Journell adds another leg to starting kicker race

Monday, May, 4, 2009; 9:49 PM | 0 | | Print

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"There's no question he's a good kicker. He's got the ability to be very good," head coach Frank Beamer said about Giles High School senior kicker Cody Journell.

Good enough for Beamer to make him the only kicker at Virginia Tech offered a full ride scholarship.

"It's a great honor," Journell said. "I grew up watching Shayne Graham and Brandon Pace, and knowing he (Beamer) sees something in me that he's seen in them is really an honor."

That's positive news for Virginia Tech special teams this upcoming season.

At Tech's annual Maroon-White spring game, onlookers received no sense of security as the Hokies' special teams unit combined to miss an extra point, a field goal, and saw no punt go farther than 40 yards.

A shaky kicking game is not something Tech fans are accustomed to, especially in recent seasons despite the constant turnover.

Since the departure of the reliable Brandon Pace in 2006, Tech has started each new season with a different starting kicker, and the team finds itself in a similar position this year.

With the graduation of last year's starter, Dustin Keys, Tech once again possesses a glaring hole at kicker and an important off-season issue to deal with.

But Hokie fans can take comfort in the fact that the Hokies' opening day kicker may not have even been at the scrimmage and has yet to don the maroon and orange.

Journell, at 6 feet and 175 pounds, is biding his time until Tech's summer workout sessions where he plans to show off his cannon of a leg and compete with Matt Waldron and Justin Myer for the starting kicker job. His high school coach, Steve Ragsdale, feels that he has the potential to excel at the college level.

"Cody brings so much to the table. He has confidence, a huge leg, and the proper mental ability to take it to the next level," Ragsdale said. "He looks at each kick as an opportunity to prove himself."

Journell is the only Giles High School graduate to receive a Division I scholarship in the history of the school.

The dynamic Journell did not just star as a kicker in high school. He played multiple positions in the defensive secondary and started both ways for the Spartans last season.

"I think playing multiple positions has really helped me become a football player, not just a kicker," Journell said. "I think its made me a harder worker, helped me focus more in practice, and it's boosted my confidence."

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