'14 NY DT Pete Mokwuah (Notre Dame Signee)

ResLife Hero

Well-known member
Messages
6,737
Reaction score
190
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p lang="in" dir="ltr">Irish A-to-Z: PeterMichiganMokwuah <a href="http://t.co/GAzrbU6Qp6">http://t.co/GAzrbU6Qp6</a></p>— Notre Dame on NBC (@NDonNBC) <a href="https://twitter.com/NDonNBC/status/626490102861004800">July 29, 2015</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

FUTURE POTENTIAL

Without having seem Mokwuah do anything but take some snaps in the spring game, it’s impossible to know what Notre Dame has in him. But even if Jerry Tillery was the defensive lineman who stole all the attention this spring, Mokwuah will be needed if the Irish are going to be a run-stuffing defense that takes away the line of scrimmage.

Mokwuah still seems like a ball of clay, ready to be molded by new defensive line coach Keith Gilmore. The good news? He’s a really big one, and that’s more than half the battle up front.
CRYSTAL BALL

As I look at the depth chart, Mokwuah’s participation likely hinges on the health of Jarron Jones. The senior defensive lineman might be a step slow coming off of foot surgery, and that would force the entire tackle position to shift down a rung.

That bad news for Notre Dame would be good news for Mokwuah’s playing time, though. But even then, he’ll be fighting a capable group of young defensive linemen for playing time, with guys like Daniel Cage and Tillery likely having a head start.

Late attention on the recruiting trail isn’t much of an indicator in ability to contribute. We saw that with Cage, who quickly moved into the rotation at nose guard. So while Mokwuah’s road to the field looks backed up, he’s got four years of eligibility remaining. And even if his contributions are limited to special teams and garbage time, getting on the field this season should be the realistic goal.

Notre Dame Fighting Irish Football, Basketball, and Recruiting Front Page
SOPHOMORE NT PETE MOKWUAH
-- Current Perception: On the outside looking in
-- Path to Playing Time: Continued improvement from the spring, a session in which he made great strides from beginning to end, tough admittedly had a long way to go.
-- 2015 Projection: Third-string nose guard – on the cusp of playing time as a member of the varsity, but not yet a contributor in competitive contests.
-- Confidence in that Projection: Medium
-- Perceived Weakness: Conditioning/Work Volume
-- The Bottom Line: Mokwuah was beaten to a pulp by the first and second unit offensive lines early in Spring Ball 2015 but he began to dole out punishment of his own as the session progressed. He has four seasons of eligibility remaining which makes steady improvement a reasonable goal for this, his redshirt-freshman season.
If Notre Dame were as starved for bodies up front this fall as they were last, Mokwuah would likely play. He’s instead a competitor that could use more time to develop.
 
Last edited:

nsisk157

Well-known member
Messages
953
Reaction score
265
Super random..just reading through other threads.

Anyone know how he has been progressing. I know he was a project coming in, but does he show upward trending signs?

Possible contributor next year.

Random, but bored at work.
 

Sherm Sticky

The Prophet
Messages
19,321
Reaction score
1,638
#2 on the depth chart behind Jarron Jones and in an or situation with Cage.

This is great news for his development, as he will be relied on heavily next season.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

ndcoltsfan2010

Well-known member
Messages
2,643
Reaction score
136
#2 on the depth chart behind Jarron Jones and in an or situation with Cage.

This is great news for his development, as he will be relied on heavily next season.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Totally agree!! We need everyone to step up and play! Let's see what this kid has got! Then put our best 11 out there!
 

Sherm Sticky

The Prophet
Messages
19,321
Reaction score
1,638
Also noted in the Upshot thread, I found this very interesting:

There is a thread on ISD about Mokwuah, and Coach D (whose opinion I might care about most of any ND related recruiting analyst) ranked the ND DT targets in terms of his want as such:

1. Mokwuah
2. Cage
3. Griffin
4. Saywers (after a gap)

He loves the upside of Mokwuah. He thinks he will need a lot of coaching, and is probably the lowest in terms of current ranking if he had to play now, but his upside is much greater than the rest. He also thinks the upside of both Cage and Griffin are considerably above Sawyers.

I just thought that was really interesting and worth sharing, especially since most here want Sawyers most, and Mukwuah is seemingly an afterthought for some. Cage as well to a lesser degree.



Well look at this. The highest players Coach D wanted, we got. Cage has been the best player in that list. And now Pete is finally coming along...


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Luckylucci

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
27,770
Reaction score
10,153
I thought that Mokwuah flashed a couple of times versus Nevada. I'm glad we'll get to see more. See if he can do it more consistently and against better competition.

The DL got a lot of movement versus Syracuse. They don't have a stellar OL but definitely our best effort all season in that regard. I'll be interested to see how it matches up with NC State.
 
B

Bogtrotter07

Guest
Pete is my kind of guy.

I remember that he had quite a trip, just to make it to class in high school.

And he was deeply appreciative of his scholarship offer.
 

Domina Nostra

Well-known member
Messages
6,251
Reaction score
1,388
I thought that Mokwuah flashed a couple of times versus Nevada. I'm glad we'll get to see more. See if he can do it more consistently and against better competition.

The DL got a lot of movement versus Syracuse. They don't have a stellar OL but definitely our best effort all season in that regard. I'll be interested to see how it matches up with NC State.


In my experience, a Dlineman can be effective in two ways: (1) play smart football at a high skill level, (2) play with your hair on fire like a mad bull almost out-of-control.

For the second to be effective, you have to really go 110%. You can only pull it off for a handfull of snaps before you collapse (just like a WR can't run "go" routes everytime") and/or the other team adjusts.

Now that we are instituting this interesting plan referred to as "Rotating Players," there is a place for a big bull like Mokuwah to go crazy 5-10 times a game. go figure.

SIDE NOTE: Why is Jay Hayes listed as a WDE and Julian Okwara listed as a SDE on the depth chart?
 

dublinirish

Everestt Gholstonson
Messages
27,335
Reaction score
13,095
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Love my team and Love Thee Notre Dame forever. I'm thankful for the opportunity that Notre Dame has given me. With that being said, I look forward to attending another school for my 5th year option. Go Irish!! 🍀</p>— Pete $hmokwuah (@petemokwuah) <a href="https://twitter.com/petemokwuah/status/948201889623150592?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 2, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

ColinKSU

Well-known member
Messages
4,647
Reaction score
6,163
Good luck to him. There are a lot of bodies on that defensive line that were just that under BVG —*bodies. I hope he can see the field wherever he goes, but it'll be nice to have some of those scholarships back once other guys like Tiassum and MDT head for greener pastures.
 

Wingman Ray

Banned
Messages
1,578
Reaction score
110
This is my concern with that DT out of TX that they are chasing now...career hamburger squad. I know you need HS bodies as well for practice but...
 
Top