Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
He's quickly making his presence felt
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Bonny Eagle grad Josh Spearin has moved into UMaine's starting lineup as a freshman.
By JENN MENENDEZ, Staff Writer November 7, 2009

TODAY'S GAME

WHO: Maine (4-4, 3-2 CAA) at James Madison (3-5, 1-4)

WHEN: 3 p.m. 

WHERE: Bridgeforth Stadium, Harrisonburg, Va.

RADIO: WLOB-AM (1310)

MAINE OUTLOOK: The Black Bears are coming off a 19-9 win against UMass. The defense forced five turnovers, two of which the offense converted into scores. QB Warren Smith passed for 226 yards and two TDs and rushed for another TD. The team's attack remains predominantly through the air, though they did pick up 82 rushing yards against UMass. LB Donte Dennis picked off two passes, recovered a fumble, and made 11 tackles. Maine broke a troubling pattern of getting outplayed and outscored in the second half.

JMU OUTLOOK: The Dukes knocked off No. 16 Delaware 20-8 last week. Justin Thorpe completed 11 of 15 passes for 262 yards and a score, and WR Rockeed McCarter had three receptions for 125 yards. The defense had eight sacks and held Delaware to 224 yards of offense. LB Chase Williams had a game-high 11 tackles. Three of James Madison's conference losses have come at the hands of teams ranked in the FCS top 10: Richmond (No. 1), William and Mary (5) and Villanova (6). The Dukes beat Maine 24-10 in Orono last year.

– Jenn Menendez

Josh Spearin had no idea.

It was Aug. 7, opening day of training camp for the University of Maine football team. Two players were ahead of Spearin on the depth chart at right tackle. One was his brother.

He expected to redshirt for a season and play his first game in 2010, bigger and stronger.

A little more than a month later, though, Spearin made his first college start in the Carrier Dome at Syracuse.

Spearin, a freshman from Bonny Eagle High, has since carved out a home on Maine's offensive line as the starting right tackle.

"Ability and talent always surfaces," said Maine Coach Jack Cosgrove. "He has a gift to play the position. A working knowledge of technique, fundamentals, good feet, toughness.

"It comes down to we want our best 11 on the field. Josh Spearin became one of our best five on the line."

Spearin, 6-foot-3, 285 pounds, had an inkling he would get the start at Syracuse following the previous game, a 20-16 loss at Albany. Offensive line Coach Frank Giufre pulled him aside to give him the news.

The coaching staff liked his presence, his physical ability and how well he responds to coaching.

"It was exciting," said Spearin. "My brother had been starting over me to begin with. So it was difficult in a way. But it was still starting."

There were no hard feelings from his brother. Matt Spearin, a 6-foot-2, 295-pound redshirt freshman, rooms with his brother on the road. He gave him some advice.

"It's a little frustrating," said Matt Spearin. "But I like to think I helped him a little bit. We talked about what it would be like before the Syracuse game. I told him 'It's just a regular game. The worst thing you can do is mess up. Oh well.'"

Since then, Josh has played every game.

"He still makes a lot of young kid mistakes," said Matt. "But he's real physical."

"He's made great improvements," said Giufre. "Being an 18-year-old kid and starting at the Division I level is pretty impressive.

"I think he's going to be a (darn) good player once he keeps maturing, keeps growing up and grows into his body. He's doing good things."

The Spearins played together on a state championship team at Bonny Eagle in 2007 – part of a string of four titles in five years for the Scots. After Matt graduated, Josh played on another championship team in 2008.

"You're not going to survive in this program if you're not a hard worker," said Cosgrove. "They came in with a hardworking mentality and background. They didn't have to learn it. It's a credit to the school they played at and the success that school has had. Hard work has its benefits."

The brothers spend time together on and off the field. They room together for road trips and eat dinner together every night. They're rarely apart.

"My brother and I are pretty close," said Josh. "We like to watch over each other. He's not that far ahead of me, but he had to go through everything first. He kind of got me ready for everything and has been a big help in that way. I look up to him a lot."

Maine's line has gone through some growing pains this season – particularly early on when the team switched quarterbacks and went from a rushing offense to a passing offense. But the group has improved, said Cosgrove.

"We feel like UMass was (Josh's) best game," said Cosgrove, referring to Maine's 19-9 win last Saturday. "There's a steady growth going on here, week to week. It's what you expect and hope for."

Ultimately the Spearins would like to have an impact on the football program together, perhaps with one at each tackle spot, or one at guard and the other at tackle.

"I'd like to start side-by-side here some day, at guard and tackle," said Matt. "That'd be pretty cool. We want to be a key part of things."

Cosgrove said that might be a possibility: "They could end up playing side-by-side."

Staff Writer Jenn Menendez can be contacted at 791-6426 or at:

jmenendez@pressherald.com

 


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