Saturday Scrimmage Will Provide a Key Evaluation of Cowboys This Spring
Players Will Get One of Their Final Opportunities to Impress Coaches
Laramie, Wyo. (April 21, 2023) -- Describing this upcoming Saturday’s scrimmage as a “major deal”, University of Wyoming head football coach
Craig Bohl is looking forward to seeing what Cowboys will step up to make their case for playing time for next season. Bohl emphasized that his team’s closed scrimmage on Saturday, April 22 will be important for he and his coaching staff to make evaluations of players -- more so than even the Spring Game that will take place on Saturday, April 29 and will be open to the public.
“This Saturday is going to be a major deal (scrimmage) -- who can make a play getting off a block, who can sustain a block, who can catch the football,” said Bohl. “Along with that as we compose our football team going into next year, you’re looking at who is going to rise up. We feel for instance we have three really good defensive ends -- who’s going to be our fourth. Those are the things we’re looking for. Some of our players who’ve returned, like
Wrook Brown (nickel back), I think we know what Wrook can do but who’s going to back him up. Those are things from a head-coaching standpoint that I’m going to make clear tomorrow to our assistant coaches that when we walk off the field Saturday and we’re watching the tape who are those guys.”
In terms of the Spring Game on April 29, Bohl described that game as being more for the players to experience a game-like atmosphere but is not as important as an evaluation tool.
“The Spring Game is an opportunity for guys to go out and play in a game and we will get some evaluation from that, but the evaluation we get from this scrimmage tomorrow will be important,” added Bohl. “While we think we are thin at some spots, we are deeper (overall) than what we have been and we have more proven players.”
A couple of the positions that Wyoming does have excellent depth returning at are tight end and defensive end. Both of those position groups stood out in Thursday’s practice.
“We certainly had a spirited practice today. We did some live goal-line work, which was great to do,” commented Bohl. “A couple things that impressed me are our play-action pass game, getting the ball down field particularly to
Treyton (Welch) and
John Mike (John Michael Gyllenborg). I think that can be really beneficial for us to utilize that. Over on defense,
Sabastian Harsh is really progressing from last year. It’s good to see him playing with confidence, and
DeVonne Harris is doing some good things up front.
The tight end group that includes graduate student Welch and sophomore Gyllenborg also returns senior
Colin O’Brien, junior
Nick Miles and redshirt freshman
Isaac Schoenfeld. Welch earned multiple All-Conference honors a year ago, being named First Team All-Mountain West by Pro Football Focus (PFF), Third Team by Phil Steele and Honorable Mention by MW head coaches and media. O’Brien, Miles and Gyllenborg also saw playing time in 2022.
At defensive end, Harris returns for his junior season after earning Fourth Team All-MW honors from Phil Steele and Honorable Mention from MW head coaches and media in his first season as a sohomore starter in ‘22. Harsh, now a sophomore, missed the 2022 season due to an injury he suffered in fall camp, but was expected to be the best of the young defensive end group entering last fall. Joining those two is sophomore
Braden Siders, who earned Honorable Mention Freshman All-America honors from College Football News (CFN) a year ago.
Wyoming Natives Expected to Play Key Roles in 2023
When discussing the tight ends, Bohl was asked to give his evaluation on the development of Rock Springs, Wyo., native
Isaac Schoenfeld. The redshirt freshman is currently listed on the Wyoming roster at 6-5 and over 250 pounds.
“I talked to him after our first scrimmage and told him I didn’t think he scrimmaged well last Saturday,” said Bohl. “I had watched him in high school at Rock Springs and was really impressed with him. He has shown good things in practice this spring but last scrimmage he did not operate at the level we expect. I challenged him today and he had a really good practice. I told him what we’re seeing today is what he needs to do come Saturday when the lights are on. He’s 257 pounds and is running well and catching the ball and hopefully he blocks well.
“That whole collection of our tight end group is something that a lot of people in our league don’t play with -- multiple tight ends -- that is some NFL league stuff. Blake Anderson (Utah State head coach) said when we played them they just ran out of bodies (to cover us). That’s got to be our edge. That’s got to be our nature and those tight ends play a big role.”
Unfortunately, another Wyoming native will be missing the final week of Spring Football with an injury he suffered in Thursday’s practice. Junior fullback
Caleb Driskill from Gillette, Wyo., suffered a knee sprain on Thursday. Bohl said that Mountain View, Wyo., native
Kimball Madsen will step into the fullback role for Driskill.
“We did lose Caleb Driskill today for probably a couple weeks,” announced Bohl. “I think he’s got a slight MCL sprain, which is too bad because he has really become a weapon catching the ball. They think he’ll be out four weeks or so, hopefully that is all it is. He has established himself as a guy who can really make an impact. He’s made great strides and I’m disappointed for him, but none the less if its only four weeks we’ll live to fight another day.”
One Wyoming native who returned to practice this week was graduate offensive tackle
Frank Crum. The Laramie native who has started 36 of 43 career games he’s played over the past four seasons will anchor Wyoming’s offensive line in 2023. Crum earned Third Team All-Mountain West honors last season from Pro Football Focus (PFF) and was a Fourth Team selection by Phil Steele.
“Frank (Crum) was out there practicing today. He had a limited role, but he practiced today,” said Bohl. “His leadership role will be significant. He’s a sixth-year guy who has played a lot of football for us. He’s smart. He’s not complacent. He’s trying to be one of these guys to find an extra two percent that we’ve been talking about. He’s a joy to coach. Before he got his neck and head injury, he was really playing at a high, high level. We’re working to get him back slowly. A lot of six-year guys would do everything they could to not go through spring football and he’s breathing down everybody’s neck to get out there.”
Improving Tackling
Bohl has spoken this spring about efforts that he and his staff have made to improve their team’s tackling. Wyoming has consistently been one of the best defenses in the Mountain West and the country during Bohl’s previous nine seasons, but he has said that the number of missed tackles last season were not acceptable.
“That (missed tackles) was a common theme last year -- the things we talked about, yards after contact with skill players breaking tackles, our defensive guys not tackling well and not bringing guys to the ground,” said Bohl. “We’ve done more live tackling this spring. If we’re going to improve we’ve got to work on that (tackling). There are all kinds of drills, but the best dog-gone thing I know is go out and tackle and so we’re doing that.”