August 12, 2012
Clarke hopes to capture trust of WVU coaching staff
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Courtesy photo
After scoring 16 touchdowns in his first two seasons at WVU, Ryan Clarke did not touch the ball last year under first-year coach Dana Holgorsen.
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"I figure as long as I carry out my role and do what I'm supposed to do, all that draft stuff and scout stuff will come on its own,'' Clarke said. "I'm not focused on that stuff right now. I'm focused on this season and us as a team winning.''

The truth is, if this team wins it will probably be with Clarke filling the same role he did a year ago. The Mountaineers have backs who can run the football, guys like Dustin Garrison and Andrew Buie and Shawne Alston. Alston, at 5-11 and 235 pounds, is probably more suited to the role as a short-yardage back, given that he figures to be carrying the ball in all types of down-and-distance situations and not just as a specialist.

That doesn't mean, however, that Clarke doesn't miss having the ball stuck in his gut.

"Of course. Who doesn't miss it?'' Clarke said. "But you've got to do what you've got to do. It's an adjustment. It's part of football. You have to make adjustment and deal with things.''

Clarke is also enough of a realist to understand that the change in offensive styles wasn't the only reason his carries dropped off a cliff last season. After all, even in a wide-open offense there's a place for a short-yardage guy.

There's not a place, though, for a short-yardage guy who occasionally drops the football. And Clarke did just that in both 2010 - his most damaging fumble was in overtime at Connecticut - and again the following spring in Holgorsen's first practices as the team's offensive coordinator.

"Yeah, I think it was a combination of both,'' Clarke said. "To have that history of dropping the ball and then to have new coaches come in, it's going to be hard for them to trust you. So you've got to take some time to gain that trust.

"If I were them, I probably wouldn't trust me either. It's always been my goal to gain their trust back.''

Well, it's been more than a year now, and perhaps Clarke is beginning to capture that rust. He said he's actually been given the ball a few times during team periods of practice, so at least there appears among the coaches to be some interest in finding out if that's an option in games.

Still, don't expect Clarke to become that go-to guy again.

"He definitely showed that if he had to he could carry the ball,'' running backs coach Robert Gillespie said. "Hopefully, guys will stay healthy enough that he won't have to. But as a staff and as his position coach, I feel very good about putting him out there and letting him run the ball. But he also got better in the spring and became a better blocker and that will be his role in this offense.''

Reach Dave Hickman at 304-348-1734 or dphickm...@aol.com or follow him at Twitter.com/dphickman1.

 

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