Krull not daunted by Mikes’ move up to Class 2-A
CARMICHAELS — Carmichaels has been one of the areaĢƵ most consistent football programs, a winning team that is usually in the upper echelon of the Tri-County South.
The scenario is different this season, however.
The Mikes were bumped up from Class 1-A to 2-A, thanks to being one over the enrollment cut-off.
Now lurking on Carmichaels’ schedule are teams such as defending 2-A champion Washington and Charleroi, former Class 3-A schools such as McGuffey and Southmoreland, as well as familiar former top-notch TCS foes Beth-Center and Frazier.
Sixth-year Carmichaels coach Ryan Krull isn’t worried about Prexies or Cougars or Highlanders, though.
Krull will concentrate mainly on the Mikes, as he always has.
“We just try to worry about us,” Krull said. “We tell our players frequently, letĢƵ be the best we can be. The focus is always going to be about us and not our opponents. ThatĢƵ the way we’ve done it in the past and thatĢƵ the way we’ll continue to do it.”
That philosophy has worked well for Krull as the program stepped up another level the past two seasons. In 2016, Carmichaels won it first conference title since 2002, and last year the Mikes won their first playoff game since 2002 during an 8-3 season that included a 6-1 mark in the TCS.
Carmichaels also played well in its quarterfinal playoff game last year, falling to traditional power Clairton, 37-12, in a game that was much closer than the score indicated.
“I feel we are trending in the right direction from a program standpoint,” Krull said. “I really believe that. But we’re not there yet. We’re not satisfied.”
With the program on the upswing, it would’ve been easy for Krull to pout about being pushed up to 2-A, but he had no complaints and is pleased with how his players have accepted that challenge.
“They’ve been grinding,” Krull said. “ThatĢƵ what camp is. Our offseason in terms of summer work and preseason camp has been what it has been in years past. They’re working their tails on. I think their mindset is generally where it needs to be at this point in the year.”
It helps to have a veteran quarterback, and Krull has that in junior Kevin Kelly, who started last year.
“Kevin grew a lot from a freshman to a sophomore, and heĢƵ even grown more from sophomore to junior,” Krull said. “HeĢƵ starting to do things that we need him to do, from a leadership standpoint.”
Kelly has evolved at his position.
“I would have said last year heĢƵ more of a thrower that can run,” Krull said. “I think he can do both now. I think heĢƵ pretty balanced with what he can do with his arm and what he can do with his legs. ThatĢƵ a testament to the work he put in in the offseason because heĢƵ gained a significant amount of weight from what he was as a sophomore. HeĢƵ really built pretty well.”
When Kelly hands the ball off, it will be to a stable of running backs, not just one or two, in keeping with the Mikes’ tradition.
“We’ve got several guys that are going to touch the ball,” Krull said. “ThatĢƵ consistent with what we’ve done in the past. We’ll have senior Joey Minor back there, we’ll have juniors Mike Robinson and John Lilley and sophomores Bailey Jones and Hunter Voithofer back there as well.”
The Mikes are a running team, although Kelly did throw for 588 yards and eight touchdowns last year.
“We’ll still throw the ball when we feel we have an advantage on the outside with seniors Billy Piper, juniors Zack Gamble and Damian Plavi and sophomore Jacob Smith,” Krull said. “All those guys have been working in that role.”
The positions hit hardest by graduation were the offensive and defensive lines.
”We’ve got a lot of new faces,” Krull said. “We’ve replaced every starter from last year, not only that but out of nine guys who played on the offensive line last year, eight of them are gone. We have one guy back, Jacob Shaw, who didn’t start but had some significant playing time.
”But the expectation has not changed with the guys who will be playing this year. If they do what they’re capable of doing, they’ll be better than anyone we’ve had here. But that remains to be seen. We’ll see how they respond when the lights come on.”
Shaw is a 6-foot-2, 315-pound senior who will be counted on heavily on both sides of the ball.
”Jacob is not just a big body,” Krull said. “HeĢƵ got some athletic ability to him. He wants to be a force in the middle.”
The Mikes are a bit more settled at linebacker, but have a host of possibilities in the secondary.
“At linebacker we’ll have Hunter Voithofer in the middle, and seniors Joey Minor and Dalton Black on the outside,” Krull said. “In the perimeter we’ll have John Lilley, Mike Robinson, Billy Piper, Zach Gamble, Damian Plavi, Jacob Smith and Brady Barnhart. The ones that perform the best in practice will get the nod on Friday.”
The Mikes open their season with an Interstate game at Beth-Center Friday night.
Krull is not afraid to go to his bench when he feels a starter is tiring.
“We are always conscious of trying to use our depth to our advantage,” he said. “If we have a guy who we feel might need a little bit of a breather, letĢƵ put the back-up in whoĢƵ 100 percent instead of the starter whoĢƵ at 70 percent. That will hold true again this year when thatĢƵ possible.”
As far as goals for 2018, Interstate or Tri-County South, KrullĢƵ expectations are always the same.
“The goal is to win every single game that we play,” Krull said. “If a coach ever goes into a game and says we just want to compete, I don’t know why that guy is even coaching.”










