Harrell surprised by Eastern Washington defense
Alex Ybarra
Issue date: 9/3/08 Section: Sports
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"It's another thing that kind of gives us a little bit of confidence," said Nichols, who threw for 335 yards in a 49-24 loss to Tech Saturday. "We have a brand new defense. We run a completely different defense."
Nichols was right, according to the observations of quarterback Graham Harrell, who said because of a new defensive coordinator, the Eagles left no trace of an unknown defense on tape.
Even studying Central Washington from last season, where EWU defensive coordinator John Graham came from, was a shot in the dark, Harrell said.
"Nothing that they did, had we seen," said Harrell, who threw for 500 yards for the third time in three seasons. "They didn't show any of that."
Harrell said the Eagles' efforts to confuse Tech's spread offense were successful at times.
They would play three safeties deep with both corners playing cover two while three linemen would crash up the middle, Harrell said. At times, Harrell recalls EWU dropping nine into coverage to take away the deep ball, which opened up the door for slot receivers Eric Morris and Detron Lewis, who each had more than 160 yards receiving.
"I've never seen that actually," Harrell said. "They're trying to take anything downfield away. That's why the little bubble screen to the inside receiver, we got 15 yards a pop because they had everyone so deep."
While Harrell said the offense had to adjust to the changes early on, Tech still went up 21-0, but he was forced out of the pocket and pressured numerous times throughout the game.
"He went back and forth in and out of rhythm," Tech coach Mike Leach said of Harrell. "At times he was in, and at times he tried to make too much happen. He would linger around and make something go deep."
For the most part, Tech adjusted to Eastern Washington's defense, which is what Harrell said goes along with the territory of such a potent offense.
Now that he is a senior, Harrell said he has seen just about everything, and admitted that there is no substitute for experience in an offense that gets a lot of different looks thrown its way.
"You've seen a lot of defenses," he said. "You've seen teams try to change it up. You've seen teams show one thing on film and then run something completely different. As a player it helps to have experiences and realize that know matter what they do you have to execute as an offense."
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