mustang637
Newbie
Can someone provide some details or a link on Mike's illness? I can't find anything on it.
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Kudla carries load on defensive line
Junior is expected to fill huge hole
Sunday, August 15, 2004
Bruce Hooley
Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus- The bench-press record Mike Kudla set this summer at Ohio State proves the junior defensive end capable of heavy lifting.
Only the season ahead, however, will show whether Kudla can handle the weight on his shoulders as the replacement for Big Ten defensive Player of the Year Will Smith.
"It's going to be tough to fill his shoes," said Kudla, a junior from Medina Highland High School. "He did a lot of great things here, but. . . . I think I'm ready to get going. I put in a lot of work in the off-season, so I think I'm definitely ready to go."
Kudla benched 555 pounds during summer workouts to establish a new team mark.
He also ran 40 times comparable to Smith, whose 20 negative- yardage tackles in 2003 leave a sizeable gap for Kudla to fill.
"It's very important for Mike to step up," defensive coordinator Mark Snyder said. "He's played a lot of football for us. We lost a lot of defensive linemen and those guys played a lot for us. [Kudla] is one of the guys who needs to step up just like Will and Tim [Anderson] did when they were young."
Smith, Anderson and Darrion Scott were the defensive line backbone of OSU defenses that limited opponents to less than 75 rushing yards a game the past two seasons.
All three were three-year starters now playing in the NFL, which concerns coach Jim Tressel as much as any personnel gap created by graduation.
"A lot of people talk about our offense and the holes we have there, but we have to find out exactly who we are defensively, too," Tressel said. "Some of the things we did that featured Will Smith, Darrion Scott or Tim Anderson, we might have to have guys doing different things this year."
Kudla believes he can duplicate what Smith provided, including occasionally dropping into pass coverage.
"Will and I are a lot alike with our physical attributes, our power and speed combination," Kudla said. "I was originally a linebacker coming out of high school, so the [coverage] drops are more toward what my position was. As far as pass-rushing, that's stuff I picked up watching Will and Darrion and guys like that."
Kudla gained an up-close look at the havoc OSU's defensive line caused last year in an overtime victory against Purdue.
Scott and Smith pressured quarterback Kyle Orton into a fumble on the goal line and Kudla fell on the football for the Buckeyes' only touchdown in an eventual 16-13 win.
Kudla has two career negative- yardage tackles and has never made more than four tackles in a single game.
But this season, he and fellow first-year defensive line starters Quinn Pitcock and Marcus Green will be asked to continue OSU's dominance up front.
"I definitely have high expectations for myself this season," Kudla said. "I definitely want to go out and perform as hard as I can, to the best of my ability, and go out and have a great season. That's our team's attitude and that's our defensive line's attitude.
"My standards are extremely high. I'm probably putting more pressure on myself than I probably should, but that's the way it has to be."
OSU FOOTBALL
Kudla is product of parents’ beliefs, a lot of hard work
OSU defensive end likes physical approach
Monday, August 16, 2004
Ken Gordon
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Even while relaxing in a chair, Mike Kudla appears capable of committing great harm, like a bouncer to an unruly bar patron.
The Ohio State defensive end is massive, in a good way. His upper arms bulge out of his cutoff T-shirt and his belly remains flat. Kudla carries his 270 pounds on a 6-foot-3 frame with less than 9 percent body fat.
"Oh, Mike is a beast," fellow OSU lineman Quinn Pitcock said, eyes widening.
Not surprisingly, Kudla enjoys pushing around weights.
"I love the weight room," he said. "That’s where I’ve always excelled, and it’s an area I’m attracted to. I get addicted to it."
The proof lies not only in his arms but in a new Buckeye bench-press record of 555 pounds Kudla set in the offseason, breaking the previous mark by 20 pounds.
"He works very hard," OSU strength and conditioning coach Allan Johnson said. "He has excellent work habits, and he’s very enthusiastic about anything physical."
But Kudla is much more than a workout warrior. Despite his love for pumping iron, he attributes his strength less to the stale air of the weight room than to the fresh air of the farm.
Kudla grew up in rural Medina County and spent many of his teenage days helping out at the 1,500-acre farm of a friend, Bobby Guccion.
That’s where he said he learned about the value of hard work.
"A lot of work with hay, and daily work with cattle," Kudla recited. "And then harvesting and then just daily maintenance — you’ve got to work on your tractors, you’ve got to work on the facilities.
"We did that for years and years. That’s what high school was for me — we’d get up, work out, farm and do it again.
"So that’s where I kind of got (his work ethic) from. I don’t know any other way."
His values were not learned solely from nature, though. Nurture had a hand, as well, in the form of his parents, Paul and Mary Fran.
"Everything I had, I had to earn," Mike said. "They really pushed me really hard, and they had a lot of belief in me and taught me self-confidence.
"They told me at a young age that nothing comes free in this world, so whatever I wanted I had to go out and get. When I was 16, I wanted a car, and I had to go out and work and get money and get that car."
A linebacker at Medina Highland, Kudla was converted to end his freshman year at OSU. He was not redshirted and has been a valuable reserve the last two seasons, playing in all 27 games.
Now, though, he must step out of the considerable shadow left by Will Smith, a first-round draft pick of the New Orleans Saints.
Kudla’s play will be crucial to the success of the rebuilt OSU line this fall. He must play well enough to take pressure off the other starting end, Simon Fraser.
"It’s very important for Mike to step up," defensive coordinator Mark Snyder said.
"The more people you have up there that (offenses) have to worry about, it just makes everybody better."
Kudla has spent years making himself better and working toward a goal. But true to a blue-collar lineman’s mentality — what car did he buy when he finally had saved up enough money?
His father’s old one.
"A 1997 Chevy Malibu, with only about 50,000 miles on it," Kudla said. "I loved it, it was my favorite car."
Now, like then, Kudla has worked hard to earn his turn in the driver’s seat.
A friend of mine who was working in OSU's Emergeny Room just called and told me that Kudla came in a a strecher with numbness and tingling in his legs. He