I
think it'll just carry you.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
I know, last week you answered this question, I talked
about style points, and in fact I wrote about it
afterward because it was a forty to whatever it was.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
Sixth game.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Does a game like that where you have to score
a lot of points against a team that you think
that you should be badly but if it doesn't happen
that way, is it okay? Because everyone wants you to
beat the crap out of things like this, is.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
It okay to be one in one or two of them?
So is that a no to your question? That's a no.
You win the game, but you still when you go
through the game, you want to execute. You want things
to go smoothly. You want the balls to be thrown, caught,
you know, intercepted, touchdown, everything you wanted to happen that
you plan the script out. You want it to happen
(12:24):
that way, and it should happen that way because the
guys they're busting that butt, they're working their tails off. Well,
I mean a lot of talk has been in regards
to as far as the execution, those are the things
that they really really concentrate on, particularly games like this,
how well the kids are executed. As far as their assignments,
What are they doing properly with their assignments. And if
(12:46):
you're doing those things, you win the game. What else
can you ask for? Progress? That's what you're looking for. Progress.
Every week by week, every every every every week is
a different game week by week. If we sit here
and build on what we did offensively, they had what
sixty some yards rushing? Yeah, okay, and we hold them
to less than sixty some yards rushing, a couple of turnovers.
(13:09):
You know what the NFL would give they have less
than a hundred yard rushing, that's always the goal. Less
than a hundred okay. And then if you can duplicate
what you did with the pressures and the defense and
the turnal, just a swarm into the football, that's going
to create big plays for you. And offensively, our running
game was flawless, was fantastic. It was flawless, you know.
(13:32):
And so when one's not working, any others working, it's
still win win. Well, listen, I mean give that the
credit again. You're talking defensively. The points that we scored
was because of the turnovers, right, and we put ourselves defensively,
put ourselves in a great situation where we can have
easy points. So I can again if those things are
constantly happened. You know, a wins win, yes, but what
(13:56):
helps it is the execution. It was physical, physical talent, violent,
running the ball, attacking people, and the same thing on
the defensive side of the balls. That's what Gonzalez stresses. Right,
let's go.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
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Speaker 1 (18:44):
Hey, welcome back to the Honey Huddle powered by Nova
Home Loans. I'm Steve Bargaret. You're with Lamont Honley and
Ricky Hunley. Now we're going to get to some interviews
with the coaches. Coach, let's talk about the new rule
that just came out about the transfer portal.
Speaker 6 (18:59):
Yep, so the transfer portal, and they're what they're getting
to is a one time transfer for college football, which
I think is a good thing because all the other
sports only have one window. It didn't make sense that
football had two, right, So there were so many situations
that happened in football, for example, what if a school
signed a player and he was there and they paid
(19:21):
him a bunch of money, and he was there from
January through you know, the end of spring practice, you know,
mid May, and they've paid him whatever amount of money,
and then he can leave again right with the money, right,
and then go get paid by somebody else. And so
I think that, you know, that's a problem. I look
at it for us here at Arizona. I look at
(19:42):
it more through the lens of once January, the ten
day windows over, you know what your team's going to be.
And that's what I'm excited about because then you start
at the beginning of the year and you build your
team through the off season, strength and conditioning, spring practice,
summer conditioning, summer workouts, training can and you build your
team and the team doesn't change.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Because football is truly a longer cycle to build a
team than any other sport.
Speaker 6 (20:07):
Absolutely absolutely, because so many people play in the game,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
And it prevents these kids from being so transactional. It's
more commitment now, you know it used to be. You know,
we hit four year automatically, one year renewable, and so
that window's gone away now Now we can at least
get them into one year.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
Which I think is really beneficial for college football. I
really do, because I don't think it's good for it.
And I also don't think it's good for the young
people that we're choosing to transfer so many times, because
a lot of them when they transfer to a new school,
a lot of times, especially if they're a multiple transfer,
if they're a three or four transfer guy, because a
lot of those credits don't always transfer to the new university,
(20:48):
and so they end up being a little bit behind
and having to take a huge course load or trying
to make it work just so they can graduate. And
so I think that part of it will also help
a graduation because.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
There's no guarantee that the credits will transfer with you,
that's right, you know, and so it's really to the
detriment of from graduating. So it works. I guess what
you're really trying to do in education is to retriculate
in graduating, that's right, Weaver State. Yes, big opponent coming
in use is a big game. It's the next game.
