Monday, April 23, 2018

4 takeaways from Penn State football’s Blue-White game


While coach James Franklin likes to use the Blue-White game as a recruiting tool and to give back to the fans, there is still plenty of value for the coaching staff, especially with a young team full of position battles.

The White squad scored for the first time since 2015 and even got into the endzone. With so much change over from last year's team, there were plenty of storylines to watch for on the field.

Here are my four observations:

Lamont Wade's role


One of the more surprising things I heard after the game yesterday came from defensive coordinator Brent Pry. While Lamont Wade was moved to safety this spring, Pry said that it wasn't decided if he would play safety or cornerback in the fall. Wade spent his entire true freshman season playing corner with limited snaps. I originally thought he would be best suited to play safety when he got to Penn State, but it looks like Nick Scott and Garrett Taylor have the two starting spots locked up as of right now. Wade was put on the White squad on Saturday in order for him to get plenty of snaps at safety, but that doesn't mean he won't be sliding down to play as a slot corner in certain nickel packages. Pry is certainly going to want to utilize Wade's ability, but it might take some creativity.

McSorley's Heisman campaign is underway

Penn State was in a relatively new situation last season with two legitimate Heisman Trophy candidates in Saquon Barkley, who went on to finish fourth, and Trace McSorley. With Barkley headed to the NFL, McSorley has the spotlight to himself now in Happy Valley. Barkley isn't the only talented offensive weapon that is not back from last year's team, leaving McSorley to shoulder the load on offense in the fall. McSorley played a lot more than a typical third-year starting quarterback would in his last spring game, but a lot of that was due to Tommy Stevens' injury. Still, we got a glimpse of all that McSorley is going to be asked to do in the fall. And he was up to the challenge on Saturday. McSorley was as sharp as he needed to be, completing 10-of-14 passes for over 100 yards and a touchdown.

Don't expect an answer soon at linebacker

One of the biggest questions heading into the summer is at the middle linebacker spot. Jason Cabinda's departure has created a major void in the middle and it's still unclear who will replace him. Koa Farmer and Cam Brown appear to be the guys on the outside and Micah Parsons was moved outside midway through the spring. Jan Johnson started at the mike linebacker spot for the Blue squad on Saturday and looked pretty good. But the battle will continue to go on throughout the summer when Jake Cooper returns from his injury. Pry is going to continue to experiment in an attempt to find an answer at one of the most important positions on the field. The Nittany Lions will hope someone separates himself from the pack when training camp rolls around, but it's more likely that the starter won't be decided until the defense heads out onto the field against Appalachian State.

Mark Allen's impressive day


Just about every Penn State running back has been talked about this spring — except Mark Allen. Everyone is talking about Miles Sanders as the new starter, Journey Brown's potential and if Ricky Slade will play or not as a true freshman. But Allen is a nice change of pace for this offense and he showed that on Saturday. While Sanders only got three carries on the day, Allen was able to display that he could have a role in Ricky Rahne's offense. Allen ran for 30 yards on five carries, including a long run of 19 yards. Rahne debuted two running back sets with Sanders and Allen lined up on either side of McSorley. With the running ability of all three of those guys, Rahne has plenty of options in that formation and gives Allen value that not many people expected he could have.