Blue White Illustrated

August 2019

Penn State Sports Magazine

Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/1138762

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 82 of 115

2 0 1 9 S E A S O N P R E V I E W PLACE KICKER (FG) NO NAME HT WT YEAR 92 Jake Pinegar 6-2 201 So./So. – Jordan Stout 6-2 197 Jr./So. 99 Justin Tobin 6-2 202 Sr./Jr. 95 Vlad Hilling 5-10 226 So./Fr. PLACE KICKER (KO) NO NAME HT WT YEAR 90 Rafael Checa 6-2 201 So./So. – Jordan Stout 6-2 197 Jr./So. 92 Jake Pinegar 6-2 201 So./So. PUNTER 93 Blake Gillikin 6-2 195 Sr./Sr. 49 Cade Pollard 5-11 217 So./Fr. HOLDER 93 Blake Gillikin 6-2 195 Sr./Sr. 15 Michael Shuster 6-2 210 Sr./Jr. LONG SNAPPER 91 Chris Stoll 6-2 257 Jr./So. 94 Joe Calcagno 6-0 260 Jr./So. PUNT RETURNS 1 K.J. Hamler 5-9 168 Jr./So. 2 Keaton Ellis 5-11 180 Fr./Fr. 29 John Reid 5-10 189 Sr./Sr. KICKOFF RETURNS 1 K.J. Hamler 5-9 168 Jr./So. 4 Journey Brown 5-11 206 Jr./So. 2 Keaton Ellis 5-11 180 Fr./Fr. Lions to score twice on punt returns was Larry Johnson. NUMBERS GAME A three-year starter, Gillikin heads into his senior season with a 43.3-yard career punting average, the best in school history. OUTLOOK As with the wide receivers, the Nittany Lions have made a coach- ing change here fol- lowing an erratic performance in 2018. Penn State's new special teams coordinator is Joe Lorig, formerly of Memphis. Lorig will be looking to im- prove a kicking game that su=ered breakdowns in all phases last year. The Lions gave up a 100-yard touch- down on their er that 27-24 loss to the Wildcats, Lorig was brought in to replace Phil Galiano, who had le> to join the New Orleans Saints' sta=. Lorig said that one of the reasons he was excited about the Penn State job was that he was convinced James Franklin valued special teams enough to provide him with the resources he would need to build e=ective kicking units. Franklin does indeed have a history of allowing his best players to take part in the kick- ing game if he feels they can be di=er- ence-makers. That policy paid o= spectacularly in 2017 when Saquon Barkley emerged as one of the country's best kicko=-return specialists. Last year was a reminder of just how costly an in- consistent kicking game can be, so it's safe to assume that Lorig will get the buy-in he's looking for, whether that means asking starters to contribute on the kicking teams or re- structuring the way the Lions use their meeting and practice time. But while changes are undoubtedly in store, there's also enough carryover to make you think that the kicking game has the potential for a quick turnaround. Gillikin is a proven punter, Pinegar hit 16 of 24 er averaging 26.15 yards per attempt. It's not as if the Lions are re- building from the ground up. –M.H. P H I L ' S T A K E There are still several major question marks here, but Blake Gillikin's ability to punt the ball and K.J. Hamler's ability to return punts and kicko=s are not among them. Gillikin may have had an o=-year in 2018, placing only 20 punts inside the opponent's 20-yard line. But in my opinion, he's one of the top two punters in the Big Ten. Hamler was Penn State's leading kicko= returner, averaging 26.15 yards per attempt. It appeared this spring that Keaton Ellis would end up being Hamler's backup returning punts, and it looks like Ellis, Journey Brown and Marquis Wilson could back up Hamler on kicko= returns. It's possible that Ellis will take over the No. 1 punt-return job if the coaching sta= is concerned that Hamler is doing too much. The two big question marks are

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Blue White Illustrated - August 2019