Bruce Feldman is a senior writer at ESPN The Magazine.
It's always fun to see which players show that they are ready to
blossom in the spring, and every year we see a bunch of new guys
emerge. Here are the Top 10 revelation guys who will make the
biggest impact in the fall.
No. 1:
Greg McElroy, Alabama, QB: The Tide have a bunch
of big holes to address on offense, namely along the O-line and at
quarterback, where
John Parker Wilson was a solid, if unspectacular, leader.
McElroy, who replaced
Chase Daniel at Texas prep powerhouse Southlake Carroll High,
really seized the opportunity this spring. And even though Nick
Saban is not one just to throw out accolades, he touted the Texan as
his QB after a very impressive spring, capped by a two-TD
performance in the Tide's spring game.
"He's far and away our best quarterback right now," Saban told
reporters. "He knows somebody's gotta beat him out. You know that. I
know that." McElroy won't have the seasoned, physical O-line that
Wilson had, but he will have a more polished
Julio Jones to work with. However, I still think the Tide is
another year away from crashing the top 5, although McElroy at least
flashed some reasons for even more optimism.
No. 2: Malcolm Smith, USC, OLB: We know that USC lost more
linebacker talent than arguably any team has ever lost after one
season, but Pete Carroll still has plenty of reasons to be pumped.
Start with Smith. Former Trojan WR Steve Smith's kid brother was all
over the field for the Trojans this spring. He's physical, he's
smart, and he really has a nose for the ball. Veteran teammate
Taylor Mays predicts Smith will be the Trojans' next great
linebacker. And if Smith and his young mates can step up, the
Trojans figure to have a pretty salty defense again because they
should be very strong in the secondary and capable up front.
Linebacker was the big concern heading into spring.
No. 3:
Jack Crawford, Penn State, DE: Like linebacker at USC,
Penn State has major concerns at defensive end, since the program
just lost its top three DEs, including first-rounder Aaron Maybin,
but Crawford is rapidly coming on. Crawford, who shows the nifty
hands from growing up boxing, continues to fill out and refine his
technique. At 6-5, 262, he could be a very scary player for rival
offenses to deal with over the next three seasons. If he can provide
some of the big-play threat that Maybin brought last season, the
Nits could be back in the top 10 again in 2009.
No. 4:
Jake Locker, Washington, QB: OK, is this finally
the time when the super-athletic Locker breaks out? You should never
read too much into spring stats, but we'll give new UW coach Steve
Sarkisian the benefit of the doubt here. The goal was to get Locker
to complete over 60 percent of his passes and the speedy quarterback
looked much sharper than that in the Huskies' spring game. He
connected on 16 of 18 passes for 200 yards and two touchdowns, and
those other two could've been caught. Now, even if Locker were to
complete 70 percent of his passes, I wouldn't be suggesting that a
winless team in 2008 will become a Top 25 team in 2009, but it could
be a team that causes a lot of problems for the rest of the Pac-10.
No. 5:
Pernell McPhee, Mississippi State, DT: New MSU coach
Dan Mullen's staff found a junior college talent that probably could
play anywhere in the SEC in McPhee, a late bloomer who dazzled the
State staff at times this spring. McPhee, a Pahokee, Fla, product,
wasn't a big recruit coming out of high school a few years back. He
was only about 220 pounds, but grew into being a 260-pound force at
DE at Itawamba JC. He could've signed anywhere after last season,
but opted to stick with MSU and boy is Mullen thrilled.
The Bulldogs are playing McPhee as their three-technique inside
and nobody can block him, says MSU assistant Tony Hughes, who has
coached defensive standouts Michael Meyers and Grady Jackson and
says McPhee can be the same type of dominator. "He's quick. He's
fast. He's flexible. You can't single-block him," adds Hughes. "The
guy is like a rubber band. And he loves to practice."
No. 6:
Wes Lyons, WVU, WR: The 6-8, 220-pound senior
hasn't been much of a factor in the WVU offense in his career,
catching just 22 passes and zero TDs. However, after sliding the
towering receiver into the slot, Lyons -- 100 percent injury-free
for really the first time in his career -- responded with a huge
spring, catching eight TDs passes.
No. 7: Patrick Trahan, Ole Miss, OLB: The onetime Auburn
linebacker came to Oxford with big expectations last year. Trahan
struggled getting into school, and his conditioning suffered. It
also took him some time to get acclimated to the Rebels' scheme. He
did finish the year strong with a terrific game in the Rebels' romp
over Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl. But now Trahan, by far the
team's most athletic linebacker, is ready to take off. Sources
inside the program say he was often the best player on the field in
the spring and was playing behind a loaded D-line, so he should be
ready to pile up tackles in the SEC this fall.
No. 8:
Michael Ames, Boise State, OT: The Broncos have been
searching for more help on the O-line, and Ames, a freshman walk-on
who hadn't played in a football game since the 2004 season, looks
like one of their answers. Ames, who spent 2006 and 2007 away
serving a church mission and turns 22 this summer, impressed the BSU
staff with his intelligence and his work ethic. "You want to coach a
guy like him," offensive line coach Scott Huff told the Idaho
Statesman. "He's smart, he works his butt off, you won't find a guy
who works harder on the field. He studies his plays, and he wants to
be good."
No. 9: Chris Walker, Tennessee, DE: No player has
responded any better to the coaching change in Knoxville than the
235-pound junior, who in his previous two seasons hadn't been much
of a factor. Monte Kiffin's new defensive scheme calls for defensive
ends flying up the field, and suits Walker well. UT coaches have
raved about Walker's explosiveness from the moment they first
watched him, hailing him as the program's second-best athlete
(behind phenom Eric Berry). All throughout spring, Walker was
unblockable, flying into the backfield, making sacks and forcing
fumbles. Don't be surprise if he quadruples his sack total from 2008
(three) this season.
No. 10:
Edward Wesley, TCU, RB: Having to replace
Aaron Brown, a back who ran for over 2,500 yards in his career,
wasn't going to be easy, but coach Gary Patterson gushed about
Wesley, a redshirt freshman he compares to former TCU star Robert
Merrill. "He's got the same vision sideways, only he's faster,"
Patterson said. That means Wesley should be a big part of a running
back rotation for a potential top-10 team.