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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

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Sure-handed Meier's 29 catches tied for tops in nation

Kansas receiver Kerry Meier pulls in a reception late in the fourth quarter against South Florida on Friday in Tampa, Fla. With 29 receptions in three games, Meier is tied for the national lead in catches.

Kansas receiver Kerry Meier pulls in a reception late in the fourth quarter against South Florida on Friday in Tampa, Fla. With 29 receptions in three games, Meier is tied for the national lead in catches.

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The declaration from Kansas University wide-receivers coach David Beaty was made succinctly and matter-of-factly.

Standing in a crowded conference room in the school's new Anderson Family Football Complex last month, Beaty was rattling off answers to questions about the team's receiving corps - strengths, weakness, expectations, etc. - when he responded to a question about junior receiver Kerry Meier this way:

"He's very similar to the kid I had at Rice, Jarett Dillard, who was an All-American," Beaty said of the 6-foot-3, 220-pound Meier. "He possesses some of the ball skills (Dillard) had, and he has a great knowledge of what we're doing offensively."

The comparison was, of course, a bit of a stretch - a Biletnikoff finalist and the NCAA's active leader in receptions and receiving yards (Dillard) versus a neophyte receiver who, up to that point, had amassed a total of 279 receiving yards in his career.

Except that, based on recent developments, maybe the connection wasn't all that crazy.

Today, Meier has quietly emerged as one of the country's most efficient pass-catchers. His 29 receptions through the first three weeks of the season ties for first in the Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division-I) with Rice's James Casey. And although he has yet to catch a touchdown pass this season, Meier has turned into as close to a sure thing as you're going to find on third-and-long.

Following Friday's 11-catch, 120-yard performance in a losing effort against South Florida, the Pittsburg native increased his season totals to 253 receiving yards (second on the team) for an efficient 8.7 yards per reception and has played a large role in the 19th-ranked Jayhawks' staunch pass offense, which currently ranks sixth in the nation.

Which is not a bad resume for a player who has played the position for just more than a year.

An accomplished quarterback and punter in high school, the closest Meier came to catching a pass was on defense, as a member of the team's secondary ("I think we might have tried a quarterback throw-back once," said Merle Clark, who coached Meier at Pittsburg High. "But no, he never did line up at receiver for us").

After losing the starting quarterback job to fellow junior Todd Reesing before last season, however, he realized his best chance to get onto the field came at receiver. And since then, despite limited work with the receiving corps, he has reinvented himself into one of the team's most potent offensive weapons.

"The thing that's even more amazing about what he's done to this point is that he still spends over 50-percent of his time as a backup quarterback on the practice field," Kansas coach Mark Mangino said. "And he doesn't attend wide receiver meetings. The only time he's with the wide receivers is when the quarterbacks and the receivers meet together. And that's once a week, sometimes twice."

One way to get on Mangino's good side is to excel at blocking, which Meier seems to have done up to this point. Sunday night, while griping about his receivers' lack of physicality in Friday's loss to South Florida, the coach singled out Meier as the only exception.

"Even though he's a quarterback," Mangino said, "he'll mix it up with you."

It certainly hasn't hurt that Meier has Reesing, the nation's leader in completions per game, throwing to him. Or that his understanding of the quarterback position allows him to make educated decisions on how best to beat opposing defensive backs.

But it's hard to deny that his quick ascension this season has been surprising - even to those that know him best.

Asked whether he could have imagined that Meier would be the nation's leader in receptions three weeks into the 2008 season, though, Mangino replied, "I can't tell you that I could make that kind of a prediction."

KU to avoid Friday games: If the Jayhawks were to never again play a Friday night game under his watch, Mangino would not be too terribly disappointed.

The coach said Monday that, despite the exposure his team received during it's nationally televised game against South Florida in Tampa, he is in no hurry to schedule another weekday game.

"In my opinion, college football is made for Saturdays," Mangino said Monday. "That's the way we like to do it."

He added that the outcome of Friday's game - the team lost for just the second time in its past 16 games - wasn't an issue. Rather, he preferred the routine his team is able to develop with a full week between contests.

"Winning or losing had no bearing on what day we played, I'll make that clear," he added. "But one of the things that we do here is we have a routine. We're comfortable with our routine, our players are comfortable with it. It's been good to us, and we'd like to stay with it."

