Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/861263
2 0 1 7 K I C K O F F S P E C I A L
our
campus, on our roster, that we're
working really hard, developing and
working with, and they're doing a great
job. So it's a process. Football is the ulti-
mate team sport. We play a nine-game
[conference] schedule, so you've got to
have depth on your roster. You're going to
face injuries. You're going to face some
guys missing time and being out. And
you've got to build your roster all the way
down.
"We're definitely not there yet in terms
of where we want to be, from one through
85 or one through 105. But we're certainly
a lot closer, and I like where we're at. I
think we have a team that can go compete
with anyone we play."
The Terps didn't do that last season,
falling by 24 points to Penn State, 59 to
Ohio State and 56 to Michigan. It was
Durkin's first season after arriving from
Michigan, where he served as defensive
coordinator, so some transitional diffi-
culties were to be expected. But if Mary-
land is to gain ground in the years to
come, it will have to recruit on par with
its well-heeled rivals. For all the progress
that it made last year, it still finished be-
hind Ohio State, Michigan and Penn State
in the Rivals recruiting rankings, and it's
trailing this year, too, with the Nittany
Lions rated first and the Buckeyes third as
of this writing.
But that's life in the best division of
what may now be the best conference in
college football. The Terps are faced with
one of the bigger challenges in the Foot-
ball Bowl Subdivision. They may turn
into giant killers. They may become gi-
ants themselves, or they may remain
stuck with Indiana and Rutgers in the
East Division's second tier. The only cer-
tainty is that they can't afford to stand
still. Not in a conference as competitive
as the Big Ten has become.
"I think we have good depth, good
coaches, great players," commissioner
Jim Delany said. "Each year is hard to
predict, each year writes its own story, so
I'm always reluctant to be overconfident.
But I think what we have in place in terms
of coaches, players, venues, television –
all conspire together to give us a great of-
fering to college sports."
■
Penn State opposed
to Friday night games
Friday night football is coming to
the Big Ten, but not without some
reservations. A number of confer-
ence coaches have expressed con-
cerns about playing on Fridays, a day
traditionally reserved for high school
games.
One of those coaches is Penn
State's James Franklin. Speaking at
Big Ten media days in Chicago last
month, Franklin praised conference
leaders for allowing members to
"have their own opinion on how
they would handle it," but said that
the Nittany Lions' preference would
be to avoid playing Friday night
games.
"It's not something that we're
looking to do," Franklin said. "Friday
is for high school and Saturday is for
college and Sunday is for the NFL.
It's worked out that way for a long
time, and it's worked out really well.
Each level complements the next. It's
something we believe in strongly and
it's sacred, and that's how we con-
tinue to see it going in the state of
Pennsylvania and speci