College Media Network - Search the largest news resource for college students by college students

Tech prepares for Kansas receiver coming off big game against OU

By Alex Ybarra

Print this article

Published: Thursday, October 23, 2008

Updated: Sunday, August 30, 2009

wtp.Briscoe_Dezmon2_08302008[1].jpg

Kansas Athletics

Like any receiver, Kansas' Dezmon Briscoe probably smiles every time he notices a defense playing man coverage.

"When you go out there and it's man-to-man," Briscoe said, "you know that you can beat them."

After his record-breaking performance against No. 4 Oklahoma last week, Briscoe could see less of those matchups. Against OU, the 6-foot-3, 200-pound sophomore receiver had 12 receptions and 269 yards - both school records - along with a pair of touchdowns.

Although it was in a loss, his 269-yard effort is best in the nation this year for any individual receiver and second best in Big 12 Conference history behind former Oklahoma State receiver Adarius Bowman's 300-yard game against Kansas in 2006.

Briscoe, whose No. 23 Jayhawks meet No. 8 Texas Tech in Lawrence, Kan., 11 a.m Saturday, gets lined up all over the field by KU in hopes of finding a mismatch in coverage.

"Most of the time he's back side. A lot of times if they overload one side with three receivers, he's bound to have the back side," McNeill said. "If they're two by two, he could be anywhere.

"The quarterback goes to him quite a bit. He's got good speed, good hands, good size, a really good competitor. He's good at all routes, and he does a good job of catching the ball and getting up field like our guys."

The reception record Briscoe broke against OU belonged to his teammate, receiver Kerry Meier, who switched from quarterback to receiver in 2007 to see playing time. Meier set the record with 11 receptions earlier this season in a loss against South Florida only to see Briscoe one-up him against OU.

"It was a heck of a performance," Kansas coach Mark Mangino said. "I like the way he went up in a crowd and caught the ball and I liked the way he ran his routes precisely. He understood the coverages. Todd (Reesing) did a good job of getting the ball to him. He has shown that he is capable of being one of the top receivers in this league."

KU quarterback Todd Reesing does a good job of distributing the ball to his sure-handed receivers. Meier, who has 632 yards receiving, leads the team and ranks fifth nationally in receptions per game with 8.14.

Reesing, who is 17-3 as a starter, is following up a stellar sophomore year with a 155.7 passer rating and 2,322 yards passing with 17 touchdowns and five interceptions. Briscoe, who has stayed humble despite all the recent attention, said his preparation and attitude will be no different for the Tech game, and he expects Kansas' offense to continue its execution.

"The way our offense works, we don't have just one play maker," Briscoe said. "We have a lot of play makers, as far as Jon Wilson, Kerry Meier and the other receivers. So whoever is hot, Todd goes to, and I believe he felt I was hot (against OU) so he kept going to me."

An intriguing battle to watch could be who has the bigger game between Briscoe and Tech wide receiver Michael Crabtree. Nationally, Crabtree's 724 yards are tied for ninth while his 12 touchdowns rank second. After Briscoe's career game against OU, he is 12th in the NCAA in receiving yards per game with 100.71 and 28th in receptions per game with 6.14.

Tech safety Darcel McBath said he caught the latter part of Briscoe's performance against OU, and he compared Briscoe to an All-American receiver that Tech's defense faces every day in practice.

"I saw how many yards he had, and that's like a Michael Crabtree type of night, so we're definitely gonna have to bring our A-game in the secondary," McBath said. "The D-line is gonna have to get some pressure on the quarterback, because he's done a good job of getting the ball to him, buying time."

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article!







log out