Zack Carpenter • InsideNebraska
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Nebraska running backs coach
E.J. Barthel and secondary coach
Evan Cooper held their first media availability as members of the Huskers staff on Thursday afternoon.
Here are five key takeaways from the press conference:
1: "Sky's the limit" for Grant, Allen is "as dynamic as they get"
No one in the Huskers’ running backs room was truly believed to be heading off to proverbial greener pastures via the transfer portal – except for
Ajay Allen.
It wasn’t expected that Allen would leave, but the possibility was certainly on the table for the uber-talented true freshman to look around. Allen is back now, though, and
Anthony Grant will also return for another ride.
Barthel’s reputation and ability to quickly build strong relationships are likely large pieces of why both players came back. Now he gets to coach up a budding young talent, who he can try to develop into a star, and a veteran, who has plenty more to give and a higher ceiling to hit.
“I think AG has a chance to be really special. Sky’s the limit for the kid. He’s got a chance to be really special. He’s a very powerful runner,” Barthel said of Grant. “Ajay Allen is as dynamic as they get. He’s got the ability to do it all in the run game.”
Those two figure to be the main one-two punch at the position in 2023, but they make up a group that Barthel says he has been impressed with.
Rahmir Johnson’s speed and ability to make defenders miss in open space.
Emmett Johnson’s effort, versatility and capability of being a high-end special teams player.
Gabe Ervin Jr.'s physicality and athleticism that would make any college coaches do a double take if they walked into a room and saw him in person.
What that collective group brings to the table is why Barthel said both he and
Matt Rhule were “not interested” in pursuing any running backs in the transfer portal.
“I’m really excited to work with that group because I think I’ve got a pretty special one,” Barthel said.
2: NFL defensive backs on the roster?
Cooper is a self-described “film junkie.”
He’s been a busy man with a jam-packed schedule, but he has already dove deep into the game film to evaluate the current cornerbacks and safeties. What he’s seen has led to him proclaiming that Nebraska has “some NFL DBs on the roster.”
It’s a mix of young, inexperienced players and older, veteran guys that he’s looking forward to coaching up. That is highlighted by
Marques Buford Jr., Isaac Gifford, Quinton Newsome and
Malcolm Hartzog – four players expected to retain their starting spots in the secondary in 2023 and who Cooper pointed out on Thursday.
“Coaching is my first love. I can’t wait to get to coach those guys,” Cooper said. “I talk to Marques Buford a lot. We just always talk. We have like minds. I like those guys. I love Gifford. I love him. What’s not to like? Quinton, that guy’s great. Malcolm, we talk all the time.
“It’s a good group. They play hard. They play hard. They play hard. Just when you watch them, it’s pretty good for me because that’s what the program’s gonna be based on – hard work, effort and toughness – and they have that.”
Cooper’s title is the secondary coach. He said that he will be coaching both units and is planning to split duties between cornerbacks and safeties depending on the situations throughout the week in practice.
3: How Rhule has changed over the years
Barthel has now been on three of Rhule's four staffs during his head coaching career while Cooper has been with Rhule at all four. Each is an ideal coach to get insight into how Rhule has changed over the years after each assistant has gone through the ringer with him.
“He’s got a couple more grays (hairs),” Cooper said jokingly – but with only a twinge of a smirk, which appears to be the first-year Husker coach’s demeanor and sly, subtle sense of humor.
“I think he’s more patient now. Early on, I think he was just go-go-go, and he’s more patient now. He understands now that this is a process, and nothing happens overnight. That’s probably the biggest area of growth that I’ve seen from him. He’s more confident in the overall process and what’s gonna happen. It may not happen overnight, but it’s gonna happen. He’s done it too many times for it (not to). He has his system, we have our core beliefs.”
Barthel provided some additional context into how and why their time in the pros shaped their mindsets.