I know. You philosophy is always just say focused, go
(21:19):
one and oh this week.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
Yep, yep. Yeah, I think it's a huge. This is
a huge game for us, really really critical. You know,
I thought we did some good stuff against Hawaii in
our first game, but this is another opportunity for us
to take another step as a program, for us to
continue to build momentum week in and week out with
how we prepare and how we perform. And so I'm
really fired up to see our guys play, I think,
you know, and when you play a team like we were,
(21:42):
they're coming into this game, this is their super Bowl,
this is a big game for them, big stadium, big crowd,
all that stuff, and so they're going to be fired
up to play, and we're going to get their best shot.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
And we know that. Yeah, that's the all the reason
never to take anybody lightly. That's right. That's a year there,
super Bowl. That's right. Yeah, thank you coach, no problem.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
So Richie out thought, you boy a a great point
about education because in all this money, because it's all
talk about money now, the education is almost getting lost
because the kids are transferring and the transfer and the
credits aren't. So you're going to be old older if
you get your degree at all, if you get.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
It all, I mean, because every time you go to
a new school. They don't have the same catalogs. Yeah,
you know, so you could be starting all over. You
may never get your degree. You get two thousand credits
and never get a degree. Let me ask you a
serious question. And because you were an athlete. Both of
you guys were athletes. Education.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
I know it's important to you, guys. You did what
you guys did. How important is it today for kids today?
The education part of it. I think it's huge. It's everything,
and you're part of it. I mean, you're you're talking,
you're talking them through this.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Because when you finish playing football, there's a short window
to play football. Okay, obvious life spanning as a football player,
it's it's yeah, really minimum compared to the rest of
your life. I tell kids all the time, if you
could live to be one hundred and fifty years old,
with perfect health, perfect wealth, you know what you want
that life and they all would want it. Yes, But
(23:06):
in reality, okay, how much football you really get to
play on that scale of you know, one hundred and
fifty years or seventy years, you got that much football,
It's not much. So then you got to make money
with your education, with your brain, with your mind. For
the rest of your life. So you got to get
the education, you got to get the degree. And bouncing
(23:27):
around from school to school to school to school, it's
just throw roadblocks. It just yeah, keeps you from achieving
your goal. But here's the question. I mean, how do
you keep those kids from bounce around chasing the bag? Yeah,
you know, and I mean, granted, I think we have
a great situation here at the University of Arizona because we
do have, you know, people like Ricky Huntley with these
(23:48):
kids day in and day out, and they see, you know,
a road map where Ricky has established within himself. But
there are some places that don't have that, so these
kids will continue to want to bounce around and chase
the bang. It's a double edged sword, it is. It
really is scary. Okay, we're gonna go to Coach Gonzales now, okay,
(24:10):
we're here at Coach Danny Gonzalez Son defensive coordinated here
for the Arizona Wallcats. Danny talked a little a little
bit about everybody talks about you can't tackle. It's like
the NFL, nobody tackles in practice anymore. But uh, I'm
watching the tape and every time you freeze a frame.
There's three, four, five guys end of the frame. That's
(24:34):
pursuit at its best. I mean, if you know I'm
a ballplayer and I know that my guy's gonna be
there on balls out.
Speaker 11 (24:42):
Yes, sir, I think there's two philosophies on that, and
I think there's a lot of I mean, people sell well,
if I have to coach effort, you're the wrong type
of guy.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
I don't believe that.
Speaker 11 (24:52):
I think coaches need to coach for hard, harder, and
they coach anything. I mean players when games. Coaches don't.
And you can get your players to play hard, they
can make up for some mistakes. And we made up
for a bunch of mistakes on Saturday. I mean, there
was a lot of Assignmentari's first game. Stuff that happens typically,
but without tackling, and practice is as much as you
used to because of the high prices those kids that
(25:12):
are on the field, it's it's almost too valuable to
lose somebody to a live scrimmage.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
You got to find different ways. We tackle pop ups,
we tackle donuts and.
Speaker 11 (25:22):
I don't see I mean we tell our kids we
don't break down, we don't stut our feet we don't.
