Blue White Illustrated

May 2015

Penn State Sports Magazine

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uba Hall are what you would call lavish, and the $14 million that Intercollegiate Athletics is getting set to spend on a range of improvements to the Lions' football headquarters won't entirely close the gap with cutting-edge pro- grams such as Oregon, whose Football Performance Center cost $68 million and looks like the Death Star's :tness room. Unless the Nittany Lions plan to hire Frank Gehry to design their new nu- trition bar, they're still going to be play- ing catch-up with the programs they as- pire to face in the College Football Play- o;. But game day atmosphere is one area in which Penn State can set itself apart from even the elites. Beaver Stadium is the :> J A M E S F R A N K L I N D I S C U S S E S P S U ' S Adam Breneman is coming back. Will he be able to do anything this spring? How important is it to get him back? Getting Adam back – you're talking about a guy who had a bunch of success early on in his career. He's had some in- juries, some setbacks. In some ways you probably would have liked to have red- shirted him his :rst year. Now the fact that we were able to redshirt him last year and still have some success is good. He's got a year to get healthy, get bigger and stronger, get more con:dent. He's a guy who I think has the size and the mentality to be a complete tight end, a guy who can put his hand in the dirt and come o; and block at the line of scrimmage. He also has the ability to be a threat in the passing game, has the size and ball skills. Probably most important, even through this whole year, as trying as it was on him, he is one of the most posi- tive, optimistic, completely 100 percent bought-in leaders that we have. He's been great. He's been great for us as coaches. He's been great with our team and players. He's always got a smile on his face. He's so appreciative of Penn State. He's so appreciative of the oppor- tunities he has here. That alone [is something] we're really, really excited about. Can you talk a little bit about your o ensive line situation in contrast from a year ago, even going into spring last year, where it was hard to have a practice with the numbers you had? The fact that we're going to have a two-deep [depth chart made up] of scholarship players is exciting. We had a bunch of guys who have had some expe- rience. Last year I think at this point we had two returning starters in the begin- ning of spring ball. As we all know, we lost [Miles] Die;enbach. We had one re- turning player on the o;ensive line for spring ball. We had a bunch of new faces in there with a new system. It's com- pletely di;erent. We have :ve or six guys now who start- ed a game. I remember a high school coach coming up to me last year during spring ball, talking about how he had been to other regional colleges, watched their practices, then watched ours. He had an interesting expression on his face. There's nobody who is happier about this group returning and the strides they've made than Mr. and Mrs. Hack- enberg. I'm excited about them. I know Herb [Hand] is excited about working with him. I know they're so much more con:dent mentally and physically, all those things. As you guys have heard me say before, not only does it affect and help with Hack's continued development, our of- fense's development, [but also with] your second-team quarterback, your second-team receivers, second-team tight end and running backs. It helps with the defense's development be- cause now the second-team defense has a chance to legitimately be threat- ened. We're real pleased. Those guys have been awesome. I could go on and on about a number of these guys, the im- provement they've made, how dramatic it has been, almost to a man, to every single guy there who has really made some really good strides in so many dif- ferent areas. I'm excited to see them go out and compete. They have a great challenge, which again goes back to the fact that

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