“I think we all have changed after our experience in the NFL,” Barthel said. “I think it’s a little different when you’re coaching pros versus college guys. My personal experience, the thing I noticed in the NFL, the guys that we coached didn’t have to listen to us. In college, they don’t have to listen to us, but there’s more of a need. There’s a lot of talent in the NFL, and you really have to bring a lot of value to get their attention and for them to want to take your coaching. It’s not so much, ‘I say. You do.’ It’s moreso about, ‘How can you help me get better?’
“I think that was a huge change, and I see that in Coach Rhule as well – that there’s a lot of guys out there that need development physically and mentally. In the NFL, we were able to tap into that with some of those guys. That was the biggest thing I noticed with myself and others on staff, including Coach Rhule.”
4: “The Original RBU”
Mike Rozier. Roger Craig. Ahman Green.
Those are just a few of the running backs Barthel named off the top of his head Thursday when talking about “the legends,” as he put it. He also mentioned Ameer Abdullah, whom he worked with during the 2021 season, in relaying the message that he feels “truly honored” to be a part of the program in the position he is in.
“It’s the original RBU,” Barthel said. “That’s the reality of the situation of a running backs coach taking this job. This is one of the best jobs in the country.
“I know how important it is to this fanbase that we run the ball effectively. … This is one of those jobs where you get the chills thinking about gameday.”
5: Alignment with Rhule
One of the most noticeable pitfalls of the Scott Frost Era was the disjointedness among the staff and the entire program. One area in which you can get a sense of how a program is being guided, or misguided, is what is said during press conferences.
Are the coaches and players speaking the same sort of language? Is the same, or similar, message being shared by both parties during those media availabilities?
Throughout the final season of Frost’s tenure, and certainly before that, the answer was no. So far, the answer is yes during the infant stages of the Rhule Era.
Obviously, that message is only being shared by the coaches, since no players have spoken in a presser setting since the end of the season.
Marcus Satterfield, Tony White, Barthel and Cooper have all now held their first press conferences as Husker coaches, in addition to the two conducted by Rhule, and it’s already clear that everyone is moving in the same direction.
That’s not by accident.
One of Rhule’s chief goals when constructing his staff was to hire a core group of people who he had worked with before because they either share his same goals/philosophies or, at a minimum, understand the ways in which he goes about his business.
Parallel visions between Rhule and both Barthel and Cooper came through vividly on Thursday when each talked about why they followed Rhule to Lincoln.
“Coach, and you may not be able to feel it from the outside, is one of the most thoughtful, caring people,” Cooper said. “Coach cares about me, he cares about his student-athletes, and he cares about his co-workers. But it’s deep care. It’s not the fake, bro-hug type of stuff. It’s real, and you can see it. Those kind of people you wanna be around, and he’s one of the brightest minds that I’ve ever been around. Probably the smartest person I’ve ever been around – hopefully I don’t offend any of my ex-teachers – but you just kind of wanna be around Coach. He’s one of those guys.
“We have really like minds. We have the same type of (mind) when it comes to people, players and talent levels.”
Barthel gave an extended anecdote about a practice at Temple in 2016 during Rhule’s final season as the program’s head coach. It was the first time Barthel had worked with Rhule, and he still remembers details of that practice.
It was a similarly icy day as Thursday in Lincoln with gray in the sky and temperatures in the mid-20s (i.e. The type of day when practice could easily be held in the indoor facilities). Instead, Rhule told the entire team it would be practicing outdoors. Normally, Barthel says, you hear a collective groan or individual players shaking their heads.
“Not one kid said anything,” Barthel said. “Not one guy made a noise or a grunt.”
That was “the moment” that Barthel said he knew that the culture Rhule developed at Temple “was pretty special.”
He’s been loyal to Rhule ever since. That’s why he followed him to the NFL, and it’s why he followed him to Nebraska.
“I’m a believer in Coach Rhule and what he stands for,” Barthel said. “I’m in alignment with the standards of what he represents in terms of development and process. And I think it applies to life, and it applies to football. If Coach Rhule ever calls me, I’m gonna pick up, and I would love to be a part of whatever he’s got going on because I truly believe in his process.”
https://nebraska.rivals.com/news/fi...thel-and-evan-cooper-s-first-nebraska-presser