SIU coach Nick Hill’s weekly press conference

Nick Hill

Head coach Nick Hill’s weekly press conference

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CARBONDALE, Ill.  — Here are excerpts from Saluki football head coach Nick Hill‘s weekly press conference held Monday afternoon at Saluki Stadium. Southern Illinois hosts Indiana State on Homecoming on Saturday at 2 p.m. CT. The contest will be televised on ESPN+. 

On the significance of Homecoming.
The football game is what brings everybody together. I know what it means to go out there and play well and give them something to celebrate on Saturday. We’re excited for the opportunity to go out there and do it against a good football team in Indiana State. It’s a team that’s improving, stuck to their plan and gotten better. That’s evident watching them on film. It’s a great challenge in front of us. We have a lot of things to keep correcting. We have to get back to playing the football we know we can play. 

On the team’s lengthy injury list.
I’ve always said that nobody cares. Indiana State doesn’t. It’s all about results. This game is going to create injuries. We probably have more than most, but that’s our job, that’s what we get paid to do, is to get the next guy coached up and go out there and give us a chance to win. That’s what we’ll continue to do, with a good attitude, great body language, come out and practice and coach, and do everything in our power. We’ll get a couple guys back, we’ll lose a couple more, but we’ll line up on Saturday with the confidence with the guys we have to go out and play well.

On the defense’s inability to stop the run at Illinois State.
You turn on the film and there’s opportunities to get stops. We’re fitting power and two guys fit outside the puller, and (the running back) hits inside and you’re going to get beat. Not all of it was just physically getting manhandled up there. We had guys that physically won one-on-ones, but it takes all 11 guys in the right spot. Missed tackles, some inexperience, (knowing) when to fit double pullers, (Illinois State) created some problems. I definitely don’t think up front we have to recruit better. We feel like we have some good players, a lot of them. 

On winning. 
You have to make things happen. You can’t sit back and hope it to happen. You have to be the aggressor and go and attack to finish the ballgame. Winning starts to steamroll and breeds success. Unfortunately, we haven’t had a lot of them that have went our way. You got to get one to get the next one, and then you start to learn how to win and what it feels like to win. You gotta find a way at some point to say, enough’s enough, and go out there and do it. Everybody has a hand in it. We have to coach better in the second half, we have to coach better late in practices. We have to focus for an entire 60 minutes. 

On the talent level on defense.
I don’t think we’ve lined up against anybody that has more superior athletes than us. You’re not going to find better athletes than some of the guys we just named off — Anthony KnightonJordan BernerJeremy ChinnMadre Harper. They’re as good as anybody. We have to coach them better and put them in better spots, and at the end of the day, we have to make some plays. We have to tackle better, we didn’t tackle good in space, we mis-fit some things, and when we did fit it up right, we had trouble getting (the running back) down.

On Sam Straub’s running ability versus Illinois State.
I thought Sam did his best job of taking care of the football. His 49 yards rushing, all of them were passes called. I think four of them were first-down runs, which we emphasized him doing. For him to take the next step, it’s what he’s got to continue to do. If it doesn’t feel good, something’s not there, pull it down. He’s an athletic kid and tough to bring down. Picking up four or five yards is a positive play. 

On the offense’s performance the last two weeks.
Any time you have 200 yards of offense in back-to-back weeks, there’s a lot of things you can look at to do better, starting with me. Nobody’s happy in that room. Your job as an offense is to score points — we scored three points, we didn’t put it in the end zone. We could sit here all day and talk about things we could do better.

On how the team handles adversity.
You can’t feel sorry for yourself. That’s what this game will teach you. It will humble you really quick. It’s easy to talk about in the offseason, about how football teaches you about life, there’s no greater sport. When you’re in it, and you’re 1-5, it doesn’t feel good, then you really learn those lessons. It’s our job as coaches to be those mentors, be honest with (the players). They’re not the only ones who have that gut-wrenching feel. The coaches are right there with them. You have to keep the core, fundamental things of your program at the forefront. You have to keep challenging them as men. You’re going to win with class, you’re going to lose with class. You’re still going to sit in the first three rows, still going to be respectful. We’re going to lift hard, we’re going to practice hard, we’re going to run on and off the field. We’re going to have a great attitude and body language on the sideline. It’s our job as coaches to mentor that. If you see somebody slipping in that area or feeling sorry for themselves, it’s your job to get them out of that.

On the team’s effort at Illinois State.
There wasn’t anyone who traveled last week who wasn’t in it to win it and didn’t compete until the very end. Madre Harper on the last touchdown passed up two guys to tackle (the ball carrier) and roll him into the end zone. If I would have seen him jogging after that guy on a 49-yard touchdown run because he doesn’t really feel like going to get him because we’re down by 35, but he didn’t. He chases him down, you play to the whistle, you keep competing. That’s we all have to do and the only way it’s going to get better. If we want to flip it around and finish this season strong, we have one choice and it’s to keep working with a good attitude.

On the team’s depleted running back corps.
We went into the (Illinois State) game with three backs — Perk (Chris Perkins), D.J. (Davis) and Tremayne (Lee), who is a freshman who has continually gotten better. He’s gotten stronger and lost 10 pounds, which we challenged him to do. He’s done a great job on the scout team. We used one game last week and we’ll probably use those three other games at some point and still let him redshirt.

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