Texas Tech Football Roster Review | Receivers
This is DTN's annual review of players, position-by-position, to take a look at the players that I think will be gone (graduating seniors or players possibly leaving the program), guys I know something about (these are players I've heard), guys I know nothing about (these are players that are on the roster who I have no idea who they are) and guys I think are on the way (commits to the program).
PREVIOUS ROSTER REVIEWS | Quarterbacks | Running Backs | Offensive Line | Receivers | Defensive Line | Linebackers | Secondary | Special Teams
GUYS I THINK WILL BE GONE
| Number | Name | Year | Ht./Wt. | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 | Lyle Leong | SR | 6-1/175 | Wide Receiver |
| 83 | Blake Kelley | SR | 5-10/188 | Inside Receiver |
| 17 | Detron Lewis | SR | 6-0/208 | Inside Receiver |
| 48 | Ryan Haliburton | SO | 6-4/251 | Tight End |
| 13 | E.J. Celestie | RS FR | 5-11/174 | Wide Receiver |
It will be incredibly difficult to replace the production of Leong and Lewis. Not impossible, but difficult. Leong's 19 touchdowns is nothing short of remarkable and Lewis' move to inside receiver in the middle of the season proved to be a boost for the offense in terms of consistency and production. And I think there's talent at the receiver position, which is why I say that it's not impossible to replace what Leong and Lewis did, but right now it's unproven talent. Scoring touchdowns is a gift and Leong's ability to go up and grab the football is something that's tough to replicate and will more likely be done by committee rather than just one person picking up the slack. I thought Lewis improved significantly over the course of his senior year, but the bad part was that it seemed like it took too long for it to click for Lewis. I think he'll be missed, but I also think there are players that can pick up the slack for what Lewis did for the team last year.
Haliburton is essentially retiring and I believe he's moving on to join a service academy (I think). Celestie I believe has transferred, but I'm not sure where. He's still listed on the official roster at Texas Tech, but for some reason I think I've read something about Celestie moving on to another college for lack of playing time. Kelley was an inside receiver, although I'm not sure he was ever on scholarship, who has graduated.
GUYS I KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT
| Number | Name | Year | Ht./Wt. | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | Jacoby Franks | JR | 6-0/195 | Wide Receiver |
| 87 | Aaron Fisher | RS FR | 6-2/186 | Wide Receiver |
| 18 | Eric Ward | RS FR | 6-0/202 | Wide Receiver |
| 14 | Darrin Moore | SO | 6-4/210 | Wide Receiver |
| 86 | Alexander Torres | SO | 6-1/199 | Wide Receiver |
| 88 | Shawn Corker | FR | 6-1/191 | Wide Reciever |
| 82 | Adam James | JR | 6-3/233 | Inside Receiver |
| 11 | Tramain Swindall | JR | 6-3/184 | Inside Receiver |
| 2 | Cornelius Douglas | SO | 5-10/200 | Inside Receiver |
| 6 | Austin Zouzalik | SO | 5-11/191 | Inside Receiver |
| Tyson Williams | SR | 6-0/205 | Wide Receiver |
Your leading returning receivers are Torres, Zouzalik, Swindall, Franks and Douglas. That's not a bad group to help lead the offense. It's not perfect, but it's pretty good and the difference between being an all-conference player and just a guy that contributes every once in a while is consistency. Every one of these guys, whether it be due to their own doing or injury, have to improve the consistency part of their game. The one advantage to other years is that Texas Tech returns a guy, Torres, that the team and players know is capable of leading this team in receptions (see 2009).
And I'm pretty comfortable writing that I think that Zouzalik, Swindall, Franks and Douglas are talented players. They're all capable of making a significant impact on the game (maybe except for Douglas, but watching what he did against Northwestern makes me think that he's capable), but they're also fully capable of having zero impact on the game. Zouzalik had 1 catch for 3 yards against TAMU, but had 5 catches for 50 yards against Northwestern. Torres had 0 catches for 0 yards (I believe he did play) against Houston, but had 6 catches for 133 yards against Colorado. Tramain Swindall had 0 catches and 0 yards against Texas, but had 4 catches for 58 yards against Houston. You get the point.
