Damien Martinez: “We practice like we hate each other”

DMoney
DMoney
4 min read
Damien Martinez has picked up where he left off at Oregon State, with a 6.0 yards per carry average and numerous physical runs. He met with reporters to discuss his season and the RB room:

On the running game in the first half v. the second half: Everybody kind of saw it first half. We came out kind of sluggish and hit a wall. Halftime, we knew what we had to do. We went in there. It was kind of quiet. Everybody knew we were better than that. So we came out in the second half with a different mindset, with everybody trying to execute and do their job the way it was supposed to happen.

But this week is a new opponent and a new week to go 1-0. That is what we're focused on.

On how the running game is settling in: We’re keeping everybody fresh. We’ve got a long season, so we’ll continue to feed off each other's energy and make an impact on the game. I feel like the team's coming together. We’re getting reps with each other, more practice, and going out there trying to execute. Whatever team executes the most is going to win. That's all it's about.

On Cam Ward: Every day, same person. Consistent. He wants to come out and be as detailed as he can and make everybody as detailed as they can to execute and play faster. We want to play as fast as we can without having to think. Just doing our job, creating big plays or chunk plays, working down the field. We want to execute every play. Every play is its own play. Cam is making sure we're detailed and know what we're doing so we can all go out, do our job, and be at the right spot.

[The TD dive] shows how much of a competitor he is, how competitive this team is. We go at each other every day, practice like we hate each other, but love each other off the field. It's how we get better. It's how we prepare for each week. We’re trying to go 1-0 every week. It’s a new chance to win and continue what we got going.

On the status of the offense: We’ve got a long season. We’ve got plenty of games to get better and plenty of practices to get better. We don't want to stay where we're at. We always want to continue to get better 1% every day. It's what we're built to do.

This offense can be as explosive as can be. We just have to be detailed and execute. That's really what it comes down to. Sorry I keep saying it, but execution is what wins the game. We just need to execute doing our job and we're going to win.

On Jordan Lyle: Everybody sees he's a bigger freshman, just the way he's built. But it’s how creative he is, how he tries to understand everything, just soaking up all the knowledge he can to be better and more detailed. He looks good running the ball. He's a natural runner. But as long as he stays down the path he is on and tries to get better every day, he's going to be great.

On the running back room: We’ve got depth everywhere. One, two, three. We just want to keep everybody fresh and keep everybody playing. Everybody in the running back room can play. Everybody can see we all got our own game. This is how it goes into the game plan and how it plays out. We’ve just got to execute and everybody in the room needs to feed off each other's energy. We just want to impact the game whenever each one of us is in and be happy for the other that the other made a play.

 

Comments (31)

to be clear, if we have success, it will be the ACCCG and 3 playoff games, correct? Like Dawson, I'm not good at mathematics.


Yes.

Although (GOD FORBID) if our first loss came to, say, Clemson in the ACC-CG, I think we could still pull a CFP spot and then play (up to) 4 playoff games. Including the first one "on campus" at Hard Rock.

HEY, DID SOMEBODY CLEAR THIS WITH THE DOLPHINS?!?!
 
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Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
FCS has been doing it for a while. I understand that they don't have the same number of guys going pro, and I'm sure there is little to no data available to study this. Wait and see mode I guess.
 
Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.


Not if they only play 3 years...

Think About It GIF by Identity





But you are correct, it is going to be a bit of a challenge to manage, particularly for the younger players.
 
Yes.

Although (GOD FORBID) if our first loss came to, say, Clemson in the ACC-CG, I think we could still pull a CFP spot and then play (up to) 4 playoff games. Including the first one "on campus" at Hard Rock.

HEY, DID SOMEBODY CLEAR THIS WITH THE DOLPHINS?!?!
Good thing we play on Saturdays 🙌🏼
 
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Not if they only play 3 years...

Think About It GIF by Identity





But you are correct, it is going to be a bit of a challenge to manage, particularly for the younger players.
Which is why it is important now more than ever to recruit depth so a) you can spread the burden with reps, and b) you don't have to play the younger players as much. The expanded scholarships may help with that, too.
 
Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
That's a valid concern. It'll be up to coaches to properly manage snap counts and adjusting the new way. Basically you don't want to be a workhorse RB on a team that could make the CFP. You'll burn out before you even make the NFL.
 
That's a valid concern. It'll be up to coaches to properly manage snap counts and adjusting the new way. Basically you don't want to be a workhorse RB on a team that could make the CFP. You'll burn out before you even make the NFL.
And I think Mario is doing that by giving snaps to 3 regularly, and 4 if we keep giving CJ snaps.
QB’s are also going to miss a few games a year as many do in the NFL College roster management will need to mirror NFL roster management to make it through an entire season.
 
Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
I’ve considered this. An extra 3-4 games packed tight is crazy. But I ain’t gonna lie and act like I’m not watching.

Teams that make it will need real depth and strength on the lines at the end of each season. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that Washington and TCU got pummeled the last 2 years in that second game.
 
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Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
I'm sure you're right. But at least now some of those players with professional aspirations are being compensated for the durability loss. It's not the same but at least there's something.
 
Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
That’s where depth and load management ideally comes into play. But most don’t have that luxury, I’m looking at players like Hampton from unc or jeanty from Boise st getting abused.
 
That’s where depth and load management ideally comes into play. But most don’t have that luxury, I’m looking at players like Hampton from unc or jeanty from Boise st getting abused.
Exactly. College football playoffs will end up like pro football playoffs whereby the healthiest/deepest team will win, not necessarily the most talented.
 
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Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
You definitely are not. The pros are about to go to an 18 game season. The things these guys put their bodies through year round is like nothing else I've ever seen. Hopefully we don't see guys literally dying on the field before a change is made and player safety is made more of a priority.
 
You definitely are not. The pros are about to go to an 18 game season. The things these guys put their bodies through year round is like nothing else I've ever seen. Hopefully we don't see guys literally dying on the field before a change is made and player safety is made more of a priority.
what your gonna see is running backs staying in college less time due to wear and tear
 
Am I the only one worried about college kids playing 16-17 games a season? Won’t that have the potential of shortening their pro careers, fi they have them? Snaps are biologically limited.
Hence why they need to be compensated for the physical demand that it takes on their body & the potential deduction it could have on their earning potentiality.
 
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