April 5, 2012
WVU’s Clarke may be key in new defensive alignment
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"We're going to a different conference and teams might be bigger, stronger, faster. This might help us out. Me being inside against a passing team or having Jorge playing the five technique [off the offensive tackle] against a team - or vice-versa - might help. It's good to teach us all the positions."

If you want to view it as the glass - or line - half full, well, Wright and Clarke are experienced.

"I think it helps because we learned from the guys that left," Clarke said. "We're just filling in the roles and teaching the younger guys so they can teach after we leave."

He admits the loss of Miller and Irvin subtracts from the pool of leadership.

"It's more of a collective [form of leadership] rather than one or two guys," Clarke said. "It's more of a rallying type of thing, as a unit. It's good to have that one vocal leader, but it's also good to have a bunch of guys. That means people aren't afraid to step up and speak."

"Jorge Wright, J.B. Lageman, even Shaq Rowell [are vocal]. Guys like Isaiah Bruce still get advice from Tyler Anderson, Taige Redman and Darwin Cook. And even though Terence Garvin is out, when guys come to the sideline he gets them right.

"On offense, it seems like the whole offense is talking, from the line to the running back to Geno [Smith]. It's more of a collective thing."

Clarke said he hopes the collective talent of the defense makes the Mountaineers effective up front. He especially likes speed in the form of two outside linebackers.

"It helps out a lot," he said. "Those guys are outside linebackers and they're so much faster. The [opposing offensive] tackles have to get used to them and us as well. They'll be expecting speed on one play and on the next we might switch it up and come with some power."

His hope is, in the end, the opposition is the one stuck trying to figure out this line.

Reach Mitch Vingle at 304-348-4827, mitchvin...@wvgazette.com or follow him at twitter.com/MitchVingle.

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