Blue White Illustrated

June 2015

Penn State Sports Magazine

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E ven though 55 of the players on its roster will have either freshman or sophomore eligibility this coming fall, there are legitimate reasons to think that Penn State can er he posted 52 tackles, eight sacks, 17 tackles for loss and three interceptions during his jun- ior season. He was the only Football Bowl Subdivision player to rank among the national leaders in both sacks and interceptions and was the . As a junior, Zettel worked well along- side Johnson, who won honorable men- tion All-Big Ten recognition with 91 tackles, nine sacks and 23 tackles for loss. In my mind, those two give Penn State the best defensive tackle tandem in the Big Ten heading into the upcoming season. Meanwhile on o=ense, Hamilton was an unknown commodity going into the 2014 season. Of course, that's not to say he arrived in University Park without any buzz. Far from it. He was ranked as one of Penn State's top recruits in the Class of 2013, having been invited to participate in the U.S. Army High School All-American Game in San Antonio. In his senior year at Mountain View High School in Sta=ord, Va., he totaled 64 catches for 1,073 yards and 10 touch- downs, and on the strength of that re- sume, a lot of people seemed to think he would get on the er he arrived on campus in June 2013 that he had a wrist injury that would re- quire surgery. That initial setback was compounded when it was determined that Hamilton needed additional surgery that caused him to see limited action during the early part of spring practice last year. In fact, he wasn't cleared to play until just a few days before the Blue-White Game. Given Hamilton's inexperience and his injury status, most Penn State foot- ball observers expected then-sopho- more Geno Lewis to take the lead in trying to fill the shoes of Robinson, who had enjoyed two record-setting seasons under Bill O'Brien, totaling 174 catches for 2,445 yards and 17 touch- downs before opting to leave early for the NFL Draft. That was not an unrea- sonable conclusion. Lewis had caught 18 passes for 234 yards and three touchdowns in 2013 and was by far Penn State's most experienced return- ing wide receiver. He ended up having a solid 2014 sea- son, appearing in all 13 games and

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