The nice thing is that it's not just going to be the guys mentioned above. A guy like Moore could be an excellent option. Moore and the below-mentioned Kennard are really the only receivers on the team with any significant height. I also really like the way that Fisher came on strong at the end of the year. He's got good size, he's willing to play special teams, which makes me think he's a team player, and seeing Fisher step into a role after two years is about right as far as I'm concerned. I think the staff did a good job of dangling that carrot in front of Fisher to get him motivated for this year. And the same could be said for Ward. All of the talent in the world, and I still think that talent is there and I'm not at al discouraged about Ward's progress. Just like the NFL, I think it takes time to figure it out and how to make an impact.
More after the jump.
That's also gives me some hope about Corker. If we don't see him at all this year I won't be disappointed. It takes time to figure it out and there are some talented players in front of Corker. I think the key is to handle it a lot like they handled Ward and Fisher in that if you give Corker something to play for and he's a competitor, then that's all the motivation he'll probably need.
I'm not going to talk much about Williams except for the fact that he's listed as a senior, but he's sitting out this year and will only have 2012 to be eligible. Williams won't be able to play in 2011.
| Number | Name | Year | Ht./Wt. | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 89 | Tony Trahan | SO | 6-5/225 | Tight End |
Trahan originally walked-on to play for Rutgers, is originally from Coppell, and decided to transfer back closer to home. If I were a betting man, I'd say that Trahan is your blocking tight end and will be a viable option, along with Amaro. Even when Trahan walked-on at Rutgers, he knew that he needed to add weight and I'd bet that this is exactly what he did as he sat out a year to transfer (the photo identifying Trahan, I don't think is Trahan):
Actually, Trahan has gained weight already -- and some valuable traveling experience."I reported on June 28 (thinking) I was 220 or so," he said. "Then my flight got delayed and my credit card didn't work, so I went the whole day without eating. I got in at 1 a.m. and didn't eat for 24 hours.
"So I was 216 (when he weighed in). That was pretty embarrassing -- just a shock when I stepped on that scale."
Trahan, back at 225 pounds, says the plan is to add more weight. He'd like to play this season at 230-plus and envisions a day where he will be between 245 and 255. Looking at him now in a football uniform, he most resembles an exclamation point.
"I'm not going against high school guys anymore," he said. "I need to get a lot bigger. I already can tell that after five days of practice."
And OC Brown has mentioned Trahan specifically:
One of the first players Brown mentioned was tight end Tony Trahan, a transfer from Rutgers who has impressed all year. Second-semester freshman Beau Carpenter seemed like a shoo-in to be in the offensive line rotation until he needed an appendectomy in late August."I’m glad we got to redshirt him," Brown said. "It’s kind of been a blessing that he got sick, because we probably wouldn’t have. We’ve got all five (offensive line starters) coming back, but they better not rest on their laurels, because he’s talented enough to take one of their spots."
GUYS I KNOW NOTHING ABOUT
| Number | Name | Year | Ht./Wt. | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28 | Brent Mitcham | FR | 5-9/171 | Wide Receiver |
| 22 | Trey Ozee | FR | 6-0/184 | Wide Receiver |
| 80 | Ty Taylor | FR | 6-0/194 | Wide Receiver |
| 27 | Kevin Thornton | FR | 6-1/185 | Wide Receiver |
This is where we're going to learn a little something about the players on the roster who you may not have heard of. Rather than doing much homework, I'm going to link to their Texas Tech profile page and let each of you dig around.
Up first is Mitcham:
Brent Mitcham ... born June 11, 1991 in Houston, Texas ... son of Keith and Karen Mitcham ... has two sisters, Rachel and Kristen ... enjoys hunting and fishing.
Ozee:
Trey Ozee... born October 18, 1990, in Amarillo, Texas... son of Kenny and Debbie Ozee... has a younger brother, Chase... enjoys fishing and hunting... majoring in business.
No bio.
No bio.
GUYS I THINK ARE ON THE WAY
| Name | Year | Ht./Wt. | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Derek Edwards | FR | 6-1/163 | Wide Receiver |
| Marcus Kennard | JR | 6-4/205 | Wide Receiver |
| Jace Amaro | FR | 6-5/237 | Tight End |
| Jakeem Grant | FR | 5-7/157 | Wide Receiver |
This position, and maybe along with defensive tackle, has the potential to be the biggest impact position. I think that Kennard and Amaro come in and play immediately. Kennard plays because I think he's a highly rated JUCO player that knows what he needs to do to have an early impact. With Amaro, there's not a player on this team that's even remotely similar to what Amaro can do on the football field. You just don't see players Amaro's size with his type of speed. It's not normal. And I mean that in the best possible way. And Kennard adds some serious size to the receiver position, one that's relatively lacking, and having some size on the outside can only help.
