3 takeaways from Syracuse's Football's April 5 spring practice

Apr 4, 2025; Syracuse, New York, USA; Syracuse Orange quarterback Rickie Collins addresses the media following a practice session at the Ensley Athletic Center. Mandatory Credit: Aidan Tseng-The Juice Online/Rivals.
Aidan Tseng-The Juice Online/Rivals

Syracuse football had their 11th spring practice Saturday at the Clifford Ensley Athletic Center.

Here are three takeaways with the Orange a week away from their spring game at the JMA Wireless Dome.


There’s no one like Demetres Samuel Jr.

Demetres Samuel Jr. is one of the highest rated prospects in SU's 2025 class, and he's stood out so far.

Samuel is listed as a defensive back and wide receiver; today he wore a white jersey (offense) and mainly did defensive back drills but worked on routes alone with a coach.

In defensive drills he showed great fluidity as a natural athlete and he has good height at 6’1”. As a wideout he looked quick and showed natural bend.

He just celebrated his 17th birthday years after he enrolled at SU at 16.

“He’s unorthodox because he’s so young and he’s so talented,” Trebor Pena said on Friday.

Fran Brown works with the defensive backs

Syracuse's two highest recruits in the 2025 cycle were four-star defensive backs Samuel and Kaylib Singleton.

Fran Brown’s ability to recruit DBs shouldn’t come as a surprise as his previous job was defensive backs coach at Georgia.

In practice on Saturday, Brown was heavily involved in cornerback drills where he went over technique at the line of scrimmage.

Brown also was involved in wideout release drills on Friday as he lined up at cornerback and taught his WRs about how corners will try to jam receivers at line and how to get separation from a defender’s perspective.

This year’s DB room lacks experience after losing several starters, but freshman Rayshon Andrews showed promise on Saturday. Andrews measures at 6’4” and is raw, but he could develop into a shut down DB.

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