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OL Jim Cordle (Official Thread)

free C-bus dispatch on Jimmy Cordle and the Lancaster Oline

20040826-Pc-E4-0900.jpg


Gales’ hopes rest on big line
Blocking unit return intact, ready to open more holes
Thursday, August 26, 2004
Steve Blackledge
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

RENEE SAUER | DISPATCH
Lancaster’s offensive linemen are returning for their senior years leaner and meaner. Back row, left to right, Jay Stoughton, Shawn Fosnaugh, Tom Stuck and Jimmy Cordle; front row, left to right, A.J. Mallory and Joe Palmer.

LANCASTER, Ohio — Few people can appreciate the value of a stout offensive line more than Lancaster coach Rob Carpenter, who spent 10 seasons as a running back in the NFL with the Houston Oilers and New York Giants.

"I’m not stupid: My best friends throughout college and the pros were always linemen," he said.

"If you’re a real football person, you can’t help but appreciate those guys because they tend to do the dirty work. . . . a lot of the stuff that goes unnoticed by the casual fan."

But anyone who watched Lancaster (11-1) roll to the Ohio Capital Conference Ohio Division championship last season recognized that the Golden Gales’ efficient wing-T offense was predicated on a huge, dominant line mashing defenders at the point of attack.

And all of the road graders who powered the Golden Gales to average 39.4 points and 450 yards of total offense return as seniors: guard Jimmy Cordle (6 feet 5, 275 pounds), tackle Shawn Fosnaugh (6-5, 285), center Tom Stuck (6-3, 280), guard A.J. Mallory (6-0, 240), tackle Joe Palmer (6-2, 280) and tight end Jay Stoughton (6-1, 215).

Cordle, a first-team All-Ohio choice known for his agility, has committed to Ohio State. The versatile Fosnaugh and Stuck, a hard-nosed mauler who placed second in the state in the shot put in June, also are being actively recruited.

The key strengths of this outfit are its versatility and quickness.
"We’ll all interchangeable as far as the positions we play," Palmer said. "It helps us a lot to know exactly what every guy’s role is so we can adjust to defensive fronts. And if there’s an injury, anybody can fill in without missing a beat. The idea is to run like a well-oiled machine."

Cordle, who Carpenter called "the quickest lineman I’ve ever seen at any level" played center his first two seasons before shifting to pulling guard. Fosnaugh and Stuck can play any of the line positions.

Despite adding a year of maturity, each of the linemen actually has dropped 10 to 20 pounds since last season.

"We’re (bench-pressing) more but weighing less," Fosnaugh said. "Coach asked us to cut weight in the off-season, and we can notice the difference.

"People see us as a big, power line, but actually what we do is more geared toward everybody being quick and mobile."

Carpenter likened Lancaster’s wing-T to the one used by Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers of the 1960s.

"We run a lot of misdirection with sweeps, counters and pitches that require the guys up front to do a lot of pulling, trapping, kicking out and running laterally," Carpenter said. "Our linemen don’t just stand there and use their mass to ward defenders off. They’re usually running 15 to 20 yards every play. That’s why I’d rather have them lean and mean."

With the graduation of All-Ohio tailback Jonathan Carpenter, who rushed for school records of 2,179 yards and 36 touchdowns, the line will carry an even larger burden in creating holes for his inexperienced replacements.

"We’re going to have to put the weight of the team on our shoulders and cut down on mistakes," Cordle said. "Last year, if we made a mistake, Jon had the ability to improvise and still get yardage because he was so good. We may not have that margin of error to rely on this year."

The elder Carpenter hinted that Lancaster’s linemen, on reputation alone, may be targeted like a star running back.

"Some people got frustrated last year when we whipped them up front and realized that their only chance was to gamble by crowding the line of scrimmage and run-blitzing," he said. "Some people tried to take our guys’ legs out.

"The pressure is definitely going to be on them this year."


[email protected]
 
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Time for the Jimmy Cordle thread to get a bump

Cordle helping Lancaster put up some impressive rushing numbers on a strong offensive line unit at Lancaster

LANCASTER -- Lancaster football fans couldn't be blamed for bemoaning a futile four-play series in the season opener at Logan.

Goal-line stands have happened before, but they weren't supposed to happen like that for the Golden Gales. It came at the goal-line. In the fourth quarter. Against Lancaster and its massive offensive line, regarded by many fans locally and statewide as one of the best units in Ohio.

