LJS
Ron Brown has heard that a person is wise to do many crossword puzzles as he gets older -- a good exercise to stimulate the mind.
"Well," Brown said after Wednesday's practice, "this is another crossword puzzle for me."
He was talking about his new role in the Husker football program, the one that has him coaching running backs.
The 54-year-old Brown has coached many different positions in his lengthy coaching career. He got his start in 1982 as a defensive coordinator for the semipro New Jersey Rams. He was the head freshman coach at Brown University. He's coached wide receivers and tight ends for Nebraska.
Running backs, though? Nope. Never that.
But what the heck? Bring on that crossword puzzle.
"You know, a lot of coaching is learning on the run," Brown said. "You have to be proactive in wanting to learn some things. I've been listening and watching tapes and studying and trying to get a feel for it. That's going to be a spring-long, summer-long process for me, just as it was when I first came here coaching wide receivers and tight ends."
When Brown started coaching receivers at Nebraska under Tom Osborne, he found whatever coaching books he could about the position. He went and asked the great former Baltimore Colt wide receiver Raymond Berry for whatever advice he could give.
The studying paid off. Brown coached wide receivers and tight ends for Nebraska for 20 years.
There was a comfort level there. Yet when asked by Husker head coach Bo Pelini about moving to coach the running backs this year, Brown was excited.
A new challenge.
"You're retraining the brain," Brown said. "But once the brain kind of gets through that first level and you can get your own creativity matched up into this position, it's good. There's a learning curve and it feels uncomfortable at first, and that's true for probably everybody. But you have to kind of work through it and then all of a sudden it begins to mesh slowly but surely."
Among the items Brown is studying these days: A tape of running back drills put together by a man he considers to have been one of the best running back coaches around -- Frank Solich.
"I patterned a lot of my things as a wide receivers and tight ends coach after how he set up his drills and so forth," Brown said of Solich, who coached NU's running backs before becoming the head coach at Nebraska. "One of the things that he said that stuck with me and I've implemented it: When a guy is a little bit shy and doesn't like to hit, he'd say, 'You know what? That guy needs a lot of collisions.'
"That stuck with me, because I've seen kids who have come into this program who weren't naturally tenacious kids who came out of this program very tenacious. I don't believe that either you've got it or you don't. I think that's why you put 'Coach' on my shirt. That's something I have to develop."
Right now, Brown is trying to develop what he calls a "mental tenacity" in some backs who could step up and help carry the load along with junior Rex Burkhead.
"I don't want guys running out of bounds. I want guys getting extra yards," Brown said. "I've stressed it. They understand it."
He's challenging players like junior Collins Okafor and senior Austin Jones.
"I'm trying to take our kids who have been in the program a while and say, 'Look, let's find a way to get out on that field. You don't want to be just drifting around the program and being mediocre in everything. Find at least one thing where you can be very talented at, very good at, where we can stick you in there.'"
Brown told all the running backs before the first practice he was going to push them hard. Jones liked that.
"There's never a time where we're going to sit there and relax," Jones said.
Brown doesn't have many bodies to work with right now. With injuries keeping some players out of practice Wednesday, he had just six of his players on the field.
But more help is on the way. In the summer, highly regarded recruits Aaron Green, Ameer Abdullah and likely Braylon Heard should all be in Lincoln ready to battle for playing time.
Brown, who was involved heavily in Green's recruitment, has talked to both Green and Abdullah since becoming the running backs coach.
"I don't know a lot about those freshmen yet coming in, what exactly they'll be great at and what they won't," Brown said. "But they're going to have to be quick learners and I'm going to have to get them ready for certain things where they can make a contribution. Maybe not in every realm of the game, but somewhere on that field, they have to make an early contribution."
Ron Brown has heard that a person is wise to do many crossword puzzles as he gets older -- a good exercise to stimulate the mind.
"Well," Brown said after Wednesday's practice, "this is another crossword puzzle for me."
He was talking about his new role in the Husker football program, the one that has him coaching running backs.
The 54-year-old Brown has coached many different positions in his lengthy coaching career. He got his start in 1982 as a defensive coordinator for the semipro New Jersey Rams. He was the head freshman coach at Brown University. He's coached wide receivers and tight ends for Nebraska.
Running backs, though? Nope. Never that.
But what the heck? Bring on that crossword puzzle.
"You know, a lot of coaching is learning on the run," Brown said. "You have to be proactive in wanting to learn some things. I've been listening and watching tapes and studying and trying to get a feel for it. That's going to be a spring-long, summer-long process for me, just as it was when I first came here coaching wide receivers and tight ends."
When Brown started coaching receivers at Nebraska under Tom Osborne, he found whatever coaching books he could about the position. He went and asked the great former Baltimore Colt wide receiver Raymond Berry for whatever advice he could give.
The studying paid off. Brown coached wide receivers and tight ends for Nebraska for 20 years.
There was a comfort level there. Yet when asked by Husker head coach Bo Pelini about moving to coach the running backs this year, Brown was excited.
A new challenge.
"You're retraining the brain," Brown said. "But once the brain kind of gets through that first level and you can get your own creativity matched up into this position, it's good. There's a learning curve and it feels uncomfortable at first, and that's true for probably everybody. But you have to kind of work through it and then all of a sudden it begins to mesh slowly but surely."
Among the items Brown is studying these days: A tape of running back drills put together by a man he considers to have been one of the best running back coaches around -- Frank Solich.
"I patterned a lot of my things as a wide receivers and tight ends coach after how he set up his drills and so forth," Brown said of Solich, who coached NU's running backs before becoming the head coach at Nebraska. "One of the things that he said that stuck with me and I've implemented it: When a guy is a little bit shy and doesn't like to hit, he'd say, 'You know what? That guy needs a lot of collisions.'
"That stuck with me, because I've seen kids who have come into this program who weren't naturally tenacious kids who came out of this program very tenacious. I don't believe that either you've got it or you don't. I think that's why you put 'Coach' on my shirt. That's something I have to develop."
Right now, Brown is trying to develop what he calls a "mental tenacity" in some backs who could step up and help carry the load along with junior Rex Burkhead.
"I don't want guys running out of bounds. I want guys getting extra yards," Brown said. "I've stressed it. They understand it."
He's challenging players like junior Collins Okafor and senior Austin Jones.
"I'm trying to take our kids who have been in the program a while and say, 'Look, let's find a way to get out on that field. You don't want to be just drifting around the program and being mediocre in everything. Find at least one thing where you can be very talented at, very good at, where we can stick you in there.'"
Brown told all the running backs before the first practice he was going to push them hard. Jones liked that.
"There's never a time where we're going to sit there and relax," Jones said.
Brown doesn't have many bodies to work with right now. With injuries keeping some players out of practice Wednesday, he had just six of his players on the field.
But more help is on the way. In the summer, highly regarded recruits Aaron Green, Ameer Abdullah and likely Braylon Heard should all be in Lincoln ready to battle for playing time.
Brown, who was involved heavily in Green's recruitment, has talked to both Green and Abdullah since becoming the running backs coach.
"I don't know a lot about those freshmen yet coming in, what exactly they'll be great at and what they won't," Brown said. "But they're going to have to be quick learners and I'm going to have to get them ready for certain things where they can make a contribution. Maybe not in every realm of the game, but somewhere on that field, they have to make an early contribution."
Comment