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Posts Tagged ‘Brooks Reed’

Rising prospect: Ex-Wildcat Brooks Reed ready to roll at NFL Combine

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Showing he can play outside linebacker is the latest hurdle for Brooks Reed.
Photo by Mark Evans, TucsonCitizen.com

Former Arizona defensive end Brooks Reed passed his first test by performing well in practices at the Senior Bowl.

Now comes his next text — the NFL Scouting Combine.

That got underway today in Indianapolis, with Reed’s groups — the defensive linemen and linebackers — beginning the process on Friday.

Yes, defensive linemen and linebackers.

Reed will do drills with both groups as scouts evaluate whether they like him as a smallish pass-rushing end who plays with his hand on the ground or a bigger pass-rush outside linebacker in a 3-4 scheme who plays standing up.

“It’s not very much different,” Reed said in a phone interview last week.

“You’re either rushing the quarterback or you’re going to be covering somebody in the flats, which you sometimes do as a defensive end. It’s not like you’re covering a wide receiver up the seam.”

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Ex-Wildcat Brooks Reed earns good reviews at Senior Bowl

Friday, January 28th, 2011

Brooks Reed excels moving forward to the quarterback; can he drop back, too?
Photo by Mark Evans, TucsonCitizen.com

Former Arizona Wildcats defensive end Brooks Reed earned good reviews at practice this week for Saturday’s Senior Bowl.

“I thought I knew him well, and I thought he performed about up to expectations,” Rob Rang, a senior analyst for NFLDraftScout.com told me Thursday night.

“He was impressive as a pass rusher. He showed a variety of pass rush moves. He showed motor. He showed the ability to drop back against the pass. … I thought it was a strong week of practice.”

It’s the last thing Rang talked about — Reed’s ability to drop back against the pass — that will be critical to Reed’s draft status.

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Arizona senior Brooks Reed: ‘I’ve had the time of my life’

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Arizona senior Brooks Reed earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors this season.
Photo by Mark Evans, TucsonCitizen.com

Arizona Wildcats coach Mike Stoops, for whatever reason, did not do his usual postgame radio interview with 1290-AM, but senior defensive end Brooks Reed stepped in following the Alamo Bowl.

Reed, a Sabino High graduate, has been a three-year starter at defensive end. Known for his energy and hustle, he is small for defensive end standards in the NFL, and likely will have to start making the transition to an outside linebacker role in a 3-4 scheme as he prepares for the draft.

Reed, one of the team captains, spent a few minutes talking with Dana Cooper after the 36-10 loss to Oklahoma State:

“Definitely not the way we wanted to finish out, losing those last five games. It’s sad to see all the seniors leave on that note, but besides that, I’ve had the time of my life. It’s something I will never forget. I’ve made so many friends and met so many people through this program. It’s been such a positive experience in my life.”

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Arizona’s Class of 2006 makes its final stand at Alamo Bowl

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

Ricky Elmore (left) and Brooks Reed have been three-year mainstays at defensive end.
Photo by Chris Morrison-US PRESSWIRE

Arizona Wildcats coach Mike Stoops was selling the future in his early days in Tucson, and recruits were listening.

His 2006 group was the highest rated among his seven recruiting classes — ranked 18th nationally by Rivals.com and 19th by Scout.com. That doesn’t always translate to success on the field, but, in this case, it did.

That 2006 class — “they’re the cornerstones,” Stoops said — makes its final stand Wednesday night in the Alamo Bowl against Oklahoma State.

With a foundation that includes Colin Baxter, Brooks Reed and Ricky Elmore — plus departed standouts Earl Mitchell, Devin Ross, Nate Ness and Cam Nelson — that 2006 class helped Stoops turn around the program.

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Q&A with Arizona Wildcats senior Brooks Reed

Monday, December 20th, 2010

Arizona senior defensive end Brooks Reed was selected first-team All-Pac-10 this season.
Photo by Mark Evans, TucsonCitizen.com

KGUN-TV sports reporter Jake Knapp and I double-teamed Arizona senior defensive end Brooks Reed after a recent practice.

Reed was the last player off the field, having done some up-downs as punishment for being late to a team meeting that day. He blamed a faulty alarm clock.

Anyway, after catching his breath, Reed — who has teamed with senior Ricky Elmore to form the best pair of pass-rushing ends in the Pac-10 — answered our questions about the Dec. 29 Alamo Bowl matchup against Oklahoma State and other things.

