In-Season Injury Update

Shorthanded FAU will be missing many key players on Saturday when the Owls face SMU in the Boca Raton Bowl.
written by Chuck King December 20, 2019

OwlAccess.com has learned that academic suspensions will sideline wide receivers Pico Harrison and DeAngelo Antoine, both seniors, as well as junior middle linebacker Keke Leroy – all starters.

In addition All-American tight end Harrison Bryant is not expected to play. Bryant has been ill ever since traveling to Atlanta to accept the Mackey Award and hasn’t practiced with the team in preparation for the bowl game.

Bryant, Antoine and Harrison are FAU’s three leaders in receiving yards. Their absences leave starting wide out John Mitchell and reserve tight end John Raine as the only players eligible for Saturday who caught more than 15 passes this season.

“You can look at it as an opportunity to make more plays to make up for the plays that probably would have been made on the field that now have to fall on somebody else,” Mitchell said.

Leroy, a second team All-Conference USA selection, leads the Owls in tackles with 101, and forced fumbles, with five. He’s also intercepted three passes.

“Next man up,” fellow starting linebacker Rashad Smith said. “Keke’s gone. Caliph’s [Brice] been training all year for this.”

The absence of Leroy, along with injured starting defensive end Tim Bonner who also won’t play, should greatly hamper FAU’s efforts to stop SMU (10-2), which brings the nation’s No. 6 offense into the Boca Bowl.

Walk-on Brandon Robinson practiced with the first team all week at Harrison’s wide out spot. The redshirt junior caught two passes totaling 44 yards this season.

Willie Wright likely will earn the start in the slot. The Owls’ leading receiver two years ago, Wright caught only 12 passes covering 127 yards this season, most of them coming on jet sweeps.

“All I’ve got to say is, our players have to be smart, really figure out what really matters,” said quarterback Chris Robison, himself suspended for all of 2019’s spring practices following a night of underage partying. “It sucks that they’re not playing, but you’ve just got to keep going. There’s nothing I can really do. All I can say is, I’ve got to feed the people we have.”

Running backs Malcolm Davidson, arguably the Owls’ best running back all season, and Tyrek Tisdale, a special teams standout, also will not play.

With 711 yards, the oft-injured Davidson led the Owls in rushing this season.

FAU (10-3) has won 10 of its last 11 games. They are looking for the second 11-win season in program history.

The Boca Bowl kicks off at 3:30 p.m. and will air on ABC.

 
No. 4 Oklahoma will be without another key defensive starter for its bowl game next week.

Safety Delarrin Turner-Yell has a broken collarbone and won't play in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Dec. 28 against No. 1 LSU, a source confirmed to ESPN's Adam Rittenberg.

Turner-Yell has been a key member of the Sooners' secondary, with his 75 tackles second on the team. The sophomore also has three passes defended and a forced fumble while starting each of the team's 13 games.
 
ATLANTA -- LSU coach Ed Orgeron said starting tailback and leading rusher Clyde Edwards-Helaire is recovering from a hamstring injury and is questionable to play for the No. 1 Tigers against No. 4 Oklahoma in the College Football Playoff semifinal game at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Saturday.

Edwards-Helaire injured his hamstring during a non-contact play in practice last week. Orgeron said Edwards-Helaire would test his hamstring in practice in Atlanta on Tuesday.

"You know, Clyde's a little bit better," Orgeron said during a news conference in Atlanta on Monday. He's off the crutches and off the scooter. We're going to see if he can do something tomorrow. It's going to be a day-by-day deal. But I promise you this: a little better than what I thought last week. He has a chance to play. I don't know if he's going to play."

Edwards-Helaire was an All-SEC first-team selection this season, rushing for 1,290 yards and 16 touchdowns. The 5-foot-8 junior from Baton Rouge also caught 50 passes for 399 yards and a touchdown.
 
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields might not be fully healthy when the second-ranked Buckeyes face No. 3 Clemson in the PlayStation Fiesta Bowl.

Fields said Tuesday that his left knee is only 80 to 85% heading into Saturday's College Football Playoff semifinal in Glendale. He plans to wear a small brace during the game and brought a larger one in case he needs it.

"My knee's probably not where I want it to be right now," Fields said. "But I think with treatment every day and just resting it every day, hopefully, it will be better by the game."

 
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