The Gales couldn't score on four tries from inches out, and even though the defense made big plays to precipitate a game-winning field-goal in a 24-21 victory, the offensive line hasn't forgotten that night. Nor have they forgotten that it got worse before it's gotten better.

Much better.

Lancaster has won three straight games and takes a 5-1 record into Friday's Ohio Capital Conference Ohio Division game at 0-6 Groveport. The rushing numbers aren't bad, either -- 1,651 yards this season, on pace for nearly 2,800 in the regular-season.

The high-water mark was a 391-yard pasting of Pickerington Central two weeks ago, the same game in which Lancaster averaged a season-best 7.8 yards per carry

"That goal-line stand was about as low as it's been for us and the Jackson game wasn't much better," said senior guard Jim Cordle, a verbal commitment to Ohio State. "We got back to basics. We've been practicing hard and focusing on every series."

Most in the know agreed the season hit its low point in week two, a 29-10 loss to Massillon Jackson. Lancaster rebounded with an equally impressive victory, 24-15 at Grove City.

"We weren't big-headed coming into the season, but we just didn't click," senior tackle Shawn Fosnaugh said. "It's all about intensity. We have to go hard for the team to do well."

Lancaster justly takes pride in the numbers, though offensive coordinator and line coach Tony Albertini is quick to caution there's no end to improving on fundamentals.

A minimum of substitution has helped. Cordle and A.J. Mallory have stayed at guard, Tommy Stuck has played nearly every snap at center with Fosnaugh and Joe Palmer at the tackles.

As the backs credit the line for their improvement, the line credits the backs for running harder and helping open their own holes.

"Everyone has taken the load on their shoulders," Albertini said. "Those backs aren't rookies anymore. They're experienced. That's been especially important."
 
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Cordle is graduating early and will enroll at Ohio State in the spring. He's looking forward to earning some PT at guard or center for "one of the best football programs in the country."

Lancaster is 7-2 and he expects them to make the playoffs. He's played well his senior year grading out at 88%.
 
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bucknut11 said:
Cordle's coming early, Boone's coming early. Taz (if he comes here) is also enrolling early. Think these guys can't wait to suit up?

With redshirt freshman Barton (6'6" 305) and true freshman Rehring (6'8" 315) playing well, Bemoll (6'5" 305), Boone (6'8" 280), and Taz (6'4" 325) would give us a young killer OL.
 
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MililaniBuckeye said:
With redshirt freshman Barton (6'6" 305) and true freshman Rehring (6'8" 315) playing well, Bemoll (6'5" 305), Boone (6'8" 280), and Taz (6'4" 325) would give us a young killer OL.
Don't forget Person, Mitchum, and Skinner.
They will be studs too.
 
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With redshirt freshman Barton (6'6" 305) and true freshman Rehring (6'8" 315) playing well, Bemoll (6'5" 305), Boone (6'8" 280), and Taz (6'4" 325) would give us a young killer OL.

Person, Skinner and Mitchum might have something to say about that as well. Not to mention that Datish, Schafer, and Downing have two year left. Nothing breeds excellence like competition.
 
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I wasn't too crazy when players first starting showing up so early, but it has been good. There is so much they have to absorb and all the extra time helps the individuals and the team. Plus, players want to play, no matter if they are seniors or freshmen.

There should be a great amount of talent for the O-line for years to come.
 
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Quote:
<table cellpadding="6" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border: 1px inset ;"> Originally Posted by bucknut11
Cordle's coming early, Boone's coming early. Taz (if he comes here) is also enrolling early. Think these guys can't wait to suit up?
</td> </tr> </tbody></table>

With redshirt freshman Barton (6'6" 305) and true freshman Rehring (6'8" 315) playing well, Bemoll (6'5" 305), Boone (6'8" 280), and Taz (6'4" 325) would give us a young killer OL.
Hopefully, this will help attract a top notch RB to come here also.
 
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Cordle will enroll in the spring like Antonio Pittman and AJ Trapasso did last year. He saw the improvement Steve Rehring made by enrolling early and he's really looking forward to getting started this spring at Ohio State. He's looking forward to his official visit this weekend with fellow o-lineman Alex Boone, who is also trying to enroll early.
 
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