Ah, the tight end. Seemingly for the last thirty years or so, Nebraska usually has had a pretty good tight end. Think Junior Miller or Johnny Mitchell, for example. But what about guys like Matt Herian, Tracey Wistrom, Jamie Williams all were guys who made plays at key times. Tight ends have always been underappreciated unless you happen to have a pretty good one. If you play fantasy football, you know what I mean. If you get one of the top two or three in the league, you know you've got a distinct advantage. Otherwise, you'd just as soon play another wide receiver.
And that's the key to the tight end. There are certain fundamentals that a tight end has to do, in terms of blocking. But if they can do that, and then go out into a pass pattern, they can become a weapon. And if you forget about them in the passing game, they can really make you pay.
Returning:
Ben Cotton (starter), Sr.; Kyler Reed, Sr.; Jake Long, Jr.;
Incoming:
Sam Cotton, HS Verbal

Jon: I'm surprised at how good a tight end Ben Cotton has become. I was holding his father against him (always skeptical of coaches' kids), but Ben Cotton has developed into a pretty good all-around football player. He earned Big Ten Honorable Mention honors from the coaches and media this past season. Reed wasn't nearly as productive this past season as he was in 2010 with only one touchdown versus eight the previous season.
Mike: Another position of strength. Cotton and Reed both suffered injuries in 2011 which limited them both. Reed played through his, though it was clear he was far from 100%. This spring, Reed needs to work on his blocking so he's on the field more. Both of these guys are good receivers, and Reed is really a deep threat. I just hope they don't try a
Mike McNeill experiment with Kyler.
Jon: Long is a fairly serviceable tight end in his own right. The real key here is that Nebraska has three experienced tight ends going into next season. That will leave little room for guys like
Robert Barry (6'8", the tallest guy on the team), David Sutton and
Eddie Ridder.
Andy: It's nice to see that Ben and
Jake Cotton playing well. That bodes well for Sam Cotton who probably starts in 2013 unless one of those names above in Jon's paragraph develops. I'm not holding my breath and we need another tight end in this class.
Mike: Barry is 6'8"? 245 pounds? He's a junior, so it will be interesting to see if he emerges in the spring game. You'd like to see someone like that on the field, as long as you don't use a sundial to time him in the 40.
So what's your expectations for tight ends in 2012?
Always loved that quip...
The sundial timed 40.
I was disappointed with Reed’s production this year, given him being a go-to-TE the previous year. I look for bounce back year from him, especially with such a young WR corps. Ben Cotton did impress me this year and I hope he improves even more in the off-season. I would liked to have seen more of Long, because he does look good when on the field. What do we know about the next Cotton?
CCE718 - January 16, 2012
In Reed's defense, he was injured until late in the season if you believe the coaches.
Salt Creek and Stadium - January 16, 2012
There were a few games this season...
…where Reed was noticably limping…
Husker Mike - January 16, 2012
I'm guessing Beck was watching some NFL games this weekend.
If so, I bet he has some nifty plans for using tight ends.
Salt Creek and Stadium - January 16, 2012
Exactly what I was thinking
Billgrip - January 16, 2012
Especially the Patriots game
The way they just destroy people with Gronk and Hernandez is what we could do with Cotton and Reed. Then again, they also have Tom Brady. If there is precisely one square inch of weakness in your coverage, Brady will find it and will throw a football there.
Billgrip - January 16, 2012
sports
Does the anagram thumb sports? The weekday slice rails. Sports pats the meal below the style. A kiss tools a recipe opposite the irrational slash. The honey plays with the foreseeable sample.
bridal websites
amadesha@gmail.com - February 4, 2012
You must Login with your SB Nation account and be a member of Corn Nation to post a comment.