UNM football wraps up spring practice. Here's what we learned.
Spring practice can feel short. Or it can feel long. Maybe it depends on how long youâve done it. Or who you spend it with.
âI was actually just telling one of the coaches yesterday: It feels like this spring just started,â New Mexico linebacker Milhalis Santorineos said on Saturday afternoon. âIt also just feels like weâve been with this staff forever.â
Maybe it depends on your role.
âFeels like itâs been three years,â head coach Bronco Mendenhall said with a smile.
Whether it felt long or short, UNM wrapped its first spring session under Mendenhall on Saturday with the sense that progress, however incremental, had been made over 15 practices.
âOur team has come a long way,â Mendenhall said. âAnd thereâs different parts of the team, different position groups â not everyoneâs the same ⊠So thereâs variability in terms of where each part of it is. But what I can say is the willingness and direction and optimism is there.â
Three final takeaways:
1. UNM got the volume it needed, consistency is yet to come
In 2016, Mendenhall inherited a broken culture at Virginia. Players didnât make eye contact when he first met with the team. Nor was there a burning desire to play football, at least from what Mendenhall saw. The cultural overhaul that occurred then â marked by an overwhelming emphasis on âearned, not givenâ â is in swing at UNM now.
There was a lesson to be learned from that period, though. Mendenhall felt he and his staff spent so much time trying to revamp the culture that the on-field product suffered, the Cavaliers limping to a brutal 2-10 finish in that first season. In Mendenhallâs eyes, year one at UNM is more similar to year two at Virginia, with a stated emphasis on playing football âevery second we can.â
âBut not at the expense of the foundational elements that need to be built,â he added. âSo we just learned â Iâve learned â over time to do a better job of doing both at the same time.â
This spring, when real, live football could be played, UNM did just that. The state of the roster (more on that later) played a role in what the Lobos could or couldnât do this spring. But if nothing else, thereâs a sample size to work off of until players return in June.
âThatâs really helping us drive the personnel choices weâre going to make,â he said. âBut itâs not polished, itâs not finished, itâs not consistent. I used that word after our spring scrimmage, and that really is trying to match the abilities to the schemes with the right chemistry and the right collection of players (at) any one time.â
In terms of the on-field product, maybe itâs fitting the spring game could be viewed as a microcosm of UNMâs first 15 practices under Mendenhall. If there was a good stretch from the offense, there was an accompanying lull. If the defense made plays up front, they gave them up on the back end.
âThe consistency led to some of the wildness of some of the giant plays or mistakes either way â quarterback sacked or balls going over defenseâs heads or anything in between,â he said. âSo lots of really good things in between, which is kind of what I see, but the volatility on either end that comes with kind of the newness and inconsistency of where we are.â
2. Thereâs (some) clarity on the O-line
Five weeks ago, the assumption was that quarterback Devon Dampier would be UNMâs leader in the clubhouse this spring. Over the course of two practices, that assumption became reality, with Dampier dominating reps under center.
Who was blocking for him, though? Different story, especially with UNM losing the entirety of last seasonâs starting offensive line to the transfer portal and graduation.
But with spring in the books, consider the group of Wallace Unamba, Baraka Beckett, Jawaun Singletary, Richard Pearce and Mc- Kenzie Agnello the starting offensive line until said otherwise. And with August looming â another chance for what Singletary called âmusical chairsâ on the depth chart â that means UNM is breaking spring practice with an all-transfer offensive line.
âNone of us are young,â said Singletary, a redshirt senior transfer center from Grambling State. âWe all pretty much like juniors, so we understand the game, understand how to communicate. And that was kind of our biggest emphasis coming on to start â like, communication and how to learn each other and learn tendencies and what we prefer and what we donât prefer.
âSo I think we kind of gelled pretty quickly, pretty fast.â
3. The next month will be critical
At the start of spring practice, Mendenhall said he felt UNM had enough depth to start a program. Having 83 scholarship players to work with on day one wasnât unusual, but it felt like a relative âluxuryâ compared to prior seasons and situations.
Predictably, things changed.
âOnce expectations continue to climb, there have been choices in, choices out of our program, to where it felt more like a normal spring,â he said, âwhere at the end youâre kinda gauging, âhow many plays can we go todayâ? with the numbers that we have. And thereâs usually a few positions that dictate that. So this feels normal to me â it doesnât feel dire, and it doesnât feel like we have (a) surplus.
âIt feels normal, which is just enough with work to do.â
That was perhaps Mendenhallâs most reiterated point Saturday, something heâs hit on earlier in the spring â finishing the roster is âpriority number one.â He declined to say how many scholarships UNM has open at the moment but offered itâs âenough to make a significant difference.â
Which tracks. Nearly 50 players on last seasonâs roster wonât be with UNM heading into the summer, with around 20 leaving right before spring practice or throughout. The emphasis for now, Mendenhall said, will be on utilizing the portal to fill some of those spots.
After that? The focus shifts to graduating junior college players and high school prospects who may have âsurprisinglyâ been overlooked.
âThey can come from any one of those three spots,â he added. âWe have specific needs, have specific filters and exact identities that weâre looking for. So, this isnât just a random take from whomever, this is a targeted approach: the specific positions, body types and skill sets that we need.â
Going off known portal offers, UNM is angling to add more players on defense. Ryan Cook, a walk-on from La Cueva High School, is taking reps with the quarterbacks right now âbut that doesnât mean heâs a quarterback,â Mendenhall clarified. Could UNM be in the market for another one?
Or a fourth running back to work with Sanders, Jacobs and Henry? More secondary help? Another receiver?
Regardless of how it shakes out, donât bank on a break anytime soon.
âWe just wonât have one,â Mendenhall said. âJuly, thereâll be a little bit. But in most times that you take over a program or you reconstruct or you move a program along, about year three is when you can actually maybe take a break.
âSo weâll talk then,â he laughed.
Photos: UNM Lobos football spring practice