We try and just run through somebody's soul, and if
they do it with the right angle and they miss,
well there's three or four angry other guys coming behind
them to try.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
And clean it up. And we had a lot of
that on Saturday.
Speaker 11 (25:36):
I think only one incident where one of our linebackers
tried to gator roll a guy at the hip, which
you can't do. If you're gonna gat roll somebody, you
better go through the knees, and he got him on
the hip and slung shot the guy and he ended
up getting another twenty yards.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
I really that was the only tackle that we missed.
Speaker 11 (25:50):
And for a first game to have one misstackle like that,
I mean, you're I'm gonna take that as a win.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
You call him a defense. I call him he's a
pretty good quote intense, that's what you want your defense.
We've got to do. Absolutely. They are truly a reflection
of his identity, and I mean that's you know they
we live and die with turnal words. So on the
defensive side about what we need to get him.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
This is a bad comparison because you guys had a
guy who you guys love in Rogan Rate can you
kind of does he have some of that in him?
Speaker 2 (26:22):
Oh, he had the passion. The passion is there and
you can feel it. I mean you can feel the
passion the words that he expressed it, he put out
there in front of you. You feel those words. You
take those words out on the field with you because
you don't want to disappoint him, right, do not want
to We've talked about that. You don't want to disappoint
dudes that mean people mean something to you.
Speaker 12 (26:40):
What He.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
Is the perfect guy to deliver the message, you know,
because he delivers it in a way it's not personal,
and they understand that if we're going to be good,
we need to do it this way. He had something
in there I can't remember now. That was pretty pretty interesting,
pretty funny. He loves you up though, right, I mean
you can see that, you know, Dad, he's got all girls.
You know, that's the way we are. You know, we
(27:03):
know how to love with that. Let's go to the
next guy. We're gonna go to. Uh, let's go to Carter.
Can we go to Carter? Coach Carter? Yes, sir, it
was a really pleasure watching your your guys perform the
other night. Tell me about you know, you emphasize things
(27:28):
to your players that they control. You're demanding on things
that they control. And it's one thing I noticed that
is it when it comes to the running backs. The
part of your success has been connecting with your guys
and your philosophy will be great to go home. You
(27:52):
talk to us about that a little bit.
Speaker 13 (27:54):
Well, it's not to that extreme, but it is on
a personal level because I do the greatness. I do
demand the red line mentality. You know, the red line
mentality is you feel like you should be playing. Prove it,
you know, being part of the one hundred hundred. That's
one of our things. Proving it, and then when you
(28:15):
make a mistake on it, fix it. So we have
a mantra in our room and it's be the standard.
And then we also say f VP, which stands for
a fast, violent, and physical. We want to play that way.
We believe in that. We believe in winning our one
on one battles. Whenever it's us and a dB or
(28:35):
a linebacker, whatever it is, we're gonna take that head on.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
We're gonna try to win that battle. And being in an.
Speaker 13 (28:42):
Offense, Coach Day's offense is very aggressive. It allows us
to show that versatility, whether it be running the ball,
catching the ball, most importantly pass pro blocking.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
You know, I have this big sign on my walls
there's no block, no rock.
Speaker 13 (28:57):
We take a lot of pride in being physical and
not just running with the football, but in past protection
as well.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Protected North Fefita, you know that's a big thing. We
love playing with him. So we have a very unselfish mentality.
Speaker 13 (29:12):
You know, it is a family environment in that room,
from the youngest to the oldest guys. We believe in
just playing for each other and cheering each other on.
And so when you say what you say, there's truth
to it. But there's also some accountability to be in
the best version of yourself and I think anything less
than that won't fit the room. So we are big
(29:34):
on non defining good football players, for finding great young
men that fit this program.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
Yeah, tell me about three of those great young men.
They like the three headed monster and you got Kittrick,
Quincy and Ishmael.
Speaker 13 (29:47):
Yes, they three musketeers right now, they're the older guys.
We got a couple of younger guys and Wesley yr
Bro and Cortnela's Warren. They all they're freshmen, so they're
getting a chance to watch read very good upperclassmen and
support each other. Of Kederick, he was here last year.
He came to us late. He's a Houston, Texas kid
(30:08):
that was in the portal we got from Old Miss.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
We've had a.
