Getting Ready For 2011 YSU Football With Kurt Hess
Last year at this time, Kurt Hess was adapting. The changes he was dealing with were a transition from high school to college, playing in a new system for a new coach, and learning what his teammates could and could not handle. Hess was named the starting quarterback before the season started and played mature beyond his years. He has earned the respect of his coaches, teammates, and fans, and will continue to work hard to improve.
Paneech: You have a year under your belt and know the system, are the expectations higher this season?
Hess: I got a lot of good experience last season and have a great working relationship with Coach Wolford and Coach Montgomery. We work well together and we bounce ideas off of each other. We kind of know what to expect now and need to refine things. Coach Montgomery will sit in the film room with me and analyze different aspects and mechanics and question why I did or didn’t do something. As much as they have helped me, you should see some results this year.
Paneech: During the Spring, there were problems with receivers dropping the ball. Additionally, last year this team was about 50/50 on a run pass ratio. Can we expect more running this season?
Hess: I don’t believe we will be one-dimensional. We have a good enough running game that we probably could be one-dimensional, but our receivers are working really hard to get better. We come in a couple of times a week and do some seven-on-seven drills and we usually throw every night to get the timing right. With the new guys, there is a lot of raw talent. I am developing more confidence with them and I can see a big improvement from the Spring already. We are building chemistry and trust, and that is so important. It is what Dominique [Barnes] and I had last season.
Paneech: What have you been doing in the offseason?
Hess: I try to find friends who have a pool, I really like swimming in the Summer. I haven’t been to a Scrappers game yet, but I have made it to Cleveland to see the Indians. I like going to Boardman and hitting the mall. I am starting to get into my education classes and am really focusing on how to be a better role model and teacher for the kids.
Paneech: Last season you were immediately thrown into the fire at Penn State, and you guys played respectably. This year it is off to Michigan State, what should we expect?
Hess: We need to have a good showing at Michigan State, and I think we will. Last year it was a new era coming in at Youngstown State with a new coach. We were thinking about at least scoring a touchdown and putting a few points on the board. This year, we want to put more points on the board than they [Michigan State] do. I think that is what we need to, and are going to do.
Paneech: One of the biggest areas of turnover was offensive line. Eric Rodemoyers don’t grow on trees. Do you feel like you might be scrambling a bit more this season?
Hess: We brought in some pretty big guys who have been working really hard and have increased their strength. We have some veterans in D. J. Main and Andrew Radakovich who have been here for three or four years. I still feel secure and have an automatic sense of trust for these guys. Scrambling is part of the game, and although I don’t anticipate doing too much of it, I consider myself somewhat slippery.
Paneech: With all of the new arrivals, have the veteran members of the team set up events to get the rookies feeling like they are a part of everything?
Hess: It’s not really any one gathering or one function. We go out to Quaker Steak And Lube on Tuesday nights for the all-you-can-eat wings and we make sure that the new linemen go and get fed. We play some pool basketball and had a swimming workout last week. We all live pretty close together, so we are always playing NCAA or watching a movie. There is a lot of contact and they are getting familiar with all of us. We recruited a lot of raw talent, and you need that to compete in this conference. I have not seen any of the new guys get lazy or cut a corner on anything yet.
Paneech: What, if any, bad habits have you formed over the past year that you need to fix?
Hess: One area I need to get better at is being a better practice player. There are a lot of times when practice is not going how we would like it to go, and someone needs to get a first down or make some plays. As a quarterback, and a leader, I need to be the person who can step up and make those things happen. Practice will run much better if I make the effort to execute better. I need to be the guy in a game that can make a big play on a 3rd and 12, or have to be able to scramble. Last year there were guys bailing me out. Barnes did, [Adaris] Bellamy did, Jamaine [Cook] did, it goes on and on. Coming back as a veteran, I need to make more plays.
Paneech: Does Coach Montgomery, as a quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator, feel like you have a grasp on the offense?
Hess: Coach Montgomery is comfortable with me that I think he may give me more freedom than I had last season. We are very comfortable with each other. I trust his calls, as he trusts mine. There will be things that change from week-to-week, but we do communicate well and we are both big Cincinnati Reds fans.
Paneech: The Reds are in trouble.
Hess: All we need is a solid month.
Paneech: Scott Rolen is all banged up and your pitching is weak. [Edinson] Volquez and [Johnny] Cueto are horrible, I don’t see it. Not this year. They will need to reincarnate Eric Davis and Barry Larkin to have a shot with that staff.
Hess: (laughs) No, you are wrong.
Paneech: Any tattoo shops around here that are going to get Wolf in trouble? What is your take on the Ohio State fallout?
Hess: I think it is a tough situation. There were things that did not fall into the NCAA guidelines and Coach Tressel may have been put in a bad situation. In my opinion, he has always been a players coach and always took care of his players like they were his own kids. It may go on other places, but that kind of stuff, like the tattoos, isn’t really an issue here, it doesn’t exist. We have a great staff and advisors who communicate well with Coach Wolford. We sign papers that say we are not going to do this, this, and this. As far as I am concerned, nobody here has done anything.