Here is some of what he said:

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Toughest tests await, but ‘so far, so good’ for Arizona defense

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

With plays like this, Arizona held Iowa to its season-low for yardage/Photo by David Kadlubowski, Arizona Republic

Worried about Arizona’s quarterback situation? Will some positive defensive numbers make you feel better?

The Wildcats are at the halfway point of the regular season and the unit that everyone was worried about in the preseason — the defense — ranks seventh in the nation, allowing 13.3 points per game. Arizona is 10th in total defense at 284.3 yards allowed per game.

“So far, so good,” co-defensive coordinator Tim Kish said after Monday’s practice.

“I really feel like we have a group of guys who like playing football together, and they have a real passion for the game. We’re preparing well, and that will be a major issue for us this week to prepare for these guys.”

These guys would be Washington, featuring senior dual-threat quarterback Jake Locker, sophomore running back Chris Polk (on his way to his second 1,000-yard season) and big-play receiver Jermaine Kearse (19 touchdown receptions in 30 career games).

It’s still tough to shake away the memories of Oregon State quarterback Ryan Katz having the game of his life against the Wildcats, passing and running at will two weekends ago, but check out how the Wildcats have done against other foes this season:

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Criner’s development another sign of Stoops’ eye for talent

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Juron Criner is off to a fast start with 10 catches against Toledo/Rick Osentoski/US PRESSWIRE

I can imagine it’s a daunting task to rank all the senior wide receivers in high school, but it’s nearly impossible to fathom that Juron Criner was rated the nation’s 167th-best wideout after the 2007 season.

Yep. That was the judgment of Scout.com, which gave him a two-star rating, which is pretty much the basement-level rating for any recruit that signs with a major-college team.

You know who else was once a two-star recruit? Arizona junior cornerback Trevin Wade (by Rivals.com) in the 2007 class.

I was thinking about all this while contributing a story on Criner for FoxSportsArizona.com — Criner making the leap to elite receiver. There are some kids the recruiting services just miss on, for whatever reason.

But I think it’s worth noting that while fans cheer, puff out their chests and mock their rivals when their team signs four- and five-star recruits, a good eye for talent and player development is an acceptable substitute.

This is where Arizona coach Mike Stoops and his staff come in.

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Stoops pushes for improvement on both lines

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Coach Mike Stoops would like to see Nic Grigsby have more room to run, like he had here against Toledo/Rick Osentoski-US PRESSWIRE

Arizona wants to get pushy this week.

While de-constructing his team’s performance at Toledo, coach Mike Stoops, while otherwise pleased with the effort and most of the results, saw two notable areas in need of an upgrade.

One was the offensive line. The Wildcats failed to get enough push up front in the running attack, especially in the power run game.

That should be easily solved this week against The Citadel. Fullback Taimi Tutogi, who didn’t play much in the opener because of an ankle injury, is slated to return as a lead blocker.

That means A.J. Simmons doesn’t have to be in the backfield and can return to his natural tight end spot on the line, replacing Jack Baucus. The redshirt freshman was a tad “star-struck” in his first game, Stoops said, and Simmons is more comfortable and effective up front.

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A few questions with Arizona assistant coach Jeff Hammerschmidt

Monday, August 16th, 2010

UA assistant coach Jeff Hammerschmidt is working with perhaps the best group of defensive ends in the Pac-10/Photo by Nico Gimino

I caught up recently with Arizona assistant coach Jeff Hammerschmidt, who is in charge of the defensive ends and special teams. Not a bad gig this season.

At defensive end, he has senior starters Brooks Reed and Ricky Elmore, each capable of double-digit sack totals. And there is also senior D’Aundre Reed, often overlooked, but coaches consider him to be a co-starter.

In fact, D’Aundre Reed, at 6-4 and 258 pounds, has the right combination of size and speed to move to a defensive tackle position when the Wildcats want to go “Cheetah.” That’s the name of their speedy pass-rush package that the coaches experimented with in the spring … and they continue to do so in fall camp.

(Arizona worked on this scheme in its two-minute drill Monday night, with D’Aundre Reed and fellow end Apai Tuihalamaka moving inside.)

“It’s just a matter of getting comfortable with it,” Hammerschmidt said.

On special teams, punt returner Bug Wright and kick returner Travis Cobb each had a return touchdown last season. Senior punter Keenyn Crier (42.9-yard career average) has one of the best legs in the Pac-10. Sophomore placekicker Alex Zendejas’ last kick in a game beat Arizona State on the final play.

John Bonano is back to handle the kickoffs, and Hammerschmidt said the team will be adding a walk-on who can also kickoff and provide some depth at punter.

A few questions for Hammerschmidt:

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Stopping Nebraska not complicated for no-name Arizona defense

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Nebraska has Ndamukong Suh, the Associated Press Player of the Year as a defensive tackle. The Cornhuskers have the enduring Blackshirts nickname for their defense.

They have a defense that ranks second nationally, allowing 11.23 points per game. They have a defense that gave up just 202 yards to Texas in the Big 12 championship game.

Earl Mitchell (making tackle) and Ricky Elmore (No. 44) have been big parts of a stout Arizona defensive line/Wildcat Sports Report photo

Earl Mitchell (making tackle) and Ricky Elmore (No. 44) have been big parts of a stout Arizona defensive line/Wildcat Sports Report photo

They have another defensive tackle, Jared Crick, who was All-Big 12 as a sophomore and had five sacks against Baylor this season. They have two more players who were first-team all-conference — cornerback Prince Amukamara and strong safety Larry Asante.

And what will Arizona’s defense counter with in the Holiday Bowl on Wednesday?

Although the bar wasn’t set high, this is UA’s best defensive line in at least a decade.

Defensive end Ricky Elmore finished the regular season with a Pac-10-best 10.5 sacks. Brooks Reed has been a factor since coming back from a mid-season injury. Defensive tackle Earl Mitchell is a possible mid-round NFL draft pick. Horton has been solid.

Arizona’s 34 sacks are the most since the 2001 season.

The Wildcats have been a self-described bunch of no-names all season — no first-team All-Pac-10 players on this unit — but that chip on their shoulder has served them well.

No need to brush it off now.

“Ndamukong Suh, he’s a crazy player,” said Arizona senior defensive tackle Donald Horton.

“He definitely plays hard and does his thing. But I feel that we have done, as a unit, just as much. At times, we can really dominate. There were times in the middle of the season when we got lackadaisical and fell off a bit, but I think we hit our stride the last couple of games and really tried to turn on the heat.”

Arizona will be trying to turn on the heat against a lukewarm Nebraska offense that grew increasingly conservative during the season, content to let its defense do the heavy lifting (and trying to avoid another eight-turnover disaster like the one in a 9-7 home loss to Iowa State).

After that, the Cornhuskers didn’t attempt more than 21 passes in any of their other six games. They scrapped the spread offense for a run-oriented attack, led by running back Roy Helu Jr. (1,139 rushing yards, 10 touchdowns).

Nebraska topped 300 total yards only twice in nine Big 12 games.

The team’s biggest playmaker is receiver Niles Paul, who has 36 receptions for 673 yards and is dangerous in the return game. Nebraska is expected use junior Zac Lee and true freshman Cody Green at quarterback.

“They’re not a complicated team offensively,” Horton said. “They don’t have a lot of shifts, and there aren’t a lot of adjustments we have to make. We just play our defense and be comfortable in it.”

The Wildcats don’t want to get too comfortable. Nebraska figures to be persistent with the run, pounding away, hoping to spring something big on the ground or play-action to Paul.

“They are very physical up front,” said UA defensive end Brooks Reed.

“They do a lot of traditional stuff. But if you can’t stop it, you can’t stop it. And they’re going to keep doing it until you can.”

It will be up to the no-names to stop it, to make a name in a game in which Suh is the undisputed star. He is the probable No. 1 pick in the 2010 NFL Draft … and when is the last time Arizona faced a defender this good?

Penn State linebacker LaVar Arrington in 1999? Washington defensive tackle Steve Emtman in the early 1990s?

Horton said his father has had words of advice when it comes to Suh.

“He said, ‘All the attention is going to be on him, but you’re going to be at the stage, too. Make a name for yourselves, too, as a defensive front,’” Horton said.

“In my heart, I’ve been using that as a challenge.”

Related links from TucsonCitizen.com’s Sports Network:
AG’s Wildcat Report: UA’s Horton hoping a dream comes true in Holiday Bowl

Wild About AZ Cats: UA’s offense more of a challenge for Pelini this time around

AG’s Wildcat Report: Wildcats ready to shed the blue helmets for Holiday Bowl

AG’s Wildcat Report: Holiday Bowl flashback: What the Nebraska ‘N’ really stood for

Wildcat Sports Report: Cats close to completing recruiting class

UASports.net: Breaking down the Holiday Bowl inside and out