Marcus Jones has rocketed from undersized recruit to know-nothing newcomer to potential starter, all in seven months -- and his freshman year hasn't officially begun yet. And the credit, the 17-year-old North Carolinian said, belongs with ...
Minnesota's brutal winter?
Well, all that snow and cold is good for something after all.
"When I got here, it was so cold, it threw me off a little bit. I hadn't experienced that before, and I struggled a little bit," the Gophers freshman receiver said. "But it was good for me -- whenever I wasn't practicing, I was hitting the books, doing homework and studying the offense. It worked out pretty good."
Better than he could have hoped. Jones was a cornerback in high school, one of the top 100 in the nation according to one of the recruiting services, and assumed he would simply take that role in college. But his 5-8 frame, and the Gophers' lack of depth at receiver, prompted coach Jerry Kill to alter those plans.
"I was unsure about the switch, but Coach Kill told me it would all work out for me, and it has," said Jones, the Gophers' second-youngest player. (He'll turn 18 on Oct. 2, two days before offensive lineman Foster Bush.) "Actually, I was surprised how much playing time I got in the spring."
Part of that was a crash course in receiving, but he also earned the repetitions with his play. By the end of the spring, Kill had decided that Jones would play right away this fall, catching passes and perhaps returning punts, and nothing he has seen in the first two days of training camp has changed his mind.
"He's gotten better. He's bigger, [175 pounds], something like that. He's probably a little quicker than he was in the spring, and he's certainly more confident," Kill said. "That's one advantage of having a freshman here [for spring drills] -- he's like a redshirt freshman."