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Comments

JayViking (anonymous) says...

Meier could have a future in the NFL with that body and those hands.

September 16, 2008 at 6:36 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

TaCityHawkFan (anonymous) says...

Funny thing about college football.... but both teams play on the same day.

September 16, 2008 at 8:18 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

TaCityHawkFan (anonymous) says...

I think Kerry is doing a fantastic job as a possession receiver. To me he is a hybrid between a TE and WR. I half expected to hear that he had won the TE job over the summer. However, I am glad that he is adding some strenght, blocking and sure hands to the receiving corps. The young kids on the squad really need to pay attention to what he is doing. It may not be a bad idea to have him spend 15-20% of the time with the receivers if for nothing else to mentor them and lead by example.But I won't tell coach how to do his job. Even with the close loss to USF last week, this is a special team that plays a lot of good teams this year. Coach has done a fantastic job turning this team around. It is exciting to watch! Rock Chalk Jayhawk.

September 16, 2008 at 8:24 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

patton6 (anonymous) says...

You're an idiot.

September 16, 2008 at 8:26 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

Lebowski (anonymous) says...

Good, constructive point, patton. What a contribution you make.

September 16, 2008 at 9:55 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

GrayHawker (anonymous) says...

They both played on the same day.One had to travel half way across the country to play it though. Travel is a distraction and cuts into practice time in significant ways. That is why home teams have an advantage.

September 16, 2008 at 10:05 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

GrayHawker (anonymous) says...

He would be the sole leader in receptions if the refs had the gumption to make the right call on the review of his catch. No question he had it in possession and had taken a couple of steps before getting hit.No way the line judge could make that call standing behind Meier's back like that.Watched it again last night. They blew it.

September 16, 2008 at 10:08 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

justanotherfan (anonymous) says...

Looking at the home/ road factor, the biggest thing is the crowd. Early in the game, we took the USF crowd out of it, but as the momentum shifted and they got back into the game, they were able to feed off the emotion of the crowd. That is why it is critical that when you are on the road against a good team you BURY them early. We had a chance, but instead of scoring TDs (which has been a red zone problem for us) we kicked a couple of early FGs, so we only led 20-3 instead of 24-3 or 28-3. A 3 TD or greater hole puts a lot more pressure on the offense. It makes them more predictable, looking for more big plays to get back into it, rather than just running their regular offense. To compound matters, we gave up a score right before the half. So instead of taking a 3 touchdown or greater lead to the lockerroom, we went to the half up only 10. That put USF right where they wanted to be - badly outplayed, but still only down 10 at home. That's a lot easier to stomach than badly outplayed and down big. In truth, we had problems burying teams last year. K-State - up 21-14, K-State takes a 24-21 lead before we win 30-24.Colorado - up 19-7, allow a TD to pull Colorado within 19-14 before holding on to win.Texas A&M - up 19-0, allowed 11 points in 4th Q, hold on to win 19-11. Oklahoma St. - up 33-14, allowed 2 quick TDs to pull them within 33-28, win 43-28.Virginia Tech - up 17-0, Va Tech scored 14, before Reesing got a TD to put us up 10 again. Still had to sweat at the end, as Va Tech pulled within a FG.Notice the common thread? All of these games were away from Lawrence. At home we got up on people and finished them off. On the road we didn't bury them. We need to get a lead and then pour it on. We gave ourselves very little margin last year, and it almost cost us in 5 different games. Had we not been nearly perfect (few penalties, fewer turnovers, etc.) last year was probably a 9-3 type year because we let teams back in games, where they were within 1 TD of tying or going ahead after we led big (except the K-State game, where we never pulled away).Really, the USF game was almost exactly like the Va Tech game. We got the early jump, got up big, then allowed a late first half TD to pull them within 10. The only differences were that we won the turnover battle and we were able to run the ball semi effectively to keep the clock moving. It also helped that their kicker missed 2 FGs, while we only missed one. Basically, Va Tech blew their comeback opportunity with missed FGs. USF didn't. But that's the situation we put ourselves in by not killing them off when we had them down early.

