Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/1063223
P O S T S E A S O N P R E V I E W >> P E N N S T A T E V S . K E N T U C K Y
that decision a=er the last [regular-sea-
son] game and between then and the
dra=, 15 other juniors come out early.
Why
would you make that decision?
You want to have as much information
as you possibly can [get] to make a great
decision. The later you can do that, the
better."
JOHNSON
POISED TO BOUNCE BACK
One of the players who had seemed a
few months ago to be a prime candidate
for an early exit was receiver Juwan
Johnson. But due in large part to injuries,
Johnson had an up-and-down regular
season in which his receiving totals were
only about half of what he amassed as a
sophomore.
He was back on the 9eld against Mary-
land last month, making two catches for
46 yards, and Franklin said he expects
the redshirt junior to "have a big bowl, a
great o;-season and a really bright fu-
ture."
"When you're young, you think life is
fair – if I invest this, I should get an im-
mediate return on my investment,"
Franklin said. "But it doesn't work like
that, whether it's the big man upstairs or
it's just the game of football. If you love
the game and respect the game and in-
vest in the game, it will pay back. The
game respects people who view it the
right way and treat it as such. I believe in
that. I believe it in the game of football
and I believe it in life. It's going to hap-
pen. When it happens, how it happens,
I'm not sure. But I think Juwan is a great
example of that. I'm excited about how
he's going to play in this game. Juwan,
like a lot of guys, had some things that
were messing with him physically dur-
ing the year that I don't necessarily talk
about. So those things factor into it as
well. But he's healthy now, and our
quarterbacks are excited to throw the
ball to him."
PSU AIMS TO KEEP STAFF INTACT
Franklin is hoping for less sta; upheaval
than Penn State endured last year when
three assistant coaches le=, including
two coordinators. Usually, those moves
involve promotions, such as Joe Moor-
head's decision to accept Mississippi
State's head coaching post. But some-
times they don't, and those are the
losses that sting.
"We
can't lose guys for lateral moves,"
Franklin
said. "That cannot happen. For
the program that we have and the type of
program that we want to be, that's criti-
cal. Like the players we've talked about,
it's :uid. I get phone calls every day. In
the car recruiting, and coaching our
players, checking on academics, I'm
constantly
getting calls about our cur-
rent
sta;, coaches who have worked for
me in the past. It's something we need to
be aware of, and me and Sandy [Barbour]
are always having conversations and di-
alog about it."
■
It was easy to point out the changes on
the o;ensive side of the ball during
Ricky Rahne's 9rst season as Penn
State's coordinator. In 2017, the Nittany
Lions gained about 63 percent of their
total yards through the air. But during
the recently concluded regular season,
the split was close to 50-50, as Penn
State passed for 2,590 yards while rush-
ing for 2,502.
Rahne said the Lions' o;ensive style
may very well change again.
"Based on who we have on o;ense and
who we're playing with, the system will
adapt," he said. "If you go back and you
look, it's sometimes hard to tell, but
there's a major di;erence from '16 to '17,
and then there's a di;erence from '17 to
'18."
Rahne said he isn't concerned with
implementing his own style or putting
his 9ngerprints on the Nittany Lions' of-
fense. He just wants to take what the de-
fense gives.
"It's really going to depend on what
defenses are giving us, how they're play-
ing and also what our personnel is,"
Rahne said. "I'm going to continue to
hopefully put us in as good a position as
possible to be successful, but that's not
necessarily going to be me putting my
imprint on it as opposed to what I think
is best to win games."
The 9nal challenge of Rahne's 9rst
year as o;ensive coordinator will be one
of the most di