Originally published Friday, August 13, 2010 at 8:54 PM
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WSU sweats through first two-a-day of fall
This year's Washington State University football team had its first chance to build memories Friday, putting in a full-pad practice in the morning and a slightly less-strenuous workout in the afternoon.
The Spokesman Review
PULLMAN — It's a time-honored tradition. Just say two-a-days, and every kid who pulled on shoulder pads knows what you're talking about.
Two practices in one day, sweating through the summer heat, building a fitness base for the long season to come.
This year's Washington State University football team had its first chance to build memories Friday, putting in a full-pad practice in the morning and a slightly less-strenuous workout in the afternoon.
The tradition has been limited somewhat over the years by the NCAA, which allows only five two-a-day workouts before the first game, and none on back-to-back days.
So are two-a-days still viable?
WSU coach Paul Wulff thinks so. In fact, he thinks some of the limits have had a detrimental effect.
"That just continues to kind of follow our society, and that is to get softer all the time," Wulff said. "It challenges you mentally to get up, come out and prepare twice a day."
Wulff admits the old ways might not have been best, but says you can't limit the practice too much, because "we want to do what's best for the body, but you also want to train that mind too."
While Wulff emphasized the mental aspect, his players also saw the grinding workouts as another in a series of team-building exercises.
"You get reps with guys you are going to play with," senior offensive lineman Micah Hannam said, sweat dripping from his shirt. "You build chemistry with the guys you're going to play with, and that's super important."
The chemistry lesson started in the morning, with a practice that highlighted the running game and the offensive line working as a unit.
Hannam admits he hates two-a-days but, like each of three teammates polled, would allow the practice to continue if he were in charge of college football.
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The day was just long enough for the offense, as they ended on a high note, when Jeff Tuel found Jeffrey Solomon behind the defense for a 38-yard touchdown strike, ending a contentious two-minute drill.
The scoring strike, coming as it did after 3 ½ hours of practice, illustrated a point.
"It's a way to test your team mentally, see where they're at," safety Tyree Toomer said. "You can't just walk through it, go through the motions or you're not going to get any better. It doesn't matter if you're tired or hot, you have to fight through it, because game situations are just like it."
It's that grinding element that sways Toomer. If he were in charge, two-a-days would stay.
"It brings you together as a team," he said. "Everybody's grinding and everybody's trying to push through, coaches included. It's tough for everybody, but you can watch the team grow."
And that's the point.
"Obviously it's tough on a lot of us, but that's one of the reasons we do it," said slot receiver Gino Simone, who tweaked a hamstring late in the day. "You've got to be ready to go in tough situations. On Saturday afternoons, there is going to be a lot of tough situations we've got to be ready for.
"Two-a-days give us a chance to not only work on a lot of fundamentals but to also face adversity."
WSU will hold its first scrimmage of the fall in Martin Stadium on Saturday.
UPDATE - 8:27 PM
UCLA extends win streak in Pullman to 18
UPDATE - 8:00 PM
Florida football recruits couldn't wait to get started at Washington State
Washington State women lose to No. 9 UCLA
Bud Withers: WSU star Klay Thompson shows serious lack of judgment, leadership
Cougars' star Klay Thompson arrested, charged with marijuana possession

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