? Pass protection is one of the areas where Arkansas State?s offense has improved this year. The Red Wolves have already thrown the football almost as many times as they did in the entire 2009 season, yet have given up about half as many quarterback sacks.
A challenge awaits ASU?s offensive line Tuesday night, though.
Middle Tennessee leads the Sun Belt Conference in sacks going into the nationally televised game at ASU Stadium. The Blue Raiders have recorded 20 sacks as a team, including six in their 38-10 victory over Louisiana-Monroe on Oct. 23. Senior end Jamari Lattimore has 81⁄2 sacks and 10 tackles for loss to lead the Sun Belt in both categories.
ASU head coach Steve Roberts said MTSU changed its defensive approach during the victory over ULM.
?They?ve gone to a more chaotic blitz, create-negative-play scheme on defense,? Roberts said. ?We know we have a challenge in trying to pick all of that up and make some plays offensively.?
Picking up pass rushers was difficult for last season?s injury-ravaged offensive line. The Red Wolves yielded 31 sacks while throwing 330 passes in 12 games.
ASU quarterbacks have thrown 307 passes in only eight games this year, an average of more than 38 per game, yet opponents have been limited to 16 sacks. Four of those sacks came in the opener at Auburn.
Sophomore quarterback Ryan Aplin?s mobility has helped ASU avoid some sacks, but Roberts said the offensive line has also played much better than it did last season.
?Last year we started the same five guys three times. This year we?ve been able to keep some consistency in our offensive line,? Roberts said. ?We?ve moved a couple of guys in and out at the left tackle spot, but both of them have played a lot of football.?
Experience certainly isn?t an issue. The Red Wolves start an all-senior front with Tom Castilaw at center, Sifa Etu and Dominic Padrta at the guards, and Derek Newton and Kiano Prater at the tackles.
Offensive coordinator Hugh Freeze said the pass protection has been pretty decent for the Red Wolves? first season in his no-huddle, spread scheme.
?We?ve gone some games without sacks, which is very nice,? Freeze said. ?Of course we tell the kids that zero is the number, but I realize that when you throw it 45 times a game or so, particularly against a team like this, probably one or two of those are going to happen.
?We just have to minimize them and hope they?re not at bad times. We?ll preach to our kids and to our quarterbacks that we have to get rid of the football.?
Timely throws figure to be important Tuesday night.
While undersized at 6-3 and 231 pounds, Lattimore is one of the Sun Belt?s most feared pass rushers. He has 171⁄2 sacks for his career, including three in the ULM game.
?He?s a good athlete, a great individual player,? Newton said. ?He knows how to use his athleticism.?
Freeze said Lattimore ?could play at the SEC level? and he?s also impressed with MTSU senior end Emmanuel Perez, who is in a similar mold at 6-1 and 226 pounds.
Perez has two sacks on the season. Junior outside linebacker Darin Davis has 31⁄2 sacks to rank second on the squad. Seniors Dwight Smith and Gary Tucker, the starting interior linemen, have combined to make 45 tackles.
?I think they?re very good at what they do. It?s somewhat unconventional,? Freeze said. ?It?s something you don?t see every Saturday, so it presents its issues for us. They have the most speed we?ve seen off the edge in Lattimore and No. 91 (Perez). It presents a problem for us, and obviously we will challenge our offensive line, particularly on the edge with our tackles, Derek and Kiano and those guys.
?They have a challenge ahead of them, and hopefully they?ll answer that call. They give you so many different looks, too. It?s not like they just line up those pass rushers on the edge and come. There are a lot of different looks they give you, so it?s good we have a few extra days to be sure we?re looking at everything, trying to find some clues.?
Freeze compared MTSU?s defensive scheme to what the Red Wolves saw against Louisiana-Lafayette, adding that the Blue Raiders have better speed on the perimeter with Lattimore and Perez.
Perez registered a sack when the Blue Raiders walloped the Red Wolves 38-14 last season in Murfreesboro, Tenn. Lattimore had four tackles in that game and returned a fumble 31 yards on a play that resulted in a touchdown for MTSU. Jeremy Kellem caught a lateral from Lattimore and covered the final 11 yards.
?We just let the mistakes get the best of us,? Newton said, recalling last year?s game. ?I felt like we didn?t put the mistakes aside and just keep going with the game.?
Newton was the only ASU offensive lineman to start every game last year, when he was a second-team All-SBC selection. When asked about the pressure of facing pass rushers such as Lattimore, Newton said it?s important to know every move and what the offense is trying to do on each play.
Ten of the 16 sacks in ASU?s first eight games came against Auburn, Troy and Louisville. Louisiana-Lafayette, North Texas and Florida Atlantic had two each. Louisiana-Monroe and Indiana did not record a sack against the Red Wolves.
?I feel like we?re doing good. Everybody is sending a lot of blitzes at us,? Newton said. ?Our coaches are giving us a lot of film to study, and we?re studying the film. It?s helping us prepare for the many blitzes people are sending at us.?
More blitzes will be coming ASU?s way Tuesday night, especially if MTSU takes the approach that proved successful against ULM.
Roberts hopes the Red Wolves can use that to their advantage.
?They?ll mix up the coverages, but they have a lot of 3-man fronts, zone blitzes, man blitzes, coming from different angles with different people, just trying to create negative plays, create mismatches, show that they?re coming from one side and come from the other side,? Roberts said. ?They do a great job of mixing all that up and playing very, very aggressive football.