September 16, 2008 at 12:08 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

ttoulouse (anonymous) says...

here's a thought - how about having one of the Friday games at home for once? That would expand the prep time. As I recall, the last weekday home game was like '93 against California. The last two I can recall were both road losses (Toledo, USF). It's like our basketball team, ESPN only wants to air us when we're on the road.Kudos to Meier!

September 16, 2008 at 12:27 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

leikness (anonymous) says...

The number one thing I hate about a loss is that we constantly have to be reminded of it every time an individual statistic is mentioned from that game for the entire next week. "Following Friday's 11-catch, 120-yard performance in a losing effort against South Florida."Alright, we got it already, Hawks lost!!!!

September 16, 2008 at 12:38 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

hawk_bred20 (anonymous) says...

justanotherfan- Very nice write up. I hadn't realy thought about all the times last year that we got up early and let the other team back in the game, only to finish off with the victory. It's hard to remember that sort of thing when you end up winning the game because that's the sole focus in the end. This is something that our Hawks are definitely going to have to work on to get to 9 wins this season.

September 16, 2008 at 12:59 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

KU (anonymous) says...

GrayHawker.....True, Meier caught that ball. But we scored anyway, so it's no big deal.justanotherfan.....Great points about failing to put teams away on the road. I would like to point out that before last year we wouldn't have won those road games, period. This is a program that is growing. They are learning how to win on the road, even if they have to sweat to do it. The next step is learning to not only win on the road, but win convincingly against good competition on the road.Keep sawing, boys.

September 16, 2008 at 1:34 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

Lebowski (anonymous) says...

I tend to think that failure to put teams away usually boils down to conservative play-calling. A team goes to running between the tackles too early and too predictably, even when it's not been effective, for hopes of shortening the game. But in the end, if you're not moving the ball, all it's doing is shortening your possessions. Coaches can be more aggressive on 1st and 2nd down at home, because they know they still have the decided crowd-factor if a few mistakes are made along the way. They're more afraid of making aggressive mistakes on the road because they don't want to ignite the crowd. Problems is 3 or 4 straight 3-and-outs will accomplish that as well.

September 16, 2008 at 1:59 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

dagger108 (anonymous) says...

Lebowski - It's interesting to read your comment in light of all the comments about KU being too aggressive at the end. In this case, we definitely weren't running between the tackles or anywhere else.Below is an interesting exerpt from the BigEast blog on espn, which basically says they won the chess match of switching O's/D's.Bulls' defense turns it around Posted by ESPN.com's Brian Bennett TAMPA -- South Florida's defense thrives on speed.But for a half Friday night, that speed was no match for Kansas's offensive tempo. The Bulls' defensive line would make a good push, only to watch quarterback Todd Reesing consistently unload a pass delivery in under two seconds. The Jayhawks lined up four- and five-wide and exploited mismatches with their receivers against linebackers.Kansas scored on four of its first five drives and led 20-3. Reesing completed 17 of his first 22 passes and never got so much as brushed by a defender."I was mad," South Florida coach Jim Leavitt said. "They had the pace going, and we weren't disrupting it any."A few key defensive adjustments turned the game in the Bulls' favor.They began the game playing a basic Cover 2, relying on their linebackers to cover underneath."We saw that wasn't working real fast," safety Nate Allen said. "Their receivers are pretty quick."Defensive coordinator Wally Burnham scrapped that plan by halftime, going to six defensive backs and rushing only three linemen. Quenton Washington came in as the dime back, and Burnham rotated his three starting linebackers into two spots.At the same time, those defensive backs and linebackers started getting physical with the Jayhawks wide receivers."The main thing was just sitting in the flats and stopping their crossing routes," Allen said. "They were running right to us."From their last possession of the first half to the end of the third quarter, the Jayhawks had only one first down in five drives, and that came on a pass interference penalty. With the timing of the short routes thrown off, Reesing started feeling more pressure from the D-line. South Florida scored 31 straight points to take a 34-20 lead."They didn't have anywhere to throw the ball," Burnham said. "But I probably stayed with it a little too long. I should have gone back to five DBs."That's because Kansas finally figured things out and made its own adjustment, scoring on its first two possessions of the fourth quarter.

