« on: September 22, 2010, 02:11:52 PM »
http://www.al.com/sports/index.ssf/2010/09/scarbinsky_dyers_time_is_comin.htmlScarbinsky: Mike Dyer's time is coming
Published: Wednesday, September 22, 2010, 5:57 AM
Kevin Scarbinsky, Birmingham News
AUBURN
Curtis Luper has been looking forward to the day for a long time. He always wanted to see Mike Dyer and Marcus Lattimore in uniform in Jordan-Hare Stadium.
Of course, the Auburn running backs coach wanted to see them in the same backfield. Some conĂ‚Âsidered it a pipe dream, but he recruited them with that vision. Half his wish came true.
Come Saturday, the true freshman Dyer will line up at tailback for Auburn, and the true freshman Lattimore will do the same for South Carolina. A head-to-head comparison that's destined to last at least three years will go face-to-face for the first time.
"It'll be pretty exciting to see Mike and Marcus on Saturday, for me," Luper said.
That's a pretty healthy attitude, especially toward the one that got away.
"Marcus is a great kid," Luper said. "He has a great family. He's first-class. I'm happy for him and his success."
The Great Freshman Tailback Debate will be even more exciting if Auburn finally unleashes Dyer the way South Carolina has turned loose Lattimore.
Dyer has 39 carries through his first three college games for 212 yards. Lattimore carried 37 times for 182 yards against Georgia alone, sparking ridiculously early comparisons to legends Herschel Walker and Bo Jackson.
Hysteria is no match for history.
I never saw Herschel in person, but I know Bo. I covered him during his senior season at Auburn. Bo and I aren't exactly friends, but Lattimore is no Bo.
Neither is Dyer, for that matter. Until further notice, the only college running back that belongs in the same sentence as Jackson is Walker, and vice versa.
Back to reality, the only thing that's separated Dyer and Lattimore to date is opportunity. Dyer has the higher average yards per carry (5.4 to 4.8). Lattimore has the higher average yards per game (111 to 70.7). Did not realize Dyer had the higher YPC.[/color]
Mention that Dyer hasn't had the touches, and Luper says, "He'll get 'em."
Bring up breaking in Dyer slowly, and Luper says, "He'll have his time. He'll have his days when he carries it 25 and 30 times. That's just not where we are right now with him. He'll probably carry it more this week."
What? Did he say more? What does that mean?
More than he's carried it in a single game so far? Dyer's personal best was 16 attempts against Clemson last weekend.
More than Lattimore will carry it this week? His lightest load was 14 carries in the opener against Southern Miss.
Please. Tell me more.
"It's a tough transition from high school to college," Luper said. "We've tried to do everything we can to make the transition easier for Mike, but he's ready to roll."
Why hasn't Auburn depended on Dyer so far the way South Carolina has leaned on Lattimore? That's a good question. Luper has a good answer. It goes something like this.
Auburn has a quarterback with legs in Cam Newton. He needs to run the ball too, especially since the Tigers started the season with just three tailbacks. That's a perilously low number in this league.
"You need a minimum of four," Luper said. He promised that the Tigers will sign two tailbacks in February.
Break down Auburn's current trio. One of them, Mario Fannin, has broken down, and not for the first time. He injured a shoulder against Mississippi State and didn't play against Clemson. Fannin said he'll return against South Carolina, but his best position may be H-back.
Speed-sweep specialist Onterio McCalebb still weighs only 170 pounds. He's a threat to get broken in two if he takes too many hits.
And then there's Dyer.
"We can't just give it to him 35 times this week, next week and the next week," Luper said. "In this league, he won't be here Week 12 when we need him."
But as the weeks go by, expect Dyer's workload to increase.
"He's 215 pounds," Luper said. "He's built for it. That's what he's done all of his life. He's carried the football 20 to 30 times every Friday night for four years. He's accustomed to that.
"We'll get to that with him, but we're just trying to be judicious."
So who's the best freshman tailback in the SEC? You can judge for yourself Saturday. So far, as Auburn expected, it's a two-man race.