🏈 JK Scott not changing anything for sophomore year

Bamabww

Bench Warmer
Member
Ben Jones
TideSports.com Staff Writer

Don't expect JK Scott to change anything during his second season punting for the University of Alabama. A reporter on Sunday asked the sophomore if he was worried about falling short of his performance as a freshman in 2014.

"Sophomore slump? I'm not worried about anything that has to do with results for this year," Scott said. "Last year, my only goal was to help the team best I could in each situation. That's what I'm going to do this year."

Scott will keep the same routine. He'll start every practice the same way, with a 45-minute "dynamic warmup" that he says fires up his nervous system. That prepares his body for the explosive movements required by punting.

He was a howitzer in the kicking game last year, averaging 48 yards per punt. That led the nation and was the second-best average among punters in college football in the last five years. "I'm a perfectionist," he said.

He needs his routine to be perfect, and he hopes the results follow. They did in 2014.

Only five of his 55 punts went for touchbacks as a freshman, while 31 fell inside the opponent's 20 yard line. The process-oriented punter became the rare true freshman that could be relied upon no matter the situation.

"You worry about guys like that being able to stay focused on what they need to do to be consistent, which he has done a really, really good job of," Alabama coach Nick Saban said during Scott's freshman season.

He even sounds like his head coach at times.

"When I'm punting, whatever the situation is, I'm trying to achieve the best possible result in that situation," he said.

In the biggest situations last year, he was ready. Some of Scott's best performances came in the biggest games. In Alabama's four games that were decided by a touchdown or less last year, his average was 48.8 yards per punt.

There might be a time when Scott looks at what he needs to do differently to try and improve. But that time isn't in August. With the season just a few weeks away, he's focused on what works.

"I just stick to what I do," he said. "Usually when I get to the season, I don't really change a lot. I'm pretty dialed in by that time. I don't want to make a lot of changes during the season."

- See more at: https://alabama.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1790946#sthash.NxjR3L6g.dpuf
 
Coach Stallings came into the QB meeting room his first year and looked at all of us and said, "throwing an incomplete pass on 3rd down and having to punt isn't a bad thing. Don't take a sack! Get at least 1 first down if we are backed up in our own end zone so our punter gets the full 15 yards depth." He then turned and walked out!
 
I still for the life of me can't seem to figure why he didn't win the Ray Guy Award last year. He had the highest average out of all punters, and he buried people inside the 20. He wasn't just good at distance or inside the 20 accuracy, he was good at everything. He helped Alabama in more ways than anyone else besides Cooper.
 
I still for the life of me can't seem to figure why he didn't win the Ray Guy Award last year. He had the highest average out of all punters, and he buried people inside the 20. He wasn't just good at distance or inside the 20 accuracy, he was good at everything. He helped Alabama in more ways than anyone else besides Cooper.
I really think it's because he was a freshman. Should have no bearing, but it's the only thing I can think of.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom