Jacksonville Sharks Finalize Coaching Staff

The news broke Tuesday afternoon that Jacksonville Sharks head coach Mark Stoute has finalized his coaching staff ahead of the upcoming 2017 season.

Starting with a familiar name, Bob Landsee is returning to the team this season as the offensive consultant. Landsee has a lot of football experience, including earning All-American honors as a center at Wisconsin and getting drafted in 1986 by the Philadelphia Eagles.

Landsee has been coaching in the indoor game since 1999, and has made it to numerous playoffs, including last year. Landsee was on the Sharks’ staff last year, and filled in as interim head coach leading the Sharks to an American Conference Championship game against the Philadelphia Soul.

Joey Smith remained on the staff after being the Sharks’ Defensive Coordinator and Defensive backs in November of last year. Smith and Stoute do have a working history together, the duo worked in the Indoor Football League as coaches for the Cedar Rapids Titans. Smith boasts coaching the No. 1 ranked defense in the IFL in 2016 and his defense pitched only the third shutout in league history in 2015.

BJ Cohen is returning as well this season as the Defensive Line and Linebackers coach. Cohen is entering his fifth year of coaching dating back to 2013 when he was Offensive and Defensive line coach for the New Orleans Voodoo.

Stan Wrubluski joins the Sharks for the 2017 season as the team’s fullbacks and offensive line coach. Wrubluski has worked in almost every single indoor league during his coaching career.

In 2014, he made his coaching debut in the Arena Football League with the Iowa Barnstormers. Since then he has coached with the Orlando PredatorsJacksonville Tomcats in the af2, as well as the Eastern Kentucky Drillers.

 

Jacksonville Sharks 2016 Season in Review

The 2016 Jacksonville Sharks season featured few ups and several downs. On the field, they were a disappointment. As one of the odds-on ArenaBowl favorites, the Sharks needed to rally to finish 7-9, and fell in the American Conference championship game to the Philadelphia Soul. Off the field, fans and insiders were questioning if the team would even exist after the conclusion of the season.

In what’s become a regular scheduling quirk since Jacksonville came into the League, the Sharks opened up on the road (yes, in their history, the Sharks have never played at home Week 1). This year’s opponent was the revamped Los Angeles KISS, featuring several players from the now-defunct San Jose Sabercats. As was the case in the third quarter in Stockton, the Sharks couldn’t get out of their own way, and the team stumbled to a 64-39 loss.

Recovering with a win in the state that would end their season four months later, Jacksonville then lost three of their next four (including a 75-68 loss to the Arizona Rattlers, the first overtime game in franchise history) to limp into their first bye week at 2-4.

Going into Week 8, head coach Les Moss was already on the hot seat, and wide receiver Joe Hills not only continued his 2015 form, but forced opposing defenses to plan for him week in and week out. Rumors quelled thanks to two straight wins off the bye.

Hills had a career and franchise night against the Orlando Predators in Week 9, hauling in a team record eight touchdowns in what was considered an upset win despite the talent on both teams. Hills was on his way to his first-ever 2,000 yard season that won him First Team All-Arena, Wide Receiver of the Year, and Offensive Player of the Year honors, thanks in large part to leading the league in receptions (161, a franchise record), yards (2,020), and touchdowns (58).

As quickly as fires died out, they reignited after Week 12, when a home loss to the Predators, facing both Randy Hippeard and former teammate Bernard Morris under center due to Hippeard’s season-ending injury, sparked a four-game losing streak that included another one-point loss to the Cleveland Gladiators (which would cost them dearly come playoff time), a two-point loss in Arizona, and a loss to one-win Portland.

The one-point loss to Cleveland was the second time during the season that the Sharks gave up a double digit lead to the Gladiators in a loss (they blew a 19-point lead in a 41-40 loss to them in Week 6).

By the time the July 4 League-wide bye came around, Moss was almost out the door, and there were even more questions surrounding then Managing Partner Jeff Bouchy surrounding payments of league dues and the stability and future of the franchise for 2017 and beyond.

Following the Week 16 loss, the on-field questions got answered when Moss was given his walking papers, and offensive line coach Bob Landsee took over to finish the season. There were immediate dividends, as the Sharks won two in a row to head to the playoffs.

During what was a surprising postseason run, off the field issues came to a resolution with a new ownership plan coming into place, and Bouchy seeing a demotion to Operating Manager. On the field, the Sharks and Predators played yet another classic.

Jacksonville came back from two scores down in the first half to nearly tie the game at halftime, then used a missed extra point to force overtime, where they won a playoff game for the fifth time in six seasons.

While the Sharks have new owners, they still need a new coach, a possibly reorganized front office, and a team that has both the talent to compete and can perform well enough to give Jacksonville their first home playoff game since 2013. Will Joe Hills and other top offensive players stick around? Can Jacksonville convince Joe Sykes to come back and anchor the defense? Will 2017 finally be the season where Jacksonville will live up to their potential?

In short, it was an interesting four months, and we’re in store for an even more interesting five or six months this offseason.

2016 Arena Football American Conference Championship Game Preview: Soul vs Sharks

At 0-1, fans were curious. At 2-4, fans were worried. At 5-9, fans were vindicated. Now, at 8-9, fans of the Jacksonville Sharks are excited. For the second straight year, they travel to face the 14-3 Philadelphia Soul for the American Conference championship, and the right to play in the ArenaBowl.

Interim head coach Bob Landsee is 3-0, but he knows after last week’s 69-68 overtime win, the first such win in franchise history, even he knows there’s some work to do. These two teams are miles apart from their two regular season meetings in Week 2 and Week 10, but thanks to those three straight wins, the Sharks are playing with house money, a dangerous mentality for any opponent in the playoffs.

The Sharks showed the same problems that have plagued them since the start of 2015: they’re vulnerable to the snowball. Jacksonville needed a pick-six from linebacker Alvin Ray Jackson halfway through the second quarter to avoid getting into a blowout, and a missed extra point on the last play of the game to force overtime.

However, this team showed the dynamite offense that the league has expected from them all season. Tommy Grady completed 32 of 42 passes for five scores, and the offensive line only allowed Grady to be hit twice the entire game. As for their defense, they matched Orlando for scores and stops, gaining an advantage when David Hyland sacked Bernard Morris in overtime. But, the Predators still scored on that drive, forcing the eventual touchdown and winning two-point conversion.

Looking at the two teams, it’s almost a mirror image. The Soul lead the overall series 7-6. Jacksonville won on the road by 18, then Philadelphia won on the road by 14. As far as the playoffs, these two teams will meet for the fourth time in five years for the conference title, with the Sharks looking to even the series at two apiece while steadily trending upward each year. Yes, the Soul won big the first two times (89-34 in ’12 and 75-58 in ’13), but the Sharks won last year’s tilt by five points (61-56), meaning Jacksonville has allowed fewer points each year, while scoring more in the process.

Neither team gives up a lot of sacks, both quarterbacks are up for some sort of award (be it All-Arena, MVP, or Offensive Player of the Year), and both teams have dynamic receivers (Joe Hills, Shaun Kauleinamoku, and Tiger Jones to name a few). So what is the key? What should fans watch for to decide who wins this game? Two things: special teams and late downs.

Lindsey Wolfe has had a sub-par season to say the very least, missing two extra points in Orlando, bringing his total to eleven misses in six games. In comparison, Tommy Frevert missed eleven extra points this season. Every kick will matter yet again this week, as the Sharks were lucky to get a two-point conversion of their own near the end of regulation to better their chances. Also, as of note, Wolfe has yet to attempt a field goal in 2016. This could also be a factor in end-of-game tactics.

The second key is who wins third and fourth down. In these two situations last week, the Sharks were only 50% (5 of 10) on offense and only stopped Orlando twice on defense (both on third down, but gave up first downs on the subsequent fourth downs). While the Soul were 4 of 7 combined on offense, they had four defensive third-down stops (5 of 9 allowed), then followed up with four defensive fourth-down stops (in four attempts against).

This means the Sharks have to get off the field on third and fourth down on defense, and keep the Soul’s defense on the field if they need to match scores and keep the tempo going throughout the game. Whoever blinks first could easily lose.

Kickoff is Sunday, Aug. 14 at 6 p.m. ET, and the game will be broadcast on ESPN2.

Sharks Open Landsee Era With 46-32 Win Over KISS

For only the second time this season, the Jacksonville Sharks (6-9) won a game at home on Saturday, beating the LA KISS (7-8) 46-32 at Sea Best Field.

With interim head coach Bob Landsee looking to notch his first win, the Sharks went to work immediately. The defensive line put pressure on Nathan Stanley throughout the opening drive, forcing Stanley to scramble. Just three plays in, Stanley turned the corner to convert a first down, but suffered an injury as he dove into the side boards. He left the field under his own power, but did not return.

Backup Pete Thomas also felt the heat, but still fired off three straight completions to Donovan Morgan before finding Fred Williams for the opening score. Jacksonville needed only two passes, one to Tiger Jones and the other to Andrew Robustelli, to come back and tie the game.

The KISS then slowed the pace of the game down tremendously. Their next drive lasted 10 plays, took nearly seven minutes off the clock, and featured an injury (OL Shannon Tevaga, who did return) and an unsuccessful challenge of an incomplete pass. Los Angeles had what would be a familiar down and distance of 3rd-and-10 twice, and only converted once via penalty. Jacksonville’s defense stiffened to force a turnover on downs.

With the ball back, quarterback Tommy Grady didn’t hesitate, completing three of four passes (the incompletion being a throwaway) to set up a Derrick Ross two-yard run to take a 13-7 lead after Lindsey Wolfe missed his first extra point of the night.

The Sharks defense continued their threat, as Thomas couldn’t get time to set up a good pass on the next drive. Following a Colin Madison holding penalty (which wouldn’t be his first infraction), the KISS found themselves at 1st-and-20, which they could not recover from.

Thanks in part to some heavy lifting by Derrick Ross on a 17-yard run, Grady kept firing and found Joe Hills in the end zone to continue Hills’ touchdown streak and increase the lead to two scores. Thomas did engineer a quick, four-play scoring drive to cut the lead back to seven after a missed extra point, but it would be the closest LA would get the rest of the night.

Content to mostly run out the clock and aim for a double score, the Sharks started their next drive inside the one-minute warning with consecutive Derrick Ross runs, but on 3rd-and-goal, offensive coordinator Raymond Philyaw questionably called a pass play. It worked, as Grady found Hills in the end zone again to increase the lead yet again.

Down 26-13, things went from bad to worse for the KISS. After Greg Reid broke up a pass, the aforementioned Colin Madison had words with some of the Sharks players. The words got physical, and Madison was called for an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. Madison was subsequently ejected from the game, and called for two more penalties as he left the field. Despite a catch and run by Fred Williams, LA went into the locker room empty handed.

The best the KISS could do was trade scores for the remainder of the game, and until the fourth quarter, the only cylinder that wasn’t firing was Wolfe. His extra points were as follows: good, hit the right upright, good, wide right, good, good, wide left. Coach Landsee said prior to the game Wolfe would need to be perfect to save his job, that did not happen.

In the same timeframe, Grady completed 19 of his first 21 attempts, with the two misses being throwaways. However, cracks started to show in the final frame. Up 40-26 with the ball 2nd-and-goal from the KISS’ one yard line, there was confusion on the handoff between Grady, Ross, and Dexter Jackson, who was in at full back in the heavy package.

As Jackson was pushing Ross across the goal line, there was a fumble, and the ball hit the back wall of the end zone for a touchback and the first blemish of the night for Jacksonville. The defense made sure the turnover came to nothing, in part thanks to a Neefy Moffett and Cornelius Lewis third-down sack on Pete Thomas forcing a 4th-and-13 that the KISS couldn’t convert.

Finally, up 46-32 with the ball 1st-and-goal with just 23 seconds remaining, Philyaw called two more pass plays instead of handoffs. Neither were successful, and the second landed in the hands of a familiar face: longtime Shark turned foe, Terrance Smith. Smith took his interception near midfield, but LA ran out of options and time to make any changes to the final score.

Grady finished with one of his best nights of the season, completing 25 of 29 attempts for 180 yards, four touchdowns, and the interception. In relief, Thomas did complete 33 of his 53 attempts for 325 yards, five touchdowns, and no interceptions.

Morgan and Justin Wilson were the two star receivers of the game. The two finished one and two in catches and yards (13 for 117 and 11 for 105, respectively) and combined for three touchdowns (Morgan had one, Wilson two).

While London Crawford led the Sharks in catches with nine, Hills led the team with 69 yards and three scores (Crawford finished with 45 and a lone touchdown).

On defense, Greg Reid finished with a game-high 13.5 tackles (the only player to reach double digits), and five different players registered at least a half tackle for loss (including Cornelius Lewis, Neefy Moffett, and Jordan Miller, who all had at least a half sack).

While Jacksonville earned a much-needed win, the regular season isn’t over just yet. Next week the Sharks will take on the Tampa Bay Storm at Sea Best Field in the regular-season finale. The game is scheduled for Saturday, July 30, with kickoff set for 7 p.m. ET.