Speaker 13 (30:10):
Full year for him to now be a part of
our program. He's one of our team leaders. He's on
the leadership committee, and he's just phenomenal on and off
the football field. And then in the portal, we were
able to get Ismail as well as Quincy, and both
of them were very good players at the programs that
they came from. Like I said, a lot of versatility
now only just in the offensive backfield, but they all
(30:33):
start on special teams as well. They all three of
them are very heavily engaged in that space, and they're
very unselfish and they just love football.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
And that's what you want to do. You want to
find guys that love football.
Speaker 13 (30:46):
And you can get it in three different all the
flavors you want with them three. You know, they give
you different running styles, but the biggest thing you get
out of them is unselfish play and a lot of versatility.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
Can those guys dance like you. No one can dance bag.
He's good to come on.
Speaker 13 (31:01):
You know I will be Dancing with the Stars out
here and Tucson coming up soon, so make sure y'all
stay tuned in. I have been talking to it, and
since I'm going to be talking to it, be the
standard for my room, I'm gonna be the standard for
the the Dancing with the Stars, I will win.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Well, here's one for you. He's a standard. I was
a winner last year.
Speaker 13 (31:20):
Well yeah, but I think that I think I got you,
So I'm gonna have to show that I can get you.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
You are you? You set a high seiling. So I
got to got trophies in my room.
Speaker 13 (31:29):
Well yeah, well I want to get one and I
got to play an album on my wall, so you know,
I gotta I gotta be able to max step.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
But yes, I look forward to doing it. Thank you, Coach,
You're welcome. Well, twinkled tos Ricky. That was pretty good.
That was fun. Yeah. Hey, the numbers said it off
for Coach Carter thirty two carries one and eighty five
yards for touchdown. Those dudes played the first guy. We're
kind of number three crincy.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
He read hard he ran, mean, yeah, wants the ball
in his hand. This if they had that running game
last year, they went on one few more.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Well the good head running game if well, yeah, and
that was a big blow. That was a big blow.
But you know what. The thing I appreciate about that
that interview and all the coaches given us the same
message as far as run hard, No, I mean as
far as what they expect from their players. You know,
they demand what's that red line? Red line you talked
(32:27):
about so true here. Yeah, I'm sure we'll hear it
a lot this year. Yeah, you're good enough, prove it,
prove it. Yeah, and you know, and that's all they expect.
And I'm gonna give you opportunity.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Well, that's what you when you come to a place
like this or you know, any school like this, you
have to prove it because there's a guy behind you
that's going to try to prove it.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
Yeah, we're gonna go to night bar. Now. In general,
what coach neither special teams extraordinary. I'm really excited about
our kicker and punters. Man, the balls are all out
of the end zone. You know, they had long, long punts.
We got a chance every time like those guys line up.
Speaker 10 (33:06):
Yeah, Ian came in and it was a real weapon
on kickoffs. I don't think a ball landed actually in
the end zone, all out of the end zone, which
that's a huge weapon to have.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Did a great job.
Speaker 10 (33:16):
He also worked some old work and Michael hit two
field goals at an over fifty yarder, which was a
good start for him. He's got a powerful leg, punted well.
I think he can do. He'll do better as we evolve.
And then Isaac Levinson or Australian punter also got some action.
So those guys got the mix right there. So it
was good to see those guys have a successful opening night.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
Now we saw a little flash's number two there in
order to turning talk to me about him. He was explosive.
The punter was tough. In pre game. He was sitting
in as far as sixty five.
Speaker 10 (33:50):
He was sitting in his short as thirty eight, so
the ball was kind of spread all over the place.
So it was a big point of emphasis for him
to keep the ball off the ground to give up
extra yards on the roll. He did a great job
with that and then almost got the opening touchdown the
season off a part return right a big supposed to
play and set the offense up plus fifty.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
So yeah, and that number two is Jerremunt Patterson. Yes, sir, Yeah, So, coach,
I'm telling you, we were really excited about the things
that you're doing on special teams and those guys seem
to really have embraced the redline. You know when it
comes to special teams. How do you emphasize that in
your meetings on a daily basis? Well, it comes from
(34:28):
the top down, obviously. Coach Brand's message is that and
those guys follow it. And a big component of when
I got here was showing how the battle of field
position can impact wins and losses, but more importantly, how
a younger guy can get on the field early in
play and how an older guy can impact his ability
to make indoor stay on an NFL football team with
(34:49):
having those special teams components and being able to go
into a training camp as a rookie knowing all the
techniques to fundamentals and the value of it having on
the tape can help those guy extending their career. Explain
those helmets there you got there.
