GREG SCHIANO: Yeah, I look at Temple. You can see, I’ve known Stan for a long time, Coach Drayton, he’s an excellent football coach. He’s been at the highest level, National Football League, National Championships. Stan knows how to prepare a team. You can see that they are getting the better. You can see there’s an identity to their team, what they are going to be, what he wants them to be. So you know, I know, as always, there’s a lot of guys on that Temple team that would have liked to come to Rutgers, right? So when you play a team that has a chip on their shoulder, it’s a challenge. So when you go back and watch that game last year, you say, well, the score was what it was. I mean, that score was not indicative of on what that game was. That score was based on takeaways. We struggled to move the football against their defense, and I think their defense is playing well again. Yeah, it’s something that we are getting ready for. They do some things that are a little bit different, so that’s challenging and then obviously in the special teams realm, Coach Scheier knows intimately what we do, and so we have got to make sure that we button it all up and make sure that there’s nothing that he can take advantage of from his knowledge of what we do.
Q. What have you seen from Gavin in terms of the way he’s navigating the ups and downs of the early part of his development and processing mistakes, learning from them, things like that?
GREG SCHIANO: I think there’s no doubt both he and Evan are both getting better in leaps and bounds, right, and how can you not when you go through that process and you play in live games. He wished he could have that interception back. It was similar to the one at BC. That’s what he and I talked about, there’s enough mistakes out there, to make new ones every week; we don’t want to make the same ones. But then again, you look at what he does on that one touchdown throw. I mean, that was a laser beam, right, and then when he runs the football, he’s a threat every time the ball is snapped and it’s in his hands. He’s a threat. You’d better defend him. You’d better have a guy accounted for, him because if you don’t, he has the ability to take it a long way. I see him getting better. Again, I don’t want to rush the process, though. I think they are both playing well and we just have to let them keep playing and…
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