"We don't have anybody that I can say is going to do the placekicking for us right now. I don't know if we'll find anybody," Restic said. (At last report, he had applied to a Kelly Girl agency for a parttime placekicker.)
The coaches have spent much of the last two weeks screening volunteers who have come from outside the team ranks to try kicking. But Restic said last week he had not found anyone who was consistent enough for the job.
The lack of a kicking game would put severe pressure on Harvard's defense by both reducing the team's point output and allowing opponents good field position on exchanges. And Restic doesn't want to burden the one part of his squad that can boast some success. "We have to find somebody...ANYBODY," he says.
On the offensive side of the field, uncertainties are even more numerous. With sophomore Ron Cuccia and senior Brian Buckley both not returning to school, Harvard's supply of experienced and talented quarterbacks has been sliced in half.
The dropoff has thrust senior signal caller Burke St. John into the starting role, backed up by junior Jim Keyte. Both starters for the baseball team--St. John at shortstop and Keyte on the mound--the pair have talent but lack varsity playing time.
St. John is a heady player, in-touch with Restic's Multiflex and adept at option and sprint-out plays. He's a quick, compact quarterback with a questionable arm--one that fits a running game more suitably than a passing attack.
But Restic insists that Harvard will not ignore the pass, though running should be the team's stronger suit. With split-end Rich Horner around, the Crimson would be crazy not to pass. "Richie will be as fine a receiver as you'll see in the league," Restic said. "Anytime we get the chance to throw the ball we'll get it out to him. I think Burke can do that for us."
Joining Horner should be tight end Chuck Marshall, a small but skilled returning letterman and another varsity baseball player. Linus O'Donnell, a powerful 6-5, 240-lb, tight end candidate, has been sidelined with leg problems; and Restic said he doesn't know when O'Donnell might be able to get back on the field--if at all.
In the backfield, Paul Connors, a talented starter from last year, will be trying to fill the hole left by the graduation of superback Ralph Pollillio. (Last week, Connors was nursing a groin pull and was sitting out practice.) Having lost Matt Granger and Larry Brown as well as Pollilio, Harvard faces the task of constructing almost a brand new offensive backfield. And when that backfield has to execute the complex Multiflex, the task is not easy.
Restic says a key to Harvard's success will depend on how much the team can use the shifting Multiflex.
"The more we can do with sets and motion, the more pressure we put on opponents," he said. "The more we cut back, the more pressure we put on ourselves."
But Restic doesn't know how much his young team can absorb in the short preseason camp since most players have had little or no prior exposure to the flex. He's unsure how many different sets the team will be able to use. "We've got to do more things because we're small," he said. Then Restic added, "But can we do more things?"
"If we sit in the I or split-back set and try to make it go against bigger teams, we're not going to do it," he says.
His front offensive line, with Dave Schoper at center and big Mike Durgin at one tackle, has some size. But the remaining linemen--captain Mike Brown, Eric Speigel and probably Orazio Lattanzi--all are moderate-sized trenchmen. They will be outsized at least by big Brown, Yale and UMass; and Restic says the team will have to use motion, rather than straight-up set blocking, to hold off the opposition. Overall, Harvard's season resembles one grand "IF." If the team avoids injury, if St. John can deliver some passing, if the lines fill out the holes, if the players absorb the Multiflex--then there may be some success. Even Restic is plagued with "its." "If our defense can get the job done, and if we can develop a kicking game it will take the pressure off our offense," he said. That will help. In the wings, Joe Restic harbors one intangible, his "13th man." No. 12, Restic says, is the substitute who is sure to come off the bench sometime during the year and give the team a certain spark that leads to victory. But No. 13, Restic says, is spirit, the one asset this Harvard team has in abundance. Again with an "if," Restic says, "We can't get down, because if we lose our spirity it's going to be a long, hard year." Amen, Joe