Speaker 10 (35:03):
That is a helmet for every player that I've coached
is currently on a fifty three man NFL roster.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
Do you know how many homeless there there?
Speaker 10 (35:11):
It is seven eight nine till eleven eleven starters in
the NFL on special teams don't either safeties or kickers,
or they're the kickers, punters or safeties. I've coached safety
is a ton in my career, so that part of
it too.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
So well, coach and I I really appreciate you, and
we'll be talking to you more and look forward to
great things from the special teams for Arizona football. Outstanding
bear down beardown brother.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
One of these days, Rickey, we're going to turn you
into a journalist's next job. We're going to take a
break here and get a hold of the chuck season.
Speaker 2 (35:44):
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Speaker 1 (40:30):
Hey, Welcome back to the Hunley Huddle powered by Nova Homelands.
I'm Steve Rivera in with me today. The Honey and
Ricky Hully. Now on the phone, we have Chuck cecil
from you A Chuck, how.
Speaker 12 (40:40):
You doing doing great? How you doing?
Speaker 2 (40:44):
We're doing well?
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Got to your buddies here two hours before the game.
How does Chuck prepare prepare, prepare for the game?
Speaker 12 (40:53):
How do I prepare it for the game? Ah? Nowadays
it's a little.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
Different for.
Speaker 12 (41:00):
You know, in the college games just kind of for
me more than anything is I have to remain calm.
Game day was always just such a high energy situation
and for me nowadays as a coach, you it's good
to have the energy, but not too much.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
Chuck, do you remember when you were offered a scholarship
and you were a walk on? And uh we had
a certain coach who told you didn't belong. Can you
tell us about that?
Speaker 12 (41:36):
Yeah, you know I was a walk on here, but
I would say a recruited walk on. They actually offered
me a scholarship on my recruiting trip and I had
other a couple other places to go, and by the
time I got back to them, they committed all their scholarships.
So uh so I would guess a recruited walk on,
but I but I loved it here. And this is
(41:57):
where I wanted to go, and so this is where
I came. And I still had opportunities to go other
places on scholarship, but I was like, this is this
is my place, and you know, the walking on part
of it was just, I mean fantastic. Again when we
went to Camp Coach Chief my first year, and again
(42:20):
I weighed in at about one hundred and forty one
hundred and forty seven pounds my Wayne at.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
The wow at the Yeah at the U of A.
Speaker 12 (42:29):
And it's funny because actually Coach Huntley's Ricky, Ricky's coach.
He every day he would walk down the line, remember
the story Coach Rogy, Coach ROGI, and he was amazing,
like he was one of a kind, and he would
(42:51):
stop and look at me every practice I'm talking, I
mean every practice. He didn't miss one. Every practice he
walk up and down. He didn't say any anybody just
walking him down and then he would stop and look
at me, and just every day he'd go, what are
you doing? And you can't make it up? And I
(43:17):
came to find out later, okay, because I mean it
used to just light a fire in me. Every day
you want to talk about me and pissed off at practice.
I was absolutely hot every day because I was I
wanted to show coach Roganman that he was wrong.
Speaker 2 (43:37):
Motivated that motivated the greatest. And Chuck looked like you're
ready to play right now? Calm down, Joe. Hey, I
got a quick question for you, Chuck. This Lamont by
the way, brother, I don't want you you know, all right? Hey, hey, Chuck,
you ended up on Sports Illutrator. You recall with a
(44:01):
big headline to say Chuck is too vicious for the NFL.
How did you How did you feel seeing that news
stand in America? How did you feel about that? Now?
Looking back, do you think that reputation was fair or misunderstood?
Speaker 15 (44:18):
Uh? Hm?
Speaker 12 (44:19):
At first I would say I read it as too buscus.
Speaker 15 (44:26):
No two busious.
