The Daily Reveille - Aug. 29, 2011

Page 12

The Daily Reveille

page 12

Monday, August 29, 2011

FOOTBALL

Magee heads crop of confident freshman running backs Hilliard, Gore also viable options Chris Abshire Sports Writer

Even though LSU coach Les Miles might be known for his loyalty to upperclassmen, one freshman’s name has consistently rolled off his tongue throughout the summer. True freshman Terrence Magee, at 5-foot-9 and 212 pounds, was just a three-star recruit coming out of Franklinton High School, but he has impressed Miles during fall camp and leads a trio of freshmen backs who hope to vie for playing time this season. “I just see [Magee] as a tough, mature young player and I think he’s a guy who will learn and be the kind of back we will need and want for a long time,” said Miles, who mentioned the young back’s name nearly every time he spoke about the running back position in recent months. Known as a shifty runner with good hands as a receiver, too, Magee said he appreciates Miles’ vote of confidence early in his career. “It feels good that he has faith in me,” he said. “But I still have to make it happen on the field, and

play my role with this team.” Magee played quarterback at Franklinton High School, where he led the Demons to a Louisiana 4A state championship and ran for more than 1,300 yards and 19 touchdowns in his senior season. Magee said his time as quarterback was “a huge help” in preparing him for the complexities of the college game. “[As quarterback] I called out the protection, so it makes picking up the blocking schemes as a running back easy,” said the 18-yearold. “It’s different though, because you have to prepare your body for making contact every day in practice.” Despite Magee being the breakout freshman name in the backfield, two other freshman backs, Kenny Hilliard and Jakhari Gore, were both more highly-touted recruits, with each listed among Rivals.com top 10 prep running backs during their respective senior seasons. Hilliard set the Louisiana high school career rushing record with 8,603 yards in four stellar seasons at Patterson High School. At 5-foot-11 and 240 pounds, Hilliard carries a reputation as a bruising runner and also carries a family lineage with him to LSU. He is the nephew of former LSU star and New Orleans Saints running back Dalton Hilliard.

BIG BABY

BENJAMIN OLIVER HICKS / The Daily Reveille

Glen “Big Baby” Davis, LSU alum and Boston Celtics player, promotes the Healthy BR initiative Saturday morning at the Farmer’s Market downtown.

Jakhari Gore

—Miami Native —Redshirted last year —Received most improved award after spring practice

Since enrolling at LSU in January, Hilliard said he has modeled his practice routine and approach to football after the trio of sophomore running backs — Spencer Ware, Michael Ford and Alfred Blue — who are likely to get the bulk of the carries this year. “It’s a big motivator for me because I get to watch them and really pick up their games to help me out as the young back,” said Hilliard, who runs a 4.6-second 40-yarddash despite his hefty build. The mild-mannered freshman said he can be the kind of persistent, physical back Miles tends to favor at the position. “My strongest suit is coming in on third downs,” Hilliard said. “I’m all about when you need that one yard and getting it done for the team in short-yardage situations.” Gore, a 5-foot-9, 175-pound redshirt freshman and Miami native, is the smallest and quickest of the three freshmen, but he said

Kenny Hilliard

—Set LHSAA record with 8,603 rushing yards —Finished senior season wtih 1,804 yards rushing and 22 TDs

an additional 15 pounds of “good weight” put on since the start of spring camp should quell any concerns about his ability to run between the tackles. “I really addressed that in the spring,” said Gore, who is the cousin of San Francisco 49er Frank Gore. “Coach Miles let me know I’m mixing it up good in there. I showed that I can hit the trenches, but I still have the vision to get to the corner.” With former offensive line

Terrence Magee

—Played QB in high school —Won 4A state championship —Threw for 2,634 yards and 35 TDs as a senior in high school

coach Greg Studrawa moving up to the coordinator spot, Hilliard said the prospect of an enhanced focus on the running game would help the young trio. “I think with [Studrawa] at coordinator is probably going to help us learn more and see the defensive fronts, which is what you need early on, he said” Contact Chris Abshire at cabshire@lsureveille.com


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.