?It will create some negative plays, but hopefully on our end we can create some big plays if we have the right calls at the right time as well.?
A challenge awaits ASU?s offensive line Tuesday night, though.
Middle Tennessee leads the Sun Belt Conference in sacks going into the nationally televised game at ASU Stadium. The Blue Raiders have recorded 20 sacks as a team, including six in their 38-10 victory over Louisiana-Monroe on Oct. 23. Senior end Jamari Lattimore has 81⁄2 sacks and 10 tackles for loss to lead the Sun Belt in both categories.
ASU head coach Steve Roberts said MTSU changed its defensive approach during the victory over ULM.
?They?ve gone to a more chaotic blitz, create-negative-play scheme on defense,? Roberts said. ?We know we have a challenge in trying to pick all of that up and make some plays offensively.?
Picking up pass rushers was difficult for last season?s injury-ravaged offensive line. The Red Wolves yielded 31 sacks while throwing 330 passes in 12 games.
ASU quarterbacks have thrown 307 passes in only eight games this year, an average of more than 38 per game, yet opponents have been limited to 16 sacks. Four of those sacks came in the opener at Auburn.
Sophomore quarterback Ryan Aplin?s mobility has helped ASU avoid some sacks, but Roberts said the offensive line has also played much better than it did last season.
?Last year we started the same five guys three times. This year we?ve been able to keep some consistency in our offensive line,? Roberts said. ?We?ve moved a couple of guys in and out at the left tackle spot, but both of them have played a lot of football.?
Experience certainly isn?t an issue. The Red Wolves start an all-senior front with Tom Castilaw at center, Sifa Etu and Dominic Padrta at the guards, and Derek Newton and Kiano Prater at the tackles.
Offensive coordinator Hugh Freeze said the pass protection has been pretty decent for the Red Wolves? first season in his no-huddle, spread scheme.
?We?ve gone some games without sacks, which is very nice,? Freeze said. ?Of course we tell the kids that zero is the number, but I realize that when you throw it 45 times a game or so, particularly against a team like this, probably one or two of those are going to happen.
?We just have to minimize them and hope they?re not at bad times. We?ll preach to our kids and to our quarterbacks that we have to get rid of the football.?
Timely throws figure to be important Tuesday night.
While undersized at 6-3 and 231 pounds, Lattimore is one of the Sun Belt?s most feared pass rushers. He has 171⁄2 sacks for his career, including three in the ULM game.
?He?s a good athlete, a great individual player,? Newton said. ?He knows how to use his athleticism.?
Freeze said Lattimore ?could play at the SEC level? and he?s also impressed with MTSU senior end Emmanuel Perez, who is in a similar mold at 6-1 and 226 pounds.
Perez has two sacks on the season. Junior outside linebacker Darin Davis has 31⁄2 sacks to rank second on the squad. Seniors Dwight Smith and Gary Tucker, the starting interior linemen, have combined to make 45 tackles.
?I think they?re very good at what they do. It?s somewhat unconventional,? Freeze said. ?It?s something you don?t see every Saturday, so it presents its issues for us. They have the most speed we?ve seen off the edge in Lattimore and No. 91 (Perez). It presents a problem for us, and obviously we will challenge our offensive line, particularly on the edge with our tackles, Derek and Kiano and those guys.
?They have a challenge ahead of them, and hopefully they?ll answer that call. They give you so many different looks, too. It?s not like they just line up those pass rushers on the edge and come. There are a lot of different looks they give you, so it?s good we have a few extra days to be sure we?re looking at everything, trying to find some clues.?
Freeze compared MTSU?s defensive scheme to what the Red Wolves saw against Louisiana-Lafayette, adding that the Blue Raiders have better speed on the perimeter with Lattimore and Perez.
Perez registered a sack when the Blue Raiders walloped the Red Wolves 38-14 last season in Murfreesboro, Tenn. Lattimore had four tackles in that game and returned a fumble 31 yards on a play that resulted in a touchdown for MTSU. Jeremy Kellem caught a lateral from Lattimore and covered the final 11 yards.
?We just let the mistakes get the best of us,? Newton said, recalling last year?s game. ?I felt like we didn?t put the mistakes aside and just keep going with the game.?
Newton was the only ASU offensive lineman to start every game last year, when he was a second-team All-SBC selection. When asked about the pressure of facing pass rushers such as Lattimore, Newton said it?s important to know every move and what the offense is trying to do on each play.
Ten of the 16 sacks in ASU?s first eight games came against Auburn, Troy and Louisville. Louisiana-Lafayette, North Texas and Florida Atlantic had two each. Louisiana-Monroe and Indiana did not record a sack against the Red Wolves.
?I feel like we?re doing good. Everybody is sending a lot of blitzes at us,? Newton said. ?Our coaches are giving us a lot of film to study, and we?re studying the film. It?s helping us prepare for the many blitzes people are sending at us.?
More blitzes will be coming ASU?s way Tuesday night, especially if MTSU takes the approach that proved successful against ULM.
Roberts hopes the Red Wolves can use that to their advantage.
?They?ll mix up the coverages, but they have a lot of 3-man fronts, zone blitzes, man blitzes, coming from different angles with different people, just trying to create negative plays, create mismatches, show that they?re coming from one side and come from the other side,? Roberts said. ?They do a great job of mixing all that up and playing very, very aggressive football.
?It will create some negative plays, but hopefully on our end we can create some big plays if we have the right calls at the right time as well.?