Speaker 12 (44:27):
I mean, come on, literally, you're growing up and you
you know read Storts Illustrated every week and everything. And
I mean to have my picture on the cover was
probably one of the greatest compliments in my life.
Speaker 2 (44:44):
It wasn't the greatest picture though, No, not the.
Speaker 12 (44:47):
Greatest picture by any such imagination. But and again the
side of that is the reason that I got put
on the cover is because I got a thirty thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (45:00):
I remember that. Remember now, that was a clean hit,
That was a legal hit. He hit him in the
chant and knocked him out. Cool.
Speaker 15 (45:09):
Yeah, and but I the thing is, uh anyway, the
lung story short is if somebody told you, had told.
Speaker 12 (45:20):
You growing up that for thirty thousand dollars you could
get your picture on the cover, I'd be where.
Speaker 2 (45:27):
Do I sign the pr? Good PR?
Speaker 1 (45:29):
Baby good PR? Hey Chuck? Another quick question, someone said
maybe this week. I don't know if it was. It
was Jay Dobbins or one of these guys. So when
you were here, you would line up twenty thirty yards
from the dummy and beat the crap out of the
dummy or trying to push the dummy.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
Uh. Ring, yeah, ring, that's it, ring the bell. Explain that.
Speaker 12 (45:50):
Yeah, Well, the the tackling dummy is loaded loaded on.
It's on a spring, and so when you back to day,
you'd hit it with your head and if you would
get the spring and knock it all the way back
to the spring, it would hit the back end and
and it would ring. It would literally go ban when
(46:13):
you when you would hit it, if you now you
had to have some force behind it.
Speaker 15 (46:18):
To get it to get to the to the back.
Speaker 12 (46:21):
And to make it make the noise, you had to
coil it pretty far, so you had to hit it
with some force. Well, the line, the linebackers were the
ones that always were hitting it, and they kept ringing
the bell and I, you know, we were, yeah, I could.
I couldn't ring the bell when I would stand at
five yards and take off and go because I didn't
(46:45):
have enough momentum. So basically what I did is I
started backing up so I could run faster and faster.
I got to where I was like ten or fifty
I'd say, twelve, thirty, fourteen yards away from it, and
I would just take off and run asack I could,
just because I had to. I had to ring the bell.
(47:05):
That was the all goal. And I finally got to
where I could could ring it a little bit. So
that was kind of nice.
Speaker 2 (47:11):
Chuck, I tell you what, last week I saw flashes
of a young Chuck Cecil out there on the field,
the way the guys were running around and Gavin Hunter,
I mean, just making clean up hits and uh, you know,
and that that just takes me back to your days
when you were playing. And I just surely hope that
that effort of running to the football and swarming to
the football continues, because it's only gonna make our defense great.
Speaker 12 (47:35):
There's no doubt about that, Ricky. I tell you what.
We definitely move it in the right direction. And the
boys are really playing hard. And and as much as
anything else, it is that they bought in. They they
they want it, they need it, they love it. It's
it's really just a great, uh, just environment to be around, honestly,
(47:59):
and and and and like I say, the boys are
in and when they're in that that's that's really all
that matters. And you know the old saying that I
used to have in the in the B B room
when I was in the safety room when I was uh,
you know, coaching them, and it's still in there. But
it just says, hey, show me, don't tell me, Yeah,
show me, don't tell me, Okay, don't tell me how
(48:21):
good you are. Don't tell me all the things you're
gonna do. It's like, show me, put it on tape.
There is no sound on the tape. It doesn't matter
what you say.
Speaker 2 (48:33):
Show me.
Speaker 12 (48:34):
And the boy. By the way, the boys are in
and they're showing it.
Speaker 2 (48:38):
I'm ready to play. Put me in coach. So great.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
The guys are great to have you and Ricky on
the sidelines pepping them up.
Speaker 2 (48:46):
So appreciate your time. We got to go.
Speaker 12 (48:48):
Thank you my pleasure. You have a great one.
Speaker 2 (48:52):
Let's fare down. You get them all ready to go?
Come on, forty, look at me. I kicked the c.
Speaker 1 (49:03):
Let me ask you because you can kind of census
his intensity and fun, what does game day mean to
each of you or what did it mean and today?