September 16, 2008 at 3:16 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

dagger108 (anonymous) says...

justanotherfan - Good point about late game finishes. Take it a step further, and go back to 2006. We are 10-2 instead of 6-6 if we execute as well at the end of the game as we did last year, or even Friday for that matter. I think '04 was about the same.We're making progress, though perspective always helps.Keep sawin'.

September 16, 2008 at 3:21 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

100 (anonymous) says...

Anyone who has played a sport knows the importance of halftime fuel... You dont fuel up your muscle fibers with energy, your team will lose -- its that simple.Look at the scoring differential in the 3rd quarter of all of those games we had to hold on and win last year (ksu, osu, Texas AM, CU). Now look at the USF 3rd quarter -- fairly similar. What I see is the other team is psyched up and we're not, 3rd quarter. What the heck r we doing at halftime while the other teams are pounding coffee cake and Gatorade?

September 16, 2008 at 3:29 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

oceanvger55 (anonymous) says...

Would love them to do a flea-flicker w/Meier receiving then tossing a touchdown to a commrade!

September 16, 2008 at 3:49 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

dagger108 (anonymous) says...

JayViking - Kerry going to the NFL would sort of be a family tradition, especially as a receiver, tho we (KU) probably don't want to remember his brothers (KSU).TaCityHawkFan - Both teams play on the same day, but notice that Mangino's comments don't have anything to do with the other team, winning or losing. He just says that we have a routine and like to keep the routine.Also, the article says that he spend 50% of the time with the receivers, just no meeting time.

September 16, 2008 at 3:50 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

Hawkish4bigM (anonymous) says...

Would be interesting to see Meier back at QB in some game that we can afford that. I suspect the hiatus has been good for him. Like to see him in more of a running scheme as he has toughened up. Kudos to him. He is a great model.The short week is worse for the traveling team, duh.(that's for the guy who said they both play on the same day.) Also, I have seen some guys talk about the humidity. Yep, it was a factor. Need to play that game about midnight down there.

September 16, 2008 at 4:24 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

justanotherfan (anonymous) says...

dagger108,Swinging the pendulum the opposite way, we go 7-6 last year if we don't have such a great turnover margin and commit so few penalties. Some of that is great coaching and talent, some of that is just luck. You figure that generally over the course of a season, the breaks will go your way half the time, last year we should have probably lost two or three of those games where teams came back on us. For whatever reason, be it more talent, on a roll, whatever, we didn't last year. But if we continue to do this, we will lose half the games that play out like that because you simply can't let solid teams back into the game at their place. It almost invites the loss. Last year we had an almost mistake free season, which included:- +21 turnover margin - only 53 penalties all year, less than 40 penalty yards per game vs. 81 total penalties for our opponents for almost 60 yards a game - 60% conversion rate on 4th down- only gave up 26 sacks- only 1 missed PAT,then we can live with a slim margin. Thing is, if we aren't this close to perfect, we will always run the risk of losing by letting teams back in.To his credit, Mangino has done a great job by getting us to this point. Five years ago, we wouldn't even have been in that game at the end. We would have blown the lead and lost by 3 touchdowns, end of story. Now at least we can scrap back. Hopefully in another year or two, after we have more experience in hostile environments in big games, we will be able to finish someone off on the road.

September 16, 2008 at 4:51 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

JayViking (anonymous) says...

Dagger,Lebowski was referring to our conservative nature when we get up by a couple touchdowns.I think he's spot on.

September 16, 2008 at 5:35 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

JayViking (anonymous) says...

Maybe it was justanotherfan who was making those points. Either way they were good.

September 16, 2008 at 5:36 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

KU_Alumn_2000 (anonymous) says...

Meier was able to squash any ego he had after getting beat out by Reesing at quarterback. Instead of being ticked off about it...he maintained a positive attitude. He turned any emotions of frustration he may have had into positive energy...not only make himself better...but made the entire team better. He's definitely my favorite player on the team. Meier...stay humble and keep sawing wood...and maybe your good carma will take you to the NFL.

September 16, 2008 at 8:11 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

theclosetnook (anonymous) says...

i'm just really excited to see all these things play out. i really don't have much to add to all of this, after just reading it. Go Hawks.

September 17, 2008 at 1:18 a.m. ( | suggest removal )