The Wolfpacker: An Independent Magazine Covering NC State Sports
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/85079
W.B. Thompson Inc. Farm, Lawn & Garden Supplies Proudly Supporting NC State Athletics for More Than 40 Years 916 NC Highway 33 East P.O. Box 69 John D. Lucas Creative Writing Services (919)820-0856 jdlucas@nc.rr.com Journalistic Writing • Sports Writing • Feature Writing Blog Writing • Creative Writing • and More C.B. Lee & Company Accountants, Consultants & Tax Advisors 4617 Western Blvd., Raleigh, NC 27606 919-851-2640 Fax 919-851-4577 Accounting & Tax Preparation Accounting & Business Managment Services Taxes Individual - Corporate - Partnership - Trusts - LLC's Proud supporter of "The Wolfpack" for over 30 years • • 7 Days a week Low Rates Various sizes available • Fenced/lighted/cameras • Insurance • Personal • Commercial • Boats • RVs • Mobile homes • Trucks • Outside storage available 2107 Hwy. 70 East, Garner 27529 Take I-40E Exit 306 to 70 E. Go 1 mile on the left 48 ■ THE WOLFPACKER JDL Aurora, NC 27806 (252) 322 - 4519 After Green and Lucas, the options are inexperienced. Michael Peek (6-2, 215 pounds) and Brandon Pittman (6-3, 212 pounds) both played last fall as true fresh- men, but almost exclusively on special teams. Peek did, however, record a sack late in the lopsided win over Clemson. Rodman Noel, a 6-3, 206-pound true freshman safety last fall, is expected to move to linebacker in the spring. How is Mustafa Greene's foot? As a rookie, Greene led NC State in rushing with 597 yards on 134 carries, and he had four touchdowns on the ground and two more through the air. The 6-0, 201-pounder seemed destined for a bright future at NC State, and he was progressing to becoming the team's feature back last spring. That changed late in spring practice, however, when Greene hurt his foot. The injury required surgery, and at first the prognosis was a return by early October. Eventually, though, Greene needed a sec- ond surgery that forced him to miss the season and redshirt. In his place, the combination of rising senior James Washington and rising red- shirt sophomore Tony Creecy held up fairly well. Washington ran 226 times for 897 yards and seven scores, and Creecy added 103 rushes for 382 yards and a touchdown. Creecy also had three receiving scores. The return of Creecy and Washington puts State in a good position at running back, but Greene flashed the signs of being a difference maker at the tailback position when healthy. If he can show this spring that he is finally turning a corner to a full recovery, he could be a boost to NC State's offense. How will the defensive line stack up? The defensive line should be a strong unit this fall, but the questions are who will line up where. Rising senior Brian Slay started the bulk of last season at defensive end after in- juries derailed the depth there. The 6-3, 290-pound Slay has far more experience at defensive tackle, however, and given the loss of interior line starters Markus Kuhn and J.R. Sweezy to graduation, Slay would seem to be a good bet to slide back inside. Rising redshirt juniors Darryl Cato- Bishop and Forrest West are two other players that are worth watching this spring. Cato-Bishop started nine games last year at defensive end, and the 6-4, 281-pounder had 26 tackles and five sacks to go with 13 quarterback hurries. West (6-1, 260 pounds) is a Colorado transfer who is eligible after sitting out last