Speaker 2 (49:14):
Well? I mean, I mean, I think it's moment by
moment and game by game, play by play and who
you about to play? I mean, and I think that
has a lot to do with it, you know. And
I think it also depending on you know, what year
you were you're at the university per se, because everybody's
going to see a different feel it different. You know,
my senior year, every snap means something to me. My
(49:38):
freshman year was quite different. You know. I was blessed
to be there. I'm happy to be there, you know.
So I think every player will be different depending on
you know, your your personal circumstances. Before he moved to rookie,
did you have a routine, did you have like a
thing you did. I used to find money throughout the
week and tape it in the bottom of my shoe.
(49:58):
But I thought purposely, oh yeah, I mean I found
a penny, I found a dime, I found a quarter
on the ground. I would tape it in the bottom
of my shoe. I thought it good luck, you know,
in four years. But you know, but it made me feel,
(50:19):
you know, it made me feel. My routine allowed me
to get on the field and do my job. Ricky,
But I had a routine during the game, and it
was simple. I was gonna count to five, I was
gonna get five tackles a quarter, and then my goal
is to have twenty a game. And most of the
time I reached that. Yeah, well okay, half, yeah, pal on,
(50:44):
I got another one. I got another one.
Speaker 1 (50:46):
So you didn't have no like pre game socks gotta
be this way.
Speaker 2 (50:50):
Pad's got to be on this in the superstition Ricky,
Ricky was always fun and rick Ricky never got you know,
tense and Bob and we're it was always loose. I mean,
during my time playing with Ricky, he was always loose.
I mean, we'll be in the locker room, guys are
getting all blooded in the nose and snot coming out
of their mouth and everything. Ricky got apples and he's
(51:12):
throwing that guys. You know he tried to loose it
up for people. Yeah, well kind of doing it now
he does that. Now, let me ask you to, uh,
you saw what happened. Let's not get we're too nuts
with the spitting thing. How how mean did it get
when you tackle the dudes?
Speaker 1 (51:27):
I mean you say some stuff or whatever, or you
just say, okay, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
I didn't spit on people, not so much. That was
it love crap talking. Yeah, you talk, you talk about
their girlfriend, you talk about them mother. You know, you
try to get him to jump off side. You know,
you try to get them out of there, and you
know out of they heading the good old days of
smeck talking. I guess yeah. Psychological warfare. I mean it's
(51:53):
I mean, it's it's part of the game. You try
to get that edge. You know, the thing that I
used to always do. I made a tackle. I love
him know what I was there and let him know
I'll be back. And I did the same thing. I
think I counted tackles in my head to try to
get to a certain number and not assisted tackles. Yeah,
I was just gonna say that was your interest to
say assisted.
Speaker 16 (52:12):
That I counted all tackles. That's why I have five
hundred six sixty six. Well, guys, I appreciate you. Guys
four hundred. We got two minutes, so that's good. Uh important,
you guys gonna go to the game. I guess mingle again,
who's coming down? Anybody special? I don't. I don't think
I know of anyone coming in town right now. I
really don't. Oh, Mark Folcher is coming intown. He was
(52:34):
our quarterback and we we had the dynamic duel of
Folchure and Tonne Cliffs and then Foacher blew out his
knee and you know, and that went our double dual.
Speaker 2 (52:45):
Quarterback. Tom was pretty damn good too, though. Yeah, Mark
was great too. Yeah, those are the good old days.
Can tell you the truth. I'd like to see Mark
Mark since I was a freshman. Yeah really really I
haven't seen because his that's forty it was his last year. Yeah,
last year was years ago, forty five years ago. Don't
(53:09):
get up think about coach niber One thing that he
understands his field position. He knows that if you get
the ball on the twenty, you got a thirty percent
chance of scoring. But if you get the ball across
the fifty, you got a seventy five percent chance of score.
You get the ball across the twenty, that's a ninety
percent chance of score. And we got a punter that
can just boom in. So we're going to control field
(53:31):
position in this game, not only the putter, and that
kickers a beast. He kicked the Bahama time's seven times
out of the end zone. Yeah, that's a beast returnable ball. Well, guys,
another show in the reps. Thanks for being here for
the Huddlely Huddle. If you didn't listen or tell people
about it, we'll have it on the podcast later. Appreciate it.