Just like Ward, Fisher and Corker I'm perfectly fine letting Edwards and Grant redshirt. Edwards has been compared to Leong by a number of folks, including me, and I still think that's a pretty accurate comparison. With Grant, the closest comparison would be Ben McRoy. If Grant were 2 inches taller, he might have offers from quite a few more universities. And if you look at his receiving yards, he went from a guy that just had 34 catches for 470 yards his junior year to more than doubling that effort, with 79 catches for 1,306 yards and 13 TD's his senior year. He just wasn't on a lot of folks radars until later in his senior year. Still want to see the footrace between Grant and McRoy.
YEAR-BY-YEAR CHART
RECEIVER
| SENIOR | JUNIOR | SOPHOMORE | FRESHMAN |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jacoby Franks | Darrin Moore | Aaron Fisher | Shawn Corker |
| Adam James | Alexander Torres | Eric Ward | Nick Cheesman |
| Tramain Swindall | Cornelius Douglas | Brett Hume | |
| Austin Zouzalik | Brent Mitcham | ||
| Tyson Williams | Trey Ozee | ||
| Desmond Haynes | Ty Taylor | ||
| Marcus Kennard | Kevin Thornton | ||
| Derek Edwards | |||
| Jakeem Grant |
| SENIOR | JUNIOR | SOPHOMORE | FRESHMAN |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tony Trahan | Jace Amaro |
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Comments
To clarify, I didn’t get a chance to update this since walk-on Bo Whitney decided to leave the school and put him under the list of Players I Think Will Be Gone. I just deleted what I wrote about him, which was that he was eligible all of last year to play, but didn’t play, which may have been an indication of what the staff thought about what the staff thought he could do for this team.
Go Raiders . . .
Double-T Nation
Celestie transferd to McNese St.
"The male wilderbeast returns to propagate the herd."
by wrench_raider on Feb 25, 2011 12:55 PM CST via mobile up reply actions
Danke
"The male wilderbeast returns to propagate the herd."
by wrench_raider on Feb 25, 2011 8:09 PM CST via mobile up reply actions
We met
Trahan’s parents at the Dallas RRC event….incredible folks and I would have to guess he is one hell of a kid based on that.
"You don't know what the ball is gonna do....its crazy man".
-Josh Howard
by oldschoolraider on Feb 25, 2011 2:53 PM CST reply actions
I'm looking at the list of
receivers I am thinking that this is where some of that RB talent goes….thats what the gut says
"You don't know what the ball is gonna do....its crazy man".
-Josh Howard
by oldschoolraider on Feb 25, 2011 2:54 PM CST reply actions
I think
redshirting Edwards and Grant WILL alleviate the logjam we’re building at all receiver positions.
What worries me is that with Moore and Kennard that may squeeze out some guys like Ward, Douglas, and Fisher….maybe even either Torres or Zouzalik may be squeezed out if these guys produce. It will be tough for me to watch. However, I will watch.
Arriba sus Pistolas, Muchachos!
by Tortilla Pirate on Feb 25, 2011 3:23 PM CST reply actions
It’s all about who’s producing. All these guys will get a shot but starting because you’re a junior or senior won’t cut it anymore. Time to find the players versus pretenders.
"You've got to find your inner pirate" - Mike Leach
"We started too late" - Neal Brown
I agree
If these juco guys like Moore and Kennard beat out some of these guys I mentioned, then so be it. I think everyone here who knows me knows that I will take a player(s) like moore and kennard and and let them have a legit shot at beating out guys like ward, douglas, etc. just because of their measureables. You cant coach height
Arriba sus Pistolas, Muchachos!
by Tortilla Pirate on Feb 25, 2011 3:44 PM CST up reply actions
Yep. I like Kennard’s size and speed. I also think Corker makes a strong case this year. Ward is a guy who I think will also start to make noise. Torres is a solid player already that just makes thing happen no matter what the situation is. I tend to think Swindall had his chance already and may have sealed his fate.
"You've got to find your inner pirate" - Mike Leach
"We started too late" - Neal Brown
For the past two seasons, I have been worried for the receiver positons.
The roster has not had the hands or the ability to break away that we have seen in the past.
That we have sought transferees and jc’s for the spots reinforces that thinking for me.
Living large in Texas...Texas forever.
All we know about Marcus Kennard is that he's tall...
he doesn’t know the offense yet… and he may not even play in his first year… give the known commodities some time before you rule them out in favor of an unknown
Look
I dont disagree with you. But I remember very vividly having a “who the fu¢k is THAT guy” moment the first time I saw darrin moore catch a pass. Although theyre very different physically I had the same feeling I had the first time I saw(noticed) Lyle Leong catch a pass (Nov 1 2008). I remember saying to myself, “that guy LOOKS like a receiver!”
Moore may be further along in picking up the offense. If Kennard can catch up quickly. I realize there is no guarantee. They may be a lethal combination at the outside receiver position.
Arriba sus Pistolas, Muchachos!
by Tortilla Pirate on Feb 25, 2011 5:30 PM CST up reply actions
I am not sure we have a log jam...
We have generally recruited receivers in larger numbers…depth on the bench for injuries + we like to play two deep. We consistently have positions for 4 or 5 per play.
Living large in Texas...Texas forever.
Thanks, Seth
You have done a great job, as usual, in collecting and presenting the information above. It is evident that the projected receiver talent Texas Tech will put on the field this year will have an excellent opportunity to match or improve on the results the receivers had last year and in previous years. It even suggests we may have the talent level available that can bring back the excitement we all shared in the 2008 season. That is something for us all to become excited about. It does not matter who becomes the leaders of the pack, just that each and every one called on this year put forth the extra effort that will be needed to achieve those anticipated projections.
My personal preferences are for Torres, Zou, Ward, Corker and Amaro provide the effort to take this offense to the heights of which we all have become familiar. The rest will have ample opportunities to lend top flight support. Together, this group should make us all very happy to be a part of Red Raider Nation. And, as a result, Seth, you can probably expect to this site explode to great heights itself as new bloggers come here to give input and insight, adding to our DTN experience.
TTpilk
"Never, never, never give up." Winston Churchill
We Need Eight
To play receiver in the spread. Eight is a lot to ask out of 11 returning lettermen. We have abot ten freshman and walk ons. Torres will be one of the starters. Zou will be a starter. Good luck on the rest. This is a pretty uncertain position for the team with so many unknowns. For some reason, I think Jakeem Grant may be the big surprise. Speed kills.
If Jace Amaro is as good as everyone wants to make him before he plays a down, Tech will probably be okay. I wish I had as much faith in this staff developing receivers as I had in the last staff. Only time will tell.
I believe
TEN is the number we nee for the rotation. We need TWO additional guys to swap out and entire IR position when we go TE. whomever your eight are plus Amaro + Travan (maybe)
Arriba sus Pistolas, Muchachos!
by Tortilla Pirate on Feb 28, 2011 12:55 PM CST up reply actions
You two see the big picture.
We need lots of guys on the roster and from those, lots of guys to block, catch, and run. We will not be bad…the question is-can we find great ?
Living large in Texas...Texas forever.
can we find great ?
Ah, that is the question. My point is Torres (09) and Leong (10) were not great enough. Ive got my fingers crossed on Moore, Evans, and Kennard being GREAT enough.
Arriba sus Pistolas, Muchachos!
by Tortilla Pirate on Mar 1, 2011 9:25 AM CST up reply actions
Consistency, consistency and then some more..
I think we have the depth to withstand a 9 x game Big 12 schedule at receiver. What we really want is consistent production. The offense will wallow if 4-5 guys don’t catch more than 40 plus in season. The law of chaos dictates that success in this category equals first downs, yardage etc. 70 passing plays 4 x top flite receivers and one back up all snagging 4 or more catches per outing. With the occasional spike of 10 -11 catches for the hot hand variable. Do that and this group will be in the top 5 nationally. IMO.
"do routine things routinely"
Yes, add to that the principle of balanced offense at reciever...the four (or 5) starters seeing basically equal production.
Living large in Texas...Texas forever.

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